B. F. SCHWEIER, THE 00IST1T U TIOI TEE THnOI AID TEE ESTO BOUGHT OP TEE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXIX. MIFFJJNTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 5, 1SS5. NO. 32. TaOrGHT OF THESE BT THK SBA. BTKFV. W. M ABOKKCM. 1 sw-; . ., stiii t their roar. . . o' .Tie OB IUe ueac-u oj J-c, tf, vessel, nobie uJ fr" , ib. tood on: far from the shore. of'the sand b. t"'' ,he her off, Weep her oiV well may we dr-'l When? white caps are rolling lu glee.' And tlioust the wonderful aeei, the ncli treasures tlt in il there be, ADd tbo w: 1s ho under it sleep. Howl light -house that .tiid ou 'the shore, A semis'"! to warn tbriu away Ail troni lh breakers unmerciful riiar A beafou l v uihl and by day. IU'uiM of tl" life-saving station, so near. Thr "b0 tiiriT bravery luli to ic tbo wi'.J. inirs- storms do not lear, AwiI "ui ll.e rescue!'" they go. uf lie ai; hai't so near to the strand, ';:li ho'i-es of pie.isure and bid; VI Otaitrrd and ouiered however Ibis sand such treasures aud pleasures could win. I turned aam to the beautiful sea, Iljcbi io'' 'ul musical roar, Aai ito; tht, ami thought of the tiiue imon to be. VVeL iti.Kiinds shall crowd to ita shore. oa AHoU.ic, thou beautiful sea, jiush aay, away to the strand! b.Mi en-t'lfui of the vast eternity, 'lhe work of an Almithiy hand." "HE iHKfcE BEARS. At some distance from tne high-road, i the summit of the steep hill which mis down into the sleepy little towu of lL-pUii:haui. there stands a lonelv peyboi.se. with many old trees behind md atom it. A long avenue of dark n4 stately pines leads up to the house but the great iron entrance-gates are litver thrown oien to admit visitors. Xearly eery day little Freda Leslie Musts m her wa.K, aud says to the aiirse-grl who attends her -What house is that, Bridget?" That theie's the den. Miss Freda, lowers liruiizet. "Who lives there?" "The three hears, m'.ss. The saaie liears that are in my story boot?'' "To be sure the very samel" At this po.nt me conversation usu aUycouirs to an abrupt conclusion, and the two scamper down the hill in tie direction of hnuie as fast as their to will Cam" them. Were Freda Leslie Saltshire-boru and bred, as her informant Bridget she would assuredly never have com' pieted her eicht short years without learning the sobriquet bestowed long ago by rv.j'.r county wit upon the own eisof the Den, Adam, Anthony ,and Ad rian Barre a sobriquet justly earned tymen who hunted and tithed and shot aLd rode with the zeal and dexterity oftiviues, aua who as resolutely as sr,i?es set the laws of society and con Teuliuulity at deuance, refusing any liiesis; iy v-itU their feiki-ieu, and Imrg year m, year out, a selhsn recfr tes existence, witn aims no higher than any four footed beaft. Siltsture, only too desirous of rereng &2 itselt ou wealthy men who, instead of taki:;,? their place in the country, ecose to leal a life so unprecedented, ws rife with extraordinary tales re flecting the nieiiayt of the Den. The tL-ee bears were popularly supposed to stare all their uvea's with th;-ir horses awi does, aLd to di-pense entirely with a:vj and forts, preferring to tear tLej meat to pieces with their lingers. Euuior also whispered that they cast aside ail tailor made garments when witbin do. irs. wrapping themselves in tte skins nf wild animals instead, aud UiiiLeir iiatreu ot the other sex was o deep that not even a kitchen maid w kept to wa.su dishes, the entire ork of the household devolving on au o.a maL servant and his wife who had lived with the iiarre family for many years. They were absurd stones for tie most j.art, certainly, but still with rait sufficient truth in them to obtain credence in a somewhat thinly populated country district about two Hundred miles from London lue Earre family had been uoted for geaeru.iorii in aitshire as eccentric. and these three last representatives &f lien race seemed iu no wav iuclined to w their fame in this resiiect die out 0f the brother, Adrian, the third, was Almost companionable, lu his young daS, j,en the death ot both parents Wt the trio sole masters of the Den, he Ud separated himself from Adain and mUiuLy, ai:d traveled a good deal broad, returning home but at rare In tervals, ai:d then ouiy tor a short time." tvea'.uiiy however this taste for rov R died out, and be settled down at Ien, as great a recluse as Uis ehler toothers; while Saltshire, getting tired "ttaigtbof their strange unsociable Ss, their determination to avoid ffca or re eiviij'j any hospitality, left "a entirely to themselves, till round ""tit Uiem and their dwelling there Pw up by dezrees a tliorny hedje of 1 vf1 ,bat' 413 lm;e P8 on, peo W became less and le anxitus to pen- "M,,'-her, says Freda, as, with a "Mjtative air, she rocks her doll back- ana torwaid on her jou said that there "fife left in the world now. knee, I were no and that Jw of my fairy-tales were really quite 'tis a chill October evening. The M whistles a sad low wail, wreaths to , I:list hiing phantom-like Y1-1" '"''f-clad trees, while in the WtL vr"ws every brow'n audyel-4r-- ; ev,ry red ai!,i PUT'e tarry ithm-istuie. Within the cot- fwior the fire blazes cheerily. Ten rjd w gu Un,l coaxed it into a name, let down the red curtain ttTi l?'? tlie oue window, and lit Cii ,4Pv a;J a link 8hade tue Jui ' . rt"il's mother's nimble fingers a.terwajds Mrs. Leslie herself eliri,"' brown ulster wet and Fiv- Uie f,-tt!" hair, yellow iaort-", . 