THE OEEGON SCOUT. JOrriJSAc CHANCI5V, 1'ubllNlicrr. UNION, - - - OREGON. IUb .ki.il.rilUltA. WJitn IrrlnR dwelt mong (bote lulls, Keir filly jor axo. Among tlioto Ivy-circled walls And myrtle til tflow, Pacing In uteet reverlo at nlnlit, And o'er ramparU Willi loimliiK Raze, To watch the moonbeams la tbflr flight Around the flowery maze, Wtro timet of awcet cncJ anlment to bli soul. In tlioao days of dreamy (lumbers, Ilia inspirations on till parchment roll Were written unto men with poetic numbers. He wrote of nature's beauty rare, Overflowing caaltets, heavenly wrought Jeweled emoys, eparkllng, rare, With aweet. lusplrod thouKht. That place hat little changed since then; Its moonlight beauty jot Is seen The soft and mellow richness of each stem As If Us In enchantment or a delusive dream. Bo now we alt alone, and ponder on the old And former times of this retreat, Beneath the liquid, tinted cold That with other scenes compete. We pass a'onR tho colonnade And harken to tho sound Of some lone lover's sercnajc, Floating sweet, profound. And leaning o'er tho parapet. That flowery -cushioned crown, Tho sceno Is oul-e:altinir, yot, Where high, gray mountains frown Againtt tho spanglod sky Looking solemn and so lone It seems as if with ecstasy my Spirit it had flown. And o'er the silvered basin of T.lndarains altlm The sweet ezhallng liquid that dolli fall. And drln like crystal tiellets from .-.s lulm And scintillate with freedom through each garden Thero wero many scenes, so soft, sublime And manifold In each lino That showed there Is a power divine; Ills hidden baud within narh vlnw: ahat, dropping checkered silver on yon vcrinlllcn lower, ended Tecndor's arches In the gloom. Hotting with a mellow richness on ouch bonei, Caught from varied ln.es of tho moon. Wo sit, wo gazo upon Grenada's peaceful sleep, Upon Its p accful slumber of to-night. From tho exquisite ruins of a Moorish palace, Tho somber, saddened walls of convents In the light. Btlll thoy carry doad beneath Alharfthra'a walls Along Its shaded archos, Its colonnades, and All With saddened footsteps tho molancholy halls To bury In (Jrenada's ground, In Alatnoda's hill. Fater Xlmlnes still survives; Though deaf and blind, ho spends each day In bringing up the past, lUid thus rovivefv With patriotic strains, tho Tales of tho AlllniifS lira." FIUDItE OK TJEB' KARl'Ilv- l'rcHi'iitr srmn; Tho "ComptttfItemlu8"of thoEfccnch Acadonmcontain8 a xemarlfttblb papc by M. livvo on tho iiliyfiffiilotrjcwhtch Have protlucetUtho present Inornro ot tlio earth. AfU;r rcmirrlringi on tho uso oi tliociiondlmim in determining tnollgtiro of tnVoin?Mi'froin tjp aeries oi mcasuro monttcof thwintensil anib direction oi lhcqriivitation forco at tMbwsnt parts of tlio enrjh'H surface, ho rkwvtt attention to tho Ter& curious Jacl that wJiilo tho direction and intensity of gravity aro affected perceptibly by the prescnoo uf hills such as Schichailion mid Axtluuta Seal, or oven by masHCs as small as .tho great pyramid ot the Gizch. giuantio moiiulaimo such as tlio Himituvyas, and great elevated plateaus and table lands, do not affect tho pendulum indv eatioTitcin airy sensible manner, except in ccrjain cases vdieifo, upon elevated continent), there appcaw to bo a verita ble defeat of uttmotiou instead of tho excess which miyhl bo expected. In deedj the observations iftu HuBieieutly striking to Hcoin to pond to tho supposi tion that under tho whole of ovory large continent there aro euoroioim cavities. Moro than this, the attractions at tho mirfaco of all tlio great oceans appear too great to agree with tho distribution pro mimed by Clairant'a formula, which is exnet enough for mot purposes. Sir O. Airy's suggestion thgt tho base of the Himalaya range rciit'htv down into the doitbor liquid interior, and thero dis ulaeeH a certain amount of Unit liquid, so that tho exterior attraction is thereby lessened, is one whieh, inherently im probable, fails to havo any application in explaining why the attraction above tho seas