fuller the Scalpel. w philosopher hMioldni that he lted truism, ever get. Man and in we include the ooBtal B.de-lH.uo wears the sealskin ulsters and hlf attention of the bifurcated SLoI humanity from the considera. f solemn and sacred tungi, -l; . pue, whether mentally or phy Lically considered. The psychologi 1 study of man, prosecuted as it it is by observation and com--ffSAS exact science By oh, rSffin and experience we learn that Ss- that he is prone to run away S lS Abort wife, talk politics, Sf J i out of the theater between acts to ft . .man-" that he spends too much of ftimrat'" lodge," and is given to i riding and other pernicious prao ilftet weScannottak him mentally and trace the ramifications of 5f conscience and hereditary trend, to ount for his vagaries. Therefore, of our mental dissection of man is guess work, or the result of vague vLtnre Undor the scapel, however, iffSorganitionof "the biped Kfffeatherc" (Plato) the two leg hvena ("tho animal that laughs ), Ends revealed in its minutest detail. Indiana law has heretofore been hos ilatothe study of anatomy. Whilo it Quired of the surgical practitioner a Sute knowledge of the human form m ,11 its complexity, aud mulcted him in Lvy damages for any injury done his natient in consequence of a lack of such Lwledge, it at the same time made its Liisition in the only manner that Jlcould be acquired, a penitentiary of fense Recent enactments havo reme died this defect, and, by providing logal facilities for the study of anatomy, done ,way with the necessity for grave rob- i before stated, the only manner in which the student can master the intri cate system of bones, muscles, arteries, reinsnerves, eto., by which life is sus Uined in the human body, is by tho care ful dissection, part by part, of the body itself. The dead body is known to the profession by the, various names "stiff," 'subject" and "cadaver" in the aggre gate as "material." In former tinios L.tarial" in this city could only be pro cured by midnight raids upon the neigh boring cemeteries, and this unsavory ind unholy traffic gave employment to a number ol proiessionai resurrectionists ind their assistants. Now, however, the law which exacts from the medical prac titioner the minutest knowledge of his profession, affords him facilities for the acquisition of such knowledge by awarding him the un claimed bodies of deceased paupers. The manner in which the award of ma terial is mado at the Indiana Medical i11pm is as follows: When Dr. Marsee makes a successful claim to the body of a patient dying at the City Hospital or any of the benevolent institutions, he . i I- 1 x 11 has the body transporoeu to uiu uouce, and then prepares it for dissection by in jecting it with arsenite of soda and red lead. The arsenite of soda is to prevent decomposition, while the red lead is to distend and color the arteries. After the subject is prepared, the class enti tled to it are notined mat it is reauy. The first five students who matriculate, are known as Class 1. and so on to the end. A subject costs the class $25 $5 a "part. Die head and neck constitute a "part," while the legs and arms, with t proportionate section of the trunk attach' ed to each, are separate "parts." Some times, for the sake of economy, ten stu dents, instead of the usual number, five, club together for the purchase of a sub ject, which is thus made to cost each one only 82 60. After a subject has been thoroughly dissected, the bones are sold for $5 or 86, for the purpose of being set up as a skeleton. They are macerated m water lor four or live months, care fully cleaned and scraped, and then "ar ticulated." If the proprietor of the skeleton is particular about having it clean and white, ho gives it a thorough soaking iu ether before articulation. The student who articulates his own skeleton derives a double benefit there from. He not only impresses indelibly upon his memory a knowledgo of even the minutest bones and the relation they sustain to each other, but the wiring of the skeleton acquires a delicacy of me chanical manipulation which coines in good play in his practice of surgery. A good skeleton, well articulated, is worth in the market, but no stndent who had once successfully put one together, could be induced to boII it. save in the direst emergency. Newspaper literature pertaining Lo the dissecting room is usually of the sensa tional order, and designed to fatten the popular prejudice airainHt the nrofession. The writers usually dwell with great unction on the imaginary horrors of the ene, and their productions bristle with such words as "ghostly," "grinning," ''livid," eto. The offensive odor Bnd the impiety and irreverence of the students re dwelt upon with great emphasis. A reporter of the Journal, who visited me cussecting-room of the