Walter Scott's Sundays. As usual from Lockhart's farrage we cannot find out a single thing we want to know whether Scott worked, after his week-day custom, on the Sunday morn ing. But, I gather not; at all' events, his cattle and his household rested (L. iii. 108) . I imagine he walked out into his woods or read quietly in his study. Immediately after breakfast, whoever was in the house, "L'adies and gentlemen, I shall road irayers at 11, when I expect you all to attend" (vii. 30G). Questions of college and other externally unanimous prayers settled for us very briefly: "If you have no faith, have at least manners."' He read the Church of England service, lessons aud all, the latter, if interesting, eloquently ! (lOid). Alter the service, one of Jeremy j lay lor s sermon s (vi lUb). Alter ser mon, if the weather was lino, walk with his family, dogs included, aud guests to cold picnic (iii. 100), followed by short extempore Biblical novelettes; for he had his Bible, the Old Testament espec ially, by heart, it having been his moth erslast gift to him (vi. 174). These lessons to his children in Bible history were always given, whether there -was a picnic or not. For the rest of the afternoon he took his ilk KM. pleasure in the woods with Tom Purdie, who also always appeared at his : master s elbow on Sunday after dinner was over and drank long life to the laird and his lady and all the good company, in a quaigh of whisky or a tumbler of wine, according to his fancy (vi. 195.) Whatever might happen o" the other eveniags of the week, Scott always dined at home on Sunday; and with old friends, never, unless inevitably, receiving any person with whom he stood on ceremony (v. 335.) He came into the room rub bing his hands like a boy arriving at home for the holidays, his Peppers and 'Mustards gamboling about him, "and oven the stately Maid a grinning and wagging his tail with sympathy." For the Esquebaugh of the less honored week days, at the Sunday board he circulated the champagne briskly during dinner, and considered a pint of clareteach man's share afterward (v. 330.) In the even ing, music being to the Scottish mind indecorous, he read aloud some favorite author, for the amusement or edification of his little circle. Shakes peare it might be, or Dryden, Johnson or Joanna Bailiie, Crabbe, or Words worth. But in those days "Byron was pouring out his spirit free and full, and if a new piece from his hand had appeared, it was sure to be read by Scott the Sunday evening afterwards; and that with such delighted emphasis as showed how completely the elder bard had kept up his enthusiasm for poetry at pitch of youth, and all his admiration for genius, free, pure, and unstained by the least drop of literary jealousy. With il imsiiv imjurinable va- rieties as chances in having Dandy Din- mor or Captain Brown for guests at Abbotsford, or Captain Maunering, Counselor Pleydell, and Dr. Ilobertson in Castle street, such was Scott's habit- ual Sabbath a day, we perceive, of eat- ing the fat, (dinner, presumably not liein&r a work of necessity and mArni. fl,rm nln ovpii f.linn. Saint BXiVA. w T vuwu "wv v.v j I f Trumbull, had thine! and lirmrbinfc in the manner of Mr. Southey's cataract of Le- ,lnrn"Here it comes, sparkling. A day bestrewn with coronations and sops vice embraces the principle oi iini uy nature ana uses mem lniemgenuy, hu is in wine, deep in libations to good hope economy ; and economy consists in almost omnipotent. Self-will is the es- and fond memory; a day of rest to beast, spending less than one earns, aud as sence of weakness and the father of the !,t,i m,Vft, tr man fas nlsoto sympathetic much less as is practicable, by throwing whole brood of infirmities. We have beasts that cannot y cludiner itself in 4liV4 Hi. V w mx-v j he mer rry.J and con- rphial hour of an orph delisht. signuymg peace on Tweedsiue, and trood will to men, there or tar away always excepting the Ironch and i Boney. John Buskin, in Century. Nineteenth A Miner's Daring. There are no braver men in the world flmn nmi bn fnniid amoucr the mines of the Comstock. Accustomed to face dau- "ers every day of their lives, they never shrink from the call ot duty. An m stance of personal bravery occurred re nMv nf. tlin Hnte A: ISorcross. wnicn is worthy of record as showing what men will An -nwl darn. The milllP column ?n flio Ttnrm burst, the flow of water JL - w -j li -is lisrmllv Dimmed at the Hale A: Norcross, a large portion of which comes from