OLD IRONSIDES. Ay, tear her tattered ensign down! Long has it waved on high, And many an eye has danced to see That banner in the sky; Beneath it rung the battle shout; And burst the cannon's roar; The meteor of the ocean air Shall sweep the clouds no more. Ho deck, once red with heroes' blood, Where dwelt the vanquished foe. "When winds were hurrying o'er the flood, And waves were white below, No more shall feel the victor's tread, Or know the conquered knee; The harpies of Hie shore shall pluck The eagle of the sea! Oh, better that her shattered hulk Should sink beneath the wave; Her thunders shook the mighty deep, And there should be her grave; Nail to the mast her holy flag, Set every threadbare sail, And give her to the god of storms, The lightning and the gale! Oliver Wendell Holmes. (Written when it was proposed to break up the warship Constitution.) Beware of the Bomb. was looking over the papers (STWfc- Paris cafe. My eye chanced -M to fall upon the Echoes of 4&L1 the Stage column, and I ex- fll claimed aloud: &2?M "At it again!" Tjf A Frenchman sitting near me looked up in wonder at my pet ulant tone, so I hastened t explain, speaking fluently, in very bad French: "Round the World in Eighty Days is on the boards again. Will they ever have done with that absurd af fair? They seem to think it a feat equal to the labors of Hercules." The Frenchman looked shocked. "Phileas Fogg was no better than a tortoise!" I cried boastfully. I could do much better than he " "You can go around the world in less than eighty days?" asked my hearer slowly, and I answered in the same tone: "I will co round the world in seventy days if you like." "I take you up!" he cried. "What do you bet?" "Five thousand francs." "Done," said I, and we exchanged cards and bows. ( That is how it came about that I left Paris for the East on the 5th of January, and stepped on board a trans-Atlantic steamer from a New York pier on the 5th of March. So far I had not lost a "minute, and now it only remained to be seen whether I should reach Havre in 6even days as the steamship company promised. It would be a close shave at best. A variety of detentions might occur; a slight accident to the machinery, and til would be lost I was nearly consumed with anx iety, but the ship acted up to her reputation, and on the 12th of March I stepped once more onto French soil. I cast the ship a look of gratitude as she lay at the Havre pier letting off steam from h ;c monstro is boiler. Then I glanced at my watch. It was 4 in the afternoou; there was plenty of time for me to dine at my ease and catch the 6:40 express. That would bring me to Paris at half past eleven. I took out my time-table to make sure. As I ran my eye down the column of figures, an inspiration came to me. "Where's the use of starting this evening?" I said to myself, "if I get there too early, it will look as if I were afraid of losing the wager. How much better to arrive at the very last second, with brilliancy and dash and dramatic effect, just as they do on the stage. That would be worthy of a genius! Now, here is a train which leaves Havre tomorrow morning at 6:55, and reaches the Saint - Lazare Station .at 11:30. The time fixed for me to meet the fellow at the office of the Semaphore just behind the Stock Exchange is before the first stroke of noon. I can easily go from Saint Lazare to the Ex change in eight minutes, in a cab, so there is nothing to prevent my ap pearing in the nick of time, just as Phileas Fogg did, after making every one's heart palpitate with suspense. That's settled. I shall not go on un til tomorrow!" Accordingly, I went with my bag gage to the best hotel, dined com fortably, took a walk through the town smoking a cigar, and returned at 10 o'clock to go to bed. "I must take the 6:55 train tomor row morning," I siid to the hotel proprietor; "can yo; have me wak ened in time?" "We have a trustworthy man on ptrpose for that work," was the reply. "That may be," said I skeptically, "but, after all, if you could let me have an alarm-clock, I would feel more safe." "I will lend you my own, although I assure you it is unnecessary," said the host, and accordingly I carried the tiny clock to my room, wound the alarm, set it at 6, stood it on a little table beside the bed, and went to sleep with a quiet mind. 1 was in a heavy slumber when 1 felt my arm being shaken violently "What's the matter?" I grumbled. witnout opening my eyes. "You lave only just time, sir," said a voice in my eat-. "Time for what?" I asked, looking up arowsiiy. "To catch your train," was the re ply. I sat up. and glanced at the clock It was half -past six! Without another word, I leaped from the bed with such precipitation that I threw down the table with the little clock; dashed Into my clDthes; crowded my few belongings into my trunk frantically; flew down the stairs, four at a time; sprang into the stage which was awaiting me, and hardly drew breath until I was on the train. Ouf! What a close squeeze! Two minutes more and 1 would have lost my bet. However, all's well that ends well; I had my ticket, my trunk was on the train, the whistle