ffih Mi9x M.-Hr hun rf I HUS. 1. S. urXIWAY, Editor ni. Proprietor. A Journal for the-People. Devoted to the Interests of Humanity. Independent In Politics and Religion. OFFICE-Coe. Feoxt & Washington Streets I illve to all Live Issues, and Thoroughly Radical In Opposingand Exposing the "Wrong TERMS, tt? ADVANCE: ol the Masses. One year.. Six months . Three months...... -S3 00 1 75 ..1 00 Fkee Speech, Free Pkess, Fbee People. Correspondents writing over assumed sign a. (35-cs must make known their names to the 38ltor,or no attention will be given to their ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted on Reasonable "VOIjTTjMCE VI. POKTLAND , OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY IS, 1877 NXJ3IBEB 18. Terms. communications. Miss J?everill's Pride. mean to desert us," said she, "because tbat foolisli ult or an Acnes doesn't "I never hpnnl nf such Imnertlneuce." Know when Her bread Is well buttered, said Acnes Peverill, throwing down the Remember It's a woman's privilege to letter she held, ana half crying in ner cuauge uer minu. ii you neglect us, vexation. "How aare ne write sucu You shut your life from happier chance.' 4 It t n i 9 Wl n f mi of naaa Iioq ha i to lov me? He never would have as U? Poet Nobody knows what dared write like this if If papa were alive and we had not lost our money.1 "You may thank yourself for this," said Grandma 1'everlll, looking over her spectacles with an air of concern "You have amused yourself considera bly with Harold Helper, to my certain knowledge. When one dances, one must pay the piper." "I don't understand you, grandma. I certainly never gave bim a shadow of encouragement. I have guessed for some time that he that he didn't dis- like me, you know: but I never dreamed that he would dare say as much. Papa's clerk! Why, I've seen him sweeping out the office, and his fingers as inky as Caddy JeJIyby's." 'Men are audacious creatures," ob served grandma; "but if you knew that hedidn't exactly hate you, you oughtn't to have, accepted him as escort when you were learning to ride. When your papa brought bim home to uiue, you needu't have made yourself so attract ive, need you? You might have had a headache in your own room, or au invi tation out. -lou needn't nave talked pretty nonsense with him by the hour, while your father and I look our after- dinner nan9, need you V" "One can't help Girting a little, grandma?" "What, with one's father's clerk? And no doubt one can't help working bim slippers and braiding watch chains, either." "Why, of course one gives birthday and Christmas gifts to all one's ac quaintances, even to old Biddy, the pauper. One doesn't expect them to presume on .that, however." "And so you thiuk Mr. Helper is pre suming when he offers you his heart's love and all his worldly prospects? Why so? "I think he is presuming, because the Peverills are not of his order, grand mamma. They came over in tbe 'May' flower;' they are descended from Lord Peverill; they have graduated at col leges, have enjoyed elegant accomplish ments ever since, aud have never soiled their hands with the grime of-labor, while Mr. Helpei's ancestors were illit erate mechanics, who murdered the king's English. Why, his own father was a stone-cutter. I've beard papa say 80." "And supposing that yours had been a mechauic, what objection would you have urged ?" "Why, it's not a supposable case, grandmamma a Peverill a stone cutter!" "But supposing you were- not a Peverill?" "My imagination is not bold enough for such a flight. You see, I have all the prejudices of my class. I would choose unhappiness sooner than marry beueaib me." "Then I am to understand that you consider yourself superior to Harold Helper. It is some years since he figured as your father's inky-fiugered clerk, remember. Since then he has written a book, he lias invented a ma chine, he has lectured to scientists. Wherein does your superiority consist? "What have you been doing iu the mean time?" "I have been rubbing" papa's gouty toe, and accepting the attention of Miles .Bond." "You don't mean " "I mean that I shall probably marry Miles Bond some line day, if nothing nappens." "Will you recon asked you a year "Marry Miles Bond !" repeated grand- f7rcavvav nm. if h.,i ,oi.i tt.at oi.u ro already xar uwaj mau happen. "iiut 1 near tnat Missi'everin lias en couraged Mr. Bond," said Harold, help lessly. And you're going to stand aloof and let little Miles Bond walk over you? Now let me tell you that I mean to make you and Miles executors of my will; so Pd like to keep on friendly terms with you don't you see?" Thank you; but aren't we friends, near or apart?" ",'Tis said tbat absence conquers love," slio laughed; "aud haven't you heard of the virtue tnat resides in propinquity If Acnes sees Miles every day, and you once in six weeks, which do you thiuk she will be most likely to love best?" It is not likely that she will ever love me, whatever happens." "Who said she would never love yon7 Aren't you worth forty Miles Bonds?" "Certainly not in Miss i'everilrs re gard." "Prithee, what do you know ot uer regard, Sir Faintheart?" "Very little, to be sure." "Tleclther fears his fate too much, Or his deserts are small, That dares not put It to the touch, To gain or lose It all. " "Haven't I put my fate to the touch, Mrs. Peverill, and haven't I found that my deserts are miserably small?" "Dear me! I see that you