I j A f. , -.--" ' ) f VOL. II. ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON, JUNE 16, 1882. NO. 45. - - - MBI A f . . THE COL . : . - - zzzr. zzz .. .. - Hi 0 ?'3 !-'. TILL DEATH US TART. BY P SAN STANLKY. These beautiful linos were first published af ter his death by the Siwtator, and were evi dently written after the death of his wife, Lady Augusta Stanley. "Till Death us part." So speak the heart; When each to each repeats the words of doom; Through blossins; and through curse, For better and for worse, "We will be one, till that drad hour shall come. Life, with its myriad grajw. Our earning souls shall claps. Iv ceaseless .love aud still expectant wonder; In bonos that shall endure, Indissoluble sure, Till God in death shall part our paths assunder. ''Till Death us join,"' O voice yet more divine! That t- the broken" heart breathes hope sublime Throu gh lonely hours, And shattered powers. We still are one, despite of change anil time Death, with his healing band, Shall once more knit the band Which needs but that one link which none may sever; Till, through the Only Good, Heard, felt, and understood, Our life in God shall make us one forever. WORSE THIN A UHOST. BY A. YOUXG. Tho winter of 1S2G-7 severe, even for tbat Jack Frost holds high was extremely country whre carnival. Nova Scotia. For six months there was a level white ness of dazzling splendor. JLhe in trusted snow became firm as ice, render iug roads unnecessary. Fences and shrubberies were things of tbe buried past, and offered no impediment to the flying sleighs. The graceful, verdure- clad, forest-tinned mountains, rising from either side of our beautiful valley, . could be likened to nothing under the sun but exaggerated sugar-loaves. But to me, it was a glorious, enchant- in. winter the first I had known of angels coming upon earth, and by their beauty andasweetness, turning it into a paradise; or, in other words, it was the first winter I had known love. The previous autumn our beloved pas tor, who had been a widower for many years, surprised his congregation and friends at large by bringing to the par sonage a .wife, the widow of a British officer, and a lady of great beauty and refinement. With her came a daughter fifteen 3 ears of age: but the child, as I -jtv?-e'dsrc?tl Jjt, b-rd not the slightest i terest for me. I had arrived at that stage of hobble- dehoyism when all feminines tinder the age of twentj-five were looked upon by me with the most supreme indifference; and, moreover, I had the satisfaction of considering myself irresistible to those whom I honored with my attention. I accordingly arrayed myself in "kill ing" attire, and sauntered forth, one frosty night, bent on conquering the new wife. I came away from the minister's house forever conquered by the "new wife's" daughter,. Lilian. Wheshe entered the parlor, where! was chatting pleasantly with the mother, I started to my feet with astonishment for the slip of a girl, whom Iliad thought too insignificant for my notice, was more lovely than I had dreamed mortal could be. She was quite tall, and, in spite of her tender years, her form was moulded in perfect symmetry, and every motion was grace itself. At the first glance I could distinguish nothing clearly; there seemed to rise be fore me a brilliant combination of white, pink and gold; but as she drew near, I was spell-bound by her wonderful eyes. Were they brown or blue, I could not tell. I could onlythink of the soft vel vet of the pansy, and wonder at their glory. ' , " That night opened to me a new phase of existence, and I walked homeward under the twinkling stars, dreaming strange dreams of wild impossibilities, woven thick with golden tresses and soft velvet eyes. The Christmas of that year brought with it unusual festivities. My mother gave a party, and invited every one far and near. ' The old, gray, weather stained walls grew young again with the sweet laughter of children. The tables fairly groaned under their load of delicacies,andjwere partaken of by numerous guests with true the zest that a. clear conscience and good appetite al ways give. The evening was devoted to games and dancing, in which both old and young joined, heartily forgetful of the past hours, until some of the more hteady-going ones were horrified to find themselves out of bed after 12 o'clpek a dissipation they had not ben guilty of for years. Then came a hasty gathering of wraps and heating of bricks and they were gone. After hearing the last sleigh bell die away in the distance, I entered the house, and was made sujureniely happy by finding that Lillian and