iitofgiiel jjggife mi jggitfciE B. F. SCIIWEIER, THE COHSTITTJTIOJT THE U5I05-AI.D TEE EtfTOBCEMEIT OF TEE IAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOI,. XXXIII. M I FFLI NTOAVN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., WEDNESDAY, SKPTEMBEK 17, 1S79. NO. 3S. H. T. HELMBOLD'S COMPOUND FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU THE WIND AND STREAM. 4 brook came stealing from the ground. You scarcely- saw it silver; gleam Among the herta that hang arouud The borders of that winding stream A pretty stream, a placid xtream, A softly gliding, ba-hful Btream. A breeze came wandering from the sky, light as the whisper of a dream ; Ii put the o'erh nKiug grasses by. And j;aily stoned to kiss the stream The pretty Btream. the fit:ered stream. The shy, jet unrelucUut stream. The water as the wind parsed o'er. Shot upward mauy a elaucing bean. Dimpled and quivered more and more. And tripped along a livelier stream. The na'tered stream, the simpering stream. The fond, delighted, silly stream. Away the airy wanderer flew To wLeio the fields with blossoms teem. To sparkling streams and rivers blue. And 1. ft alone that little stream The flattered t-tream, the cheated stream. The sad, forsaken, lonely stream. That careless wind no more came back. He wanjers yet the fields. I deem. But on its melancholy track Cotupla ning wtut that little stream The cheated stream, the hopeless stream The ever-murmunug, moaning stream. PHARMACEUTICAL. iSfECIFIC REMEDY FOR ALL The Last Sixpence. I know, UM'thtT dear, you would not feci j sal of which formed the subject of discus sion ere they left hcnio. Tl. -- me vicar was well acquainted with tlie resources of his congregation, and knew they could not contribute much to the cause he pleaded ; but, as he re remarked, they might at least give a por tion to God's service and that the widow's mite tendered willingly was dearer iu His sight than the gold grudgingly contributed by the wealthy. But even at this appeal, when Mrs. Willis observed the hectic flush upon Lucy s check, and noted how the ex ertion of even walking to the church told upon her, she felt half inclined to harden her heart in favor of her young companion, and to keep the last sixpence in her pocket. But Lucy read Sirs. Willis's thought, and whispering in her ear the words "God wil provide," the money was given up in a trice, and the old lady's heart leaped for joy at the self sacrifice which had been ac complished. "'ow, mother,"' said Lucy, when they got within sight of their abode, "we wont sit up in the dark talking, so as to lose the glow our walk has produced, but go straight to bed, as I must be up early." Louugicg against the door-post, with hisl hands in his pockets, and surveying the outer world as well as he could through clouds of tobacco smoke he was diffusing, was the person Mrs. Willis and Lucy owned as their landlord. "There' en"elmnn lij.en linm at-,.. happy if you could not contribute your mite ! f((r you, he 0.rveJ oM mm sd therale-fWgirlof twenty, preying , tlI? at hu pipe a,most into her aged companions hands the six-i .,, , . , . ., ... . , . i nd "J bow be wanted you panic ler. pence which constituted all tne monetary ; V w , .... . . ,. i j e a --. DISEASES j He left a note, I think for you upstairs. I ; didn't speak to him myself, but my old j 'ooman did, and if you want to see her j you'll find her at the Hod Lion, in the jug- or THE For IVMIity, Loss of Memory. Indisposi tion v Exertion or Itii-Jiness, bortneaa of B:th. Troubled with Thought of Disease, Inanwof ViiuTi. I'atn in the Bark. Chest, no H-sJ. Ruh of lilood to the Idead, Pale (.-unit-nance, and Iry skin. l:tfce-e symptom are allowed to go on, t Irrqueiitlv Kpilentic Fits and (on-K3T-ti..n f-.iiow. When the constitution .nj"S affected it requires the aid of an Kviai:ns inedicine 10 strengthen and tCjf sp liie system which "Helmbold's Buchu" A rroteasors Quickness or Ketort. Dr. B , who was for many years associated with the L'uiversity of Vtr giinia, was noted for his quickness of retort and some of his repartees, which are failing out of contemporary mem ory, are worthy of preservation. Once, many years ago, being on a visit to Washington, he thought he re cognized a friend In the man who was immediately before him. "How are you V" lie said, clapping the supposed friend familiarly on the shoulder. "My name is Hull, sir. "I beg your pardon." said the Pro fessor. "1 was looking for the Colo nel." On another occasion, as he was walk ing, looking intently at something in the street, a man coming in the oppo site direction, who was gazluo- with equal earnestness into a shop window, ran shoulder to shoulder against him The stranger drawing himself up in extreme hauteur said : " Why did you run against me?" With equal severity the professor answered Iu exact Imitation of his ques tioner's tone aud manner: Fur precisely Vie samt reason that you ran against me," and the encoun ter ended iu a good natured laugh. A gentleman coining iuto his office, one day said : "Doctor, why do you keep your room so hot? It is like an oven." 