u M THKMAnHOH'llTMIIlNl'lli:. nr ions iwmi.ii o'nxu.i Where the f)t of the window imrlillip ArM, AntlUifUfwurrfplimUnl glow, The rarth will lmitM Irfsmrr )i'M, As the oldrn mry (fur. In a cfjrll cup r tli" dUmotid AM For lilin who fan lftly ch 0rr torrwiit and prrf Iplf" wIM, To Anil thr rainbow's wandering h. There we rr two In tiin Arid t work one day, Two bmthrta, who llllhHy ting, Warn scrnM their II, deep winding way Thr glotlou airh wflung, Ami n w naught bill b.n of tain, And imp feared for'hli Mirare unbound ( Ami one U swa), otcr immnUlii and pUIn, Till Uie in) .Ural treauirn I found, Through foret and stream, In bllfi,l dream Thr ralnUiw I ii ml him out With a rltrn'a guile It loitered awhile, Thrn league away wa gone. Orer brake inl biler he followed Arrl , The jwoplenoffid ho pl i Hut In thlrit and lir-t, and with wounded fret, ll rioted on the prise l lat, It U cloer and rtom h win the rate On strain for thr goal In tight: lU radiance fall on hi yrartilng fser - Th blended rnlofi uiiltr-r-IIp Urn hi brow- In the Irl lH?m Hf teatlie Ah, wool tlio muih1 From the rolMy gulf where he end Id dresm Atiil the cryital rup U found. TW th old, nlil tlorjr Onn man will rrsd lll)f.K.nof tll In tlir kyt Whll notiirr I blind In the present need, Hut see wild the aplrlt'a eye. You inn)' grind their soul In tlio selfsame mill, You may hind them heart mid brow; Hut tlio port will follow Dip mltiliow Mill, And hi brother will follow thr plow TIIK PAHSOVH IIOKHi: lUlK. IIAIIIIIKT IlKWIIKH STOW, "Wall now till ho'O does bout nlll I wouldn't a thought It (if tlio deacon!" Ho spoko Kttni Lawson, dropping In a discouraged, contemplative uttltuilo In front of ancuuallydlsooiiragod look Ing horse, Hint liml lust been brought to hint liy tlio wlifow slmpkltis, for medical treatment. Among Sam's no compllshmchts, lio was reckoned In thu nolgjiborhood nn nraoln In till matters of this kind, especially liy tlio woiiitin, whoso helplessness In mooting such emergencies found unfailing lolncu In hi compassionate willingness to at toml to any IhiiIiiom llmt illil not utrlut ly Imlong to litiu, nuil from wliltili no jiunlnry roliirn o)iill )ollily tin ux pcotod. Tlio widow Slmpklnn liml linulit tliU liornn of Dunoon Alklni, nppurontly n fntrly woll-nppolntod lirnto. niul enpn V Ida iu ho wiu LMMiildooklnir. A Rliort. im) drive wlion tlio dencon hold tlio rolim, hn.il hown oft hU poliiU to ml vnnUjfv, mid Iho widow n mll otook if rcudy Mivlnjrft hud t'oiiio forth frooly in pnynu'iit (or wlint nho thought wru n liArgritn. When, noon nftor ooiiiIiik In to pomoiiloii, who dUoovoriMl that hor horn, If drlvmi with nny lirmtu, pnnUtd In a fonrful nmniiur, and thnt ho npponr id to lm kiowIiik Inmo, ht waxud vory wroth, wont to tlio donoon In nngur, to ho nut only with thu aniooth ronilndor thai thu nn i in id wim all riuht wlton ho took him nnd thnt alio find noon him tried liormilf. Tlio widow wnn of n nn tnrtt aaniuwlmt aploy, mid oxprowd tirniulf wnrinlyj "It'a n chi'iit nnd a mIiiiiiio, and I'll takn tlio law on yo." . "What law wftl yod takof Whmi'I It It a fair ImrnlnP'' Midd tlio unmovod doaoon. I'll tako tho law of Cod." anld tho widow, with Impotonl Indlimllon. nnd alio dopnrtod to pour horcnroi nnd nor row Into tho ovor-rvady oar of Sam. Having axaumod thu earn of tho anl tnal, ho now aat conti'mplntliip It In n aort of franco of mulmiuholy rolleo tlona. 'Why, hoy," hn hroko out, "why didn't alto conic to mo .foro alio hoiiKlit thin orltturf Whv, I know all alimu hlmt That urn crittur win Jot rulnod n year ago lant amninor, whon ' oni, thu doiKHin'a luy thr, comn homo from oolliK. Tout dtlv htm ovur to Sltor hum and hack thnt oro hot Font th of July. I romomlHir It; 'omi-o I aaw thu urlttur whun ho como homo, and aot up with Tom taking unro of him all night; that crittur Imd tho thump till night, ami ho hiwn'tnovor tioon good for iioth log nlnco. 