I- m-9mx3x:mi? ,,-r - - r "V V -x-f - .v. wmr-'ML--J f ?rv? z- "wss; -- y y -.-A -KSrO-i-' S -"-ifrrv PVfc jt r P ' v . J- 'F "tf '- jr m - s. - a? f? J? Ss I I, 't . r T $ 1 'N fc J -Vi-. vt- -&2 TT . 'j Mfc iJ. " OF A1 THE AIRT8 THE WIN1 CAN BLAW. tXni: following p-tcm was dedicated to Mrs. X "" Burns, during tbo honeymoon. rtfcwMwHuBtirllWli jives, tho lass that isi. MM VWJ vr ir - KO , Mm A Will fftmaBA " Jhjar er,I see s 'Otfr.yLtt taaeraLUtis, Hi' flM MR. a . -r not Imssms flewer mtitta. HUVM There's notnbonnlo bl moo my Jean i 0, blaw ye wcntlln winds. Maw oft amiuirake leafy trees! ..,,, .. Wr gentle nlc, f ra niuir an dale, bring name toe laden bees! And bring tho lassie back to mo that s aye sae sweet an cleun. Ao blink o her wad banish caro, aao lovely Is my J can I Wkat sighs and vows amang tho knowes hare past between us twa! v... Hew loin to meet! bow wao to part! that day ehogaodawal . . '. ..- Tfce powers above can only ken, to wsom tnc heart la seen, . That nane en be boo dear to mo as my swcci, " 7W?rt Warn. CUBIOUS PETITIONS. TttrrtgkLof expressing their opin--ions and making knowatheirdesircs by MtMoB,kB always beea dearly cher ished and abundantly exercised by En E lishmea, who had a satisfaction in aviag mM their say, even if nothing COBMS f "it UadarAe.DedaratioBof Rights the like privilege uadoubtedly appertains to.the waaker.scx;: but whether it was alwltf sjbel to do Bok aH so certain. Heniaa642,Amne,Stftfgr and her swter TjoMUciwu," necessitated, as they averred, by their terror of papists and prelates, to imitate the example of the V.oineaof Tekoah, claimed equal right ' with the men to declare their senti- meati by petition, the Commons thank fully aooepted the petition of the women , Joojlo; but twelve months later, .apon the ladies coming to the front demand the cessation of civil warfareMhe eU-aaae Hohsc told them bade them Snind their household affairs; enforcing this now view ot the matter by dispersing th e Petitioners by a cavalry charge, in which wo women were IdUea aad eight wounded. Hardly amenable to the charge of meddUag-rith matters taut did not concern them were tho ladies of St. Albans, .who, upen George III. taking a wife unto himself, embraced the op portunity of calling royal attention to the grievous distastefor matrimony dis- -T)layed by the young-'iucn of the period, by presenting a petition to thb new Queen, expressing the hope that, as subjects were always influenced by the example of their sovereign, the matri monial state would be honored by their Majesties' dutiful subjects cheerfully following tho royal example an exam ple too much needed in that degener ate age, wherein the happy state was XBM " serm - a1 BBttflH C-S mM-K , L -v niauo me ooicct 01 nuicuie, msieau or respect, by too many vain, giddy and dissipated minds. "If tho riches of a Nation consist in its populousness," argued tho fair enthusiasts, "this happy country will too soon become poor, whilst the lawful means to continue posterity arc cither shackled by the re straint of mistaken laws, or despised by those who respect none. But as every virtuous and commendable action is en couraged by your royal consort, and 3'our own noble sentiments and conduct, wo hope this example will be duly fol lowed by your Majesty's loyal sub jects." If a time comes when sex will be no longer a bar to possessing the franchise, baclielors will have to bewaro; for un less the ladies lose their hymeneal in stincts, we may look for the enactment of laws for tho encouragement of Tuat rimony, and the infliction of pains and penalties upon obdurate men; as was within an ace of coming about not many years ago in Indiana. Mr. Cutter, a young m6mber of tho Legislature, had rashly promised to introduce a bill for the taxation of old bachelors; and a number of young Ladies went down to the House to see that he kept his word. He would fain have cried off or delayed the matter; but Mr. Robert Dale Owen, seeing some fun in prospect, urged him to draw up a bill then and there, im posing an anuual tax of ten dollars upon every bachelor above thirty years of age who could not prove that ho had popped the question twice ineffectually. Then a very rapid act of Jegislation was performed. The rules of the House were suspended, and the bill read three times, passed and ordered to bo 're ported to the Senate without a mo ' ment's delay; tho House adjourning in order to accompany the joung ladies, and see what the Senators would jdo. They, catching the infection of the"hour, read the bill twice;, and it seemed as if its passage was secured; but two or three of the older and graver members, awaking to a sense of their responsibil ity, then made a stand against its fur ther progress, and procured the ad journment of the debate. This proved fatal to the measure. Next day, it was defeated by a small majority; at which the bachelors of Indiana had good rea son to rejoice, since the Governor was resolved to sign the bill, as he saw no impropriety in its provisions; and as for its expediency, tho legislators would have to settle that matter with their consciences; it was none of his busi ness. The subjects of Frederick the Great, who had any grievance to air or favor to ask, were wont to hang their peti tions on a linden-tree at Totsdam, to have their prayers granted or refused as the King inclined, without waiting the pleasure of Minister or Sec retary. The Petition-tree doubtless bore strange fruits sometimes; but nov er did Old Fritz have a stranger docu- ment submitted for his consideration than one that found its way into the hands of Charles L in 1640. This unique petition ran as follows: Whero- as your Majesty's petitioner hath un derstood of a great discontent in many of your Majesty's subjects at the gra cious mercy your Majesty was freely pleased to show upon" your "petitioaer, by suspending the sentence of death pronounced against your petitioner; these are humbly to beseech your Majesty rather to remit your petitioner to their mercies that are discontented, than to let him live the subject of so great a discontent in your people against your Majesty; forit hath pleased God to give me grace to desire with the prophet, Tht if this storm be . raisedlfor me, I may be cast into the tea, that others may avoid the tem-pest-' This is, most sacred Sovereign, the petition of him that should esteem his blood .were shed to cement the breach lietween your Majesty aad your subjects." Whether John Goodman's crime deserved death or not, after such j m -appealr it .was impossible for the1 Crowato revoke its revocation, of the; '"-MoieBce. - - Tn'vimr iflra&t stvle was -heroree- r' , M?Ij-.I.J.J..Lj 'W-lIfVl.r J .WnglCOBOT VJW? J, inMrown 85jjir'5J An tyray, torture and wrong the itl righto of the people thou rulest? 