'I must," he answered promptly, "for it is here that I make my bread." Many years ago this incident was told in one of the magazines, but the point was somewhat missed, as the con tributor made it hnke instead of mate. On a visit to a Xew York publishing Grinding Tools. wealth they possessed. "There's quite enough bread and butter and tea for break fast in the morning, and if I get up very early, as I mean to do. I shall have finished Mrs. Smith's dress by three o'clock, and bar." she s sure to pay me directly I take it to , M neitlu.r Mrs Wiis nor Lui.y any e ' j wish to seek their landlady in such a place, "But we've no candle or firing in the they borrowed a candle from a lodger, who ,--;u''- j was not quite so badly off as themselves, in "IX .n't you trouble alKHit that ; when we ordt,r to noc to h(tvu lccn ,cft ome back from church it'll be quite time m (heir rooni. for hard-working folks like us to go to bed: j "Im afraid it's from Mrs. Smith,niothcr," so that we shan't want a light, and our gaij Lucv. '.jf g,s it-g , blowing up. for I landlady will lend us a shovelful of coals' told her Id make an effort to have her for to-morrow ; so don't say anything more, ' dress done forjier by last night, and, a but take the sixpence and come along, for ! you know, I did my best."' the church bells have almost ceased.". ; If the room in which they lived looked For a few seconds the aged woman hesi- uninviting in the day-time it appeared far tatcd between her charitable inclinations more dismal when viewed by the depress and solicitude for tiie orphan girl who ca'.l-, I'S1'! of a tallow candle. But the residents ed her mother; ' bu". looking earnestly into were pretty well used to the aspect of the joke and to rid hi in sell of the nuisance her companion's face, and finding written i piace, and therefore devoted their attention there the same desire that predominated ! to the note directly. The flickering flame w ithin her own breast, she placed the coin revealed it lying upon the table, Lucy held in her pocket. j the candle and took the note ; but no sooner Without a word more on cither side, the ; did her eyes rest upon it than she turned to ' two females quitted the r.xm they xu- i n asy paleness, anu leant agamM ner house, against which he hail a cla for six hundred dollars, he was usher ed into the office where one of !ie firm sat on a high stool, pompouslv shelling letters. The professor stood awaiting recognition, but no notice was taken of him. Finally the small business mill twisted himself around on his iercli, and said in the most stipercilous of tones : "What?" "That," said the professor, hamli ng he order for the money." The business was settled without an other word. very tiresome civil engineer had been vexing the righteous soul of one of the l"niver-ity professors, who for a Edge tools are fitted up by grinding. Ihe sharp grit of the grindstone, be ing harder than the Iron or steel, cuts very small channels in the surface of the metal, and the revolving disk car ries away ail the minute particles that are detached bv the grit. If we were examine the surface of the tool that kas just been removed from the grind stone, under the lens of a powerful mi croscoje, it would appear, as It were. like the rough surface of a field which has recently been sacrificed with some implement that had formed alternate ridges and furrows. Hence, as these ridges and furrows run together from both sides at the cutting-edge, the newly-ground edge seems to be formed of a system ol minute teeth, rather than to consist of a smooth edge. For this reason a tcol is first ground on a coarse stone, so as to wear the surface of the steel away rapidly; then it is polished on a w heel of much liner grit and final ly, in order to reduce the serrature as much as possible, a whetstone of the finest grit must be employed. Tliii gives a eutting-eilgc having the small est possible serration. A razor, tor xauip'e, does not have a perfee iittnig edge, as ons may perceive by viewing it through a microscope. Se- I giniKis are sometimes m.-.trncted, when grinding edge tools, lo have the stoue revolve toward the cutting edge, aud sometimes from it. When the first grinding is being (one it is a matter of indifference whether this is done or not; but when the finishing touches are applied near and at the very edg.;, a grimier can always complete his task with more accuracy if the periphery of the grindstone revolves toward the cut ting edge, as the s'enl that is worn away will be removed more easily; whereas when a stone runs in the op posite direction, the grinder cannot al ways tell exactly when the side of the tool is fully ground up to the edge. This is more especially true when the steel lias a rathvr low or soft temper. The stone, whea running from the edge will not sweep away every particle of the metal that hangs as a "feather" but when the stone revolves toward the edge, tliere w ill be no "feather edge" to deceive the eye of the grinder. Street Life In Venire. 