f ! I ! iii"rit mmm if rr iiVN ' ' i Tim i nwn ti.iiTrim'rVtmrArtHMMIiii-ia iiiinini - " i ir m,i,i..i mn mf niini i Free Speech, Free Press, Free People. UBS. A. J. UCMWAT. Editor and Proprietor. OFFICE Cor. Fbont & .Washington Streets A Journal for the People. Devoted to the Interests or Humanity. Independent livrolltics and Religion. Hive to all Live Issues, and Thoroughly Radical in Opposing and Exposing the Wrongs of the Masses. TERMS, IN ADVANCE: One rear.. $t no 1 75 1 00 Six months. Three months.. ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted on Reasonable Terms. :POTtTjL..AJNT, OREGON, FREDAY, -A-TTGTIST 11, 187C. OUE EAETH PAST AND PUTUEE. All nature seems replete with mys tery. Let the scientist pursue Jiis in vestigations in whatever direction be will, and be is met by problems so ab struse, with obstacles so formidable, or apparent contradictions so irreconcil able, that at every step he is lost in wonder and admiration, or so con founded as to be tempted to lay aside the great book of nature as one too pro found for his intellectual powers, or too contradictory for his credence. Yet, thanks to the persistency of modern re search, much light has already been thrown upon many of the natural prob lems that bad previously baffled human genius, and enough of the apparent contradictions have been reconciled to convince the thinking that none really exist, but that the entire universe is governed by fixed laws, and forms a consistent, perfect whole. Less than a half-century ago the pop ular opinion, founded upon a strange misunderstanding of the first chapter of Genesis, was, that this planet upon which we dwell, with all the stellar worlds, was created but about six thous and years ago. A very 'limited knowl edge of the sciences of astronomy and geology, however, is sufficient to con vince one that our earth has existed for untold ages. Tbe law of succession seems to per vade all the phenomena of nature. Day follows day; lunation succeeds luna tion; spring-time, with its leaves and flowers, returns in its season to be fol lowed by summer with its blos soms, autumn with its fruits, and winter with its chill, and astronomy tells us that not more certainly does day follow night, or season follow sea son, than cycles of about 21,000 years in duration follow each other. The ge ologist reads upon the earth's crust the indelible imprint of not less than six teen of these successive cycles, which places the date of creation back at least 330,000 years. I am aware that scien tists do not agree as to the agencies that have wrought these wonderful changes in the physical geography of our earth, but they do agree that, where we now see parched deserts and elevated moun ranges, and fertile, blooming valleys, sometime in the remote past, old ocean reigned supreme. It is well known that the earth has no less than three distinct motions its diurnal motiou on its axis, its revolu tion about the sun once a year, and a wabbling or gyratory motion, which causes the pole to describe a circle iu tlie heavens with a radius of 23i in 20,000 years. This last motion is what occasions what is called the "precession of the equinoxes." The path of the earth around the sun is an ellipse with the sun in one of the centers; hence, it will be seen that we are nearer the great source of light and heat during one-half of the year than we are during the other. At the present time, the nearest approach of the earth to tbe sun is about the 1st of January. Then we are some 3,200,000 miles nearer than on the first day of July. And, since bodies travel faster when near the center of attraction than when farther away, it follows that the earth passes over our winter portion of her orbit iu eight days less time than over our summer portion of it. South of the equator, however, their winter is eight days longer than their summer. And, since the earth is over three millions of miles nearer the sun during our winter than in summer, and at her greatest distance from the sun during the winter in the Southern Hemisphere, it will be seen why the Antarctic winters are- more rigorous than those of the Arctic circle. Year after year for ages past, a constantly augmenting quantity of ice has been forming within the Antarctic circle, and, iu proportion to the increase in weight of the Southern Hemisphere, the earth's center of gravity has slowly moved toward the south pole, drawing the waters away from the Northern Hemisphere, and piling them up toward the south pole; aud this is probably the agency that has uncovered the couti neuts of Europe, Asia, and America no less than sixteen times. But, Is the Northern Hemisphere to henceforth enjoy perpetual immunity from these aggressions of old ocean's billows, or will the law of succession once again bury us beneath the inhospitable deep? In about ten thousand years there must come a complete reversal of polar con ditions aud climates. But how? It is universally conceded by astronomers that the ellipse which the earth de scribes in moving around the sun is itself revolving, so to speak, making the circuit of the heavens in about 90,000 years; and, since this motion is direct, or in the direction that the sun appears to move, and that of tbe equi noxes tne reverse, it will be seen that the conjunctions of the equinoxes