( i i "i '4 4 .5 What Came of It. Ilelwi E. Ktarrett in Chicago Weekly Maga il no.1 Mr. Smith missed the train by just Inst one-half minute and Iio wan m furiouH temper over tlio matter. Ho lived in the suburbs and w out into the city every day to his place of businoss, Not once in three. months did such thing happen aH his being late for the train, but on this occasion lie felt like doclaring that half the time ho had to rush himself clear out of breath to reach it or elmi miss it. lie wns in tliut ex as pcratrd stato of mind where ho wanted to blame somoliody, abuso somebody a state of mind which, in a condition of development a little nearer tlio savago, would impel to acts of cruelty towards any tiling or any person on whom angor could be wroaked. Of courso tho person on whom he could most quickly and with tho least impunity cast bliime was his wifo. It was all her fault. Why couldn't she maungo household affairs so that ho could got his breakfast earlier? He worked like a slave at his business ton hours a day, he gavo her full control of the house and furnished money to run it; she had a servant and it was pure and utter shiftlossness in her that breakfast could not bo ready in proper time, ihus soliloquized Mr. smith, as with anger-flashing eyes ho saw tho train disupKar in tho distance It was a full hour and a half till the next train; it was nearly hulf a milo back to Mr. Smith's houso. He nerv ously paced buck and forth for a few moments before the deoot, debating in his mind whether ho should wait there for tho next train or go buck homo. As ho mused his anger grow. Ho would go back home; he would give his wifo such a "blowing-up" as sho would re member for mouths. Sho should feel that it was no light matter to have breakfast five minutes lato. He turned his fuco homeward and stumped heavily along with tlio air of a man determined to do a desperate deed; his faco was Hushed with anger and his eyo gleumed fiercely. But as ho hastened along Homehow or other his absorbed attention was di verted by tho song of a bird in the trees that lined his path. Ho looked up in voluntarily. How brightly tho sun was shining I The trees were putting forth thoir tenderest green; ho was the grass. He noticed tho fragrance of tho apple and plum blossoms; lie distinguished tho peculiar strain of a bird he used to hour in boyhood. Ho had listened to that bird when ho had walked in tho meadows witli tho pretty, shy young maiden whom his heart was bent on winning for his wifo. Sho was his wifo now. Sho was the mother of three rosy, uctivo children; they were his and hers. Sho was not so pretty as sho once was. Sho was thin and careworn. Tho plump rosiness und merry smilo were for tho most part gone, lint what a good, true wifo sho had been to him! And on this bright, sunshiny, beautiful morn ing ho had been meditating tho sharp words ho could say to her, and all for a trivial little loss of an hour from busi ness. Mr. Smith's pace slackened; his countenance relaxed, his heart melted. On such a morning he could not, would not mar tho harmony and beauty of tho sunshine and birds and tho green things growing. No; if ho could not speak kindly words ho would hold his peace. As Mr. Smith neared his house ho felt a certain shrinking from meeting his wife directly. Ho almost felt that ho might betray on his countenance some of tho harsh thoughts ho hud been thinking. So lie went around the side of the house and entered a kitchen door. Bridget was standing with a perplexed and distressed air over tho open stove in w hich smouldered n dark, dying tiro. "What is tho matter, Bridget?" "Faith, sur, and it's the stovo that breaks mo heart entirely. Tho grato is broken and tho stovo-pipo smokes, and whin I sthrivo to make a quick tiro, here's tho way it serves mo." "Well, Bridget, I boliovo that's all my fault. Your mistress has asked mo many times to bring a new grate from tho city and also to have a man come and clean out the stove-pipe und chim ney. 1 will put this down in my note book and bring the new grato this even ing, and l'ut Mel-linn shall como this very day and fix the pipe." "Oh, thank you, sur," said Bridget, with a brightening countenance, "and couui you nave ino cistnern nxoa to t Tho pump has been broken along toime