1 tollud tho dotioon ho wan a gonod lto.11 thou, mid wouldn't nuvur bo good for nothing. Tito doacon hu took otT hU altooi ami lot him run to puntttvu all aummor, and lio'a boon a foi'dlng and a nuraitig of him upt ami now ho'a put off on tho wlddor. I wouldn't n thought It of tho duaoont Why, this hoaa'U novor bo any good to hor; that oris'!, a uaodup orlttur, any fool may ool Ho'll myalhi do for a quarter of an hour on a aniooth road, but como to drlvo him m a Inxly wanU to drlvo, why, ho blows Iiko my bcl lowaU; and thudoncon know It must a known lit" "Why, Sam, ain't tho duacon a good want" wo oxulalmod. "W'ai, now, there' whoro tho ahoo IilnohoAl In a rinoral way tho doaoon i a goodtuan. llo's conginorablo moro than mldtUIn' good glnorally ho't an honor to hli iHirfoialon. On moil all ptnta I don't nor nothing agin tho doa oon, and this horo ain't a bit Ilko him but Uioro it ll Comn to Iiomc, thoiv'a whoro tho unsanctirlod natur comot out iollu will cheat about ho.vo.H whon they won't about nothing olso." And Sara leaned back on hla cold forgo, now empty of coal, ami aeomod to deliver hlniaolf to a mournful train of general reflections. "ii, hooi do aoora to bo sort of un regonorato critters,' ho said, there's wmolhing about hofses that decelvos Uie ver)- elect; tho Tory best of folks git tripped up when thoy comes to deal in hossos." "Why, Sam, Is there anything bad in horsosl' wo Interjected timidlv. "Taln't Oin hosstvs, boys," said Sam. solemnly. "Lordy massy, tho bosses is all right enough bosses is scriptoo rml animals; Elijah went up to heaven in a chari't with hossea; and then, all them lots of hossea la the Ravel allots, black, and white, and rod. all sorts of color! That thnro ahows that hor go to liciwonj but It's liinrn'n thn folks that hov 'uni I likely to, f they don't look out." "MlnUt'irt, now," contlnui'd Ham, In n aollhHiilrlng vein, "folks allrtn thinks It's siithln sort of shaky in a tnlnUtcrlo hnvn an) thing to do wh Iiomi;.-- nro to grl Vm Into Iroiiblo. Mure win old I'nrson Wllllnma.of North lllllriky got into a drrlliil mc nlHiiit n ho. Miidy intfuy, Iim wnru'l to btnm, noltlmr, Imt hn got Into thu dnirulcat acrnpo you evttr lurnnl on-)ino nigh to onaottlln' him." "Oh. Snm, loll ii all nboiit It," wo hoy lioiilil, dollghlod with thn pro pent of a story. "Wnt, wnlt, now, till ! git off till crittur' shoo, nnd wo' 1 1 takn lilin up to tho pnturo, nnd thou wo nan kinder act by tho river nnd llh. llopy want nl a mo of llh for aiippor, nnd wiu a onlculatln to got aomn for hor. You bo) go nnd bo dlggin' thu lull, nnd gll yer linos." And o, a wo worn sittlnir trnmiullly bralilo thn Chnrloa rlvor, watching our line. Ham's narrnllvn bognnt "Yo are, boys, I'nraou llllnm hos dond now- lint whim 1 wa a hoy hn was one of tho groat mim around horo. Hn writ (Hulk's. Ho writ a tract ngln thn Armenians, and put 'run down, and hn writ a big hook on tho lullloriluin, (I'vn got thnt urn hook now); and ho wns narnnrt proaohor; folks nld ho liml Invitations to sutllo In Hotou,aud thnro ain't no doubt ho might a Imd a lloston parish i;f ho'd boon n mill' to takn It, lull ho'd got a good sntlloiuonl ami a hniidaomo farm In North lllllriky, and didn't enro to movo; though I s'poo, thnt 'twas hotter to ho nuiiilmr one In n little plncn than utimbor two In a big un; nnywny, ho carried all before him where lie wns. "I'nraou Williams was ntall.atrnlght, piTHonnhlo mini comn of good family fnthor nnd grnndfnther before him nil mlnlators, ho wns putty up and down and t'otiimnndiu' lulils waya.and thin:' litul to go initty much ns lie said. Ho was a good deal aot by, I'nraon Williams wns, iiml hi wlfo was u Durby.sud ouo of 'm rluh Hnlom Dorliya and brought him a lot of money, ami so thoy lived putty uny nud comfortably so far its this world's goods goes, 'Well, now, thn I'nrson wasn't ronlly what yau uall worldly-minded, but then hu was one of thorn folks that knows w lint's good In temporals as well as spirituals, and liked to havo tho beat that there was goln', nnd ho niters had an eyo to a good Iiom, "Now, there wns I'nrson Adams nnd I'nraou Homiitou, nud most of tho other mlnlstiirs, thoy didn't know tun I didn't enru what hois thoy hud; Jost Jogged round with these 'ore poundln, pot bellied, sleepy critters tlwt minister mostly lies, good enough to crawl round to funerals nnd ministers meetlns, and associations and sluh. but 1'arson Wll Hum ho allor would havo it hoss as was a hoss; ho looked out for Mood, nud whun these ere Vermont fellers would como down with n drove, tho I'lirson hu hod Ida eye open nud knuw what was what. Couldn't none of em ohoat him on hos lleh; nnd o one time when thiol was down with n drove, the doctor ho bought tho best horse In tho lot. -mm salil ho rover seen a par son afore that ho couldn't cheat, but ho aiild thu doctor rooty know ns muuh as ho did, and got tho very one hu'd meant to a kept for hiuiaelf. " Tills ore ho was a peeler, I tell you. They called him Tamerlane.from some heathoii feller or other; the boys called him Tain, for short. Tarn