wnicn cause the modifications of cli mates on the earth, are accomplished In a much shorter time according to me calculations or an eminent Scotch mathematician, in about 21,000 years Now, our nearest approach to the sun being about January 1st, in 10,500 years tbe same will occur on the first day of July. Now, our winters in the North ern Hemisphere are short, and comnar Itlvely mild, and those of the Southern Hemisphere long and rigorous. Sup pose, men, that the plauets of our sys temMars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune should all be on that part of their orbits that our little earth will occupy at her aphelion, she would be drawn millions of miles away into inhospitable space to wrestle for months with conflicting forces, and, when she did at last break away from them, she would, according to the third law of Kelper, fly past her perihelion so quickly as to make little impression on the vast accumulation of ice that would have gradually gathered in the North ern Hemisphere. It has been found by calculating the planetary orbits aud conjunctions, that our earth has been as much as 14,000,000 miles farther from the sun at her great est eccentricity than at present. This was about 850,000 years ago. 200,000 years ago, however, the focal distance was 10,500,000 miles, and the excess of winter days twenty-eight, which would unquestionably extend the ice limit far into the temperate zone. Look, then, for a moment, at the ef fect of this state of things, which the science of geology says has existed in the world's history, and which the sci ence of astronomy says must exist again. Tbe long and hot summers of the Antarctic will unlock the icy fetters that have bound that desolate region for ages; that pole would become cor respondingly lightened, and, if the esti mate of the mathematician already al luded to be correct, that the melting of a mile in thickness of Antarctic ice would lower the southern sea level 500 feet, aud with this removed, and that amount deposited within tbe Arctic circle, there must be a deepeuiug of the northern seas of probably 1,500 feet. The earth's center of gravity would be moved toward the north pole, the southern seas drained oil toward the equator, lands for centuries buried be neath tempestuous floods would gradu ally rise above the sea level, enriched by the sediment of ages, and continents would appear where scattered islands only now are seen. And our Northern Hemisphere ? It must sink a thousand feet beneath a frozen ocean, leaving but its rugged mountain tops to wrestle with pitiless tempests that must beat upon them, unchallenged again for un told ages. Then, all the monuments of the skill aud enterprise of ambitious man will lie buried in a watery tomb, to be biddeu for ten thousand years, aud to emerge again, as great a wonder to the then busy throngs of eartli as are the pre-historic ruins of Mexico and Yucu tau to us to-day. These changes, as will be observed, must take place slowly not perceptibly in the short lifetime of a single individual; but, if our maps and histories are preserved for the use of coming generations, they will see verified what we only predict upon scientific hypothesis. Ouoli.. A Tradition of Saratoga Lake. There is an Indian superstition attached to this laUe which probably had its source in its remarkable loneliness aud tranquillity. The Mohawks believed that its stillness was sacred to tbe Great Spirit, and that if a human voice ut tered a sound upon its waters, tbe canoe of the offender would instantly siuk. A story is told of an English woman, iu the early days of the first settlers, who had occasion to cross this lake witli a party of Indians, who, before embark ing, warned her most impressively of the spoil. It was a silent, breathless day, and the canoe shot over the surface of the lake like au arrow. About half a mile from the shore, near the center of the lake, the woman, wishing to con vince the Indians of the erroueousness of their superstititiou, uttered a loud cry. The countenances of the Indians fell instantly to the deepest gloom. Af ter a minute's pause, however, they re doubled their exertions, and in frown ing silence drove the light bark swiftly over the waters. They reached the shore iu safety, and drew up the canoe, when the woman rallied the chief on his credulity. "The Great Spirit is merciful," answered the scornful Mo hawk; "lie knows that a white woman cannot hold her tongue!" William L. Stone, in Harper' s Magazine for August. Something to Set Us Thinking. Ninety years hence not a single mau or woman now twenty years of age will be alive. Alas! how many lively actors at present on the stage of life will make their exit long ere ninety years shall have rolled away ! And could we be sure of ninety years, what are they? "A tale that is told;" a dream, an empty sound that passeth on the wings of the wind aud is forgotten. Years shorten as mau advances in age. Like the degrees in longitude, mau's life de clines as he travels toward the frozen pole, until it dwindles to a point aud vanishes forever. Is it true that life is of so short dura tion? Will ninety years erase all the golden names over the doors in town and country, and substitute others in stead ? Will all the now blooming beauties fade and disappear, all this pride and