1 ' "aSiug all damp and Tbere, 'tu a.K.ut her urcttv iula f jo ''".ut her t ti-.. , , J f-' s tw llU,e g.r. w(iom Mrs fcirur 8 lltm"s:c, and there was a te'tai h" kllitt?d Kloves as well n tU Jf rich UVr iaen y who lived Wt 1 "I(,e of l'PPi' Ehani, on the JfcSr",1 Md Mrs. Les- iutigWeekt iVCa 1683011 "M tW( hu ""e's birthday!" Freda anrt Vi,1U8lietried oathe toejiii!r K enran into the kitchen wlertreasuretoBndet" istdhorT ,m,!rnei, appearances "er to be very quiet, for her motners Dig desk waa opened and she sat writing busily, coTering sheet after sheet of blue foolscap with the funny iwisieu umcK letters mat t reda knew so welL By and-by that foolscap will be made into a roll or a fat letter, and it will be sent to the post office and sent to London. Njtuetiuiea the pact age comes tiack again, and then her momer looks disappointed and sad; Buiucuiues n remains, and a small let ter arrives instead, with only a few words m it- Then Mrs. Leslie smiles. aud seems bright and happy. When the small letter appears, a present a picture-book, a tiny doll, or a paper of cuucoiaie usually turns up tor Freda Consequeutly she feels she lias a vested interest in the speedy despatch of the lociscap parcel, and would not do any thijg to retard lu completion, ller interrupting question thin even ing Is quite an exception, and Derhaiw Mrs. Leslie thinks so; pei haps she re- inerouers that this small grave-eyed, soft-voiced speaker has been alone all day, save for unimaginative Bridget's company, while she herself has been tramping up and down muddy lanes and in aud out of uncougenial houses, earning daily bread for her child to eat At any rate paper and pen are pushed aside, and long slender fingers wander caressingly through Freda's tangled golden hair, while her mother says "What is that you are asking about fairies, little Freddie? Donl you know that since the world grew so old and practical, the fairies Iirvh left it and gone back to fairyland forever?" But at this Freda shakes her head. "At any rate, the three bears are here stilll" she answers triumphantly. 'I see their Den every day in my walks and when I ask Bridget if they are the same bears that are in my story-book, she says. 'Yes. the very aame.' Fancy that, motherl Do you think it is true!" adds the child anxiously. Mrs. Leslie smiles. The busy life she has led since she settled, only a year ago, in Uppingham has left her no leisure to listen to and idle tales re specting the neighbors surrounding her; and indeed she is ignorant even of their names, with the exception of three or four families she visits daily in the ca pacity of music-mistress or French governess. "I am sure, if the three bears do live near here. Little Golden Hair is not far off," she answers, falling into the quaint conceit to please the little one. "You should go and take a peep in'o their Den, Freda; but don't break the little bear's chair, and be sure not to fall when you jump out of the win dow!" Freda, gravity itself, stoops to pick up the gaudy picture-book lying at her feet. It opens, curiously enough, at a highly colored representation of the re nowned (xolden-Ilair taking a flying leap from the wide lattice, while the three bears, in frantic attitudes and attired in very tight blue-and-green jackets, lean out in various stages of anxiety to watch her. '"The Den windows are not like this one in the picture," the girl observes, in a criticising tone. "They r b'j ger and much nearer the ground, I am sure, so that I would not have to jump far if I ran awav, which I should not do unless I found that the bears were going to eat me. Perhaps when I have been to see them," muses Freda, in a dreamy tone, and speaking more to herself than to her mother, "I could go on farther into the dark wood that lies behind their bouse, and d.nd the Sleep ing .Beauty and the Dwarf's hut, where Snow white lived, and " And Jack the Glant-Iviller, and Puss in Boots, and Dame Trot's cat. and Mother Hubbard's d g," laughs Mrs. Leslie, as she closes the rosy mouth with a shower of kisses." "Oh, Freda, what a delicions little piece of simplic ity you are, and how idle you would make me If I had time to stay and lis ten to your idle tanciesl I had just such, though, when I wa your age," adds the fond mother, with a smile and a sigh, Tell me about it," pleads t reda, as she nestles against her mother's knee while the autumn wind sighs without. and firelight aud lamp light gleam soft ly on the two figures, so pathetic in their clinging attitude, their tender grace. "Tell me of the old French gar den where you used to gather herbs for the soup, aud of grandpapa s gray don key that carried Mane to market, an I about the church, and the great yellow cat, and the funny white cottage with real grapes on it, where you lived when you was a child like me, aiomer," continues Freda sitting up with sudden energy, "I cannot think why you ever eft grandpapa to marry rattier, l win never leave you never not to be mar ried to anybody 1" Large tears rise quickly in Mm. J-.es- le's gray eyes. As ine cuuu speass. the home of her early days, so often descriljed to Freda, stands out, distinct - A, . i i . as any pnoiograpn, in me uiouier s memory, a picture never to be effaced the queer remote rrench watering- place, inaccessible men save uy uoura of tedious mountain travel, where her father held an English chaplaincy ror inauv years, an apwintuieut that suit ed his feeble health and slendor means; she recalls her ow n motherless yet most appy childhood, that seemed one end less round of sunny days and moonlit nights, the joyous girlhoo that suc ceeded it, aud then the sudden crush ing blow, the unexpected disapioint nient that shattered all her early hopes, causing her consent to be ea ily won afterwards when her friends pressed ou her an ill-assorted and ha. ty mar riage, a marriage that turned out worse than ill, embittering her whole existence till death stepped in, after six weary ears, and mercifully dissolved tne union. Th loss of her father during ner first year of widowhood left Mrs. Leslie utterly alone in the world, dependent almost entirely on her own exertions for the support of herself and Fredda. chance advertisement ior uany goveruess led to her establishing ner- self at L ppmgnam; anu, ouuc mcio, her indomitable energy caused her to unturned in her efforts to keep the wolf from the door of the little home that sneuereu uei umu. During the day she taught mdefatiga bly music, French, drawing, painting- nothing came amiss to ner versatile talents. At night she wrote for the newspapers and magazines tales, verses, translations, anything that might bring in a pound to Uy by against a rainy It was a bard me, a uim-wu.u- struffsle affainst poverty: yet sne was happy happier she often told herself than she could nave ueuevwi f""""" .un th inner wearv day over, she could shut herself up in the little i cot ti.w with Freda and feel that within those four walls ay u "" I v worth living for her. It was UUJ times for she was stOI young, and the regrets of youth arc hard to conquer that a