Indiana Col ,eS?e, a few nights since was agree bly disappointed at the absence i traditionary horrors. He found smell, it is true. The smell is unde niable, and can not be reasoned away. It as not the smell of carrion, however, nt a strong "meaty" odor, like that ef a slaugherhouse where an attempt has been made to keep it clean. There ere gome five or six subjects in various tages of dissection, some of them show "? little save the bare bones, others .""parativeiy fresh. Around each sub jt was guthered a group of students in long calico gowns, each at work on his JPwt," some of them with open books wfore them, and some apparently snfli ftently np in the study to dispense with we text book. There" was no "nonkey ffig. no obscene jests or flippant con versation They all seemed to be full of business, and were earnestly and decor ly, if not reverently, Retting the .f ther money. Among the ex Ped intestines of a colored subject a o-uj, , Biaaenu were groping witn ? occasionally bringing up an un JBnUy substance, which they united in wclarmg a beautiful specimen," her subject was that of an old wo- r& With rrnnVAsI Idiva mnA mvmm an1 Jkta i all drawn out of shape. Though been one of bitterness and sor row, she was undoubtedly "crookod" in her make up. In a room below was a most interesting subject, that of a young woman, whose eventful lifo history was abstractedly considered in the Journal a few days since. She was Binall in stat- ure, with delicate, clear out features, white skin and appearance of refinement which is not usually encountered in tho dissecting room. When our reporter was admitted, tho work of dissection hud already progressed to a considerable ex tent. The scalp hod been removed, the skull sawn apart, the brain taken out, and the acappel had laid bare the chest. The eyes were closed and the features wore a peaceful look, except that tho mouth had been sewn up. Around this bit of frail humanity the clustered stu dents discussed only science. There was not a word or suggestion of ribaldry. The students exercise great care in dis- soction, for even a slight cut of the fin ger may prove fatal. Tho bit of muscle of flosh is caught up with a dolicato hook before being cut away. Septio poison in a cut in dissection where the patient has died from erisipehs, for instance is always dangerous in tho extreme, and generally fatal. A cut whore the patient has not died from a septio diseoso, may produce a painful and obstinate local ul cer, but is not daDgerous. A cut re ceived from a fresh snbjoct is more dan gerous than from an old ono. Tho arse nite of soda with which subjects aro pre pared, is in itself poisonous.-Mf iViwkW Journal, Slorhu of the Duke or Argyll. If one were to meet the Duke hurry ing cityward on foot, and carrying a Binall carpet-bag, one would set him down at once as an intelligent banker's ilnrk. Meet hiui in evening dress at Lady X.'s, and you would still be far from suspecting that lie was the descend ant of a long line of heroes and states men. Tn anuearanca ho is essentially iwiniinnnnlivn. It is only when he be gins to taia, or rtnuui- wuuu ue nuruis u his subject, that you recognizo uiysses Vvon then vou are a lorn? time in detect ing the grand signeur. His conversation is that of a Bcholor who has yet seen something of the world, though in whom the enthusiast is apt to prevail over tho But for ono circumstance, the jjuko or. Argyll might have ended as a mere rmiliea of the "Lord Vincent" whom Bulwer sketched in Pelliam, a dilettante who had always a uilluse review on hand, n nrntai.f nf nurtv organization not finite M jitujuv. ' -j n - x reiulv. and some brilliant ideas which just wanted to be put into shape. From this fate ho was saved by a passion ior . . . m i a . hard work, tie is simply MdciatigaDio, and on busy men their crotcucts and mcir doubts sit lightly, while their enthnsi asms are also undor control. The late Strickland Cookson (the frinrwl ami executor of Wordsworth). told me he was on a Royal Commission with tho Duke of Argyll. I think they had to inquire into some rather abtruse legal points, "in a week, said iook nn "the Duke had so mastered the sub' ject that he knew more about it than any of us, lawyers included, luooiogy, too, ho had deeply studied, as well as natural scienco, antiquities and politics. To the queen of the sciences, however, as the schoolmen called theology, one fancies he has long since bidden farewell, his mind having taken a more manly de velopment. As Marquis of Lome, and fur some time after, he plunKod eagerly into tho fray whenever the merits of the .Established lurk, me rree Kirk, or the Prolatic Schism came prominently under discussion in the land of toddy and polemics. At 1!) he refreshed the world with his views on some of these topics in a pamphlet bear ing