1 have kept all thy laws diligently. O Qveea, listen. It is thy prerogative to eoMUUKl. 'Lei right be done!' Tho erawM have fallen lately from the regal heeii of Feveral Priaces in Europe; aad the greatest monarch that ever held the "English iwsjjjter looked back aBd moralized, andlier'Majesty exclaimed: Millions of money for moments of ttme! " Ladies can wax wondrously grandilo quent when in tho mind. A Kcntuckian victim of mans inconstancy thin set forth her plaint in a petition for divorce: "Dark clouds of discord began to loxver over tho sky of wedded felicity, and the aftiaacious lightning of , disunion bsat. to dart its lurid flames across gloomy cloads of atramental blackness obscur ing every star of hope and happined whose resplendent glory illuminated I the dawn of the tint few brief yca ol her wedded life, when she gave hex hand and an undivided heart to the de fendant, who in the sultry month of July, 1876. after having been warmly and snugly wintered within tho fond embraces of her loving arms, and close ly nestled to a heart that beat alone for the defendant, showed his base, black ingratitude by abandoning her without cause whatever, except the insatiable thirst for novelty, which Ls the predom inant character of defendant's nature." If the deserted one was in tho habit of holding forth in this style, the wonder is that the union endured even a few brief years. A very extraordinary petition for di vorce once came before -thb Courts in Tennessee. The petitioner set fortL that his wife died in February, 1871. leaving eight children; that his mother-in-law took great interest in her grand children; aad 'feeling that she was nearer and learer,to h children than any other liinnan'bein, andlwas bound to'them by the ties of common affec tion, he, in September of the same year, married his mother-in-law; it never occurring to him or her that there was any technical objection to their taking such a step. Two months afterward, he was horrified by acci dentally discovering, not only that he had committed an illegal act, but one unsanctioned by the church of which he was a member. He therefore peti tioned the Court to pronounce the mar riage null and void, and declare com plainant and defendant free from the supposed obligation and its conse quences. No opposition being raised on the lady's part, the Court decreed accordingly, and the too-hastily con tracted union was formally dissolved. Another attempt to escape the con sequences of a niatriihonial misadven ture did not end feo happily. In this case, the widow of an officer who fell lighting for the North, tired of her mateless condition, had, by marrying again, relieved Uncle Sam of a pen sioner. Unfortunately, her new part ner treated her so badly that she was compelled to go to the Di vorce Court 'for relief; and that ob tained, petitioned Congress'lo reinstate her name on the military pension roll; on the plea that she had reverted to her former status as an officer's widow. The committee- to which the novel claim was referred, reported that they could find no instance of such a thing being allowed, and declined to advise Congress "to create a dangerous and inconvenient precedent. Here we stay our pen, not for lack of material, but because we have no dis position to try the patience of our read ers as hardly as petitioners are apt to try that of the authorities to whom they pray. Uhambcra Journal: M The Euglisli Gamekeeper. The tall and stout yet slightly stoop ing form; the velveteen coat, glazed at the shoulder and sleeve where thejrun rubs: the dog-whistle at his button- hole; his pocket knife, which is a basket of tools in itself; his gun, which he loves as an old companion, and the balance and "haug" of which he is so accustomed to that he never thinks of aiming " lie simply looks at the ob ject, still or moving, throws the gun up from the hollow of his arm, and instant ly pulls the trigger, sta3'ing not a second to glance along the barrel." He is per fectly civil to every one; and with a willing manner toward his master and his master's guests, ho yet has a won derful knack of getting his own way. Great on dogs, his opinion is listened to and taken by everybody, ana by tins knowledge many "tip's" are gained. At tho farmhouse he, is invited to sit down and take a glass, for bis gossip is welcome, and hjsJavprisnlwaysiwprth cultivating. He is proud of his occirpa tionTandaelIghT3inthc woods and the fresh air.He thiukstho smell of the earth a fine thiag, and the hedges and grass "raSu8Weot las augar," after a shower. If a rdariasks him to take a gl.iss of ale he never says " No;" and when gentlemen give him "tips." he is "much obliged," and takes them home to his "missus." He is not afraid of wet weather, for ho does not regard it; and a great-coat he scouts as a thing of naught. He has likewise his faults. Toward his undermen, and the laborers and woodmen who transgress his rules, he shows a hasty temper, and is apt to use lus .ground-ash stick rather freely, without? "thought- of consequences. When he takes a dislike to a man, noth ing will remove it; his hatred is cordial, and he is full of prejudices. Conserva tive in his way of thinking, the im Eressions.of his youth are strong within im, and he looks with contempt on everything whuih diverges from his early-formed haVits and methods. Yet he never gets sour of life. The "tips" that are forthcoming from picnic par ties who frequent his grounds in sum mer, and from -the young gentlemen who have a turn at ferreting rabbits with him in winter, add a certain softening element to his surroundings, and as he is proud of his cottage, of his wife, of his family, of his gun,andof his dogs, he is on the whole as comfortable and happy as may be. Exchange J)Ied.as a Aia; saeald. t i J. E. MuitDOCtfhas written a book on the stagey in which-occurs the -following story: Mr. Macready was fond of telling the following story as his experience of American independence, exemplifiedin a western actor of the self-satisfied kind: "In the. last? act of Hamlet," said he, "I was very anxious to have the King, who was rather of a demo cratic turn of mind, to fall, when I stabbed iim, over the steps of the throne, and on the right hand side, with his, feet to the left, in order that when I 'was ,to fall I should have the center of '.the wage. $9 myself, as befitting the- prlnciaabpersonaee of the tragedy. TJo objecttoa was made to this request on the part ef the actor; but at night, to my greait'iwrprise, he, wheeled directly round after receiving the sword-thrust, andf deliberately fell in the middle of the sceae. just-oa the spot where I was in the Jiabit otdyiag. .Well; as a dead sum caaaotoriove himself, and as there was -o-timefor .others to 'do iVthe Kmgsbodyreaiainelin possession of my,plaeeaadlwa'foroedto findan other sitaationf