PfclPJWi'-Ari'jiA'- f v A Jylx(j wiP wty ww B. P. SOHWEIER, THE OOISTITUnOI-TZS UHOI-AID TKL OT010E1CIIT 07 TEE LAYS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XLT. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. MAY 25, I8S7. NO. 22. ''e a. n.; a. ru' m is s I Ja ill iers t M au VOi JUT ill ts c IE. i i ua.. lilllc -4 P j P .'2p II ? -lei ' V 4 i 6 ; J "! rt an )W risv 65 u, - m, 3 O'J p 25 , in, i EDJ rone 0 & D mviil. one :tce ( txx Tj-r at ti u. i unti' IJibj; Hon id C SBC- t ouna . i. 2 c it Al i. ii : . and ilfl'jf- oyal atall id S . , 15L ;seri:..-i worked piiy I -l;t to McIU ; Before the Gate. They gsre the whole long day to idle laugh- To fitful son ft and Jest, To moods of aoberneM as Idle, after. And silences, as idle too as the rest But when at last upon their way return ing, Taciturn. ltr.H Through the broad meadows in the sunset burning. They reached the gate, one fine spell bin- uereu mem Doll, Her heart was troubled with a subtle an guish Buch aa but women know That wait, and lest love speak or speak not lanzuisb. And what they would, would rather they wouia not so ; Till he taid man-like, nothing compre- ueuuiDg Of all the wondrous guile That women won win themselves with, aud bending Eyes of relenuess asking on her the wmie "Ah, if beyond this gate the path united Our steps as far aa death. And I might cpen it!" His voice, af frighted At its own darinp, faltered under his Dreai-u Then she whom bath his faith and fear enchanted Far bevoud words to tell. Fenline her woman's finest wit had wanted The art he had, that knew to blunder so we;i Shyly drew near, a little step, and mock ing, Shall we not be too lata For tea?" she raid. 'l'm quite worn out with walking; Yes, thanks, your arm. And will you open toe gate? . PYR AMI'S AND T1IISDT. "Papa," 6aid Thisby, only daughter of Jonathan Smith, to her father, who sat in his library one Sunday morning engaged in reading, "why do you have that awful high fence between our yard and Brown's? What taste! a hedge on one side and a board fence on the other! ), papa, do l-ave the horrid thing re moved." Jonathan Smith made no reply to his daughter's remark; he bunched his chair, however, and tightened his hold upon the paper he was reading signs of impatience ever but otherwise remain ed heedless. "Papa," continued Thisby after a pause, "do vou hear me shaking to you?" Jonathan Smith lowered his paper so that he could see his daughter's pretty face over it, and glared at her like a country justice at an innocent unfortu nate, and the tone of his voice as he addressed her was in the not-to-be-qus-tioned key. ".Never mention Pyranius Brown to me," he said. "Brown and I are out: I have shut him out, and out lie shall remain. Brown!" he continued, rising and flourishing his paper on high; "the man who called me an old Presbyterian hypocrite in public too. Think of it! calling a man of my standing a bank director, a deacon ot the church of God, and only just turned sixty-live such a name as" that. Ah, Thisby, there are wrongs the spirit of Christian meekness and forbearance will not endure. And yet," he continued, resuming his seat with the air of one who has been falsely accused, and is now triumphantly vin dicated; "I will forgive him the injury; it would be unchristian to harbor it, and God knows I am not that. But X want him away, removed out of my sight; I do not wish to look on him nor his." "What paper are you reading, papa?" said Thisby in an arched tone of iuqui- .'?The Christian itbsereer. my dear." ' ""And are those Christian observa tions you have just made?" she asked, elevating her eyebrows aud canting her head saucily. "What!" exclaimed her father, in astonishment, "Hum!" said Thisby, as she turned on her heel and quietly left the room, followed by her father's look of Wank amazement. "This is a pretty state of affairs." said Jonathan Smith to himself. "My own daughter catechising my Christi anity. It was never questioned before; never, except by Brown, and he shall pay dearly for it." He remained for some time meditating as how he lest might pour coals uioii the head of the foul calumniator inhabiting the territory beyond the fence. His thoughts resulted to no purpose; so to relieve his mmd he resumed his paper. "But I say unto vou, love your enemies," was the first sentence his eyes fell upon. "Why," he mused, "is that diyiup pxurtation thrust before me at this particular mo ment? Am I wrong?" ...... Left with the inquiring spirit of his own conscience the unseen angel that speaks in faintest whisper to one alone, vet heard above the cavilings ot selfish ness and fate, that thereby virtue may not wholly die it questioned him: "Are vou rigid?" and he answered: i'A.m 1 wrong? Mother calls me a fool ish man; Thisby 'hums' In my face, and Brown, well, the matter doesn't seeni to trouble Brown much. I will reflect; perhaps I'm wrong and there may be a better way." Thisby on leaving her father went where her curiosity led her. And what was now more curious to her than the barrier which had been erected between htr father's grounds and those of neigh bor Brown's? It was the first object, that attracted her attention on her arrival ie day before after a protracted ab sence at "Kb it had furnished th? wbiect of her first conversation with her father on the day following; and Savin" learned its history, it became the present object of her curiosity. There it was a long, high, solid struc ture running from the street, back, the whole length of the spacious grounds. It was looked the personification of dis- eyes. JSShite Sue could sW but the even, f without cap or ornament yv kind -and the supports whatever ?.fLe must have beet, attached to Ibey w nntKJSlte Side. Mie wauveu iyuB . . . .. 11.... CsMe it, looking first up. then upwn, P . ! iist-iouslY tor some yana- pva in the monotony of continued same- Ivhat was the spot she saw before Jl just below the eyel of her licit a .