the in questionable-taste title of "A letter to the Peers by a Peer's Son." Tlinsm n-lin tliH&crreed with Lord Lome thought it the safest answer to coll him a "prig; those who approved, said soms thing about "deuced clever." How manv on either side read the brochure is another question. The men of this gen eration are not to bo converted by solemn arirnmnnta earefnllv marshaled. Laugh ter, or a shrewd appeal to self interest, is now your most convincing orator. Still, the heir of MacCallum More had mado himself a name as a rising young mfltl? fin il this would havo been suffi cient, even if the self-styled "Bishop of Argyll and the isles nd not aone ins best to give the Marquis additional noio vinfr. The later Arervlls. while remain ing staunch Whigs and upholders of tho Covenant, had yet lapsed into tne naoii ff-ntitrfifited throucrh constant sojourn in England) of taking the communion at Easter and Christmas in an Episcopal chapel. One Christmas, the Bishop, who knew Lord Lome would present ln'munlf vrnte to sav that ho could not be admitted to the sacrament on account of his irreverent romarks ancnt the bcot- tish Episcopacy. Lord Lome only laughed, till he discovered that the little Beet had the big Church of England at its back. Dr. Bloomfield, Bishop of London, a man alternately courageous and compromising, declined to adminis ter to Lord Lome the eucharist which a brother Bishop had refused. The Duke, by the way, tells a story of Bloomfield (toward whose memory he is far from bearing a grudge) which is worth repeating as a specimen of that rare phenomenon, a neat German re partee. It was at a party, where the guests had been amused with experi ences of clairvoyance. "Well," at length exclaimed Bloomfield, puzzled at what he had seen, and unable to explain, "but what, then, were our eyes given us for?' Bunsen, who was present, instantly re plied: "To limit our vision, my Lord." The Duke naively owns that he did not consider the reason Riven as exhaustive. It must be remembered he is a Scotch man. London Truth, January ltt. Never give away a penny indiscrimi nately. If a beggar tells you he is starving, order him to come to you the next day. If he makes his ojpearance it is a proof of tbe falsehood of his state ment If it had been true he would have died during the night. It is not so much the quantity that tells as the quality. The devil has as much brains as an archangel, but he doesn't look at things in the same way, and that's why he is where he is. Undertake not to teach your equal in the art he himself professes; it savors of arrogancy. Irish Lands. Whoever may have traversed green P.m'n from the mountains of Wieklow to the wild yet rich scenery of Killarney or tne stony wastes aim grim lastnesseit of Couneiuara, from tho south coast of a thousand inlets to the mighty cliffs of the northwest and the columnar wonders of the Causeway, . the stranger who nrnmwa tlm rentnil iiliiina Invcrv lunil- scapo of cultivated country or of vast reaches oi uurx uog lias Bumnuis in tue further distance) , who sees tho spread ing loughs, the broad-flowing Shannon, and the rivers flowing into many estua ries by which every province is watered, un.l ivhn viuita Htn urnntllnml rncrinnR and innumerable tracts of fino plow land and of pastures luxuriant beyond r.ngiisn ex amplo, must have felt the mystery and sorrow of the fact that such a kingdom romains but half utilized by the indus trial default of its inhabitants, and that over a large proportion of its surface Ire land yields only poverty to tens of thou sands wuo snouid 00 among tue most happy and prosperous people on the nartli A rliiTifttrt mild ami moist from the influenco of the Atlaniio, from the lull ranges in every maritime county, which condenso the sea vapor into rain, and from the humidity duo to peat bogs occupying a seventh part oi tne snpern cies of the island, is uncongenial for the i-inoninir nf fnl linrvftHbi of bread corn: and, indeed, tho low Hummer tempera- ture and tre prevalence oi nouu, es tuu'inllv in flin Knnth and went, render the maturing of wheat, aud also of fine malting barley, precarious, uut tnese atmospheric conditions favor the growth nf mil a nf irrixm forairn. roots and (Trasses. and of natural pasture ic profusion. Ire land is not lormea to oo a granary; nu ture makes it a meadow, a dairy and a stall. In part, also, it is a garden of vegetables and fruit. Here is a country which should at least be a, paradise of live stock a land flowing with milk, if not with honey. And the wonder to a stranger is why Ireland, possessing few manufactures and little of mineral and metalliferous industry to divert the ener gies of its people from the mother art, has not presented to the world a pattern of good management in every depart ment of husbandry. If the profits