chance word, such as the child had now spoken, would bring with it an overwhelming rush of self-pity, a passionate longing for the joy that had so nearly been hers, when fata mysteii ously stretched forth a hand and snatch ed it from her grasp. She forces back her tears with a great effort, dreading lest Freda should see them. "Not to-night, darling," she says, fh answer to the child's request. "1 re ally have no time to talk or tell stories with that paper for the Lusy hodif only half done. I must fish up the villain from the bottom of the well, where I left him, and get Ladv Isibel out of the attic, which has just caught fire, in time to send off the manuscript this week, or what is to become of the new winter cloak and boots that you begin to want so badly?" "Aud of Dolly's bonnet?" adds Freda gravely, as she deposits that much bat tered representation of humanity in the muslin-covered soap-box that serves it for a cradle, aud pushes back her stool from the cheerful hearth. "You know you said that, if the Busy-body accep ted 'Lords aud Ladies,' she should have a new one, aud perhaps a red cloak as welL I won't speak again, mother till you have finished But mind you make them marry, and live happy everafter," continues Miss Golden-Hair, who is a somewhat severe critic of her mother's literary performances. "All stories ought to end like that, so that one may feel satisfied and comfortable about them when they are finished, you know!" The mellow sunshine of an autumn afternoon is streaming through the dusky pine-trees of the Den avenue, bathing their tall straight trunks in liquid gold, and falling here and there m slanting yellow rays on the silent pathway so softly carpeted with brown decaying leaves. There is a suspicion of frost in the clear air, just enough to make the scarlet jerkius of the robin redbreast look particularly seasonable aud appropriate, as they hop aliout cheerily, fluttering in their native bold ness almost around the feet of a rash intruder bent most resolutely on paying the three bears a morning-call. "Will they be at home?" That is the est ion Freda has been asking herself incessantly ever since she left the cot tage, running with all her might along the high-road till she reaches the tall dark gates, the untenanted ivy-clad lodge she knows so well. Once within tae shade of the avenue, all fear of pur suit is over, and she walks slowly, re volving her plans at leisure. Iter night from home has been par ticularly well timid. It is one of her busiest days, when she Is absent teach ing from nine ln the morning till seven at night. Bridget also had been satis factorily disposed of. She hail shut herself up in her kitchen with her iron ing directly after dinner, telling Freda that she would not have finished all she bad to do till tea time, and that she must please to amuse herself as best she could in the garden that afternoon. - Freda was nothing loath. Here was a glorious opportunity for the adven ture she had long been planning, a not- to-be-neglected chance of satisfying her burning cunosity respecting the in mates of the Den. "I shall be back before Bridget misses me, and then I can tell mother all about it," was her one absorbing thought as she buttoned herself into her little well' worn jacket and crushed her brown fur cap down determinedly on her wayward ye. low curls. That she should see real bears she, in her simple childish faith. never doubted. Nothing but ocular demonstration would ever have con vinced her of the disappointing fact that they were only men, after all, Her heart gives quite a bjund of joy when a slight gap in the pine-trees, as she nc.rs the house, shows her that the great windows on the lower floor of tire mvstenons dwellinz stand, open. and. further, that the wide sashea are only a step from the ground. "I can get in there quite easily," says Freda to herself, as she climbs the low moss-grown paling that divides the avenue from the lawn, waiting cau tiously for a few moments when she has done so, lest some apparition too terrifying for mortal eyes emerge from the enchanted building and confront her. So far however there appears to be nothing to fear. An absolute silence reigns around, a silence broken only by the twitting of the birds. Before her lies the old gray house. bathed in the autumn sunshine, one half its frontage luxuriantly clothed in the green and scarlet garb of ivy and Virginia creeper. Large stone vases filled with tawny-Ieave-i geran'unis are placed at regular distances on the broad terrace that stretches beneath tlie win dows, and there also a few pigeons coe and strut. Were it not for them and the column of blue smoke that rises fro:n one or two of the twisted chim neys, the place might well stand for a very model of the fabled palace where the Sleeping Beauty lay enchanted, sur rounded by her court. Keassured by the stillness that reign around, Freda steals softly across the lawn, creeping cautiously over grass and gravel, until she can peep comfor tably in at one of the open windows. The room into which she looks is empty the walls and floor are of dark shining oak, and there is no carpet, a few fur rugs and tiger-skins lying about instead In the centre stands a large table drap ed with snowy damask, on which an untouched meal is carefully spread. Plates are laid for three, and beside each plate, in lieu of tumblers is a mas sive silver cup. At the further end of the room an oak sideboard groans un der a goodly display of eatables a mighty roundaf beef, an uncut ham, game-pies, cr.kes, fruit, and cheese. Freda, contrasting this array with her own modest dinner of mutton-chop and rice-pudding,decides at once that such a repast can be consumed only by bears! A small cheerful fire crackles on the wide hearth, where are drawn up three luxurious arm-chairs, as though in waiting for the occupants. Ii jund the walls are arrayed sporting prints, whips, foxes' brushes, and all the usual paraphernalia of a hunting man's sanctum. The untouched meal is but a very ordinary luncheon pre prepared for hungry men returning wearied from a long day's bunting or shooting; but to the little wondering child; examining everything with fear full curiosity, and viewing each unfa miliar object the mist and glamor