a yonng friend were to remain with ns for a few days. The clouds had been threatening dur ing the day, and as night closed in, there came with it a solemn stillness, and the air was soft and stilling with un f alien snow. Before morning it com menced falling gently and with no ap pearance of violence at first; but gradu ally the wind rose to a furious gale, and the air was dense with whirling, hissing snow. The sky closed down upon the earth like a huge pall, and the black ness of death lay upon the valley. For seven days and nights the storm raged with unabated fury. The doors and windows were blockaded by the drifting snow, and an arctic night reigned throughout that long-to be-remembered week. To this day, children gather around the old men and women, and listen with wondering eyes to the story of "The Snow Storm." How the bright, promis ing lad, "the flower of the family, by long odds," perished at his own door; that he was supposed to be safe with friends until his body was found while digging a path to the barn; how many of the cattle died from thirst, while others were wounded unto death by the horns of their companions, who, driven to madne s, broke loose from their stanch ions, and so on. Tae stories are legion that had their birth in that storm. Happily we had no such severe expe riences. Our woodshed and barns were joined to the house by covered passages and aside from the anxiety felt for our neighbors, and a sensation as of being buried alive, we got along very well, devoting ail our waking hours to amuse ments of the lightest sort. My father threw aside his habitual reserve, and played "blind-man's buff" and "pussy wants a corner" with all the agility of yo.rfh. Ho-also astonished us by siugiug old ballads, learned years and year?, be fore, and for the first time in my life I awoke to the fact that at some remote date he had had a bo.vhood. Among other surprises, ho suddenly develoed a gift for story telling, but never touch ed upon any but cheerful and amusing subjects, until one evening when the wind moaned and sighed around the old house like tho lost, troubled souls, he succumbed to the influence of the hour, and narrated a thrilling ghost story. At its conclusion we huddled together with bated breath and a half-dread of something horrible coming out. of the shadowy corners. But our niind.s once turned in this direction, the fascination became irresistible, and wo talked of things supernatural till the flickering lights from the wide-mouthed fire-place seemed so many huge shadows mocking and nodding at us, until at last they dis appeared in the darkness. Lillian had been sitting with a far away look in her eyes, apparently un conscious of the turn our conversation had taken; but as she felt our gaze fixed upon her, she drew a shuddering sigh and said: "Oh, that horrible dream! how it haunts me to-night; I cannot shake it off." And her face grew so pale that we feared she would faint, and drew near in alarm. In a moment, however, she re covered, and, in answer to our inquiries, told us the following dream, which was as strange as it was thrilling: "I was only six years of age at the time; but, young as I was, the shock to my nervous system vas so great.that fears were entertained" of serious and lasting results, and ii was ixly oy con stant amusement and change of scene that the remembrance of that fearful night was driven from my mind. A sis ter of dear papa's had recently beconio a widow; she was strongly attached to her husband, and her bereavement seemed almost more than she could bear. She was of a singularly sensitive and excita ble temperament, so her friends were not seriously concerned at her terrible outbursts of sorrow; but with the reac tion came more alarming symptoms. It was the culmness of despair, instead of resignation. 'She must be roused out of this at once,' tho old doctor said, 'else she will go mad. Active grief is the safest.' And, as a last resource, hp beg ged my parents to bTing me, hoping the strong resemblance I had borne to her only child, whose death she still mourned, would turn her mind in an other direction. How well I remember the look of hopeless misery in her dry eyes as she held me in her arras and gently kijsed my clie-ik; but with no thought, apparentlv, of her own lost darling. After our arrival, she made an effort to appear more cheerful, and her family hoped she might be her old self again; but when they appealed to the doctor for a confirmation of their wishes, he shook his head as he answered, 'I would rather see her; weep.' "I occupied a room with my nurse in the remotest part of the house from Aunt Nina's apartments, and was en tirely separated from them by a long corridor, the door of which was kept constantly locked; so what I am about to relate could never have been seen with my physical sight. "I had slept soundly during the early part of the night, ind it must have been nearly morning when I became suddenly conscious of a peculiar light. 