which'; i; did,.. and;a ished the scene in the bestway I could! When I expostalated with-his Majesty for the libertyhe had taken,.he coeUy replieMr.Maereadrwc Western peeote tawwraeihiae abimt -Knars' ex- an oaatncK orao theref ore, X thoakht hadxaTghtrto'do, wa-;w,jirrit jmu sri, m -- " -i The Seas ef Directive la laiaiak. A OEXTLEMAJf writes to the Popular flciaiv MonUi'y: I was vcrv much interested in the account, pu6lished in your July num ber, of the experiments with the intet ligcnt Cincinnati dog, and I think the fact there developed tend strongly tm the pioof of a theory that I have long believed to be correct, viz: that some of the lower animilt arc endowed with M-n of location and direction which at most is onlv rudimentarily possessed by man. I do not think that the feats of the carrier-pigeon can be accounted for on the theory of any llnite development of the sense of sight, smell or heariag., and the action of honey-bees presents the ame difficulties to persons familiar" with the habits of these interesting in sects. In searching for wild honey, the bee-hunter provides himself with a small box with a sliding door; insido of this box he nuts some sweet sub stance as a bait for the bees. When several bees have collected in the box, he closes the lid. As soon as they have finished eating, he releases a bee, which, after ascending high enough to clear the surrounding trees, makes a "bee-line" for its hive. Tho hunter marks this direction and carries his box off at right angles to the line made by the first bee, and releases another bee; he carefully marks tho direction taken by this second bee. and if they are both the same swarm, the hive will be found at the point where these two lines meet. I might cite well-authenticated cases of cats, pigs and dogs finding their way home, where such a teat wouiu seem impossible to man under like circum stances; my object, however, was not to theorize but simply to record what I consider some interesting observa tions bearing upon this subject. Last spring, I built a trout-pond in my garden, ort the west side of a run ning brook discharging about six hun dred cubic feet of water per minute. The brook is quite rapid where it passes the pond, and the surface of tho pond is some five feet higher than the sur face of tho brook. Tho pond is supplied with water brought two thousand feet in underground pipes and discharged in a fountain in tho center of the pond. Common bull-frogs (Rana pipiens) oc casionally find their way into this pond. On the 18th of last 'July I found three frogs in the pond, and shot all of them with a'pistol. I dipped them up with a scoop-net, and found two of them shot through the body, and the other, a little fellow, weighing about two ounces, was shot across tho back, the bullet just raising tho skin and leaving a white streak across its dark green surface. I emptied the three frogs out of the net into the swift running water of the brook, and they floated down stream out of sight. On the 19th of July, tho day following, I found the wounded frog in the pond again, ami readily recognized it by the scar from the bullet. I found no diffi culty in catching it in the scoop-net, and, fearing that tho scar might disap pear from its back, I cut off the center too ot its right foot, put the frog into a paper bag, carried it down the brook across a bridge, and finally threw it into tho stream some onehundredyards below the pond". On the 24 th of July I found the frog back again, caught it," and. so as to leave no doubt about its identification, I cut off the middle too of tho left foot. I then put the frog in the paper bag, started from tho pond in a northeast course, stopped and whirled the Fag around so as to confuse any ideas that it might have had of direction, and then changed my course, and finally released the frog on tho opposite sido of the brook in an oat-field about an eighth of a milo in an easterly direction from the pond. To prevent the frog from get ting any idea from watching mo, I passed'on after releasing it, and did not go back again to tho pond for several hours. Three days afterward I saw the frog in tho pond again, but it was so wild that I could not catch it with my scoop-net, and I afterward tried various devices to capture it alive, but the mo ment it saw me approach the pond it would jump in and remain hidden in the stones at the bottom until I left. Finally, despairing of catching it alive, and hav ing some doubts about its identity, on tho 9th of August 1 shot it, and recog nized it by the absence of the cut-off toes. Tho general direction is up-hill from the poiut where the frog was last re leased to the pond, and about tho same distanco in a down-hill course would have taken tha frog to the Ausable lliver. It still remains possible that the frog waited until nigut, and then followed my tracks back to the pond, but that seems improbable, I think; even more so than to believe that the frog knew all the time the direction of tho pond, and slowly worked its way back again as inclination prompted. Anecdotes of Artemus Ward. Mr. Toole, who was one of Artemus Ward's most intimate friends in Lon don, says that he told him the follow ing story: He went to a lecture at a re mote place, where his face was not known. He was a littlo late; tho audi ence became impatient, and began to stamp with their feet and to whistle. By and by Ward came out and began to move about the platform, dusting the chairs and desk. The people took him for a "supe," and became still more impatient. Presently ho turned around, dropped the dust-cloth, and said: " Now, having dusted the chairs, 1 will begin my lecture." Many of the jokes he made were not so good as this, but, no doubt, served to amuse himself and others. An acquaintance told me that he was once riding in a Broadway omni bus when Browne got in, and, on be ing asked for his fare, inquired of the driver if he could change five dollars. The driver said he could not, stopped the coach, and requested Ward to get out. Upon this Y ard became very in dignant Why should he get out? Be cause he had not the proper fare. " But I have," he said: "I never said I hadn't ten cents. I only asked if you could change five dollars?' . S. ATo- dal, " Scribner. - Ancient Bei The Romans were keen, business like men, who never preteaded to'be above trade, even though they were of superior rank or 'wealth. It- djd" not cost much to keep a man in the early centuries, the yearly allowance for a slave being thirty-seven dollars aad a half, while a free laborer lived forjorty four dollars a year. Corn wae the'aaain stay, fifteen million bushels-being con sumed annually, and oil d honey were iised in lar qnantities. Amoag theTich, epicures were morecommen andmore extraTagantthanintaemodeta world. Fortuneswere petj'Se banquets. Men were absurdly lavah. And yet everything' was. very cheap even-in, .this extravagant .city, rae market reports shdw that Iamb and fith were only W ceate P'P0,4tbefS cents, fish two cemts, PJJ ? ? thirty cents, eggs six JgHr wheat JjSJ?j!