I SCO Si PA TA BIUTIKH. A thin, lltUo fellow hud aueh a fat wlf. v.i iut. wife(,ii.i hlpita her! Bno looked Ilk a druro.aud lm looked like Die, And u look nil hl uionf y to drs ber, . Mod blea lrt Todreunarl , Mod dim bort Todrsnerl To wrap up her body aud wiiriii up ber tod, Rat to. fMl loen-Uod kerp liarl Kor bonnet kud bowi bdiI ilfcn clothe, To eat ber, aud drink her, and aletp ber. (I(k1 kwp herl To tlrln k hrrl And b'p her! ' -And Wit lierl fib rew Hk n toriti I ; b grew like sword, HUe took 'ml the urn Hiid iibe took all tha . DOHIll, . Ado Jl look a whole unfa to bear her. ' Uod imiw t r I To twar berl God ipwrr bet! . lob.arhtrl Bh apread like a turtle; beahrank llkeaplse. And nobody rvi-r beheld the like, Kor they had to wr rIiih io thav Dim, God aave him I To ahave hlml Uodaaveblml To abate hlml She failed away till aha bmted one day, Kxplmted, blew up til tae hurl An I ah Hie ppl Uial '" Uay Hueoovoifdovfon-Hiw! Uod Ukn her) An acre I Uod Ink hurt An acre! . Wren Lore. Tbo wren, tlio smallest of English birds, is almost as grout a favorite with tho "pot"-loving public as the roltu-rod Ireost, and often popularly connected with it. Many of tlio vulgur actually boliove it to bo his wife, hence its name in nursery loro of "Jonuy Wren," "Kitty Wren," cto. Tt in rnmmonlv uilocd to bo nil Wkv to kill or iniuro it. In Cornwall the children nay, "Who burti the robin or lh wp a, Will never pronptr, sea or laud," Halliwcll in Lis Popular Rhymes has the following: "The robin and the rcclbreatl, Tlia mtuu aud lha wri-u, II tak mil o' l heir not Ve'll uever thrive again. "The robin and the r'tbreat, Tte innrilu aud the awallow, If ye toucll cm o' llielr ees Bad luck will aur to follow.' ' A translation of tho Welsh couplet may be rondcred: "Wtinno doth a wrea'l net ateal Bball UiKl'a blitrr anfer feel." Ariatotlo and Tliny treat of the rever oneo in which thin little bird was held: it was then believed to bo the heavenly niossongcr that brought fire to tlio earth, though it disputed thin honor with the eagle. According to the Popular Legends of Normandy, in performing this kind oflloo its plumage was unfor tunately aeorchod, but the other birds made tin this loss, iu consideration of tlio service it had rendered, each of them presenting it with a feather, except the owl, which lias ever since been ashamed to show itself in tho daytimo; or, as some say, tho cuckoo is for this reason universally despised. Again, tlio robin wiahod to add his feather, but came, too near, and was himself scorched. Notwithstanding these favorable opin ions of the bird, in Frunoe, Ireland, the Islo of Man, otc, they formerly carried tlioir dislike of it to great extremes, it being tho barbarous custom to hunt this innocent aongster. For this purpose they procured two sticks, one to Wat the bushes, and tlio other to throw at the bird. Yarrell, in the British liirds (vol. ?. 1-178) . tolls ns, "It was the boast of f an old man, who lately died at the ago of HH.I, that he bail hunted the wren for tho last eighty years on Christmas Day." Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, St. Stephens Pay and Now Year's Day were tho times when this practice was ob served. In Ireland tho "wren-boys," as Uiey were designated, decorated them selves with Tarioua colored ribbons, and . went round with the birds they had killed placed on a holly bush, singing a characteristic song, aud soliciting gratu- . itios for tho service they had rendered. This practice waa very prevalent in flalwav, Cork, Clare, and other parts of Ireland. The aversion to tlio poor crea ture is founded on a tradition that dur ing the Irish reltellion a party of Royal ists, tired out after a day's skirmishing, sank to rest, and soon the sentinel also incenmbed to slocp, when, as the enemy approached them, a wren tapped on his drum three times, which awoke him, and saved a surprise, the rebels being defeated. Different versions of this story are related. Another tradition we read in the Science ilossip is that our Savior, desirous to le coucealed, took refuge under a tree; the robin, perceiv ing this, carried moss and laid it on the tree, making the covering more dense, at which the Ixrd waa so pleased that He put forth His hand and loft the red mark on its breast. Put the wren came and carried tho mom away, and exposed the retreat; hence it is called br them the "devil's bird." In the Isle of Man thev hunted it from sunrise to sunset, ' and placed it on the top of a pole, and when all the money they could get was gathered in, they laid it on a bier, and carried it in a procession to the church yard. There they made it a grave, aud with mock solemnity sang dirges over it in the Manx language, which tier called its knoll. Afterward thev formed them selves into a circle outside the