aafl rreprtoier t. i. j. nrwwit. TKUM. IN ADVANCE: 'ce year...., ":i months Tlree months.. -.175 - 1 ADVERTISEMENT Inserted on ReMoimble HER LOT; How Me OK, l'mtectetl. Iiv Mrs. A. j. DrxrwAY. ' '""" "F "JIMMTH KKII," "ILLI Dnwil,'' -AIK AMI UKXKY LBS," "THE HAPPY HOJf K," "OKK WOMAX-8 HPniKIt," "MADSK HOKRISOX," KTC., ETC., ETC Entered, aocnrdins to Act of Congress, in tbe .-eiir lsTK, ') Mr.. A J. DiiDiiray, In tbe office of i-'rarliiDcf Congress at Washington City. ' CHAPTER XXL When again I grew conscious, my husband was bending over ine, ready to catch tbe first gleam of my return ins reason. Mr. and Mrs. Motley were also near with my children, and lr. Soy denbam was i,nt far away. Bat I did not realize that I had beeu ill or nnooo ecious. Kuryihiug was confused in my brain, ami I thought X was in Mel bourne. I had forgotten all about the trial. "Gerald, iait you? and are you sober? and do you love roe ?" I asked, my voice so weak us to be almost inaudible. "Yes, my precious darling; I am here, a sober man and free. I was honorably acquitted, thanks to your dreams and endeavors, and I call God to witness that I will never again allow myself to touch or taste or handle the intoxicat ing CUl." Jt was a great blessing to me that I believed iu my husband's earnest prom ise. It gave me hope aud strength and courage, and enabled me to convalesce, i as I could not otherwise have done. But it would have proved a far greater ! blessing had he only had sufficient moral and physical strength to liave I successfully resisted l la diseased appe- ' tite to the erd. 'Ah, id- '. Very gradually I recovered my accus tomed strength, and yet more gradually my shattered memory. For a long time everything connected with the trial under winch I had sunk uncon scious Whs to me as a more thau half forgotten dream. J?U gradually glim mers of tlie past came hack, and among the lir-t of my confused remembrances recurred 1 lint vh'oii of the coal-black eyes and pale blonde hair that had hauuted me before my nirrL-ifut season of tempo rary oblivion had occurred, to save me from hopeless insanity. -vt ".-' I liitd j 'np;"tvii.M )tte,t,oii, but I sooii saw that the task of untangling my dilemma through hiui was destined to prove ineffectual. He was uniformly kind to me now, and fought io ani.cipate my slightest wish, hut Ills only reply to my numerous in terrogaloi le- v : "Wait till we get well aud strong be fore we :.sk too many que-lious." liut my mind was not to be thus ap peased. Tlie curiosity of my sex which is said to be inherited from our mother, ' Kve, is possessed by me, in common , with all the sous and other daughters of women, aud the more I pondered over ! the vexed question, the more anxious I ! grew to unravel it, until finally I would be put oft no longer at least so far as I Mrs. Mot.Vy was concerned. 1 "You treat me as though I were nodi- 1 ing hut a half-witted child!" I said,' sobbing fitfully, and accompanying the complaint with tlie usual exclamations of bitterness indulged in by peevish ' perons. I """il we only want to restore you to' he.tith, little one," was the cooing an swer, as the good woman sought for tbe hundredth time to pacify, without satis fying me. "Hut I'm not an idiot, Mrs. Motley, aud I know I can't get well till themys Ury of that murder is cleared up," I said, burtug uiram into tears, and call lug my be-t friend heartiest) aud unreasonable. Faxs Speech, Fbeb Tmmu I'sofuc VOLUME "VII. j?otit;la.ivi, Oregon, frxdat, jtjtsts users?. NUMBEK -11. ings, that she was not dead, bat hidden away, the better to ween the old repro bate, the unlawful custodian of your quintuple eagles, from nuklte suspicion." "And how was it all discovered T' "Partly, as I said, through your dreams and ravings, and partly through testimony wrung from the canting ofd hypocrite himself, whom you will be glad to know is now at San Quentin, serving out a three years' seutenee for obtaining money under false pretenies." 'Thank God!" I ejaculated, fervently. "Yon will ardon me, Ethel dear, but it seems In me quite inconsistent in you to praise tbe Lord for tbe incarceration of Elder Chalmers, when you were ready to screen your husband, whether innocent or guilty." And Mrs. Motley looked at me re proachfully, and with pity. "ou mistake my motives my pre cious friend," I answered, earnestly. "My husband was on trial for murder, of which I knew be was not guilty, and T waa determined to see him vindicated. cannot shake hint loose after he has robbed, Insulted and maligned you, and crippled your child." "But he Is ray lawful .husband, and the father of my children, aud I love lilni; ami he is, or has been, the unfort- Utiliiation of Babies, BY I-ETBOI.EI- r.VASUY. It wuz Tunper, I tal Tunner. whleh v well is a liousesprlii like Topper, forther ftaf Uie ioimor- " babe In a pleasure." -I t uo nonsense nate -ielitn of a diseased appetite, and I ! about him. His poetry la ex -easy to won't Iinar mi- Wt friend .fc ll ,.f " e I14' t " Km me kii t. ,. Jsndrinoff in . i saw, iiiuiguaiiuy. 