and it takes so much of mo toime and keeps back tho work so to bo dhraw iug water wid a rope." Again Mr. Smith's conscience smote him. How often hud his wifo asked him to have tho cistern fixed. "Yes, Bridget, I will havo tho cistern fixed also this very day." "Well, sur, thin I think I'll stav. I was just telliu' tho misthress that I wouldn't work any longer with such in conveniences, but if tho stove and ois thern tiro llxed a poor girl can get along." Mr. Smith made another memoran dum in his note book and passed on through tho dining-room towards his wife's room. Ho noticed that her plate indicated an untosttd hroukfust. Softly ho opened tho door of their room. His wifo started up hastily with an expres sion of alarmed inquiry. Her eves were wet with tears. The baby, still in his night-clothes, was fretting in the cradle, w hile a little ll-vonr-old, partly dressed, tugged at her skirts. "And 'so you missed the train breakfast was Into, well, I can't help it Bridget is going to leave, too," and the poor little woman covered her face with, her hands and burst into sobs and tears. She fully exoected nnirrv com plaints from her husband, and i"t jome way sho felt that bho whs to uio. Sho could not comiiass every- and tlio indues wcro so trouble' Oh, did evcrv young mother i hard a time, as sho did? durlmir, what's tho matter?'' smith, putting his arm around .oino, I think it is mostly I have como through hi 1 und lirMk'et has so store being broken and tho chimney bad that Iwoii' dor she can get breakfast at all." "I ouu'ht to tret up in time to seo that you have your breakfast early," sobbed tho noor little woman. "But Bridget is so cross this morning and I I am so tired. "Ami no wonder, darling, that you aro tired, with tho care of these big babies, wearing on you all tho time. You have no business to havo any care of tho hroukfust at all, and you shall not havo after this. Y'ou need your good morning nap and you shall have it. Bridget is all right. I'm going to eet that broken stove fixed and tho cis tern, and then if Bridget can't get the breakfast in time without you we II tinil some other way to do. Come now, cheer up and I'll help you to dresn theso rogues. I have plenty of time before the next tram. How wonderful is the effect upon the iihysical nature of a spiritual impulse! low quickly can an uplifted and strengthened spirit energize and strengthen the body! Everything seemed instantly chanKod for the poor dejected little Mrs. Smith. She luid her cheek against her husband's, thou rested her head on his shoulder. How precious and dear wos his love and strength. Her eyes brightened and her cheeks glowed. Her weariness and depression which hud been utter misery gave way to a delightful feoling of re poso and loving happiness. In the midst of the most prosaic surroundings her heart was full of the finest and most inspiring emotion. "Dear, dear love, how good you aro !" she said. "How yon havo changed tho aspect of everything for mo this morn ing. Had yon reproached mo as many husbands would havo done, I would have sunk in deepest anguish. Your sympathy makes me strong strong and happy."" Bemusing his wifo with a tender kiss, Mr. Smith took tho baby from tho cradle and merrily drew its little si;ok ings and shoes on its little plump, Kick ing, restless feet. Then ho brushed out the other little fellow's curls and but toned his shoes. Willie, the oldest, had slipped out of tho house, and Mr. Smith went to look for him, and found that he had taken advantugo of on insecuro lock on tho guto to run off ii) tho street. Bringing him bock, Mr. Smith got tho hatchet and in a few minutes hud fixed tho goto so that Master Willio couldn't open it. His wifo smilingly opened the front door and seeing what ho had dono ex claimed, "Oh, I urn so relieved to find that Willio cannot get out of tho yard. It has been such osourcoof annoyance that I could not keep him in." And now it was timo to start for tho next train if he stopped to order the stovo man and the pump man to do tho promised work. So, gaily kissing his wifo and children once more, Mr. Smith started for tho depot. And as ho walked along with a light and joyful heart ho mused : "How cheap a thing is happiness, after all, and yet how easy to turn it into