& & u 2 T - -SE thirty centtf Jre to chickens tier aa'r, al"J ""tl im.. ten lieadsof lettace two y?TLr"" Komans-wete &7liTav2a .-T.3j.a -fc tkav eeaaamed I!:!S?rB,0fc , fcei 'iaiocGM-a! w. imtm articles, and many impced'to-brodt largepriceC fioHtmeeobia conia not wru - - T., r . I.. were ...tow- a jk mki coaat of Forbiger it aecms that goods were very low. A pair of shoes cost thirty cents; oae pair of woman gait ers, thirty cents; one felt bat, one dol lar; one tunic, sixteen dollars U thirty six dollars; one tog tweaty dollars to tweatv-eight 4llaf. A nan could get a ffca've for two cent. The Romans speat large araeunts on other luxaries beside those of the table. The imports of flowers, perfumes, ointments and dresses from India in one year amount ed to two million two hundred thou sand dollars. In furniture they had their decorative art craaei, tho ciiros wood tables being favorite articles for squandering money upon. In Cicero's time it, was not aaususl to spend fifty ihouaandiloJlarspVpngof these tables, and Seneca, the stoic, who grated of the virtues of abstinence and the vice of luxury, owned five hundred of them. Hew a Jaaa Stitches ea a Bittes. He had never tried it before, but he was naturally a .self-reliant man, and felt confident of his ability to do it. Moreover, his wife had gone to the country. Therefore, carefully selecting from that lady's work-basket the thickest needle and stoutest thread, he resolutely set himself to the task. Spitting upon his fingers, he carefully rolled the end of the thread into a point, and then, closing one of his own optics, be attempted to fill up the needle's solitary eye; but the thread either passed by one side or the other of the needle, or worked itself against the glittering steel, and refused' to be persuaded. However, tho thread sud denly bolted through the eye to tho ex tent of an inch, and, fearing to lose this advantage, he quickly drew the ends together and united them with a knot about the size of a buckshot. The but ton was atrouser one, but he liked tho dimensions of its holes, and it was only going on the back of his shirt, anyhow. As he passed the needle gently upward through the linen, he felt a mingled pity and disdain for men bungling over such easy jobs; and as he let the button gracefully glide down the thread to its appointed place, ho said to him self that if ever he married a second time it should be for some nobler reason than a dread of sewing on his own buttons. The first downward thrust had the same happy result, and holding the button down firmly with his thumb, he came up again with all that con fidence which uniform success inspires. Perhaps the point of the needle did not enter to the bone, but it seemed to him that it did, and his comment upon the circumstance was emphatic. But he was very ingenious, aud the next time he would hold the button by one edge, and come up through the hole nearest the other. Of course he would. But the needle had an independent way of suiting itsolf as to holes, and it chose the one where the thumb was. Then tho needle got sulky. It didn't care aboutjholes, anyhow, H it was going to be abused for finding tlfera, and the button might have been an imperforated disc for all the apertures which that needle could thenceforward be made to discover, without infinite poking and prodding. It always came through when it was least expected, and never whon it was wanted. ' Still he persevered, and it was not until he finally discovered that he had stitched over tho edge of tho button and had sewed it on tho wrong side of tho shirt that he utterly broke down. Tillage Improvement Societies. Almost every New Eugland village of much prosperity now has its Society for Promoting Rural Improvement, the work of which is to induco and direct tasteful architecture and gardening. Bishop Clark, of Rhode Island, in a Ledger article, emphasizes the value of these societies by describing Fortbridge in 1870 and in 1880. This is Fortbridgo as it was: "The houses bordering tho main street are all enclosed by rail fenoes, picket fences, and dilapidated stono walls, with creaky turn-stiles and gates half unhinged, aud drunken posts leaning against an old stump for sup port; patches of luishorn grass and weedy gravel, faggots of bark and wood and brush, fragments of ancient carts, and broken plows and disabled narrows, heaps of mortar and stones, piles of bottles, and all other conceiv able forms of rubbi3h dumped into the gutter. The barns and sheds and dwell ing houses are all much of the same pattern and the same color, if they can be said to have any color at all; cold, bare, dreary, with no piazzas, or porches or window hoods, or any other attempt at ornamentation." Tiiis is Fortbridge as it is now: "Most of tho old houses reappear, but with broad piazzas, taste ful porches, and bay windows peeping out from the vines and flowers; with altered roofs and fancy chimneys and rich coloring. The ugly fences are gone, flowers bloom in front of all the houses, the streets are all reformed, the woods and rubbish are seen there no more. Good, clean sidewalks have been laid from one end of the village to the other, and the roadway is so fine and smooth that even Mr. Bonner would not hesitate to drive the marvelous Rarus or any other of his swift-footed stecd3 through tho town at any pace of which they might be capable. The barren common has been converted into a park, the duck ponds into roman tic lakes, with a swan or two sailing about." Seme Curioas Ancient Beliefs. Most of the writers of the Middle Ages believed that cinnamon, ginger, cloves and nutmegs are the produce of the same tree; that the bay, the fig tree, eagles and sealskins afford protection from lightning; and that the use of bitter almonds is n effectual guard against intoxication. Two fallacies are attached to the herb basil. Hollerius declared that it propagated scorpions, while Oribasius, on the other nand, asserted that it was an antidote to the sting of these insects. One great au thority, quoted by Browne, states that an ivy cup has the property of separat ing wine from water, the former soak ing through,-but the latter remaining. SirThomas seriously tried the experi ment, but in vain, whereupon a hostile critic ascribed the failure to the "weak ness of our racked-wines." Another sage wrote that cucumbers had the power of killing by their natural cold; and yet another stated that no snake can endure the shade of an ash-tree. " m The agricultural ant is a pattern of neatness. Ths most minnte particles of dirt are carefully removed, and