'There! there! little one. You have talked enough for one day," and my friend again placed her hand playfully over my mouth. "There is no law or out uv the grasp uv the Intel leek uv tlie most humble. You kin di gest Topper ess easy ez you kin pumkin pie. But I don't Intencl to stray oil Into the Held uv criticism. Babies was alias rav espeshl aver shuu. A hauv is a tbfcMr to be taken gospel to prevent a man or woman from care uv, not a thing tfl take care uv Mug a fool, if so disposed. Now go to i anybody else. Babies are expensive, sleep ami he hannr " mk1 ,,e WMO hl" ,'"v"r uv that T . . , ;kind of arrers must expeck to devote e,oeed ny languidly, and lay himself religiously to Ibasa. and byjtat there tbiaking, thinking. o much aegisst bVM- T!l; uare "Surely," I soliloquized, "my hus-1 ,,v others and Deglectiii myself wuz band will never again essay to i, jure 1 T, m " "d"pleU me. I have given him so much proof jt wuz, therefore, with feel ins uv pro of my devotion that he will consider it found disgust I saw the first uv the his duty, aud it will certainly be his ' by Irapeudin. I didn't like It. I prideto protect and honor me li-re.fi. r i ,,Jfctvd to it, not ouly on akount of n . Prtiw ""nor me hereafter, j myiM.,fj but oll Mariar-s, tbe wife uv my liut, alas! for tbe vanity of a wife's , buzzum. That excellent woman wux a expectations under such circumstances. ! milliner, aud t felt that it wux enull for Besides, he is, or was, a slave to a dis- The truth is, as I now know, through ,,er to uk" care ,,v IMe without bevln for what be did while uuder tbe influ- years, that any mau who will abuse his fr that addishuel ooe lesson my cdm- eoceofrum. He is now truly penitent, and I have a wife's abiding faith iu his complete refoi (nation. We shall be happy yet." Yoo precious, hopeful, and deluded simpleton," said Mrs. Motley, Irjing to speak playfully. "Don't you kuow wife without provocation, or even per- forts ? I am not selfish. I k no wed sisteutly, when provoked to It, is so far th"t maii with a child coodeut care devoid of principie that he Is not cap.- tZjXJffT ehHd' ble or experiencing tbe lofty emotion of she cood without. Ex it wux, she could unselfish gratitude. igive her whole time to me aud the Gerald was obsequious, penitent, and 'ul the takin care uv me ex I ought kind enough when his selfish needs and to. f"!"'- "IV"" "i?!; lilt mat tbere is about as much chance to aims inspired the feeliug and conduct, fust, and she wuz still lovm) "My deer, cure a drunken man of his coustilu-' but he never imagined the moral emo- it's a fine boy, aud can't you take some tioual infirmity as there is lo cure a case ! tlon of protecting aud caring for me for ,,0,,,,f"rt io tlie refleckshun that iu your of hydrophobia "The Ird God omnipotent reigneth," I answered, with a devout emphasis that made my friend smile sadly. "If the Lord can cure evils so effcctii- .1.11..!.. " . mv own -L-u l il I I,. I ,l . i ""- ers you will nev some one to my owi sake. And I had done so mud, U,M11 , Think of that.'' r"rh,ni! "My deer," I replied, promptly, "I Ah, me! ain't a discountin the fuciier. Te pres- Iu a few weeks I was again ready fr e,,t !" ,?00', e"ouKh fw me, I thank you. , j...! ... - . A bird in the baud is worth' a irood ""'" nu as our iunus .,,.,, i ,,,, r .. ... soiis"itool went so far on oue occasion wheu one uv em wuz III, I actllly went and split oven wood rather thau let Mariardrop that child and do It her self, wieu bad alluz been her dooty and privilege. A father's luv Is Mir most twhln thing in nacher. Hundreds uv nites hev I laid in bed and permitted Marlar in gu up mr oatiitp tea wlien I really needed sleep, and her nrlslu disturbed me; ami the warm water I hev allowed that woman to bring from the kitchen nites for therrfchlldren, would never be believed. Like a troo father, I made sacrifices for them children. I felt the dooty uv ecniiomlsin that they might eujoy advantages, and to thut end I sternly refoosed to let Marlar pay for a pew in the church she belonged to. and at once cut oft her annooal subscripsheu w toe rurnu jusuuarv isncletv. "Marlar," I ranuliL nintin at the I ten, "the heathen is not onffc si oni-4 uoor, oui tuey are inside thereof." wen wood it hev bin for me ef T had never allowed mvself to Im suaded in this matter. Marlar sunk under the latior uv oarlu fur them ohll Iren, ami went to iter long home, de spite the advice I bad given her for twenty-live years eoncernin the proper management of them. I drop a tear to me memory uv mat excellent pervider. She wuz my stay for a quarter uv a cen try. My second wnz better lookin, but the miuit she wuz married she closed the shop (I have alluz married mtl liners) and insisted on my supportin "y nuru wuz weaRiy i wuz took iu with tier and couldeut work. Wat a contrast ! Marlar