.V f i I 1 ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, OREGON, SEPTEMBER 22, 1882. NO. 7. VOL. III. CO Jy A YTEDI' UOWX. "Oh, missus, missus! Soniefins done happened." . i Blank horror aud dismay were depicted upon Lha face of my small African, as she stood upon my threshold with up raised hands and eyeballs that seemed starting from their sockets. Her pause was one of preparation, for with the innate consideration of her race she sought to break the news gently to me, but the 'bnrd'eu of it was too great for her, aud with the next breath sho ex claimed: "Dem pigs done chawed up Miss Lyddy's weddin' gown!" '"Glory," I exclaimed (she had been piously "christened "(Horiana.) "Glory, how did it happen?" "Dnnno," said Glory. "Tears to me de:a pigs ha9 got Satan iu 'era. Guoss dey's 'scended from de ole lot what run down a steep place inter the sea. I'll go an' fetch ve a puce." She sped out and instantly returned with a tattered shred of India mull that had once been white, and still bore some resemblance to a gown. Poor Miss Lyddy! This was all that remained of her dream of wedding splendor. It was too pitifu ! I felt at one that the bonds of good neighborhood had been irre trievably broken, and that Major Haw thorne must be made aware of this last and :rst depredation of his unseemly pigs. "But who would break the news Miss Lvddy?' "Glory," said I, "where is she?" "Gone over to de burryin' place to to visit Ce ancestors." answered Glory. Poor, faithful soul; even in tlie last days of her maidenhood, witii the vague terrors of matrimony and the still more, appalling responsibilities of unsaved heathen souls hauging over her, she did not forget the ancestors. Long lines of Ludkins-s lav buried in little sunken hillocks in the family burying place, which lay just in siht of her sitting room window. She herself was the last of her race, and until within three weeks it had seemed that the only fate" which awaited her was to live out her little space under the ancestral roof tree, and then take her place in the silent ranks of those who had gone before. But a change had come. It came in the person of a returned missionary from the Microne sian Islands, who had buried the first and second partners of his joys and sor rows somewhere under the palm trees of those tropical lands, and had come back to the scenes of his youth to recruit his health, serve the cause, and look np partner No. 3. He met Miss Lyddy at a woman's missionary metting. He called the next uiternoon and was invited to stav to tea. He accepted the invitation, and next morning Miss Lyddy came into mv room for I, too. domiciled under the Ludkins roof tree, for a consideration and with much hesitation and many faint and delicate blushes, informed me that she had premised to share the future lot with with the Itev. Xehemiah Apple bloom, to take care of bw six children, and to support him in his arduous labors among the heathen of the Micronesian Islands. I was struck dumb with amazement. "Miss Lyddy," I caid at length, "have you duly considered this project?" Her thin figure quivered, and her white face that yet had a delicate re membrance of youth in it, grew tender with feeling. "Yes," she said, "I think I have always had a presentiment have that should marry a minister or a mission ary." Admirable and prophetic faith! "And Mr. Applebloom says he knew the moment he set eyes upon me that I was ordained to be his wife; so you see it is not the surprise to either of us that it is likely to be to our friends." I knew then that her mind was fully m-de up. I demurred no longer, but lent myself at once to discussion of the wedding, which I plainly saw was what Miss Lyddy desired of me. "You will be married in church I sup pose?" - "Oh, no," said Miss Lyddy, with gen tle decision. "I am the last of the Lud kinses. All the Ludkinses have been married at home. I will go out from un der my own roof tree. ' If I must seem to forsake the ancestors" she paused to regulate a little choking in her throat "I will at least not forsake their tradi tions. I shall leave a little money with the parish clerk, that he may see" that the graves of my dead are kept in proper or der, as I always have loved to keep them, and I hope they will forgive my depar ture; but I will at least go as a Ludkins should. It is my desire to be married in my grandmother's wedding gown." Miss Lyddy's voice trembled, and there was a humidity in her eyes, at which I did not wonder, for it was much like a funeral, after all. "I thought perhaps," went on Miss