should be greator than over the continents. M. Fityo propounds tho following solution to tho dilliculty : Un der the oceans tho globe cools more rapidly and to a greater depth than be neath the surface of the continents. At a depth of -1,01)0 meters (13,000 feet) the ocean will htill have a temperature not remote from 0 deg. 0., while at a similar depth beneath tho earth's crust the torn leraturo would be not far from lot) deg O. (allowing 108 feet in depth down for an increase of 1 deg. in tho internal tem perature). If tho earth had but one uni form rate of cooling all over it, it would bo reasonable to assume that the solidi lied crust would lmvo the sumo thick ness and the samo average density all over it. It is therefore argued that be low tho primitive oceans tho earth's crust asshnied a definite solid thickness before tho continents, and that, in con tracting, these thicker port ions exercised a pressure upon tho lluiil nucleus tend ing to elevate still ftu titer the conti nents. Tho hypothesis, M. Fuyo thinks, will, moreover, explain the unequal dis tribution of laud and r-ca around the two poles, tho general rise and full of conti nents being determined by the excess of density of tho crust below lite oceans, and by the lines or points of least. resist ance to internal pressure being ut tho middle of eoutinoiitsoriit tho margins of oceans. A Lost Note, In 17-10, a director of tho Hank of England lost a 10,000 bank note, whiel ho win persuaded had fallen from tin I'ltimiiiiy-pieco of his room into the lire. Tho bunk directors guvo tho loser i second bill, upon his iiKiYcment to re More tho II rut bill should it ever b found, or pay the money if prehented In liny HtnuiKcr. "About thirty year at tirwartl."tajHSlr, Francis, "thedtivetoi having boon long dead, ami his heir u jMWMWvhlon of bin fortune, an unkiiovw jHtntoii iirvMtuUtl tho lost bill at On lutiik and duniundod imyiueiit. It wu III vain that Uiey inciitlniiml to thin iHr Ml llui trniMucliou by which that ll mih uiuuillotl j lie uoiild not )Mcn u Jlo luuliiluluml Ihut it hud iuim In hm, Irotil ubrixul, and Undated llsi( iiuiut. ilak tuyimllt. Tlio unto miu ikim.i lo bcnr, itial Iho fJKl.lKK) utre imi loiti 'J'lto liKir oi Him illiwU.r liol luleii i any ilumuiidt of rliliiUt, timl Iho bunk utu ii1)Ihm misImIu Ui. 1 W II ilbkCuvt'fUl Mltvinwd JW HlVjlljw l, limillU ))IMvIhm llt a nl a liiMi, IiimI IttdiHi H iluMuti dru IiuiM wiiuthMi uuui ilu mik. IihiJ Mile) (hi) jtolv In lh in ii il iwrnmvy, m lulu lm im 1IKMOIIW. famous Characters Who Are Engaged In ltook-WrlUnc. And so, writes a Washington cor respondent to The Cleveland Leader, Justico Field is to writo his memories of politics and politicians. I venture tho work will bo a most interesting one, andt it will probably describe, anion tr its California reminiscences, tho duel which lie came so near having while ho was a member of the Califor nia legislature. It is wonderful how much valuablo historical material is being gotlon together by distinguish ed men. 1 know of a dozen leading statesmen who aro intending to writu up their recollections before thoy die. Kopresontativo W D. Kolloy, tho noted pig-iron protectionist and one of tho most interesting writers in public life, Intended to writo a book of reminis cences in connection with his daughter Florence, wiio so recently married tho Russian nobleman with tho unpro- tiouncablo namo Florence Kelloy has a stylo much liko that of Dickens, and sho would havo made a valuable as sistant. Wlinthor her father will carry out his idea alone I do not know. Senator Sherman could writo one of tho most interesting books of this kintl, and he has a fund of material which is inestimable in value. His loiters lrom his brolhor, Gen. William 1. Sherman, running back for almost iwo scoro years, are a history m them selves. Tlioso letters are, 1 untler- itand, very full, and thoy havo beciCf penned under all imaginable circuui- nances. iiany of tliom wero written during tho rebellion, and some de