the well-known north drift on the 000(1 In vol nf fclm "Savage " and is vow lint was sent thiouirh con- fn. flm ( v s. shaft to be raised to the Sutro tunnel level. One An ti.to iirtu. nf wutov was nmisuallv I I 1 L I 1 111 1.1 1 A II WA. (..WB. "--' i strong The pumps labored assiduously - - , ., i to keep it down, Lmt labored in vain, Bailing tanks wore added, and still tho oopinnnlfitimi coll Id not be kont down, wu flio o. son shilinn at. that shaft was flivon fnriinilm-watei- information ,..,.o ennf fl.o "RnlP A- XnrcroKs of the I..... . fact, and a desire was expressed to know "I" " - t.lio o.anse of the increased flow. Hie necessity of an investigation thus be came imperative. RiiDermtendent Ueideshenner. not knowing what might have happened in that coulined locality to threaten the nf f.lio rmno nn tho nwor fovo. s. i not. wishiiir to send men where he 1L111 ("---n - semi men wnore ne was ,,n,vi lin.r tn an nmsn f. snnfc for Foreman Kellogg, who was working on flm broken imnip column, informed him H 11 1 . . . . - - o 1 of the situation oi anairs and asked him A - . . ' , . o cm with himseii ami see wnat was wronc. Mr. Kellogg would not allow Mr. Deidesheimer to incur the risks of the exploration and set about preparing tn rrn alcne. He saturated a woolen shirt with ice-water and bound it on ana over his head, leaving but a single eye that if he did not return in fifteen min- un timn n it o oolii mi 11 us. 5n nr.n .iu imc chii i.iihl meic is hod fUnenvAnnrerl entered the drift, leav- Ano mprnliantof the thirty in that town tell." ri.1. CJriv.onrtnndnnt, ft rcnuest wlin wnnl1 nnt. vote nPuillSt the liciUOr "You'd trier AVlbll VL1V KJ 1' " J. I " O , 1 utes the drift should be closed behind him to be opened no more. This could well be done, as the Savage had bulk headed that level, the air had been shut out and the workings there practically abandoned. After enduring that terrible heat for twelve minutes Mr. Kellogg came back and reported nothing amiss. The extra water was but an unusually lartre intermittent, flow from the old north drift in Savage. When stripped of his mufllings Mr. Kellogg found that in some way one of his hands had be come bared while he was in the drift, and the back of it had been burned to a solid blister by the dry, hot air to which he had been exposed. Water boils on the Comstock in 10S degrees, and he had sustained for twelve minutes a tempera- .,.,, miiv in (Wrees below that of boil- jn,r Wttfcer and sutlicient to have roasted him in a very short time. Advice to Young Ulen. To Hon. William E. Dodge, in his re cent lecture on "Old New York," or "New York as it was Fifty Years Ago," when he was a young man of twenty-live years, gave thefollowing financial advice to young men: " A.11 voung men should aim to save something; even at the expense of a lira.- lted wardrobe, and many nine tilings they thmfc necessary. i mere were none t i. ...... It I II'AII II Lt IT T-ri- I UlU yiJIUlU IIIUI nun;, x iwuiu sin frnm M, first, voar when I entered a store ...ii i f aw.. vnnv when as a salesman. I received verv large pay for those days, I never failed to save apart, aud when 1 started in business, those savings and my experi- ence were an my capital. ... .. I The advance here given, illustrated by such an excellent example, is worm us ,,f ; pi frt ,J wi,n ri,n. tices upon it. Almost every one who is in working condition can make his ex- pensos less than his income. If the lat- terbe small, he can cut down the lormer suusiu!meBiuaii Buipuo "j"1"' II, on tne oiuer iianfi, nis inhume uu lurrrA lw fmi i5i.lfA n. hlV'TR RflVlllO". with- :f:.,ce . iu lononf appearances. What he thus saves by not expending it, is his camtal; and if he .i t " 1 1 j.i. saves sometmnir eacn vear. men wiui each year his capital increases. This course, pursued for thirty or forty years will make any man moderate y rich and some men very rich, unless the mishaps of business shall sweep awav the accu- m illation. i One ditlicultv with many young men in the outset of life is, they do not un derstand the art of practical economy. They spend too much in the little foolish and uimeccv.sary ways, and sometimes m douotnu, n iiol immoral wayt. xnvy wasto their earnings, and live faster and better than they can afford to live. They keep themselves poor forever, unless they are radically changed. They refuse to forego present pleasure in order to secure a much Greater future good. The result is that, no matter how long they live