of her own too vivid and excited fancy, the dining room at the Den is truly en chanted ground and she herself the living, breathing heroine of a real fairy tale. "It's a rascally shame one cannot " hanl I doat baUev we get w half the pheasants we ought; and I told Macfarlane so to day. He didnt like it a bit. You're not strict enough, either, about the preserves, Adam; the beggars know that, instead of prosecu ting tnem for having a fat hare in their pockets, you'll believe any cock-and-bull story nf it having jumped in of Its own accord, and let them off scot-free. I cant see the use of game laws, for my part, if they're not to be enforced." The speaker is Anthony Barre. The three brothers, just returned from pheasant-shooting in their own woods, are seated round their well-spread table in the waning light of the October af- ternoon. doing ample justice to the viands before them. Fine men truly are the thre brothers, the two elder Adam and Anthony, gigantic of limb and stature, the youueest. Adrian, of less powerful build, but lithe and active and sinewy as a panther. Assembled there, clad in rough suita of velveteen with gaiters of untanned leather and heavy 8hooting-toots, their untrlmmed beards reaching far down their massive chests, their appropriateness of the uickuame they have earned in the country is very apparent although, despite their uncouthness, their loud laughter, their uncultured habits, ua ture has set her ineffaceable stamp of geutle birth upon them a 1. I can t help it." auswera the eldest brother, in response to the remark that t ... I. i - - . . . - Auinony nas just made. L pou my sou, I ca mot find it in my heart to be hard ou the jxN.r beggars for helping themselves, if they're hungry, to any wild creature, furrsd or feathered, thai the Almighty has made lit for food! A pheasant or a hare more or less is of no such great consequence to us, after all; and think of the spite aud ill-will one brings oneself by being too severe! Old Harcourt would never have had hfs ricks fired if he hadn't Great heavens, what's that?" He pauses suddenly lu bis speech. the brimming silver tankard be holds arrested midway between the table and his lips, his eves fixed in amazement uton one of the large arm-chairs on the hearth, over the back of which .rmear at this junction a rough aud very yel - iow mass or curls, framing a pair of large inn.icent gray eyes that are sur veying the three brothers with an ex pression of the utmost perplexity and disappointment. "Oil, please," says the intruder, scrambling down from her hiding-place and aiivai.Pi..ffith th At .w nnir ta ih. ting petrified with astonishment at this invasion of their privacy "oh, please i will you forgive me for ' coming here : like this for indeed I did not mean to ! be naughty! I wanted to see if you really were the three bears, the same as in my book. Bridge! said you were ! and, when I got here, you were out, ! and 1 came in by the window; and the supper looked so like the picture; and i enmuea into one oi the chairs and pretended to be Golden-Hair, and wait eL" The small voice is choked with a' sob which is drowned by the uproar.o... langaser of Fredas listeners; while Adrian, who has an undisguised fond- ness toi children, lifts the small tress- nasser on to his knee nri nl:.e. - hn bunch of purple grapes before ber with one Land, while with theotherhe wipes away the child's tears adroitly with his own silk handkerchief. "Dont be frightened, little one; the three bears won't eat you this time, I promise you," he whispered encourag ingly; while Adam and Anthony, great ly diverted with what they call the "pluck of the little creature," press every dainty on the table upon their unwonted visitor, and soon draw from her a full account of the circumstances that have led to her appearance at the Den. "I must eo home to mother now," she announces at leugth, sliding down from Adrian's knee, while she holds up a confiding face to his rough beard for ' - r a kiss. "I shall tell ber bow nice and kind you are not a bit like bears, but batter and gooderl "Yes, I will come and see you again some day soon; and' slipping her band coaxlngly into Adrian's "I will let the little bear walk down the avenue with nie, be cause, although 1 am not frightened, it is rather dark, aud because I Lke him a little the best, von know!" Winter is gone. A long hard winter it has been, and a damp unhealthy spri' g has succeeded it. Kound about Uppingham, just as the primroses are peeping forth from the brown earth, a low anguish fever finds its way, claim ing here and there a victim, and mak ing the householders curious concern ing the quality of their drinking-water. and especially particular respecting the coudition of their dust-bins and similar sanitary matters. It Is a wild wet evening, more like a night in January than oue in April, and Adrian Barre is seated in the library at the Den, mending a whip-lash by the light of a leading, lamp. Save for the presence of two favorite dogs, a brown dachshund and an Irish setter, which lies watching him with faithful intelli gent eyes, be is alone, for bis brothers are absent attending a horsefair in a neighboring county, and are not expec ted to return for some days. Xear him and looking strangely incongruous amidst the litter of straps.bits of leather sporting-papers, and the like with which the table is strewed, stands a china jar containing a large white hyacinth just oned into perfect bloom, its scented breath perfuming the whole room with a delicate fra&rance; Adrian himself has brought in the flower from the green house to-day, intending it as a gift for Freda. Since her first memorabla visit Miss Golden-Hair has paid the three bears many an afternoon call during the win ter, always sure of a welcome from her strangely chosen fnend3, who indeed vied with each other to gain the fore most place in her favor, and who after a time grew fond enough of the little child to await her coming with a sort of anxiety, as some change and varia tion in their rough unsoftened lives. Of late however these visits of Freda's have mysteriously ceased, and, as five weeks slip by and she still remains in visible, the three brothers comment a good deal on ber absence, and act so strangely