-5Y t THE C053TITUTI0S TH1 U5I0H AHD TO 5T0BC11KT OF IH1 LAWS. Editor and Proprietor B. F. SCHWEIER, MIFFLIOTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA.. SEPTEMBER 28. 1876. NO. 39. coram rest. In; from the roar and the rattle. The dost and the din of the ton. Where to lire ia to brawl and to battle. Till the etroog treeda Um weakling down! Away to the bonny green hilla Where the sunshine aleapa on the brae. And the heart of the greenwood thrills To the hymn of the bird on the spray. Away from the smoke and the smother, The nil of the don and the brown. The posh and the pleeh and the pother. The wear and the waste of the town ! Away where the eky shines dear. And the wild breeze wanders at will. And the dark pine-wood node near To the fight-plumed birch on the hiU. Away from the whirling and wheeling And steaming above and below. Where the heart has no leisure for feeling. And the thought has no qoiet to grow. Away where the clear brook parte, And the hyacinth droopa in the shade. And the wing of the fern nnoofla IU grace in the depth of the glade. A Second Wire. White and silent, in the centre of the darksome room, lay the source or ail tne darkness, the sobs, thi black veils. "She looks peaceful, doesn't she ?" murmured an aunt to a sister who was dropping bitter tears. "At last! at last!" The words sounded as if they were (round between closed teeth. Mr. MiMSTie stODDed beside the coffin : he was taking a last look at the face that had smiled at him through a brklabveli, fifteen years before. "See how moved he looks !" whispered Mrs. Brown to her daughter. "Ah! she was a high-strung creature not iuat the one to make a man happy yet how attentive and polite he was to her! There is not a better man in Kosevme. "It seems as though be could not get away from that coffin," remarked Mrs. Prism to Miss Prune. "Oh ! she was a high tempered girl! But they seemed to get on well of late years. He always got her everything she wanted. What a fine looking man he is!" Just then occurred a sudden move ment. "It Is that sister of Mrs. Ma gogue, Julia More. She came near fainting; her aunt took her out;" the mourning crowd explained to each other. Outside: on so, dear, a minute." "Julia! Julia! don't take Ilere, here come in here Mrs. More drew her niece into a conservatory, and dipping ber handkerchief into the tinkling fountain she soothed Julia's temples. She ceased the spasmodic hand clench ings, but still glared at her aunt out of hot, dry eyes. "There, there, cry now, dear; it will do you good," said her aunt, still laving her face. "I can't cry, aunty ; but you did well to bring me out ; in another moment I should have sprung at that hypocrite; I should have turned him round to those maudlin women. I should have said: There is her murderer! There is the man who swindled her out of her prop erty; who broke'her heart and wore out her life !' To hear those women go on about her 'high temper.' My poor darl ing ! 'Not fit to make him happy !' Ah, 1 wish I had the making of him happy for a little while!" Several maids and widows had a thought of the handsome widower which fitted into the identical words, but not into the gritty accents used by his sister-in-law. "Don't, July dear," pleaded Aunt More; "I didn't hear anybody say any such thing; and I hope Margaret was as happy as most wives. At least, she is resting now, and perhaps the peace of heaven has already washed away the scars of earth. Do try to compose your self, and let us go back." They went back, but we need not follow them into that dusky atmos phere, heavy with tuberose and helio trope, the flowers of love and death. A little over a year afterward, Mr. Burt Magogue might have been seen bidding a reverent good night to a cherub face, at the door of a charming country house. Stepping back into his carriage, he noticed a friend waiting lor the horse car. "Come with me, Ross?" "Thanks ! you're a good fellow, Ma gogue." "As the coachman drove back to the city, Mr. Boss remarked : "This opera going is costly business to a poor devil, if the lady lives in the country, especially if it rains; but you are not a poor devil." Magogue laughed ; "I don'tcare what I spend in the campaign, so I come out victor." "Then you have begun a campaign in earnest, have you ?" "You're right." "Dear me! Which one is the be sieged? Miss Erminia? She has fine, dark gray eyes like like your wife." "I know. It is not Miss Erminia." "Miss Helen? She is an accom plished, handsome girl." "Too accomplished; she has too many opinions of her own. I've had enough of that." "You want an echo?" "Well, if vou like to out it so, I do want an echo. I want a little, artless, affectionate, docile, clinging sort of wo man. I am going in for Miss Effie." "Miss Effle! Why, she's hardly out of school." "Harcllr. I know what I want." "She would scarcely be much of a companion." "I don't want companion." "But she is a dear little thing to pet sweet, timid eyes, quivering Hps you can't speak to her but the color rises In her face. What flossy, flaxen curls she has? On the whole, why dou't you get a Skye terrier V "I know what I want." repeated Ma mtnie. a dark smile on his fine features. o Presently a new engagementenliv- ened the Koseville tea tame. "Sn soon ?" alrhed Miss Prune. "Soon?" echoed her brother, "why, his wife has been dead a year; she wouldn't be any more dead if be waited three." " -v "So childish I" said Mrs. Prism. "That's just what he wanU," said Mr Priam, "a tweet, little, clinging, docile thing." "An echo?" "Yes, an echo. I guess he had enough of independent opinion in his first wife, if the truth were known." "So handsome he Is, fascinating and so rich," said Mrs. Shrimps. "It is a fine thing for Effie Keene, youngest of the three-" "His first wife had a good deal of money," said Mr. Shrimps. "I've heard say that he kept her pretty short, though." "Of her own money?" asked Mrs. Shrimps. "My dear, after she married him it was her husband's money. I think she was inclined to be extravagant. A high spirited, self-willed