or how much they receive, they con- sume all they earn, and as to any accu- initiation by saving, end each year just where they began it. The moment their working power ceases, then by sickness or age, they oecome oujeets oi cuaruy. They have nothing to fall back upon for their own support, or that of those who X a. are dependent upon them. The advice of Mr. Dodiie. reduced to practice, would give to life a very differ- ent show in the way ot results. ne au- overheard imaginary wants and supply- ing only those that are real. If one is poor, which is the condition in which most persons must start life, then so much the greater the reason why he should start with the saving principle in the very outset. By saving ho will learn how to save. It will become his habit to do so, and, under ordinary cir- rmmhinpn5 Tip ivill nnrMiimi late enough in a series of vears to make himself com- fortable, needing no man s charity to smmlv a sincle want. We advise all men to act upon this excellent theory A Drunken Plan's Safely. A man sent out to repair tr ocrr aph wires on the 17th began by getting drunk, He had on his climbing hooks, and point near the crossing of the Boston and Albany Kail way and Columbia Avenue, he forthwith shinned up a telegraph- pole. From this perch he beheld the siirht. and crettinsr both less over one of the cross-bars aud both arms around the nole he fell asleep, meditating very II A 7i t . ii. r .1 l .1 - .1 1... liKeiy, upon iuu lurwuru sumw mmiu ui our cuy wuuui mu imu ucutuij. While thus reclining To leet irom tne ground, he was espied by a kind-hearted individual, who pointed out the perilous situation of the man to a police sargent . .. -r . - 1 ,1 l of the Jjittn division, remariiing tnat I . . . . 1 -I nf t.hn sariront must get mm down, or he would fall and kill himself. ;How am I to get up there ?" asks the sargent. "Can't say," replies the kind-hearted man: ''but something ought to be done, "The feller haiut in no danger," breaks in a man with a red nose and a squeak ; liic vninn who has iust come up and taken 1 . , . -m -w w . i taiteu i uxuiuti .Ttiiv-iuii.s ovmni. .i man on tne po;e. v uy ibii t uu: i i t h i i ...- i. j -. .. ,. . , sharply demands the "Don't you see," r voice, "the feller's up there so tight he can't fall, nohow. There appears to be one town where absolute prohibition of liquor selling has succeeded. It is Carrolhon, Ga., where prohibition went into lorce live years ago fcince men tuu joimu.h mmo -ji mu place has increased irom ozuu.umu to i traflic on purely business principles. l . . I l t i il - 1 1 I : l 1 l . - . I .... 1 .1 L I.. I The Educational Failure. Mr. Richard Grant White contin i. . ii ues his reasoning against, tne present public school system, and with the skill which usually tittends him in argument. It has been ioiiir dawning on the minds of our thoughtful men that the American educational system is 'not precisely what it is claimed to uc. aw. wnue aw. v shows how and why this is, and we cannot add anything or appreciable value in that direction. iut we would like to sav, what wc have thought lor a rood many years, and said at intervals, editorially and pel serially, that we attribute the most of the evils under which this people sutler political, social, moral, and intellectual to the incompetence of i I ... ..! . I. our educational sysiem. uu mis, first, because the system inculcates only platitudes and truisms instead of principles and laws. And, second. because its tendency is ievelinj in stead of elevating training minds to the suppression and sacrifice ot in dividuality, and only to the ad vau tairo iin(j advancement ot qualities ivl.i(..i. ,m, rftnel.jc ftll(j not sec he 1 , ,w, '"S .ou,., instead ot analysis, causation in I'U reasoning, lo tins tendency is to be attributed tho fact that we have, as H product of this system, actually no first-class men or women in anv walks.in life: that our ,r, ,0. m:n h..ff ,inno a-nvk- . 