don't know that. women blow twenty ways of a morning. Who knows but she is cry ing her pretty eyes out this minute, and wishing with all her silly heart that she had it to do over again?" "Miles knows," laughed Harold. "Come aud see who knows best. An old woman's advice isn't to be sneezed at. I refused my first lover myself, be cause I thought he'd come back and tease me into it, but he never did. Served me right, too." And Harold did as lie was told. He made himself intimate at the Pev- erill's as of old. He was there iu sea son and out of season. He bore with the caprices of Agues aud the conde scensions of his rival. He was often left to the tender mercies of Grandma Peverill while Agues aud Miles made liie garden or the river echo with their songs. He came aud went like a shadow. When Agnes chose to lis ten, he let loose his enthusiasm; when she gave him the cold shoulder, lie ac cepted it without a murmur as if one should be grateful for any gift of her's and fell back upou theold lady's unfail ing Kindness, one day, however, even Grandma Peverill failed him. She waked one day from a doze, and asked, Is It really love" glancing alter the two, pelting each other with roses in the garden. "It looks like it," gasped Harold. "Time will prove time, that unlocks all secrets and discloses all impostures. Miles is of the earth, earthy. He loves liue society and grandlatbers and coats of arms. It is a crime in his eyes to be born without a silver spoou iu one's mouth. "'But what Is lov4 made for, If It Is not the same Through Joy and through sorrow. Through glory and shame ?" Then she fell into a dose again. The shadows draped themselves about her; a star came out aud leaned to look into the window; a late bird twittered on aspray near by, and made a sudden gush of music through the place; the murmur of laughing voices came faintly toward them on the breeze, iiut Harold lis tened alone, for Grandma Peverill was the level of her lips, sider the question I ago, darling?" And Agnes reconsidered. Mrs. Helper had been married a year and better, when it occurred to her, in an idle moment, to overhaul Grandma Peverill's papers, now that they were her own possessions; and when she heard Harold calling her, she went slowly out to meet them "crushed in her soft "What have you there, darling?" he asked. "Aud you knew it all the while!" she nuswered, irrelevantly; "you knew I was not a Peverill, descended from the Crusader; you knew tbat I had been adopted from a foreigh foundliug asy lum ! And yet you loved me! and yet you married me, Agues Nobody !" and Mrs. Helper began to cry, and allowed herself to be clasped in the aims of a stone-cutter's sou, and found comfort iu it. "'Lovo Is not love, which alters When It alteration llnds,'" said Harold. "But I may be the daughter of a cob bler, of a pauper, or wqrse," she sobbed. "You are my wife, and I love you." "Then I would rather be your wife than the daughter of a king," said she, smiling through her tears. Mr. Helper had forgotten to burn the letter which Grandma Peverill had .written to her executors, and so pride had a fall. Idealism. HotelLife. ' Did you ever live in a hotel ? Yes ? Then I pity you. No? Then I envy you. Anil yet hotels are the place to study human nature, and get your lessons by heart, too. I've tieen a hotel boarder for five years. When I began I was a quiet, modest lit tle woman as ever you sav, but now well, never mind what I am now. Jn the hrst place it tries your temper. Theservants won't work unless they're ell feed; the waiters pass you by un less they're bought; the call-hoys never ear any bell mug by a guest who never tips. This spoils the temper. If I pay a hotel three dollars a day r everything, everything is to he mine. I won't be put off witli hash when I ant quail. And if I can cat twenty-four buck wheat cakes, I will eat 'em, and that's II there's about that. The servants use my brush, and un ravel their kinky hair with my best comb. I won'teven swear to my tooth-brush. I send undergarments, with lovely frills, aud tucks, and things, into the ash, aud (hey come back without tbe frills, untucked, and holey, There's starch enough in the rufiles about my neck to scratch the epidermis from the back of a hippopotamus, but there isn't enough in my petticoat to stilleu a mosquito's bill. The soap well, the soap is funny Generally it's a piece of slate, hard as brass and smooth as oil. It never knew lather, aud as for suds, the very idea chokes me. There's a plauo in the parlor, but no music Not that it isn't played on, for from arly morn till dewy eve children thrum t and brides peck at It. JJou't think me iretful. 