thing she was as Margaret More. I don't think they were very congenial; and I am afraid this If not going to be any better a sweet, pretty, babyish thing and prob ably spoilt." Julia More saw her brother-in-law one day. He was In a jeweler's store, gently fitting a gold ring upon an el fin finger. All Julia knew of her sister's nnhappiness she knew by a blind, cer tain instinct; the scene before her caused an Intolerable pang of reminis cence. Then she glanced again at the slight little figure, the sweet-eyed, cherub face, and the tall, dark form Impending over them. Pity devoured her heart. "Poor child! poor child!" And old nurse, who had reared all the Keene children, watched the pair sauntering up the steps that night. -'Eh ! a fine handsome man he is, and how sweet to her! But he'd better have taken Miss Erminia or Miss Helen. Poor Mr. Magogue!" But Mr. Magogue had found exactly what he wanted at last. When he tried to explain to her that Tilden, presiden tial candidate, had never been mixed up with Mr. Beecher's affairs, but was "the man who, more than any other man in the country, represents" how sweetly she shook her flaxen curls ! "Don't try to put all that Into my poor little head. Which man are you for?" "Tilden." "Then I'm for Tilden." This was delightful to a man who re membered seeing his first wife, when an erratic child, weeping passionately because Buchanan was elected Instead of Fremont. Mr.Magogue considered it unfeminine for women to interest themselves In politics. To be sure the fair child, Francis WaUingham, first attracted her knightly lover by her intense Interest in a certain phase of politics. But then her lover was not Burt Magogue, but Philip Sydney. Mr. Magogue and Miss Effie Keene were to be married in the spring. Sweet Effie could scarcely make up her . mind to leave the country where she had been reared, where all her friends lived, and go to bve in the city, which suited Mr. Magogue's business. "We will go away on our tour, my pet," said Magogue, at one of their last partings under the stars. "When we come back you can make up your mind." The smile that adorned his features after his back was turned was not one which his bride elect would have recog nized. Her predecessor knew it well. On the tour she was ail sweetness, gaiety and grace. Coming back they stopped at her father's. The next morning Mr. Magogue addressed tllle: "Dearest, you know I would like to consult your wishes in this as In every thing; but my business requires that we should live In the city." "Does It truly, dear?" rolling up her sky-blue eyes; but how bad that is, for you know my health will not stand the city." Mr. Magogue s brow darkened. j "You know," said his bride, sinking upon a cushion, rolling her flossy head upon bis knee, "how I would love to live in the city, so as to suit you, but you tee 1 v:Ould die there. Ton don't want me to die, do you? bo, li you really can't live in the country, I shall have to stay at papa's, shall I not? But you'll come out and see me, won't you." And she rolled up the long-lashed eyes. He was angry, baffled, bamboozled. but he stooped and kissed her. lie hired a pretty house In the country. As to living at her father's not for him ! How could he be master in his own house, there? But he was not quite satisfied. He had a vague sense that he was not hav ing his own way; he scarcely knew why. To his first wife he had banded out her own money discreetly; from her he had required a strict account of every cent. But this was such a child ish creature! He would teach her, though, in time; there was no doubt of that. Was that she in that jewelers shop 7 Impossible! But it was his Effie, and the jeweler was just handing her a box. She caught sight of her husband's ex cited eyes; she skipped toward him at the door. "O, look here, dear!" She held him the open box; on the white satin sparkled a cross of alternat ing sapphire and diamond. "Effie! I told you I could not afford that!" "Oh. don't look at me like that!" she pleaded, shrinking, rolling up her lips. "I know yon said you could not afford it; so I borrowed the money of cousin Charles; he said he would as soon lend it to me as not. For these sapphires, I must have them; they just match my eyes; they belong to me; see?" With such a smile. But Magogue could have kicked him self for smiling back at her as he did ; but what was be do with such a child ? Thinking it over, he began to see that he was being cajoled; be, Burt Ma rogue. He must put a stop to this; it was time he came out in a new charac ter, or men would call him doting, "Cousin Charles." Indeed ! Where was he drifting? A day or two afterward Mr. Magogue was riding home in an unpromising humor. Some of that first wire's money, very wisely Invested, he thought, had lust sunk out of sight and reach. This annoyed him. He was a man who needed a good deal of money. Kene of your goody-goody, two cent fellows was he. The the long, dull, country ride annoyed him. What a fool he had been to give in to ber about living in the country. "She must have a lesson," he said, shading his head, grasping his whip, and touching up his gray horse. Another turn brought him round .into the broad elm-arched avenue that led to his door.; Arriving there, what does he see? ' A groom with two horses; one beau tiful, snow-white, bearing a lady's new saddle. --" Burt Magogue sprang up the steps; he crossed the piazza at a stride, the ball at another ; he looked In at the ante room door. A lady was glancing at the long mirror; a petite lady, smiling at the petite double In navy blue riding habit with silver buttons, navy blue velvet hat with ostrich plume, a flame of geranium at her throat, a silver mounted riding whip In her little hand. "What does all this mean, madam?" shouted the flower of Koseville chivalry. She turned round, bowed, walked np to him: "What did you say to me, sir?" she asked graciously. "I asked, what you mean by this?" She laughed a silvery laugh. "Oh ! Why It means that I am going out to ride. I like