church yard and danced to music. Now they sometimes go about "with a wren sus pended bv the legs between two hoot clothed with evergreens, and in exchange for a coin give a feather of the bird, and it is not uncommon by the end f the day to see it quite featherloss. The feathers are kept as relics and safe guards against shipwrecks for a year, and sailors take a dead bird to sea with them as a charm against all danger. In Train'a "Isla of Man" we see they now bury the bird, cot in the church-yard as formerly, hut sear the aeashore, atnging the. following: "Wi basied I be wra for robin tbe bobbla. We auaird tbew-ea fcrjik tbe ran. We bus ed (be wra lot rvlwa the bobbin. We healed ue wra tot evry ooe." Their legend is that, in day long gone by, a fairy of uncommon beauty, exerted auch undue influence over the Manx war riors that ahe induced manv of them Ho follow her footsteps till ale gradually led them into the sea, where they perish ed. This continued so long that it was feared the island would be depopulated, when a knight-errant sprang up, and finding a means of counteracting the charms of this siren, sought her destruc tion, which, however, aha scared by as suming the form of tho wren. But spoil was cast upon her which compelled her to reanimato tbo same form every New Year's Day, with the sentence that sho was ultimately to perish by human hands. Honninl relates a hunt at Ciotat, near Marseilles: Whon they had caught tho bird thev blueod it on tlio middle oi long pole, and carried it as though it was heavy burden; then they weignod it in a pair of scales, after which they mado merry. Thoy call it the pole-cat, or aula tocasxe I father oi the woodcock) which is supposed to be engendered by tlio polocat. a exeat destroyer or birds, Uolliwell mentions another ceremony still observed In Pembrokeshire on Twelfth-Day, whero they carry this bird called Uie kind, in a box with glass win dows, surmounted by a wheel ; or a stable lantern is sometimes substituted, for which they linvo various colored ribbons. Men and bovs go about with this, sing ular as ther walk. Tho wren has been culled "king" from time immemorial; and Col. Vitlluncoy, in tlie thirteenth number of his Collectanea n IMut HilieniiU. lmco 07, says that tho Druids represented this bird ns the king oi all outers; and tunc tno superstitious respect shown to it gave offense to tho first Christian missionaries, and it is still hunted bv tho peasants on Christmas dav. That this poor creature should bo so Kononuly huutod, and lor so mauy aiieg' ed different reasons, does indeed seem stninco. Tho names for it in all countries soem to coincido in declaring that it is a supo perior bird. In Hono's Year-Hook we nnd tho following amusing legend con corning the origin of its royal title: "The birds, beinit determined to elect king, ossomblcd, and dtcided that the bird among them which Hew the highest should have the preference. Among tho candidates which competed were tho caglo and the w ren, the latter being de termined to accomplish tho toot by strut agem. To perform this, it got nnpor- eived on tho back of tho eagle, wiucn felt not its weight, and llew the highest; it bad begun its descent, when tho wren seized the favorable opiKirtunity, sprang from it perch aud llew higher still, and was uuauimouslv pronounced King, though how it reached its elevation pu zlod all." A similar talc is current on tho Continent. "Iho Jutbca iu tlio Wood lias given riso to tho pretty idea that the wren, with tho robin, covers with leaves, flowers aud moss any exposed dead body they may find. Shakspeore, Drayton and Webster, in his comedy of Yittoria Corouihona, 1012), allude to "this notion. Peed, in his old plays, has the following lines: Call lor the rnbbln-rvdbrrant rnd the wren, Mlnoe o'rrahady swvra Ihey hovrr. And with leave and fljwrr (to cover The frlendleaa nodiea of uuburled men." In many places it is thonght by the superstitious that to dream of wrens de notes great happiness and content through lifo. Miuksneare. with his all-seeing eve. has immortalized the courage of this tiny bird in Macbeth : The Door wren. The mud diminutive of birxls, will fight. Her yount, our iu lue nml, agttual the owl;" And in Richard HI., act i, scene 3: prey where eagle dart not "Wrena may peicu." -JIarper' HVX7y. ('one to the Bot.oai. Next to the pirate ship Alabama the Shenandoah, whoso loss off the island ot Scotia in the Indian Ocean was reported tbe other day, waa the most famous of tho rebel priv-teera which preyed on tho commerce of the North during the late war. She was built at Glasgow, Scotland, and aunched under the name oi the Sea h.inj. un septonuer u, iso-, 6no was purchased for tho Confederates, and after being fitted out, cleared for Matauioroa. At Madeira she met tho steamer