sounded, t was off lor Paris. When I entered the St Lazate sta tion the hands of the big clock pointed to half-past eleven. I hailed a cab, and learned that there was time for me to take my trunk with nip. At that moment it appeared in the arms of two porters who .were carry ing it with the greatest care. Con found them, how slow they were! What fool ever accused the railway companies of handling baggage rough ly? I hastened toward the men ex claiming: "Be quick, now!" I had hardly uttered the words when a heavy hand was laid on my shoulder, and, turning round to ee the cause of such familiarity, I found myself face to face with a gendarme.1 "What is the matter with you?" I asked in amazement. "Matter enough," replied the man in a jeering tone, tightening his hold; "you will see!" Behind the gendarme came two railway otticials. They stooped over my trunk solemnly, turned theii heads as if listening, then stood tip and exchanged a glance which plain ly said: "There is not a doubt of it." "They are crazy," I thought, but then a horrible conviction flashed through my brain. Whether the men were sane or not, one thing was sure: it was forty minutes past 11. At all hazards I must make my es cape. I shook myself free of the gendarme's grasp, and knocking over two or three people in my flight, dashed madly away; but was stopped by two custom-house officers, who seized me by the collar. I was dragged, protesting and gesticulating, back to where my trunk stood. There was evidently a mistake somewhere. "Let me go," I cried, "let me go! and I swear I will come back in an hour " The gendarme's lips described a smile behind his thick mustache, as he took possession of me again, this time with both hands. "Come now; don't try that," said one of the railway officials, "you may as well confess. You arrived from New York in great haste and under suspicious circumstances. Who are you? What have you iu this trunk?" "Clothes, nothing but my clothes." I answered, speaking worse French than usual iu my agitation. "No explosives?" insisted the of flcial. "Explosives! What for? I am not a prottchnist, nor a chemist" "Then what is the meaning of this strange noise? Inside .your trunk there is a sound of machinery in short an infernal machine. Yester day, the London police arrested four American anarch'sts who had similar articles in their possession. You are known to be one of the gang." I listened in speechless wonder to his words. I looked at my trunk, and my wonder increased to stupefaction as I heard a metallic tick-tack inside. Suddenly there was a loud ringing report like a signal for an explosion. "Beware . of the boinb!" shrieked some one; officers and porters scat tered in all directions, and even the gendarme moved away. I alone re mained, like a hero. I tore open the trunk and pulled out the clothes in feverish haste. All at once I felt something hard inside a night-shirt, and the next moment drew out and exposed to view a little clock! I had unknowingly packed up the hotel-keeper's property, and it was striking the alarm six hours behind time. "Confound the old turnip!" I cried, throwing it down furiously. I was answered by a loud peal of laughter from the spectators. Then putting my head down, like a wild boar that scents the hounds, I dashed toward the cab again and sprang in, shouting to the driver: "I'll give you a louis if you get me to Place de la Bourse before noon." Seven minutes and a half later the cab was tearing up to the Stock Ex change; I jumped out flew upstairs to the Semaphore office, burst into the room like a hurricane, and remarked in a stentorian tone: "Here I am, gentlemen!" The next instant the first stroke of noon sounded from the Exchange ClOCK. PARIS AT DAYBREAK. You cannot say you have seen the streets or raris until you have walked them at sunrise; everyone has seen them at nicht but he must, wntfii the ni change fmm night to day before he can claim to have seen them at iheir best. I walked under the arches of the Kue de Rivoli oue mornim when it was so dark that they looke like-the cloisters of some great mon at-terv. and it. w.i iinruwsiMo. i.. lieve that the empty length of the Rre Cambon had but an hn-ir hefnm been blocked by the blazing front of me uiympia. ana before that w:th rows of carriages in frout of the two Ooluinbius. Th la ted cabs hugging the sidewalk, with tiieir drivers asleep on the boxes, and a couple of gentlemen slouching to gether across the Plane fie l.i f!nnivl. made the only sound of life in the wcoie city, xne Seine lay as motion less as water in a bath tub. mui tho towers of Notro Dame rising c-ut of tne mist at oue end, and the round bulk of the Trocadero bounding it at the other, seemed to li Hilt, til i ivor to what one could see of its silent surface from the Bridge of the Depu ties. The Eiffel tower, the great sseieton or tne departed exposition, disappeared and reformed itself again as drifting clouds of mit swept through it and cut its -reat ugly leugui into rraguients hung in mid air. As the light grew in '-trength the facades of the government build ings crew in outline, ns limn-l. nri opera glass, and the