of ag riculture are insufficient for the woll-be- ino nf tl.o nAniilnti'nn it. ift nnrfainlv not tlie quality of tho soil which is to blame; for no ono acquainted with the soils of . ... .1 1 1 Ireland will class tuom generally as mie rinr fn tlm lif lit. nands and noor clay of - "O . . " Flanders, or will compare thoir natural fertility unfavoraniy witn tne araoie nna nnoinva lnn.lu nf Itaiimiirlr anil Holland. IflinbUlD lllll.lll V . i.. ....... Where are the Irish lands representative t Al. .lfna nrA llAaflia wll Wll V.nrrlltlll husbandmen Lave wrought to a high too, the adhesive clays which English farmers now nna it pronuess 10 cumvuio are but unknown. Pun limit nf am-icnlturftl nrosneritv be attributed to an undue pressure of the Irish population upon uio limits oi meir ..ilti't-ntoil lnnilu9 Kn far as the irenorol average is concerned, the available area is not below that of other countries wnere tlm ncrriniiltnrn in extolled for its excel lence. While in England 21,500,000 out of 32,5000,000 acres of total area have been brought under crops and in grass, Tmland 15 1150 .000 out of 20.750.000 acres are under management and this amounts to two and tnree-iouniis acres to each head of the population. In Bel tlm nuantitv of cultivated land is only ono acre per head; in Great Britain it is one and one-quarter acres; in Hol land it is one and one-third acros; and up to three and one-quarter acres per head in Denmark. An excess ofi nliabitants in proportion to the capabilities of the country for maintaining them, can scarcely distinguish Ireland as a wholo, whatever may bo the case in particular .ii'iitriiitR .Tn.liinff by tko examnlo of kingdoms in which it is admitted that cultivators of the soil thrive, it appears probable that Ireland might support in onmfnrt tlm pristine 5.350.000. who. in parts of many counties, are alleged to be on the verge of starvation, whenever Providence visits tiiem with an unpropi timia oAfiinn. There is enough cultivated land in Ireland to be devisable into holdings av timmna twenty-nine acres for each of the existing ocoupiers; and hence there can be no absolute necessity why a more ru inous morcellement of occupations should obtain than we find in Denmark, where the holdings average tnirty-iwo acres each, or in the small-iarra provin ces of Belgium, where they averago little mnrA tlmn tttpntv acres each. Here. however, a remarkable inequality exists in tho distribution of a total areo, which, if equally proportioned, might be found amplo. Out of the 481,000 occupiers in Ireland holding more than a singlo acre each in the year 1878, there are 207,000 holding above one and under fifteen apron nnil of these (50.000 occupy not mnm titan rmo tn five acres each. The number of occupiers with moro than fif teen and not exceeding thirty acres, is . . . . n.ll win 1. .1 1 124.00U. And with iWi.wu iarmors uoiu ing from over one up to thirty acres each, tlm rn in din nnlv 150.000 farmers occu pying above thirty acres, nearly half of these namely 00,000 having farms of over and un to fifty acres. Farmers of over fifty and up to 100 aores, number 51.000; only 21,000, or about 4 per cent, nf tho furmnrs nf Ireland have over. 100 and up to 200 acres; and but 11,000 have more than axj acres. rropaDiy aoout l.oifnfall tlm pultivuted land is in the hands of small occupiers of from over one and not more than nity acres eacn. l,i!a tlm mrrinultural condition of a tl.ir.l nf Tr lanil is revealed and tested by the little occupations of from over one and not moro than thirty acres eacn. rimvo mioannrec iation of the real state of i : - Irish husbandry would arise from taking ing it to be represented maily by the class of farms wnicn x.ngnsn tenauis n,ii.i i-orrarrl as 1:1 rep or medium-sized. w u uiu . rj or worthy the name of farms at all; yet '. -1.1 i ii. . such are those commonly visited ior tue purpose of acquiring information as to the character and position of Irish hus bandry. The Juvenile Theology-Mother at a tea-table: "Jack, who helped you to those three tarts?" Jack, age seven: "The Lord." The Lord? Why, what do you mean, Jack?" Jack: "Well, I helped myself; but father said yesterday that the Lord helps those that help them selves." "Mamma, what are twins made for?" Bir precarious brother replied, "So that cannibals may eat philopcenas." Benedict Arnold's Wire. H. C. Van Sohaoek. of Manlius. Onon- dago county, New York, fathor-in-law of Aaron .1. Vandenwel, of this city, read before the New York Historical Society last evening, a paper entitlod "Benodict Arnold before his Treason." The paper was too voluminous for reproduction in a daily paper. In concluding it Mr. Van Sehaack, however, touchod upon a phase of the subject too interesting to be omit ted: "An attempt was made," ho said, "many years ago and