1 was In Aunt Nina's bedroom, and every object was distinctly visible. I remember see ing a scrap of crumpled paper lying un der a tab'e which was found exactly as I described. 'Aunt Nina was kneeling by the bed, her long hair falling in disheveled masses around her. Her low, imploring voice was full of agony, and sobs con vulsed her slight form, as with clasped hands she raised her streaming eyes to heaven. Her words were distinct, and burned themselves into my very brain: ' 'O God! spare me this, and keep mo from m3 self! Crush me beneath a greater load of sorrow, if it be possible, but take from rce this horrible temptation. Let me not be carried beyond Thy sav ing goodness, but give me, I beseech Thee, strength to resist this maduess.' Again and again she repeated the words with increased despair in her voice, un til, with one agonizing cry of 'God have mercy!', she threw herself face down ward) and clutched at the carpet as if she were being torn from it by invisible hands. How long she lay there I could not tell, for a great darkness came over me. When I looked again, she had risen to her feet with a fearful look on her blanched and ghastly face, every feature quivering, and, instead of tears, her eyes filled with a light I prav to be spared from ever seeing again, even in my dreams. "In her hands she held what appeared to me to be a large towel, which she twisted with eager, trembling fingers. And I saw her open the door, and move Yn tho direction of the staircase. In mortal terror i closed my- eyes to shut out the horrible sight. "At last I seemed to feel a great light, as ia our waking hours we are conscious of a strong light vfitb. closed eyes, and for an instant I looked upon a scene of glorious brightness. It hung limp arid lifeless," but with a smile of ineffable s eetness on the pale lips, and surround- ed bv a halo of li ght, through which I caught glimpses of floating forms. by tho nurse calling "I was awakened to mo, aud Mama bedside. In an came hurriedly to my instant my dream Hashed upon me, agony of fear: and I screamed in an " 'Aunt JNtna is q ead. I saw her hang- ing to the balusters and tho angels'have taken her soul to God.' "The shock had l)een too great, and I fell back fainting. When I recovered consciousness, there was tho awful calm resting over tho house that succeeds death. "M&ma told me that the body had been found as described by me. And, even at that early ag?, I felt comforted to know that she htid resisted tho fearful death, and that a great and holy peace had come to her atlthe last moment." Had a ghost stalked into our midst during the silence that followed Lilian's recital, it would haye been a fitting ac companiment to our feelings. We had listened to each Other's ghostly tales, knowing they wee all "once upon a time," with nothing true or definite about them, and we1 rather enjoyed the little thrills of fear they caused; bat here was au actual experience. There she sat, tho slender, graceful creature, with the firelight shining on her Avond rous golden head, j She was among as, and had passed through all this; and everything, even tlie snow-storm, paled before it. I I don't feel that 1 should be exactly honest if I did not! confess that only shame prevented me begging nay parents to let me sleep at the foot of their bed that night, or, at least, somewhere within the sacred precincts of their chamber door. When I awjake the next morning the gloom was gone! The sun had burst forth again with renewed glory, and all the world was one unbroken expanse of sjjotless purity. Lumps of snow, shin ing in the early sunlight, fell from the trees with a muffled sound, while tiny icicles, dislodged by a breath of air, dropped with a flash as of a diamond. The work of clearing away the drifted snow was carried on vigorously; travel was resumed almpst immediately, and the-grout snow storih became a memory. j Lillian and I have just celebrated our golden wedding.and wee toddling grand children cluster around bur knees; but to me she is, as ever, the loveliest of her sex, and as golden-haired and violet-eyed as when I first loved her, fifty four years go. Ncarl Kissed 'I lionise vt'8 ti Death. Osculation is unquestionably a pleas: ing