1 really am mamma, as if she had said that she was coinc to marry the Khan ofTartary, "You seem to be astonished, grand mamma, "Yes a little. He's a born aristocrat." "Exactly; there's a pair of us. I shall be entitled to consideration in the beau monde as his wife, don't you see ?" For it must be confessed that since Mr. Pev erill's death and insolvency the beau monde bad looked coldly upon his pretty daughter, in spite of the Peverill coat of arms and the luxuriance of tbe family tree. "Then you do not care a fig for Mr. Helper " asked grandma, "Is it necessary for me to deny the soft impeachment, when I have almost made up my mind to accept another ?" "When I was a girl " began tbe old lady, "You loved brocades and brocatelles as well as your cranddauchter." "ButTdid not sell myself for "them And so you are really engaged to Miles Bond, and there's no help fur it?' "Well, not really engaged; I won't give my word at least not quite yet. You see, grandmamma, one hesitates to rivet tbe chain, as they say in novels, And then Miles says he will wait; he won't hurry me; he'd rather wait a cen tury in sweet suspense, as lie calls it, than to be retused at once. Iiut I A few weeks later Miles Bond and Mr. Helper were eugaged looking over the private papers of the late Mrs. Pev erill, as her executors. That modest portion of her fortune which ber son's speculations had lett intact, she had be queathed to Agnes. Presently Miles raised his eyes irom tbe paper he had been inspecting. "A rascally piece of business," lie groaned, betweeu his teeth. Should he quietly light his cigar with the paper, bury its contents in ob livion, and marry Agnes, and go on his way rejoicing? No; perish the thought! A .Bond, of the Uouds of .Bondholder, who could trace their lineage to the Conqueror ! A thousand times no ! He made a desperate resolve, and passed tbe sheet to Harold. It was merely a letter from the late Mrs. Peverill, setting forth a certain family matter, which she had deemed it wise that they should know, not as executors, but as lovers 'Of course this will not affect-your in terests," said Harold, uiing the paper away, quite at ins ease. 'It might not," sneered Miles, "if were not a Bond, with family credit to sustain." 'And yet," said the other, "Sbak- apeare tells us that "Love Is not love, which alters "When itulteratlon llnds.'" sup pose it will all end one way." "Shakspeare be hanged !" quoth the -Ana wuai win you answer tonaroia quondam lover. Helper?" The following week, when Mr.'Helne "Heaveu only knows. It will not do dropped in to pay his respects to Agnes to tell a man who oflers one his heart he found her watering Iter bed of mig- mat ue ougnt, to nave Known oeiier." nonettes and pausies. "Nor that you will not marry him "Oh," she said, presently, Decause uis iaiuer was a stone-cutter." Mr. Helper accepted his refusual. however, with a good grace. He made no fuss about it; he merely assured ber tbat her happiness would always be dearer to him than his own. "That's the letter of a gentleman," said grandma, "if his father wus forty times a stobe-cutter." "Pshaw!" said Miss Agnes, tearing it into fragments; but, curiously enough, gathering them together as soon us Mrs, Peverill's back was turned, as if they were sweet to her as scattered rose and half shyly, "the oddest thing has happened 1 must tell somebody l How dear grandmamma would laugh if she were here, and say it served me right ! I re ceived a note yesterday, (you could scarcely call it a billet-doux, though it was Irom Miles), and what do you thiuk? He says in it there, turn your eyes away, don't look at me so while I tell you he begs me to release him from an engagement, which, upon close exami nation of his heart under the micro scope, I suppose lie finds himself una bie.to fultlii ! jNow, you must know leaves. Perhaps she was thinking of J tbat there never was an engagement at me uays wuen Mr. Helper was uer all between us; ue just teased my soul laiuers cieru, ana uaa taught uercness out oi me to marry nim, and l promised winter evenings days when she was Only to think of it! A Peverill, a de not so worldly-minded, and more ro- scendant of one Rupert Peverill. who mantle, and didn't guess the worth of figured in the Crusades, jilted by Miles position anu long descent, jferhans she Bond I It must be that grandmamma' regretfully remembered the spring joiuture disappointed the poor youth njuruiugs wuen mey pusnen through Motto: .Never appoint as your executo the woods for wild flowers and ferns, the man whom you wish to marry your wueu ue maue a uuaiut amum tnr norihoir" of pressed sea-weeds she had it hidden away somewhere now. "It would never do," she said, half aioud, answering some unspoken tuougnt. "l should always be hanker ing for family and money. One must give up something; it may as well be "You don't seem to take the affai much to heart," said Harold "Because my heart wasn't concerned in it." "What under heaven were you think ingof.then?" "1 was thinking whether or no you love as any thing; Oh, if my father had you had changed you mind, sir; whether uuiy oeen a stone-cutter, too:" you would ever again dare " Grandma Peverill met Mr. Helper in "I dare do all that doth become tbe street later. "I hope yoa don't1 lover," asseverated Harold, Inclining to Sepulture of the Brooklyn Theater's Dead. On Saturday. December 9, the grief- The tendency to fashion Ideals is in- stricken Citv of Brooklyn, the weather herent in human kind ; fewpersons so belnc intensely coin, anu me wind prosaic, so lacking in imaginative vein, blowing a furious gale, buried its uu- as not to have, tested its presence at known dead, amidst the universal some period of their lives few so dull mourning and sorrow of all classes of and spiritless as to be eternally content citizens.