icribo battles almost immediately after thoy took place In reply to heso, Senator Sherman wrote ttlinost is fully in rogarjl to whnt was flroinn: jn Here at Wuniiiorioo, ana u ino gvn srnl lias prusorvea ins luttvrtj, tho two jets would miucw up tho most iukirMt- ingboolc of tho kind orer pubiiwhod in :uw country, l don't know toot tlio JOiiutov itouUnnphitos wuiting sneh a beoje, but bin ItmdHt U almost por(oott md HlKinld ho retire from tho muitito ho aojild find nothuiir more iuhireat- ng iiml in'lruble. Suoset Cox's book goes bmvoiv om itid it mil ho alSvo with hitoreHt. Ho is mh'uig groat pjtins with it, aud smhhj ol the advanoo tdtcoi wliilt I hovo jeoii irivo ik irroat detil of imwritlon Uisory, told with the vlvaoity of an in terested oyo-wirnoss. tiav. Knott, of Menfciolry, hitoiulH at some future thuo to write his rotniniHuotivsos of public life. Ho a lino writor, aud Ids work will road woll. It is natural ior a mini who bus led n active pubho lifo to wwh to toll his itory boforo ho drops inUt tho grave, Mid'iimny tho grootost men tbo world litis ovor known havo wrirton tlteir MininiscouHcs. Bon Franklin penned his autobiography, Ctesav wroto tho itory of his oiunpalgus in (lira), (ioetbo told tho etory of his lifo in Wilholm Moistur, Charles DioliuitH pictured U'w jotil's history m David CopporKold, ud Lid her gtivo tho world muub. of Ids lifo in his "TabtoTalk." J.diiiHon hud a Boswoll to chroitielo lun liuuM aad IiImihoI, bnt Poppy, tho assoeiato of great mon of thu times before Uim, boootnes a great man to tbo fnturo tneruly becauso bo I; opt a dairy. , All groat uaon Huould pwsetvo tbir lut- ter anrl notes. Wo aro indubtod to Mndison's notes for the bintorv of thu constitutional convention which fooad 2tl our governniont, ami tho letters of tho Adamses tiro literally worth their weight in gold. Think of the value in an historical point of view of the let- tors of 1 humus Joilorson, ami rec olleut that their aro still unpublished important historical papers belonging to A ml lew .Jackson wlOeh lie set aside for his biography, and which aro now the subjects of litigation in tho courts horo. Froshlont l'olk-kopt his papers oarefully ami a book will be written from them In tho future John Tyler's. pon, orTiophow, I am not suroQwhioh, I Is now writing a biography of tho ox- presidcut, and Keineseutatlvu Dor shehnor is onrarod noon a lifo of Martin Van Huron. Down at Chilll-R cotho they havo tho letters of old Mill Allen awaiting an editor. Alexander Stephens' letters aro the most interes ting history of a great life, and tho Into biography of Huehtimiu is so Itirgoly initde up of letters that tho work seems almost like an autlbiogra phy. Grant promises now to hvo to :oinplete his memoirs, ami with lilaliie, Gov, and tho thousand aud one stories of romiiiiseeusu whieh aro now lllllng the daily papers, the Amer ican historian of tho future will bo blo to cull more of thu truth of Iho times than has over been done in thu past. (Ion. Leo' 8 Death. Tho doath of Con. Robert E. Loo at Lexington, Va., on tho l'Jth of October, 1870, removed an important autor in tho civil war. In thu south, where ho tvus best known and most beloved; in tho north, where his military genius md worth as a private citizen louiid Jut) recognition, and in Europe, where als skillful generalship ami personal jourtigo hiul won him high renown, (ho tributes to the memory of the de parted southern chieftain have been gcuouous, enthusiastic, and worthy of als fame. It may bo truly said that personally Con, Leo had not tin enemy. Ills heart ovorllowed with love aud jhnrity toward all iiialiklud. Ho drew is sword In tho oivll wnr troni a sense f duty to his native state; but when ho sheathed It again, under thu apple Ireo ut Appomattox Court house, there iv tis not a stain upon its blade. Even tlitiHii who wero oppotuul to (Sou. Leo upon Iho batllelluhl wero as ready us til most Intimate friends nnd anient admirers to testify lo hl wol-ili'serv d (itinti a a mllltnry lender, an