'pied, and pr. needed through the narrow j companion for support. ' streets teeming with human lx-inir to the j "Mother, mother . si DOES IN EVERY CASE. my eyes. sue froji.eu, "1 can- Heaii, read and HELMBOLD'S BUCHU IS TJNEQTJALED church, whither the bells had invited them, i n trust ' To nearly every depth it is said tliere is a quickly ! ' ', deeiT still ; but Mrs. WiHis and her pr- ! Mra- Wi,lis s,''171 ,Iie sliP of P-lIr. ,mt !tege, Lucy Marks, were certainly among: r tI,e uaudwriting and the i the p. -.rest iu that very' po. .r district. words Lu(T Adversity makes us acquainted with; "Don't go to bed until you've seen strange companions, and Alfred Willis, j Alfkeu." j when he quitted England two years previ- j Without a word the to women wound ; ously to seek his fortune in Australia, little . their arms around each other, and wept dreamt tliat the comfortable home in w hich tears of silent joy ; for unless some villian ; he had left his mother aud bcthn.tlu'd wife ; OU9 trick had 5cn practiced "f'n them, he ! would have been so son broken up, and ' tl... 1... ft..u. l.itt citru al..rT-...a tltev unild It Is prescribed Ij "-"' itiv reme.lv known. to con eminent phj-slcians ail over the have sunk to the poverty they now exper :a, in Biieumatism, Spermatorrhoea, -euralgia, Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Achea and fains, I , - Kidney Diseases, LiTer Complaint, Xervous Debility, Epilepsy, Bead Troubles, Paralvsis. General lu-Uealtn. nuess. I ieuceiL I From the age of fourteen Lucy had been able to tarn her own living, so hat when i Alfred, after losing nearly all his capital i. gayc up the grocery business he had been ', deluded into taking, his only anxiety was I ' a provision for his mother. The $ i,) he , : had left when he was clear of his business too confiding moment, lent to a who had for years been the cherished darl ing of their hearts had been given back to them once more. Ay. and was iu the room even now as he quickly let them know, w hen he thought their agitation liad somewhat abated, and that he could safely emerge from the hid ing place he had sought beneath the bed. Hearing from the residents of the house in whieh he left his mother and his letrothed that they deemed him dead, and fearing i . . .i . .,.t te cttC' U13 sudden appearance migm man in whm he trusted to the utmost, i . , ,. .. .. . . , ,i,.,.t.t. have upon them, he had left the note with i with directions that the interest therefrom ...... , . ., ,, mtLst be paid t his mother ; but ere AI 5-:rit n: Sciatica. Deafness, Decline, Lumbago, Catarrh, Nervous Complaints, Female Complaints, &c ."'Jiaehe. Pain In the' Shonlders, Conirh, ;U"N Sour Momueh, Kmptions, Jliid j in the Mouth. 1'alpitaMon of the , art,pin ln the resrion of the Kidneys, ; a thousand other painful syiuptouia, : ue xh' fTl'i lugs of Dyspepsia. . I . : ......... na . ..i 1 1 as ll.t VMllfl was a bankrupt, and Mrs. ilhs was pen- , w nd b.ndladv ve him opportHnity for secretly returning to Helmbold's Buchu Invigorates the Stomach, I T ...1 . v. ct i rrl c Tit nt 'thiZrww'rhc!; , , ,i,c... ,,,...1.1,. ihe could watch the effect of his ruse. iev er, a.,u a compassionate fellow-lodger who touch tier neeuie. . . , , .. , , i They were alone in the worM, fr Lucy lt Lucy the candle waited a long time 'was an orphan, and Mrs. Willis, whilst e it was returned; indeed, as a matter of i having no relatives of her own, knew noth- fact, that particular illuminating medium ' in" ofher late husband's family, who years was not returned at all, for it had nearly Uforc had founded a home in anoiner j nurni neu wiiue "j am! ; that it had been borrowed; but really there Kapidly their few worldly nossi-ssions j was every excuse, for Alfred had so much were disposed of, until at last they were to tell : How at first he had lieen ui.fortu glad to find shelter in the small the very j in Australia; how, in a fit of desperation, small front r.x.m they now occupied. j he bad resolved to try the digging, and was Thev had heard several times from the wonderfully successful, getting in less than much loved Alfred; but owing to the un- j six months some nuggets that realized him J . :..... i.:- .,.,,.,.. onto tl.er bail not '. !it oi0: how he resolved not to take his cenaiinv oi w i,i'.. "-"" . ; jlK.t n able to reply, so that he knew noth- mom y with him on board the Juno, but j ing of the misfortunes that had la-fallen j i,aVe it sent over on some future occasion; ' them. His last letter was a bright, cheer bow, when the steamer foundered he had I ..;ti f..ll f bone- announcing ,,,a I n.-.nn.reil lo si-cure himself to a broken spar i i.i 1 1 . i -. . -. . i i . i . . - - sent him to Dr. It with his engi neering sclieincs. as to a congenial and sympathetic soul. He therefore came wilh high hopes, aud unfo'ded his schemes several tunes w ith wearisome multiplication of details to the devoted profe-sor, when the listener's iinpa- iienee made itseir felt. I be engiuecr J coin in tied to say. "just one moment, Professor owe thing more." Finally his hearer's much tired patience show ed signs of utterly giving way, where ujton the patentee again said : I on ly want lo show you one thing more, Professor. I have invented a short method of boring mountains, which I think will prove very valua ble." "My dear sir," burst forth the wear ied listener, "if you would only invent a short method of boring individuals you would confer a lasting favor on the race." The engineer departed. " Klm... .v. . t., Ttowei. ! I,.