at variance with their usual habits as actually to ride past the cot tage on several occasions, with an Idea that they may perhaps catch a glimps of the little figure they miss so greatly Xo signs of Freda however reward thi3 effort on their part; aud on this very morning, as he carries in the hyacinth on the chance of her appearance, Adrian Barre makes up his mind that be will wait and wonder no longer, but call boldly at the house, on the following day, and ask for news of the child. A ring u tae hall bell! The circum stances, un usual woiigb at any time, causes Mr. Barre to raise his bead in surprise from his employment, while a perfect volley of barks from every dog great and small, resident on the Den premises resound through the house drowning even the furv of the wind aud the rain, and rendering old Isaac's voice perfectly inaudible when, a few minutes later, he puts his gray head in at the library door. "'Tis a lady, Mr. Adrian, sir," he contrives to say, after sundry futile attempts to make himself heard. "I told her we never see no visitors here in the day-time let alone nine o'clock at night; but she was that determined. like all women, that I was forced to j ,et her have her way, She says she has I message from little miss as used to , ome here from the cottage down yon i der, and that she must see one of the masters. She be half clemmed herself. t do believe, sir, she looks so mortal bad, and she be dryin' herselt now by the hall fire." Hastily putting the old man on oue side, Mr. Barre steps out into the hall a great dreary place vaulted like a church, and so large that the blazing fire and the one lamp that Isaac has deposited upon 'the square oak table leave more than half of it still in shadow. Ou the hearth stands a slender figure clad in a black gown that falls in straight i heavy folds to the stranger's feet. The " K-nm.n,d fu.u ' -.j1 fp, .n. Id.ian a a woman's face is turned from Adrian as she bends over the fire in an 'attempt to pry the dripping fur-lined cloak of which she has just divested herself; but there is something in the grace of her attitude, the pose of the small head, that strikes him as curiously familiar. At the sound of steps behind her the stranger looks round quickly, and the two stand face to face. He recognizes her! In spite of her wasted bloom, her lost girlhood, Adrian Barre knows that he is looking now upon the woman who has always been tne one wonan in the world for him. i t"oue? iwe ve years oeiore ne new irom to,r 8,d.? fu.U f, .nd 8plte' !lo'nnK a lat of d os8!P to. P th,em: Dd without considering what he might i M, "' hlr t0 suer f"' nim, self down at home, where he has spent his life since in trying ineffectually to stamp her image out of his heart. Of course it Is she Mildred Darrell when he knew her, but Smith, Brown or Bobinson now, no doubt, with some brute ot a husband in the background. i n i reda meir cnuai ro wonuer me i 'dttle one's gray eyes and yellow hair appealed to him so strangely! Why, she was Mildred's very image Mildred as he met her first; a lovely innocent crea lure of nineteen, living her simple life in the tiny Pyreuean village where he was idling away a month or two before traveling into Spain! He has the advantage of her however If every line of her delicate pathetic fiice' hpened bj anxiety, worn with i " Z 8llently at h.erVhe LaS evldenUJ become a stranger to her. . In thf ve,be8fded1mn wh?se hair i ?'" de'l ?treaked K1? r"orT "T? , S ,ove who1dfSed hf " ,uid"l,,7 completely giving no opportunity of an explanation that wouldat once have cleared away the cloud between them, but leaving ber instead with every hope shattered and all faith in manly truth and honor gone. Possessed as she is with only one absorbing idea, one over whelming dread, Adrian Barre is to tally unrecognized by her; and it is as one in a dream that l.e stands and lis tens to the sweet familiar voice as she begins timidly "Sir, will you pardon the great lib erty I have taken in coming here to night? I am ln great trouble; my lit tle girl " She pauses, falters, then liegins again "Little Freda, to whom you and your brothers have shown such kindness during the winter, lies very ill with fever. This afternoon she be came conscious for the first time since delirium set in. She asked to see you. She is very, very weak, and the doctor says he says " Striving vainly to force the dreaded words, the poor woman looks up, and for the first time her eyes meet Adrian's. The next moment he is holding her, white and senseless, iu his strong arms. "Freda," whispers Adrian Barre sou e two hours later, as he sits, a strange visitor, beside the small bed at the cottage which contains a very frail and shadowy Freda indeed, "you must make haste and get well as fast as ever you can, for mother has promised that you and she will come and live with me when you are strong enough, and 1 am in a great hurry to have you both!1' To this Freda, smiling faintly as she elances np at ber mother, who is bend ing a very April-like face over her dar ling's pillow, replies that she will try, aud then asks "Will mother and the little bear mar ry, and live happy ever after like the good prince and princess in the fairy tale?" tain. Thl.TM in I rugumj. Cattle, thieves li the land where I raise stock," said a Montevideo cattle breeder visiting New York, "have dis covered a new and ingenious mode of dUungoishing their booty. Last au tamtv I lost several head, and half a dozen times I and my men, with the mounted polioemen, came np with the thieves, and I saw with them csttie that I knew at once were mine. My brand was on them (J. M.) and sometimes there were scars on the bodies that I knew quite wall. The animals were exactly like mine in every respect but one. Tue horns branched differently. If those on my oowa had pointed np these dropped toward the ground, and often one pointed forward and the other backward, or one toward the sky and the other toward the earth. J. Mn the drover said, were his own or his employer's initials. The cattle were certainly mine, bnt I could not bwear to them; and I waa obliged to see them taken away." "The tbieves had kept the horns wrapped in poultices of boiling hot meal until they were soft enough to be twisted and thus