frekeotly put a mortgage on litr Asters to supply tbe father ii v her children with the uecea ries uv life. Alas ! them fixters are all gooe, this many a year. Time rolled on, and Tom reached the age uv twenty-two and was admitted to the bar and got into a good practis. ow, I seil to myself, I she reap my reward. The first fee Tom got I promptly asked him for ten dollars, wicb wux to hev been tbe first drop uv the golden shower wleh wuz to fll..r Tom looked at me a expression that A Talk with Whittier. ally when his attention Is called to were exhausted, I turned with longing pint uv takin that boy thro scarlet fe-' k1 me 1,0 Rood, aud turned on his them, or he is coaxed to do it, I cannot ' toward Nevada City, where I ex- vr, mumps, measles, colic and other ,,eel a ntl walked away. Xot u dollar see why he doesn't preveut them alto- peeled to again resume my former hus- !' iuoideut to childhood, uv payin wood '''K've me, tho he did tqnander gether," she exclaimed Inrei.lv "Pre- iness. r .m.rs, st uooim, close anil et cetlery, r""7 "" y " ms younger ' cALiniui, iii repiy. ire- mi U inn. n m.i.li.. , .... brothers ami sisters, .nut limuu 1 1 ' . i. . 1 II UW IIIC 111 I , . ' " -.-.v-. u.u vention is certainly better thau cure." Hut Mr. Dllieuthal was m thoroughly "Mrs. Motley, I believe you are grow- , disgusteii with me because of my loy ing skeptical !" I exclaimed, in anion- ally to Gerald that he would not renew ishnieut. my lease, and nobody else would trust "Xo, dear," was the quiet answer. ' n,e, so I found it necessary to look iu "I do not doubt the wisdom aud mercy "oiue other direction for a livelihood, of our Heavenly Father, but I clearly Strange that it did not occur to me to see that we do not always comprehend depend on my husband, seeing I k im his laws. I am provoked w ith you be- P'lcitly trusted him, but he teemed to cause you do not protect yourself from "le 'ke a helpless child, for whom it 1 1 irim I 1 v.. 1. . . . . I . .. . . .1 . . u.aa I - . . I 1 . . . ... . . v.r.,.., lain i7i iimu i ucjitllll oil MIHI "J "'J iioviiib IO Uller- ' , . . . , , , ... ,,;. , I ...1,1, .. i T . i i. ,r i . . ' . . i i . , -. . i his saluted mother, he would snonnrt 1 feue quite agreed with him, and I to do it for yon. If I thrust my hand n"'. And yet, I considered mvself an ,..,.i ,.i.. ..'. ",r.T .. T. irted sick. Into the fire aud keep it there, I do hut orthodox "clinging vine," to be sup- etlorts I could go thro the balance uv 1 Loo'er married a week-mlndeil young mock my Creator when I ask him to P"eU aud protected by tbe laws aud "e vallejr and shadder in comparative, '"V" 1 eoou nev borrowed my seer and yaller leef. I hev to take j oue By -mr I,ot g'vln em a better ine vnances uv ills belli a billiard i l ",Ma "ru-narieu anu uu- player, or uv sludyin meiiiciue, or uv ; S'fteful. turmn reformer, or any uv them uu- '"'"Rene did marry a rich old man at , profitable okkepashiius." eighteen, and moved iu a brilliant 1 sed this to let Mariar know that 1 1 lM'r- Confidently r approached her wuz displeased, so that she would ; ""sband on tbe subject of takin up my more keerful to please me iu everything n 'u w'm l'em, aud pa sain my de else. ' I cliniu years iu comfort, but lie remarked But what she sed sunk deep into my h"'11, "' lurlher first, ami he wuz heart all the same. Ef John, wich is i ek""y onreasouable ou the subject uv wat we named the bov. shood irmw temjiorary relief. Finally he informed aud shood inheiit the dispnsishuu nv ,n" that he didu't marry me. and lino- ae- Wlien you see Whittier, you see in stantly it is the Whittier of the pic tores, only more thin and gray. The pictures give you a larger head, yet not so fine in the lines that menu most to a man of genius; and no picture can give you the eyes, smaller than tboee we see in ills portrait of Burns, but dark, in tent's aud tender, aud when be speaks of what touches him intensely, all nglow with the light or his soul, such eyes, indeed, as you only see now In a picture by one of the great old masters, who.e genius I used to tliink, as T wan dered through the galleries, was more wonuerrul iu that than in anything else that has eome to us from Uulr h.,, Tbere is s. hint f the Quaker, you ihk ic, in iiiecuc oi ins ilress, but not in the color, which is black, not new at al', but so snot less as to make vnn wink sj would (ante alt.ycur new garments awl put them through a course of train ing for a few months, that they might get tbe habit of looking as pure and sweet as that when you came to wear uiem; a tjuaKer in his speech, yet using "thee" aud "thou" with such a shy, sweet grace as to make you wonder whether the finest manners may not lurk, after all, within tbe homely old S.ixon terms; quick with his words, contrary to all his traditions and train ing, and with no hint of the sacred sing song bis sect has always held in such pro round esteem, especially iu meetin'. When we had done