- was now far better circumstanced than an(i aftcr forty-eight hours' exposure nau blood of all impurities, and Imparting Or Six Bottles for 15, jjrd to any address free from onserva- h th mT consult by letter, receiv I? lrifl same airontim b eollinir. bT ering the following questions: im'J e Tnnr '" anrt nost-offlee address, 'f 1 suite, and your nearest express fljwniwtiont J1rri,OI.Mn!;)(.t t S,S .' "'fit. now and In healtht I y ,nK have vou lMen iek T - 1 H """Pb'X'on.eolor of hair aim eyest 1 ke'iii -opiipinp or ereci : l.-. lK without reservation all r11 t'qnvtnlii..lthi..ilin In rlMnalni I . , r. i 1 1. tti.t w intended , 'lf' and vigor to the whole svMein. I retuniing home by the Juno, Uie mil flr.Jie tri.l mill l jnite sufficient to , . f..ii.1IT, 'w-themos, hesitating of its valuable steamer leaving MelUmrni. qualities. To crown their sorrows, a month before I hiR existed return news came that the j Juno had foundered in mid -ocean some j dozen men, among whom Alfred Willis was E 1 PER BOTTLE not included, alone surviving to tell the sad j tale. ! Wiiat a sweet relict was it w emei portal of God's house, and leave behind them the crowded streets anu listless loiterers and frivolous pleasure-seekers ! Outside all was noise, bustle and confusion ; within, a peaceful calm, broken only by the silvery tones of the aged minis ter, as in simple earnest language he plead ed a cause very dear to his heart. The Sunday service was the one relaxa tion Mrs. Willis and her adopted enjoyed ; wet or fin they were never absent ; aiwi occasions such as the present, when relief for certain purposes in connection with nltnr """"Hon. and we will eive yoa . rciion was asked for, tne .'plate was Vaifm JJL.'1 - our " and oar csouiu -- " ;n- Never. G-"inRacure. never handed Jo them in vain iNevir, t'teila,,1,1ns" hiiis attend to eorres- . ., recent experiences of tobi.."- All letteis should be addressed however, in their rweuv ; Ha-Sj nlory. iW "- iihert treet, rhila verty bad their circumstances been so low as now. Lucy for.tbe past month had H. T. HELM BOLD, been unable to perform her usual quantity Druggist and Chemist. of work, so that the wage-fund upon which Phade,Ph,a, Pa. the two women solely relied had din.mshed to a corresponding extent, until tbeir scte 4 remaining coin was the sixpence the dispo- 80LD KVERIWHEI been picKea up ny a passing finally, the difficulty he had had in finding "'ulution fee. reservation all yon . Kncloe one Vonr letter will then his mother and betrothed in their new aliodc Then, with tears in their eyes and a smile upon their lips, they told him of the dispo sal of their last sixpence, and of their con adin? trust in Him who, after a night of sorrow, sendeth joy in the morning. And truly their sorrow had passed away even as a tale that is told. Their Bargain. a boy are Iter a long Well, I never give a fellow "Your folks goue anywhere this summer?" inquired one bootblack of another at the post office. "Has your'n?" was the evasive re ply. ".Sav. Ji't what kind of yju" asked the first, pause. "Me? away." "Then, if you won't let on that my mother had to stay at home to wash for her regular customers, I won't say anything about your father, who Is tikinir his vacatien In the Work House." They shook hands over it and both will keep mum. Genius is sometimes arrogant; know ledge is always diffident. Kecoveriut Lot Timber. That timber in considerable quanti ty and ot substantial value is daily found filiating on the surface of the St. Lawrence river is well known, but that large deposits of timber lie sunken at the bottom of the river at various points adjacent to Montreal is a fact that will by no means be so readily credited. Such, nevertheless, is the case, and daily the timber is brought to the surface by gangs of inhabitants and others, who sell it to dealers. The bot tom of Longucuil bay, near the shore, would appear to be literally covered with timber, and during tUe past few months a number of men in canoes.and provided with chains and grappling hooks, have been busily engaged in bringing up the logs, floating them ashore, where they are hauled away by horses and piled for sale. The timber consi.-ts almost eutirely of white oak and walnut. It has been estimated that most of it has been in the river at least from thirty to forty years, and has formed portions of the numerous tim ber rafts that, in transit from the West to Quebec, have been wrecked or dam aged in or above the Lachinc Rapids. The length of time it would require even so dense a wood as white oak to become sufficiently soaked with water as to sink to the bottom of the river and cause it there to lie as a stone, war rants the belief that it has been there at least during the period named. Our informant states that the timler is in a perfect state of preservation, the action of the water or insects having in no way impaired its texture or affected Its value. Some of the logs brought up at Longueuil are two feet in diameter and from thirty to sixty feet in length. They command, when delivered in Montreal, from thirty to thirty-five cents per foot. Timber bets of similar character are stated to exist at many points along the river below the city, where logs like that of Lougueuil oc cur; indeed.it is difficult to know the number or extent of layers of valuable wood r-isting on the bottom of the no ble water highway that flows past that