has been repeated since, to implicate Mrs. Arnold in her husband's treason, and in fact to make hor the chief conspirator. The object of that effort seemed to be to oonvinco tho world that had not Arnold marriod Miss Shippen, ho would not have strayed from the path of patriotic virtuo, his treason would not have occurred, aud by conse quence, the unfortunate Andre would havo escaped tho gallows, ltemarkable discovery that Arnold, would have boen no traitor but for his wifo! Wo shall perhaps next be told that it was the con dition on which sho yielded to him her heart and hand. It was Davis' biogra phy of Aarou Burr which undertook to convince tho world that Arnold's virtu ous patriotism was corrupted by his wife. Strange indeed is it that tho American public should thus have been inade acquainted with this remarkable fact through the pages of a work which commemorates a character scarcoly less extraordinary thau that of the arch traitor himself. If, indeed, wo were called upon to designate two individuals figuring upon tho pages of American history whoso characters beyond all oth ers were the most mysterious and tho hardest to understand, we should unhes itatingly point to Benedict Arnold and Aaron Burr. After Arnold's tseapo from West Point Washington kindly gave Mrs. Arnold her election to be sent to her hnsband in New York or her friends in Philadelphia. Sho chose the latter, and whilo on hor way in her carriage with her nurse and young child to thatoity, she stopped ouo night in New Jersey with Mrs. Prevost, who two years afterward became tho wife of Colonel Burr. Now the state ment in Burr's biography represents him telling his biographer what Mrs. Burr told him after marriago in regard to Mrs. Arnold's admissions to hor while stop ping at her house. (Mr. Schoack hero quoted from tho Burr biography. ) This account places before us a newly-mar ried yeung lady of nineteen and sho a young mother corrupting an American General of six years' standing, and of tho mature age of forty, and that Uonoral her husband, all (for such is tho motive ascribed) to acquire tho means of gratifying an inordinate vanity. Credat Jutla'iis Apjxla, non ego! Time will for bid my entering upon a full vindication of this lady from the absurd chargo of being the author of the plot for the' sur render of West Point, aud her husband only a reluctant instrument in her hands to further tho dark scheme. The hear say testimony upon which it is based is so unsatisfactory in itself, bo inconsistent with historical documents of established authenticity, and with the clearly ex pressed opinions of General Washington and Colonel Hamilton and Major Franks, that I protest against it as inculcating an unnatural and revolting supposition, j impeach it in the name of femalo lovcli noss, incapable of such baseness. I ar raign, it in behalf of youth without the art to conceive or the craft to mature tho foul plot, and I discard the revelation in all its material positions as absurd in itself and as a tax upon our credulity at tho expense of our judgment. Margaret Arnold novor dug the crave for her hus band's honor. Burr's story is entirely too biar. Thcro is. however, an episode to the history of Mrs. Arnold's visit to Mrs. Provost's, which does not appear in Colonel Burr's biography. Burr was himself at Mrs. Provost's at tho time Mrs. Arnold was there, he probably be ing at time a suitor of Mrs. Provost. It is not surprising, however, that Burr should havo neglected to state to his bi ographer the facts that whon Mrs. Arnold left her house in the morning Burr offered hisoscort, which, he protendod, might bo useful to her in the then excited state of tho public mind. On tho way he baso ly made love to this olllictod lady, think ing to take advantage of her just feelings of indignation towards her husband and her helpless condition to aid him. Being indignantly ropellcd, he treasured up his revenge and left a story behind him worthy of his false and malignant hcurt to blast this amiable ludy's name. In conclusion the lecturer said: 'Teter Van Sehaack, LL. D., was in England several vcars after Arnold's treason. On the occasion of ono of his accustomed visits to Westminster Abboy, his atten tion was arrested by the entrance of Gon- eral Arnold accompanied by a lady. The lady was doubtless Mrs. Arnold. They passed to the cenotaph of Major Andre and there stood. What a scene for a pencil! The traitor Arnold at the tomb of a man for whose ignominious fate be was responsible, reading the monumental inscription that will transmit to all agos thetalo of his infamy.' A. Y. World. A Somewhat Astonished Pedaoooi e. It was a wise suggestion that school children ought to have a great hearty laugh every day, and one of tho teachers in the Chico public school was thinking the matter over