Laurel, which had previous- sailed trom Liverpool with a cargo ot war materials, and oluccrs and men for tho Shenandoah. These, were transferred to tho rebel ship, which then bej:an her piratical career. She subsequently went to Melbourne, and thero strengthened ber armament, eparting front that port in Febru ary, 1SG5. On Juiy 2Sth, in that year, intelligence was received in New York that the Shenandoah had destroyed eight wbal ng vessels in tho Arctic seas. This news came by way of San Francisco, where it was brought by the bark Milo, which bad been spared from destruction in order that sho might take the crews of tho burned vessels to the United States. This and subsequent reports ot the ravages worked by this scourge of the seas created intense excitement and anxiety throughout tho Now England whaling ports. lobtilitica had long before, come to an end, but still reports continued to arrive of the Shenandoah's destruc tive work, ller captain, it wa said, had been told of Lee's surrender, but refused to believe it, and consequent- r continued his cruise, rmaliy, ou November 6, l$o5, the rebel pirate ship ai rived at Liverpool, and was there given up by ber commander to the british authorities. Her othcers and crew, numbering 133 men, were allowed to depart without punish ment, and after some delay the She nandoah was surrendered to the con sul of the United Stales at Liverpool. She was subsequently the subject of almost as much diplomatic corres pondsnce as the pirate Alabama. The Geneva arlitralurs decided that the British Government, by tbe 4'ailure to exerciae due vigilance, became re sponsible tor all the acts of the She nandoah after Lr departure trom Melbourne, an J the loaaes to Ameri can citizens caused thereby were in cluded in the Geneva award of 115, 000,000. "There newr waa any situation so bad that it could not be wont," says aa Amenoaa philosopher, l or instance, a maa on t-ia gallows might be lot in ta woods without evea a dog for eompasy. AX ABLE LPtlTBB "OX PAHAHIT1KM IS KATl'RB AND SOCIKTV," DKMVERKD BV TROy. It. B. ( NORTON AT THB IKDXPEKDKNT CHURCH, OAkt-AMJ, CAUKOH.N1A. . Dr. Le Conte has suggested that evolu tion Is the law of time, as universally eravitation Is that of unRce. Thero is a divino. fiery, infinite energy pervading nil the Infinitudes of mutter and spirit j It Droiects itself into the realms warmth and light, and produces flowe birds of paradise, and all tbe children thnliiriit. It nours through the dens darkness, and produces organisms that are incomplete, larval, monsiroui, buujiuic i .... 1 Him icriiuic i , The t.hvsicist speaks in ourfrars words incohiprehetiHiDie in uioir vim mcmi... Me talks about atoms uuu iuiicj, u anmdoof motion; light and life, not i entities or substances, but fortis of vibra I .... Ma hi.U u h to iriiaeine in i whirling dunce of infinitesimal spheres, going on and on, wunoiu omniums end, forever; atoms clasping hands m tiny groups and systems, vibrating, puls ing. scattering, but ever forming anew : r..i. uirni-tiirta rif organic life And yet God, working in nature, does so without any referonce to our human mor alities or tastes. It plcaneth Hlm.tne Eternal PhlM. To ulny Hl iweel will. gUU and wild. The vhiiII tlmt nlowa. I.nineoae wall light, It the Inn where He lodgei for a ulgbt. Wtmt rroS uch irv-lr, If the ooerf 1 bat bloom an a fade like meadow nowers, A bunch of fiaiirsnt 1 1 1 tea be. Or lliesia'aof elemlly t Alike to Him the beltr. the worae; The t Io lug Augol. the ouicaat corse." n;nr adorns to cire notliinz for vast ness, or beauty, or refinement, in our sense ot the words, sno loves me nmu no tim it.ua thn dove: she creates more toadstools than roses; she gives usf many mosquitoes, out lew oirus ot para Devils are legion, but angels visits are r.. r,r lint il'opii ami uou is one. iiiu ........... n .... tin... la in aa stilcndkllv armed as Sir Galahad, going forth! in quest or tlio noty ur.ui. auu iuw ,i... i, dii Ti-n wins tu be no fijre in nature tending ltilierentiy ana neocs Siinly upward, to lllgutr icu.ui oymiuai being. , l involution rr devolution eouals evolu tion. P.eooil is as powerful as propnl- ,1 linuscs on California street bill (San traliciscoj, oiu e.icu . i r . .....1 lm a ttiousanii b.aik- irni-n li,m.n. suicides, in order thut the world may have one bonanza king. 'lue preservation of the fittest msans too oltcn me preservauuu oi " oin.--, liar,a.l mivst I'll n 111 1117. best SmiOred. Ollt of the 'intiuite wreck and waste of jast . ... .1. u.. .....i ages have come to us me u humming bird, the palm tree and the rose; but how much agony, strurgle, deatn, forgotten lives, destroyed race, do these triuiuptis of her w irk represent? And fur ofteuer her selective choice rests upon diametrically opposite endowments. The naEelle perishes that the hyena or tiger mav grow strong; the vulture tears the huuimiog bird; ttie poison oak stran gles and outlives the rose. Out of mil lions of uvea sunken la torpor, squaior, .....i;. ...rii.