misery I If I had given wny to my temper this morning I could have grut ilied a momentary impulse of unreason able anger and left behind mo saddened and discouraged hearts. If I had not learned of and remedied tho discomfort and inconvenience caused by mv owu negligence, weeks and months of domes- tie chaos might havo followed. Thank heaven for tho lnfluonco of tho song of bird and scent of flower, and thank heaven, too, for all tho gentle influences and sweet utl'ect ions that can make tho most uneventful lifo a blessing. Dear. good wife! and dear little children I Thank Uod I havo loft them happy this morning if I did miss tho train. i i 1 JF n y i v jr J aguo X ' ft. i . x ' v ',Ai "A. said 51V jus iiv-Y ( j .tl,M.kitelY. I iruii,-uii tho x I vw'.-; V A hlncxe Moltller's Itutloiia. On tho banks wero several battalions of infantry, encamped in good tents, all laid out in first-class order, properly pitched and nicely intrenched. Tho w hole arrangement was on tho Euro pean system. I went ashore among tho tents and Raw the evening liieel being served out. Tho rations consisted of rice, pork, fat', vegetables, and tlsli. Each man got a lingo bowl of the mixture. All tlio men sat down around tho bowl, each with a little basin in his hand and his chop-sticks ready for action. There was no cere mony. Every soldier tilled his cup and then began to till his mouth. In a few minutes nothing was to be seen but chins and chop-sticks moving si multaneouslv. A dead silence had fallen on tho camp, and till the attack on tho rations was over not a l liinumun spoke, Then there was a movement toward tho canip-iires for hot water to bo poured over tho tea leaves, of which each man seemed to havo a supply, and after this camp merriment and talk, for tho serious business of tho day is over I found tho soldiers had had one meal liko that in the early part of tho day, und that the two rations wero all they got, but they w ere quite contented and huppv, and looked in very good eondi lion. I learned that one secret of their happiness was the abundance of pork fat served out. At Hangehowit appears that tho authorities wero more than usually Ireo With this felicitous accom paniment of a Chinese soldier's dinner, Only the, Hired UlvU A little 3-vear-old was out the garden, wlieu sho stepped on beetle and killed it. Tho gardener, in a sympathetic tone, said to her: "Per haps that was a mother beetle gather ing food for her children at home, and they may sutler with hunger;" when Ida" replied with apparent honesty, "I guess, I'nchi Trunk, it was not the mother 1 killed, but was only the hired girl. Hound to Mirk. I remember how tho jockeys used to ride in the olden days. They had no raddles, i ud each man who mounted a horse was required to wear home-made linen 'pants. A vial of honey was poured ou the back of tho horse, and the honey coming iu ooutuct with tho raw linen, formed au adhesion sulli ciently strong to keep tho rider in hi posit ion uud enable hiui to rido with safety. A MARYLAND ESTATE. How the Srg roe Wire I'mvlitnl for ..Tliflr Allowanre of Food ami lolliinc. Fred Douglass, in hit autobiography, thus describes the management of a Murvlund e at.', in tho times of slavery : "Tho men and tho w.mien slaves on CtA. Idovd's farm received as their monthly allowance of food eight pounds of pickled pork or their equivalent In fish. The pork was often tainted , and the fish was of the poorest quality herrings which would bring very little if offered for solo at any normeru market. With their pork or fish they hud one bushel of Indian meal, unbolted, of which about 15 per cont. was fit only to feed pigs. Y ith this one pound of salt was given, and this was tho entiio monthly allowance oi a mil grown slave, working constantly in the open field from morning till night every day in the month except Snuduy, and living on a fraction more than a quarter of a pound of meat per day and loss than a peck of corn meal per week. Tho yearly allowance of clothing con sisted of two tow-linen shirts, such as the coarost crash towels ore made of; two pairs of trousers, one for summer and ono for winter; one winter jacket, one pair of varu stockings, and only one pair ot shoes, l no Slave s enure apparel could not have cost more man $H a year. "The