recently, and how he could possibly give the scholars in his department a Rood hearty laugh. This teacher is a Normalite, and has imbibed all the tactics of a strict disciplinarian, and to brine his pupils up to the hearty iauchinff pitch, lie would necessarily be ,1 i i i t:. i: Wl.il compeueu ii lower uin iiiguuj. n unc thus sittinz in his chair coiitating,he braced himself baik, tipping his chair on tho hind legs, and over he went chair and all, an. I instead of his stern features lookintf over the scholars, a pair of num ber of twelve 1k)oU came, liko an wlition between him and his pupils. The scholars at first wondered for a moment bow their teacher had disap- pared from view, but when the eclipse had gono off, and ho commenced to rise again to the surface, it was then that thev concluded that the laugh cam in, and right heartily thoy enjoyed it Chico Kccord. A trnnnor namml Whitehead WBS es pecially commissioned to keep his eye peeled "for Chief Moirosi, and he shot the old African while be was making for a little cave. London now has a 8ouety for Prevent ing Street Accidents and Dangerous Driving. DO AS YOU'RE BID. "Mind a man!" These words were uttered in a tone of splendid scorn; but an unseon auditor around the corner of the piazza only smiled, and yet he was a man. "But, Doll, you will have to mind your husband," responded a gentle, drawling, exasperated voice. "Shall I?" returned the clear and spir ited note of tho flint speaker. "Ho has not appeared on the stage yet, Grace. When he does, it seems to me it will be time enough to contemplate submission." ihe gentleman on the piazza smiled ngain, but he rose quietly and walked away; He did not like to be a listener. however voluntarily, for be was a gentle man. He did not altogether esuipo that fresence, however, by his own absence, le carried with him a vivid picture of the tall, slight figure, graceful as a deer ; the dark, tender eyes, that could be full of lightning; tho proud, delicate, sensi tive face; the abundant biowu hair, shot with red rays, like a ripe chostnut skin. lie had studied this portrait many days, for he had known Dorothea Schonck as a ;hild ; aud though for years they had not mot. this Summer they were together in a quiet little tavern in the hills of Ver mont, air. llorton for rest from a year or hard work in a city parish. Dora to be with her invalid mother, who could not bear hor usual round of Newport and Saratoga. Dorothea Schenck was a spoiled child. The idea of obedience was as distasteful to her as bit and bridle to a wild horse. Her outbreak this morning was excited by somo careless gossip of brace Hamil ton'sa girl of her own ngo who had come with them to Addis, partly because Mora had coaxed her, partly becauso It was cheap, and Grace was not too rich. The suhioct of their discourse had been the sufferings, publicly paraded, of a cer tain little lady known to this party, who had been very and, inooed, absurdly extravagant, and brought her husband to the brink of failure ; so near that shu had beeu compelled to accept a sudden and severe retrenchment. Graco's aunt, who was also staying at the Saltash House, hud blamed Mrs. Uluke severoly. and Dora had not objected till Grace affirmed that she did not at all sympathize with Mrs. Blake, as her husband had been very open with her in regard to his business affairs, and had long since told her that she must give up certain habits of luvlsh expense, or expect Dim to tail a Met which the natural levity aud folly of the woniua's nature led her to treat as a threat. And so the end came. "And I'm not sorry for her; Bhe ought to have minded him!" Uraco said. A woman's natural duty is obedience; she ought to havo known that it is our destiny to yield to our superiors," whined Miss Hamilton; and this, which seoined to Dora superlative cant, had brought out her sharp exclamation. She herself was utterly undisciplined; a blind indulgence bad set her adrift in life without an idea of duty, and she had yet to learn any law but her own will, or any restraint hut her own caprices. Poor child ! lire is the sternest of creatures, even with all the preparations that can be made for its en counter, and a merciless pedagogue to the willful and ignorant. Mr. llorton wus bewitched with Dora against bis judg ment. Her fresh, piquant grace, her regal boautv. and her very insurgent way of action and speech, captivated him. t i . ;.L ..1 .I.