fashion, the love, hope, joy, pass away, and be forgotten ? "Ninety years," says Death; "do you think I shall wait ninety years? Behold, to day and to-morrow, aud every day are mine. When ninety years are past, this generation will have mingled with the dust aud be remembered not!" A farmer's wife entered a dry-goods store in St. Louis the other day and In formed tbe clerk that she wauted "one o' them 'ar wimmen's hats that spread out big, covered with white muskeeter netting, and which is gittiu' so fashion able." The clerk showed her one, but when he mentioned the price, $1 75, the matron sprang to her feet aud ex claimed : "Look-a-here. vounir man ! Maybe you know the vally of 'skeeter nein' ana wire linlu', and maybe you don't. I don't care. I know it. lean take my old hoou-skirt and a nlpr o' sheetin' aud make that thing for half nie uiuuey, ana I'll ao It. Elsie's Secret. UY HESTER A. BENEDICT. "I wish you wouldn't do it, Elsie. I've said so scores of times to you, too; but it seems to make no difference." "Does it not please you to have me do what I think is right, Paul?" The face that Elsie Heath lifted to the face of her lover, Paul Devereaux, was a little flushed; but it was full of earnest, honest purpose, and anyone (except a lover) looking at it and listening to her low, measured, intense tone, would have left off coaxing, aud reasoning, and remonstrating, knowing that eitherand all would be unavailing. "You put things so oddly, Elsie," Mr. Devereauxanswered, impatiently. "No body ever thought you weie doing a positive wrong in patronizing all the poverty-stricken people you could hear of! It may be right I suppose it is, or you wouldn't do it but it's dreadfully humiliating to me; and I can't help feeling that if you loved me" Something in the girl's face checked tbe words, and the sentence was not fin ished then. "Elsie," after a long pause, "why do you go among those people? Why do you haunt the shops, the sewing-rooms, the alleys, even? for I've followed you aud watched you when you little knew I was near?" "Paul ! you dared to do that?" "Why not 'dare?' You are my prom ised wife. Ought there to be a secret between us? Is it not my duty to watch over, guard, and protect you ?" "And to follow, me like a spy, as if ray work or my play, whichever or whatever my mission was, were un worthy Elsie Heath !" She had risen aud stood looking down on him, "a saint's scorn" on her young face, her eyes Hashing, her little form rigid with indignation. He had gone a step too far, and he knew it but would not acknowledge it. He laid down the book he held, got up aud took her hands in his, patting them with li is white patrician fingers with an air that said, plainer than any words could, "Be quiet, pretty beastie; lam yourmaster!" "Elsie, little Elsie," he said, "really I don't see any reason for your haughty ways and your angry words. You must own it's a little hard on a fellow to be quizzed, and teazed, and tormented as I am, on every hand, aud by those who know of our engagement aud of your secret !" He pressed her hand spasmodically, as if the little word "secret" hurt him; but she did not seam to notice. "I know of course I know that the secret, whatever it may be, is not un worthy you; but why, in the life of a girl like you, should there be anything hidden from from the man whose wife she is to be? It is incomprehensible, and I I am not pleased that things should go on in this way longer." Siie withdrew her hands from his, leaned a little heavily on the piano, as if for support, and looked away from, and asked quietly: "Will you tell me what would please you, Paul ?" "Yes; give up your strange habit of strolling forgive me! I can't call it by any other name let the girl-life end be my wife! O, Elsie, my darling, don't look at me so ! Don't shake your head ! I will care for you so tenderly, dear. I will shield, protect, and love you !" "I know it, Paul oh, I do know it and just uow " She broke down there, fortunately, perhaps, for both. "'Just now' what?" "Never mind, Paul," she answered. "My heart was drowning my judgment. It is better so. I cannot please you in your way yet indeed I cannot, Paul. But I love you ! And, dear, be patient with me and wait." She had laid her soft hands upon his and was lookiug at him with her great soul iu her eyes. But bedid not Bee the soul. Maybe it was not his fault. He let her hands fall suddenly, turned on his heel, and walked suddenly across the sweet morning-room aud back again, stopping abruptly beside her, and saying, almost contemptuously: "A woman's love must be taken at a discount, if taken at all, when it will make no sacrifice for sake of the be loved. I love you. I would do any thing, be anything for your sake. But for me you will not give up even a habit that is repulsive to me and compromis ing to yourself. And you love me!" The quick color flushed the girl's face. For a moment bitter words were on her lips, but she kept them voiceless till they died. Then : "I think you will be sorry for those words when you are yourself, Paul," she said, "because they are unworthy of you, and they are unjust to me. I do love you! That love is my breath, blood, pulse, existence. But "'The Lord who fashioned my hands tor work ing Set me a task, and it Is not done. "You do not know the nature