with our greet- lugs, we sirucK nrsi, i caunot tell how, on the fathomless subject of the nature and destiny of the human, soal. My friend and myself took tbe sunny side of the way, Whittier the shadowy. We tried to make out a case that should cell ter first aud. last in the Diviue love. He stood fast by the Jiumau responsi bility. We marshaled our picked forces for a Divine election of all souls at last to the everlasting lite. He matched us with the freedom of the will, through which a man may elect himself to the doom of tbe UtM, and per sist in that to the end. We fired onr last shot : "He shall go after tbe sheep which is lost until he find it, and bring it on his shoulders rejoicing." He feared that the habit of wandering would carry the dav airain whMir the hapless thing got its chance to A Journal forihe People. lx-voted to tbe Inierestof Humanity. Independent in Politics and Religion. Ulve to all Uve Issues, and Thoroughly RadlcaHnOpposlngandBspodlnKtbe Wrongs o "is Masses. ""Pondentswnllng over assumed slgna s must make known their names to the r' or n attention will be given to tbelr eomaonieationg, Tieie Money is Made. the SjSL-' and five-cent p.eces-and a larTf' we goia ana silver coins i-i V.T s ! 1 1 J(J eountrv. Thr ,.r .i . ' at San Francisco and C.rJ cuy. Tnd at these places gold and silver coins of th- "reCoiuediD S'tqu"U- Tboaeof yoo who have been in Pl.iia delpMa will remember. th- . side of Chestnut street, near Broad, a Grecian boiidingof white marble, some whatgray from age, with a tall chim- ?-e. jI0' itom the eete''. nd the jolted Stotes flag flyiug from tbe roof. This is the mint. lt us cllutb tbe loiur flight of steps and enter the oolidinsr. f.n ih. rf. - , a placard: "Visitors admitted from nine to twelve." The door opens into a cir cular entrance hall, with seats around the wall. In a moment a polite usher, who has grown gray iu tbe service of the institution, comes to show us all that visitors are allowed to see. "When the gold has been weighed." says our guide, "it is locked up in irou boxes aud carried in the melting-room, where it is melted and nms.1 i.,i molds." A small piece is then cut off, and its fineness ascertained by a long and deli cate process called assaying. This de cides tbe valueof the lot. The depositor is then paid, and the metal is banded over to the inciter and refiner, to be en tirely freed from its impurities aud made fit for coinage. And a hard time it has of it. to be sure. Xothiug but pure gold aud silver could ever stand such treatineut. It is melted again, dissolved iu nitric acid, squeezed under I mi nse pressure, baked Iu a hot eellar, and finally carried to this dingy-looking room, at the left of the court-yard, where we have stood all this time. The metal is perfectly pure now, but before the final melting one-tenth of it weight in copper is added to it to make it hard enough to bear the rough usage which it will meet with in travel lug about tbe world. ll)e room would h il,t i.i n... comfort. I wux dually reeoncf IchI. r -m fin. uiuiaiiv r - vs. vmj, tuciv aic limit T.. . - , - " , Wl-I them that w... not see. J&Xtf&b" "I don't understand you, Mrs. Mot- My husband had lotted much upon , "Mariar," wuz my remark, "this is .' , r ! my restauraut, and when he found its: !'.?. Tr'1- H?8." icuhus. "Well, my dear, I mean lust this. '',., J h , . Z . ' ,,l,t 1 "HVe kM,ru' t. looking to the You know vour husband Is a confirmed f ,be "B"'U ,H .t kin a girl do ? She is ,.,. . . , s coniirme.1 is cuw. But lie was not cross, as he an exiense from the time uv her birth nebr ate. ou know be is liableat any mwbfrM , 1,11 she gits oil your hands. I shudder time to be attacked by sprees, and when of him as formerly ' when I think wat that puny girl will he is in his cups your life, your chll- tr , M r'.i ..... i . .. 1 mI WBl We hev Got to 8 thru ., .... ' . . aud Jlrs. Motley relurnetl to their on its account " .oC... .uu your property are in constant 01Mra ,i,... ., . n '"oiiuinTa niiiuuir, alic ui I ll ers, so provoked with me for elingiug to my husband when it was plainly no benefit to either myself or children for me to do it, that I hail little hope of ever meeting them again. ij.it u ..... . l. "AW .le,.r f,ie.l .. ... i ' "ry iouo someining. ' . . . . . v . , i -i ii. pi tir-v- e iiou lor women unoer tlie law except j inrougu tlie divorce courts, aud vou jeopardy "Then what would you have me to do ?" "Protect yo-irself.'' "How ?" "I'uder the Itw." were out of money, Gerald was runk, and our room rent was over due. A K.. O.I. .1 i now an Knglisb woman nrefers ileuih .... ' oi excitement In California about the donation land law that had recently to divorce. "We are all governed a great deal more by prejudice than common sense," said my friend, reflectively. I "Mrs. Motley, would you advixr mr to Icarc my Ausfranrf" The supreme loftin-s with which I asked the question provoked a laugh in j response. I "Of cour-e not," she ssid, earnestly. "Women are made to be beaten and robbed and trampled under foot bv And in a bitter mood I sot down with my head in my bands, like one whose fuciier is gloomy. lp spoke Mariar once more : "My dear, Imogene will grow up Into a flue woman, and wheu she is I went v lour " "Why not seventeen ?" "Seventeen be it. When she is even teen she will marry a rich old man. Yoo kin do better out uv a aou-in-law than yoo kill out uv a son, for the son-in-law will be in love with the girl, and a man in love kin be made to do any thing. For your sake, deer, I hone ail been passed for tbe Territory of Oregon, ' our children will be girls." money, but for the Insurmountable faet that lie lied none awl never did. He wanted to return to tho arentle roof, but I indlgiiantlv refused. Joolius got lo he a mechanic, but he ueu ins own family lo support, ami Ah nor laueu me io scorn wlien 1 came upon mm, Insistin that he wood do as much for me as I had ever did for him. S.imyool, from whom I did expect siithiu, flouted and jeered at me, and wheu I insisted and talked of pureiitle authority and sieh, absolutely threat ened me with a brick. Meliudy, my fifth, got to he a mil liner aud never married. Ez a lust re sort, I proposed to live with lfir and take charge of her blzlness, as I had a large exjierlenee. "Kxcuse me," wuz her hartlls re mark. "I ain't mo." Aud so I wuz cast oil" from all of em. The memrv uv their mother Hz im like a wall between them ami me, and them ex shood have cared for me ez she did. And so on down. They showed great alacrity in gittln away from me, and an ureaK away: mere would-be no over- "ery glow of the furtuuv. u-binh 1,.. coming of the freedom of tbe will, to;,,n end of the plane. Ou these area wander off or to stay by the -Shepherd number of small pots, filled with red even iu tbe treen nastures ami bv the I hot liuuid metnl- ami utii ,.. i,i. still waters of God. It was a most na- I workman lifts one after anntl.or ini .. thetic and touching little struggle of P'r of long tongs aud iours the gold two to one. Still, Whittier stood when lu streams into narrow iron moulds we had done where he was wlien we lw. We would rliu- i .'. gan, unspeakably solemn and teuder, ' ' at tbe glowing fires aud the wishing, I thooght, he could see what , swarthy figures of the workmeu but seemed so sure to ns, but neither able our guide is already half-way across the nor willing to disturb the solid aud and we reluctantly follow, slen- strong convictions of a lifetime aud of P"K aside to make room for a workman such a life. , with his burden of Silver lura urliiAk !.. Then he said cheerfully to me: "I j is carrying to undergo the rot Hug pro hear thee is lecturing this winter on The rollers give the metal the Burns. I should like to hear the form of ribbons, from w hi.lt ni.nil.... Bums is to me the noblest poet of our race. He waa the first poet I read, and he will be the last. Our people did not care for poetry," he said, "wbeu I was a boy. We had iu our house an Amer ican reader, quite popular at that time, in which I found some pieces of tbe old school of singers; and, beside that, we had a poem called the 'Davidess, U hope I have struck the title) written by ti 'Friend,' and held in great esteem by our body. But somehow these did not seem to touch me. They were not what I wanted. Oue day one of our nreanli- ers came to stay all night, aud noticing, as we sat bv the fire thnt t -.. i...... . ou ii book, ne said :'I will rend lo thee, i P"0'1! "f, disadvantages that men have I 9 Sl.nn lit... . . ' I tlQtTSlP lla.i t n a.. ... a .1 r . a w ... machiue Hunches the nlannhet u-hi-i. are tbe coins be-fore they are milled aud stamped. .Sr. Nicholcu for May. WhyJJot? Thought, ambition, lanlniinn i..- ideality, veneration, and all the attri butes that go to make up the sum of hu man intelligence and human worth, are absolutely sexless. Genius U sexless. Many of the brightest lights iu liter ature and art jjf poetry, music, sculp ture, painting are women. It hus beeu thus all along down the line of human history; and that even under a multl- ir lliee like, some poems by Bobert Burns. I have a conv with me Sn ii got, tne booK and began to read. It was never nau to contend with. Unlil lately ..... .