4 , . a .. . , , under the influence ot special educa ttun -tuu smm ".n ji puonc scnooi sysiem, auu wnicu con sistcd in affording the student the tools by means of which he was to if am uis caucalion. and leavinir ine to the venerations now passing away ma - our political puune aunuui aya- tern produces proiessionai poimciaua . . i l' i i -. : 1 insicau oi noiincai econoiniaLb, evaders and la w-brcaUes instead of l.nV-makers. copyists instead of oriiri- , ,hinkoI.. As to all of this we . . . oiutu i it j iiiui j 'v Mt r w.v vw- and shall be quite ready with the proofs. In the mean tunc, wo are irlad to see such innovations as the Quincy (Mass.) new school system, the improvement in boston and in Philadelphia, and the wise icono- clasm by which Mr. Jiichard Grant White is preparing the scene for a manifest change in the scheme ot education and in the characters and es tab- which are to introduce lish it. Bra. Human Power and Progress. The Greeks taught their children music that thev might learn obedience to the laws, for all music is the subjugation of sounds to fixed laws. Man's self-will makes discord. Modern civilization seizes the same idea and illustrates the thought that there is no such thing as human power aside from obedience to law. Man in himself is weak, but when he falls into sympathy with the laws of made great progress in the development of the country, because we have studied and used the laws ot nature. All our in ventions are simple applications of nat ural principles, for no man ever created a principle or a force. Two classes of men have been chiefly instrumental in this stupendous work. The hard stu- dent of principles, without a grain ol "practical sense, lias discovered the principles upon which nature worKs, and "tho practical man has applied these principles to practical uses. Hence our wonderful material progress. And the question arises, How far can we go in the direction of development? Is there any limit to human progress? We answer that the scope of future triumphs will b larger thr u that of the past. It will be so because the laws ot nature are all comprehensive, and no one can for a moment believe that we have exhausted the forces of nature. In fact, we nave only entered upon wie outer i T 1 1 il. - confines of the era of development, be cause we have only begun to discern the elementary principles that lio at the basis of natural law. Our future success, however, will de pend upon our ability to stimulate the student element. The practical man froflini't! nnd nninve li ii rown.rils n.4 hfi L'OfiS along, aud he needs no special eucour agement. But the student of laws and I . . - 1 1 principles receives lew nonors ana less emolument. 11 we discourage tue au- I . r - T 1 1 .1. sorbed student, we paralyze the germin ative powers of progress, Without the student, the practical man, who ap- plies knowledge, cannot exist. Hence the necessity of nourishing our higher institutions of learning, for in them we oronfp. cavofnl students of the laws of i r i . niimic. jluu ihhtaoi. o - progress. X'racucai men must realize Kiuu-neariea man this truth and ricniy enuow proicssur eturns the sciueakv sln'ns and scholarships. In this way I . . . . - -t f alone can we make provision for the illimitable progress of the future, that must be the joiut work of the student and the practical man. fS. F. Post. o No Judge of "Watermelon. "I say, Parker, can you tell the difference between a ripe watermelon and a decayed head of cabbage?" "Uive it up: cant Brown laughed softly, as ne said, be a nice man to send to buy a watermelon, you would." Innocent Childhood. Childhood is the glad springtime of life. It is there that the i eeds of future greatness or startling mediocrity are sown. If a boy has marked out a glowing future as an intellectual giant, it is dur ing these early years of his growth that he gets some pine knots to burn in the evening, whereby he can read Herbert Spencer and the Greek grammar, so that a hen he is in good society ho can say things that nobody can understand. This gives him an air of mysterious greatness which soaks into those with whom he comes in contact and makes them re spectful and unhappy while in his pres ence. Boys who intend to be railroad men should early begin to look about them for some desirable method of expunging two or three fingers and one thumb. Most boys can do this without ditliculty. Trying to pitch a card out of a job press when it is in operation is a good way. Most job presses feel gloomy and un happy until they have eaten the fingers off two or three boys. Then they go on with their work cheerfully and even hilariously. Boys who intend to lead an irreproach able life and be foremost in every good word and work, should take unusual precautions to secure perfect health and longevity. Good boys never know when they are safe. Statistics show that the ratio of good boys who die, compared to bad ones, is simply appalling. There are only thirty-nine good boys left as we go to press, and