riding. Cousin Charles went with me yesterday to look at a horse. He says he is a splendid fellow, and you see how handsome he is. The bill for him will come in to-morrow. Don't I look nice, dear?" He clenched the whip still In his hand. "I'll pay no bills for any horse; that is going back where he came from with the groom. And you, madam walk up stairs, take off that gear, and put on something decent, and then come down to me." She looked up at him, lips apart, from under the curled, navy blue rim of her riding hat; then clapped her tiny bands and burst into sweet peals of cherub laughter. "Madam, are you mad ? Do you think you can behave like this? You didn't know my first wife, she's dead." He spoke in an ominous tone that lowered the color in Effie's rounded cheek; her lips curled back like those of a child when first confronting some strange, unpleasant animal. Burt Magogue went on : "She was a spirited, high-tempered thing, but I brought her down. Would you like to know how I brought her down?" "Yes I should," she answered with that curious.fearless glance, just touched with something that might have been dismay had It not been more like scorn. "How did you do it ?" "I conquered her with the lash !" Little Effie shuddered and looked down. Her delicate face was working with horror, with pity for her prede cessor, with terror for the gulf sud denly open at her feet, swarming with the misbegotten wrongs that follow the meeting of irresponsible power and weakness. Or was it only terror for herself, hopeless in the power of her natural protector, lowering over her in his vast superiority of physical strength ? He wished she would look up; these baby faces can be as baffling as the time less brows of Sphynx. At last those golden lashes lifted ; the timid eyes rose up and up, until they met his ; they gave him a disagreeable sensation; he would revenge it upon her some day though she was almost too pretty to be crushed. "You did did you ?" She had taken in his remark, it seemed. Then she walked up to him, clenched her fist to the size of a magnolia buJ,and fixed him with eyes whose cherub blue was lost in a glitter, like bayonets in the sun. "Well if you ever lay so much as your least finger's weight on me don't you ever shut your eyes again, for the first time I find you asleep I 11 cut your throat from ear to ear. So hear me every saint in heaven !" She turned at the door and flung back laugh : "This U your second wife !" With this "echo" she left him. A horrible sensation clutched Burt Magogue. He fought it as if it were paralysis. What was it? And what being was this that he had marrried this mocking, spirit-like thing whom he could not terrify? He knew all about women yes, the bravest of them ; flighty, provoklne, but nervous; "na turally subject to fears ;" docile as sheep to one who showed them a little resolu tion. What manner of woman was this? He turned quickly at a sound without. "There she was mounting that snow-white sted,and there was nothing reassuring in the smile she flashed him ere she whirled off in a night-cloud of draperies. Was she some witch sent by Hecate, queen of night and of the dead ? Burt Magogue believed just as much in one religion as he did in another; you see mortal flesh and blood it could not be that had threatened him with Effie Keeno's soft lips, and transfixed him with her liquid eyes. Could it be some unsleeping ghost arisen, taking posses sion of a sweet familiar shape ! Faugh ! why bad he ever read those uncouth horrors of Hoffman and Tieck and Ed gar Poe? Burt Magogue has always defied the supernatural. Can a shadow of it keep him so docile as he is to his elfin wife? Why, the men growl now and then : "He Is get ting to be the mere echo of his 'echo.' A DlaralMeel Laewrer. "Do you know where I could get a harvest hand ?" "Yes ; do yu see that man across the road holding the awning post in front of that saloon? Well, go tor him, he wants to work." 1 hey met and commenced negotiations. "What do vou pay for your harvest hands? "I pay from 1 50 to"2 50. It depends all on the man." "Well, sir. I gues9 I am your man ; I want work, but whether I work or not depends alto. irether on the wages." "1 live nine miles from here, and if you go out with me in the morning and work one day, then we'll. fix the wages satisfactory, "Is there a cover to your wagon ?" "No, sir, no cover, but a nice spring seat. "Xo cover I" yelled the laborer, do you think I'd ride nine miles in an open wagon to get work in the harvest field ! Why you must be sick! Stranger, 'pull down your vest.' "Denver .etet. A rrmrk arbeasete Beware) XI eel- The London Globe says: "The Pre fect of the Seine has just hit npon a scheme which, as the French papers say, interests in the highest degree the fathers of families. The idea is ex plained in a letter addressed to the Mu nicipal Councilors, who are, it appears, expected to find the necessary funds. It is proposed to reward the good boys of the higher class municipal school in Paris by giving them, not books nor the ordinary school prizes, but a ten days' trip to the seasi le. The place selected for this year is Dieppe, and arrange ments have already been made for se curing the school-house there for the use of the excursionists. Here they will take up their abode, accompanied by the Director of the school, the Professer of Natural History and other masters, and everything will thus be done to make the sojourn at the seaside instruc tive as well as agreeable. Of course, the fifty who are selected out of each school to make up the party will indefinitely prefer the natural history lectures, the company of the director, and the accom modation of the empty school house, to the miseries of home during vacation. If this should by any mischance turn out to be not the case, it might be advis able on a future occasion to try the effect of a similar system on the fifty worst instead of the fifty best boys. This system would have one decided advan tage over that which the Prefect of the Seine has now devised. It