- nii imr o limn LU ---- . . . . r,pad? " was n? r,n " i w. a knot had si runs, aim iicu yu, aiS.ml wWn she reached it. SflJS knd looked about; then used Sa tb revet for one moment " hT-leasure of an antic.panon; for tad resolved as quick as Qash to Sfv throuk aiid sep What prefiiii.es tl wful" Srowu inhabited. ExpecU ,,aw.fu.l... -miilit and played upon , Kuntnce as she leaned forward v "A iered through. ne, too " t I ' " . . - i . or the trunk of one, with a rustic bench against it; and then, to her astonish ment, a man comfortably seated there on, whom she imagined to be none other Brown "the calumniator." Yet there was nothing villainous in his appearance; rather the reverse, for he was young, handsome, and well dressed; with a exst of countenance indicating a predisiosition to virtue. She had seen enough, however more than she ha l expected so she turned and wandered away; but wherever she went, whether to pluck a flower here or to admire one there, for some unaccountable reason she kept in view the lonely hole in the wilderness fence. The morning was so beautiful, the surroundings so pleasant, and TuLsby's heart so full of youthful joy that care less time engenders, that as she arran ged the flowers she had gathered into a bouquet she began singing snatches of familiar songs. Simultaneously with the first note the figure on the rustic bench showed unusual signs of anima tion and interest. The man arose, took a step forward, listened a moment, then exclaimed: "As my name is Pynt mus iirown, a woman's voice, and a sweet one, too." He started in the direction whence the voice came and a few steps brought him to the fence. "What a wall!" he said, "higher than a citadel's, ill scale it. Jo, here 1 may look througlu" He bent down and peering in, saw Thisby, who liad just finished the bouquet and tied it with a ribbon from her hair, coming in his direction. When she reached a point opposite him, she stopped , aud stood a moment irresolute, then turned and stepped lightly towards him aud, as she stooped to take another look before going in, eva met eve through the apereture. "Oh!" exclaimed Thisby, starring back. "Ah!" sighed. Tyramus, leaning the fartlier forward. "It s a man:" said Thisby, clasping her hands, dropping her head aiid blushing. "Yes, it is a man; but don't be afraid," returned ryramus, assurinjily. "If this fence were out of the way, I might explain matters." "Indeed!" replied Thisby sarcastic ally; "when vou were the cause of it." "Me? Sot I?" returned Pyrainus firmly. "Your name is Pyramus Brown Is it not?" "Yes." "Well, my father just hates you!" "Hates me? 1 have never met your father. It must le my father he hates. I am Pyramus Brown, Junior." "Oh; is that it?" replied Thisby in a tone of apology. ''Yes, you would not visit my father's sins on my head I hee?" "Xo o," replied Thisby, Imitating. "I will have this fence removed at once," said pyrainus in a voice ot aur thonty. "Oh, will you? It would make me so happy." "les I wnl," replied Pyramus; "and whatever imaginary fence stands be tween vour father's mind and my fath er's, cleared away also. The idea of neighbors fencing each other out in this way! Don't vou think it foolish?" "Yes I do," replied Thisby. "There is father calling now. I must go." "I hear no one," said Pyramus. "Don't you hear a voice calling This by?" "Ah! that's your name. Well, This by, meet me here at this time to-morrow, and we will arrange a plan for removing this fence." "I will try," Thisby replied. "And give me those beautif ul flowers as a pledge that you will surely come," said Pyranius. "Oh, no; I can't do that," replied Thisby. "Here comes papa now. " "uick!" said Pyrainus laughing, "toss them over or I will cry out: Smith, Smith!' at the top of my voice." "Well, take them," said Thisby, throwing the bouquet over the fence and hurrying to meet her father. "Ah, there you are, my dear," said Mr. Smith. "Come, you must get ready for church. What have you found to amuse this morning?"' "Lots of things, papa; the fence for one." "Yes," he answered cautiously. "And what a fence it is," Thi-by continued. "Yes." said her father; "very well built. Saws did a good job on it." "Aud Mr. Brown has such beautiful grounds. I saw thein through a hole in the fence. "I'll have it covered this very after noon." said Mr. Smith firmly. "To-day is Sunday, papa," "Well, the first thing to-morrow, then," replied Mr. Smith. "Oh yes, papa; aud 1 saw Mr. Brown, too, aud he Is such a nice gentleman." "What!" exclaimed Jonathan Smith in amazement. "Hum!" said Thisby quietly, as they entered the house together. The next morning Pyramus sauntered about his father's grou: ds for some time, finally depositing himself in the rustic seat, in which Thisby had sq un espeetaHy discovered him the day be fore, lie settled himseir in an easy posture and contemplated trie huge fence before him. The result of his delibera tions was the following sage opinion which he delivered with considerable vehemence: "That fence will never stand against a strong wind; never if the pqsts are loosenet)." The tin e had now arrived for Thisby to meet him at the hole in the fence, to which he repaired and jteered ttiroush, anxiously. There was Thisby wander ing aimlessly alxmt. He thought she was a verv beautiful girl; which indeed she was. He thought ht-r the most beau tiful girl iu all the world; which indeed she was not. The latter opinion, how ever, unfounded, was ardouable; for it was caused by a very commendable prejudice, the bias of a youthful admi ration; besides, it was influenced by a half-informed desire a desire that she might be his. and being his, what beauty could be more beautiful? What kin or prince, with all that money buys and royalty purlqins, holds m the crimson casket of his wealth a geqi a tenth as beautiful, a hundred phrt as valuable as the sweet and tender object of a good man's love, be she in form and feature what she may ? "Thisby,'? cried Pyramus, In a very small voice. . ' , , , , Thisby, on the alert for the slightest sound, heard the call and hastened to ward him. ' "Is tills yoo,llr. Brown?' she in quired, timorously, fearful that it might be some pthtr body. "Yes, it's I," replied Pyramus, assu r'ngly, 4andlhave been planning all the morning how to get the fence down." "Have