and ob ject of my labor. Just uow I cannot tell you. You must trust me, wait for me, keep faith with me, or we must drift apart. That is all, and that is everything to me." "My God, Elsie! Do you know what you say ?" "I kuow what I say I know what I say." How cold and white she was ! And cold aud white and crushed her grand aunt found her, an hour later, leaning there still on the piauo, just where her lover had left her, her wide eyes fixed on tbe finger from which she had taken the betrothal ring, aud the pink leaves of the roses she had worn lying, forgot ten, down at her feet. "I wish you would cry, child," the old aunt said, that eveuing, after they had talked together for an hour. "You never do anything as other women do. I don't object to that in the main; but in this instance a shower of tears over your white cheeks would make me hap pier than I was with my first pocket." Elsie laughed,' aud laughter was bet ter for her than tears, just then. "Auntie," she said, thridding the old lady's silver hair tenderly, "you re member the divine who, laying his hands on his dead mouarch's head, bowed his own, and said: 'God alone is great!' And 1 have heard you call him eloquent. I am thinking to-night of how far more eloquent was he who, standiug lu the presence of his kiug, with all the gold aud tinsel aud trap pings of royalty about him, turned his eyes from tbe careworn lines on the royal brow, and from the hollow-heart-edness of fawning courtiers through tbe window upon tbe embrace and lovintr kiss which greeted a tired peasant over the way, and said, aloud : 'Love, alone, is life!' Auntie, dear, there was morel of true God-life in the peasant's kiss and the bright flash of welcome from love lit eyes, than in all the circumstance of kingly splendor, crown, and jewels. It was tbe divine part of a true man and a true woman looking upon itself through human eyes aud human hearts. It was that mysterious essence of life that in comprehensible something which wom an only expresses in the pet name of God love ! And love is lost to me !" "You are wrong, my child, my little one. Love is not lost to you, nor can be. If his heart is worth your having, anil if it ever truly loved you, it will come back to you. There is uo perfect love without perfect trust. Dou't you know this, Elsie, child?" But "Elsie, child," only nestled closer to the old aunt's bosom, and was silent. "Mr. Devereaux Is a gentleman, and he thinks he loves you. But he has no sympathy witli the working class or what immaculate society call the work ing class and he cannot bear that you should come iu contact witli them as you do, and must, if ever you are to be a help to them in any way. You are down with them when you hunt them in their homes or at their toil. Your finger is on their pulse. You watch their struggles, and you kuow how hard it is for them. You have a mission a high mission given to you of God, and you must not do violence to it, as you surely will, if for love's sake you cease to sow and to reap! Of the thousands who kuow to-day, as a household word, the name of 'Alixeue,' only three there are who dream that that popular author and Elsie are one. A child creeps be fore it can walk, though there be a few who seem to step out from tbe mother's lap erect from the start, and whose hands and knees were never soiled by contact witli the dust of the earth. In literature, as iu any other calling of life, most of the aspirants for its honors creep slowly at the start, aud are re joiced, if when the hour of old age is upon them, they can look around and see some fruits of labors and hear some little commendation of tiieir efforts. If you walked not from the first, you crept but little, and you have increased your pace and lengthened your strides, until you can look back from your stand-point of to-day upon hosts of toil ing ones who are far, far in the distance behind you. You have accomplished much; but yon are capable of doing more and better, and you must. This is the crisis of your life. To reveal your secret now, eveu to him, might ruin all your glorious prospects. As his wife you could uot put pen to paper for the public's good, without incurring his dis pleasure. Your uew work must be com pleted as it was begun, sub rosa, or it will never be completed as it should be. You must rise to the high dignity of your mission. You feel thespiritof it thel.longing for it; but the woman in you makes you faint and falter to-night. This is but nature as we speak of other souls of yours, it is your weakness. As what would be strength in a cord would be weakness in a cable, so what would in other women would be great and grand, in you would be commonplace and ordinary; and that is death foryour life is not in tbe heavy atmosphere of valleys, but in the rarefied state of mountain-top into which you are being lifted by God's hand and your own." "But, auntie, I am so tired to-night," sobbed Eisie. "Hands, and head, and heart are all so tired !" "I know, dear, and you are wounded and battle-stained. But God is leading you by the hand, God, who gave you glorious gifts, who made you a pearl among pebbles, au exotic amoug herbs, a star upou the dark of many and many and many a life. You have worked aud you have won, I know. You are high, you are glorious, in your divinity of