would be far more welcome to the parents. For whereas the good schoolboys are gener ally given to reading or study, or real work of some kind, and do not make much trouble in the house, the conduct of the fifty worst boys of a school In their respective homes is a thing too dreadful to contemplate. If the Prefect could devise some means for cribbing, cabining, or confining in an effectual way these disturbers of domestic tran quility, he would earn the gratitude of society in general, and more particular ly of the parents and next-door neigh bors of the juvenile marauders." settling a K eetty aeeaaat. A merchant once had a dispute with a Quaker respecting the settlement of an account. "Hie merchant was deter mined to bring the matter into court, a proceeding which the Quaker very ear nestly deprecated, using every argu ment in his power to convince him of his error: but he was inflexible. De sirous to make a last effort, the Quaker called at his bouse one morning, and In quired of the servant if his master was at home. The merchant hearing the inquiry and knowing the voice, called out from the top of the stairs, "Tell that rascal I am not at home." The Quaker, quietly looking up at him, calmly said, "Well, friend, the Lord put thee in a better mind." The merchant, afterwards struck with the meekness of the reply, and having more deliberately investigated the mat ter, became convinced that the Quaker was right and himself wrong. He re quested to see him, and after ackuowl eding his error, he said, "I have one question to ask of you how were you able, with such patience, on various oc casions, to bear my abuse?" "Friend," replied the Quaker, "I will tell thee. I was naturally as hot and violent as tuou art. I knew that to indulge tins tem per was sinful, and I also found it was unprofitable. I observed that men in a passion always speak loud; and I thought that if I could control my voice, I should repress my passion, l nave therefore made It a rule never to let my voice rise above a certain key, and by a careful observance of this rule. I have. by the blessing of God, entirely mas tered my natural tongue." . Such good, frank philosopny was not lost upon the merchant In after years. aavlaa- MMe. At the opening of the century the public facilities for anatomy were less than now; so then robbing the church yard was quite a trade, and an egotist or two did worse they killed people for the small sum a dead body fetched. Well, a male body was brought to a certain surgeon by a man he had often employed.and the pair dumped it down on a dissecting table, and then the ven der received his money and went. The anatomist set to work to open the body; but, in handling it, he fancied the limbs were not so rigid as usual, and he took another look. Yes, the man was dead; no pulsation either. And yet somehow he was not cold about the region of the heart. The surgeon doubted ; he was hu mane man ; and so, instead of making a fine tranverse cut like that at which the unfortunate author of "ManonLescaut" started out of the trance with a shriek to die in right earnest, he gave the poor hotly a chance; applied hartshorn, vine gar and friction, all without success. Still he had his doubts; though, to be frank, I am not clear why he still doubted. Be that as it may, he called iu his as sistant, and they took the body into the vard. turned a high tap on, and dis charged a small but hard hitting column of water on to the patient. Xo effect was produced but this, which an unscientific eye might have passed over: the skin turned slightly pink In one or two places under the fall of wa ter. The surgeon thought this a strong proof life was not extinct; but, not to overdo it, wrapped the man in blankets for a time, and then drenched him again, letting the water strike him hard on the head and the heart in particular. He followed this treatment up, till at last the man's eye winked, and then he gasped, and presently he gulped, and byP-and-bye be groaned, and eventually uttered loud and fearful cries as one battling with death. In a word, he came to, and the sur geon put him into a warm bed, and as medicine has its fashions, and bleeding was the panacea of that day, he actually took blood from the poor body. This ought to have sent him back to the place from whence he came the grave to wit; but somehow It did not; and next day the reviver showed him with pride to several visitors, and prepared an article. Resurrectus was well fed, and, being a pauper, was agreeable to lie In that bed forever, and eat the bread of science. But as years rolled on, his preserver got tired of that. However, he had to give him a suit of his own clothes to get rid of him. Did I say years? I must have meant days. He never did get rid of him; the fel low used to call at Interval and' demand charity, urging that the surgeon, had taken him out of a condition in which he felt neither hunger, thirst nor mise ry, and so was now bound to supply hi natural needs. . . e)aeer ftapersUtlea. Of omens there are still enough and to spare even In tills sceptical genera tion of ours, when the law of evidence are somewhat better understood than of old, and there Is a rather wider demand than the old for causes to precede re sults. Grave, thoughtful, educated peo ple still refuse to sit thirteen at table and resort to all manner of old devices and puerile tricks to avoid the fatal number, and so to cheat the future. Crossed knives are a sign of fast approaching orrow, which even uncrossing them with the left hand will not wholly ar rest; and the salt spilt between two friends Is a sure presage of disturbance In the amicable relation. It may be a little mollified by throwing a pinch over the left shoulder, but the sign is more sure than the act of modification. So, too, the fire burning persistently on one side of the grate for many' days together fortells, without fail, the de parture of one of the house inmates; and boots or shoes placed inadvertently on a table as surely fortell a serious quarrel as surely as does the