- Private aud public buildings with fact. wern drnned with emblems of woe. anil Pronerlv comprehended, idealism is Lt,u r everywhere the flags were half-masted, an aid to aim, be this emotional, ambi- fi i.,i Notwithstanding the bitter cold, thous- tioual, or indifferent in range, since ?uib uuuv.o. I , . . . . I ,i . - .. ., ....1.1 ailU were in ine streets i wimna iuc wituout perieci couceimuus lueiu wuuiu funeral procession, aud with a deprnssed betriteannroxitnation unto good. Ideals air of repression and solemnity, indeed, are the spurs which urge us to accom with a tone ot saddened awe prevailing, pnsnmeut. To prop our aims wuu me the immense multitude waited patiently same, to rest them in tiie nearest ap for the procession to start. It was after proximate state, is our most available two o'clock when the military, preceded highway to content. bv a sou ad of mounted police, neared Unhappily, humanity is prone to for- Flatbush and Sixth Avenues, with the get that it can but approximate ; hence Forty-seventh Kegiment on ine rigutoi tanure aud injurious etlects. aucn Be- tbe line and the Tweoty-tniru negi- quel not only embitters sell, but reuecis ment in hollow square formation as a detrimentally wherever its influence is guard of honor, aud surrounding the felt. Illustrating its prevalence we hearses, seventeen nearses anu roriy- note .skepticism, scorn or the castles live undertakers' wag'flns, with from one that fresh enthusiasm builds; theold to four coffins each, followed, and after cautioning the young against iraagina them came carriages with relatives and lion not as a power to be curbed, but friends, carriages with ministers and oi- as an evil to be resolutely set aside; and iicials, the Thirteenth Itegituent Closing all because men and women nave cov the rear of the procession. I eteii ends impossible for humanity to Flatbush Avenue, on both sides, was attain, and crushed by disappointment. full of spectators, and there was scarcely admit safety only in tbe opposite ex a window on that tliorouguiare through treme. Un such fashion retaliate the maiority of humau kind not only in self en deavor, but sharply in exterior judg ment crops forth .their narrow base. Religion eveu is condemned, .if its vo taries fail to satisfy their pet ideal; they win countenance no lnendsuip not in perfect harmony with the same; and so on through the category, despising pleasant truits iu-tlieir irrational striv: lug for as truly rational ends. iiut it is in connection with the deeper human emotions that we nnd the best illustrations of this phase. Take the premartial state, developed as far as en gagement; here is a broad margin for irrationality aud mistakes. Alan in some cases, not content to wed a worn an, must needs transform heriuto a ma terialized angel; she, iu turn, exalts to a demi-god. Together these look for ward to a perfect tuture a fool's para dise it may be aptly termed. For when the wings drop aud the idol turns to clay, these unfortunates have naught but husks few sulllcieutly wise to ac cept approximation as all they can ra tionally expect. Ine curb is needed which gloomy faces were not regarding tbe spectacle. A long row of partly fin ished brown-stone-front houses at At lantic and Flatbush Avenues preseuted an especially noteworthy appearance, seeming, as It did, almost all wiudows, and every window thronged by as many persons as could get a peep from it. As the coffins passed, many upon the sidewalks did reverence to death by bar ing their heads, and frequently women sobbed aloud. The march was a terrible one, for its oppressive gloom, tbe deadly cold, and the grier on every band. The head of the procession entered the Twenty-fifth street gate of Green wood Cemetery at 2:45 o'clock, the bands at the moment playing dirges that mingled their tones with the mournful tolling of the cemetery bell. Battle Hill, where the arrangements for the interment of the bodies in one common grave had already beeu made, is tbe highest point of ground in the cemetery, and is situated but a short distance from the gate by which the procession entered. Here a circular trench uad beeu cut, seven leet deep and here to restrain such rampant premises. thirteen feet wide, nearly surrounding a round sodded space ten feet In diame ter, upon wnicb the projected monu ment is to stand. One by one the hearses and undertakers' wagons passed up the mam avenue, each, in turn, stop ing there long enough to discharge its ghastly frieght and then moving away by Battle Avenue. I'rora each, one to four colli us were lifted out. Twelve cemetery employes received the coffins; six carrying each one up the steep in cline to the trench, and lowering it to eight other employes four on each side of the point of delivery who method ically placed them in a double row, the heads all pointing luwardiy, on tne bot tom of the trench. At length the coffins were all in place To the 79 containing 101 bodies brought now, were added two which had arrived before, each containing one recognized victim of the disaster, which had been brought by relatives and friends. The double row of black coffins almost filled the trench. Sixty German siugers, members of the Brooklyn Saengerbund, south Brooklyn liuartette Club, Sehuetzenlust and .Brooklyn nrt T liotroult manflnito.l t li li,i..a tml 1 . . . . Z. " 7 . . t mu,,,, lu.s, Maennerchor, led by W. Uroschel, stood them, or tho Inaa nf mv nnlrkirtio I faal flint In doq I .. !..'. V; v . i ' .,.11 upon the central grass-plat and sang ist in either nlfl lintola nr., ufitltloil In n linn- nr oi I . .. .. . . 