wa n grent charncter. All tho fellers for miles round knew the doctor's Tarn, nnd used to como clonr over from tho oilier parishes to see him. "Wnl this ore sot up Cuff's bank high, I tell you. Cuff was the doctor's nig gor man, and ho was nat'lly n dreadlul proud urlttur: tho wav ho'd swell and strut and brag about tho doctor and hi folk nnd hi thlugl The doctor used to give Cuff his cast-off clothes, and Cuff would prance round iu 'em and seem to think ho was a doctor of divin ity himself, nud had tho cha go of all naltir.' "Well, Cuff, he reoly mndo an Idol of that ere ho, n reg'lnr graven Image, ami uowoii iiowu nnd worshipped hint; hu dldn t think itothlu wa too good for him; ho washed mM brushed and cur rled him, and rubbed him down till lie ohoiio Ilko a lady's satin dross; and he took pride iu rldln and drivln him causo it wn what tho doctor couldn't let nobody else do but himself. You oe, Tam warn'l no lndy's horse. Miss William win friUd a death of hlm.iiud thu pnrsou ho had to git her iv sort of of low sperlted crittur that she coujd drlvo herself, but ho liked to drlvuTam, and ho liked to go around tho country on hi bnuk, and a tine Hguro of a man hn wa ou him, too. Ho didn't let no body olo back him or handle the rein but Cuff, nnd Cuff was drvdful set up abouUt, and lie swelled and bragged ahout'that ar hoss all around '.he coun try. Nobody couldn't put in a word about any other boss without Cuff's feathers bo all up stiff as atom turkey's tall and that's how cuff got the doctor Into trouble. "Yo see there nat'lly was others that thought they'd got hosses, and didn't waul to bo crowed over. Theru was Hill Atkins, out to tho West parish, and Ike Sanders, that kept a stable up to PiHiuot Holler; thoy was down look in at the parson's horse, and a bettln on tholr'n.aud a-darlnCtiff to race with em. "Well, Cuff couldn't stand it, and when the doctor's back was turned hu'd bo off on the sly, and they'd hov tholr race; and Tam, ho boat em all. Tam, ye see, Uns, was a hoss that couldn't ami wouldn't hov a hoss ahead of him ho Jest trouMrt'.. Kf ho dropped dead iu his tracks the nest ruluit, ho would bo ahead, and ho always got ahead. and so his name got up; and fellows kept comln to try tholr bosses, and Cuff 'ml take Tom out to race with fust one and then another till this eru got to bo a reg'lar thing and began to bo talced about. "Folks sort o' wondered If tho doctor knew, but Cuff was sly as a weasel. and always had a story ready for every turn. Cuff was one of them fellers that could talk a bird off a tree master hand ho was to slick things over. "There was folks as said they believ ed the doctor was knowin to it, and that he felt a sort of carnal pride, such as a mlnUter oughtn't fr to hov, and o shot hi eyi. to what was ngoln on. Aunt Hnlly Nlrkerson said alio was sum on It; 'iwn. all talked over down to old Mi liiiiiunliiger's funeral, mid Aunt Sally she said I lie church ought to look Into It Hut everybody knew Aunt Sally, ho wa altera walchln folk' hatting, and intllu on herself up to jcdgn her neighbor Wal. I never Mlrved nothln agin I'nrson Willlnni; It was nil Cuff' con- I trlvnnrn, hut the fact wns thn feljers all goi uieir moon up ntm more was noa rncln In nil of the parishes, and ll got to bo so they'd even hov hos race Hun da) s "Wal, of course, they never got thu doctor's hos out of a Sunday, Cuff wouldn't a durst do that, lord ii-tuaaay not H wn niters there In church slt tln up In the doctor' clothes, rolllu up hi u)o and looklu a pious as ef he'd never thought of rncln bosses; he was an awful solemn look In nigger In the church, Cuff was. "Hut there was a lot o' them fellers up In IVquot Holler Hill Atkins and Ike Sanders and Tom Tutors nud them Hokum l)o)s-tied to go out nrtor mcotln' Sunday afternoons and rnce hons. Yo see, ll was oloso to tho Htnte lino, and If tho s'lcctuiou wns to como down ou 'em, thoy could (tut whip over tho lino, nnd they couldn't tako 'em. "Wal, it gol to Im a great scandal; the fellers talked about It up to thu tav ern, and the dencon and tlthlngmnu they took It up and went to Parson rVII Hams about It; ami thu parson hu told 'em to keep still, not let the fellers know that thoy was being watched, and tho next Sunday ho and the tllli ingman and tho constable they'd rldo over and catch 'em In the very ad. "So next Sunday afternoon I'nrson Williams nnd Deacon I'onkln and Hen Hradloy (ho was constable that year) thoy got onto their koo and rode