they are not feeling very well themselves. The bad ones are all alive and very active. The boy who stole my coal shovel last spring and went out into the graveyard and dug into a grave to rind Easter eggs, is the picture of health. He ought to live a long time yet, for he is in very poor shape to be ushered in before the bar of judgment. When I was a child I was different from other boys in many respects. I was always looking about to see what good I could do. I am that way yet. If my little brother wanted to go in swimming contrary to orders, I was not strong enough to prevent him, but I would go in with him ami save him from a watery grave. I went in the water thousands of times that way and as a re sult he is alive to-day. But he is ungrateful. He hardly ever mentions it now, but he remembers the gordian knots that I tied in his shirts. He speaks of them frequently. This shows the ingratitude and natural de pravity of the human heart. Ah, what recompense have wealth and position for the unalloyed joys of child hood, and how gladly to day, as Iit in the midst of my Oriental splendor and castle magnificence, and thoughtfully run my fingers through my infrequent bangs, would I give it all, wealth, posi tion and fame, for one balmy, breezy day gathered from the mellow haze of the long ago, when I stood full knee deep in tho lukewarm pool near my suburban home in the quiet deil, and ai- lowed the yielding and smoothing mud, meek-eyed pollywogs to squirt up be tween my dimpled toes. Denver Trib une. The Bruuineid Case. The Kansas Citv JowhhI of Septem ber 30th, mentions a suit pending in the Circuit Court of Jackson county, Mo., which, a it is of interest to many readers of this coast, we reproduce as follows: "A petition was filed in the Circuit Clerk's oilice on the 27th of September by Nancy M. Brum field against bamuel Lewis Wolf, in which she pravs that the title of the Briunfield homestead be di- vested from said Wolf and vested in her. The plaintiff charges in her petition that tne property was tne nome oi ueiben uuu former husband long before his DKSEirriOS AND SUBSEQUENT XrURDER In Washington Territory. That on or about the first day of August last, when Brumfield was making secret prepara tions to leave her and decamp with his daughter-in-law, he obtained by fraud n. ml fiilsn Drntenses. her signature to a deed conveying this property to the de fondant. Samuel Lewis Wolf. But the plaintiff further avers that no considera tion was paid or ever has been paid by tho defendant for this property. That the deed to him was fraudulent, and made with the understanding that he was to reconvev the prop erty to Jrumneid m peroi uuu l-v IT .- .1 thus defraud Her ot ner ngnts. That ho was only holding the property in trust ior xrumncMi a auuuuii mu oniy preveuicu mm iium property back to Brumfield. The home stead is valued at $b000, and lies east of Kansas City on the Blue river. Iho suit will come up at the next term of the Circuit Court. The remarkable story of the infatuation wiiich Samuel Brumfield, a rich farmer, conceived for the bride which his son brought home one day; the manner in which he had FALSE WAP.1IAXTS SWORN OUT And ostracised his son from fear of the law; thou quietly disposed of his prop erty and eloped with his daughter-in- law, is familiar to all the readers of the Journal. He was joined by his friends, Bud Thomas aud his wife, and subse quently the bodies of Brumfield and his mistress were found m Washington ler- litorv, and Bud Thomas and his wife came back here, and were soon after ar rested for the murder. The story is one of the most remarkable in the annals of crime." Thomas and his wife ptill lan guish in jail at Walla Walla, awaiting the tardy arrival of the day which will send them to the gallows for an awful crime, or give them back their long with hold liberty. The modest girl is not fast. It is not with the Maud .S. horse. SHORT BITS. M. Gambetta has an abnormal vplonment of the forehead over de file eyes. Everybody had a chance to see me. The conclave was a great success. N.T.G. Mr. Bon hit's celebrated watch and horse Barus can still outfoot anything in the world. Rye whiskey is said be to the favorite drink at Saratoga Saratoga is a great fire-watering-place. The sultan has so much fear of assassi nation that ho has the locks ot his doors chauged omv a week. Sitting Bull who is in a starving condi tion, wants Dr. Tanner tocome west and teach him how to fast. The bogus Mr. Bender, recently