1 T . I . . . i t . .. , , V. , i , b ! Abt's "itepose." xneitev. John parser sibie realization aim ji uon-i iiiiuu tue Kins usiuir aciuart .,,i ti. iti.,t Un!nni .i,-ll girls using an or so of perfume. It improves them. But there's a young man in the next room who whistles, aud he comes in late, and smokes. I can stand a cigar, aud there's a kind of romance about a pipe, but the fellow smoses a oeastiy pacK oi nasty cigar- of immortality. cites ccijr uigiu ui ilia inc. It dries bis blood not that I care for that, though. A woman in a hotel is isolated from creation If she's old and ugly, she might as well be in a desert. If she's young and pretty, she'd bet ter be. I'm old and ugly, and that's what's the matter. 1 llustraled Times. read, the Protestant Episcopal burial service. The Kev. Dr. Putnam, instead of the extended funeral oration which he had prepared for the occasion", an nounced that the extreme cold would preclude the possibility of its delivery, and merely said a few brief words on the uncertainty of life and tbe blessed hopes Then the benediction to keep subjected to erroneous notion that happiness is unattainable save by idealizing nesh and blood. Again, probably no two human be ings, upou unisou in marriage bouds, find each other the exact specialties they faucled before ; in a greater or less degree does this discrepancy exist. Just here stands in readiness a potent power, it it be permitted to work. In illustra tion, we have two opposite types. One woman, it matnraouy yield disappoint' ment, cries out against her fate, reso lutely closes her eyes to the possible good in view, and retaliates upon her previous imaginations witli the most unmitigated scorn. Another, similarly circumstanced, clothes palpable bare ness in the graceful garments of ideal ism setting up tbe most ordinary of men as a king, to whom, perforce, the world must bow, because so deltly aud determinedly upheld. opposed to these active dealers in idealism is that class of humanity too wary too distrustful to become simi larly involved. These walk eternally cellbaxe, either seeking their idols, con hdeut that they will ultimately attain hopeless that they did ever ex- case sacrihcing much pos to au absurdity lacking in fruit. This class amuse us by their sincerity, yet merit pity iu their fauati cal extremes. He Hade a Mistake. An amusing incident is related in con nection witli the meeting at the Taber nacle on Thursday night. As is well known, Mr. Moody preached to fallen women, hundreds of whom were pres ent. The newspapers were ageg, and a dozen or so of reporters were dodging about the great buildiug trying to pick ideas. Among these was a young man from the Times, who had been told to interview some of tbe women, if pos sible, after the services. He was a nice young man, a modest young man, as all Times reporters are, but be bad not that stock or worldly ex perience with which most of his breth ren are endowed. Seeing a richly dressed lady in the audience who seemed deeply atlected over the services, he watched bis opportunity,, and, as the audience was passing out, addressed er. "How have you enjoyed the meet- ng?" said lie. "Oh, very much," she replied. "Nothr ing could be more affecting." "Do you like Mr. Moody's preaching?" 'T think he is the greatest living evangelist," she returned. , "You believe what he says, then?" said the reporter. "Most assuredly I do." she answered. "Are you ready to leave your life of sin, then, aud try to reform?" "Wliatf" exclaimed the lady, looking rather blank. "Are you ready to reform?" An expression half of astonishment and half of indignation overspread the lady's countenance. "What do you mean by reforming?" said she, rather tartly. I mean leaving your disreputable lire," ne replied. The lady looked at him steadily a moment, and then said: "I thiuk the managers ought to send only such mem here of the Christian Association out to talk to the congregation as are pos sessed of a little common sense, aud ntend to tell them so." It was tiie young man's turn to stare now. What managers?" said he. The managers of these meetings." she replied. I've nothiug to do witli the meet ngs." said he. "I'm a reporter." "Oh!" said the lady. "Yes!" returned the reporter. "Iben," said she, "I will tell you something that you can make a note of, hope I am a respectable woman. J have been a member of an orthodox church ever since I was eleven year old. 1 have done all I could to aid .Brother Moody in these meetings, and I am here to-night to help any fallen women or fallen men," she added, lookiug-sig mhcautly at the reporter, "who may need my service?. Now, if you will come into the inquiry I will take great pleasure in introducing you to Brother Moody." The young man didn't go, but lie did get out of that building about as fast as bis legs could carry nim, while bis face was beaming like a carnation rose. Tiie lady, the wife of one of Chicago's prom nent aud wealthy young citizens, told the story afterward to some friends, who greatly enjoyed it, as will everybody Ise, escept possibly the uutnrtunate re porter. Chicago Inter-Ocean. The Magdalen3 of Chicago. An invitation has been exteuded to the fallen women of Chicaco to reform finil ATr ATnml it lino nrnanliail an nrnnl. n aa uiuuuuubtu u.v iuc .Lie. vw. v. , . . i . oapninn In Iham Un F h ..n ...... and Uie ceremony concluded with the li6ne(1 tbey bave eXuibite(1 a wIIlinjr- singing ny ine uermania cnoir o Ile33 10 turu from t, path tl are Kuhlu s beautiful choral, "Above alt 8ui if some feasib,le plau , devY8ed Summits there is Repose." Illustrated , bi1mb timm t ,,,, 0MOODOt.r.,n Political Gambling. It Is not cred itable to the intelligence of the age that the great question of electing a Presi dent should have been turned into a vast field of profit for the gamblers, and tbat in this city alone two millions of dollars should have been staked on the issue, aud left in the hands of men who are out of the pale of decent society Gentlemen who would have been horrl Bed to be greeted by these men in public as acquaintances, and would bave ejected them into the street if they ever called at their residences, made confi dants o'f these gamblers, and entrusted them with large sums of money, i'eo- ple who are openly opposed to lotteries. neVer play cards, and to whom dice are an abomination, possessed themselves of pool-tickets on the most approved plan. Clerks staked their salaries for many weeks on the issue of tne day, even ladles commissioned their male with her, praise her small feet, and tell friends to invest large sums in the ber she ought to be proud of such a hus- lciu(Jtiu aLuc I'rtaujuus uuu ouuiiai I hnnn nq I nm JKX. were aiscarueu ior tne nonce, anu oet- tiug and hedging were discussed with avidity. Evidently society needs im provement. Jewish Messenger. There is no trouble about the sentimen tal part of the business. We can all beg this wretched class to embrace re ligion, and all rejoice over the reports in tne papers tiiat even one has been rescued from her dreadful life. But how about the practical part? Miss Kate Muusou has led the life of a pros titute for five years. She wants to re form. She will reform. She is deter mined to quit her horrid avocation at once, ishe bad a father and mother both living when she entered upon her ine ot shame. liotn are dead now, aud she has no kindred willing to receiv lier. She does not know a great deal about the practical work of a house hold, but she would try to learn. She can do plain sewing. Who will receiv Miss ivate Muusou into their household? Taking the repentant girl by the hand m tbe Tabernacle is one tiling; taking. her into our lamiues, wiiere sue win mingle witli our children, and where the strange quiet wilt form such astrik lug contrast to the glare aud excitement of a five years' life of siu, is another. We know that the allurements of vice are great, nnd that the girl's continu ance in her reformatory course is doubt fill. Her earnings will be scanty, her dress poor, her position in a worldly sense strange and trying. Her re&olu Eugenie Bonaparte has grown old and tiou to reform must be supported by Hiding his Tracks. There were vigorous inquiries at the post office the other day lor the chief clerk, aud when the Captaiu's face appeared at the win dow the inquirer asked: "Has a cross-eyed woman been here asking for letters addressed to me ' The Captain hadn't seen her. "Well, she'll be here this afternoon She's my wife, aud she's a little weak in the head. She's cot a notion that I get love letters from a womau in Can ada, and she'll be here to ask for my mall." "Well?" "Well, I don't get any such letters, of course, but you mustn't give ner my mail. She might get one witn a urait in and not know its value. Just say to her that you never knew ot my receiv ing a letter here, and that you have re peatedly heard me say that I had the best wife in town." "But I don't know you." "Never mind that. In dealiug with an insane woman it's best'to be soft and slick and smooth. Just shake hands The popular consciousness has been profoundly and tenderly impressed by the fearful destruction of life in the Brooklyn disaster. It is eutirely honor able to our nature and our civilization very stout.'and uo longer dyes her hair. which lias taken on a pepper-and-salt hue. The Prince Imperial is "a good looking young man," with a flourishing mustache aud a pair oi sou oiue eyes, which he uses with much interest in the Florence art galleries, where he at pres timt hum mi sonsUiiHtloa nliontri ho ent snends much ot his time. The ex- wrung by such disasters. The feeling Express is in no particular danger of test they will be few is no less intense than when tbe effects of a holocaust like that would have beeu considered chiefly In respect to tbe destiny of the dead. .Life Itself is a thing too valuable not to be protected acaiust sucb Hazards; and atlectton too sacred not to be saved from the shock of the sudden bereavement that now chills so many hearts. Let us hope tbat in the quickening of human sympathy consequent upon this fearful calamity, there may be a permanent addition to the forces of tenderness and humanity in tbe popular heart. jNew Age. starvation. She has real estate iu Pans valued at $1,065,000, on which there are mortgages to the extent or 40,tX)U. Then, iu the provinces, scattered about, she has estates worth at least Sl,bao,OUO. Only one of these is mortgaged. lie- sides all these, the. Bonaparte family possess large estates iu Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Corsica and England. As for the personal property, estimates vary, some of them reaching nearly S15,- 000,000, and others falling as low as $5,000,000. Tbe Emperor was what the American housewife calls a "good pro vider." The question which now absorbs tbe larger half of Philadelphia is what to do with tbe Immense amount of cotton batting with which their Centennial bedding was