- fun- ci.iniH ariHp: men that litu AuvrUn hulls and liotis re stored to the flesh; men with the brain of a god, the physical presence 01 uypenun, tlx. nittnii.1 iwn-iiun of a kinizof beasts. Such nien we see iu the stock exchange, tie places ol political power, biiujciihics n ilia milnit i.iniHtiiiios cuidins armies. b'yron, Goethe, Ibnton, Mirabeau, Bis marck, Napoleon I were of this type. rit.l.. nnA amnna milllOnfl flf in.stliriCfS Villi VMVV ft do we see a crest bruin fitted to be the temple or a still uiviner uie. uuo inci ter one Washington, one Lincoln, one ictor Hugo aspiring, unseiusu, uiine, lining like stars above the dusty desert ri.i.i..r.- lint iliMit ri:it ones are few udeed. "Xatnraeeems best to loveaver iires. mediocrity, the pettv and the com monplace. Like aCotuanche.she rejoices n torture, blie rorgives no sins, iveep iten upon her treadmill or you shall go itider the wheel. She experiment rudely; he casta away her failures mer ile!y. Our geological museums are full ,f il.-'fr .riiMiii of forms exoerimoutul. ntative," transitional, too clumsy and ii.xmth to keep pace with the inarch ol in a t,u fiimul in tilirf ami feeble III brain Inno niulnrA. I cannot find ailV law Ol natural progression toward the heights of pirltuai Uelllg. .ew natural puweia aiiu rces only intensify inherent tendencies, "v-il i iVtAiiivri m.?res.-ive. self-reDro- duciive. It is not a vacuum or negation. I'k. .:..! ......!. ....I n,.ti,M h.ivA iiv euuaiviiai naiium iuuiuiv urn. . . . . . I diiitsl t lie vast iroint oi 100 iwiui auu splendid cup of the ictona Lily, but v u.bo tlisiil tbo deadly venom of the .riili unit thi inhni. 1 canuot find in nature any force tending to change the I,mi int. ttia Imli- or t.i ili-;rov Itia lion and preserve the iamb; oru make the upa or CJVuius less ueauiy; or io umiiii in the power of sin and arrest the hell ward uiurvti amony mea. The germs of evil have a rtrungo and terrible fecund it v. If Nature hud been left to her owu will, Uuiaua would still bav been a trop ical swamp, brooded over by .a deadly miasma, ruled over by the anaconda and a.ifator. It had been built up out of the waste, the sk'Uti and tlime of the. continent, vomited from tho mouth of the Amazon, aud flung, as a mass of abhorred refuse, upon the shore. Bia.k. stattuaut rivers wauiid thnxivru its swauipy forveV; hid eous reptile xnd the uucleau pelican bie.istet i.s nitt; and a cloud of pison ou efll jvmm torever hung over it. But at U a generation of UboHoiis, aturxly Dutchmen overthrew the rvigu of Nature; the ax and s(ade, wielded tor centuries, have turned the pestilent morass iuto a tropical paradise. So it must be every where. ir the e..rtb and man are to te fuliy reileemrd it mut l thruugh the worklug of forces higher than thoe merely naturaL Our evolutionist philosophers speak f the three fvmxs working toward the end ot whii h they are the Xjeilur8. 1. Heredity. This tends to produce fintvof type, by handing down to each generation Uie vharacteriaucs ot its an cestors. 2. Tbe influence of eavironmenU. This work mainly apoa germs and em bryos, modifyiug then upward or dowu Ward, acrorUiu to the Data re of circutn-S-aucen. S. Natural selecUoa. By the operation of this priudle, the tronk-4, mort cv.n- nin l-sf KrniiOd aJ iirkt coucealed an ma' lixe, while other prnsh is the . . -r-1 . e . J . stru, !t lor exrateiice. iu iww reuu i...IaI.LvI nsrfMioo. It Vtl ia ihetekM of car senul a ri.'pi ritual briog. Neerthe!estir.t-ul exa-'uuoa is a costly gJX. Wbea ooe svtil aecends t in li to pir fi K d I tin the the tu. nn.rt mmv wa. look in ir front the merely natural sutnd-point, seem to see a throng pressed down thereby to lower levels. Human vermin and weeds, hko thnia itnnrrnnoni in lower nature, have a fatal fecundity. The doublo flower, the costly product of a century or culture anu care, hears no fruit. The large-brained ;.;.. ,.,., la rlvinir out of its birth place; but how tbe Five Points, the sand lots, the Chinatown swarm. One of the strange phenomena or the i;r nr luver nature is Darasitism. This word refers to animals and plants that fieil nrev uDon others. In nil the life of the sea parasitism is almost uui .i,. i- onH tiia wnndurful erowth of med ical science is teaching us things concern ing the relation or parasitism io uiseaw, in mirnril tn which ignorance is bliss. Iho i:n..n iwatiant Hto the raw sausages at their harvest leasts, and died in horror of gnawing death worms, as lornine as mi which overtook Philip II. or King Herod. Tho "germ theory" assumes that all zymotic diseases, like cholera, diphtheria bv