loaf of bread turned on its face bring misfor tune in France. The origin of this su perstition was told to the writer as dat ing from the "executioner's loaf." It was part of thejpriveleges of Monsieur de Paris, Monsieur de Lyons, Monsieur de Bordeaux, and all the other terrible messieurs in the business, to receive ra tions of bread from the local bakers. These, to mark the loaf assigned, turned the face downwards, and not the boldest spirit aniorg their customers would have touched or taken that loaf. It was a loaf accursed, full of misfortune and distress; and had any one but the mon sieur in question eaten it, there is no saying what might have happened. Hence, to turn the bread face downward is a porte malheur to the French, and the English offend their feelings by their ignorance of the superstition. The one unlucky magpie flying across the path can make the gay heart heavy if some business is on the point of being begun ; perhaps the omen may be aver ted If, after a rapid, triple nod, and crossing the ground with the left foot, the fowl, as Poe would have called it, flies to the right; but,if after this exor cism it flies to the left, all hope is at an end, and the misfortune Is as certain as the funeral met when you have set out on any expedition is the certain herald of disaster. The bridal procession which meets a funeral train bad better turn back and break the bond before it is ratified. Xothiug but sorrow can come of a marriage which has such a woeful forecasting, just as the christening par ty which also meets with a funeral might as well order the coffin instead of the cradle, for the child will not live, however robust it may be now, and however wise the cares bestowed on it. LoHilun Times. Hetaals Career f Cripple. English papers give interesting par ticulars of the success which has marked the life of Mr. Walter Wren, who has come prominently Into public notice by the great success which has attended his pupils for their competition for the India civil service. His prosperity Is the more remarkable as he has long been a hopeless cripple. Recently while canvassing Chelsea for an elec tion to Parliament, Mr. Wren in the course of a speech which he made, men tioned that his condition was due to a kick which he received from a bully at school for whom he was fagging. He did not, however mention, all the facts. Soon after he received the blow, it was found that be was most seriously in jured, and his prospects seemed utterly blighted. He refused, however, to ad mit that he was beaten in the battle of life, and rejected an offer of 2 a week which was made to him. He determined to proceed to the university and become coach" if be succeeded as well as he hoped to do. At Cambridge he acquited himself with great credit, and since he left the banks of the Cam for the banks of the Thames, he has become the most successful "crammer" of the day. He is wheeled from room to room ; although he can walk a little, his favorite position is to lie horizontally on a coach. He married very well, and has a family of six or seven children, and besides a very good house in London, he has an estate in Berkshire. Seattle la Hewfeaadlaad . As a natural and somewhat curious feature it is mentioned that the island of Newfoundland, thongh abounding In game, Is not Infested with reptiles. The absence of snakes and toads in Ireland, for many years has been tbe subject of comment; but we believe the peculiar condition of Xewfoundland has attrac ted but little general attention. Cap tain Chearlney writes : "In Newfound land there Is not a snake, toad, frog, or reptile of any sort. There Is not a squir rel on the island, no porcupine, moose, or minx ; whereas, with the exception of the porcupine, wanting in Cape Bre ton, Xova Scotia, all these creatures are found In the neighboring provinces. The Arctic hare is found In Xewfound land, but neither in Cape Breton nor Xova Scotia." Captain Hardy, an En glish officer, calk) attention to other de ficiencies. He visited Newfoundland at midsummer, and could not help re marking the fact that fireflies were not to be seen there; while In Nova Scotia they swarm by thousands, their scintil lations adding beauty to the pall of a quiet night. The island is full of bogs and swamps, which renders It difficult to account for the total absence of rep tiles. The decrease of the whaling inter est is marked. New London, Connec ticut, which thirty years ago had one hundred whalers, now na nut ten, Tne "Literary Feller aaa Ike Palttl- elaa. Nobody likes to be ridiculous. We doubt If even one of them literary fel lers like to appear ridiculous, even in the eye of a regular politician. The literary feller la not a great deal com forted by the fact that the regular poli tician is intrinsically a much more ri diculous person than himself. The trouble is, that the regular politician is not conscious of his ridiculousness,, while the other man is. Tbe literary feller in politics feels that he Is an amus ing object to his temporary associates; but these associates have little idea that they themselves ever afford amusement to the man of letters. The Irony of The Nation" does not touch the amuur propre of the strongest man in the 401st ward. The fact is, that while the literary feller 1 In actual contact with the poli tician, he does not feel the politician to be so extremely ridiculous. He sees him dealing vulgarly but effectively with people of his own stamp; he sees that he is shrewd, prompt, practical. The gentleman politician feels himself at a disadvantage in a primary, or a cau cus. He may be quick to criticise, but he may not be quick to suggest. He comes home from the primary and writes an Ironical "article" for some magazine; but thebitternessoftbe irony Is Intensified by a grain of chagrin. It is when the literary feller goes off on his mid-summer holiday, that he gets quite straight with the politician in bis own mind. It is then that the poli tician is seen to be, with all bis shrewd ness, an exceedingly short-sighted, not to say