Lyddy, "if I brought the venerated relic to you, you would tell me if any thing were necessary to be done to fit it to me. I don't care for the fashions, yon know, and my grandmother, as I remem ber her, was about rny height, but still, you know something some changes might be advisable." "Certainly," I said,, "do bring it to me. I should so like to see it." "It is sprigged India (she called it Ingy) mull. My grandfather, C-iptain Simon Ludkins, brought it home from over the seas. I'll bring it." Like some pale and gentle ghost f?h'e rose then and went to a bureau drawer and unrolled, from folds of linen that smelt of lavender, the frail relict of Mrs, Capt. Simon Ludkins' wedding state. It was fine embrodered mull, the undoubted product of Indian looms. "It is lovely," I said, "and so well kept that it will be just the thing for you. Will you try it on? We can then tell just what it needs." Miss Lyddy proceeded to disrobe her- self and put on the spider net gown. As she did so, the changes in fashion's man date became only too evident. It had no waist to 3peak of, and just a little lace trimmed puff for sleeves. Miss Lyddy was evidently surprised. She bad not thought of this. I knew well what the troubled look upon her face meant, and I pitied her maiden sensibilities. Could it be possible that her grandmother.Mrs. Capt. Simon Ludkins, had ever worn such a gown as this? She said not a word that could indicate tlie depth of her mortification, but her face was a study for an artist. j "There must be sleoven,";she mur mured, after a few moments jsilent em barrassed contemplation. J "Yes," I replied cheerfully as my con strained gravity would allow. j"And you might have a fichu, and a flounce on the bottom." She looked down. She had not before realized that the skirt of the I venerable relic lacked a full quarter of a yard of touching the floor. j "However conld theyf 'they ejaculated in an undertone. But she quickly re covered herself, and looked ;up to me cheerfully over her spectacles.! "How ingenuous you are!" j she said, with an air of sweet relief. "I, knew you would help me out." j We went out together to buy the requisite mull that day, but when we came to put it beside the ''venerated relic" of Mrs. Capt. Ludkins. it was vi.lfnt that time had so enriched the color of the latter that the two were most unfortunately unlike. "We can lay it out on the grass," I said; "those June dews are just the thing for it, and as it will be evening no body will in the least notice." j Again Miss Lyddy smiled gratefully, and declared that my suggestion should be carried out in the most faithful man ner, j The Kev. Neheniiah Applebloom "A lovely name, don't yon think so?" siid Miss Lvddy, and she blushed and smiled like a schoolgirl in her teens had but a short furlough, aud the marriage was to transpire the next week, so the relic was put out to bleach forthwith. It had al ready been put upon the grass three davs'ani nights and had been religiously watered by Miss Lyddy at morn and noon and dewy eve, and the next day it was to be taken up early and put into the dressmaker's hands for the necessary alterations, when the dreadful event oc curred with which this narrative opens. "Glory." I said, "do you keep watch or Miss'Liddy when she returns. Say nothing about what has happened unless she misses the gown from the grass. In that case tell her that I thought it was bleached enough and took it np to dry, and you don't know where I have put it. I am going out now, but if I she asks where, tell her you don't know." Glory was faithful, and had, besides, the natural craft of her race, and I knew that she could be trusted. As for me, I swiftlv donned my bonnet and set out to find Maj. Hawthorne. It was ja bright June evening, and my walk through the meadow and grove that skirted Haw thornedean would have been a more de lightful one if I had borne a mind more at ease. The Major was a gentleman by birth, but he had lived out his fifty bachelor years in a gay and careless way that had seemed to set the gentler part of creation at defiance. In the'lifetime of his parents Hawthornedeau had been au estate. It still retained many marks of wealthy and cultivated ownership.but it was sadly run down, as the home of a bachelor was apt to be. The grove, which had once" been the pride of the place, was grown up to brush now, and the sere leaves of many summers' growth rustled under my feet as I walked through it. At one point, coming sud denly around a thick clump ofj under growth, I heard a chorus of tiny snorts, and