yoa fond a way?" asked This- bv. "Yes," replied Pyramusi "but it will require your to-o-eratlon, aud It needs a great deal of explanation. May come over and tell you all about it?" "Oh. no, no." replied Thisbv, "that would never do." "Then meet me at the fountain at this afternoon." said Pviamus. "There can be objection to that, can there?" "I don't know," replied ThMy, doubtfully. "Just look at this fence," said Pyra mus, "a thing of beauty; a monument to neighborly love and friendship to be perpetuated always; and then say whether you will meet me." "I will," replied Thisby, desjieratelv. "Some pledge please," said Pyramus, laughingly; a flower will do. "Earn one first," said Thisby, as they separated. Pyramus and Thisby met that after noon punctually at the time and place agreed upon, and each afternoon there- alter until Saturday came. 1 lies were very pleasant meetings, having a flavor of novelty and romance, and they both came to look forward to them with no small degree of happy anticipation. A very agreeable acquaintance sprung up from their daily association, wherein each related to the other the strong points iu his or her biography and ex changed opiu:ons upon various subjects, generally wuh astouishtng unanimity or if anv sheht difference arose it was easily adjusted; and futthermore, each came to notice and admire some espe cially beautiful quality in the other, and each was convinced that a true and lasting friendship had arisen. Thisby was chiding Pyramus that a week had almost passed, an 1 that with all their planing the fenceTstill stood Pyramus blamed the wind, that it had not blown strong enough nor in the right direction, but vowed that wind or none, upon that very night the fence sjio'ild fall. The ninht was dark. Beside the lui.rlilv faun. vt-O.,11 tllA limir4 CT and 10 might have been seen a solitary fiiTin-o iniliwtrimisl v nlviiiif nick and spade. The task was a hard one, but the wiiul which had increased to a moil pinto r:il aiKftp Rundown se.'-nifd t( encourage the lone laborer, and when by repeated efforts it swayed the iosts around which he was digging, ha passed on to the next and continued his work there. It w:is lil n'lr,ck and Jonathan Smith sat alone in his library. It had always been a pleasure to him on Sat unlay night to recapitulate the events of the six days past especially when they had been a source of worldly profit, and to look forward to an equally or more prosperous period to come. rti tliU t. irt w-nlar S:itnnl.iv nifrht his face was clouded by the shadows of trouble and annoyance. L pon ocm. in- air tottor i-or-eivpd durin? the Week. The last which he had just ojiened and read, was couched in the following terms: "Love thy neighbor (Brown) as thy self." There is no offense like a high fence that rears its presumptuous top with brazen effroutery into tl:e sacred ;trecincts of heaven, ti,o nttira u-xrn it similar imnort. . iiu - y ' v t - - but appeared to have been written by - . . T .. .-, inerent persons; lor ijiamus, ad been noted at college for cleverness 11,1 varietr in tienuianship. Sinirly time itiil i1i-.nl! v execution to the neace and happiness of Jonathan Smith; col lectively thhey formed a whole battery which no mau of a proud or sensitive nature could withstand. "I wouder who they are," he said, 'that condemn me in this matter. Can it be that the whole neighborhood, the whole town secretly arraigns my con duct and look upon me as one who malicious y wrongs anotherV This must not be, I would to G d the fence were down." At tliat moment he heard a crash outside. Half frightened he started from his chair, hastily donned lite hat, and jiassed out of the house to ascertain what had hapieiied. "The fence is downl Beh dd my prayer is answered!" he exclaimed in a voice that seemed to lift a load of trou ble from his heart and scatter to the wind. "Who is that?V cried a voice from the other yard. 'My name is Sinith, sir? Who are you?" "My name is Brown, sir!" "Oh hem I have met considerable damage here, Mr. Brown. 1 see the w nd has blown my fence down." "And a very strong wind it was," replied the elder Brown, "you must needs set the posts deeper next time." "I don't know as I shall rebuild it," said Smitlu "I don't believe we ex actly peed a fence here. Do you think we do, Mr. Urown?- "Xo, I don't," was the reply. "The fact is. Smith, yo and I were both a little warm, when we fell out about nothing worth mentioning. Iet's shake hands and declare the fence off." The two elderly gentlemen standing ujon the fallen structure, grasped eacli other by the hand cordially; aud there was peace between them, as they passed into their respective residences. Shortly afterwards two figures emergtd from a vine-clad arbor near by, convulsed with smothered laughter. "It has terminated more happily than I had ever dreamed of," said Thisby. "How well it has ended," said Py ramus "good friends and no fence. Ah! Thisby, the folly of such actions! That people should impale the sacred spots of earth that friendship's morning suu may not shine therein and make them beautiful. And do'yqu Uncw, that sorao build barriers around the heart, that love's light, that makes it blossom as none other can, most unkindly is debarred? Ah, Thisby, you will not build a fence around your heart, lor 1 love you and would enter." "Yes I will," said Thisby, "and a great one high one, too, to keep every body out. But there will be a place where you may look through and see me gathering flowers " "For ii e," pleaded Pyramus. "Yes," said Thisby softly as she bent her head and the roses blossomed in her cheeks, "lor you.'! poir CalllbrnU Was Sanded. The eminent Jesuit writer, Don Joseph Cambol, has said that when Cor fez left the Bay of Santa Cruz he went t. nf the peninsula as far i.