different auu jtiwn wvi . , species of minute fungous plants, bred in filth, whose spores, uoating everyucio invisibly, are inhaled and germinate in human tissue. But this much we learn from nature: naraaitium ia nlifava degradation. The dodder, with its pale, bloodless tissuos, and iU feeble, loathsome life, is closely re lated to the beautiful convolvulus. Some naturalists speak of the sacculina, a lively and perfect little crustacean, which some times attaches itself to the head of a flsh, and begins to feed upon the living tissues of its host; and at last its brain disap pears, its limbs are changed into clinging rootlets, aud it becomes a mere sac of un conscious or semi-conscious jelly, ifs in dividuality gone, its identity practically mcrired in that of the animal it had se lected for a prev. In the realms of hu man life the same law holds; parasitism is degradation. The Brand things of nature are always bah irit4 In itieiiliinl distinct. The stars oxtipv each a central portion in some region of the vastness of space. Each keeps the secret of Its own fiery heart. The grand men concede little to prece dent; each, in his inmost nature, tends to solitariness; ho wants air, light, elbow room, freedom from abstresive contacts, for body aud soul. The Polyd-life of the Au nnd iiiHHSPil. eni'li form OWU V I V X. V. - J penetrating and 'feeding upon the other, till parasite can hardly be uisiinpuisncu from its host. The lower grades of human lir.t vii.Mi- n similar ureMriousness and tendency, mutual suction and absorption. The feeble student intensines ins iccum- ness bv fieding upon the fruits ot his brother's work. Every popular minister is Biirrounded by a parasitic group, feed in.r n rum hi thnnclils and therefore sinking into mental feebleness through tbe desuetude ot their own reasoning powers. 1 need not speak oi tue neipiess wives, sons, daughters, drunken husbands, n,ir .viti.. nunn imrtnpr or HH re III. a 11 a to- ing down into torpid decay; nor of the stock jobbers, political rings, thieving n.tv-i.ntnnri KvtVms of religious oppres sions, which are, in some measure, para sitic upon the world's life; but confine ray thought to the degraded tramps, vagrants, Iwunn anpnk thioves. the acari and nedi- cuirupon the body politic The fast mul tiplication or thee is one oi tne niosi ter rible of the phenomena of bur social evo lution. Our social order is about that of wild beasts. Uooui for the king ! Koom for the strong arm, the vast cold brain, the heart oi granite, the cheek of brass! f.ir th Lir'pst eounetition. the niOMt meiitless monopoly. Every one for nuiseir. Ah, now sail mai we musicom- iluin llm nnivprlv "tho ill vil take the hindermost!" In the pitiless struggle the weak go down. To him that hath shall be given; from him that hath not, that whiL'h he seemeth to have is taken away. The best government, we say, is that which governs least. All mat humanity needs is free schools and the ballot in every hand. The saying is unspeakably, monstrously lake. The tramp is a new phenomenon upon this continent. Whence does he come? : is a complex problem. Formerly, uierica was building oOOO to 8000 miles 1 railroad per rear. Many thousands of laborers, endowed with little but mere luscle. were sDadintr those endless lines of embankmenis. That work is measura lilv .(.ma Tho vnst niiiltiolicatiuii of la bor-saving machinery has enormously in- reased the demand for educated, skilled nor; but the work has less ana ies a lace for the two-hated bog-trotter and lumsy clodhopper, the work which ese can periortu pertains lessanuiessio world s Hie. iney sin lower anu wcr in every facet and libre of their iing, as huiiiHiiity sweeps on w arn aim at mum Tlioir montui .111, 1 nhvsical characteristic are hardened into heredi tary types. We are breeding np a mighty swarm of human beings, as parasitical, verminous, loathsome, an the lazzaroni of Naples, Aua what are e dmng to cure mis great evil? We must do all Nature will ) nothing for us. fae loves ami muiu lm, li iirr tvne. We must overcome them, as ever in the realm of Nature, by special and artificial method. Thus far we have worked according to system or rorethouhU e nave maue these degraded and sinking men, each sovereign voter. e have enacted laws muiKin.. ahnrl terms of imprisonment upon vsjrants; we have given sporadic half-dollars to meu who are sunken deeper thereby; we have impseJ upou HLnrvinj ami desperate men the stern command, "Move on!" Alas! whither? But in all our legislation and methods of execution we have followed no large, comprehensive, remedial policy. Our criminal law iuvolves a vast system of make shifts and temporary expedients. There is in it ne healing for the terrible uli-er which is gnawing the vitals of so ciety. The pre-uiupiion of our laws is that every