destroyed the cow's identity. The horns soon hardened when the bandages were removed. "I have been told that the trick was iuvented by Bossian cattle thieves. I witih they had kept it at home." A New York man baa invented a cast iron bnttou hole. He has been a mem ber of Assembly for two terius. JtjDos: "How did yon come by these fish?" Prisoner: "I hooked them." Jndge: "What nave you got to say, Mr. Officer?" Policeman: "He tells the truth, yonr honor; he did book 'em and 1 saw it." Judge: "Then why do you bring lvua hare? Discharged. Jext case Partner, far m nance. Dancing has been called the "mirth of the feet," It is the one fine art of which we have no account of its origin. There is evidence that man knew how to dance wherever there are human records; in the hieroplyphicsof the old est nations, on Lgyptian monuments. in pictures on rocks, in the most ancient writings on papyrus. The priests of Iris and Osiris danced before their al tars, the Hebrew children, when they escaped from i'haraoh. danced to the songs of Miriam, and David deuced before the ark of the Covenant. But suppose we skip history and come down to yesterday. The Jlerald wriler saw on Madison street a rubicund and jolly individual, manifestly in that state of happiness produced by libations of some thing more potent thau water. To give full expression to bis internal de light he began gyrating and dancing to the musical croonlngs of his own husky voice. There was a happy but vacuous smile upon his face, and his eyes show ed him to be oblivious to most things external. With appropriate but by no means graceful gestures he waltzed around on the pavement, holding his cane for bis partner, having no thought for himself and no care for the specta tor. Nature was thus rudely vindica ting her supremacy and illustrating that, after language, dancing is the one method by which the feelings are ex pressed, and has its origin in the con stitution of humanity. There is not an emotion that has swept the heart strings but what has fouud expression through the choregragbic art. Love, mirth, martial fury, funeral grief, re ligion, all have had their special dances, and a religious form still survives among us in that eccentric sect we call the Shakers. Among savages the glo ries of the chase, as well as the more heroic deeds of war are recouuted by means of dancing, and, besides their war dances, the .North. American In dians have their buffalo dance, the Kamtschatkans their bear dance, and the Australians their kangaroo dance For our own social dances and pan tomime and the ceremonial have long disappeared, and little remains but the love of kicking and the love of flirting. Xo one who dances a quadrille nowa days is conscious why he shuttles his feet in one way at one time and anoth er way at another time, if, in fact, be condescends to shuffle them at all. Every motion had a meaning at one time, though the key is now lost. For all that, dancing still has its uses. Is any young man short in his conversa tional powers, and, like Orlando, easily "graveled for lack of matter?" He cat; still hold bis own with the fair sex if he have but agility, a single conver sational formula being adaptable to many partners. Thus he may dance himself into the affections uf some maiden fair, though he could never have talked himself there if he bad liv ed a hundred years. How can a lady show the grace of her form so well as in the dancer lhe " ladies' chain" was invented expressly for that, and verv well does It fulfil its purpose. Mit Mtlima B3T tleir cwn peculiar dances, and we, cosmopolitans that we are, have tnel them all. lhe country dance is indigenous with us, or rather brought by our forbears from Eugland, and its hearty, social fun, its pretty figures, its availibility for any number and for all ages, make it a truly happy dance, like the chorus of a song where all the parts come in together, a hen tbere was the stately minuet dance of the eighteenth century, which we see occasionally in some old comedy on the stage. That, too, was English, and suited the English temperament. We read that at a grand ball given in Xew York on the inauguration of Washing ton, as President, and in his honor, he danced two cotllions and a minuet. We are glad to rescue from the idle worshippers such a bit as this about tha father of his country, for we have but little other evidence that he was a hu man being. We know of three occa sions on which he swore, and one on which he laughed uproariously, and these, with his dancing, must convince the most skeptical that he had some of the attributes of humanity at least. Perhaps as time goes on we will find more. The cotillion or quadrille we g'tt from France, tlie mazurka aud polo naise from Poland, the waltz from Ger many, though it oricina'ed ln France some centuries before the Germans adopted it. The German cotillion, which we call the "german," also came from Germany. This is not so fashionable as it was fifteen years ago, but it is a most seductive dance. Schil ler describes it : See bow the couple whirl along the dao.-e i bouy aitl title. And scarcei- toa-b with w.Ofre 1 teet ibe fluor ou wittcn luey untie. Oa! are they dyiii shadows, from material form set free? Or eitn shapes, whose airy r uas the summer moonbeams see f Every accessory was called in to beau tify its figures. Gay and many colored streamers and strips of tarletan floated above the beads of the dancers, while jingling bells aud exploding bon-bons kept time with the low and sympathe tic music that filled the air like a per fume. To lead the german was a post of high honor, and one who could do it well bad no other worlds of dance to conquer, it required a clear head, a fertile imagination, a graceful figure, a handsome face, a polished manner and a perfect dress. Some of our society young men possessed all these, and were heroes in their day. In the society nov els and tales of twenty years ago the hero was always a man who was unex celled ln leading the german. But the favorite movement of the cerman was the gallop, and its vivacity too often degenerated into a romp and general indecorousness, which nnaiiy led to Its banishment. The varsovienne, from Vienna, was a popular dance in the ball-rooms some years ago, but