the whole body frequently and thoroughly cleaned, especially after eating and sleeping. They assist each other in the general cleaaaiBg, aad the attitude of the ant nnder operation is one of in teaee aatiefaetioa. a perfect pictare of MKular wrreader and ease, n ant Easleen seen" to" kneel down before another, and thrust forward the head under thefaceof the other, and lie motiealeas, expressing the desire to be cleaned; the other ant understood this and went to work. Sometimes this is coabised with acrobatic feats? in which these aats excel." jumping about and in a remarkable fashion' to of grass. Sometimes the cleaas- ant haags downward1' from the grass, aaa to ner the ant operated unoa cliars, reachinsr over and no with great agility to submit to her friend's OiBces. Xivweauy motetare mm tne BMth is used for washing. "-? oood aaiest kmrhi at a good, joke oeott af aarcasaa.Bba ant; Grewta ef the Beard la HUUrj. A Fkexcii paper gives orae haphaz ard sclectioas from a hbtory of tho beard. In the carliVt Pagan times tho primitive deities were rcprecnti with majestic beards. In France thev plaje i a grcatrofe from the reign ef rhara mond downward. Under dovis, in deed, the beard of the King was an ob ject of peculiar veneration, and indeed, every individual was more or less sen sitive regarding his beard. It b re lated that after the great battle of Tol biac Clovis sent a deputation to the de feated AHarc requesting him to come and touch the victor's beard &a a to ken of alliance. Far from accepting the invitation in the spirit in which it was offeredrthe ewraged King of the Uum seized the Frankish emissaries by their beards, and hanled them out of the room by their reverwd locks. The un fortunate envoys returned rather crest fallen to Clovis, narrated what had hap pened, and swore " on their beards" to avengo the affront. Id subsequent reigns the beard was the object of numerous enactments, and the fashion of wearing it was changed as frequent ly. Sometimes it was worn long, some times close-clipped, now peaked, now plaited, or even decorated with pearls or gold trinkets. Even in the sacred atmos phere of Rome itself bcanls wen the objects of considerable discussion. Dif ferent Popes laid down different rules on the subject. One Pontiff enacted that no beards were to be worn; anoth er as stringently directed that the razor was never to be applied to the chin. Saints Clement, of Alexandria. Cyprian, Jerome and Chrysoitum engaged in vehement controversies about the mode of wearing tho hair about the face in the fourteenth century. In France I ho final triumph of bcarJs dates from tho Renaissance, when the exnmplo ?et by the great artists, who indulged largely in these appendage, was closely fol lowed by the sovereign and other mag nates of the land. Under Henry III. shaven chins were the mode, the'mus tacho being worn long and drooping. During Henry IV.'s reign beards, cut square, came again into fashion, and mustachos were curled; while under Louis XVI. beards were again tabooed, and tho mustache alone worn, and in tho two following reigns the razor was in full use. Under the Republican regime, as also under those of the Km pire and Restoration, no boards were grown. They came in agaiu, however, with the revolution of 1SJ0, in company with many other changes of costume, etc., and at the present day no uni versal rulo exists on tho matter. Aa Unceremonious Irritation. It is natural for a hospitable man. en countering a friend unexpectedly, to ask him unceremoniously homo to dinnor. The man invited, having a share of common sense, does not ox pect an elaborate repast under the cir cumstances, but is willing to accept the ordinary faro provided for the family. This is a man's view of the matter but it is a view that six thousand years of masculine expostulation has not suc ceeded in getting inside tho heid of tho female woman. Tho woman is a good sool, we all know that, and we are all ready to bow down end worship her and admit that we could not. under any circumstauces, get along without her; but when it comes to this matter of dinner-giving we are forced to own up that the dear thing has a great deal to learn. When a man comes home, say twenty minutes before dinner time, and tells tho best wife that ever vet was put into this sinful world that he has brought another man un expectedly home to dino with him, an expression will come over tho faco of that excellent woman that will make the man even though ho be tough and seasoned tremble. She becomes rigid directly. When tho dinner comes on it is a good enough dinner for nnybody, and tho other man enjoys it. and says so; but a train of cars could not con vince that woman that he is telling tho truth. "Merc politeness," she nays, coldly, when the fact that he ate three slices of beef, was helped twice to pud ding, and made a clean sweep of things generally, is timidly presented to her consideration; and sho adds that "he, at loast, had some consideration for my feelings." And when a woman, even the best of women, refuses to believo in three slices of bcof, what is a man to do? Submit to the inevitable, and re frain from inviting a man to take pot luck with him unless assured that tho pot overflows with milk and honey. Servant in Germany. One reason why German servants do their work so systematically and thoroughly is that washing day comes but once a month, and then is done by extra help hired for the occasion. On Monday of the week devoted to this work, the women come and make preparations. The clothes arc care fully assorted; the wood laid ready for lighting under the great boiler in 'tho wash-house, and every tun, hogshead, etc., filled with water. Tho water is pumped laboriously, and brought from some distance in cumbrous Duckets. The carriers wear upon their shoulders for this purpose heavy wooden yokes, like ox-yokes, with a chain and hook at each end, to which the full buckets are attached. The next morning at three o'clock they are at work, as busy as bees, and out-chattering the swallows in the ivy which grows about the wash house eaves. Wash-boards, those in struments of destruction, are unknown, all rubbing being done between their horny knuckles. The ironing is done in Germany by means of a mangle, where -possible, and the clothes are beautifully smooth and clean. By this admirable system of "doing the wash ing," the family peace remains un disturbed. ANew Jbrset fox that had been tamed secured the friendship of dogs, but. from his peculiar odor, cats kept aloof from him. xney wouia not waiic upon any spot where the fox had been standing. He used his knowledge of this to cheat pussy out of his breakfast. As soon as the servant poured out the cat's allowance of milk the fox would run up to the spot and walk around the saucer, well knowing that the