city, and which a short time only may develop. A Blftt Jam of Log;. ( The big jam of 10,000.000 logs on Carratunk Falls, Maine, is broken at last, C.000,000 logs going out at once, which was said to have been a grand sight It took sixty-five men thirteen days to break the jam and get the rear over Carratunk Falls. A por tion of the ledge was removed by blast ing. Omar Clark had a crew of fifty men in charge from the time the first log started on Moose river, then on the main river, until this time, and not an accident of any kind has happened to a man, not even the jamming of a toe. This makes 85,000,000 logs that have oassed down the river this season. Venice's great impression is its street life so brilliant, so highly colored, so unlike that ot any other city. The couiiuon-place shows of the guide-books are fiat and disappointing; the prisons, dungeons. Bridge of Sighsand so forth. The school girl glamour thrown over these places is mainly traceable to By ron's sentimental wash f verse. The unbalanced poet's judgment on the his toric events of Venice Is about as weak audyietwus as his dgniant on other matters and his ignorance of fact is ap palling. The daily picture of Venice, however. Is something of which one never tires and which changes ever with the hour. Gondola life is some thing deliciously dreamy and luxurious In the soft light of day or under the sheen of moon and starlight. Let dark night come and rain, however, and these long, narrow, deep black boats, seen mysteriously from the faint point of light on their prow take to them selves the likeness cf floating coffins steered by the shades. The effect is indescribably sepulchral. You seem to be alone in the waters of Hades among the spirits. The gondolas are all of a funeral black, with black dnperies over the dark cabin. Many centuries ago a Venetian law ordered this pattern and color, for what reason I do not know. The laws of Venice do not eh inge, and the gondolas are ail black and ghostly to this day. The streets are narrow and blaze wilh light. Their narrowness sometimes not over three leet makes a very little light serve to brilliantly illuminate them, and the j-ts iu the shop windows, kept open till late at night keep them bright and blazing almost without the out-door lamps. Through them the people surge iu constant streams all ijations, all classes, all colors. You study the world, but even the Venetians them selves present some strong contrasts, for they in time are made up of the blood of many people. One striking contrast, which you soon note, is that the Venetian men as a body are dark, their women blonde. The sounds, too, are polyglotta, and everything is inter national. It was my first sigiit, for instance, of Greek money w Inch I received several times in change. been all over the world since I first went to sea. I've been in Greenland but not at all seasons ot the year at the same time. I've been round the Cape or Good Hope a good many times. The Xiagara saw Ihe biggest suulish off the Cape that ever I saw or read about." "When was that?" "ln 1873 in IStiU before the war when she was taking the Japanese to their own country." "But the sea serpent?" "Tell him about the sea serpent, Young," Devlin replied. "We did see something very like a sea serpent, Mr. Young said. "That was on the 20th, the day before we en countered the sunfish. It appeared on the mizzen crosstrees, and it was prob ob'y thirty feet in length. Other gen tlemen besides Mr. Devliu saw it." "It was iu sections," Mr. Devliu re marked, impatient over the common place description of his friend, "like a tapeworm. I couldn't see it all at once, but each section was well, let me see ten or fifteen feet long." Yt hat was lu color?" Brown or black." Are you sure It wasn't the remains of a garbage scow?" sung one of the sailors engaged iu cleaning the brass woi k, a la "Finafore." Bring out this bottle of seaweed. Young," cried Devlin, and then turn ing to the reporter, lie said, impressive ly : "K-.-member, I'm a scientific cuss." The Ix.ltle of .-eavveed was produced. It was really a very beau til ul thing ot its kind, to beautiful in fact that it would attract general attention and ad miration in a cabinet of curiosities. There were ferns and sea berries aud minute specimens of shrimps and crabs the size of a pea and a ti-li iu size and shape very like a whi,dash. In color it was brown, purple, variegated. It looked more like a suake than a fish. "What kind of fish is this?" the re porter a-ked. "It is like a sucker alKut the head but ts body resembles a gar-fish," Mr. IKVllll said. An American Jockey. There is no dispute as to w ho is the best English jockt y. His name is Fred Archer, and his record is as follows: In 1S7S he won ii') races, out of 1! in which lie rode. This was the largest number of races ever won by a jockey in a single season, being iu excess o the total attained by Archer in 1ST" when he won 21S races, or in 1S76, when hi was successful 207 times. This year, up to August I.