the scampering of numberless hoofs, and knew that I had invaded thej haunts of the Major's last agricultural freak, the very brood of Berkshire pigs that were the source of all my borrowed woes. Away they scampered, theii snouts well raised in air, and each, with a purl in his tail that seemed too ornamental to be wholly the product of nature and to jus tify the village rumor that' the Major's own men put them in curl papers every night. They had the air of spoiled chil dren, every one, and were evidently the Major's pets. But that didn't jmatter; they had ruined Miss Lyddy's wedding gown, to say nothing of other aggravat ing exploits which do not belong; to this story, and I was determined to have sat isfaction out of their owner. j I found the Major sitting on his piazza, with an after dinner look upon his hand some, good humored face. He :rose to greet me with an air of old school, polite ness, dashed with a faint wonder jthat I, a woman, should have had the hardihood to approach a place so little frequented bv women. "Good evening, Miss Grace. I am I hive that I harmv to see vou. In what can the honor to serve you." He had read my face and knew had come on a mission. "Maior Hawthorne," I said, ppying no attention to his offer of a chair, "I have come on a very painful errand." "Sit down, madam," said the Iajor, politely. "I can not possibly permit a lady to stand on my piazza. I 'ought, perhaps, to ask you to walk in, but it is rat her stuffy inside this evening." j "No," I said, I will sit here ;if you please." To tell the truth, inlobrs, as seen through the windows, had hot the most inviting look, and I was glad to compromise. "You have no doubt heard' plunging in medias res. "that Miss Lyddy a1 Lud- Una is ftbnnt to be married." I "Married! Miss Lyddya! No! Hadn't heard a word of it, said the 31a genuine amazement. "Who is t tunato man, pray?" or, in lie for- "The Ilev. Nchemiah Applebloom, a missionary to the Micronesian Islands, who has come home to repruit his health and find a wife." "I know him," said the Major. 'Saw him down at the station a long, lean, lank individual just fit for his vocation; no temptation whatever to cannibals! But what the deuce is he going to do with Miss Lyddy? What will Balaam's Cor ners do without her?"' "Balaam's Corners must do the best it can," I said I fear a little sharply for my mind was still in a most aggressive state toward the Major. "They are to be married next week, and" "What will become of the ancestors? " interpolated the Major, in whom surprise seemed to have gotten the better ot habit ual politeness. "Oh, she has made arrangements with Mr. Crow about that.' "Just like her. Dear, faithful girl." The Major had all his life loved all the sex not one and I was not to be beguiled by this show of feeling. "She had set her heart upon being married in her grandmother's wedding gown." "Old Mrs. Capt. Simon? I remember her well. A mighty fine woman. She never would have gone to the ends of the earth with a missionary. It's the craziest scheme I ever heard of." I began to fear I should never get to mv errand. '"It was put out on the grass to bleach, being a little yellow with age. It was a lovely embroidered India muslin that the old captain brought home from India himself." "How well I remember him in my boyhood! A jolly old soul! A grand daughter of his go off to the Cannibal Islands to be eaten up by savages! I won't have it!" "Her heart is set upon going," I con tinued. "The wedding gown was set out to bleach, and this very afternoon those little Berkshire pigs of yours they are a nuisance to the whole neigh borhood, Major trampled and rotted it to pieces, so that it is utterly ruined." "Little black rascals!" said the Major, with a chuckle behind his neckcloth. "And I have come, without her knowl edge, to tell you of it, because I was sure that, under the circumstances, a gentleman of your breeding would feel in honor bound to make some reparation to Miss Lyddy." The Major mused and looked at his boot for a moment in silence. "Miss Grace," he said at length. "I thank vou for the service you have ren dered ine in this matter. Will you have the goodness to say to Miss Ludkins, with my compliments, that I shall do niyselr the honor to wait upon her to morrow at 10 o'clock, to adjust this un fortunate matter? 