-. ..I... lie Knew, wun paiuiui cieurnuss, nun sue was as unfit for a ministers wife as a woman could be. but he also knew that without her his life would lone its savor, and become a routine of the dullest order, perhaps misery, though conscience warned him not to be weak as this, whilo his work remained yet to be done. Tho next day there was to be at that re sort of Summer boarders, in lack of all other amusements, a picnic to Glen Falls, a wild ravine in the heart of tho hills, through which a rapid brook tore its way, plunging from one precipico to another, at no one spot to be seen in full beauty, but reserviug its coy surprises ior inose who had skill and strength to climb up ward to its source a clear mountain pond that slept amid dark woods, fed by hidden springs. The day was warm, yot fresh w ith the wonderful freshness of mountain nir; and when the long wagon of Saltash Holme arrived at the loot of the ravine all tho younger members of the party were unanimous in their resolve to climb to Clear 1'ond, while the older ladies and one white-haired bachelor, who cared lit tie for scenery and much (or his ease, re mained quietly on a broad rock by the lower pool, where thick pine boughs sheltered them from the sun, and the cool odor of dripping water seemed to disperse whatever boat the July weather threat ened. Two couples had already gone up ward, when Dora and Grace, attended by Mr. llorton and Ned Schenck.a cousin of Dora's, began the climb. Both gentlemen had been sufficiently accustomed to forest paths to make the matter easy aa far as they were concerned, but to feet only used to the walks of the city or the smooth turf of the croquet ground, this rough yet slippery ascent looked learlui enough; nor were kid boots the best preparation for sharp rocks and moss strewn with nine needles. It seemed all but impos sible for Dora to attempt such a task, but her pride forbade retreat, while Orace, in despair, suffered herself to be hall carried ud the steepest pitches by Ned Schonck, and lifted bodily over stones and logs that sho declared herself altogether un able to surmount. Fortunately for her protector, she was slight, and not tall; ho could easily spare all the strength neces sary. But Dora would not allow herself to be more than guided, though the guid ance was peremptory. "Put your foot here, Miss Hchentk; now the other on that stone, (five me your left band, and take firm hold of Unit Lough to the right." Dora obeyed with the most child-like confidence, for the abyss below her and the height above were alike terrible; but she had that best of courage, which will not turn back, though trembling with terror. Grace, from below, a helpless burden, saw with u sort of pique how well Dora endured the march, and caught Mr. Mor ton's admiring glances at the lithe figure that was at once so brave and so docile. To tell the truth, Grace had intended that the handsome young clergyman should be her own escort, and was not at all sat isfied at being regelated to Ned Schenk's care, who was strong and good tempered, no doubt, but neither good-looking nor rich. It was not from pure desire to tease that Grace called out, In her soft, drawling tones: "Doll, you ate really a miracle. I never expected to see you mi nd a man' so implicitly." Dora was indignant. She knew well that Grace could be spiteful, but the spite did not hurt her so much as the answering consciousness that, in spite of her fine theories, she had been most implicitly submissive to Mr. Horton's escort. The girlikh, filly pride thai ws hor great fault, rose iu arms, hi e did not answer Grace, but, with a resolute look on her flushed face, sprang onward after her own fashion, stumbling and dine ing as well as she could, every moment expecting Mr. llorton to advise or remonstrate, but bent on heednw his voice no more. She expected in vain. He said noth ing, and the smile on his face would not have pleased her. lie only followed fast behind her till thev came to a little gritiwy platform at tho head of the stream, where (lie rocks retreated and the trees had been swept awnv directly in front of the last and highest fall, which descended here at right angles with the rest of the stream, belli nd a cliff that hid it entirely from the lower pool. Grace had stopped far below; she was heated and tired, and angry too. Ned Schent k did not mind her petulance, for he did not care for tier; ho he sat down on the other end of the log where she had seated herself, and profaned the del icate forest odors with a cigar. Dora stopped a monie.it to take breath and ad mire the beautin.il rail before them, which dashed Its white water down the sheer black rock, and sprinkled with bright dew the luxuriant ferns and vines that fringed the banks on either side. Then sho turned to follow tho very slight indi cation of a path unwiird. Mr. llorton whs reauy to follow, but, the moment she set hor foot on the rock which was her first step, and extended her hand to grasn the ledge above, which was to be climbed, he cried out in a loud, impera tive voice, "Dora, stop !" The voice was so decisive, so powerful. so full of that command which is the counterpart of obodienco, that, without a thought of rebellion, Dora stood like a statue. In an instant Mr. llorton put his arm about her, swung hor back, and be gan to strike rapidly and fiercely at some thing on tho crest or the ledge; and in another minute ho lifted a dead rattle snake on bis cane rn 1 Hung it far into the stream. Dora turned Bick, and sat down on a stone, shuddering and pale. Mr. llorton only said, "hxcuse me. Miss Schonck ; the danger was too near for me to be less imperative." Dora shivered. "If you had not, 1 should bo dead now." 