rightful owner would not touch it. Day after day the cat lost his milk, until the trick, was found out, and the milk placed in a spot where the fox could not reach it. After he had been stopped from rob bing the cat he tried his cunning on the dairymaid as she was bringing the pails from milking. As she was passing along the fox went up to her and brushed him self against one of the milkpails. The milk became so tainted with the smell of the fox that the maid dare not take it to the house, and thonghtlesely poured it into a pan and gave it to him. Thecrafty animal repeated this trick several times, but when he found that the spoiled milk was given to the pigs instead of to him self, he gave up his attempts. "S COJfFULWT. It toareled fast: R'a here at last. The dmded eptzootr: Sir nose, of caane. is cettinc worse, And yoac I all rar beauty; Mr style Is Sed, my cweutacaead Each day Is rettiac larger: Herodhie. qwe, coaM sot endare Am& Bees upee a caaei -S.J Chreafcta. m m Doh't covet the possessioas of aav aatu you are willing' to nar for them the price which he paid; thea yoa will not need to covet theat, for yoa can go aad get them for who spends ak FEfcMJ.f IL ASU I.ITEI4ART. Miu.au. the Knrlih pjilntwr, chargr I2&.9Q0 for paint js a portrait. AaoCT a M:oatf cp of Web-T,SprlJa-l?j"A continue to b M j Tory year. THE Fjiglwsh Unilariao hato Ut4 in ciUoo of Cbaaainj: work. cwpv of which are sold at a shilling. Da- CtUKt-ts 51 CKr will won pob lUh a trcatie on "Olrure Word aa4 Pbraes la Shakmpcare and the Kiux bcthaa Dramatist-" Mu. Rohext IIrowmxg, the pocU living at present la France, !U phy iclans navo adricd pe4ctrtaaLtu as a relief for bis reccal iu-bealth. Mia. 4, Yias Ciuxrjfcr wdl fur nish the text ard her husband the Hlu. tratiou of some forthcoming magatlno articles on Spain an.l Portugal, when the artists arc now traveling. TUE Directors of the Edinburgh Ph losophlaal lattituiioa have ordered ht removal-af "OuMaV aoveUfrem tht shelves of their library. Considerable excitement ha fallowed tho order. Scuoi'enuaueu was thirty year without a disciple, almost without a reader. At present the mere llt of the books and articles in which reference l made to him m tMH'tit!t nlnetv mlm -. i .'iLn.ir- T.U.. ' V-'.-l'.'- -" - ..-A- T in. fed a-r m t- irvi. Bp ''.. mi t . a am -viTaiTiirvBri-miiiia j-pcnai uiuw-rT.puj. AiicmJtsHOi- PuKCEtu ot CindnaaU. is very leeoie physically, wane un a. k ." mind appears to be as active as ever. to brirnten as the teacher marked U a It.. ,11 v!r, ,I..J.l,t ,; rtnrTrthw'.. .1. 1 ...n. In Uo OH logical labors half a ccntur' ?'. when ho rode hundreds of miles thruuen lor- ests to establish ohurches. M,.. K..i,. fniin,) ImnAiiIMn In fill the orders for Miss NeiUon's photo &l iW. trt- W. iinr"iwn- - .... m ,? , X- T. I - ..!.. graphs since her death. Next to hers tho largest number sjld are of Mary Anderson and the noxt in popularity is are of Maud llratucombe. manv of whoso pictures aro lKught by artists as studies, und are used by young lallo in their first attempts at cmron jor traiture. Wilkie Collins !egan life a a tea merchant, but after anhort time .-ludiod law at Lincoln's Inn. and presently abandoned that for literature. He Ls a rapid inventor and slow producer, writes at a massive desk, on ono Mil of which hangs a picture of his father, and on the other is a tin box containing ploLs and schemes and ideas jotted down. In composing ho first finds a central ida, then fits the characlem. lets the characters evolve their own incidents, aud begins his story at tho be ginning. IIL'XOKOUK. Seckets may bo trusted to a miser. He never gives anything away. .V. 0. ricuyune. A Chinese adage Lovo '00 littlo. love Oolong. Boston Commercial Vut letin. "Do Kisil sing?" asks an exchange. Certainly, nnd many of them havo been known to reach the high sea. hula dclphia Sun-lay Transcript. Br holding a very littlo misery uilto close to our vycs, wo entirely hue sight of a great deal of comfort beyond which might bo taken. Buffalo Express. IJjounson, tho Norwegian novelist anil poet, iijas ajrrived iju tjhis ejoun trv, cjreatiugfrjuitu ajn ejxeitement ijn Ijftcrarv citrclcs. ajnd ijs ajnxious tjo mjcet Wilhelmji. bjingo. Oil City Der rick. "Thkue aro only one hundred and tiftv different ways'of putting up peach es' said a youn-r laay to our funny contributor; which way do you prefer?" "I prefer putting them down," was the reply. Toronto Grip. An American lawyer is now Attorney-General of tho Sandwich Isl ands. If in two years he doesn't own tho entire country and hold the King's note for a largo sum ho is no credit to the American oar. VhilatUlphia Chron icle. "Br George!" observed a Danbury young man who was married last month, "if I'd thought about kindling coal fires I'd novcr got married in the fall. I'd waited till nisxt spring and had a six months' honeymoon." Dan bury News. No AH'LArsR will bo allowed In the theater in New York during the por formanco of the " Passion Play." They're rather afraid that some of the Wall-street men might evince a dispo sition to start a cheer for Judas Iscariot. Boston 1'osL A Galveston woman, just married, wishing to impress her husband with her ability as a housekeeper, bawled out to the servant as she entered tho door: "Matildy, bring me tho wash board; I want to wash the potatoes for dinner." Ualvcston News. A White Mountain Guide. Our guide walked on before us, erect and manly, wearing one of those broad canvas hats which arc characteristic of this region, and furnish one of our few glimpses of picturesque costume. He bad led for years the genuinely out door life which belongs to our mount aineers. As a rule, farmers are far less rich in conversation than sea-side peo- fle sailors, pilots, fishermen; the rural ives are rather monotonous and un eventful; but when you come where the farms actually abut upon untamed for est, the art of conversation revives, and James Merrill was as good as Tboreau, so far as the habit of observation could carry him. He showed us, in the occasional de posits of soft mud by the water bars on the mountain road, how to distinguish squirrel-tracks, sable-tracks, bear tracks. A bear bad passed, as he proved to us, within a few days, which had weighed about one hundred and seventy-five pounds, and was probably two years old. He pointed out to us where, in sandy places, the young partridges nau nesuea ana nuiiercu nxe nens in the path, and where tho hedgehogs had Biawed and torn the roots in the wood, e told us how these little "quill-pigs." as they are pooularly called, defend themselves with their tails, thrashing them about till the aose of a dog or other animal is full of bristles; the dogs instinctively fear this, and seize the creature by the bead, where the bristles turn the other way- and cannot hurt. The hedgehog is in