well a to litii inttiiy private virtues. (leu. Iei, nhorlly after the mirren dor nt Ammunition, boouuio pnndduivl of WiuIiIiikIoii iH)llitu, at Lexington, mid itovuM himself In Iho tliUie uf Ihut position u lidon slluk mi Wodliesdu) evening. Hup A hu wit a bum in mU ii uo( at Ihu Uh Itthlu. hr sunli In lib) liliulr Ullll IllHMIIIIW I II ii l bin A rjydl"U ooii nl In. liuiieiui, Mini In lliM uuiirtm uf the I mi iU i following hit kiuMiiily luipriivml, null I II lioiawl lit Mut mil ul iUu tr If Ml Mil IhM (idluHli.g MudH) inenliig iu hhiii xddviil) Mud Mj'iijly wurv HH'I i 'IihuumI la uK until doath claimed its victim. During tho early part of his illness ho slept much and spoke seldom, but was rational when awake, and Tuways re cognized thoso at his bedside. At times his mind seemed to wander, and on several occasions roverted to tho army. Ho once ordered his tent to bo struck, and at another time do sired that "Hill should bo sent to tho front." Ho suffered but comparative ly littlo pain during ins whole Illness, and expired very quietly and peaco- iiilly at OiaUon Wednesday morning. liosion lJuugcl. Modern Geography. In nothing, let tho sciences and in ventivo genius of tho ago set up what claims they may, lias the world so mi proved as Its knowledge of its own geography. Within tho memory of innnv hvinc. and so short a time nrro mat It seems like a lew years only, . -1 " ... . .o tho maps ot our own school geogra phies wero naked m many places, great spaoo being marked wit a tlio letters "unexplored." These tracts, or vast regions of country wero mapped out indifferently in all the continents, while great archipelagoes wero put down as never having been explored, and no accounts of them were given. Central Africa was a terra incognito, and vast areas of South America had nover been visited, and oven great stretches of country in North Amorica, within tho United States oven, had never been cxolored and wero unmat)- - ljuU, except under the head, or title unexplored." Kegions m Asia, too, wero unexplored, or at least our knowledge of tho country, its physical features anil its people consisted only in stories very much like tho wondor iul accounts of .Marco l'olo, or tho fitorien told ot thu marvels of America by thu wnly Spanish, and other diacov erors and adyunturvrs. But to-day tbiH in idl difforenfr, and thy world is nmppud out with ;ic;urocy, almost, for thu -study of ovury school child. Thura w scaree a part of tbo earth rewmtiiing nuexplorod, scoruu n wiotitiH which biiu not beou vim ted by tiio advouturouH of tbusu modern times. Tho tvavolsof Liviugstouo and Stau-1 loy in Africa havo snpplomonrod thoso of Mungo Park aod Brnco, and thu u.ipaeities aud possibilities of tbo great Congo Uasin and Central Afriita tribu tary to it, lmvo buuoiuvj fomiliarutud to tlio civilized world. Tbo hcadwators ot thu Amazon, aud tho great oniidro surrounding thom, have been explored, aud :i Llumiiolut lias nuuiu us aeuiiHtuc- ed with the iaiiiiiuoraolo l-osourees of South America, whilo Aijjwyiii mid other soioutinto Ainericau voyagird havo added to our knowledge. Tho unknown in Central Amurioa and Mexico bus beoorno known, whilo tho Great Amoricou Desert" 1ms been ex plored and fonud to be a fruitful region, lrom which tho groutent agricultural sttitu of the Union, KansiiH, has been carved. It bus disup'ioarod from our maps, when scarce tweuty-tivo or thirty yoturs ago it aocountod for tho lui'gor portion of tlio ara jotwoen tho Mississippi and tho Hoc Icy mountain!. in Into years, rowoii, vneolor andj El:tjden, by tboiir explorations in tbo turrirnnos, tnrongu and along tbo Rooky niomdaiuri and down Uio Grwat Canyon of Colorado, liavu loft no part of the Unitxtd States nuknowu aad nnmnppad tor our geographies. What bus baen trno uf tho WeHtem hlmiMphurtt uad Air km hiw bean trut of Asm. Itussia's coriHlaot ooorouohmonU io Asia havo caused Tartary to be map ped, havo caused tho English to loam the geography of Afghanistan anil tlio Celestial