over to reipiot Holler. The Doctor's blood wa up, and ho meant to come down on 'em strong, for thtl was his way of doln' In the parish; and they were In a sort o' day o' judgment frame o' mind, nud jogged along solemn as a hoarse, till como to rise thu hill above the holler they see three or four fellers with their hoos getllu' ready to race; nnd the parson says ho, "Lot's count on quiet and get behind these bushes, iiiul we'll see what they're up to and catch 'em in the act.' "Hut tho niUohlef on It was that Ike Sanders see 'em comln' nnd he knew Taut In a mliiit -Iko knowed Tam of old, nud hu Jlst tipped the wink to thu rest. " 'Wnlt, boys,' says he, 'let 'em gll uIohu up ami then III give the word, and the doctor's hoss will In, racln' ahead like thunder.' "Wal, so tho Doctor and his folks they drow np IhiIiIiiiI tho huhes, and stood there, innocent as could bo, and saw 'em glltln' ready to start. Tam ho began to anulllo ami paw, but the doctor never mistrusted whal ho was up to till Iko sung out, 'go it hoyst' and tho bosses nil started, when, suae as you live, boys, Tam gave onu liy, and was over the bushes and in among 'em going It like chain lightning, ahead of cm all. "Deacon I'opkln ami Hen Hradloy jet stood and held their breath to see 'out goln' It so Ilko thunder; ami tho doctor ho was took so sudden It wns all ho could do to jct hold on any way, so away ho went, and tree and buheand feirces strottked by him tike ribbons; his hat (low off behind him nud his wig nrter, nud he got cntched in a barberry bush, but l.only ntassov, ho couldn t stop to think o' them, lie jest leaned down ami caught Tam around the neck and held on for dear life, till thev come to thu stopping plucu. "Wnl, Tam was ahuad o' tl icnt all, sure enough, and was snorting mid snuffling a if ho'd got the verv old Iniy In him, and wa up to rncln' some moro on tho spot. "That 'ere Iko Saunders was the Im- uideiilM feller thnt ever von see, and io roared ami luiw-haweil at tho doc tor. " 'Hood for you, doctor,' says ho; 'you beat u all holler,' savs he; takes a parson for thai, don't It boys?' ho said. And thou ho and Iko ami Tom ami the two Hokum bovs thev int mated and dun cod round like wild edi tors "Wal, now only think o' It, boys! What a situation that was for a minis ter -it man thai had como out with tho host of motive to put a stop to tho Snlilmth breakln'l There ho was, all rumpled up ind duty and hi wig hanging in the hiihc. and theo 'ere umrodly fellers glttln' tho laugh on htm, nnd all acausoo' that 'em ho. There's times, Im)s, when .. inllers must be tempted to swear. If tltoro ain't pre venting grace, and this was ouo o' tho times to Parson William. Thoy say lie got red iu tho face, and looked as if lie should burst, but ho didn't say uuth in;' he scorned to answer, the sons of 'eriilah was too hard for him, and ho let'em have their say; but when they'd got through, and Hen had brought Itim tils hat end wig, and hruhod and set tled him ngln, the parson ho says: " 'Well, ooys, yovvo had ycr say and yer laugh, but I warn you now 1 won't nave this thing going on any more,' says he, 'so mind yorselves.' "Wal, tho boy "see that tho doctor's blood was up, and they rode off pretty quiet, and I oollovo thoy novor rodo no moro on that spot. "Hut there ain't no tolling tho talk this 'ore thing nude. Folks will talk you know, and there warn't n house In all lllllriky. nor in tho south parish nor ctmtor where it warn't had over and discussed. There was tho deacon and Hen Hradloy was there to witness ami show jest how the thing was, and that tho doctor was jest In tho way of his duty; but folks said it made 'a great scandal; that a minister had no imsl ness to have that kind o' hoss, and that ho'd give tho enemy occasion to speak reproachfully. It reoly did seem as if Tarn's sins was imputed to tho doctor; and folks said ho ought to soil Tam right away, and get u sober mlttUter's hoss. "Hut others said it was Cuff that had got Tam in bad wavs, and thoy do say that Cuff had to ca'tch it pretty lively when tho doctor como to settle with him. Cuff thought his time had come sure onourh, and was so scared that he turaed blacker' n ever; ho got enough to cure him o' ho ruclng for one while. Hul Cuff got over it arter a while, nnd so did tho doctor; there was a rumpti ami a fu, And folks talked and talked and sdviacd, ever) body had their ay, but tho doctor kep right strnlghl on, nnd kep' his ho all the sniiio. "The ministers they