--t fana Kf. Tsiiftjw; that there he found a beautif uJ small bay, and on the southern' extremity thereof be saw, an immense arched vault in the TOintcj rocks that form the bay, wwJUt fw this rasouW caiJed tne bay Oalaif or-, nix. By analyzing" this name we will find that "Cala" means small bay in Spanish, "1" is the conjunction and fornix" means arched vault in Latin. " Expect not praise without envy untn require tour cooteration. and it needs OD STOillES OF THE PRESENT her had taken the utmost precaution I She Miaht For. nim. f rn?4nrrvA prava I GOOD STOIUES OF THE PRESENT DAY. Ibe Sea Has Iu Mysteries, and Some of Them are Nerrr Solved. The sea Is of itself a mystery, but the mysteries of the sea are many and deep, and are added to each month. A ship's boat, from which the name has carefully been obliterated, and which holds the emaciated bodies of two men who have starved to death, is picked up in the Pacific to-day; to morrow Cunarder crossing the Atlantic reports seeing a sailing ship bottom up; next day a derelict schooner sails herself into some port In the Caribbean Sea, and nothing can be learned of the crew who manned her. And it may be that on the next some great steamer leaves port on her voyage to Europe and is never to be heard of more. As an old sailor, I have had the luck to en counter some of these strange things, and I will relate the incidents without exaggeration. In the year 1SG1 1 was mate of a brig called the Henry and William, sailing between San Francisco and the Sand wich Islands. She was a small, snug vessel, a fast sailer, and the Captain was William Lansing. He and bis brother Henry were the owners, and the brig was named after them. Just at daylight one June morning, in the year I have mentioned, while we were 300 miles from the Islands, a schooner was sighted dead ahead, we bad a fair breeze over the starboard quarter, and the schooner cad all sail set, and was making good progress. Sails were not an unusual sight on that route, and we gave the stranger little attention until we found that we were overhaul ing her. She was exactly on the true course to the islands, an J we were therefore in ber wake. She was hull down when we first discovered her, qut by the time we had washed down and breakfast had been served she was not over two miles ahead. There was some smart schooners flying in that trade, and the fact of our outsailing this one so tandsome'y put us all in good spirits. We were humming along after her at moe or ten knots an hour. when she kuddenly came up into the wind in the most lubberly fashion. shivered there for a moment and then broached to and was driven o3 before the wind sideways. It was lucky for ber that the breeze was no stronger, fjr the schooner was light and tho aiovement would have brought disas ter. As soon as I saw the schooner in trouble I seized the glass and ran half way up the fore-shrouds, and it wasn't a minute before l made the discovery that her decks were entirely clear of men. At this hour of the morning both watches should have been on deck, but not a sailor was visible. This was an unheard of occurrence, but, as she bad no siznal of distre&i flying. and stood too high In the water to have been abandoned for a leaking vessel, l could hardly credit my vision. I looked aqain and again, examining every foot cf Lor docks, but it was a plain fact that not a living person was in sight. I reported the matter to the Captain, and by that time we were so close aboard that all our crew could note the condition of things with the naked eye. Our ship's bell was rung. and the men shouted in chorus, but nothing came of it. It was then de termined to board her, and, as the brig was laid to, I went oS with three men in the yawl and was soon at me stranger's side. I was burning with curiosity at the start, but the nearer we approached the stranger the more curiosity ga,ve way tq awe and f&ar. There bad been some terrible work aboard of her, or she would not be in that condiliou. Had a malignant fever taken off the last of the crew, or was it mutiny and its ghastly consequences. I bad expected to meet with some shocking sight, but was disappointed. The decks were free and passably clear or raffle. Some of the colls had fallen oS their belaying pins, and I could see at a glance that the decks bad not been washed for several days, but aside from this I could detect nothing out of the way. The scuttle was drawn over the forecastle entrance and bolted. My first action was to open this, and the i ush of air told me that the forecastle had not been ventilated for several ays. Seizing a capstan bar which leaned against the anchor windlass, I oounded smartly on the deck aud called out to know if anybody was be low, but no answer came. The man with me, who was an old salt, grew so nervous that he would have returned to the boat but for my positive commands to the contrary. As soon as satisfied that the forecastle was clear of men 1 felt that the schooner was deserted and we at once lowered away the sails. This checked ber drift, and the brig turned on ber heel, and came down close to us again. The next point tor inspection wai the cabin. I went down alone, and in two or three minutes was satisfied that it bad no occupants, living or dead. There was no disorder no sign of haste or plunder. I was sniffing the air as i moved about, ana x coum ae- tect no odor to prove that an epidemic had raged. When I went on deck the brig was within speaking distance, dritting at the same pace as the schooner, and I informed Capt. Lansig of the state of affairs and sent th0 boat to brine him over. When he came we descended into the forecastle and ligh the liap, Thee was plenty of oil in it; proving that some hand bad turned out the light In the usual way. We then went to the cabin. Everything appeared as if the officers had simply gone on deck, except that there was not a single article of wearing apparel. This was likewise true of the forecastle. We looked for the schooner's log, but it was gone, as also were her papers and charts. We rummaged the cabin for half an hour, but found nothing whatever to enlighten us. Her name ought to have been on the stern, but when 'the boat was ordered to pull' around ber bo name or vessel or port was found. It had not been scraped or painted out recently, but as far as one could judge she had not carried a name for years. Then we made a search ' alone the decks. She had no small boats at alL Xot even an initial letter was painted or stamped on anything. ' We sounded the well, and found ber dry as a bona. We pulled off the bat'he?, and found herinsan4 bllajL She had plenty of fresh water ail provisions, and in the cabin were six muskets and plenty of ammunition. Onr inspection and investigation las ted three hours, at the end of which time we were no wiser than when we ban. Here vn a stawB.'