winter the chief food of the "fisher-cat," and this in turn is trapped for its fur. his small quadruped is jet-black, with a few white hairs; is as large as a large cat. but is shaped like a mink, aaving short legs. The fisher-cat and sable pronouced uniformly "saple" climb trees like cats ia pursuit of squirrels, and will run from tree to tree as easilv as the game they hunt, though suable to spring like them through the air. Both of these species are active and daring, venturing sometimes into the hunters' camps at night in search of food. The ordinary wild-cat, or bob cat," or "lucivee" (loup-arvicr) Im also found on Mooailanke, but not the larger "catamount," or that half-mythical beast known amotur Maine lamhermea as the " Iadiaa deviL" This bobcat is often as larze to the eve as aXewfooad- iand dog. but its fur is o deceptively thick that it really does not weigh more than thirty aoaadv Merrill was elo quent about its shriek at aight. -Waea yoa hear it aear yoa," he aafci. " makes every hair staadap straight, aad youfeelaboatasbiyowraar- 1 hare heard it wfcea it made me feel aa if my hat was two feet from my head. It is as mach bigger thaa the hoase-cat-'crmflb as that is aigger thaa a X W. Higjintm, aa Ai- Our Yomg BcaMkrf. TltS rXOCP MOTMS&M ttrntrrr. !f2tL rZ wtr. nkJ, tf fiiMtat fere mmm ? TKt i r AT fca wWh W"" Tx kUU hlh maffSSlmmi AM ltM. M rrh Hw tatsk? WM er a pmW t 1? , IJtml-. kltln... tM- M te T Ar.,.tUit!HtiU. HW CEL1A WKOTE TIOX. X 0ttl' Czi.il wa. iwelvo year ohlr a bright ..... ,, llTIIrtf-iri SI HBr ICTAJMJffeW. v- - - al her leajwft. anHtt r " . ". . . ....i . m ra ., a n i ww :iri a. . s. . .Aaa.aa.r r m r w t . vm v. ni d . mn a - ,. tt. heju r hcr cUw. ana a rrn" faT0rite in urbooi. No matter haw Ion;? -'. .m .. r. . v. .- or hard the Iem. Ibe m uiuoi - . -. . tr... r .... Hrov n'. hers the rt tolco tofxcJ.tlm I ( 11, 1 nvV.in ei irei it It we irr rfht hard, and I certainly will dti I tk,.t I ltl. III. a Z,ir M- tint. .o... wrtnl to recVive a bricht look of aul- Aivniniin"!!. jiun ..w. ... " ' -- escence from Cella. at least, when hc one morning aanouncml to the little class jhat acotnltloa would ha,. im-iMl fmm .vh une oil the hndaV of the following week, bu .--.- -'V .- r iKitnted. To her sun ..1.1 ... .tt.tntt wurtlt iVMiltl hare spoken. -. I cin't poaslblj do It, MUs Nul-on. and it's of no ort of um to try." , . What are wo to HTite a romjHwU tion about, girl, whoo Miss Nelwa?" aked oso face matched Cella'a In ox- . 1 .!..... 1 - . frt L;..f -.... .!! iMn. In thutrholu rtion l IIUU lu vt"", -- worldl"" " MIni Nelon sinllctL "Oh. yes. vow do. my dear." hn n- plied. pleaantlv. " I think you will tmd you know Something worth telling abotil t,iU when you put on jour think- ing-cap and make up your mind to try. At any rate, that U what 1 expect you todo-rru Audi will lot you know afterward how nearly you have suc uceiled to my satisfaction." Cella Hrowu never said a word. Sho just closed hor Hi tightly and shook her head in titter despair. It was of nO use to talk to her; a composition sho could not write. Pages of sjelltng. half tlio graniaiar or geography, miles of arithmetic, would not have daunted her anything like the mere word com jKwition. Sho could not think of any-. thing else Uiat afternoon, nnd at thn tea table she looked so abstracted and was so unusually silent, that her big brother Tom. just home fnm college. uesirvu to 00 lom 11 ner lomzuo nau gone out to spend the evening. O sister, how yu thJ practlcn vcur iiiusiu Ictnoti this afternoon." added littlo Willie: "you just banged imdj tore ! J reckon she didn't count her I one, two, three's much, mamma!" I "Mamma. Miss NcUon has told nil tho girls in rav class to write a couirKV Mtion for nCxt'Frlday," sahl (.Vila, dis regarding her brothers personal re marks, nnd lookimr anxiously at her mother; "and'I know I cant lo It. . . ..1 I iust couldn't do it if it would save my life; I would rather undertake to recite seventeen chspters of history!" r "Nonsense, said hor fatlior, laugh- ing; "it is quite time you learned to use you mind in composition. Seven-' teen or twenty-seven chapter of history will not do you half the good that six linos of carefully-written composition will do. And vou will not find It difll- cult. Celia, if you do not make up your mind against it. Did Miss Nelson give you a subject?" ) "Yes. papa salt," was tho reply, in a disgusted tone. "The idea of such a subject! I cau't think how nnjthing. interesting could bo wriltou ujon saltP "Oh, writo about tho 'cat,' exclaimed Willie. "I wouldn't writo about salt, either; nasty stuff! Jina write on the cat.' I'll tell you exactly what to say: J can writo a composition. Pooh! Its easy. Walt till mamma sends me to school. Now you just write thi. The oatls a real nice animal, it's got three j white feet and one black one. It's got 4 a spot on its breast, too. It ha four dear little kittns; and it washes hoc.11 face everv morning with her paws. She licks her face this ain't nice; but what can you expect from a poor silly cat? It don't know any better. And ours is named Thomas Matilda, after nurse's brother and sister!" "Bravo, Willie!" exclaimed his fa ther, joining in the hearty laughter of the others at the little boy. "So you can write a composition. I'd advise sister to call on you for help, by all means." "That composition might do for you, Willie, dear,'' said Celia. stiH laughing; "but I think it would sound rather queer to Miss Nelson." "Why, vou aeedn't care how it sounds. Need she, papa? She Just tells every single bit she knows. That is the way Tm going to do when I write comaositioBS." "That is tolerably sound aI vice." said her mother, looking at hcr. with a smile. "Just nut the thouzbt of ' how it will sound' quite out of your mind. and write down all you know about salt." The acxt day was Saturday. About ten o'clock Celia sat down at the little ! tabic in her bedroom, and made up hcr mind to try. t "Salt!" she wrote at the top of her paper, and then there came an awful pause. "Ob. dear, tchat shall I say about it? f Salt! . Salt Well. JL'm ure U doatkaowsrArf it Is exactly, unices it ssaUf and here Ccha s thoughts were T.V . .. '. 