1 beg in the mean time that she will give herself as little solicitude as possible, for though I can not restore the ancient and venerable dry goods, I will do the best that is possible under the circumstances to make the loss good." He bowed over my hand, and the au dience was evidently concluded. Was I satisfied? No, indeed! What woman would not have felt wronged to be left at the end of a mission of disinterested benevolence in such a state of doubt and uncertainty as this?. But I was obliged to go home, nevertheless, and wait as patiently as I could for the stroke of ten next morning. Glory had beea in hearing when the mebsage had leen delivered to Miss Lyddy, and she, too, was on the watch. At last she scudded in from the hedge, her ivories all aglisten, and her eyes wide open and full of a rather incompre hensible mirth. "He's a comin'," she said; "and such a sight!" At that minute the gate clicked, and up the walk strode, indeed, a most as tonishing figure. The Major had gotten himself up in a continental suit, which he must have fished out of the unknown depths'of the'ancient attics of Hawthorne dean; black velvet coat with lace ruffles at the wrist, knee breeches, white satin waistcoat, slippers with shoe buckles, powdered wig, and cocked hat. Ho was six feet tall, portly and well formed, and he looked every inch a signer of the dec laration at the very least. He was fol lowed by his colored man, who carried a liirrrft. lirnwn naner narcel. ? : - .. . . ,, i He's come a courtin missus, Baiu Glory, ' ye can see it in his face." I had not the instinct of Glory, doubted: but what his errand was I and was dying to know. But he disappeared into Miss Lyddy's parlor, and I was left outside to temper my impatience as best I could. Pres ently Glory entered on tiptoe. "Missus, missus," she whispered, "de do's swung open jest de leas' crack, an it's jest opposite de big murror, an if ye come out here in de hall ye can see it all in do murror, as plain as day, an' it's a heap better'n a play." It was a temptation, but believe me, dear reader, I resisted it. Only, as Glory ran back to her peeping, I fol lowed to pull her away and send her out of door that was simply my duty and there he was full on bis knees before her, and she with that rapt seraphio look upon her face which no woman ever wears except on the most vitally inter esting occasions. But Glory disposed of, I went back to my sewing and waited as best I could the conclusion of the mo mentous interview. The Major came out at length, as smiling as a May morn ing, leaving the brown paper parcel be hind him. It was very still in Miss Lyddy's room for a quarter of an hour, and then she, too, emerged from her retreat. Spread over her hands was a gown of cream col ored brocade embellished with the love liest roses in full bloom, with blue forget-me-nots trailing here and there among them. It had au ample waist, elbow sleeves, and a train a yard and a half long. "My dear Gracie," said she. "The Major has brought me his mother's wed ning gown to be married in." "It is beautiful," I said; "but who is to be the bridegroom?" She smiled as angels do, and looked afar, a delicate flutter of pink hung out in her cheek to deprecate her recreancy, as she whispered in a tone of gentle but consummate triuniph: "The Major himself! Didn't he look grand in his knee breeches?" "And Mr. Applebloom?" "Major Hawthorne will adjust that matter." "That matter," indeed! She spoke as though it, were already ' as remote from her ts the pyramid; p.. "I congratulate you, Miss Lyddy," I said, growing formal, for she had behaved shamefully. "Don't blame me," she murmured. "Major Hawthorne declares he has loved me since I was a child, but never thought himself worthy of me, the gay deceiver; and Mr. Applebloom, you know, is only the acquaintance of a day." I wanted to ask her how she had dis posed of her presentiment, but I did not dare. Major Hawthorne subscribed fifty dol lars to the Micronesian mission, and sent Mr. Applebloom elsewhere to look for a wife, and the verdict of Balaam's Corners was that he had done the hand some thing. " 'Fore goodness!" said Glory, "ef dere weren't a cl'ar relation between dem pigs an' providence, den I don't know nothin'." Miss Lyddy took the same pious view of the matter, and made the Major the most dainty and dignified of wives. And then Comes Seed Time. Our farmers will soon be done the har vest, and then follows seed-time for all summer-fallowed land. It was formerly the practice to wait till the early rains had softened the clods and mellowed the summer-fallowed lands before sowing. It was observed, however, that volunteer grain coming forward with the first rains got a good start in the warm fall weather and warm soil, and that with this early