womanhood, but the fields are white still with the harvest, and tbe laborers are few. The next ten years are your best-years. If you cloud and shadow them, or allow them to be clouded and shadowed, they are gone forever, with all their chances for growth and good, and you cannot, in all the future, com pensate for their loss. You must either rest on the laurels already wou, aud step aside for the next caudidate for honor and place and influence or you must go on, up, out of his way to tbe summit, where you have a right to staud. Which shall it be, my darling?" The June roses were nodding sleepily in the moonlight on tbe casement be side them; the small hand bad forgotten to thrid the silver hair; tbe young head lay on the old bosom quietly euougb; but tbe heart in the young bosom had been crying at Gethsemane, and God aud the angels knew how, in that still hour, so fragrant and so fair, Elsie Heatli climbed up the Calvary heights, bearing tbe burden of ber cross. "Which shall it be, my darling?" "I will be wedded to my work, auntie," the girl answered, lifting her face from over the old heart whose idol and hope she now was; "I will be wedded to my work. Pray God I may not die at the altar!" A year later, Paul Devereaux saun tered lazily into the sanctum sanctorum of the book reviewer of the Loudon World. The former had been for six months on the continent; tbe latter had been his playfellow iu boyhood, bis chum iu col lege, his stanch, true friend always. "What have you here, Will?" in quired Mr. Devereax, laying his gloved finger's tip down on the marked page of an open book. "Oh, something that will make wry faces here in England and iu our own America, too, for that matter but a truth, nevertheless, a grand, sorrowful truth. Listen : 'To work or not to work, is the question every woman thrown upon her own resources struggles to an swer. To work brings independence, strength, and the means to a pure, use ful life. But if she be of a fine, sensitive nature, she has learned there is uo com panionship, no sympathy or encourage ment for her among tbe people whose work she does. The moment she takes tbe needle in her hand to stitch out the daily bread of her existence, that same needle digs a ditch so wide, a cafion so deep, that the piteous voice of a starv ing girl can never reach the hearts of those to whom the needle belongs. Not to work means starvation, suicide, or a beastly sell of body aud soul to the deepest depths of hell !' It's true, Dev ereaux; every word of it is heaven's own truth, and you and I know it. Of all the" women in all the world, I would like-best to get ou my knees at tbe feet of Elsie Heath." "Elsie Heath !" Mr. Devereaux's face grew suddenly very white. "In the name of all that's mythical, what do you kuow of Elsie Heath ?" The young reviewer was busy with his thoughts just then, and did uot ob serve his friend's agitation. He heard his words, however, and answered, ab sently: "Oh, only what all the world is find ing out, namely, that she promises bet ter than any female writer of the age, in short. 'Alixeue' and 'Elsie Heath' are one, as you will see by the title page." What Paul Devereaux saw on the title-page was not only that "Alixeue" and "Elsie Heath" were one. He stood, holding the chastely-bound volume for a long time, his face to the window, his back upon his friend, and that soft June morning a year agone seemed scattering its roses about him; hecouldsee the flut ter of his darling's dress; tbe pained, pleading look in her drowned eyes; could hear her saying, "I do love you ! That love is my breath, blood, pulse, existence!" And once again the glory of ber presence and of her love was over, and around, and through him "just as of old;" and the twelve months of weary wandering were for the moment lost to sight and to memory. Twelve hours later Paul Devereaux was on board the "Oceanic" homeward bound. "I am only one of a world of worship ers at your feet to-day," he said to Elsie Heath, one hour after the ship's arrival in New York. "I hold your hand in mine, and to devote my energy, my life to you is the grandest, best object and aim I have in my life, though to walk in the same pathway is not amoug its hopes. I did you grievous wrong. I was a fool I was mad. I meant to bend you to my will, and I failed. I thank God that I did fail, though you are lost to me; for you stand so high to day in the world's worship, and I love you enough to rejoice, unselfishly, iu the joy that has come to you a better, worthier, grander good than as my wife you would have compassed ever. But I want your forgiveness, dear. On my knees I beg you to forgive me for the cruel wrong I did you !" For many minutes she sat, still as a statue of pearl, ber hand iu his, her eyes toward the moon that was climbing up over tbe sycamore in the garden; then : "Women like me love not lightly, and never love but once," she said, lay ing her disengaged hand upon ber lover's locks, and smiling down on his lifted face. "You asked me to forgive you, Paul. I will if if " "If what? Tell me tell me!" "If you will give me back my ring!" And the swallows slept among the sycamore blooms; the moon climbed up, and on, and away; the winds were wild with joy for "the jubilant June;" tbe world was sweet, and glad, and young; and somewhere, I think, iu