woolly-brained person. It Is then that he sees the politician proclaiming upon the house-tops the 'thing that the literary feller had spoken in the ear in closets, and had been pityingly smiled npon for speaking. In the mid-summer holiday of 1876, for instance, he sees the two great political parties pledged and repledged before tbe country to perform the literary, sentimental, ideal, and un practical deed of tying each its own hands so tightly, that it can never again carry out Its projects by the old time honored and familiar methods. He sees, moreover, that tbe shrewdest politician on each side knows that there is no hope for his own party, unless the ceuntry, by hook or by crook, can be made to be lieve that kit party Is the one most wil ling, and most able to perform what, in moments of contemplation, must appear to him in the ghastly light of hari-kari. Scribner. BlBKiae;. Singing requires of the vocal organs functions very different from those re quired for speaking. Furthermore, a good physical constitution and perfect regularity in the functions of the organ ism, are of inestimable value to the artist. In tbe emission of the voice the respiratory movements must be per formed without strain or effort; tbey must be regulated so as to make the in spiration short and easy, and the expi ration slow and prolonged. There is a struggle between the organs which re tain breath and those which expel it; practis, youth, and good health, are the conditions npon which an adjust ment must be based. In the highly gifted artist the larynx holds its ordi nary position notwithstanding the vari ations of intensity and pitch of the sounds produced. Being implicated in some of tbe more energetic movements of the tongue, it rises or falls, but to no purpose. The larynx of the singer, while fixed in its position, multiplies its performance; the suppleness of all its parts is a matter of prime impor tance. The vibration of the local lips and tbe resonance of the vestibule de termine the timbre of the glottic souuds, the configuration of the pharynx of the buccal cavity, by modifying the sounds formed in the glottis, produces the tim bre of the voice. This cannot be altered to any considerable degree by even the most powerful effort of the will. Pro fessors of singing injure their pupils by prescribing in too absolute a manner tbe mouth arrangements which they themselves find most serviceable. Each individual must follow Nature, and M. Mandl had good reason for begging singing-masters never to forget this truth. Popular Science Monthly. Heraldry la Ea-laad. When the Herald's Colletre was in corporated, it took npon itself not only tlm reo-nlation of arms, but also the ordering of those sumptuous funerals in which tbe bad taste ot our lore fathers delighted. If a great man died, the body was sometimes kept lying in state for weeks. More frequently, now ever, the remains were privately in' terred. without Domn. or heraldic dis play, and some time afterward a mag- D lucent nearse was ereciea in iuo rhnrrh. hmg round with the aims. crest, and motto of the dead and his ancestors, and tbe family and retainers went at night by torch-light to near a funeral sermon in praise of tbe virtues of the deceased. For all this display heraldic knowledge was needed, yet so perverse were tbe gentry around that, instead of employing Holme and Smetbley to superintend the pageant and paint the banners, they often ens-aired what the Senior Deputy Herald calls "poorsnaks. bedge-paynters, and I take it. Diasterers." toaoioe oiazonry for them, i his was nnoearaoie to me men in euiuuiit. . uu wcv; i .uuu of their fees : and long and bitter were their comnlaints to tbe authorities in St. Paul's Churchyard, urging that aharn measures should be taken with tne arms-painters, ana insi toe peopie who had these stately funerals provided for their relatives should be compelled to pay the accustomed fees to Messrs. Ilnlme and Smethlev. whether they availed themselves of their service or not. There were, however, difficulties in the way which tbe members of tbe college fully understood, but which were not so clear to these men who felt themselves defrauded. Tbe her alds, since their incorporation, bad, it is true, jurisdiction over arms and other heraldic insignia; but it was well un derstood by themselves, and by all others who bad information on the matter and heraldry wss then one of tne necessary accompnsnmenis ot an Enelish gentleman that there were number of families whose rights to bear arms were unquestioned, of whom ttjje heralds had no notice in their books. Many members of tbe higher families were too proud to arkoow ledge them. There is a tale told of ceitain northern squire who. when served at the instance of Sir William Dngdale with a summons to attend bis visitation, to prove his arms and pedi gree, replied : "Tell this new knigbt that the IVatertons bore the thre bloody ereacents for five hundred year before the usurper Richard incorpor ated his college, and that the Water- tons will continue to bear them a thou sand year after some righteous king baa suppressed it." Whether this be a fable or, as we think more likely, a slightly decorated version of a real messaire. it is is certain that many ot the nobler of tbe untitled houses did not acknowledge the authority of the heralds. With the lesser gentry it was much the same. 1 heir arms might not have got into rolls or printed volumes, but they possessed plate-carvings and embroidery which showed that they had borne them in days gone by ; and, as their position was well known and acknowledged among their own neigh bors and kinsmen, they were little con cerned to avail themselves of the ser vices of tbe London office. Then, as now, the chief occupation of the her alds was with tbe new men, who wanted, as far as armorial bearings could do it, to be put on the same plat form with the older families The Athenaenm. The 6 irt efttah. A writer to Tintley't Jfaoazine dis- courses on the "Gift of Gab :" To make a good after-dinner speech