man has, or can acquire, self control, the power of selfaupport; that every criminal may be reformed, if he only be puutbed euoiuli to learn that the way of the transgressor is hard. Thepre aiiuiption is fle. Life U too heavy a burden for thou sands. There are men organically weak, needing aid, guidance, the helping baud. The tendency to ciime is a disease, a mallurmation io many .instances. The recent report of the surgeon in charge at aa eastern peuhentiary announces that the dissection of the brain of many hun dred men who have died in prison on the gallows conclusively prove that crimi nal are diseased aud deformed ia their nerve a'.ruc.ure in a vaat majority of casea, and this malformation ia aa heredi tary characteristic of great feneration of men. Wtll remember the temblestory which Mr. DugvUl ha told us concerning The Joke," now "Margaret, mother of rrimiukls," an abandoned woman, seot down to posterity a generation of who a sore Ihaa5u0 were known and recorded a felo is, nek thieves, paupers ackproe t tales. Oae experience came home to me years ago, of which I have already It ot 1 Pi 1 h the lo be pa f anntnn In nrint. but concerning which perhaps, a repetition is pardonable, for it has been the experience ui ou uu. a. ring at the door bell announced the com ing of a tramp worthy special notice. He was a bull-necked giant, with a face on every line of which nature had written "beast." Ho wanted clothing and money; he was just out of the peniteutiary at Sao Quentiu; he could get work nowhere; no oody wpnted a felon in shop or home. I could well believe his story. There was no place for hlra in society. Seven years of prison life had blotted out the last vestige of manhood. Only the cowurdlv crutltv of the hyeiia remained. Doubt less ui'y half dollar was spent at the dram shop, and paved the way to a renewal of crime; for no other life was possible for such a. being us this. A little later, journeying In a coasting steamor along our lower coast, my thoughts dwelt upon the rango of islands enclosing the Santa Barbara channel. At present they are pastured with sheep, but very few people ever set loot upon them. One of them has a considerable stream of water and a large fertile valley. Why not purchase this and found a penal col . ouy here ? W hy not begin to weed these alnula nnf nf hnmun Ror'ii.t.v ? f.... . I I . I I .... Villa mere impulses auu icuiiciii;ii;d ia has nothiiiL' lo do: but, when these have ripened into the overtuct, the duty of tho executor of the la n beginu. It should say to the organic criminal: "llus island is henceforward to be. your homo, lou shall have abundant, healthful work, sul ficieut for self support, rigidly enforced. You shall be cleauly in person und sur roundiiiLM. and decent iu speech. You shall have, at proper seasons and inter val, onnortunities lor moral und intel lectual culture, such as you are capable of uli irinir. But here your root snail per ish; you shall not go forth again into so ciety, to rear a family in your own like ness, and send the stream of your brutal izing life down to curse tbe coming generations." I cannot but feel that society has the right to protect its owu future; that it is suicidal to turn the organic criminal loose upon the world, to an inevitable reoetitioil of crime. There is no kindness in such procedure; no mercy to the crimi nal, or to the commonwealth upou which he is parasitic. Healthful labor, restraint, enforced order and cleanliness, and the final extinction of his debased race these are the highest blessings that can be con ferred upou linn. AS to tne criminals who are not organically and hopelessly such, there should be a court of pardons, composed of our wisest physicians, which should decide whether any ono of these could safely be released to the life of so ciety. Only in some such fashion as this cau the criminal elements be weeded ouf As for the pauper and vagrant classes, we must taxe positive ami rcmeuuti action. Thero should be in every coun try a farm and shops, furnishing work, food, shelter, enforced cleanliness and ab stinence from poisons to every tramp, vagrant and habitual druukard. There should also bo a place for worthy men, temporarily needing shelter and food, and willing to give in re turn honest work. There might also be a school for children, and such a gradation in relations and style of clothing, among those forcibly restrained, as would en courage well-doing. At preseiit society supports its parasites at enormous coot in the way of arson, highway rob bery, insurance, and policy expenses. It were far better to do this work in a sys tematic and orderly fashion, and in a manner which tends to uplift and heal. Very often the vagrant has no organic tendency to evil. His sin is weakness. Place around him the strong arm