-t, he had wou 107 races, iu a to.itl of mounts or an average of say one-third. The extraoidmary victory of the horse 'Falsetto" has revealed the champlou ockey of America, who happens to be a colored boy wilh the decidedly Celtic name1 of Murphy. The Xew York Times contends that lie is quite the equal of Archer, and to prove this as sertion give the subjoined sketch : Mur phy's riding in the Travers Stakes race, Juiy IS, and in the Ken ner Stakes race, August 22, were the two finest exhibi tions of skill in the saddle that have been seeu in this country in many years. Jlurpiiy has a steady han I, a quick eye. a cool head and a bold heart four qualifications absolutely ueces-J ary to the success ol every jockey. I'hat he is very observant during the progress of a race, and is quick to per ceive the weak points of an adversary, prompt to take advantage of them, was signally illustrated iu the run for the Travers Stakes. Asked, son after the race, why he ent up to Harold and Jericho at the half mile, only to fall away again, he replied ell, I did not care for Jericho, but, while 1 thought Spendthrift was the dangerous jorse, I wanted to go up to Harold to see how he felt; so I tapped Falsetto with the spur one t me, went up to iheiu, fell of Harold, found him sprawl ing over the course, and saw he was out ot the race, I fell back to keep Feakes from thinking I was ai all dan gerous." was then asked how he happened to get between Harold and cannot te shown that the halls are used for any other purpose. The offices nec essary for the management could be rented for i.'100 a year. And it may be as as contended by Mr. Alderman Cotton, in the recent debate in the House of Commons, that tiiere was a great difference between gross esti mated rental and actual rents; that the income actually received by the com panics In respect of their city proper ty is considerably less than the before mentioned figure; but if the companies deliberately lease away their most val uable e.-tates for less than their real value, that is their own lookout. It dies not affect their wealth in the least. In addition to thi- they own extensive aud valuable properties in London out side the city. In St. Martin's lane, foi instance, the Mercers' company owns an estate Lady Bradbury's which is now rated at i.'i7.575 c year, and in all parts ol the metropolis they are possessed of properties ever in creasing in value. The new "IHhhus day Book" also shows that the city guilds are the owners of estates of more or less value in pearly every shire in England and Wales, to say nothing of estates producing some :0.000 a year Jin rents held by eight of the large com ! pauies in the north of Ireland. Their investments in the funds are also very considerable. We have, indeed, little doubt that ,000,000 a year would, if anything underestimate the annual val ue of the real and personal estates vested in the city companies. The Spanish Princess Pilar. It would not be doing justice to the Infanta Filar to say that she was the handsomest member of the family. She wns singularly beautiful, and in no wise Bourbon. It is no secret that her father was Capitano 1'iUg-Mollo, of the Spanish Artillery, with whom Queen Isabella consoled herself after the de sertion of the Duke de Sesto and before she made the acquaintance of Senors Manfri and IV.'nta, for her unhappy marriage. The deceased Princess had attained her eighteenth year. If the the pole ou the turn. "I didn't intend Audits color is zebra-like," Mr. to K " tl,e turn," was his reply ; "but Young added ! when we started toward the stretch. ine reporter rose to Dike his leave. ; Harold was tired aud unsteady, and he next Oieen Consort of Spain should "Before you go," Mr. Devlin said, j leaned away from the pole, and give j furnish the church with a christening, "let me tell you about the meteor we :"'- ro," to go in. 1 thought it better j the Inf.inti was to bi married to the saw on this voyage. I have seen me- l" run for the position than to have to ( ro.vn Prince of Austria ; if no chil l teors in the Grecian Archipelago ev- round him, so 1 jumped at the chance, j were borne she was to remain iu ery where raining down all round the and went between him and the rail. I ! Spain and choose a husband w ho sky, but I never saw one shout up be-! steadied my horse here a moment to j would be satisfied to live there, lore." compel Harold to cover more ground i The Infanta had a clear olive complex- "lhat is so," said Mr Young It on the turn, ami beat him good, for he , ion, regular and finely chissled feat "''.V.' JTi:.'.r."i,1"r.''"""" , ,, . very tired, and ju.-t In-fore we got ; ures, eyes dart and profound as those terru deii ", """'ii't' , "Wretch 1 le.t him aud went after j of Mile, liaehel, aud dark hair that "It started near the horizon ajnl j "-"dtl"""t-" explanation could ! might have been stolen from a pagan seemed to follow the path of the milky j -uurI'y "as ai- gouuess. ner ngtire menaced clumsi- wav, upward, upward, describing a I n:"ly ""'"y-'veii mounts this ; ness. bui not to the exieut of her molli- aemfcircle in the heavens. I never saw 'y.e;!r am!i,,i" Wl" twenty-five, besides tr's. She was called alter ai. Arago any thing more beautiful, aud I wish ! ' beat, and this is a ali)eMU.lJi.,rtMtuk)I1 that I could write, so that I might! bt"tttT E"Sl"h JOtkey I bjr ueen Ib'- J w rite about it." can show. fjjepoor girl with fearful suddenness. "It is soinetiilug for the astronomers' ., .'"