ilUUJHH 170 LANOUAOK ITS 01UOIN. VOI, Vllt. iwin For I mis rntlior full nml linil no business thoro Whcro tho lives or the minor wcro plncod In my enre, Well, they got lit tho cage an' I started om down A holdln' tho lirnko while tlio ropo wn unwound: Hut tho stuff In my stomach lmd worked on my hrnln; I reoled toward tho pil, nml rccovorln' again, I lot tho brake hIIji; wluvtn turrlblo sound Ah tho windlass llko llftlitnliiK wont spinning around 1 In nn Inutmit my agony brought to my brow, Tho cold bonds of sweat and no longer now Was my brnln In a mist; with tho strength of dis- pair, 1 clutchuil at tho ropo while tho timbers up thoro Whoro tho pulley was hung llko tho envoys of fate To seal my sad doom woro lying In wait. My (5od how tho thoughts sped through my wild brain 1 My wife and my child, would I parish In vain ? Would I murder thorn both and bo soul to the bar Of my righteous Creator to answer therefor? Tho thoughts that I had, 'twould take hours to tell Hut I parsed In a second, a cycle of hell ; My right hand grasped the rope as upward I sped Till tho pulley was scarcely u foot from my head; Thou my loll struck a beam, with a desperate grip I hold till it seemed that my Joints would clip From their sockets: nml out of my nostrils the blood Gushed forth. Tho cage stopped, and I dropped with a thud. I revived boforo long; and my opened oyos foil On my wife and my child, they woro both tare and well. When I got the cage stopped boforo I lot go, They woro scarcely a yard from tho bottom and so When I let the ropo loose they didn't drop far And all that they suffered wasjust a slight Jar. That's why I don't drink; lis reason enough; I'm not a fanatic; but don't wantnostuiV Thnt makes mo endanger my family's lives And keeps mo still pcor while my next neighbor thrives. Well, here wo are. We've been riding slow, It wont hurt 'em to drink. Now behave yourself! Whoa! Thnt cowshed down thoro Is tho '.ouso that I had llefore I sworo oil". It was pretty bad: Not much like the now one? No 'taint quite so Hue; I'm halfowncr now at tho Tlgor gold mine. LANGUAGE ITS OMQIN. LTIIOUGII some object to nny the orizing on this brunch of modern thought, assuming and only assuming Unit Speech is of divine origin, already built up into sentences, divided and sub divided into tho various parts of speech, we will try the venture. These objectors claim that God la the framer of human speech. In this, they appear more orthodox than the Bible even. For turning to Gen. 2: 20, we read, "And out of the ground God formed evcrv beast of tho Held and every fowl of the air, and brought them unto Adam to sec what he would call them, and whatever ho would call any living creature that was the name thereof." The foundation upon which the assumption is based, is that God could crcato lat?guagc as well as any thing else by a strcch of his power. True there is nothing impossible to Him, liypothetically; but it becomes us to in vestigate and not lazily to ascribe to di. vino interference, what is in reality a prod, net of the human mind. Do you doubt this? Is this view athc istic? Is thoro anything unworthy of the Creator to endow men with intellect, with vocal organs, easily adjusted, finely carved out is thoro a defect in his crca lion in leaving us to develop our powers of speech V And should wo suppose Him to have put in our mouths such words as "aUUborunlivhoscophornio&t" We answer no. Ho thai holds that in tho garden of Eden, God spoke Latin, the Devil French, and Eve Italian, and asks mo then to dis prove tho proposition, is not to bo rea soned with; he finds no dilllculiy in be lieving that rocks are created, aqueous, metamorphic or igneous, now in 1879, juat the same as in the mesozoic or azoic ages, having mastodon's teeth even imbed ded in them. To him the characters of Nature's books are nothing; shells and fossil imprints of leaves, organic remains