pursuit. It has been recognized as such from time immemorial, by genera- tions, unnumbered of lovers, poets, and There are doubt- even philosophers less at the present moment in this, as in other countries, many enamored swains, who ask no better t lau to be permitted to iinprint "ten thousand kisses," one after another, upjm the lips of the damsels upon whom they have bestowed - - p JJ '"-'j , ,-. esteem tnemseives iortunato it their opportunities in this direction are some what limited, as (the following true story will show: At an eyening party in Kelkheim a few j weeks ago the con versation happened;to turn upon kissing, ani the question arose how many salu tations of this class ;could be exchanged between two ardent lovers within a certain space of opinions differed. time. As usual, and the discussion waxed warm, offered to bet Presently a fiery youth anybody present the German equivalent of a ten pound betrothed would notethat he aud his kiss one another within ten hours, iteu thousand times provided they were permitted to partake of some slight re- freshment at intervals of half an hour during tho performance. His wager having been accepted and the money posted, the affiaucpd couple addressed themselves to the achievement of their congenial task. At the expiration of the first hour their account stood cred ited with two thousand kisses. During the second they added another thou sand, and during the third seven hun dred and fifty to that number. Then, both broke down. pitiful to state. thbv The youth's lips were stricken with cramp, and the maiden fainted away. Later on in the evening she was com pelled to take to her bed with a sharp attack of neuralgia An even more dis tressing result ensued from this surfeit of tender endearment, for it led to te breaking off", by mutual consent, of a hopeful matrimonial engagement. Young lovers should keep this sad tale in mind and moderate their transports, for, strange as it may seem, Dan Cupid himself may be kissed to death. Lon- aon Telegraph. Tho labyrinthine complications of words in which agnostics become entan gled are frequently amusing, when they studiously and laboriously attempt to avoid any expression, showing a belief in God as the creator and sustainer of worlds. During M. Pasteur's repudia tion of the Positivism of M. Littre, in the season of the French Academy at Paris, he quotes the remarkable defini tion of that overruling power, by many called Providence, iwhich had been given by M. lienan, as i"the totality of the fundamental conditions which detormine the march of tho universe." The Yarmouth Bloater. The glory of Yarmouth is its bloater, but the highest qualities of the bloater are so neeting mac oniy those who live in or near the town can know how de served the glory is. Take one of the primest of these herrings, ".pit" it, and smoke it for between eighteen " and twenty-four hours; thus tho common herring is transmuted into the delicate and incomparable bloater. Tho arsenal like led brick buildings seen in many parts of the town are used for this pur pose. The choicest of the herrings, technically called "bloater stuff' " are selected, and threaded through the gills cn sticks or "spits about, a yard long, and placed in racks, .one above the other, to a height of thirty feet or more, in. a building called the smoke-house. One man stands in the racks with his legs astraddle, and puts "wpit" after "spit' in position, about twenty-five herrings being on each "spit, until like "We thousands of tho fish are hangin stalactites under the high roof. call these loves," an old man the racks; told us as "I'm up he climbed up among the loves. "Loves?" we repeated, incredulously. "Yes, 1-o-v-e with a hes, he replied positively, thoueh wo afterward fount out that he was mistaken, and that the proper but inexplicable name of the racks is louvres. When they are filled, a log of oak is lighted and left to smoul der, and in about eighteen hours the her rings have absorbed a certain proportion of the smoke, and become perfect bloat ers with ail unmatched delicacy of flavor They have so little salt in them and aie so finely cured that they are too perisha ble to be sent any distance, and thus it is that in this condition the. bloater is only known to those who are in or near Yarmouth. Smoked for a longer period, and salted, they are prepared for the for eign markets, and au exposure of twelve or thirteen days to the fumes of the oak produces the vulgar red herring. The stale fish, and those which have lost their heads or are in any way uishgured, are packed in barrels and compressed by a machine