took it up In the aaaoclation, but como to tell the torr ll set thum all laughing, so thoy could n't Imi very hard on tho doctor, "The doctor felt aort o' streaked at fut when thoy told thn story on him, ho didn't jiit like it. but he got mod to It, and dually when ho got twisted on It, Im would sort o' smile and sav, ) ny i am iraai 'urn, wal one comfort." The Hiorj of a TwadThe Uiirf r Pet ef a nilllsniiportlflJl. Homo of tho little one of our"Houo hold" ask for more torle. ao I will tell them nbotit my pels when I w'as a little girl eight )oars old. He wa the largeat toad I ever saw, and I named him "Hob." This Is tho way I hap. pencil to got such a iiiecr pet. Our man was nt work in the garden and ac cidentally cut the toad with his hoe. Ho was about to kill him to put him out of hi misery as It was a very deep, bml cut ou the lleahy part of his' hind leg when my father, who stood uy, picKeu wo poor Wing up, and call ing to me, put It carefully In my npron nnd told mo to tnke it carefully into the Iiouho nnd nttend to Its leg. I knew just what to do, for my good mother kept a box of rags whoru wo children could alway lind them; and a bottle of bloodroot sleopcd In brandy, which Is very good for cuts and bruis es. I mimed my funny pet Hob thu very llrst thing so I could talk to him, and try to make him know I was mix ion to cure him. I pressed tho edge of tho cut carefully together, after llrst washing it Iu warm water, nud bound It up snuirly In soft linen rnirs. as I hml so ofUtn seen my mother do for our numerous wound; then I wet It well with bloodroot, and although I know it smarted very much, Jloh held quite still and kept looking nt inn with his bright eyes, as much a to av, "thank you." I was never afraid to handlu toad as most little ;lrls ami Woys are. for father had taught mo how useful thoy are to destroy insects in the gar den, and when I wont out walking I brought homo all I could see (In my apron) and put them among the melon and cucumber vines I was shown how to handle them so as not to hurt them, and I knew they could not hurt me, so I held poor Hob very carefully In my lap while I built him a little hmisu under a bush, where ho would not bo disturbed. I llrst madu Mm a soft bod of nice, cool graa. nnd laid him on It; and then I got somo tiles and other Insects to feed him and watched and attended to him overy day. I changed the rag on his leg oc caalonally and kept It wot all tho time with blood root. Ho kept very quiet, nun t nw imi nm was noniiinj nicely After I had had him about three weeks went one day as usual, when lo! Uiu door of Hob's housu lay Hat on the grass and there wa no toad there! I hunted about for him for a long time In vain, until llnally I spied something white moving along on the ground, and running to it found Hob trying to hop with the rag partly off his leg dragging behind him. I took It off then, as tho cut was pretty well healed, although there wits a very bad scar that would always remain, so wo could never mis take any other big toad for him. He hopped with a funny little limp that al ways mndo us all laugh. Hu was vory tame and never went faraway from the house. When t was sitting by tho kitchen door 1 would call "Hob." and hu would come ami sit just as cl-xe to mo iv ho could get. I never handled him much a It hurt him; but 1 uaed to think ho understood all I said to him. Ho would go iu to the kitchen ou hot afternoon mid catch Hies. When cold weather cantu he disappeared mysteriously, and wo never could lind out where Hob spent his winters. Karly in the spring hu enmo out of his hlillng-plat'u ns brisk a over. I left him nud nil my other pets, with many tears, live years afterward, and went away to school. While I was gone my parents moved to another place, nnd as It was in cold went her they could not take Hob, as ho was not to be found. So, 1 never saw or heard of him again, much to my sorrow, for I was very fond of him, and I think ho loved mo iu his poor, dumb way. A Slury of the Vlokshiirir Campaign. It appears that after Vicksburg had been Invested and the South threatened nt other points, (Jovornor Alton, of Lou isiana, conceived thu desperate Idea of capturing the person of (ieueral (irunt. Ho believed that (Irani was tho evil ge nius of tho Confederacy, ami that if lie could bo killed or taken prisoner, tlio siege of Vicksburg could be raised and tho Federal army driven back. Ho sunt for Joo Lee and Imparted to him his thoughts, and asked