-w-uituuuies lor nigiier culture have been clo, to her. Sbe has had " the first I had heard of Bums, and my I tot"'KK'eagaiust prejudice, oppression. fhat I heard I B"" ",0ot eonleiuptible of all tyr- aud I conceived the idea of removing A" 1 rdereu. It wood not he rerrU WH' 1 ,,ev.er lhjln s ad thing to hev a rich son-in-law, to I account for. In speekln uv the i Willi you coon go aiiii iKirrer teti ilol- I . " " " proioose in re- ve.ni me tuerary oi ineir motlier. wich didn't need it, but they didn't reveer jiy uusuaiiu seemeu io nave uo care 1 lars every time you needed it, Wat for the present or the future, aud the "on-ln-lsw in this Christ In land wood management of the enterprise devolved ''!'''" '"'"M-ln-law, the awtbor of his wholly upon me ! T1'" " ,brfu',8 nr lor the lack of a wnoiiy upon me. few paltry dollars? And besides, if he Thanks to Judge Downy, I was not : didn't like it and saw any chance uv without influential friends, aud I was I olJ man's drinkiu' hisself to death, able to secure a Jiositioii for my husband 1 be "f"1 h",D '"at eonclushen. Wat as commander of sbm.l.l I,. glorious deth ! I aceepte.1 tbe dawter. drunkards, Whv should thev com- . . , , . " anu oore .Marlar' s increest labors lo per- " ve eraoarkl tor Portland, where we vide for it with resignashun. r ' 1 landed, after a rough voyage, on a raw ! -"i I narrate how oue follered This sarcasm was a revelation more j aod foKy xoveraber day. QrnH bad ,er .,M PW ocioti1 how the potent to me than any other method of ' Wn ?lr . , . . number Increest till there wuz ten uv re..,...i i i . . .. ..... r I teea sober "uri'K l"e journey, and had nlem, aud how eairerlv I look..) r.. i "Well, little woman. I more thau half ... ,i... ;.;..,. , I olrect1 b very liberal wages to be to the tmie when I shood rest from Mu- believe you'll get well ail the more ' r i .d flii i i ' pall over to me. But for this timely "d sit dowr, umler Ihelr relief I do not know what would have ",,u "V . elyoy ,,re7 . ....... 11 wuz a terrible strain on 'Mariar become of us, for he fell again Into his and I sympathized with her. Tt.i .. .ill 1 was determined to cleave to Gerald, and MuicHiy irnra Knowing all about it, but the doctor's order is imperative, you know. He said we must mil t,IL- .. .. . I J nor let you ask questions And Mrs. Motley looked so exceed ingly wise,, mysterious, and discreet that I saw I was gaiuing my poiut. "Aod you won't tell him if I tell vou al! ?" "Of course I won't." "lhen, my dear, to begin at the be ginning, do you remember anything about Klder Chalmers?" "Rcmrmber O, Mrs. Mot ley 1 Can I cease to remember the faet that I so loathed bim tlmt I cursed my dear In nocent baby Gerald with his looks and mauuers? And can I forget that Ger ald, my husband, made the poorehiid a hopeless cripple io his drunken rage, because he could not bear to see tbe striking resemblance to Chalmers, for which he alone waa to blame?" "Tbere, little woman; I feared to talk to you, lest you'd get excited, just as the "Tell me more atmut the trial, Mrs. Motley. What did my dream have to do with acquitting my husband ?" "In your delirium you seemed to be always talking with tbe woman of whose murder be was accused, and you were so positive that she was not dead, but a living accomplice and companion of tbe hypocritical ex-Elder, that my husband was constrained to thoroughly investigate the matter, ami he proved that yoo were right." "Bat I have been certain all aloog that the creature was dead." "Yes, you have thought so in your normal senses, but in your delirium you have teen differently." "Absurd !" "I know it seems absurd, but the fact remains, nevertheless, that you so plainly explained all the minutiae of tbe plot laid to entrap your husband and wreeu the guiltier parties, that Judge cups before we had beeu ashore an hour. ' dren cost money ez well ex labor. I left him In charge of the obliging C'liureu cost me ez follows: landlord of a primitive hotel lu the very primitive eily, ami with my children aeeompauied a jmrty of land-hunters up the Willamette to a point above Oregon City, and from thence with teams across the country to a level ex pause of wood and prairie land, where I decided that our future home should be. I should like to tell tlie reader exictly where he may find that old donation claim long since the property of my Them lVianl uv rny motber-ln-law three weeks. lor eacu... ajg of, Mtillklr attendance, each NootliliT isyruiw, rarmlnntlve balsams! I'liiiilorsnd Klcli.eaen, .10 00 f nuiiii mr i-DHU st'inir u Iw-hiIh for child . uv wife's si-rriivs lor three works 'loi Ii iii.whoolin and medikle attendance I c. ui-o.tlll ihry cood liro-se lot Jen oo 3 UK 111 to UU tticinielves, each.. Or, say in round mimtutru sann ni. Multiply this by ten, aud you hev the comfortable sum of S,000. wich these addishuns to the census subtracted frum Mariar's earnings, wich win Inst n.. legal protector's creditors hut I do not i amount taken frum tne. But ez it wuz want my identity to be tooanoarent. for I S".",'", "n.'J 'iex.eT. i'"1 r murmured. famllv reasons. Mv children are overi-if ..V.. ,ii. 1 lo - - i " " " 1 it I M VV . r Mllil ii-i 1 1 sensitive about our early misfortunes j wl" distinkshen and fees. That dis and their father's infirmity, and I will i tinkshen I will share and the fees like spare their feeling, so much as my duty I JrlnU;iS,:.iribjl to the public will admit, so I will not stay." Sammy I destined for the minis be too explicit, as to my real name or ,r' Tom for baukin, and the others, erewhile whereabouts. !" t,,e Rlrl in the cradle. I had ar- t... . i I...... , ,i ,.,.,,., ranged in my mind's eye so ez to make ynn 1 i iiicit: isle: iiuikii ttvj 3 v wiiri loiiatiuu tlJr-HM ItJCUQI u... .rtlld Pn ' Lh? r""1.lt " ,l'.t,be i ela,,,,s 0f'n 80 n,OKi oun ,hat I K I over tbem children I felt ou iu wnole scheme. Kl.Ier . . . . 