pillars of the r i . Aiaucnne tooK form and substance; then the whole irreat unioro lihnwoil itself empty and deserted. The dark ness imu niauen notning move terri ble than the clean asphalt and the motionless statues or the cities of i ranee. A solitary fiacre passed me slowly with no oue on the box, but with the coachman sitting back in his cab. He was returning to the stables, evi dently, and had on his way given a seat to a girl from the street whom he was now entertaining with genial courtesy. He had one leg thrown over the other, and one arm passed back along the top of the seat, and with the other he waved to Mie srreat buildings as they sprang up 'nto life as tne day grew. The girl beside him was smiling at his pleasantries, while the -isijg sun showed how tired and pale she was. and mocked at the paint around her sleepy eyes. The horse stumbled at every sixth step, and then woke again, while the whip rocked and rolled fantastically in its socket like a drunken man. From up the avenue of the Champs Elysees came the first or the heavy market wagons, with the driver asleep on the bench, and his lantern burning dully in the early light Back of him lay the deserted stretch of the avenue, strange and unfamiliar in Its emptiness save for the great arch that rose against the dawn, and seemed, from its elevation on the very top of the horizon, to serve as a gateway into the skies be yond. The air in the Champs Elysees was heavy with a perfume of flowers and of green plants, and the leaves dripped damp and cool with th dew. Hundreds of birds sang and chattered as though they knew the solitude was theirs but for only one more brief hour, and that they then must give way to the little children, and later j to crowds of idle men and women. It seemed impossible that but a few hours before Duclerc had filled these silent cool woods with her voice Duclerc with her shoulder straps slip ping to her elbows, and her white powdered arms tossing in the colored lights of the Berpentlne dance. The long gaudy lithographs on the bill boards and the arches of colored lamps stood out of the silence and fresh beauty of the hour like the relics of smie feast which should have been cleared away before the dawn, and the theaters themselves looked like temples to a heathen idol in some primeval wood. And as i passed out from under the cool trees to the silent avenues I felt as though I had caught Paris napping, and when she Was off her guard, and good and fresh and sweet, and had discovered a hidden trait in her many sided character, a moment of which she would be ashamed an hour or two later, as cynics are ashamed of their secret acts of charity. Richard Davis in Harper's Magazine. It is a dangerous crisis when a proud heart rnts with flattering lips. Flavel. There are two freedoms the false, where one is free to do what he likes, and the true, where he is free to do what be ought Kingsley. The comfort of ease without toil is an illusion, and leads neither to the health of the body, the vigor of the mind, nor the welfare of the soul. RILEY AND FOE. Whitcomb Riley, early in his career, met with the experience common to young authors, particularly writers of verse. Believing, that his productions would have been well received nau they been written by an author al ready famous, he decided to test his belief by producing a poem in Imita tion of Edgar A. Toe and publishing it as a newly discovered manuscript of that author. The result was "Leon ainie," written upon the fly-leaf of a worn copy of Ainsworth s Latin die tionary. This poem was first printed in the Kokomo (Ind.) Dispatch by arrange ment with the proprietor, J. O. Hen derson, now auditor of Indiana, who had full knowledge of the facts con uected with this literary hoax. It was extensively copied and so clever was the Imitation that American and English reviewers and even an emi nent authority like Edmund Stedmau pronounced it genuine, and when the name of the real author was dis closed, Stedman still maintained that the poem was unquestionably written by Poe. This poem was Whitcomb Riley's introduction to the world of letters. Ills work had merit which the world was willing to concede. Tit follow ing is the poem in full: LEONAINIE. Leonainie angels named her; And they took the light Of the laughing stars and framed her In a smile of white; And they made her hair of gloomy Midnight and her eyes of bloomy Moonshine, and they brought her to me Iu the solemn night In a solemn night of summer, When my heart of gloom Blossomed up to greet the comer Like a rose in bloom; All forebodings that distressed me I forgot as Joy caressed me (Lying Joy! that caught and pressed me In the arms of doom!) Only spake the little lispeT In the angel-tongue; Yet I, listening, heard her whisper "Songs are only sung Here below that they may grieve you Tales but told you to deceive you So must Leonainie leaye you While her love is young." Then God smijed and It was morning. Matchless and supreme. Heaven's glory seemed adorning Earth with its esteem; Every heart but mine seemed gifted Willi the voice of prayer, and lifted Where my Leonainie drifted