start they kept growing right on through the succeding winter, and come to ma turity early and yielded better crops than the well-cultivated summer-fallow sown late in the season. It was observed also that the earlier sown grain on summer fallowed lands generally made better crops than late-sown grain on equally good soil in an equally good state of cultivation. These observations led to the conclusion that the closer nature was followed in the matter of seeding the better. The volunteer was nature's mode of sowing. The grain dropped from the ear at the time of harvest lay on the dry soil or in the small cracks or crevices without germination till the rains moistened the soil and caused the seed to sprout. Dry sowing is simply following nature in regard to the time of seeding. By summer-fallowing the land we help na'ture, by giving the grain a good mellow seed bed, in which the roots can strike deep down and grow large and strong even during the coldest winter weather. Experience is now highly in favor of summer-fallowing and dry or early sowing. Dry sowing may be commenced any time now when farmers are ready to go at it. Seed is preserved just as well in the dry soil as in die sack or bin, and the sooner this work follows harvest the better.for when out of the way other winter work, such as getting wood and fencing, etc., may be attended to. IliDse Horrible Primary Colors. " Miss Lightfoot, of Baltimore," says the Washington critic, "tells a funny story of Oscar Wilde. When the es thete was introduced, she made conver sation as she would for any other stranger. He had mentioned at the club that he was going to New Orleans to look up some property left him by a relative, and when she had exhausted the or dinary 'airy nothing' she .asked: "When do you go South, Mr. Wilde?" "South? South? Why, ah! what do you mean, Miss Lightfoot, by South?" "Why, you know, Mr. Wilde, you are only on the border of the Southern States!" "Ah! What are the Southern States? And then she entered into a little ac count of the subdivision of the country, to which he responded so stupidly that at last she laughed and said: "You have never studied geography, Mr. Wilde?" "Oh, no!" was the response; "never, never, I could not, for the.colors on the maps are so discordant, and they dis tress me. I never could bring myself to look at them!" Ills Way. A stranger who was having his boots blacked at the postoffice corner Saturday felt somewhat interested in the "shiner" and observed: "Boy, do you go to school?" "No, sir." "Are you good in figures?" "I dunno." "If I had ten cents and gave you five, how much would I have left?" "That isn the way I figger," replied the boy after a moment's reflection. "If I black yer butes fer five cents and you don't pay I'll foller ye and throw ten cents' worth of mud on the job!" The man settled before the other boot was touch6d. Detroit Free Press. The excellencies of a man's nature are often the means of his fall and ribe, and of ten afford the platform for his most dangerous temptations and keenest soy rows. Rev. S. P. Herron. Common Sense About the Flanp. Little girls fear the piano, and long for the time when, having at last mastered its difficulties, they will not be called upon to play upon it any more; while numberless great girls regard it as one of the many nuisances which they must put np with until they get married: Once, however, liberate young women from thaf piano to which like serfs they have so long been "assigned" but not "at tached," and some of them will take to cultivating it for its own sake; while the remainder will at least spare both them selves aiid their friends a considerable amount of annoyance. The enormous j difficulty of modern piano-forte music constitutes in itself a reason why in the Bdncation of oung girls the piano should not, like "dancing and deportment," be made obligatory. A woman can get through life so well with out playing the piano; and for a few shillings, or even in extreme cases for a single shilling, she can, if her lot happens to be cast in London, hear from time to time the finest players that this great pianoforte-play ing age has ever produced. It is not because the piano is unworthylof her attention that woman should be liberated from the task work imposed upon her in connection with it. It is because music, like every other art, demands from its votaries spec ial gifts and inclinations, and because among women who are thus endowed it is a mistake to suppose that the piano is the only instrument suitable to them. Let it be understood