some sweet, limitless land, the seraphs smile to gether over little Elsie's Secret. How Mrs. Peduncle Got Even. Mr. Peduncle went out to milk the other day. Now, if there is one thing Mr. Peduncle prides himself upon, it is his perfect command of a cow. With his bucket on the ground, he milks with botli hands, and sings meanwhile, occasionally bestowing a word of warn upon tlie cow If she whisks her tail at him or tries to scratch her back with her hiud foot. On this occasion be tiad nearly finished aud was singing cheer fully : "My soul (so now) be on thy guard;" (What in tlie Egyptian sandhills ails this cow?) "Ten thousand (thunder and borax ! stand still) foes arise " And as Mr. Peduncle raised himself up from the barn floor ami wiped tlie milk out of his ears and nose, be saw up in tbe loft the wife of his bosom with a long switch in her hand, with which she had been tickling tlie gentle ani mal's nose, and she said in an awful voice : "Oliver Peduncle, I'll reckon you'll wrap your old tobacco-box In my hand kerchief again, next Sunday, won't you? and have me take it to church and sling it out on the floor hey ?" When he milks now, Mr. Peduncle sings very softly indeed, and keeps one eye on the loft. Chicago Courier. Lillie Devereux Blake gives the fol lowing iu the New York Era : "A poor womau came to a friend lately, begging for work. Why, Mary,' she said, 'I thought you were employed iu the city court-house.' 'So I was, ma'am, but I lost me vote.' 'Lost your vote !' ex claimed the lady; 'did you ever have one?' 'No, ma'am, but me husband did, and he's dead.' Actually, this womau, who had been employed to scrub the court-house, had been turned out because she had uo vote to represent her! If she had been a voter herself, she would not have lost her work." Weighty Thoughts. A regular at tendant on the ministers' meeting at Boston is reported to have said: "Some of tbe brethren have weighty thoughts, but have difficulty in uttering them; others express themselves with facility, but communicate little of value. The former have ball without powder; tbe latter powder without ball." This is just tlie difficulty of the majority of ministers, outside of that seat of learn ing as well as iuit. A proper combina tion of powder and ball, well fired ofl, is an exceedingly felicitous thing. Samuel J. is not a handsome man, and probably no Governor ever gave tbe Albany photographers so much trouble. One of them says: "I never saw such a countenance as bis when lie sits for a picture and tries to look his prettiest. Tlie expression of studied repose be comes quite painful; the eyes seem to shrink from the ordeal; the lines about them multiply rapidly, aud the brows gather until tlie whole upper part of the face comes out in the picture like the photograph of a piece of old tripe." The more married men you have, says Voltaire, the fewer crimes there will be. Examine the frightful columns of our criminal calenders you will there find a hundred youths executed to one father of a family. Marriage renders a man virtuous aud more wise. The father of a family is not willing to blush before his childreu. An illiterate preacher improves upon the ordinary version of the holy scrip tures by sermonizing from the text: "First cast out the bean in yerown eye, and then you'll kuow how to cast out the bats that's in his'n." This probably rendered tbe command more effective in the agricultural districts. The Squire's Attachment." "Bax !" Baxter Jones, called "Bax," for short, was Squire Syphax's office clerk. "Yes, sir," answered Bax. "Fill me out a writ of attachment," said tho Squire. "I'll stand no more of tbis nonsense." "Yes, sir; what name, sir?" "You'll find it there," said the Squire, writing on a card, and tossing it over to Bax, who picked it up and sat about his work. The document was speedily finished and presented to tbe Squire, who affixed his signature. "Give it to Constable Darby, and tell him to serve it without delay," said the Squire. "Yes, sir." "And when he brings In the prisoner, report to me." "Yes, sir." Squire Syphax, magisterially, was tlie sternest of men; individually, he was one of the mostsoft-hearted aud yielding. For the moment he was filled with of ficial indignatiou toward a delinquent, on whom, for some coutemptuous disre gard of the law's behests, he was deter mined to visit its weightiest penalty. He was still feeble from a recent and severe attack of illness, aud while waiting the return of the warrant he re tired to seek a little rest, meanwhile forgetting the cares of office in a de licious reverie, of which tbe charms of a certain lovely creature were the cen tral feature. In this occupation let us leave him for the present, merely pre mising that he was a bachelor, both diffident aud susceptible. Bob Darby was a constabulary model. He did his duty to the letter, and ex pended few words about it. When tbe servant came, in answer to his ring of widow Goodheart's door bell: "Is your mistress at home?" Bob inquired. "She is," was the response. "Tell her I must see her," said Bob. "She's very busy," replied tlie maid, "and, unless the business is very par ticular" "It is werry partie'lar," interrupted Bob, brushing past, and entering with out ceremony. "I'm werry sorry to ill conwenience you, mum," be said, when Mrs. Goodheart