From me like a dream. TIE NEW DIPHTHERIA CURE Statements as to the Good Results of Its Use in Other Countries. Dr. E. O. Shakespeare of Fhiladel phla, who has recently returned from Paris and Berlin, where he has been devoting some time to the study of the newly discovered treatment for diphtheria, says that the use of diph thcrine, the name given to tho mate rial, had lowered the mortality from diphtheria in those cities fully fiftv per cent The Press reports bim as adding: "Deaths from this dosease are now scarcely half the number in any giv en period that they were previous to Its use. Diphtherine is made from an artificial culture of the diphtheria ba cillus. This is injected Into the goat or horse, both of which enjoy natural immunity from diphtheria and tuber culosis. Inoculating this animal a number of times with this culture creates an artificial immunity against diphtheria. After this is established tho animal is bled and an extract of his blood is made, which is found to have curative virtues for diphtheria in human beings. The portion of tho blood used is the serum, and a hypo dermic injection of a fraction of a centimetre of this diphtherine has the result, as has been shown conclusive ly in Paris and Berlin hospitals, of dividing the mortality that is to say, it is scarcely half what it was under other treatment "Diphtherine is also successfully used as a preventive. For. Instance, if a case occurs in a house, all the members of the family are inoculated and the spread of the disease is stopied. "The principal reason we have not used It here is that it is a new discov ery. It was discovered about three years ago, and has been in use in Berlin about one year and in Paris altout two years. Reports upon diphtherine and its use were made before the recent Hy gienic congress at Budapest by Dr. uoux or tne Pasteur institute, Paris Dr. Loeffler of the University of Greufswald, who discovered the ba cillus tuberculosis, and Dr. Behrine of the Institute for Contagious and Infectious Diseases in Berlin, who is the discoverer of the curative proper ties of this serum. It is a common law of medicine that the serum form of blood of an animal which has been rendered immune from a disease is a specific for that disease. This is so in diphtheria, cholera, and tetanus. It is also said to be true of typhoid fever, and it has been found to be a general law in contagious and infec tious diseases that the blood serum of an animal that has had such disease, either artificially or naturally, Is a .s w4. ,T. t.-.:i 1- . have not gone far eaough, however, to determine about scarlet fver." GRAVITY AND ETHER The Theory of Prof. Foster the Prophet. He Tells Why the Moon Floats in Space. Why One Heavenly Body Is Attracted by Another Comets and Repulsion. It may be claimed that if gravity is a push the moon would fall to the earth. The moon is not like a stone but is enveloped by an electrosphere which is resisted by the electrosphere of the earth. This is proven by two magnitized balls brought r.ear each other when their magnetic envelopes or atmospheres are pushed to the op posite side of each and each ball is repelled by the other. Take the mag netism away from one ball, or what Is the same thing, charge one ball with negative electricity, as it is erroneously called, and the two balls will fall together, or attract each other; increase tlie charge in each and they will more forcibly repel each other. For the above reasons the moon floats in the atmosphere of the earth because the buoyancy of the electro sphere Is of greater repellant force than can be overcome by the push of ether as it moves toward the center of the earth from all directions. These facts explain why one heav enly body is attracted by another while at a distance and this attrac tion turned to repulsion when nearer each other. The repulsion begins when their electrospheres meet. A comet has no tail when at its aphelion or farthest point from the sun. Its tail begins to lengthen when the comet meets the repulsion of the sun's electrosphere. All comets do not go around the sun. Some are so forcibly repelled that they turn back before reaching the sun. When they come long distances and have consid erable mass the incoming ether gives them sufficient momentum to pass them around the sun, Of course these arguments depend on whether the earth and planets are increasing their gross matter or grow ing. If they are not the theory and argument must fail, Orthodox scientists hold that sun and olanets weve originally balls of fire, now cooling and continually smaller. That is the nebular theory and the ideas herein advanced are in consistent with it and one of the the ories, at least, is necessarily without foundation. If the earth is not increasing in size then geology Is a lie. There are many strata in the earth that are recognized as general; covering the whole earth. One of these series is the coal meas ures. They extend all around the earth and could not everywhere lie deeply buried if the earth was not adding materials to its surface. Vegetation produces a vast increase to earth's matter every year and