." I It appears, that she inspired Prince to settle," I tevliu answered. ' "" j Kudolph of Austria with a passion. "Goodby," said the reporter. j Thanks mainly to a Metis or half : whica s!,e 'eciprocate.l. The uncer- "Goodbv, and be sure you give us a ; breed who is iu the service of the Hud- utlti' oi "er marriage tormented her. good rejort," cried a number of voices son Bay company, a Sioux warrior was i Va ne to " Empress of Austria or after him. I tound iruilu- of stealing a horse. and ! was she to be kept in .paiu to provide Mules' in Mines. condemned to pay the animal's value heirs for the throne? She would have ! bv instalments at one of the company's j readily renounced her contingent birth Colliery mules sometimes live many ; forts. On paying the last installment, 'te1"; hut jurists held that if she an years without seeing daylight, as they he received his quittance from the man jnounced her own claim to the succes are only taken out of the mines when ! who had broug'it him to Justice, aud j 8'on l,e could not prejudice the rights work is entirely suspended. The mules j left the office A few moments later J of ner children. The Infanta, without are used I u hauling cars of coal from ihe Sioux returned, advanced on his -being seriously ill, ran dowa. Sea the various parts of the mine to the i noiseless moccasins within a space of i baths were ordered, and sue went to a foot or slope of the shalt from w here it j the w riting table, and leveled i.is mus- I wateriujj pla-eon the southern shore of is hoisted to the surface by steam. The i ket full at the half breed's head. JutltheIJay of Biscay. While bathing mules go to work with the miners and ' as the trigger was pulled, the Metis i tm;'re sie wa3 e'ed with a fit of the continue until evening. They are sta- raised the hand with which he was .epileptic type which la-ted several bled iu the mi.ie and are carefully at" I writing and touched lightly the muzzle ! nol,r3 fr01'1 which she only awoke in tended to. Strauge to say, ats of . of the gun; the shot passed over his aotl'er world. The King an 1 Prin mules working iu collieres are singu- ! head, but his hair was singed off in a I l0ss of At"r'!, wilu were telegraphed larly smooth or elossv and miners at- I broad mass. The smoke clearin awav ! for' ,liJ arrive in time to see her pass away, tjueen Isabella was at her tribute it to the coal dust that seitlcsou ! the Indian was amazed to see hiseneniy the hair and polishes it. The lead ' still alive. The other looked him full eountry house reading lettei mule iu a team always carries a miner's in the eves for an instant, then quietly : t,,e ll,t"'"' had just brought t lamp attached to his cllar ; but mill- j resumed his writing. The Indian ' ,u,a"U w I"Ml ,.,"! t,'1r:" ers sav that the lami. is uniie.-es,rv as silent! v dei.arted bcinir iim.iirsi.ed : her "erea.- arrived. Ihe u:ilc the mules never sret off the track in the those who would have siveu chase be- "lutl,er was overwhelmed with grief, dark. In some places where it is not convenient to haul the cars mules are trained to push them, 2nd it is not un common to see a dozen of the aiiima.s I ng stopped by the half breed w ith, for she is most allectionate toward her !..... I l. .. 1 1 . "Go back to your dinner, and leave l""u" , am. nas aeeniy ten ner sep I the affair to me."' aration from them, notwithstanding the I Wl..... ev..,.i,,,. . r...e .!.:, 'intimacy with Pueuta and his family. Tall Fish Stories. "I was at the wheel," said Mr. Young, of the bark Kentish Tar, "some of the men being ill. It was a bright, clear day, and w hile I was enjoying the Iresh breeze which was blowing at the time I heard some of the forecabin passengers say, 'There Is a fish alongside !' Look ing out ou the starboard side I saw it lying on the water lazily sunning it self. Its eyes were open and its fins were going just enough to keep him it the top of the water. It was about six feet by fourteen, and was the finest specimen of that species of fish any of us had ever seen." "Six feet by fourteen," said the re iiortcr meditatively, trying to bring all Ins arithmetical knowledge to bear harmonizing this statement with that contained on the log. "I could not see it all at once," said Mr. Thatcher, divining t-lie reporter's thoughts, "but as near as I could make out that was about the size of it. 1 don't think Mr. Young's estimate at ail exaggerated." "I am t "d hau-' with the har poon," Mr. Young remarked, "and I generally try to keep one on hand. On this occasion, unfortunately, my har poon was on the main deck, or I could have had the fish on board." "Anything we could get with the harpoon," interposed Mr. Devlin, his talk beginning to flow as freely as the exciting cause "we gathered in the In terest of science or anybody else." "Any ssa serpents?" queried the re- 1 orter gently. "Sea serpents! I should say so," Devlin answered confidently, "I've working iu that way. Iu pushing cars ; curious to see how the affair would end the muie is provided with a heavy breast-pad instead of the ordinary har ness. The ample time the mules have for reflection does not howevei.seem to improve their dispositions, as every mining report contains accounts of men and bovs who have been kicked tod ath ihe Inlanta Paz now stands