little boys and girls were nearly all iu a stuto of perfect midity. A coarse blanket, such as cover horses, was. their oulv bed. I he little children stuck themselves in holes and corners about the quarter, olton in tho comer of the huge chimneys, with their feet in the ashes to keep" them warm. More slaves were whipped for oversleeping than for any other fault. Neither ago nor sex found any favor. The overseer stood at tho quarter-door armed with tho stick and cowskin, ready to whip any w ho was a few minutes ls-hind timo. Young mothers who worked in tho field wero compelled to tuke their children with them, und to leave them in the corner of tho fence to prevent loss of timo in nursing them. But in the great house of Col. Lloyd tho table groaned under tho heavy and blood-bought luxuries, gathered with painstaking euro nt home und abroad, i iclds, for ests, rivers and seas wero niiido tribu tary there. Fifteen servants waited on the groaning table, some armed with fang to cool tho heated brows of tho alabaster ladies there. Splendid coaches were in tho stable, beside gigs, phietons, barouches, sulkies and sleighs, silver-mounted harness and thirty-five lino horses. .1 Banker's) Knmlly Traveling Coach. Chicago Thill's. A coach in which a banker of Penn sylvania is traveling with his family is described as follows : Tho outside has seats for three in front and two back ; two largo lumps aro on each Bide of tho front scut, and ono large headlight is on tho dashboard. Hero also aro a clock, an ax, a knife, a pistol and other things. On tho left side of the coach, near the 1mx, is a jwivato locker con taining viands. On top is a large willow trnuk, immediately back of which tho tent, camp chairs and blankets are stored. Undsr tho back step is a plaoo for another largo willow trunk, hanging behind which is a step loddcr to bo used by ladies when taking seats on tho outside of tho coach. Iu side the lxot all kinds of cooking uten sils aro packed. On tho side of tho ouch are willow cases for canes, um brellas, fishing roils and guns. Insido aro two roomy seats facing each other, accommodating six jhtsoiis. In th cushions of tho doors aro map pockets, and on tho cushioned walls haug a ther mometer, a barometer, a compass, a clock, night lump and match 1mx, and near the top aro racks filled with note paper and envelopes. Tho vehicle weighs only 1,370 pounds, and tho reins aro handled by tho owner, who generally makes from twenty-nve to lony mues daily. Tho party go into camp at 1'2 o'clock. Tho horsos aro then piokoted and the camp fire u kindled. A Mtamnriiie llulloon. ICussoll's M ijjiixino. At tho forthcoming international ox- 'hibition of Naples will bo exhibited in action a submarine observatory, or bal loon, which will sink people to tho bot tom of tho Mediterranean shore waters, where they can enjoy the natural uuuariu there to bo seen. It is a bal loon of steel, with three compartments one for the actuating nie.'hanism and heating bladder, ono for tho captain, und one for the passengers, to tho nmn ber of eight. There aro glasi w indows for looking out at the fishes, shells and weeds, and tho height of the balloon in the water is regulated at will by means of a collapsible bladder. A telephone connects the balloon, which is captive and can not tloat away, w ith tho shore or a boat above. BEWARE, PROl'D WOULD. Peware, proud world : n..w thou dinplwut Tlw hiiniblwt of thy civiUiirMi, lint In melancholy's ml""" '"iiw Il chance upon a M divine -, Who nine shall c-leavs your torturing chain, , , , i .i . And bo-alt your ptred S'-1 reliiitlesr ivhjn An Old Tlij lclair Vlw. I believe, however, that it is not the liquor alone which produces the diseases generally attributed to it. It is rather in the fact that those who are supposed to fail in physical health by its use, or who use it to excess, do so because they create by their course of life or lulior a morbid demand for the stimulant. I have already shown how a board of trade mun may rush off to get a drink to prevent a reaction from excitement. It is so with many other vocations. Take a compositor on a morning pajier. He will work all night, and have his slnmlK'rs broken in the day. Ho rises uurefreshed. He 'must work again, and, utterly prostrated, suffering