made. The hotels aud the "My business is to talk," said a stump- speaker; "I deal in words and sen tences." "Yes," said a voice in the crowd, "and as long as I've known you, Christian counsel and kindness, or it i almost sure to fail her. Who is ready to offer the employment, furnish th home, and watch over the reclaimed woman? Where are the families willin, to dd their part iu the labor of relorma tiou? We do not doubt there are such but we fear that when it comes to th And if the fam ilies willing to take this upon them are limited and insufficient, where else shall the converted women go? There is. to be sure, an Erring Woman Home, but the very name is au adver tisement of depravity, aud It can .afford at best but temporary retuge to tb fallen. The words of Mr. Moody have fallen upon many hearts among this class tbat ache to accept the promised bless ing; but there must be a way opened, practical path marked out for them to follow, or preaching will be in vain What assurances, what promises, what encouragement can be held out to these women? President White, of Cornell, admits tbat tbe lady students average ten per bedsteads can be Bold for kindling wood, your place of business has never been cent, better on the examination papers dui tne nauing is a puzzie. closed," ' man tne young men uo. "Lovely Woman." Df in according to woman the palm o loveliness, the lords of creation think they have done the whole duty of man bv her, and that they have nothinc to complain of if they deny her the mental capacity to which they lay ciaira them selves. They will tell you that Mary Somerville among the scientific, Rosa Bonheur among artists, the host of prime donne among musicians, "George .fciiiot" among novelists, are only excep tions to the rule, auu prove nothing in favor of the sex. Hamerton has the further audacity to assure us that women who are not impelled to study by some masculine mind arenotsune rior at tbe age of filty to what they were nt twenty-live, entirely overlook ing, it seems to us, the knowledge which comes to eveiy womau through experience aud the hard friction of life as well as the maturing and developing of her intellect by the lessons of every day, though she may be so unfo.rtuuate as to be quite without the impulse Irom the "maseuiine mind." Is not every one among us required daily to use her liidgment? and does not judgment In crease witn use as wen as muscle and is it not conceded to be one of the su preme facultiesof the mind ? It is only those women who have been in th habit of leaving every question to th decision of some male dictator who are weak in this respect, aud throw dis credit upon their sex. "It we meet uo gods," says the sage, "it is because we harbor none;" and we should fear that those who speak with disrespect of the feminine intellect have simply been uutortunate in the! associates, whether accidental or se lected. "For your handful of female astrono mers, artists, poets, and the like," the male objector may say, "we can conn our tens of thousands," without reraem bering the centuries during which ins sex had the start of ours, when letters were prohibited to women, and they were allowed only to think such thoughts as their rulers chose for tiiem It does not at all follow because you are acquainted with all the dead and living languages, with an tne literatures the world and the sciences thereof, that the original powers of your mind are greater than yonder plowman's, bu only that such as ell to your share bave beeu fostered and encouraged be youd his. Considering that we bav been thus distanced in the matter of artificial development, it is surely great argument in our favor if even one among us, laboring under such a disad vantage, lias gained' an acknowledged equality with the ablest of tbe "supe rior" sex. It Is certainly a modest con ceit on the part of man that he should possess the llou's share of mind and muscle both, one of which we should hesitate to deprive him it it did uot Im pugn the justice of our Creator, as well as His wisuom. The young woman who was chosen one of tbe class-day officers at Middle- town University has been compelled to resign, owiug to ine clamor raised by some or tne class, anu there will be new election of class-officers. The con duct of a minority of the students who took part in these proceedings was un manly aud unworthy of the Institution We hope that the faculty will express us disapproval. Second Marriages. Nothinc is more characteristic than the very general sentiment of disappro bation with which women regard a sec ond marriage. Their first impulse is to condemn it, and to apeak, if not with censure, at least in terms of gentle dep- recatlou,or the people wuo nave eutereu pou It. Talk to tne loveliest ot uer sex f the sorrow of a widower, and she will , probably reply, "That is a grief for Inch ne will soon nnu consolation." Announce the engagement of such a ne in any circle of friends, and the femiuine portion will immediately be gin to count the months and years since the death of nis former wile, mere will be observations upon the transitory nature of human affections, aud the quality of forgetfulneSs which inheres men. xet tne seventy oi womaniy comment on man's second marriage is tempered with mildness, most women being conscious of a tolerant pity for the helplessness and loneliness of a.male creature left to take care of himself, or