like a cheese press, in which form they are sent to Italy, where tney may often be seen in Hie shop windows, adding a shining diss to the glitter oi a Venetian day. J W. H. Rideing, in Har per s Magazine for June Towed hy a Sliark. Heading across the bay to St. Simon's light the man in charge of the wheel hailed Mr. Titt, and directed his atten tion to something ahead of us. The ob ject turned out to bo a shark's fin, so large as to be a matter of wonder to the sailors aboard. The boat happened to be provided with a shark line a manilla cord about a half inch thick, with a large hook tied to a traco chain. A small piece of beef was quickly put on the hook, a float put on the line, and then cast out, and the line made fast to the capstan. As we ueared the fish the fin disappeared, and all eagerly watched the float. Suddenly tho line tightened, the float disappeared, and the headway of the boat was checked, aud the man at the capstan yelled out: "He's hooked, I have been fishing, but I never saw one tho like of that. The fellow rose to the surface of the wave -and looked at us. He had about seventy-five yards of the line out by this time, and actually in a second he made a rush and jumped clear over the bow of the steamer. The ladies then got under shelter and all hands helped to hold that line. The fellow.when he failed to eat us up, made the for the ocean and fairly made the water foam. After about a miles's run he begaa to tire and the boat was headed for the beach, and then one of the hands waded afthore, taking the end- of the line with him, which he made fast to a stump and came back for help. Four of us got on shore and commenced to pull Mr. Shark ashore. It took all we could do and two rifle balls to boot to laud him. When I tell you that he measured seventeen feet, teu and a half inches from tip to tip you a ill know what a job we had. We determined to prove that we caught this shark, so we gave two negroes four dol lars to cut him open and get his head off so that we could get his jaw over home. His teeth are wonderful, being about three and a quarter inches long, and so strong that he actually flattened out the big iron hook. The negroes made quite a prize. In his stomach they found eleven silver Mexican dollars and one Spanish doubloon, gold, and a whole lot of brass buttons (Albany (Ga.) News. Au Opium Victim. The reporter of the Helena (Montana) Herald recently visited the cabin of a confirmed opium smoker, and held an interview in regard to the whole business. A long description of the apparatus and method of inhaling the fumes is given, but as this is only too well understood on tho Comstock it need not be repeated. The smoker did not object to giving a full account of the baleful effects of the drni? on himself, and from what is here tj 9 known of the habit and its story will strike all as being story is as follows: "I was brought up on results true. the His the Pacific Coast," said the young man, "and passed a great deal of my time among the Chi nese, in fact learning to speak the lan guage with much fluency. I was per suaded one day, seven years ago, to try the smoking of ono pipe of opium, and from that time I have never been able to get rid of the desire for using it. Again and again I have tried to break myself of the habit and failed, every year making my self will weaker. To-day I feel cer tain that unless I rid myself of tho tit sire I will be dead in twelve months. It has come to be death or victory. In a few days I start for the Arkansas Hot Springs, and there I expect a perfect cure to be effected. My left lung I always lie on my left side went smoking is entirely destroyed, and my right lung is going the same way, I feel mjBelf debased morally and physically, uy the war o opium, and 1 would gladly die this mo ment to save one person from contracting the habit. At the risk of many friend ships l have stopped a number ot my comrades from learning the habit, unc have even caused arrests to be mad sooner than permit myself to see a young man become the wreck 1 am "How will you manage to smoke when traveling? asked the reporter. "I will be forced to slink away like c dog to some out house while the other passengers are eating at the stopping places tor meals," replied tho young man, "and as x have lots of money I can bribe people to secrecy when necessary. Do you know, he went on to say, "that v hen I awake in the morning a great quantity of water will pour from my eyes, nose, month and ears, and I exper ience the tortures of a hell until the pipe is lighted. Then I can eat heartily; but every four or five