from nervous losses, he drinks to restore him self. He continues this course for years, and becomes a wreck. Whether from the drink or tho work for which he muv have been constitutionally unfitted I could not say, unless I could determine w hat w ould have been the result had he follow ed either course and left tho other alone. I am inclined to think, However, that the effects of liquor ou a person following a nervous and exhaustive vo cation, especially if it be used to brace up to greater efforts and harder work, is far more injurious than when used by such men as those who first peopled the west, and who drank it frequently and sometimes to excess. Their sys tems wero strong enough to throw off its effects. Their occupations did not cause nervou-i prostration, hence they did not develop a seeming necessity in the system for it. It is not the peculi arity of modern liquor or the depravity of the present generation ; it is the ex haustion induced by the terrible outlay of vitulity in exciting business that makes drinking what it now is with a large class. My advice to oil workers is to go slow. Do not brace up that you may overwork. Best; that is na ture's own magnificent and unri valed remedy, that will cure when nothing else will. Take to the woods, tho fields, the open air. Throw physics to the dogs, and do not sell your health for money, for you cannot buy it. A Vlca lor Little Men. Surely tho anthropometrists will do harm if they encourage tho crazo of fullness. It seems one ambition of mothers that their boys should be tall. Napoleon and ellington and Nelson wero short. lho lioinans dominated Italy becauso individual physical in feriority mndo them perfect their or gunizatiou. . To say that the English is tho tallest race is pimply 'to say that they aro hewers of wood and drawers of water for tho rest. Tho tidiness of Saxon invaders proves little. Although reach was of more importance in the days of sword and ax than now, tho tall Saxon did not in point of fact oust tho shorter Celt or Neolith except in places whoro command of the sea guvo him power to concentruto rapidly. It is to organization, sanitary education, etc., and not to tidiness, or even to weight, that ono race must look to beat another now, as iu tho days when Bomo beat tho mountaineers. But if wo are to admire physical condition, surely we should bo taught to look to size round the chest in men, and to sizo, whero size is wanted in womou, and not to tullucss in either case. Cunning Conjuror, Chicaso Times. The performances by tho Davenport brothers and other spirits aro clumsy compared with the acts of tho far north west Indians. The conjurors are legion that will permit themselves to bo bound, not merely hand and foot, but tho wliolo body swathed with thongs, withes, ropes and rawhides, and after ward tied up in a net, and then releaso themselves almost instantly on being placed in a little "medicine lodgo" of skins, constructed for tho purpose, tho bonds being thrown out through an opening iu the top, without a knot being apparently disturbed. The Coming Trot tee. New York Tiiliuii". lien the world sees a t roller cover a mile in one minute and forty seconds, a lent aecoiupiisiuM ny more than one thoroughbred, it will see a wliollv new tvpo, so different from tho present ani mid that tho theory of evolution will never stretch far enough to cover tho prodigy. A t'urlnne Visits A fortune awaits tlio man who will in vent a penholder that vou can't stick into the mucilage-bottle, and a mucilage brush that won t go into the inkstand. There is a man in New Y'ork who manufactures diamonds for actri.es U lose. They aro sold at so much s quart. One of the IHpr'oug- Want. In tho carriage-makers' convention in Now Haven, Conn., after tho committco on apprenticeship had rojwrted in favor of restoring tho old system of inden turing apprentices until they reach their majority. Mr. John W. Britton, of Now York, said : "Ono of tho serious wants of this country and of our trade is good boys. Our boys aro deteriorating, as are our men. Tho greatest difficulty wo experience iu New York is that of getting boys who havo brains and aro willing to learn a trade thoroughly. The example of men who havo mado millions iu a few years is held up be fore