-tlgtt schooner picked tip In mid-ocean with all sail set. These who bad absvodoaed her had taken the utmost precaution that she should not be indentified, but ror mat reason we could not even eon lecture. Here was a lump of salvage ior us worth looking after, and Cant. Lansing determined to take her to the islands. We hadn't an extra man on the brig. Indeed, we were one short of our complement. We had there fore decided to take a tow line to the brig and bang by her at least while the weatner was safe, and n id begun our preparations, when an "ox eye" or squall was seen gathering down In the south, and we had to hurry aboard the brig to make all snug. The squall hit us fiercely, and lasted nearly half an hour, and when we came out of it the schooner had turned turtle within half a mile of us, and the prize had slipped irora our grasp. Did we ever learn anything further about her? not a word, singular as it may seem. The incident was published in scores of papers, and called to the attention of thousands of sailors, but none of them was ever able to furnish any true information. What do 1 think? Well, it was one of the myster ies, but no stranger than some others I have had a hand in. Enjoying Ufe a Hundred Years. Though It must be granted even of the centenarian, as of all others, that he soon "passeth away and is gone," yet happily we are not obliged to admit that his "strength is but labor and sor row. In many instances, on the con trary, be has, it not a green, yet a mel low and cheerful, old age. one of hap piness to himself and pleasure to oth ers, brightened by a vivid, though calm, interest in the present, and un shadowed by apprehension of that which is to come, "ray me a visit when you next come tq Leamington, were usually the words of adieu by Miss Hastings, at the age of 103, to her mends; u shall l.ke to see you, and hear how you are going on." There is a great moral in this! for while we are denizens in this Mammon, we are bound to make to oursejvej friends of it, which is best done by a cheerful, happy use of It, and by enjoying it and using well the powers and privileges it gives us; and the injunction is none the less Imperative and valuable when the sojourn in it has l usted for five score years and more. Moreover, in this, as in so many other instances, the influ ences are reciprocal; for associated as cheerfulness and happiness are with good doing and kind feeling, they are also much dependent upon the smooth working of the several parts of a sound bodily machinery, to the bealthfulness of which they iu their turn not a little contribute. So long, indeed, as the body Is enjoyable, and its functions go glibly and smoothly on, the tenant is commonly desirous of coutlnulutr its occupation. nen it ceases to tie so, when lassitude and weariness super vene, when means of communication with others are stopping, when the "sans everything" condition ia impend ing, be 13 content to quit, and when the tenement becomes distressing or painful he is anxious to do so. Still, though the capacities for activity and work may be passing away and life's 'fretful fever" with them, the old per son may comrort hlnself with the re flection that a useful mission still re mains in the benign influence of a se rene and benevolent disposition, which calmly estimates the things ol time and sense at their true value, aud which, leniently regarding the short comings of others, gives the true crown of glory to the hoary hea4. Hnqlaved Oj stermen. Once In a while something reaches the outside world about a system of hair slavery alleged to exist among oystermea at Chesapeake Bay, Horri ble stories have been told of the bru tality practised, but no one has seemed to move ror a remedy, mis is pro posed to be bad now through Congress. Representative Flnilay, of Baltimore, has presented in the House a petition for the relief of oyster dredgers in the Chesapeake May and its tributaries. The petition, which Is signed by sev eral hundred persons, calls the atten tion of Congress "to a system of slavery existing on vessels engaged in oyster dredging In the waters of the Cnesapeake Bay, which in its brutality, oppression and horrible treatment has rarely been equalled lnTiIstory.''. Men are enticed by false representations to a ship for a short period, and often are kidnapped, by brutal force, and kept against their will as slaves on these vessels in the bay for three, four and five months, being transferred from one boat to another, kept at bard work without proper provisions, without pay, and under the most cruel and hobble treatment; some cf t'uew have been murduvaV und the murderers have never been brought to justice. The sufferings of these poor men from mal treatment, as from exposure to cold and the elements without proper pr tectlon, are heartrending. These men are without tiie protection of the law, as there is no police supervision over these waters, and the petitions pray that a committee n ay be appointed to inquire into this great grievance, an! that such laws may be passed, ' as will remedy this cruel wrong "yooo Shaviiyja, The use of wood shavings, prepared by special machinery, for the packing of fragile goods, has recently been in troduced into Germany from America, where this material was first produced on a large scale. Since its introduction, the application of this materia! has been considerably extended la Uertuaiiy and shaving; are now made as a regular commercial article in eight different sizes, the largest being composed of fibers about a third of a millimetre wide, while the finest scarcely exceeds the thickness of an ordinary wool fibre. Coarser qualities are csed instead of straw or papor cutting' as a packing material, while the