it cannot be claimed that vegetation comes from the soil. The matter built up in vegetable growth comes from the atmosphere and is taken in through the leaves. The sap never ascends in vegetation but comes from the atmosphere and runs down. Tho atmosphere, thus robbed by vegetation, is renewed by the conden sations of the other and thus the earth is constantly growing. The mind cannot grasp the im mensity of the expansion of solid mat ter to ether, or of the condensation necessary, to reduce ether to solid matter. The student of nature can make no mistake in a supreme effort to understand this part of the sub ject for It is the basis of all things that man may know. Although the question is in doubt among scientists I fearlessly assert that in its original form, reduced to atoms, or In that condition where it is called ether, there is but one kind of "matter. It matters not how vastly this ether may be expanded as compared with the lightest of gasses it will have all necessary jiower to create gravity if it has sufficient velocity. We are used to measuring power by the pound and forget that velocity is the important factor. A one pound pull would lift the weight of the world if the pull was given sufficient veloc ity. The power added by an increase of velocity is as unlimited as the power of the lever. Then it matters not how attenuated, how much expanded, the ether may be if it Is given sufficient . velocity to ward the ce-rter of the- earth it will have the ne-cessary force to create gravity. Electricity, magnitism, ether readily pass through solid matter. Electric ity passes through some kinds of matter more readily than through oth ers, and when given great velocity is inclined to take the matter with it Whether the ether is of the same na ture is not certainly known but no good reason can be assigned why ether and electricity are not the same, as much so as steam and water and as the velocity of steam gives to it a power equal to water so does ether have a power equal to electricity. As it is the ether that gives to com ets and planets their motions the ether must have vastly greater veloc ity than the swiftest comet The sun moves about sixteen miles per second. Lights move" 186,330 miles per second. The incoming ether of space must have a much greater velocity than light and this movement being toward the center of all organized and grow- iu neavemy oodles presses every thing toward their centers in propor tion to their mass or density and this pressure or push is the cause of grav ity. After the gross matter carried by the ether has been absorbed by the earth the residuum is' thrown oft and be comes what we call electricity and the effects of this electricity we call mag netism. Herein is the new and true theory. It Is in accord with all known facts; it explains all the facts not in accord with the fire theory; it gives the true basis of all motion and all life. Prof. Foster mental nmvoi- ni Hoflfitmev of heart i the caw of many men never be- Icomlne crea. Bulwer. A TRUE GHOST STORY. Ghosts being associated from time Immemorial with this season of the year, though for what reason I never could understand, I am going to relate a personal experience of this kind, which happened several years ago. We are so familiar iu the present day with all manner of spirits from the various stories gravely related to us by clever men, who. whatever may be our opinion, are evidently them selves quite convinced that ghostly interviews are now n matter of every day occurrence that I suppose soon an apparition will be no . longer a thiug of terror to f reeSSe the blood and make the hair to stand oil end; but I belong to an older generation which did not care for dealings with any thing "uncanny," and was content to leave all communications with another world until we ourselves had put off the body; so I must confess that when I knew myself to be in the presence of a spirit as on the night of the his tory of which I am about to relate, I was seized with so deep a fear that even now I shudder at the remem brance. I shall not indicate the house or the inhabitants nearer than to say that I was cn a visit to some friends who lived near Warminister. Some of the descendants of that family are most likely alive, and it might pain them to have the name made public; so I will call them Palmer. I had never. been to their house before, and had never heard that it was "haunted;" in fact I had no suspicion of this being the case. I arrived tired with my journey ind rather anxious to get to bed for :i good night's rest I had been used to have my sister to sleep with me. and as Mrs. Palmer had a daughter a young girl, I asked her if she woult mind sharing my room. The chili shrank back with an evident look o fear, and I said hastily, thinking she was shy of sleeping with a stranger. "Oh, never mind, my dear, if you would rather not I am not afraid of being alone, only I prefer a com pauion at night, as I am used to it. I went to iujr room shortly after It was a comfortable onc and I fell no uneasiness whatever. I locked the door I am sure of that and in short time was iu bed. This