cap- tured in Kansas, is believed to be a dime-novel-writer iu disguise. Summer days are swlflly waning. Autumn duts are on the leaves; Never :aokle a green melon Rupert'. srntherlng golden sheaves. An article in a Sau Francico paper, describing M. Louis, says: ;,The city is well laid out." it is indeed by the late census. Prof. Mommsen has recovered his equanimity, and is going soon to Italy to renew hia copies of ancient Borne in scriptions. Ex-Go v. Bice, of Massachusetts, has ar-cepted the honorary chancellorship of Tuion college, and w'itl deliver the next commencement oration. A Boston paper says that the "Bev Murray is wildly anxioiw to pay his debts.'' He in wildly prevented by the want of money, probably. Jenn Lind, who left the stage in 1860, is still hale aud hearty. As Mme. Otto Goldsmith she is a worthy-looking and somewhat stout lady, with white hair. She will be 59 years old in Oc tober. Cam He irlammarion, the astronom er, has been making a balloon journey with his wife. They started from Paris, travelled all night, and came down near llheims. Thos. 11. Gould, the American sculptor living at Florence, has exhibited in Paris his bronze statue of Kamehameha, the first king ofthti Sandwich Islauds. It is described a3 a work of much merit which will liferally astonish the natives of Honolulu. Lawrence Barrett is trying to organize an actors' fund. Something of the kind is much needed. The ties of every rail road in the country are being worn out by "busted" theatrical companies. It was a Windham wife, who, when her husband was brought home intoxicated, thanked God ho was not a blood rela tion. It may seem paradoxical, but it is nevertheless true, that a man cannot smoke a cigar too short unless he smokes it too long. A contemporary tells how to utilize old fruit cans. Give a boy a string and a strange dog and he needs no further instructions. A man out "West was offered a plate of macaroni soup, but declined it, declaring that they 4conldn t play offanybiled pipe-stems on him." A young man on Main street says he is going to attempt the feat of going forty days without working. He says if his employers do not watch him he think he can accomplish the task. fBockland Courier, The Pope's new journal and organ, the Aurora, started at Rome Jan 1, 187U, has reached a circulation of o,CQ0, and ;s now considered firmly estab lished. I r h contributed to by personage in the Vat ican. French beans to be productive require a oed oi iainy ricn soil, aDoivc eigne inches deep. In planting put the seeds sjx inches apart, and as soon as they are two or three inches high take out every other plant. A circus manager wanted a new name for his show, and a sophomore collegian suggested "monohippic aggregation" as good, and the circus man had got three towns billed before he was informed that 'monohippic" meant 'one-horse." The best means of ridding houses of cockroaches, says the Scientific Ameri- can, are equal parts ot powdered oorax, Persian insect powder, and powdered colocynth, well mixed together, and thrown about such spots as are infested with them. This powder has been found an infallible remedy. Humok. All humor, in fact (in the nnSf . Wfi ftrA nw .nnsirWitirr u) mainly jepends upon a persistent tendency in the human race toward emp- tiness, purblindness and silliness qual- lties not xiecuiiar to any special class or persons, nut common, at certain times and in certain relations, to all. The humor consists in subjecting the fanta sies and figments of our vanity and dull1 ness to the sane light of simple good sense ; and the quality of the humor is determined by the manner in which this is done. In Irving's case it is a gentle and amiable xn'ocess ; we hear a subdued chuckle, and the swollen balloon ot our self-importance imperceptibly collapses. Swift, on the other hand, employed a far more stringent and violent methou, which it has become the custom to dis tinguish under the name of "satire ;" it is humor in a bad humor, but the essen tial principle is the same. Between these two extreme exponents the whole world ol humorous treatment lies. Mosthum- or lias the same yuuuim wujvol m abatement of folly ; and it is here that the main difference is to be found be tween humor and wit, the latter having no constant object in view, but only tho anomalous one of epigramraatically ex posing real or fancied incongruities. This distinction does not, of course, stand in the way of humor's being witty upon occasion.