empire, China having bon opened to civilized comoiorco no lon ger reinalhs a ni) stery. Its rivuiH aro known and thoir courses have been traced; its mountain rangofi Jiavo boon visited and mapped in their course, and tho fertile from the storiio regioris. of tho viut empire are knoMr,aiul shown-' on the maps. Thu geography of liulia, Maylay, bitun, Cochin China ami Tou quin, as well as the dimensions and features and U products of the is lands of Ocutiuisa are known, and even the far uorthhinds of tho Artie regions havo been visited. Franz Josef land, and Grooly's polar expe dition has added to our kuowuledgo of tho Ice barricaded regions of the earth. Whon, too, it is romoniborod that thoso explorations, by which wo lmvo acquired all this knowledge of the earth's surfaoo, all the knowledge we have, have been mudo within three or four decades at most, modern enter prise, adventure ami thu scientific de mand that has caused this wandering up and down the face of tho earth can not pu too much commended. Ql'lie earth is ours, anil the fullness thereof should not escape us for tho want of enterprise that has enlarged our kuowl edge of its geography in this ago. -Kansas Ctty Journal. American Literary Activity. A now growth of literary ami intel lectmil activity seems to bo .springing up among the people of the United States. Otu people talk of til Huron t things now than they did a decade or so ago. Tho newspaper tiro lillod with history, science, and literature, In addition to their market reports and tho news, which wero ton years ago their all aud lit all. Wo are getting yut ot tho formative element when the nation was going on tho "root-hog-or-dle" principle, aud aro fast advancing into thu stage of being comfortably well olV and of having time to enjoy ami cultivate the beautiful, tho pleas tint, and thu good. Art taste Isspilug lug up, a knowledge of science and philosophy in common, and the people are thinking of nomothlng eUe than broad and butter and tho making of money. ChwUimt .nnfrr. KmIuI Flushes of liletitrlciKy. MglitllliiU ha Ullml l.OOJ pcriotu In l'lunuu siiit'o IbtfA. An timl iiiiiii Imi have Iwuii svrmiulv, Ihuiigh not IhUH), WoumiIimI. uiid Au Iiiin a liiHiiy liuuk I he hot )r wtrt thu most fiitul, unit U mv rumai kitUle Mil liMtlug lawn Iho hol iiu wmum, Them Ua liol Uhii u dwulh friiui iihiMiuji m t'ttru in ihw Ihtpail lliuiil u( Ihw tot'iui siiie U Ihouxh llitrvliMiw Imhi man) tudvul Itullllf lliriv iliii nji ihut imuv A THOUSAND CHEER8. A tlionaml cheers for the bllrjhtcd life, The lonolv oni; we dolly meet. The sod, gad lot a knight In the strife Is trodden down ly rapid feet. He seeds our hand In the hearth ss race, The vol-e of love mlplit calm his. fears. Our smile mlpht brighten Ills rarewoin face, Inspire his life with a thousand cheers. A thousisnd cheers for the Rowing girl I With her tired hands and her henry heart Tliougli puro In soul unknown In the whirl Of money-makers In cltv mart. O beautiful flower on the tolhome path, O Jewel rare for the wenry eyes, O thought sublime that her tolling hath A thousand cheers Iiom the starry skies I A thouand cheers for tho honest boy, Unlearned In schemes of fame and wealth, Whose steps are heralds of restless joy The res'lessjoy of rugucd health. The clouds may shadow, some sunny day, This picture gilt with morning Hgut, But honor on earth still Hurts n way And room enough for n deed ot right. A thousand ebens for the man of might! Who bravely si rives when others tall, Whoniarclics "on to the losing fight Wht-n rights go down and wrongs prevail. The mau who bears Iho scorn and the Irowu And Censure's hitler lilastinir breath, Iteeelves, nt last, a dear-bought crown, A thousand chrcrs at the gates of death. 