was the now old-fashioned four-poster, with curtains all around, so that when there you could see the other part of the room through any gap there might be in the hangings. I went to sleep for some hours, I should fancy when I awoke to the knowledge tlia some one was in the room, movin about Exactly opposite my bed wa a chest of drawers of antique make and design. They were of dark pol ished wood, inlaid, and with hanging brass handles. The curtains were not drawn close, and standing at these drawers, opening and shutting them was apparently an old woman. The moon shone directly upon her. As clearly as I saw it then, I can still see that small, bent figure. Forget ting that the door was locked, thought that someone had made a mis take in entering my room. I coughed to make my presence known. The figure turned and came to the foot of the bed. 1 saw with surprise that it was attired in the fashion of many years ago. Then it opened wide the curtain and gazed down on me with a face of intense malignity. The face was that of a corpse, the flesh dis. colored, the eyes fixed, the features rigid. The coldness of death seemed to seize on all my faculties an un utterable horror of this dreadful thing took possession of my whole mind, I remember no more. Hours after, when morning was drawing near, I regained conscious ness, for I conclude that I had fainted with terror. With my returning senses came the reuiembrauce of the ghost I had seen, and the same over whelming sense of fear. With a shud tier I looked around. Nothing was to be soon, but the drawers were, some of them, standing open. I dressed hastily and as soon as the household seemed stirring went down to the breakfast room, only too thankful t leave my hateful chamber. I said nothing to the family, but directly we were seated at breakfast my hos exclaimed: "You are ill. Your fac is ghastly pale." All eyes were turned my way, and I felt rather confused "No," I said, with the reluctant" ore has to speak of an apparition "But I saw something in my room last night that rather disturbed me A pei-son came into the chamber, and her appearance was a kind of shock. My host turned instantly upon his wife. "Rosetta, he said very stern ly, "you have been at that old wo man s things again! Then he tried to turn the subject But this invol untary speech as it seemed to be made me determine to know more lou must tell the whole story now," I cried. "You most cruelly, think, put a guest to sleep in a roin yon knew to be hauutel Evidently tins apparitiou is not new to you. My hostess expressed her i!eep re gret that. I should have beeu !is tin-bed, and her husband replied, "It is certainly true that, when anyone turns over the articles in that eh--st of drawers, the old woman you speak ot is sure to appear the same niglit. V hat she wants, or who she is, I can not tell. I believe she is an ancestress of mine and that the chest of drawers belonged to her. I was not aware that my wife had beeu meddling with it or you should not have been nut in that room and subjected to such a night of terror." I understand then the little girl's objection to sleep with me. Many apologies were made both by Mr. and Mrs. Palmer. I was entreated not to let this experience make any differ ence to my visit; but I considered their unkindness was so great, in al lowing a stranger to sleep in a room in which it was known this horrid aj parition was wont to appear, that I left the house that same morning as soon as I possibly could, and never again entered "under their roof,' or even went near the vicinity of War minister. FASHIONABLE COLORS. Speaking of colors in dress a fash ion magazine says: Dark laurel green, dark blue, tan, olive and the reddish-brown shades like the old Bismarck colors, also many fruit and wine dyes that impart a glow of crim son all are used in the making of various stylish York, princesse and double-breasted English walking coats -and long stately redingotes that envelop the wearer from throat to skirt hem. Real Dreadnaughts worn by tourists returned from abroad are checked tans and browns, or show at tractive mixtures, in which deep rich blue, fawn color and a bit of green and Indian red appear. Life is but a short day; but- It Is a working day. Activity may lead to evil; but inactivity cannot lead to good. Hannah More, , . FATHER OF GRAMMAR That Is to Say, of Our English Grammar. The Home and Life of Lindley Murray. Early Days of the Man Who Did What He Could to Spoil Native English. Twelve miles south of Harrisburg still stands the house in which Lind ley Murray, the so-called father of English grammar, was born, says the Philadelphia Times. It is a somewhat pretentious log house, with three rooms and a sleeping loft built ou the southern slope of a hill and facing the slow-flowing Swatra that his toric, stream of which Whittier sings, uul up which, on their way to the fertile plains of Tulpchockeii, the first Pennsylvania Dutch pushed their rude rafts, over two centuries ago. Murray's -father was a Scotchman who settled there about 17:!0, and soon after married a Miss Henry, daughter of one of the Pennsylvania German