had made her appear ance; "but I've got to take you over to tbe Squire's right away." The widow turned pale and trembled. "Has tbe dear mau has he had a re lapse?" she asked, in a tremulous tone. "Coultlu't say, mum," answered Bob. "All I know is, it's a case of 'tach ment." "A case of attachment!" exclaimed the widow, the color mounting to her handsome face. . She saw it all. A relapse, perhaps a fatal one, had surely set in; aud the Squire, whom she had long beeu wait ing for to speak his mind, but whose modesty had hitherto prevented, had doubtless selected this critical moment to declare his feelings. She would have preferred to see a mission so deli cate entrusted to other bauds than those of the town constable, but the suddenness of tlie emergency, it was likely, had left no room for choice. "I shall be ready in a moment," said the widow; aud so, indeed, she was. "There's a kerritige at the door, mum," said Bob; aud, when he had handed the lady iu, nothing more was said till they reached the Squire's door. That functionary, like many country magistrates, kept his office at his house, and into the apartment so appropriated the widow was at once ushered. Bob Darby, having duly signed the return upon the writ, handed it over to the Squire's clerk, who proceeded straightway to notify His Honor. As the latter entered he started witli surprise. Instead of the contemptuous culprit, Dick Slote, at whoso guilty bead he was prepared to hurl the law's anatiiemas, it was tlie lovely widow Goodheart, the angel of his dreams, whom he saw before him ! Iu the name of all the Dromios, what diabol ical error was this ? Catching up tlie returned warrant, to his horror he read: To Any Constable, Guektino: You are hereby commanded to take the body of Doro thy Goodheart, and brin;; the same forthwith belore me, etc.. etc. C'alkii Svi'iiax, J. P. Darling a look of wrath at tlie clerk and the constable, he ordered them to withdraw. "My dear Mrs. Goodheart," began the Squire, blushing to the tips of li is ears, "how can I atoue for this annoy ance 1" "Oh, it's no annoi'ance, I assure you," simpered the widow. "I'm so glad to find you are uot ill." "But but this unfortunate attach ment," stammered the Squire, dashing aside tbe ill-starred document. "I I have long returned it," naively murmured the widow, turning as red as himself. A gleam of gladness flashed over the Squire's countenance. Could it be she was ignorant of tlie indignity she had suffered ? And then, to find the ice so happily broken ! He clasped her hand, pressed it to his lips, and poured out the tale of his pent-up love with au ardor and eloquence which fairly aston ished himself. Tlie widow's pretty head dropped on his shoulder, as, with alteruate smiles aud tears, she listened rapturously to what she had been so long waiting to hear. Tlie Squire came back a happy man from escorting the widow home that eveuing. But the sight of Bax Jones aroused his fury. "How dare you pay me such a trick ?" he thundered. "What trick?" inquired Bax, inno cently. "What trick? Why, putting Mrs. Goodheart's name in that attachment." "I put in tiie name you gave me," answered Bax. "It's false !" roared the Squire. "Here's tlie card," rejoined the clerk. Tlie Squire glanced at it. It was one of Mrs. Goodheart's cards, left witli some delicacy which she had sent during his late Illness. Ou the blauk side lie had unwittingly written the name to be in serted in the writ. Whether tbe clerk had copied from the wrong side by mis take, or had played ofl a practical joke, was not quite clear to the Squire's mind; fur Bax, in point of gravity, fell far short of his distinguished namesake, the author of "Saint's Rest." However, in view of the happy issue, and Bax's earnest professions of innocence, he was finally let ofl, but with a caution both to him aud Bob Darby never to mention the affair under pain of the Squire's hot displeasure. But a story too good to keep always will get out. Judge Clark in New York Ledger. Correspondents writing over assumed signa tures must make known their names to the Editor.or no attention will be given tothe'' communications. Facts about 0 Porto. O Porto is in size the second city in the kingdom of Portugal, and iu business equals, if it does not surpass, Lisbon, its superior iu magnitude. It is situa ted ou the left bank of tlie river D'Ouro, and coutains a population of 90,000 bodies or more. From the village of Saint John at tlie mouth of tbe river up to O Porto, the river runs between mountain banks rising precipitately from the water to a height of several huudred feet, aud these banks present a beautiful appearance at this seasou of the year. From bottom to top, terrace upon terrace rises covered with grape vines, fig and orange trees, and shrub bery of various kinds, while upon every favorable spot a house clings to the niouutain side as closely as the ivy clings to its sides iu turn. Everywhere the appearance bears to the eye of the beholder the impression of antiquity. Here and there a building looks as if it had been newly painted in red and white, yellow and white, or green and white, but on the most of them there is a uniformity of old, faded, worn colors, and stone walls blackened by time. The ride up tlie river is oue full of ro mantic interest. Once iu the city, cu