our boys m school, and tho boys becomo intlamed with the notion that they must niako their millions and bo ablo to found cross-roads colleges bo- tore thev die. ho they eschew trades and become poor professionals." The AiitliuiHhlii of "Old Urlnies." Tho 'New Y'ork Tribune has been trying to fix tho authorship of tho pa thotio ballad. "Old (irimes." Tho weight of tho testimony is in favor of Albert O. Green, a graduate of Brpwn university and author of "The Baron's Last Banquet." There is a pretty well authenticated claim, however, that the author was a student of tho Yalo col lego during tho presidency of Dr. Dwight. In thoso days the janitor of tho institution was au eccentric charac ter, who wore "nn old brown coat," and was called by tho students Professor of Dust and Ashes. Ho died, and the claim is that one of tho collego rhyni- sters w rote the lines m question, which w ere snug by a lot of heartless students who assembled for that purpose on the roof of the college building. A I Helens Habit. Tho act of putting a lead pencil to the tongue to wet it just before writing, which is habitual with many people, is one of tho oddities for which it is hard to give any reason unless it began in the days w hen pencils wero poorer than now, and was continued by example to the next generation. A lead pen should never be wet. It hardens the lead and ruins the pencil. This fact is known to uewspoper men and steno. raphcrs. A Warning. A Boston editor heeimo "a walking cncycloedia of historical and bio graphical knowledge" and then died. People should not try to be encyclope dias unless thev expect to bo soon laid ou the shelf. LEXINGTON Tho Obl-Timo Allien or the Houth The Commercial Centre of t..c A. K. McClure III Philadelphia Times. I find nivsolf for the first timo in Lexington, the homo of Clay. Grand as it is in the associations which gather about his lustrous name and career, it is not the Lexington that called tho "Mill Boy of the Slashes" to seek homo and funio'in the Kentucky wilderness. When ho turned his youthful face toward the setting sun in 171)7, and cast his lot in tho outpost of civilization, tho Lexington of that day was regarded as the future inland commercial centre of the south and west. It was baptized at the cunip-rire of pioneers, by the patri otic impulse that welcomed tho news of tho Lexington buttle in Massachusetts, and Virginia culture and refinement came to the land of Boone and lnado the new Lexington the Athens of tho west. Clay and l'olk both came from the Old Dominion to riso with the most promisi ng and cultured people of tho new commonwealth, and both honored it iu later years, iu the senate of the United States. And their dreams of social and commercial pie-emiiionce for their new western home, long seemed to bo certain of fulfillment. Before Clay had reached national distinction as Commoner, Lexington hud become tho greut commercial cen tre of the west, with Cincinnati, Louis ville, and all tho near west and south seeking it as a wholesale trading depot. Its law and medical colleges rivaled even tho greut cities' of tho east, ami its temples of learning were the pride of tho nation. Transylvania university was the Yalo of the south, with its char ter from purent Virginia ante-dating the independence of the colonies. Tho population of Lexington was once thrice that of Louisville or Cincinnati, and it was the centre of southern intel lect, refinement and elegance. It has furnished the most illustrious line of statesmen of any city or county in tho union. Nine residents of Fayette county havo bomo the high commission of proud Kentucky to the United States senate, and among them wero such memorable names as Clay, Marshall, Brcckenridge, and last, though not least, tho present Senator Beck, who cast his first vote for Clay iu lst l ; and twice that number have mudo tho nunio of Lexington familiar in tho house of representatives. But commerce is shifting as the sands of the sea, and tho Lexington that Henry Clay dreamed of and saw iu commercial, and social pre-eminence tiiree score years ago,- is now, as com pared with that day, another sweet Au burn, grandest in tho fragrant memories of festive greatness. Tho steamboat's hoarse song was heard on tho Ohio; coninierco fled to