1 .i..i, i ..i i ... .i .... , wueu i nave oescnoeu one you may i iobiu e an in vest- know all about the rest; ami which par- mf"'. ''tter than life Inshoorauce or , , , , . i ' savings banks. Theluvuvaehitd for Its ticular oue belonged to us is no matter, j p!kT, , more uin than bank or life To be continued. ; lusliiHirauce. They may break, but na- cher can't be wipeil out uohow, and Is certain to endoor. And iu most states You are a onward if afraid to tell the there is a law cointellln uiiltdren to truth when you should do so. You are I take keer uv their jiarents, whether they a coward when you insult the weak. I want to or not. iu are a coward if alrald to do right, if j An 1 so, communln with myself, I let 1, wny was constrained lo give heed to di-ctorsaid von would." And Mrs. Motley placed her band ! C , jT ' ! fWh'e 8Cheme- EWr playfully over my mouth with wltam,u'UB "sh-e-e e." after the fashion of school ! u , d",""" "e children in their glee. .4d a sTp ,h e cu i ui . , . raisea a stop tniel cry through the i- Isubdued my rising temper with ade-. )lCe,odivert public attention fro.uhtnT termined effort, and soil led faintly. self." r'u '"m" "What of Klder Chalmers?" I asked, "But you don't mean to say that t. as patiently a- I could school myself to i bei Martinez was Infatuated with that speak. old reprobate?" I said, incredulously. "i iir Vfimiii h. . ieri.... i . . i . . j ........ . , - x..r.c I, .WUu..oS ,r tasie, ; .mm maintaining that which you as she ch.e to. I found myself lookin his rnend and ally, and it was proved little woman. It is not more wonderful know to be just and good; and you are with soli.,sjtood on them ofl'-prings, aud during the progress of the trial, and in- than that you should be so deeply in- Ttes otv """fl'1 lf i"11 know certain I saw to it that they wuz kept iu good directly through your dreams and rav-1 fatuated with Gerald Grey that you ! theol to yMrer "e Uot 10 own condishen and not XkhI to any dis- ' J J ,iuWJuraii. i ease that wux likely to prove fatle. My you shrink from defending your opiu- Mariar work for them children as muoli me, wich did need it, a particle. Then i reauzeu : " "w snrper than a aerpent's tootb It It Jo Ucv a tlianklis ohlld." My children are most all of em in good circumstances, ami their children are well clad and well cared for. I am a lonely old man, deiendiu for a sub sistence ou mv borrow! among strangers, a precarious aud dan gerous method uv livln. My invest ment didn't pay. The $8,000 that them children cost my various wives wood, eflhed it now, give me a decent in kuui, aud enable me to live in compar ative comfort. It wuz the mistake uv my life, and I am too old to. begin agin. Aud so life is to tne a weary dreem, and my fucher is overcast with leaden clouds through which I see no rift. May heaven forgive my wives and my uuuacnerai ouspring. Thk Stewart Woman's Hotel a Failukk. The Stewart Hotel for wom en in New York City is no longer to be kept open for the exclusive benefit of ladies who earn their own living, as was inieuueu ny us loumier. After two mouths' experience it has proved a fail ure, the class of ladies for whom it was erected not rescinding in sufficient numbers to warrant its continuance. The building is, therefore, to be changed into a general hotel for all comers, and alterations are now beiug made for thut puriose. The building was commenced by Mr. Stewart iu 1868, and took nine years to construct. Iu his will ample provision was made for its furnishing uud running excuses, until It should either succeed or fail. It cost to build, finish, aud furnish, $3,700,000. There were accommodations for 1,000 women. The exfienses are very heavy, gas cost ing $9,000 jier year, water $2,000, and taxes $,000, besides the enormous pay roll of the army of employes necessary for so large a structure. Exclusive of the above expenses, the hotel has cost, since its opening, $500 per day more than the receipts from boarders, and Judge Hilton, manager of the Stewart estate, is unwilling to continue the ex periment longer. As soon as the neces sary changes can be made, It will be opened to the general public A Sunday .school bov. li twin hat tin asked what made tlie tower of Pisa lean, replied, "Because of the famine In the land." A lawyer is to bo hanged In Texas. Good beglnniug. Go ou. wonder and delight over what are as fresh still as if it were vminnkv I had heard nothing up to that mo- kibiii, ii seemed lo me, that had any right to he ealled poetry, and I listened as long as the old man would read. I noticed he left the tmok on tbe table, so I rose at gray dawn next morning