to battle through the world with chli- ren. It Is to women that they look tor fidelity beyond the reach of another love. The widow who lays aside her eeds, and gives herself once more to erlrlBil invs. ia fplt hv many of her married sisters to have lost caste, and is imagined by some of tbe unmarried to have done them a personal wrong. She has stepped from the uiche, saintly and revered, where her dark days placed her, and descended to the ordinary common place level of life. It is not in India only tbat the wile is tnougtu most oi who is willing to immolate herself on her husband's funeral pile. Equally are there communities here, where she who is a "widow indeed" occupies a station quite unapproached in its ex ceptional reverence, and where she who seems to listen again to matrimonial overtures is thought to bave forfeited a little of tbe traditional esteem witn which sympathy had invested her. The foundation of this unformulated creed of society is built broadly on the respect we all feel lor true love. JUove is strong as death, we say, with a sup plement in our hearts, to the effect that it ought to be stronger. Its silver cord should not be loosened, though the an gels stretch it over into tbe shadowy land whither our beloved have been taken. We miscalculate the length of laborious days., lightened by happy memories, but dimmed by present tears. We forcet how hard it is to keep fresh and vivid the Impressions of kisses un renewed, of touches no longer tangible, of voices hushed. We do not estimate the force of the rebound by which the soul, desolate, weary, unstrung, lacer ated In its finest sensibilities, turns to receive the sweetness of some gentle compassion, or some tender comprehen sion. Often it is those whose wedded lives have beeu most uuited, flowing ou like a poem set to fitting music, who seem soonest to be ready to rear a new temple on the ruins of theold. ferbaps n their case the heart-hunger is tue deepest, and the vacancy needs most to be tilled. Whatever may be the reason, is a tact beyond denial that many second marriages, so tar as the world can see, are more sitisfying and felicit ous than the first were. The choice of tlia man in the maturity of his powers is often quite other from the selection of Ills youth. No doubt in a second mar riage there is less of the element of fall ing in love, and more of sober judgment. The youth was won mainly by the pretty face, with its soft curvrs, its sea- shell tinting, its swift blushes, and dewy freshness. Propinquity had much to do with his decision. He lived near her father's house. They sang in tbe same choir, rney, went to tue same church. Neither had emerged from the erudites of adolescence, or knew to what manner of man or woman the soul within them would grow, when they plighted their troth and took on them solemn vows. Whether in the close ness of daily companionship they would become knit and blended into a com pleteness which is possible only to dual ity when lovo unities it, or whether they would find life hopelessly halved, was a problem tbey could not resoive. No second marriace oucht to be the re sult of a passing fancy or the product of a caprice. Love should be real aud pure, but it should oe deeper man a sen timent. It should dare to look opeu eyed at the chances it has for develop ment into that perieet auecuon wuicu is based upon tastes, pursuits, aims, and education in common. Harper's Bazar. Bad Tkmplb. There are few things more productive of evil in domestic life than a bad temper. It does not matter what form that temper may assume, whether it is of a sulky kind that main tains perfect silence for m-tny days, or the madly passionate, which vents itself in absolute-violence. Ill temper at any age is a bad thing; it never does auy- body any good, aud umje wuo mouige in it feel uo better for it. After the passion lias passed away, oue sees that he has beeu very foolisli, and know3 that others see it, too. Bu"d temper in the aged is, perhaps, the most trying of all; it is indeed a pitiable sight to see the wrinkled cheek of an old person aflame with the fires of anger and pas sion. Since anger is useless, and an un speakable misery to its victims, why should it be indulged in at all ? Miss Susan B. Anthony lectured last Sunday evening at Investigator Hall, Paine Memorial, on the -aixteentu Amendment." Her argument for Wom an Suffrage was based on the ground of the inalienable right ot each citizen to a voice in making aud executing the laws. This is impreguable ground; anil the cause never gains any strength by abandoning it for any side issue. She will speak again, at the same place next Sunday evening at half-past seven. Subject', "Women Want Bread, not the Ballot." She has testified ber devotion bt many sacrifices, aud will no doubt be greeted by another large audience. New Age. The Revolutionary war cost $135,193, 703, at which time the population was about 4,000,000, making about $33 80 per capita. Tbe war of 1812 cost $107,159, 003, aud at that tinie we had a popula tion of 7,500,000, or about $14 35 per capita. .The war of the Rebellion cost $3,000,000,000, at which time we had a population of 31,400,000, or about $95 60 per capita. The entire coffee crop of tbe world last year was 900,000,000 pounds, of which the United States imported a full third part. Why are energetic men like emetics ? Because you can't keep tbeovdown. 9