on the accompanied the Metis to the Sioux en- ol u,e l,,rone -'C"P"i fy tier sis- ean.pmeut. At a certain distante he ter r'lar- '''e is the age of the Duke bade them wait, and advanced alone to I Je Mont..cnsier's son Antonio, and in the Indian fi.its. Belore one of these hI1 llkelihood will be kis wife. Thus sal the b.itlkd savage, singing his own i U Guizotine policy of the Spanish death-hyiuu to the toin toin. He told j marriage has a fresh chance of being his friends in the spirit-land to expect ! realized. Princess Paz or Peace, is or severely injured by them. Owing to ''im that night, when he would bring '!lir a,1(J r pleasing appearance. She them all the news or their tribe. He ; was coniirine-j oy me late l ope, anu is swung nis body backward and forward 'supposed to be a Marforiy-Borbon. The a he chanted his strar.ge song, but!,irst telegram of condolence which never once looked up not even w hen ! King Alpliou.-o received was from his his foe spumed hiui with his foot. He chivalrous young I ri -n I. the Crowned only sang ou and awaited his fate, i Prince of Austria. Then the half breed bent his head and I " 1 spat down on the crouching Sioux.and j Bettinc On Saratoga Funerals, turned leisurely away -a cruder re-1 They bet on funerais at Saratoga, or venge than if he had shot him dead. i r!ll)l..r ,,, ,i, f,i , - - - v.. ..... .. aw., tru. v. I V the constant tea.-ing of the driver boys, mules occasionally become so savage that they cannot be approached. flow Adunis Handled a Muidtet. In 1777, John Adams was appointed commissioner to France, to take the place of Silas Deane, and embarked ou lioard the Boston frigate. Iu the course of the voyage, the commander of the Bo-ton saw s sail, which carried' the flag of the enemy, and the temptation to engage w ith her was so strong, that. although contrary to his orders, which Wealth of the City Companies at Lond n j tolling bell. They were sitting on the ; talcony of the States, talking about the is ; price of wheat for September delivery. The wealth of these companies simply enormous. Sir John Bennett, I when all at once the old Presbyterian were limited to carrying Mr. Adams to for he is ou the court of one, if not , bell began to toll: France, he determined, if possible, to capture her. Having obtained the permission of the commissioner, he made sail in chase; and when coming up with the enemy, he represented the danger of remaining on deck, and in sisted upon Mr. Adams' retiring below, out of gun shot. Having seen his charge safely deposited with the sur geon, the captain returned to thw deck; the courses were clewed up, all hands more of the companies said they had ' 'Ding dong ng ng, ding-dong "loads of money" ami that some of the ng ng, ding dong ng ng " companies, "like the fly in the treacle "I'll bet the age is over twenty!" pot, could not move for wealth." In said Mr. Travers, breaking the solemn the city of London that small speck in stillness. the centre of this metropolis coveting j "Two to one its under twenty-five?" barely a squ..re mile the city guilds responded Mr. Belmont, religiously, are possessed of real proiierty the val- j ..i-, no better," said Jim Keene; I ue of which exceeds half a million ! never sell what I can't deliver; but I'll year, us is evidenced by city rate books : r,.,t one hundred to fifty that it's a wo carefully examined by the present ' man !" beat to quarters, bulkheads down, deck writer. Some ot this is doubtless un- "Taken!" responded several voices; productive, for the halls or the com-! ad then all the brokers sat still and pauies are stately buildings erected at j lUteued to the tolling bell. As the bell greac expense the drapers spent near ! eame to the age and struck thirty-one. 80,000 upon theirs and covering ' Belmont paid his bet and said ; ".Vow much ground in the heart of the city, for Keene. The bell strikes one for a sanded, matches lit, and the fight begun In the midst of it, tbe captain saw, to his surprise, that Mr. Adams had es caped his confinement below, and, with musket in hand, was doing the duty oi a marine w ith irreat dexterity and coin- i are absolutely useless save tor festivi- man and two for a women." oosure. lie immediately went to him ! ties. Xot long ago the Goldsmith's ; Then came a moment's silence, and and said, "My duty, sir, is to carry you ; company was asked to lend their hall j unhurt to France, and as you are un- i to hold an exhibition of horological in- ... Koll r.n.r nut willing to go under hatches of your own accord, It is my duty to put you there;" and seizing the future President of the struments, etc., but the company re fused to grant the application on the ground that they feared the costly dec- republic ii his arms, he had him con- orations would be damaged. Much um- veyed to place of safely, and took meas ures to keep him tliere, which were effectual brage appears to have been taken at the term "shrines of gluttony," which has been applied to these halls. But it deliver. "One two!" " Keene 's got it!" said Travers. "I knew I should," said Keene; and then he whispered to Belmont. "My coachman boards at the house, and he told me the man's wife had died not twenty minutes ago. I had a sure point." so, as usual, Keene nau tne wheat to