him t hu could de vise a plan. It was readily taken to by Lee, who Immediately proposed to exe cute tho daring enterprise. At that time that Is in the spring of 18GI (rant ami his army were encamped at Mllligan's Hond. nosr Young's Point, on tho Mississippi, somo eighteen miles above Vicksburg. General (I rant's hoadmtartora were In tho dwelling house that belonged to a magnificent planta tion, much of which can be seen from tho deck of a passing steamer. Joe Le proposed to go to that house and brine away the liody of OKNKHAI. UIIANT, UKt UK AtlVK. Ho chose llvo out of his most trusty men. They were tho two James broth" ors, two of thu Younger brothers, and John Jarrwtt.- -Thev with himself, made six. There never wore six better men for such an expedition. Young, strong, and as bravo as tho bravest. Already they had seen all there is in war; had been tried in tho most trying places; had suffered all manner of hard ships; did not care much whether thoy lived or died; were the quickest and best shots in tho world, and rodo tho fleetest horse in the land. It was just before tho Federal army set out on that surprising march down the west side of the river. Marshes, bayous and ino raasea tilled the country, so that the natural advantage for the execution of the plot were good The plan was for Joo I a'" and hi live truty follower to dre up In Federal uniform, rldo ou hor-ehack to Milll gan'a Hond. go direct to the houie that (iratil was stopping at, rush In and o curn hi tierron, put him on a spare horae ami then ccapu to the wamps that were near by On one Saturda) evening late tho j-nrly et out from Dlckaon' house, near Delhi, and rode loward the Miliippi. Not a soul on earth Im-IIc thum'lic and Governor Allen knew of their deaerate mllon. It wat upward of twent) llvo mile they hail to travel, and the night w.i a dart one, but lWoro they arrived at theedgw of the wood thntbor lered on the iilnu titlon of Grant's headquarter No en emy wn there to attack Jrom tho weal side, nnd thnro wa no particular pro cntitlou about guard. All the picket were pac beforu sun up, and, while tho General jet lay iwlcep, tho guerillas rode iMildly up through the open Held townrd tho houe. There they were -six men aeveu horses; th empty sad dle for the commander of tho hundred thousand men who encamprd about in every direction. They upnroarhcd In almost a stone's throw of the houH, when they mel a neirro: thev were dis covered. It was an old man whom these vory men had run away from Delhi not ten days before. Hu knew them all, nnd Immediately gave tho alarm. In a moment there was a irreat tumult, and tho six guorlllas had nothing to do but save their lives. All broke through tho Held, and lit the twinkling of an eye were back In tho wood, but not until a hundred shots had been llred at them. Hvforu thu sun went down they lauded safe at their favorite rende.vous. Thus was frustrated one of tho rnot daring plot of tho war. It is not probnblo thnt General ("rant took anv particular notice of the affair, and it f not al all probable that he ha ever realized the valuable services of tho old colored man. Whal lutcprctatlun the olllcers of the army put upon tho presence of the strange and hostile men at audi a time ami place is not known, but if there were any dotibu a to their mis sion, tht bit of history may servo to iu m ivo them. HI. .ok'm W. MKIIITATIOMN AT MKMPIIH. (lloomy Kfflecllons for Returning Itrfti gees. A few moro days and the 110,000 ref ugee Memphians, who aro scattered over tho union, from tho Atlantlo to thu t'aolllc, ami tho lakes to tho Ohio river, will return to their homes. Thoy will be welcomed by a fow, vory few, tho survivors of what must pa Into his tory as the great plague of 1878. They will have many question to ask, and will look In vain for friends who have long since been mustered with tho dead. Nearly four thousand of their fellow citizens, counting those who died far from homo nnd friend, havo fallen victims to the scourge, among them hundreds of men and women who were of the most valued of our noiiiilnilun Men nnd women who by industry, tal ent and energy, and force of thosu vir tues tho good prize most, had won for themselves a recognized place in every avenue of Industry and society. Preach ers and priests who ministered at altars now desolate, who were tho exemplars of an earnest piety and tho leaders of Christian hosts, are "silent now for evermore." Many of tho counsellor, guides, and advisors of