it, too, has been laid aside in favor of our modem quadrilles, the most of which now have a waltz movement in some of the figures. The waltz has long been tried, and the poetry of its motion is enticing aud seductive, but American girls can never dance it well, nor at all compete with their German and Scandinavian sisters. And the reason is that American girls feel, or at least half suspect, that some where concealed in the waltz there Is an impropnety, and this restrains them from the abandon that is essential to grace of movement. When an impro priety is felt, for that person it exists, for "as oi.e thinketh in his heart so is be." The waltz, except as retained in the quadrilles, will have to go. From Scotland come the strathspey the Highland fling and the Scotch reel, lively enough on occasion, but solemn as the grave when danced by Scotch people at the raund of bagpipes. And from Ireland the lively Jig, in which rat and Xorah try to dance each 1 other down amid much surrounding hilaritv. "Weil done, Pat," "Step out now, Miss Brady," with many varied encouragements to increased activity, constantly saiute the ears of the dan cers, aud the fun becomes contagtou, while every foot beats time to the music and the dancing. From Spain coiues the fandango, w ilh bells, and clicking castinets, aud jing ling tambourines. This is a love dance full of beauty and grace, but no more adapted to our morals or climate than that of the autch girls from India. We can just bear to see it on the stage. and that is all. ln fact, we have to be a tritle bald-headed eveu to do that. The polka, the gallop, the va!e deux temps, the Newport, are all in vogue and help to euliven and variegate the programmes or dancing assemblies, and beautiful enough they are when joined in by bright-eyed, merry maidens and not too solemn young men. But f r some young, people dancing Is a very serious affair, and these we would ad vise to leave their dancing pumps at home. Then there is the French improve ment on all dances, from the Jardin Mabille to the high-kickiug can-can. Aimee and opera bouff a have fully de monstrated to the American audiences all the possibilities of that lively salta tion. But 'few of the importations have ever become acclimated, and for real amusement and enjoyment old and young among us still prefer the square and country dances, the "lancers" aud the "Virginia reel." "Moneymusn" is as potent now as ever, the "pigeon wlug" is not eutirely effete, nor the "double shuihV extiuct, and the people who cherish these can never be come entirely bad. i'oinfort In Ore.. A woman, of course, but one w ho has been admitted to tlie confidence of the charming English actress Ellen Terry, says that in all probability there is not a woman of the hitter's promi nence that dresses like she does, ami yet she gives no thought to her dress. She wears what is comfortable to her. and she thinks of nothing but comfort. People who do not know her Imagine that, being one of the leading actresses of the world, she dresses in the most ex pensive and gorgeous style; that she wears nothing but thepayest Paris bats and the most dainty Paris boots. Ou the contrairy, she has hardly a tiling that ever saw Parts: certainly her hat and her boots never did. She has worn the same hat for the two seasons that s?e has been in America; and although she has been here in the winter both times, her bat is a little brown straw turban with a brown veil wound around it. Sometimes she pins a bunch of nntural flowers violets as a general thing in the side of her hat, and for gets to take them out after they are faded. She likes this hat because it is linht she says her head Is always hot and because she can pick it up and put it on, and take it off and Llurow it sown PU the floor or tlio luauur ur auy where, and not bother about it. As a rule she likes to pull it off the first thing when she comes in the room, and to run her fingers through her yellow hair, which stands up around her head like a halo. Her shoes have not the commonsense recommendations or her hat. They are pumps, s-.iys the female friend referred to, that she bought for the stage, with a great high heel in the middle of the sole, aud the toes sharp ened off to the finest point. They are made of stout leather, and ornamented with a big steel buckle. She wears these low sh3 summer and winter, but she says they are the most comfortable things she ever had ou her feet; that before she ever wore them, she used to wear"common-sense" I shoes, made with great attention to the anatomy of the foot, and she never had a minute's happiness In them. When she played Olivia she bought those pumps as a part of her costume, aud they were so comfortable that she has never worn anything else since. No one could deny that Miss Terry was the most strikingly dre.sed person in any room; but I venture to say she would be the moat inexpensively dressed. She has her gowns made of anything that strikes her fancy, whether she sees it in a drygoods shop or au upholsterer's. The stuff is the thing she looks for, without regard to the dictates of fash ion. H Ktwtd it Vj. They have a fighting dog in a saloon on Michigan avenue, mey not oniv keep him to fight any dog ln the State for spot caah, but he furnishes a heap of fan to hangers-on by the way he picks up such canines as happen to drop inside at the heels of their masters. It is a poor week when he doesn't crip ple three or four, and be has killed several outright. The other day a rongbly dressed man. carrying a whip ib his hand and looking like a callous handed son of toil, entered the place aDd called lor beer. He was followed by a broken-hearted dog of re pec tabid size, and as soon as tbe loafers caught sight of the canine there waa much winking and chuckling. "Better send that dog out, suggested one. "Is it agin the rales of the house?" "No, bnt he'll get chewed up." "I don't see anything likely to do it, though be ain't no fighter." "There's a dog in the back room which can snake him out in ten ticks of the clock," said tbe bartender. "Wall, I dunno. P'raps be .eight and p'raps he might'eut. William Henry alius kinder manages to squeak along somehow." "Would you have any objections to my bringing in my purp?" "No-o, 1 guess