worship ut new altars, and tho city lots which sold at fabulous prices in tho suburbs oi' Lexington, hyo long been gatlu red back into heart some and bountiful blue grass farms. I spent a most interesting and in structive morning here with ono of the few surviving contemporaries of Clay w hen Lexington was the boasted Athens of tho w est. Ber.iamiu Grutz has braved the storms of liinety-ono winters. Ho tells of Philadelphia when a city less thun tho present Louisville and of Lexington as tho boasted inland city of tho continent. Ho once pointed to -Transylvania university in its grand est distinction as part of his owii work, and ho shared every joy and' sorrow of Henry Clay. His eyes aro sightless and his fine form bowed by tl',3 weight of yours, but his face brightens with almost tho fervor of youth when ho tells tho story of tho devotion of Lex ington to the gallant "Hurry of tlio West." Tho city of l'enn that ho left to become part of tho future metropo lis of tho west now has nearly a million peoplo within its limits, and the western metropolis, founded so hopefully iu tho heart of tho beautiful and bountiful bluo grass region, is to-day a pretty vil lage, rich in legend and tradition, richer in tho nation's rocords of endur ing fame, but with all the glory of early dreams departed. ; it. A celebrated singer told mod,: Farepa first came to tins couutrr ? called nt tho Bennett sented a letter of introduction Pt sho brought from Eurono. V r11 nett, who was a dressy and rather Fault of OurJMrhool Hystem. B. F. Butler. We school tho children too much ; that is to sav, we keep them at school nil the year round; we continually forco their perceptive and memorizing facul ties, and give no time for the play of thoir retlectivo faculties. In other words, they don't reflect upon what they havo learned or attempt to apply it in their own minds. We cram them with too many studies. How else is tho fact to bo accounted for that a child iu tho country, having but four months' schooling in the year, will como to Boston more matured in his education thun ono who has had nine months' schooling in tho year ? In our city schools there is too much teaching and too little learning. By that I mean to say thut tho great press of studies placed upon the young mind by oral teachings for a few minutes ot a timo, and a different study most every hour in tho day, tend to break up the continuity of tho pupil's thought, and the oral addresses and lectures re ceive but little attention from tho tired minds of tho pupils. Another Fashionable Craxe. . Just now it is said to bo a craze among tho fashionable ladies of New York society to own valuable cows, paving for them sums varying from sftCuOO to $1(5,000. They affect a glass of milk night and morning, which is quite os expeusivo as tho masculine cocktail at that rato of investment. ivtt, who w as a dressy and rathe, 2 itteent sociotv lad v. r.wiv.i ""?' the parlor, and, after welcoming i bore her to the library where fc,F tinguished husband was at his aML "Father." said Mrs. Bennett,-,, here is Mme. Farepa, come to U protection of our paper." Mr. Bennett expressed his pW. at seeing her, but Farepa bridled. ceptibly and exclaimed earnestly. "No! no! Pardon me! Yo ,.,, mistako. I do not come to ask the ,' tection of The Herald, but only to sent a personal letter of introdncfi from your friends." J Constraint and embarrassment foi lowed. Mrs. Bennott was angrt ti call was short. And The Herald uM?, gave a word of cordiol praise to IW till both her host ami hostem dend. . Another: When Madame Ga.?a:iiRn the finest singer of her time, wast this city, sho called on Mrs. UennH ono day and waited for her half an ho in tho drawing-room, and then left. 0 letting her out, the servant asked: "Who shall I tell her called?" "Tell her," said tho prima donna "that sho will find my card on the piano." And there, sure enough, it was fonn.l Gazzanitrca. sernu-1,.,1 in l that had blown m that summer morn ing on the polished piano lid! Instead of being offended, Mrs. Bennett was at once pleased by the impudence and liveliness of her cnller, mid thencefor ward tho two wero good friends, and The Herald could never suy enough for her. How Londoner lrrn. The streets generally wore thronged with people, principally