tho coming gen oration who in nil tho 'occupations of life wore looked up to with pride, have lolned tho "innumerable throng." Hundreds, too, of tho honest poor, the patient multitude who bear thu heat ami burden of tho day, will bo missed, and none will be able to toll more of them than that they havo passed away, have laid down the weary load of life, havo ceased to struggle, and aro at rest. Children will return to their school and call for loved companions who can no longer hear tho summons, and the ser vant will ask for tho master, and the master for tho servant, now dumb in death. Day after day will roveal to the returned absentee the dreadful wide-spread destruction of life, and perhaps after months of Inquiry, the full effects of the visitation will dawn upon him as wo know It who havo with stoed it face to face. Then the torture of suspense ho himself endured will dwindle down to nothing, 'nnd the plauge will reveal itself in all Its force as a warning against tho indifference and reckless disregard of health nnd no iiiiu nave iiiiiieriocuaract rueii u The many hundred orphans, tlio help less widows ami tho men who walk our streets in muto despair, all that Is left of once happy household will heighten the sad picture, intensify its glttom, and perhaps quicken tho" impulse for prompt reform which should lie a re sult, which must be a result If wo would avoid a repetition of the sad experience of tlio last six months. We must havo sanitary reform; wo must havo the Nlcolson pavement taken up this win ter, whet nor we can replace It or not; we must sewer the bayou, and wo must establish a health board on a basis so strong that It can enforce Its own de cree through tho courts and compel obed'enco by poor and rich alike to the laws, tho disregard of which has cost us so much sorrow. If this Is not done a recurrence of the plague is only a question of time, and another such visitation means tho death not only of good cltixens. but the destruction of Memphis. Life Is too short, at the best, to be jeopardized even every five or twentj'-flvo j-ears by tho yellow fever, and no prospects, however flattering, will repay the loo In trade which our merchants and business men have this fall been forced to liear. ManjJtit Ap- JKil. Nad Fa ef a Rsataatle Marriage. A curious divorce suit now on trial in Hrldgeport introdr.ee plenty of ro mance, with the old moral against runaway matches. Miss Elizabeth Adam years ago lived in Syracuse, N. Y. She met clandestinely one Charles K. Hill, who soon after went as clork to China. She kept up a correspond ence with him, but her parent did not know she even had his acquaintance. One day she started on a journey with her mother, but got left at a way sta tion and disappeared. She was not heard of for a week, and then came a letter thai she had sailed lo marry Mr. Hill. The ahlp was wrecked, and for fifteen days she wa t.med atxni m Ab open boat Finally he wiu recoJ and married Hill. Now she sum for divorce after all that she endured u j-rt her husband. She came home twW after marriage, and In 1MW her ('bln, servant were the wonder of Suscute Of reent jear Mrs. Hill liabtVn lr eling abrovl Not long ago. at Hrldge jHirt, she Mod a bill for divorce He heard of it, and. being very rich, wrote to a Maine friend to give her ITA.OiXi If ahe would make it a quiet separation Subsequently, hearing that the affali had Iwcomc public he reduced hi ofl!? to iiVOOO II.. friend called al thr" Sterling Ilou" to talk it over with her, and immcdlnt-'iy ahe broke a pitcher over hi head and had hi in arreaiod for assault Ho n..i complained against her. They are .u it Hill i1!M tiled a bill of divorce, tind i on the wav hojhe to tight, and then it stand. !v-antfft disgrace, discord, e'e . all the natural fruit of the onesided elopement of long ago. llurtjord Countnt, oldtinnki.im; piTte. . Story or a Life Passed Mostly UaVr ground. Old "Tunneling Pete" was what he was always called, and If he had any other name it was never heard on the Pacilic coaat. It a aaid that ho was from the lead mines of Galena, III,, where they to this day tell how ho bur rowed his way through the liuicfltono from cave to cave iu search for 'miner al,' making the cave last found hi abiding place. F.von in those days ho was nearly alwajs underground. How hu managed to endure tho light of dav long enough to cross thu plains has al ways been n mystery to all who knew him. Some assert that ho traveled onlv luring the