requires a special talent. A man may be eloquent on paper and ready and witty among his friends, but tbe mo ment he ries to propose a toast or to return thanks be generally manages to make a mess of it. Thackeray could not do it his nervousness quite over came him. Theodore Hook, with all his rattle in private, was a failure. Even Jeffrey felt at sea; and Froude is in sipid. Dickens was an exception. He was always ready, always bright, and at his ease: and, when he could be secured, was the best chairman any cause or committee could find. Dining has become one of our recognized modern institutions; and, as no public dinner is complete without its accom paniment of speech-making, it follows that there is not even a provincial com munity which cannot boast of its local orators. Any country newspaper will give us an idea of the nature of the utterances of many who believe their forte to be an ability to talk, and who are always ready to discharge their wind-bags at "Mr. Chairman" and the reporters. . No municipality is more profuse and ostentatious in iu hospital ity, or more honored with the presence of guests of distinction, than that of the metropolis. Yet even of this greatest of dining bodies it has, alas! been said that the "good things of tbe corpora tion as a rule, are those that go in at the mouth, and not those which come out of it." When so man v are given to talking, how rare it is to find a good istener! It is an art as much as taili ng is; but it is little understood and much less practiced. A good listener evinces intelligence and manifests an air of respectful attention. Even if he has previously heard the narrative, or is familiar with the knowledge that is being imparted, he exhibits a certain amount of interest. Let him tell us the difficulty of this acquirement who has tried to practice it on all occasions, however uniuteresting the communica tion and however tiresome the speaker. Uneducated people experience con siderable difficulty in expressing their ideas fluently and correctly, 'l hey are guarded in their choice of words, some times from a fear of rudeness, but generally from a natural reticence or diffidence. They express their feelings n an artless way. and often convey their impressions more suggestively by their simplicity then if they aspired to grammatical precision. Have you ever observed the courtship of a couple in the humbler walks of life? You in similar circumstances would discourse without an effort, to an interested listener, on literature, or sentiment, or the topics of the day. For lack of the resources whicn training anu education supply, they exhibit their attachment by playfulness and innocent diversion by pushing, or pulling, or chasing or teasing, with the accompaniment of laughter and screaming; ami an mis is to them as natural and as mutually en- oyable as intellectual conversation is to more fortunate individuals who possess the gift of gab. A Wen Thackeray Dlda't Like. There was one member of the club whom Thackeray did not like, and some of who-e failings he referred to not giving the name of course in the 'Snob Papers." mat person was Al bert Smith, the author of the "Scatter good Family." "Christopher Tadpole," etc. Mr. Smith exhibited some pretty panoramas of "Mont Blanc," and the "Overland Route to India," and accom panied them with lively lyrical elu sions of his own composition. These brought bim fame and money, and this accumulation inflated him terribly. He talked of dukes and marquises as if they had all been school-fellows or were nrst cousins. He never gave them their titles is speaking of them. "Argyll and "Breadalbane" were intended to disclose his familiarity with these peers. As he waxed rich, or was supposed to have a good account at bis banker s, he was assailed witn importunities irom poor acquaintances, and even strangers, He therefore caused a civil negative to be lithographed and forwarded to applicants of all degrees; and he fre quently boasted at the "Garrick" that . . . . v . , t -v i. : . ne nau sent on iwemy rr uj i was thoroughly snobbish, lie nad some good points, however. He was upright in his transactions. Rather than pilfer a good ioke or iokelet, which some one in the trade might throw off in com- oanv. Albert Smith woul.l ask politely : "Are you going to use that bon mot?" "How use it?' " I mean do you intend to have it published ?" "I never dreamed of such a thing." "Then, if you will allow me. I will annropriate it." And down went the jeu d'esprit into his note-book, to be afterward worked up for "Punch" or some other periodical for which he wrote. Watery. Why Chi ass r Pls-Taile The history of Chinese cities is told bv the Rev. Julius Doolittle, a nna- innarv in China, as follows: J he nrst r.mperor oi tne present ny nastv. who began to reign in 1044, hav ing usurped tne in roue, ueiermineu to make the tonsure of Manchuria, bis native country, the token of the sub mission of tbe Chinese to bisanthority. He ordered them to shave all tbe bead except the crown, and allowing the hair on that part to grow loug aud dress it according to tbe custom of Manchuria. The Chinese had been ac customed, under native Emperors, to wear long hair over the whole head, and to arrange it in a tuft or coil. Tbe change was gradual, but finally pre' vailed through tbe Empire. At first tlinMe who shaved their heads and con formed to the laws, received, it is said a nre sent of a tael ot silver, after I while only half a tael, and then only a tenth of a tael, and afterward only an egg arid finally even an egg was not allowed. Tbe law requiring the peo ple to shave the bead and braid the cne was not often rigidly enforced by tbe penalty of immediate death, but it be came very manifest that those who did not conform with the wishes of the do minant dynnasty wonld never become successful in a lawsuit against those who did conform, nor would they sue ceed at tbe literary examinations. KTWS IS BBHT- Texas raises 800,000 bales of cotton this year. The unveiling of the Seward statua in New York has