gentlemen. English ladies seem to "walk but little in tho streets. Tho London gentlemen nro a lino looking set of men. Thev dress remarkably well, wholly in Prince Albert coats and white vests amities. They wear tho glossiest, most shining hats, w hat wo call "stovepipes," which make them look taller and better dressed thun the "bean pots" of America. Nearly every gentleman hns either a rose, jasmine or a tuberose iu his button hole. It mav bo their dress or their lints thut give the impression, but English gentlemen look taller than Americans. Their physical development is good; their faces handsome; thoir features clearly cut. Most of them nre clean shaven, except a small mustache and neat side-boards. ' There aro very few beards to bo seen amoiigthe better class of young Englishmen. The streets of London aro enlivened with red-coated soldiers. They are a lino looking class; their dress ver bright in color and well cut. On tlw streets they usually wear a cap, re sembling a smoking cap, which the; jauntily perch on ono side of the head and in "their hands carry a lithe or slen der walking cane. Thoir walk is verv regular und their bearing military; and on nccount of the number one ses they contribute quite a feature among tho city sights. After lneteen Years. On tho 21st of June, 1S34. a young lady residing iu Frankfort Ky, sent a letter addressed to "Lieut. J. K. P. South, Company D, Fifth Ken tucky Infantry, Lewis Brigade, hee ler's" Division," which was forwarded but never received by Mr. South. After i,n ivnv Mm loftnr enmn into the pos session of Bev. E. C. Guerrant, ol Mount Sterling, who placed it in a box Mill, a mimlwir nf nthnr mementoes of his comrades of the "lost cause," w here it was discovered by Mr. . 1- Baveti n.i;,.rnf Tim Mount Sterlinir Sentinel who forwarded tho long missing letter to Mr. South, w ho received it one day last week. Tho fair writer at the time sho wrote tho letter was tho betrothed nf Afr KnnHi but. is lonor since married tii nnnflmr nmn mid now resides in Louisville. Lieut. South is tho brfr' father of a family residing in lies, i Vn. Mr. Sonth-.i'ntonds' to selil loiiL'-sealed letter aftor he reads to. nm.innty tn flio l.i.lv is a rcminuor 01 their former friendship. Thaddciifl fctcven' rave. 1 Stevens had purchased and paid for lots iu tho "Lancaster" cemetery beforq he know that its charter limited its ten anf to thro ill whoso veins rail DO African blood. Ho then negotiated for ground in "Woodward Hill cemetery. but ascertaining thnt they, too, duln think a black man Food enouch t moulder to dust in their graveyard, he exclaimed : "is it possible that tney re a set of fools, too." Mrs. Smith says, that tho directors then offered to hav tho obnoxious limitation stricken out of Stevens' deed, but the old man ile ilnp.nl lia iv-Aiil.1 1inva nntlnncr to d with them or their cemetery, and th4 ho "wouid rather be buried in Fotterf Field.' And so this consistent chan pion of the oppresst d turned to the le: pretentious burial ground, where 1 now lies, beneath that graven tabl whereof all the world knows and ho The IIii;)i fcrlmol Truncation. '"Y'ou ought to be in our room now," said Amv; "we have a teacher that rules the roos't." "Well," replied tho high whool girl, "I'd be ashamed of mysolf. You sh juld say, 'Governs the horizontal perch on which tho fowl reposes,' not 'rules tho roost." " Voltaire: I never was but twice in my life completely on the verge of ruin first, w hen I lost a law suit ; and, sec ondly, when I gained one. Barou Nathaniel BothschilJ tikt..' dinner on golden plates. i Ol'S. Progress! in Mertiratlon. Since the time of our fathers gr changes have taken place, all in the rection of the diminution of the v and number of drugs admit) : Doses are getting smaller, pi (dwindling 111 sra.-agd 'pnwtT---', growing so beautifully les as to, ?" ut no distant period t'ifir lii .i i blessed extinction without hope v' urrection. Drops are substi! n tablespoonfiils.andeflVrviiFflinR -the black draught of stil!bl;K-k ory. Tho whilom bolus, monsf size and na- tiness, is an extim physio, aud what pills af if " dwarfed form cover thei coats of varkd hue, or j selves in the aeduclive t-- :s OF Juscno!-' returned In J a Ti-ry fine tWK i - ' 3 and examirt ni f