families in the neighborhood. Mur ray, iu his autobiography, says: "My parents were of respectable character, and In the middle station of life. My father possessed a good flour mill on the Swatara, but, being au enterpris ing spirit and anxious to provide handsomely for his family, he made several voyages to the West Indies in the way of trade, by which he very considerably augmented his property Pursuing his inclinations, lie in time acquired large possessions, and be came oue of the most respectable merchants in America. My mother was a woman of an amiable disposi tion, and remarkable for mildness. humanity and ' liberality of senti ment." The Murray homestead, with its old oaken bucket and ivy-covereti porch, lies within a few miles of ths "old Derry church," one of the very oldR-t churches in the stat?, and which, within the last few years lias been replaced by a beautiful stone memorial chapel. Here the Murrays and Dixons and Trumans and Boyds and Bertrams worshipped as early as 1720, and tradition still points out the very tree at which William Perm lied his horse ou his first aud last visit to the parish. Distance does not seem to have deterred the pious old worth les who had charge of the spiritual affairs of the Murrays and their Pres byterian neighbors, for in the life of tho Rev. Adam Boyd, who ministered to the flock before the infant Lindley was born, it is said that lie "preached on the westward of Octorara and Donegal, over Conoy and eastward as far as tho barrens of Derry," and his salary was sixty pounds per year payable m hemp, linen, corn, j-aru and chickens. It is rather curious to see the changes that have come ovorx the neighborhood in which the great grammarian was born and raised The log houses in which lived the old Scotch, Irish and English families are still standing and iu use for farm im plements and stables, though tho Murray homestead is still occupied as a dwelling-house, and the prim German housewife will think you have certainly gone daft if you go staring about her house or ask her what she kuows about Lindley Mur ray, of whom she has never even heard. A region richer in folk lore or historical incident cannot be found, though the present inhabitants 1 here about can give you little assistance or inspiration. Material prosperity has smiled upon the hills of Mauada, and the barrens of Derry, but there is none of tho old intellectual life which in one generation gave to "glory and to fame" more sons and daughter; man nave ten generations since, xim most prominent of these were Dixon and Murray. Robert Dixon, of Dix- on's ford, near the Murray place, won it-..,, fame on the same fields that brought glory to Wolfe and Montgomery. Sam Atkinson says of him in his. "Casket and Evening Post" that "hi was one of those spirits which rise in tlame to illume all around him; gentli as the summer breeze in private lii'e. but terrible as a whirlwind in the day of danger." Murray was a being of a different order The closet was his battlefield, though he never turned his pen in favor of the country of his birth. While the companions of his boyhood were fighting the American revolution he was living the peaceful life of a Quaker. Meanwhile, how ever, like many auotlier pious Quaker, he was taking advantage of the timet, aud lining his pockets with the al mighty dollar. Near the Murrays was also born Ellery Tinman, and another, the equal of them all, Emily Raj-moud, the pride of the Swatara. the spirit of its woods and fields; a. beautiful soul whose story remains, to be written. Lindley Murray's early boyhood was spent at the home on the Swa tara, his father's flour and grist mill being about a mile distant, near Rog er's ford. When Lindley was about G or 7 3ears old his father determined to quit the Swatara and try his for tunes in the Carolinas. The family soon returned North again, atd a few years later settled In New York, where they acquired considerable wealth and influence Before leaving the parish of Derry Lindley had been sent to Philadelphia and put in the care of a tutor, Professor Ebenezcr Kinnersley, who afterward became noted as a co-laborer with Franklin in his electrical researches and ex periments. Murray was an apt pupu, and gave early evidences of the ability he was to dlsnlav In after years. He took PIONEER ' u u : 1 AND COFFEE SALOON. HODES & HALL Plain and Fancy Confections-Ice Cream. CIGARS::- ' "OUR SILVER CHAMPION," "BELMONT," GENERAL ARTHUR," and a full line of Smokers' Articles. Come in when hungry and e n-h nr hour of the day. a violent dislike at first to a mercan tile life, and for want of a more suit able profession took to the law. He was admitted to the bar at the agar of 24, and, after a few years iu Eng land, returned to New York, where he practiced until the Revolution broke out He then took a turn at mercantile life, and made a fortune and went to England, where he lived! ever afterward an Englishman rath er than an American. He says: "In particular I had strong prepossession in favor of a residence In England, because I was ever partial to its po litical constitution and the mildness and wisdom of its