in the first place that it is no more a disgrace for a young lady not to play th piano than it is a dis grace for her not to draw, to paint, or to model; and, in the second place, that if she does mean to play some instrument it is a mistake for her to restrict herself as1 a matter of course to the piano. Next to the organ the piano is, thanks to the orchestral effects which it can be made to produce, the finest in strument in the world; and it is the only instrument for which every great compo ser writes as a matter of course, and for which every great composer's orchestral works are arranged in reduced form. To praise, at the expense of the piano, the violin, which except when "tours de force" are indulged in yields like the human voice but a j single note, is a very common thing, but is one we should not care to undertake.: The violin, to be effective in a truly musical sense, must, like the human voice, be accompanied either by the orchestra or by the piano forte, or by other members of the violin family. The pianoforte is (putting aside of course, the two j colossal .organ), the only instrument which, for harmonic as well as melodic purposes, is complete in itself, and which is really aa orchestra in a little. j There are good reasons, then, why all who care much for music should stud the piano, but no reason why they should study the piano exclnsiuely. Often in the same family there are two, three and even four pianists, j How much aud how advantageously the musical domain of such a family would be increased if, with or without neglect of the piano, the in struments of the violin family were taken up, with a view not necessarily to string quartets, but, at least to the numerous pieces written by great com posers for violin or violonoello, and piauo. "The violin I include always the viola and violoncello is no doubt," says Mr. Hullah in I his excellent little work on "Musio in the House," "a diffi cult instrument; but the difficulty of ac quiring a serviceable amount of skill on it has been much exaggerated. To be? come a Joachim, a Holmes, or a Piatti, is the work of a lifetime, even for men gifted with equal aptitude and persever ance to these turned to ac count under skillful - guidance and at the right time of life, and supplemented and encouraged by a thou sand circumstances as impossible to take account of as to bring about and foresee. But there is an amount of skill below very much below that of artists of this class which, if accompanied by feeling, taste and intelligence, may contribute largely to the variety and agreeableness of music in the .house." It may be hoped that in a few years, without the number of our domestic pianists being too much diminished, that of our domes tic violinists will be considerably in creased. Some half dozen lady violinists have appeared this seasop in London public concerts, who possess the very highest merit; and at; a half private, half public concert given recently at Stafford House for the benefit of a charity, the chief attraction was a string band con sisting of no less than twenty-four lady executants. The diversion, then, of feminine tallent from'; the piano towards the violin, is not a movement which has to be originated; it needs only to be en couraged. St. James Gazette. Most too Briny. "Father," began the boy as he looked up from his First History, "are silver mines very fresh?" i "Fresh ! What do you mean?" "Why, they have to put salt into 'em to make 'em keep don't they?" "What nonsense! I don't understand you." j "Well, I heard some men in the car say that you salted a j silver mine and made a hundred thousand dollars, and I wanted to ask what the salt was for." The way that boy was hustled off to bed made him dream of cyclones . all night. j A street railway has, been laid between Athens and the Piraus, which serves the, whole city, passing by the Parthenon and the Acropolis. But what a prosaic, Averv-dav sort of acre this is when such things can be as horse cars in the land of the ancient Greeks. ', PITII AND I'OLNT. "A source of anxiety:" The head of a turbulent river. Cold, moist weather has affected Penn sylvania's honey crop. Chance is a word void of sense; noth ing can exist without a cause. Voltaire. Little Boar's Head, N. H., is threat ened with the erection of a Blaine sum mer cottage. ; The chief glory of man does not con sist in never falling, but in arising every time he falls. ; L is at Birmingham, Conn., where Clara Prima Louise Donna Kellogg has summered down. I . A. daily paper half one big advantage