been postponed for several weeks. Since the immigration movement began more than 2,125,000 Irish people have landed in New York. The Capitol at Washington will be open on Sumlay hereafter for the con venience of Centennial visitors. The Wagner orchestra at the Bay reuth festival numbered one hundred and sixteen, including thirty-two vio lins. A young seal was shot at Middle bury. Vt., the other day, which the people believe escaped from Barnum's museum. There are no less than 1,200 Chris tian congregations In the Island of Madagascar, numbering 260,000 wor shippers. A Baltimore youngster fell into an indigo tub the other day and crawled out fully qualified for membership in the boys In blue. The freshman ciass at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Ct., numbers sixty-two, a larger number than has ever before entered. Baltimore has over fifty oyster and fruit-packing establishments, and sev eral hundred thousand dollars are in vested in tbe business. A bear seven feet long was shot near the Twin Mountain house the other day, and a big panther Is scaring the people of Springfield, Vu The Eastern shore of Mayland has sixty thousand acres of peach trees, and the yield the present season is es timated a 5,000,000 bushels. A factory for the manufacture of sugar and syrup from watermelons has been established on Andros Island,Cal lfornia, in the San Joaquin river. Ex-Mayor J. Y. C. Smith of Boston a rather poetical person of an eccentric turn, is building an open-rront tomb, with seats and a table, in tbe beer garden style. The Rev. Arthur Mitchell, of the First Presbyterian Church, Chicago, has voluntarily relinquished $1,000 a year of nis salary on account of the bard times. Nebraska has more than doubled her population since 1870. The State now contains 2.7,47 inbabitanU, as compared with 122.9U3 in 1370, and 4, 4'M in 18.M. The bridge across White river, on the Wisconsin Central Railroad, is the largest wrought iron one In the world. It is 1.525 feet long, 107 feet high, and cost $200,000. Tecuinseh's grave has been discov ered near Ridgetown, Out., and the re mains have been exhumed and taken to Niagara to be deposited in the vault at Brock's monument. Daniel Hull, the oldest living loco motive engineer in rYnnsvlvauia, re sides in Chanibersburg. He was born in Strasburg, Lancaster county In 17', and commenced railroading in 1334. A party of Freemasons from Glou cester, Ma-j., while on a fishing excur sion In IStiO threw overboard a bottle containing their names. Lat week it was washed ashore at Rockland, -Me. Gen. Joe Lane the candidate for Vice-President in ISO'J with Breckin ridge, is a farmer in Oregon. His sou Latavette Lane, is a representative in the present Congress from that state. The 81-ton gun at Woolwich, with a charge of 270 pounds of powder, will send a three-quarter ton bolt with suffi cient force to be driven through three feet of solid iron at a range of one thousand yards. The ancient church of All Hallows in Broad street, London, is to be pulled down. Milton was christened in it, and in 1555 the rector, Lawrence Saun ders, was executed for heresy by order of Queen Mary. A very singular method of elec tioneering has leen adopted by a couple of residents of Munroe, Mich., who have agreed to run a foot-race, the loser to vote for th others candidate for the Presidency. The great imperial bell made out of the French cannons taken by the Germans and placed in the tower or the Cathedral of Cologne, cannot be made to ring in a tolerable manner. The sixth effort has proved a failure. Ground has been broken at Hart ford for a new Catholic Cathedral of Gothic architecture, 154 feet long, with a spire 250 feet high, which is to be one of the b?st ornamented and roost im posing church buildings in New Eng land. A Mississippi letter savs many of the negroes think that "Wheeler A Wilson" are the I'resldeutiai candi dates of the Republican party, and are promising themselves a new sewing machine, instead oi tne traauionai luriy acres and a mule. John Anderson, the first man to make the ascent of the great South Dome in the Yoseroite Valley is a quiet young Scotchman who lives her mitlike In a small nouse near tne sau dle of the dome, to which he is con structing a stairway of 1000 steps. C. P. Haseltine, of Stevens Point, Wis., has a cranberry marsh of B40 acres under cultivation. If the berries are not destroyed by early frosts he ex pects to gather three thousand barrels. which will tie snipped uirect to i.iver- Dool. Five hundred persons will be employed in gathering the berries. Mr Sipley, a noted hermit, of Pike County, Pa., is dead. He was formerly a wealthy merchant of New York City, but failed in business. His reverse so preyed upon his mind that he fled to a wild, desolate place, sev eral miles from any habitation. There for thirty-five years he has sustained himself by fishing and bunting. Chicago is greatly delighted over the announcement that A. T. Stewart t Co. have leased three blocks of build ings on Wabash avenue In that city with the intention of turning them into one vat establishment, in which they will have from $2,000,000 to $4,- 000.000 worth of merchandise, imported expressly for their western bouse. A correspondent, who says that the widow of Millard Filmore has a great deal of silver to spare, recalls the fashion In which the pair would drive out during the ex-President's lifetime. Mr. Fillmere would attire himself in glossy black broadcloth, a high hat, high, stiff, white collar, and a pair of white kid gloves, and In this guise ride down Delaware avenue, In Buffalo. Two professors of Urbana univer sity discovered last week in a mound In Champaign county, Ohio, eight human skeletons, twelve feet under ground, enclosed In a wooden tomb. One was a child's skeleton, with a string of shells around the neck. While, the professors were burrowing, one side of the shaft gave way and a scien tist was buried, bruised, and nearly suffocated. As soon as he was dug out he called for a spade and went at It again.