finer qualities are nsed as suffering for the cheaper class of furniture, and the finest for hygienic purposes, instead of lint. Intermediate sorts can be nsed for the cleaning of machinery. In substitution' of cotton waste, and also for (Uteric,g purposes. Experiments, n.a,de. in, several breweries with wood shavings, as 4 filtering medium for beer nave given very satis factory results, The storm tries the building, and discovers which is built upon a rock and which upon the sand. The storm tries the pilot. The toici&c6 tries the metal, vrtcthes it be gold or cop pes. -The furnace tries the gold, whether it be pure or dross. So afflic tions and persecutions try the Christian. She Might Forgive Rim. Although He Did Remember Much for Peace Sake. Too They were celebrating their silver wedding and the fnends were admlr ng them as people always do other people when they are getting a lot or presents. You have noticed, of course, how people look at you when you show them something somebody bas given you. They are surprised and they envy you. They always wonder, however, in themselves what on earth anybody conld see in you to give yoa anything so handsome. Unless it is your hus band. Then they smile and wonder what he has been doing that bis con science needs rest. But if you'll notice, you'll find that people who get many presents have many friends. You may have many friends and get precious few presents. Presents make friends; friends don't make presents. Married people increase the circle of ther rriends with every anniversary of their wedding, because the presents get handsomer and more expensive. You can work this paradox out for yourself. 1 haven't time. Tbey were celebrating their silver wedding, and of course the couple were very happy and very affec tionate. "Yes," said the husband, "this is the only woman I ever loved. I shall never forget the first time I proposed to her." "How did you do it?" burst out a young man who had been squeezing a pretty girl's hand in the corner. They all laughed and be blushed; but the girl carried it off bravely. "Weil, 1 remember as well as if it were yesterday, it was away back in Maine. We had been out on a p.cnlc, and she and I got wandering alone. Don't you remember, my d&ar r" The wn'c nodded and smiled. "We sat on the trunk of an old tree. You bavn'l forgotten love, have you?" The wife nodded again, She began writing in the dust with the point of her parasol. You recall It, sweet, dun't you?" The wife nodded again. ''She wrote her name, Minnie, and I said let ni9 put the other name to it. And I took the parasol and wrote my name Smith alter it." "How lovely i" broke out a little maid who was beaming in a suspicious way on a tall chap wita a blonde mus tache. ''And she took back the parasol anJ a rote below it, 'o, I wou'c And we went home. Your remember it. darling. I see you, do." Then be kissed btr and the company murmured sentimtntally, wasn't it pretty. The guests had all departed and the happy couple were left alone. ''Wasn't it nice. Minnie. to see all our friends around us so happy?" "Yes, it was. But Joha, that remi niscence r "Ah, it seems as if it had been oalr yesterday." "les, dear, tliere are on!? three things you're wrong about in that story. " "Wroag? Oh, nol" "John, I'm sct;i you told mat story. becaus? 1 never went to a picnic with yoa before we were married; I was never in Maine in my life, and 1 never refused you." "My darling, yon, rausl U wrong! ' "I am not wrong, Mr. Smith. I have aq excellent memory, and al though we ha7e been married twenty five years, I'd like to know whj that minx Miuuie was. You never told me about her before." "I guess she'll forgive him; but I don't know if she'll forget. Seville,. i ne c&ubtry all round Seville is a gaiden of Eden. The orange trees, the palm trees and the almond trees are everywhere. The hedges are the prickly pear and the cactus. TP landscape is Ainct In t luxuv aace, and the golden sunshine tloods the land with, glory, Hut the roads. Oh, ye gods, the roads l A hey ought to be impossible roads, but we drove them. They are in ruts a foot deep; they are lu holes in which a man might hide himself. They have not been swept for centuries. The mud that was in heaps in the davs oi the. Moors remains in heaj still. The dogs and cats who died by tho roadside iu the days of the Moors have not yet been buried. Once when was in Seville it rained all night The next day we drove through a sea of liquid mud. Even the road ways In front-of the palaces of the rich are in great boles and full of ponds. Carriages break down, horses brai; their legs, visitors disappear darcn boles in the roadway. ih,e ivillian3 regret the cjicuuit.iafices; they repair the car riages, buy new horses, make new friends, but they never repair the road. Some day the only way of getting about Seville will be bv i-l'r,c-i. Even now it is tbi ;r,fa-i way." So much has bec dcue for Seville by the the past Moors; the present Burgesses might at least keep the roads in repair. The Guadalquiverl Another o' ujy lost illusions, roet" Uao sung it from a disfiUio the poet who. walks upon its banks holds' his noje. The Quadal quiver, out of the poetry brpks and the songs and the ronance, is, a common luouplaco, thirty stream, about as ro mantic as the Thames at Barking Creek, and not so clean. It is the peo ple and the patoit aud the climate that make Seville, aud the Santa S.