hours during daytime 1 am forced to smoke or I would go mad. Now I want yon to promise me to do all in your power to put down the use of opium wherever you go, aud should you ever come to be the father of a family shoot any of your children dead on the spot should you discover them acquiring the habit of smoking opium. I wish I had been shot myself this day seven years ago, and I would not bo living the life of torment I am feeling now. At night I have the most horrible dreams you can imagine, and my life is a curse to me." AnObitlnatc Bride. The other night a young man from northern Arkansas and a young lady lady from the southern part of the State, met at a hotel in this city and were married. After the ceremony the young man went out and sat in front of the ho tel while his wife went up to the room assigned s the bridal chamber. j.nis thing oi getting married is a life-long business," he said, addressing a man who had just been divorced from his wife. "I reckon you have found it so," he added, turning to a single man. "Wall, I reckon I'll go hp. Dinged if I don't sorter hate to go up thar, too. But I never was afeerd . of a man, and I don't see why I should be afeered of a woman. A He went up and rapped at the door. "Who's there?" demanded the girl. "It's me." "Who is me?" "Don't you recognize my talk, honey?" "No, I don't." "It is your own wide-awake and living husband. Let me in." "Go awav from that door: you shall not come in here. I am not acquainted Them fellers down at me. Open the with yon yet." Say, let me in. stars are laughing door, fur I'm sleepy," and he yawned like a man waiting for a night train. "Thought you said that fxm were wide awake?' "I was a while ago, but I'm powerful sleepy now. Say, ain't you going to open this door ?" "No, I ain't." "Why did you marry me?" "Cause I wanted to." "Wall, why don't you let me in?" "Cause I don't want to." "All right, old gal; I'll shell out fur lome and leave you to pa3 the hotel bill; I never seed the woman that could pull the wool over my eyes." The latch clicked and the door opened. The hotel bill had frightened her. "It won t do for a woman to buck agin me, lemmy tell you, tur 1 was raised at he cross-roads, an went to mill early. Little llock Gazette. A 'e Yu(la Komuuce. The auction sale of the personal prop erty of Ira S. Parke recently attracted ully 500 people to the Parke mansion in Six-Mile canyon. The prices realized were for the most part mucu below value. A few of the much smaller pieces of furniture were taken at fair figures. The furniture sold .was bought 12 years ago, and was the roost expensive outfit ever brought to this city. There was a romance connected with Ira Parke's life in which the buving of this furniture was an incident. Feeling that he was getting to be somewhat advanced in years Mr. Parke decided to take a wife, and in order to get one entirely to his liking, concluded to have a girl reared and educa'ed with that particular object in view making a mistake not unknown to other elderly men who have gone before him. Accordingly he sent to school a most estimable young woman, and as he watched the gradual development of her personal and in tellectual charms, counted hi oi sell a happy man. Tho young lady's school course being finished, the big brick louse which had been built to receive her vas sumptuously furnished, and she was invited to enter it as its mistress. It was then that Mr. Parke was in formed by his fiancee that her heart was irrevocably another's,' and that though she would fulfill her engagement and marry him, she could never love him with devotion due from a wife to her husband. With true manliness Mr. Parke promptly released the lady from her promise, and settled down to live an old bachelor's life in the palatial mansion! which he had expected would be brigh tened bv her presence, but which now appeared a'dungeon. Mr. Parke never married. Virginia Enterprise. If vou wish to make a cake which will keep well, use the yolk of eggs only, as thev make it much mora moist and less liable to dry than the whites do. SHOUT BUS. The United States census gives 92,653 Protestant churches, 71,002 Protestant ministers and 9,003,030 members of Protestant churches. There is a marked increase in the num ber of theological students in Germany. This would indicate that the salaries of clergymen are going up in Germany. - The State Sabbath school convention of California, urged all schools in the State to have Bands of Hope organized in connection with their Sunday school work. j An Ohio man, who would jirobauljr have no objection to serve on the -commission, has sent the President a plan for the suppression of "poligamy in Eutaw." j Elephants,it is believod.can be taught to play billiards. If so,it will be a great relief to young men who are now obliged to give up so much of their valuable time to this work. A man with a rod nose doesn't need a placard hung around his neck to tell the world what caused it. You're right he don't. Tho little joker starts off as soon as he begins to smile. The mistress of the household asks her new cook what her name is. The cook, obligingly: "My mistreessea call me 'Madame Benoit; with the gentlemen ray name is 'Felicie.'" They were seated "on tho sofa, where they had been for four long hours. "Au gustus, do you! know why you remind me of the Chinese?" "No, dearest, why?" "Because you won't go." The meeting then adjourned sine die. A foreign letter states that the Budd hist dignitaries of Japan have taken alarm at the spread of Christianity and the consequent decline of Buddhism among other classes of their country men. The princess Dolgourki. widow of the late czar, is in Berlin, with three chil dren. It is strangely reported "that she receives no official recognition." If she were to visit Washington now, half of the government would be around for in troductions. ! At the close of dinner at the late dean of Ely's, a guest happened to remark that six eminent lawyers had died in six months. At that time, the dean, verv deaf, rose and said: "For these and all other mercies, God's holy name be praised." One of the witnesses in the Malley Cramer murder trial swore on cross-examination that he had perjured himself to induce tho Malleys to give him hush money. It does take Connecticut to get up a murder trial that will bring out every known form of meanness and dev iltry. A man may plug his own firewood with powder to prevent thievishneighbors and then by accident get a plugged stick in his own stove; but, though he swear to this explanation, it won't prevent the neighbors winking and snickering when the firewood is mentioned in his pres ence, and kind of hinting that honesty is the best policy, j A dentist who broke a Detroit man's jaw offered to pay S2 to settle the case. But the victim was insulted at the idea that breaking his jaw .was only 32 dam age to him, and indignantly asked if the man of torture thought that sum would console him for having to refrain from chewing tobacco for a month. "How much quinine can you take at a dose?" inquired one milarious indi vidual of another, as they met on the street one morning. "Oh, not more than about four grains. If I take any more it sets my head to working." "Does it? I should think you would take six grains twice a day, so's to be sure that the j oid thing worked, you now. j The clergymen of Chicago are deter mined to put ja stop to Sunday-night theatricals. They say that if the theaters would only play standard dramas they would not care,1 for such counter attrac tions would have no effect on tho size of their congregations. The trouble is that so many of the places of amusement present nothing but burlesque and bal let troupes. j There are occasionally brave women in this world. A Philadelphia lady heard burglars breaking into the house. She arose, called the bull-dog and seized tho shot-gun. Then she opened the door and let the dog out. Then she almost immediately fired the gun. The dog's hide was too much perforated to sell for anything. j Cetewayo, the Zulu king, has set a noble example to the Mormons. He has picked out his favorite wife to keep, and set the others adrift. It's a great racket. You don't have to choose one wife to be gin with and then keep her for better or worse. You test half a dozen, find out which is the most disposed to hold her jaw when you come home late, and bounce the rest. Then there'll bo re joicing in the religious circles over your reform, land everything will be lovely. When Dr. Johnson had completed his dictionary, Millar, the book-seller, and principal proprietor of tho work, could not help expressing his joy upon tho occasion in terms somewhat intemperate, as appears by the following acknowledg ment of the receipt of the last sheet of " the manuscript: "Andrew Millar sends his compliments to Mr. Samuel John son, with the money for the last sheet of tho copy of the dictionary, and thanks God that he ; is done with him." Tr which Johnson returned this good-natured answer, "Samuel Johnson returns his compliments to Andrew Millar, and is very glad to find, as he does by the note, that Andrew Millar has the grac to thank God for anything." t I, f t. f r : 4 'I J: V - - . Si