of legal restraints ; keep him busy, clean, well fed, healthy; stimulate tho brain with new ideas; and perhaps we are laying tho foundations of a new aud higher life for him and his. I have timidly ventured one or two suggestions, only hoping that these will turn other minds in the direction of social scieuce. The law of human society is yet to be written. Our modern social frame work is the product of ages of barbarism, and of blind, stumbling emperiment. Like Topsv, it has 'growed," as best it could. It is evidently true of it, as of Topsy, that Uod did not make it. It is time to begin, with heart and soul, the study of the science of society. Look ing at the seemingly hopeless confusion that prevails the questions concerning land limitation, water-right, suffrage, di vorce, aud thousand similar themes w e can seo that society is neither standing upon open sea nor solid laud, but is built upou a quaking quagmire. Strong, loving, thinking men and women must drive deep the piles and lay the granite foundations upon which the structure of the redeem ed world shall yet alise. But here we shoul-' take our stand; that legal precedents, common luws, existing constitutions, must not be permitted to hamper our thoughts. Laws and consti tutions if they are not, at least should be, the outgrowth of human needs. Man has no natural rights, especially where such alleged rights are incomputable with the best good of the great social unit. Life, liberty, the pursuit of happi ness, for the individual, must stand aside to make way for the needs of our integral humanity. I rejoice that there is the prospect of a more careful study of these ureat themes; that the scholorshipaud culture crystaliz ing about our university are organizing for such momentous research. It is well that the giant brain of Herbert Spencer ha-s led the way, laying broad founda tions for future work; but it is needful that others enter the field, studying the spirit nat as he has studied tne material rela tions of man to society; contributing the complement of the vast circle of research. Hitherto, philosophy has been hopelesa. This great rolling orb, with its life-long tragedy, sorrow, sin, suffering, was too much tor mau's weak arm to grapple. In Epicureanism, in Asceticism, in pleasure or despair, eating the lotus and drinaing the nepenthe, men were coutent to live on, shutting their eyes and ears to the in buite misery, and waiting till IJod's puri fying fires shcuid sweep where the deiuge swept before. But I thing ttat the day spring of a higher hope is arising iu hu man hearts- The measure of human sin aud wretcheduesa is almost infinite, but not to innch for divine and houiau knowledge, labor add love. What sweet aogsuons, promises, visions of better d) , sometime come to as oat of nature! Such a one came to me, not long ago, as I looked from the window of my mountain home upon the Pacific, sleeping below. It was suit night, but a faint gray glimmer along tht eastern borison showed that the morning was at baud. The ocean was dark and still, and heavy mists hunt over it like a palL But, a 1 auhed and waited, the dawn sent forth iu first purple ray, which wa caught and reflected upon the buat of one great moon lain cone that Biood. like av mighty prophet, and sent down to the dark world below its J trst faint promise of ihe morning. Other nAaVa imifvlif 4tiA J: whole earth was illuminated whh perfect day. The poisonous night Vi? the shadows, bata and owls, fuina A darkness, myste.y and horror, away and were seen no more. Bu iti ark flew heavenward; the flowers opened their cups; tho earth was full of tlieC of beaty and melody. The mists BWeD away from the surfuce of the ocean a?, trust they yet will from tho ou"i ! glorified humanity, and it lay lik L of glass mingled with fire, the p'r? Image o the gold and crims..., S above. .My heart accepted the proill of that hour. Xmii niiiu, f and I thanked the father that ,eTd: given to earth a promise of her Golden ... ..... ........ , ccij mummy. The British and Thrlr Beer. The importauco of beer umv m . by the fact that the English make Baro nets out of their brewers. Tho Lion Brewery, which is tho first object whieh strikes my eyes as I wako u., ln ., morning, looking out of tho window at my lodgings near Waterloo Bridge i8 1 marvel of resourco. It has from which it pumps up the thousands of barrels of water always in the tank on its top; it cools two hundred barrels of boiling boer every hour; its cellars and store vats oro enormous, and you littlo realize, when you are walking in tho stroets in its vicinity, that boer is gliding in pipes beneath your feet, in great streams voluminous enough to drown every London brewer at one and the same time. A single brewer has a coon ering establishment capable of turning