njglit, and others that ho wore a huge pair of goggle of hlacia glf In Mas. Old Pete lam led In California IHt'J, ami a soon as hu struck th golden soil took pick nnd shovel, and went out of sight beneath it. During the ten years lie mined lit California he wa under tho ground most of the time, only coming out to the light of the day at night, us it sou of Kriti would say Ho appeared to hate tho sun, which kept him winking and blinking, even when hi eyes werv half closed, as they always were whoi. ho was on the surface. In California old Pete mined tho gravel baukw Mexican fashion, run ning coyote holes In them till they were a greater puzzle than was the famed labyrinth of Crete. What ho done with tho gold ho found no ouo over knew, as ho was never seen to havo any in his possession, nor wns hu over seen Ur purchase either food or drink. It was the same In the lead mines, anil a story canto from Galena that ho was not a human being, but a gnome in disgraco iu some shape with the beings of his race. Ho was seen hero on tho Coin stock soon after silver wn found, but straightway disappeared under ground. No onu saw him on his way hither or knew ho wa coming; tho llrst Intimar lion thoy had of hi migration wax when ho was scon hero. 'Ihere were those among thu prospectors of thnt day who swore that old Pete had merely extend ed one of hi California hole's and so "como square through the Sierra Neva da mountains." It is reported that after tho day of his arrival he was not seen for over two years, when ho final ly cumo out near whore tho town of Sutro now stand some now sav that Mr. Sutro followed in on "old Pete's hole" whon ho dug his tunnel, other wise he could never have found his way to tho Comstock. Tho story goe tha't when old Pete's head popped out through thu ground by thu verge of thu valley, it vas daylight, nnd when ho saw tho eottonwood trees nlong the Carson Hiver hu is 'aid to havo boon In a terrible rnge, a he had supposed ho was deep enough to pass under the channel of the Carson and get beneath the big peaks of Como. All day hu sat winking and blinking nnd cursing and swearing in tho mouth of his hole for old Peto wa fearfully wicked and at night ho gathered up his drifting-bar, pick and shovel, and crossed over tho hills to Flowery District, where he sel to work, and was out of sight under the lno of a big ItUI long before morning, f Ho was seen on thu surface, in the twilight and of moonlight nlghU. two or three time oich year by tho miners of Flowery until about three j onr ago, when hu seemed to havo disappeared for good. No one cared much whither he had gone, for ho wa an unsightly old man and exceedingly snappish and dlagreoblo. One morning aliout JK month. ii go somo Indians rinded into the village of Flowery iu a terrible fright, saying the "devil" had apttcar ed lu their camp. A few miners went with the Indians and found old Peto sitting in the big hole, through which it was evident he had jut risen. Tho old man's eyes were glassv and his gray hairs were matted with"clay, Iiko those of a badger just dragged (mm his hole, and It was eay to wo that ito was on his last legs. Hu said ho had come to tho surface to get a mouthful of fresh air in order that ho might havo strength to die. Ho had lust lifo enough left to saj that he had been away up under tho roots of tho Comstock during tho past three years, and had there seen more wealth than Fair, Mackey, or any mining millionaire of them all nad ever dreamed of. "Thoy will novor find it. though." chuckled he; "they will never find It! They will never go down to where It is; they will become dis couraged (ar above, up among tho twisting clays and cross-course and faults and great horses of orphyry. I must die now, but none of them will over find what I have seen no noveW" So saving, tho old fellow suddenly pressed his hands to his breast, a rat tling came from his throat, he fell back upon the ground, gasped, and clutched the gravel with his bony fingers, a tremor passed through his frame, he straightened out, and was dead.4 rirginia City (.Vv.) Enttrpritt. Oajtt tablet. A Frenchman roasts coffee, grinds it to flour, moisten it slightly, mixes It in twice iu weight of powdered unite sugar, and then presses It I a to tablet. One of thee tablets can be dissolved at any tlmea hot or cold water, making at once the very perfection of coffee; and it I claimed that it will go much farther this way. t "r''i-3imK,miemm .M KiCJiaMTBKr""""' "? 'C