and read for myself. I was hanging over the book when the friend came down, ami then he told ine he was go ing further to visit such and such meet ings, would be back al such a time, and if I liked, would leave the book with me. Thee may be sure I gratefully ac cepted his oiler. I read Burns every monieut 1 had In spare; and this was one great result to me of my communion with him : I found that the things out of which piems came were not, as I hid always imagined, somewhere away oft In a world lying outside I lie edge of our Xew HaiMiehire sky. They were right there about my feet and among the peo ple I knew. The common things of our common llfiM found were full of poetry. It was a new and a perfect revelatiou." He told me also what such a man only can say In good faith, that he could not understand wbat the critics mean when they say there are things in Burns not fit to be read, things impure and vile, tbe spume of a fallen spirit. "I never found such things," he said. "I read all Burns, every hue of him, and while there is a difference, of course, to me every Hue is good." I know Whittier could not have thought, as he told ine this, that Paul said mice: "To tbe pure all things are pure;" and how purely true his commentary on Burns was the great old text I The Lnkatide Monthly. The most jierilous hour of a person's life is when he is tempted to despond. The man who loses his courage loses all. There Is no more hope of him than there is of a dead man; but it matters uot how poor he may lie, how much pushed by eireuiDstauees, how much deserteii by friends, how much lost to the world, if he only has courage, holds up his bead, works on with his hands, and, in his unconquerable will, determines to be aud do what becomes a man, all will be well. It is nothing outside of him that kills, but what is within, that makos or uumukes. Goodness is goodness, rind it where we may. A vineyard exi-ts for the t.ur liose of nurturing vines, but he would he a strange vine-dresser who denied the reality of grapes because they had ripened under u Ie pbiiI,.i .. yoiid the preclude of hs vineyard. The gods hel fl tflfkain trim l.A1 al selves-men or women. ' lUem" "Winding up buslnea3"-atartlns the clock. auuy, fashion. Man. In his n.n.r strength, in offering her his protection has feil her vanity with his seuseless flattery, until it is a wonder there is a self-poised, true womanly woman in all the world. Society, with its false lights and saaeu reefs, has lured to intellect ual rain thousands of noble women. Iu stead of the companion, Jrtner, and friend of mail, strong in that intellectu ality which is able lo counsel and sun h.ii, she has been made his brainless toy-hw silly botlerfly, all wiugs and gaudy tinsel. But, thauks to the spirit of tbe age, woman is coming forward to take her juace siue iy skis with her brother man lu tlie intellectual struggles of rife The old fogy notion that political, educa tional, or social rights should depend upon the nature of the sex, is coming by our best thinkers to be regarded us no more rational than that such rights should depeud upon the color or the bair, or the weight of the person. These thoughts are suggested by see ing the names of women enrolled among the membership of the Bute Medical Jsoclety that closed its session lu this city Thnnsday. And why not? Who so well qualified to minister to the sick, and especially to tbe sick of her own sex, as the educated woman physician ? A few years ago a womau lrlicil iug iu the deliberations of a society of doctors would have seemed strangely out or place. Tbe doctors themselves would have looked upon the innovation with horror, aud lied in dismay from the hall. Now no one is disturbed at the thought. Men aud women now quaff from the same fountainsot knowl edge, and no oue is shocked. And why should they be? If a woman has the brains to master any science if she thinks she can practice the profession of medicine, law, or divinity, why in the name of all that is juit should she not have a chance to try it ? If she can edit a newspaper, or uiuuuge a farm, or run a thrashing machine, we say give her show sjto,, underestimating ,er ability to do whatever she chooses to do, or thiuks she can do. Aud above all s op speaking of her as tbe weaker , and inferior vesel. S'a Jote Mercury. Cruelty is the offspring of mental idle ness and beastly ignorance. It should he repressed, and not eueouraged, a8 is too often the case with the unthinking. A liner who. takes property from an other has It iu his power, should he re !eut, to make a full restoration. But the robber or life can never give back what he has wantonly aud sacrilegiously taken from beiugs perhaps innocent, and equally capable of enjoying pleas ure or sollerlng tort ore with himself. Every euoh death its own aveoger breeds. Show may be easily purchased, but happiness Is always a home-made ar ticle. ' A. celebrated oasf tho printer'a.