-rmana the Holy Weekl that brings thou sands aud thousands of people, to Seville. It is a week eT ranfioent processions a wc; oj such pomp and circr,stauce aud magnificence and show aa to be indescribable. AH the winter long people come to Seville because it is .said to be a beaut'ful place. During the morth J tLe Santa Sprmana thnv rnn.A inlS S-vlllin tn p a sirht whlt-h no other town in the world can snow. The Best She -01(1 Dp. Nothing is ever gained by want ol politeness. There was an eaticuablA Quaker woman who kept a boarding house, and was so, prospered as t t often obliged to aend some bj hey ti trons ta lodge w fc0urt Lei neighbors; Itecentlv a conmanv of a dozen or so ot Baltimoreans, who had been com mended to this lady, arrived in the cl'.y. and at once repaired to ber resi dence. I "I can give lpa, all board," said she to tho JiyliiidoiB, but thee must I sleipla Coffin's." "Whatl" cried the amazed man. SDnkeS ' i That is the best I can dofos thee: andif thee do not 1 the cau go .Ue-J And tb Indignant visitor went. CHARMING FERXS. Some Simple Directions as to Their Successful Cultivation. Ferns are easily cultivated. If a tew practical details are observed. Grow ing in their native habitats they are. lor the most part found in shady posi tions, where, during their growing pe riod, they have an abundance of moist ure at their roots; therefore, under cultivation, a shady window is for most kinds more suitable than a sunny one, and during their season of growth a good supply ot water at the roots is demanded. While it is necessary for their success to have an abundance of water, they are at the same time very impatient of a stagnant soil, and to prevent anything of the kind occurring perfect drainage is indispensable. ot only is drainage a necessity in the cul tivation of ferns, but it is also needed in the culture of all kinds of window and greenhouse plants after they have attained a certain size, Xo plants do I know, except aquatics, that succeed in a soil from which the water does not pass off freely. Plants growing in pot! six inches in diameter and over should have good drainage. This may be done by placing over the ho!e iu the bottom of the pot a piece of broken pot ; over this place more of the same ma terial in small pieces; instead of this pieces of charcoal answer well. Pill about one-fourth of the pot in this man ner, and over the top place some moss or other rough material to prevent the soil from mixing with the drainage, aud thereby preventing the water from pas sing freely off. The most suitable soil for ferns is a mixture of irarden loam and the black soil found in the woods, auout equal parts ot each, then witn a good sprinkling of sharp sand through the whole, giving more if the loam is clayey and less if sandy. Russian Girl Students. The attempt on the Czir brings the Nihilists again to the fore, and will have the effect of exposing the Russian lady students here to much nagring police espionage. One rarely sees them unless in the Quartier Latin, although I came across a nest of them a short time ago in a hotel in the Cours de la Bene. Quakers could not have been more plainly dressed, and most of thr.-m had their hair cropped. Tloy were good musicians, and one and all hard ened smokers, Itussian girls take to the fragrant weed like Kalmucks. I sru not sure that their air of quiet seuicru sadness is due to impecunious- uess. A studentess to',d tun that the only cheery ones among them are Jewesses, and that they ate not verv wealthy, but they meet with moral. aim, indeed, olteu material, supiiort rroni iiersons or tiieir ia-e settled in p.iria. I also learned from her that not a tow of her cotntianions are "iris of in lluentail families, and they have broken away from home and come here tin-le assumed names to study. The ditlk-ul- ties with which some of UtvHt had to be content m makitu; thur way here would strike you, vve I to relate them, as be fOTittiiig tu the domain of romance. What do you think of the daughter cf the Governor of a province who was sent Souih by her f;uly to le out of the way oj tK-ss spirits with whom wtine in sympathetic tuiiiact lu Mtwcow. working htr way as a cabin boy to Varna, Sho there enterel a hotel as '-boots," staid some time, ami s she had moucy enough to buy a suit of clothes suitable to her sex, took ser vice as a nur-eryniaid in a family about? to start for England. When thte she was engaged as a r,i;issy gowrnvss in a r.owe faulty, and was taken to the country seat of some cousins of her own. Ugh in the English retrace. But they had no idea who she was. As s-vjii I as she had saved a small sum tho eatue to Paris, and before she could Cii l a lodging she used to pasa Iter nights iu a casual asylum, Bhig a 'person of first-class educa tion, she now prepares iritis wanting to be admitted to the uev high schools. The place where she resides is a bis loft over acartmaker's shed, which has been ' fitted up us a dormitory and living room for about twenty studentess,-. Another loft serves as a refectory, vbeie meals are cooked at a large stove. Each studentess takes a turn at cook ing. lLa tables on which dinner l- jevedare made of boards placed on trestles. When the plates aud dishes aie removed in the evening they all sit down to study. The brain of the Bus-. sian girl is a receptive one, and yeti.iiis what it takes in. I dor.'t ilank that the studentesses dvsoibe are engaged in dyn.rraU conspiracies, but they wbh Vi'Cii to those who are. Queer Venders in Turkey, The different articles. r food diffei as much as tl. venders who carry them. The ir.o-i substantial are the "kebob," -r small pieces of mutton, broiled &i; the end of an iron rod over the fungal or live charcoal that tUey carry from place to place. v.TUu$ a Coustaiitinor corresicr.iUmt. Then with this is tl 'peloil,'1 or rice cooked lu greas. The "yaoute" man finds ready sale for this prepared clabber, while the "tearuit. or sodti-ureati mau, is at everyone beck and call, Sw&etmeats of all kind: are ever at band, aud even the lce- ereani man appears on the scene. None of them stop and implore your patronage, but all go forth callius at the top of their voices, T' tliere come the organ-yrdcta, one with the instrument en Ms hack, while his com ?ado ntrches. behind to turn out tl.t tunes, and some of them are quiU musical. It is around one of the?