not, though I never encourage dog-fighting." The saloon fighter from the head waters of fighting creek was untied and ushered in. William Henry was half asleep iu tbe center of the room, and the first thing be knew he was rolled over and over, and something had hold of him by the throat. It was a fleeting grip, however. The fighting dog seemed to get bold of something to dis courage him and he let go and began sceeziug and coughing. Then it was lliiam Henry a tnrn and he sailed in. ln three minutes' time be bad run the fighter ont doors and across the street and wonld have killed him in the gutter if pedestrians had not interfered. Say, stranger, how was it done?" asked the bartender as be picked up the remains to carry ti eta in. "WelL William Henry hain't no great flirhter, as I told you before, and to kinder help him out I lue-l about a pound of nulf around the vital parts. irs awioi good icr fleas and it sorter even up put-op thing ! NEWS IN BRIEF.. Camels sometimes live to the ag of 100 years. British railways carried oSo.COO.Oul passengers last year. The bee, it is said, can draw twent y times its own weight. A professor of natural history says auimals freqaeutly cry. There is an almanac in the British, Museum Suoo years old. The averaae duration of life in Kussia is only 26 years. Over r2."i.0JO Pamirs receive pub lic aid in Paris annually. The bankinsr capital of the United States to-day is jTiy, 000,000. Twenty-live incorporated cities dot the map of Xew York State. Nearly half the American sailing ships are named after women. There were about l,o0 steam ves sels in the United States iu 1?47. TLe leather product of this country reaches SJu0,0 i,uoo per annum. The aliushou-e at Orleans, Mass., has closed tor lack of patronage. A rich vein of itold is reported to have been discovered in Fannin county, fia. The number of scholars enrolled in the United States is placed at 11 000 - ooo. It laiuuioied uovv that Emma Ne vada will marry Dr. I'almer, her mana ger. The free lunches iu New York sa loons are said to cost U,Su0,fJ0 annu ally. The greatest height of an ocean wave is said to be .'So feet above tho level. Oue of the most successful dairy owners of Sierra Valley. CaL, is a wi iroaii. lhe total length of the submarine cable now in use is quoted at 0S,00O miles. The total number of recognized swies of Australian fishes now reaches l,2fl. There are in England 157 ragged schools which are attended by .Vt.OOt' children. Color blindness is said to be many times as common iu the male as in the female. Moody, the evangelist, is getting so fat that his couditiou is an inconveni ence to him. A gray worm, about au inch lonii. is destroying the corn crop lu parts of r onua, N. 1 . Nearly OiKO.OOO shad have been hatched at the Connecticut State hatch ery this season. There are 2."o disabled ex-Coulexler- ate soldiers living iu the poor houses of orth Carolina. The publishers of General Gnnt's book have already received over l'J,00 orders for the set. The total product of copper of the Lake Superior mines for lS&i is estima ted at 0o.C0"w pounds Tea cuitute iu Cevlou is making headway. Tbe crop this year Is esti mated at 3,5(10,000 pounds. Ellen Terry's visit to this country has had considerable effect upon the styles in American dresses. ' Comparatively little mouey has been made this season by the Southern mack erel fleet, hailing from Gloucester. Mass. Missouri employed a total of IX- J"J0 school teachers last vear, and the average salary per month paid them waa H7..o. Kepre.-eii tatives of three feneration- of the bride's people were present to wituess a recent marnaee in New York. Tueopiniou is expiessed by a Ca- nadiau physician that fifty per cent, of all diseases arise from the use of stimu lants. The Kim; of Bavaria has given a donation of X 12 towards the funds of the German Teachers' Assignation in England. Tbe suriiuiiies of three candidates runMiig for an office at a recent election in Clayton county, Oa., liegin with tho letter "K." A lightning expiess,at Afhenia.N. J., a few nights ago, struck and killed a man whose widow lost her first hus band by lightning. Fruit trees are so heavily laden in places on tbe Pacitlc coast that hund reds of lalwrers are kept employed thinning out the fruit. Last year ffi.70'2 volumes were withdrawn from the public library of Paris, an increase of IS5.-475 volumes over the preceding year. Oaken pillars have been decided U be better supports for abuilding in case of fire than iron, the Litter being liable to Warp from the heat. Tlie pendulum of the uew clock in the Chicairo Board of Trade building weighs 750 pounds. The dials are ten feet ten itches in diameter. Ill feeling nas Deen caused in Indi anapolis because foreign, ii:stead of American, marble has been seleoted for the floors of the State House. The population of Macon, Ga.,was 12,000 according to the United States census in 1SS0. and is now 2.".,oOO ac cording to tlie directory census. Prof. John II. Hewitt, of Balti more, Md., aged 8t, is named as the oldest living graduate of West Point. He belonzed to the class of lcl. Wires and bars are sow produced direct from fluid steel by pressing it out through dies in a manner similar to the production of lead pipes from lead. An Oregon man has hollowed out the stump of a huse tree in the fashion of a rootn, cut a door and windows in it, and has there taken up his abode. There were 2o,3!0 house built iu London and the suburbs in 1SS2. form ing 5o8 new streets and one new square. and covering a distance of 75j miles. A rare book ou a subject local to Herefordshire (from Eail Conirgslv'a "Col'ection"), sold in London for X'3o0 in l!n. Lately the same book went foi l'J. A check that was draw n in 1S32 was presented for payment at a Hart ford, Conn.,bank recently. The holder of the check had laid it aside, and iu time forgot all about it. The silk worm culture in Hawaii is stated to have been almost wholly abandoned in consequence of stringent unuay laws winch prohibit the gatb- enng of mulberry leaves or the feeding of the worms on that day. Bulterine Is imported Into England in vast quantities. During the first four months of this ye.ir 5S2 ,000 worth was imported, chiefly from Hol land, Belgium, Denmark and France, I