riosity multiplies. Along the riverside is a solid stone wall, built, no one knows how long ago, which at oue time enclosed the city. It is said by some to have been built by the Moors, who once inhabitated the country, and of whose presence some ancient laud marks still remain. Long ago, how ever, the city outgrew the limit of the stone wall, and it remains only along the river front, and iu several points in accessible to builders upou tlie moun tain sides. From the water two prin cipal streets lead directly up into the city. They are very roughly paved with huge stones, and one wonders if ever a loaded team attempts to climb them. A late improvement was the building of a new street for a long dis tance upon a gradual inclination aloug the elevation of the hills. But there is no possible way of getting up into the city without climbing, sometimes up long niguts ot stone stairs, sometime up narrow, crooked streets, but always up until you obtain the desired alti tude. Then, if you wish to move in au easterly or westerly direction up or down tlie length or the city, you must either climb or descend, or both, again, for the city covers these high hills. There is, oue might say, no manufactur ing doue here at all. Cloths, silks, cot tons, etc., are all imported from England and France. All of their coal is brought on ship-board. Vessels bring fish from Newfoundland, al though there are plenty of fish iu tlie river and sea but a few miles away. Wheat and corn are imported from the United States, and but for this supply of late years, I am told, there must have beeu a famine iu Portugal. Oak wood aud staves and sulphur are also im ported. In fact, about ail that is needed to make a city is brought from over the sea. The country produces a- great abundance of nuts of various kinds, and oranges, olives, onions, grapes, wine, and cattle. All of these are exported largely. But it is tiie country, aud uot the city that produces, and that should be beuefited by them. The fact is, however, that here we have what is cursing ourown land a very large com munity living entirely upon the mere work of exchanging for tlie farmers and shippers what they should exchange for themselves. The people are, however, not so poor as they are iu our country under similar conditions. There is an abundance of ignorance aud poverty everywhere to be seen; but, having made it my conscientious aim to see life here as it is, so that I might speak of it confidently, I am compelled to say that, iu any city of the same size in our country, oue will see far more of abject poverty, ignorance, degradation, aud real misery, than can be found here. Why is this? The answer must be, not that the system of education or the government of the country is inferior to what exists here, but that the cost of living is so much less. With us, tlie worst degradation and poverty and ig norance is to be found amoug immi grants who are Catholics, so that it can not be said that it is Catholicism that makes the difference. Put these same people into a country where the cost of living would be doubled, and they would sink speedily into what we see iu all large communities, such as Boston, New York, or London. Tlie very highest wages paid for labor here is seventy-five cents per day, and the average wages is thirty-five cents for the women still less than that. There are many church holidays when all work is suspended. Aud most of the working people are without any reg ular trades, there being but few trade, and they pick up work wherever and whatever they can get. Tlie loading and unloading of vessels furnishes em ployment for many of them, because the city hasn't a single wharf by the side of which a ship can He to discharge her cargo. She is moored in the stream, aud a long heavy plank from the stone quay aloug the river to the rail is tba bridge over which the entire load is carried upon tiie heads of men, aud often women, loo, when the cargo is anything iu bulk that can be taken up iu conven ient loads. It is astonishing to see what au enormous load one of these porters will carry. Our graiu is in bags weigh ing 222 pounds each, and oue man will take one of these bags ou his bead aud shoulders and carry it ashore with ease, and will keep at it all day long, too. Tlie women also carry burdens that would frighten one of our delicate American girls into consumption im mediately. But they are hardy, healthy looking people, though quite small iu stature, as a general thing. It is amus ing to go out upou the roads leading into the country morning or evening and meet the women as they trudge to or fro from home to market. Huge baskets that would make a good-sized wigwam, full of oranges, pears, cher ries, cabbages, onions, salad, peas, beans, chickens, etc., as firm upon the top of the head as if they grew there, tbe arms swiuging free by their sides, while, barefooted and barelegged, they tramp away with a long, steady swing that would task an old campaigner. Some times you will come upou a knot of them, girls generally, who have set their baskets down and are resting themselves by joining in a merry dance in which they accompany themselves with songand laugh that defies dull care aud keeps their brown faces young. "Whrt is true by the lamp," says Joubert, "is not always true by tlie sun."