out eighty thousand barrels yoarly, and maintains a veritablo army of draymen and porters, every ono of whom is a giant in sUture. The brewers' employes of London, if enrollod in a few regiment and sent into a foreign land, would create a most formidable impression as to tho size of the inhabitants of Albion. And when one thinks that all this industry is for the siniplo purpose of making a liquor, which befogs tho senses and deadens the ambition of tho working classes, ho cannot help marveling much. The English, like tho GermanB, are born thirsty; their climate enables thorn to drink immense quantities, but no one has ever heard that the climate prevents the liqnors of all grades from having the same disastrous effects that they have elsewhere. Beer, boer, beer 1 Hot and cold, morn and night beer beer beer! This sums up the British workman's lifo. A friend of mino required some extensive repairs in his studio, and was obliged to employ two or three workmen for a couple ot weeks. He says that they begged beer money of him on an average every two days. When ho indicated that he did not care about giving it, they managed to lose an hour or two of time, so that he lost more than he gained by refusing. Beer seems to bo omnipresent. Mr. Flower, tho worthy man who has done so much for tho Shakospeare mem orial, is a brewer, and his establishment makes Startford-on-Avon better known to nine out of ten Englishmen than than Shakespeare's tomb does. The beer trade in India is enormous. Why Englishmen wish to drink, in the East Indian cli mate, a liquor which is as unhealthy as. possible, it is difficult to say. The out come of English civilization in South Africa will bo an enormous brewery. Then, indeed, the negroes will be civil ized. Think of an establishment like that of Barclay, Perkins & Co., in South- wark, where thirty-live hundred barrels of porter may be seen in a single vat.: These thirty-five httndrod barrols of: porter are worth, at market rates, lony-; five thousand dollars. If the men who are brewing were engaged in manufac- turmg cheap food, to be sold at the same price as beer, I wonder if the half -starved public would buy it as readily as they do beer, which does them no good. No, I am sure they would not. One of the crazes of the English common folk is that unless they can see an immense piece of meat before them the are having nothing to eat. luey wasio enuugu iu keep them in plentv, if they only had a small amount of education in cookery. They like, too, the pot-house, with its steaming odor ot man jinueeu, i imu tha smell of beer permeates every nook and cranny of London), and they prefer to siMsnd their money there rainer iuau around their own tables They sit in a kind of befuddled beatitude on tne clumsy benches, with their pewter mugs in their hands; and on particularly wet and nasty nights it is as much as the publicans can do to get them to stir from the place, when midnight "and the half have sounded. Fancy them drinking hot beer (and adulterated beer, also) as if it were meetar. London Curr. Uotton Jour- Axotueb Ixyestiox. The vorsatile inmnt nf a Western inventor, who HI.. UUI. F V. t .i un r.,uu dm limn in the far- UUUUUI.S3 luivov.. i It distant future when the forests shall cease to clothe the hills and uaios, auu the demand for lumber suau pru.r Tastly in excess of the supply, has sue- ; .i.-.'ci'ntr a. anbstitnto for the ecru iu r . natural product of the virgin or the cul tivated sod. His plan is to use that fragile vegetable, straw, and by peculiar process make ito a substance as hard ana indestructable as oak timber. It claimed that this process couverts wheat straw into timber which is susceptive oi as fine a polish as mahogany ana oiw. walnut, at a cost not in excess of that oi the best clear pine. The straw is hrst manufactured by the onlinirv paper mill process into straw-board, and a sufficient number of sheets of this of the risht size are taken to make the required .- , . ci-i. ..,vi nit aoftened into a chemical solution, which is. or course, the inventor s secrei. a noer oi pasieooaru i iiunv.-; rated the pile of sheets is pressed be- f tween a aeries of rollers, which - date them so that when they dry tue - . ... oi imAil whole is a hard atici. it is ai -the process render this wood substitute impervious to water, and the chemical used are such as to mat it fireprool. But. the sanguine inventor has only made samples taas lar. I -, - Tribune. ' ' " Dean Stanley ay Theodore Tarter mra the atrmuTPst imDUlM to the study of acientiflc theology in this eoantry. tx-Uovernor x v. ioim eently dispensed HJ0,UW in churchea and hop Uls- The lye and Ear -Hospital, of New York City. f f io.Outf, and the d.bt (?11.00.) of t old brick church near Lis Loose ca IJ' avenue was paid. b u tl 0! tl ft a b