- Instruments that the dancers ccKie gat. It is mostly 'U commonest workmen, wih, ir great heavy shoes, that aW part. They form in line, jesting hands on each other's shoulucrs Then the leader has a series of stei tliat he performs. The others follow his exanipjo with, less ami less viyu Rewards the end, until the lii vve just simply walks around. They move iu t circle, and when the leader haa SiL-Jhx his li e suddenly end wUh a whooi and a jump, and. lm isti on the grass Vfhile hift ucut takes his place, anc tfius 4 gue on. so weird and lifeless yet, to a new observer, so intent ing. it all seemed into ice scene o; centuries ago, and tlough it lasted three days, one afternoon was enougl to convince us of the emptisesa of thai religion., ' There are about 3,000 libraries ii the United States containing 1.0OI volumes or more. I have been benefited by paying fo taela lor "J uioitihtt nuu lu ji for them, X bav gotten something foi . . y ZETSiEZ arfjometu cannot remove. NEWS IN BRIEF. Small pox lingers in New York. Connecticut has ten living ex-Gov-ernora. Helena, Montana Territory, Is to have a 60,000 clnb house. The natives ot HIndoostan are credited with making the first fiddle, A nine foot coal vein has been itruck near the surface at Greeley, CoL An average egg weig s about 1,000 jralns, divided as follows; Shell 107, white 604, and yolk 2Stf. An average election campiign in New York city costs the candidates or their supporters about 1200,000. The sea serpent has got around into the Pacific, and is cow reported from points on the California coast. Full grown figs of this season's growth are reported to be on the rees at San Luis Obispo, California, The Alhambra. the great London music hall, is said to have paid 46 per cent, in the last six months in divid ends. A large lobster wascaueht in Mon terey Bay, California, recently, the first that has ever been known in that lo cality. Before the weddlnir dav aha wan Sear and he her treasure: but after. wards she became dearer and be treas urer. There have been 112 murders com mitted in Edgefield county, South Carolina, during the last thirte;a years. The 31.000 school teachers of Nw otk last year received an avenge salary of 701 in cities and $261 In towes. A Pennsylvania magistrate. hn had united 7.000 couples in marriage, died recently with all his sins upon his uea'j. The light on the Bartholdi Llbertv Statue, it is stated officially, is visible 23 miles beyond Sandy Hook on a clear evening. A French Canadian is seriously ill at the home of his daughter in Paw tucket, Bhode Island, it is claimed, 109 years old. In Cuba soup is made of pUntaia. sometimes dried and ground to a pow Jer. and sometimes used fresh and green for a puree. TiintrTY. Mrs. Oaks, ot Wheat land, Mich., has pared 1430 bushels ot spplea this winter, besides attending to ber household work. A South Carolina hunter recently shot a buck whose head was white and whose horns were short and curved like the horns of a goat. A Hindoo made a wager that he would gaze at the sun for ten hours. At the end of the seventh hour he fell iown in a fit and died. In the New York sub-treasury 220,000 silver dollars passed throazb tti9 bands of the clerks in one day the purpose of redemption. A western man, after losing all his money, put up his wife as a stake in a ?ame of poker. But his run of bad luck continued. He failed to lose her. A bill prohibiting the taking on or more passengers than seats can be pro vided for oa the street cars of New Yoik, is before the Legislature at Albany. An Oregon man who pointed a ?un at a woman "iu fun." andkilled ber last month at Albion, in that State, has been convicted of man slaughter. Two colored ladies managed to call out the Atlantic City fire deparement the other evening by indulging in a fight, with lighted coal oil lamps as tne weapons. A yacht race, to be sailed in June over a course extending twenty miles to windward out (.Ue SauUy Hook, Is to be for the novel stakes of a pi&t pot full of gold doilars. San Diego, California, has one of the wisest Cainamen in the world. He Is a laundryman, and he bas kept an advertisement running in the local papers for fifteen years. Burglars blew open the safe In Jersey City store the other nigh Sixty dollars, blown from the Baft I y the force of the explosion, were foi. d by a clerk lying on the floor. Notuit. v. aa missing. Greece, Professor Seymour, of Yale University, says, is having a "boom. " Athens, which bas increased in popula tion from 10.000 to 100,000 during the century, now nas city railways and steam railroads. For 24 hours unceasmg!y, and with no other refreshment than some beef tea and an occional cigar, a Cape Cjlony artist, named Woodcock, played the piano at Baberton recently, "finish ing iu capital condition." A prisoner in Louisville who es caped the death penary by simulating madness and was acquitted on a second trial by the same means Is now unre served in his chuckles over the way in which he deceived the jury. A gust of wind blew a passenger off a ttain on the Eastern road, near the - Mystic river, as he was attempting to pass from one car to another while the train was going at full speed, but he escaped serious iDjury, as be was tossed into a deep snow bank. A visitor to the penitentiary at Zanesville, Ohio, while casually 1 .Hik ing through the institution recently, discover! in one of the prisoners a' brother of his who had ran away from home at the age ot seven years, and was supposed by the family to have been drowned. Ice taken from the Hudson river has been subjected to a series of exper iments by Dr. Pruden, of New York, who says he has found as much aa Siai bving bacteria in a cubic centi metre of one specimen. He wants the State health authorities to take the matter in charge. Buffets have been established at all way sta.Uona on the Orleans ( French) railway, under orders from the direc tors, and good meals of meat, vegeta bles, cbeeatt, bread and wine, are to b furnished at a cost of If. 5a (30 cents c onr money) at each of them. A young man at San Kafael, CaJL. who heard some one ia his room on a recent night, called to the intruder to explain the eak ot bis visit, orb would shoot. Receiving no reply, he fired a ball from his revolver and wounded his deaf and dumb aunt, hut, fortunately, not very serious y. Men's lives should be like the day more beautiful in the evening; or like the summer aglow with promise; an-' like tho autumn rich with jr'.-en jii eaves, where good deeds h ripened in the field. .net her gaze; men a u, - 1. i ,lrwgJT.-ifrfr.-igaKii .. i .. ...