6 . " Cfc ",u n cosier,' sne contu: continned. thinking aiona. "ievs see now," and a a .a. u . - flhft , whiried the leaves rapidly to the Ss. urn: nere it is: 'alt-chloride of Siaai to the worship of the roldea caM sodnsmssjiataaceased for seasoaiag! the image of the Apt? jpd of Mstr certara kiads of food, aad fer the Egyptians they probahly beisg a7 preseryation of meat, etc It is foand more aware that aader this eir&vn was native 10 the earth, or it is produced by represented the saa-god ia the xodiacal evaporation and crystallization from ' sign Taaras thaa were the am of the water impregnated with saline particles. Egyptians themselves. Still another Well, I do declare! If that's all. Mr. reason why these mtths aad Jegeads fcuBicreas w ay awci aau, now should I be expected to know any more? t Xhe idea! Why. Idoa t knowany more, 1 aoa a ooa 1 no inat: rV ell. 1 do say j Miss Nelson Ls unreasonable," Celia , wriggled herself nearly off her chair, sighed, zroaaed. fanned herself, hit her pen-handle, and finally, at Waae'slBriatoa says the Algaaala M call, jumped ap and ran from the room. 1 traaetated "Miohab" iato "The Grtjlhjg leaving the compositioa still to fee Hare," km hy a false etymologyTr -"" writtea. grt P1 of ir retfgioa. the traa She aad her little brother moeated , meaa-ajc of the rr eadeaHedfy the see-saw ia the gardea, aad darfag , bBjr "The Spfrk ef the Uht." ar this pleaaaat pastime CeKs iaterro-a . "Tea Dawn." Dr. Wl IL Ur4sr. aa jj edliBfeawhathe knew aboltlpular ScUnc SfyniMjf. .-" wni at keow aaaca. m what km did kaow he reaeroaslr told. "SaHv h hsfirmn I aec was rtrj rood to make- ice-cream with. That cows MkedsaJL he also told her, "aJ thoaghsdida't." Celia laaghed so at this that she coaM not seesaw aay loager, aad she west back to the hoose to take.fcer mkb. sic lessoa ami afterward she drove out i withher mether; aad the day; went. aad she eetered her "room at aight t MMaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaM"r,MMM,, - a w4 a H4J. febuf . 34 e XW wiiT- .. .v., wt often! hr mu m) jaw " rr"'j cowiwitloa. vo wjr ' ' letrt" Ml N to? " 'mI. latrl of my rtulac . I . jfcr exactly how hanl y i ej,4akr to J -- itmn'f J1 twinkle! k ir wat a to her w,K,h tort. 4. VreUttril wrw ' !?Mieri. I . tr r SSfiri! Lm vr ar "- ' - "JS&X tt ftr ij IT!!L- mnim Unt H l . X r . WW- " . . . v. .... . i fttx nt u i ..a.i .i-Ia im tw -, tont --- -- - "'".'..T-: t im rt. m . JJ 1 iaHrte wia a. I J" - .. .jw .itji lruriHiw - p '' . - . j.&.w.KiJk.a Ariir v ttiii ww nw mmr 7"-v ..-.-; , 1,,, iM. , J JTJl.rSn rvmhw. im- im. . ! "TlI--j m isd Y -t .tM-.. tut 1 -VSSt -tZl? 1-- - t .Jr. , ii ier At tji r ... i, n,u iiip n. n-- ZT - ... lm rut aL am rlLVJ TnXmMf treVouM wi. l.. 'ut ,Mt uM i ; t t i .. - riirUlnVW Z.-Jii. U 4ht -Tll Mim Np .. Savsaad Thsdy was fcr rr, U . S', f r. $ ",u TrT? " ImU ihiak of ikM Pw t&L aol: J01 " "r tcU that T7 " ntrful uhta U Or !W tk " "" i.... iLiiftlv tried d nat wrt. nt sbewasduap-'itwtJwe!rihfir ta rtn eiea rw wis. CVlia face ;,h",a . weTi my Wi ; a - -rorda could hare , ,tr n ,it.fJnl yii. 4er vt mam. . t .ii..tvtiint wu. !r Mm 4 Wwfu ty XVlTn. LTl V i t ,w.rsK..Kbntr .. , . ;...., v.... W' grcv " 7'" NcUon tn'Utetl upon .n.ldrmK th . Altera 'commwlthm" a, of ef - - . ... 4 y. ,. It wm. anil she read It homelf b U.I"!1 U10 whole school Tlie wcnil of l a . aWlity to write a letter where .he 4 not wr. a coimhIUob l i th . fact that she c,nclm.ly Mw,l l Httle WHIIe's adv eo ntul wruoisl.u she thouyhl and W",t rnr,, " how It utltfht MiuntL -Uan A '' - Zl The Ueacst Uoelhlark. O.xe dav. as I sat at toy ofll-Intk writing busily, I heanl a door. "Come In." saltl I knmiW nl the The door Oenotl, and there lHd smill Uv. vcrv ragged and rathordlrty "What do you want?' lakel. lnrjdjr, for 1 wax annoved at the Interniptkm "Please, sir' said tho boy, will you net mo up?" It wa such a queer request that I laughed outright. "Sot ym up" l I. "lou are not a bowling-pin. at you? .What hi the world do ou mean ' , " rie. sir, I want U be net up 1 1 i. ! " UMfOH want mo to give yon soma " nionoV .u, ir 1 uiiij mini m ,, ,t... "And how much do you want? "Only twenty ceuM."Ir." "What kind of bulew villi that et . V'.. .1. f .. ..,.... I lnnu. v.. I..9' T US II Tim newspaper business, !r. I ' n.lMfc .Vf 1 imiit- ., 9 . I.. li.n.M ' And you promise to tay th money bacKf" "ie,'ir. ..., i I here was something a!out the boy that pleated mo. I handed him two dltpvs. and ho went w,w, A friend who hapiHjsed In. Just as I wa cIoMiir the transaction, etpnyi4d the oplnhm that I had been imposed upon. " Vou will never see that little rogue again.' f said he. ly niter day passed, and I began to think that my friend w right. The boy lnwl not como bark. But, jest a I v, had about given him un, ho appeared, and repaid the money "honotly. I was so pleavl that 1 madi him a present of tho amount, nnd added a trille U U Two year or more afterward", 1 stopjod ono day at a stn;et-eorner to have my shoes cleaned. As I placed my foot on the block, the bootblack looked up in my face, and said, " I should like to shine your shoes for nothing. lr." "Why no? said I. " Don't you rcmerafeer, lr. howyou ct mo up?" Thea I recognized my old nqHarrtt-w anco, though he hwt grown so that I should hardly havo known hiss. He was thriving, ha told mo. In hU new line of businc, and harl no occaln now to iKirrow any more money. He lisd imprornd greatly In bin looks, and. what was better, he had been im provltig hinwtlf in many othr way He had leanicd to read and write, sadr being reaily to turn his band to any honest work, he was trying bravely to maku his way ia the worhl. All this luppentsl a good whde agj. I kept watch of that boy, aad Vrtk great pleamre in finding that my fimt inaprc sion of him was correct. Whatever ho undertook to do he did with a will, and he itoou found a better employment than blackintr shoe. lie w bow a prosperous mercaant. and. if I were to tell you hi nime. you would hardly bclic7o that be ever could have been Tom. the hoolbAck. Aljrtd I Sclvsyn in Nvrwry, The ITershle ef Animal. 4 Ix the Infancy of mankind almost every system of mythology included the worship or veoeratioc of aaintaU. Ia one Iaad the deity was a bell, ia aaother it was a Mrprat, in yet another it was a bird; and in lands like India and Kinrpt almost every kaowa aaisaal was either an incarnated deity or famtm. The same reasons that caused the animal to be deified aad worshiped would, ia : short time, sarrouad it worship wkhV numberless myths aad legeadi, that r woo Id be remembered long after the occasion caueo iaen tato exut- occasion ence h.vl beca forgotta. As aa la artHash. if fWS ara Batwl naW cite th return of the Israelites is the desert ef wonW remaia loasr after tbeir real meaaiaz had beca tetzAzn. is dtw the metopherie aatare of all rxzf laa- guages; aad thb eae woW act sttfl more stroagly if the varioas hsule & meaaiag of eaeh aastaphorkal term were net limited hr aeourate wriemz. m Ixaa actio thit was reeeatlr riMk m aa Eagiish eoart. whea the as dse4e waa m to the aaafety aa4 coaditioa of a as-slee that kvl heem, kid down asaay rex bcJeee. a wltaaaa stated that it wasaa eWjwpe. aad theirs fere out of eoaditioa. The Jadjc marktagtkt "peedasataseaalp lygel oat ef coaditioa hy oTtt the wttaess promptly aaswerea. " sw do. my Lord, if booed ia the grettad.' . h 1 y yuan uaww Mtiimw -- rraV linmii il Xsrth im iii xwmimmmmm ,mx mn ha Jlr.