general laws. On leaving my native country there was not, therefore, any tiling which could afford me so much real satisfaction as I have found in Great Britain." He purchased a small estate near Holdgate, where he led a quiet, peace ful literary life. Murray's chief literary work was "The Power of Religion on the Mind," published 1787, and which passed through nearly twenty editions. The object of the book, he said, was to 'excite serious reflections on the un satisfying and transitory nature of temporal enjoyments, and to promote a lively concern ror tne attainment of that felicity whie'h will be complete mil permanent" He then wrote a series ot sKctcnes or xw men anu women of all sorts and conditions. from Job to Caesar Borgia, and Baron Heller to Sir William Jones, whose lives, by inspiring in the reader either admiration or pity, were to be "ot singular efficacy to excite a love of God aud goodness." He dwells es pecially on their conduct at the ap proach of death, and uses it for a stirring argument against inndenty. "What an evidence on behalf of piety and virtue! What a dissuasive from vice and folly!" is the fact he says, that all should be so deeply impressed with the need of religion when they reach the termination of their days. And lie quotes Young as the inspira tion of his life: 'Tis immortality 'tis that alone, Amidst life's pains' abasements, emp tiness, The soul can comfort, elevate and fill. In his school life Murray had made many friends, with whom he kept up a lief-long correspondence. Promi nent among these was Chief Justice .Tay. Murray also wrote many relig ious and controversial pamphlets, and several books in French. But there is only one book that has kept Lindley Murray's fame alive iu all these years, and that is his grain mar. It alone is sufficient to make the' valley of the Swatara -forever famous. And yet how few people re member or know that the county of Dauphin can claim the birthplace of the noted grammarian. Lindley Murray's grammar! What memories it inspires iu all of the old er generations, all of whom, in the satirical lines of Drydeu Climbed the grammar tree to know Where noun and verb and participle grow. AH the old schoolmasters swore by Murray aud his rules and examples of orthography, etymology, syntax, and prosody, his four constituent parts of English grammar. In the rural districts near the gram marian's birthplace Murray, under a different name, is still taught in all his glory, and there is a somewhat pretentious academy, now happily on a decline, only a few miles from the Murray place, in which a decrepit old grammarian, "dressed in gown, bands and wig," still holds his old time sway. Grammar, in his opinion, constitutes the sum total of a liberal education. He considers it his spec ialty, and still uses Lindley Murray as the first and last authority, and a verbatim 'knowledge of his twenty two rules of syntax is his first re quirement from a beginner, and woe betide the poor wretch who recites rule lit or rule 20 when a rule of a different number is called for! This survival of the Lindley Murray regime is no more amusing than the grave way in which I heard a little girl discourse a la Murray on the difference between systactical and etymological parsing aud then take up "Who preserves us," and, chatter ing as fast as her tongue could go. proceed to tell "OKI Polyphemus," i 1 - , .". , , ' "'' " f '.'"f h'l( al'd ",e otIJf dwu m ' "L inn if mi niimitrii uunwrin, iiiitL iiu is a relative pronoun of the ihterroga- tivo kind, therefore without any an tecedent, and in the nominative case singular; nominative, who; possessive, whose; objective, whom; tin? word to which it relates is called its subse quent and is the noun or pronoun cout lining the answer to the question; according to a note under rule 0, which says," etc. The boys were not qtiite so ready in their parsing, but perhaps they had no key to the exercise or did not stand in such awe of" their teacher. Whatever may be said of Murray's grammar, it must be coufessed that under one name or another it is still taught for good or for bad In nearly all of the rural schools of the state. Ex. FEEDING VALUES. There is but little difference iu the feeding value of fine wheat feed, such as wheat middlings, and the coarser feeds or brans. Many wheat brans on the market are simply the coarse brans le-ground. This is done because there is a popular prejudice against tho coarse;, husky appearing brans. One of three samples sent by B. H. McLean belongs to that class. From the small number of digestion experi ments made in this country, it ap pears that middlings arc somewhat more digestible than bran, and for this reason would be more valuable. When biaus can lie bought for from $1 to $3 per ton less than the price of middlings, they are without doubt the cheaper and better food for milch cows. There is considerable differ ence in the manurial value of wheat bran, which contains an average of 47 lbs of nitrogen, 00 of phosphoric acid, and 32 of potash, wliile mid- dlings average 41, 52 and 14 li and 14 lbs re- spectiveiy. rror. o. o. t-neips. BHKERY Proprietors