'Not at all." laughed Mr. Horton. "I know those, woods too woll to bo ever without the proper alleviations for a snako bite, but 1 never yot used them, though I have mot and killed a good many. Kattlesnakes are dull creatures unless thoy coil to spring, and one blow with a heavy stick will kill them. Very few people die of their bites. I have only heard of one case in these regions, and that was a child who strayed alone into the woods." lie uurnoselv lengthened his explana tion, that Dora might calm herself. He did not know how it was still throbbing through her heart that he had called her "Dora." Her native generous instinct demanded somo thanks at least to bo paid, but she could not sneak yet: Bhe was shyly glad, yet angry with hoiself for being glad; and, trembling so with the sudden nervous shook, she could not for some minutes speak again. Mr. llorton stooped down to the water's edge, and seemed absorbed in looking at the fall, but his heart beat as wildly as hers. In that moment of dan gor ho had discovered what deep hold Dora had taken of his life. He did not think of hor unfltnoss to be his wifo, of her scorn, her wild impulses, her quick temper. Like many another man in his case, he thought only of her beauty and its sweetness, and felt that she must love him or he wouhbo miserable. Blessed ordination of thlugs! If men or womon chose their mates as thoy do thoir shoes or their books, with deliberate and cool judgment, this dear, delightful, naughty old world would come to a sudden end. It is tho wisdom of Providence that they never do. It secmod an hour to both of these as tonished people, yet It was barely Ave minutes, before Dora looked at Mr. Hor tcn and said, "I don't know how to thank vou. I can acknowledge now It is good to mind a man-mctlines." Thore was a soft, arch look in the beautiful dark eyes that contradicted the quivering lips; but tho lovely blushing face told what Dora never meant to tell. Mr. Horton knelt down on the grass beside her. "Oh, Dora! I would not be a tyrant," he said. And Dora dropped hor head so low it rested on her shoulder. Mrs. Horton also declared hor husband never asked her to marry him, which he indignantly denied as often as she as serted it. But, however the union camo about, it was true for everybody soid so that no gentler, sweeter, happier min ister's wifo ever tilled that dillicult posi tion in tho city of Ludlow, where Mr. Herton was settled liven Grace Hamil ton could not find fault with this match, though she had predicted all sorts of sor rows from ita ''radical unfitness." But time had not softened Grace's native spite, though she controlled It during her brief visit to tho parsonage. On the uext Christinas morning a package came by express,diroctcd to Mrs. llorton. On the inner cover of the box was written : "For Doll's room;" and, as the last fold of tissuo paper was lilted, an elaborate il luminated motto appeared: H Com when yna're called, 1k aa you're bid, Hliut the iliior Kflrr you, Aud you'll never be vbld." Her husband was looking over Dora's shoulder, and they both laughed. Grace's arrow was pointless for such trust and happiness. "I've only changed my mind," said Dora, "and that is evory woman's priv eie." "And I hive only ablica'ed. and that iany king may do," retorted her husband. "Have you?" Slid his wife, incred ulously. ... The truth was that neither knew how to differ from the other with comfort. A Depraved Small Boy. A fearful examplo of criminal precocity is afforded by a case which recently came before the Assizo Court of St. Peter, in Martiuque. A boy named Emillen Dema, aged 11, was accused of deliber ately murdering Paul Sarpon, a child of 3 years. The following extracts from Dema's examination will show the hor rifying cold-biooodedness with which ho admitted the commission of the crime. On being asked how he dispatched his victim, he answered, "I killed him in tentionally. I got him to come and play with mo, He followed me, and we Idayed together at first, and then I led din near the edge of a cliff and pushed him over. I next jumped down after him, bitbim in the neck, and finished him off with a stone." Gorman's snccess in grasping the Maryland Sentorship is explained. He nsed to be a good catcher in a base ball club. ': i i I- i