over the human face. It can every now and then add new features. The enlarged Sunday edition of tho New York Daily News is everywhere re ceived with unqualified favor. Camden's Post is of the opinion that systematic lying doesn't "make customers any quicker than it makes votes. Hard on a would-be Governor: "Gen eral Beaver lost his leg in his country's cause, and his head in Cameron's.' f Williamsport Sun. It is fashionable for Newport belles to read Goethe by listlessly holding the vol ume in their laps, with its pages upside down. Captain Von Eisendecher, who has just left the post of Envoy from Germany to Japan, is to be transferred to Wash ington, name and all. There seems to be bolting and kicking out of the traces all over the country. Ileason the country has more great men than offices Mobile Begistcr. "Yes, I'm opposed to caste," said Madame Ringsparkle to a Saratoga ac quaintance, "but really, my dear, there should be line of extinction!" Her friend agreed with her. American Queen. "Sweet sixteen" is all bosh when re ferring to a girl. At that age she is the crossest and most imprudent of any period of her life, being too old to spank, and not old enough to box her inother. The Norristown Herald is authorized to announce that at the last convention of undertakers held in New York it was resolved substitute the toy-pistol for the kerosene-oil can as the emblem of the order. The Imperial Gazette of China cele brated its one thousand five hundredth birthday last month. The founder of the paper was detained by business Detroit Free Press. You mean by "a press of matter," don't you ? Herbert Spencer says he may publish his notes of what he sees in America. You bet he will ! Where is the English man who ever scribbled that didn't write up what he saw, and thought he saw, in Yankeeland? An advertisement in a New York paper eads: "Wanted A man accustomed to handling snakes," which leads us to ask: "Will not a man accustomed to seeing snakes be a serviceable man for the posi tion ? Philadelphia Sun. Festive host (who has been told by hii wife to make himself agreeable) "Un common slow, ain't it, Sir Pompey ? Fact is, my wife thought it would be rather fun to ask all the bores who've asked us and get 'em to meet each other and pay them off in that way, you knowl And she did, by Jove! And the best of it is, they've all come!" A Coney Island horse-jockey who died the other day confessed to having par ticipated in thirteen "put-up" races where it was arranged beforehand which horse was to win. Hbrrled ITomen and Property. The incapacity of a married woman to be rated even in respect of her own house in which she lives -with her hus band is due to the fact that, except to the very limited extent allowed by the Married Women's Property Act, a wire is still unable to hold property without the intervention of trustees. The owners of a house settled to the wife's separate use are, in contemplation of law, not the wife nor the husband, but the trustees, who allow the husband and wife to live in it. The effect of this permission is to constitute the husband legal occupier. Such occupation as the wife has, is, in law, the occupation of the husband; and although the trustees hold for her, yet when, with their sanction, she and her husband live in the house, the effect is the same as if the trustees were strangers to her. The wife is thus excluded from offices fer which rating is a qualification, but under some circumstances the parish might seriously be embarrassed. The husband being the rate payer, the wife's furniture cannot be seized for the rates, although it is in the house rated; so that if the husband has no property, the only way open to the parish of enforcing the rates is to put the husband in jail until the wife pays them. Such are tho ano malies which arise from retaining the shadow of the old rule by which hus band and wife are one, and that one the husband, while the substance has long departed. All that is required is a sim ple enactment making married woman capable of holding property. London Law Journal. Sleepers. A sleeper is one who sleeps. A sleeper is that in which the sleeper sleeps. A sleeper is that on which the sleeper which carries the sleeper while he sleeps runs. Therefore, while the sleeper sleeps in the sleeper the sleeper carries the sleeper over the sleeper under the sleeper until the sleeper which carries the sleeper jumps off the sleeper and wakes the sleeper in the sleeper, and there is no sleeper in the sleeper on the sleeper. . p 1. r ? j i i ; i ! V ! 1 i