11. Jr. Callahan, m The Current TO A JUNK HOSE. O roval Rose I the Koman dress'd His least With thee; thy petals press'd Augnsum urows; mine oaor line, Mix'd with the threc-tlmcs-mluclcd wine. Lent the long Thracluu draught Its zesi. Whnt marvel then. If host and cuesb J Uy Love, by Song, by 'I hee caress' J, iiHii-ireuiuicu on Hie lnit-uivin?, O royul lto3e! And yet nnd vet I love, thee best In our o!d gun. ens of thu. West, iviiciner iiDout my tim'cii thou twine, Or Hers, that brown eved mnld of mine. Who lulls thee on her lawny breust, u royal Jtosoi Austin Dubson, in Harper's 31ar;azine. IN A HOLLOW ELM. Tbo n:uroinr train, with a crcat rjitllo nnd mach snorting und pufflog from tho looomotiro, skntd tbo low er end of tbo little Now England Til lugo of Middloton, and (Inully, with whBczy si-h, us though from exbuaH tion, oumu to a stnudriUll oppoaito tho red, box-like structure dijaitiod w'ith tuu n;i iuu ot depot. (Jno ptv?senger alighted, aud after Bnndry prolimiunry puffs and stiorte, the train oontinuod on its course. .Nemo among thu littio throng of idlers on tha atatinu platform recog nized tho new ooruer, who was rather shabbily dressed, with a consumptive sloop to bin shoulders and a pale, clear-out fitce, lighted by two large black eyes, which, from their dreamy expression, seemed to bo gadug upon some seotie fur away. "(mens he's a book peddler," said old Isaiah Buttertiold, tho village ora cle, shading his eyes with his hand and ga.ing after the stranger. "Yea, I know bo is, for he's turnin' into Squiro Merrinian's gate. Coin' to git him as a subscriber font, as a sort of a recommend, an' then tuckla the rest of the village." Enquire Jacob Morrimy.n wa tho village magnate, and livod m Uib tin est Loune in town. The supposed book peddler walked fdowly up tho straight gravel path lendiDs to tbo front door, and rung; tho beli. After quite a long wait during which nv blind wiu cuut'uiualy opened at un upper window una u pair of bright ayea surveyed tho fLdtor, tho door wan opened by a ncrvnnt girl who bud evidontly jn6t coma from tho wnsn tub, judp-ing from tbo red, perspiring fact und steaming, parboiled Arms, wbioh wore brd ithovo thoolbows. "Snre, wo wmit nothin' to-tltiy!" ciried tho girl, with 00 aogry toss, of ht't iwad, ttud sho Wat, about" to eloso tboxloor. 1 ' "I beg your phrdon!" said tho visi tor, stepping into the hall. "Is Miss Kuto at home?" "That she is, sir." "Take her my card, please," 'con tinued tho caller. q nd thrusting his liana into an in ner pocket, ho drew therefrom a shabby wallet, and handed tho girl a card, on whieh was written, iu bold characters, tho name: JOHN KKNT. The girl took tho card by one cor nor, with tho timrof her thumb anil linger, and bidding the gentleman bo seated in tho hall, disappeared. In a few minutes sho returned, and with saucy pertness delivered her message. "Sure, Miss Kate says sho's not at homo to the loikos of ji'ouA' Ah!" murmured lvont, and hlspalo faco Hushed. Ho did not stop to expostulate or make further inquiries concerning this strango niossago, but walkod through tho door, which the girl hold opon for him, and slammed shut, witli a bang, as soon as his feet touched the porch, with his shoulders moro stooped than when ho entered. "I might have expected this," ho muttered, between thu house and the gate. And another weary sigh escaped him. He stopped a minuto on tho side walk, and, after looking up and down tho street, walked toward tho left, and a short dlstancu from thu house turned down another street whieh led by tho town hall anil the two meetinghouses, thu blacksmith shop, and tho grave yard across the railroad, and tho nar row littlo Hiver Ipswich, and on out into tlio uoutitrv. I'll take ouu last look at thu farm," ho said, when ho readied (ho bridge, and paused for it moment to gazo down Into thu tumbling water, "and then go back to tho old life of toil, and hunger, and want." Ho heard the sound of approaching wheels, und rained hi eyes. A little wagon, drawn by a stout puny, whoso driver win a rosy uhuekrd, I'liiiy-himded ) tiling lud, not ovor t went ) ears of iiKu, wan rapidly tip jirotdilng, and ul mghl uf Hit nuny ami driver liu ulmvk it gum lliikd, ami glad siullo uf rwHtftiilUuii iiroal4il hi Ihln llp. Tim MHy lkfHl Uk sum he nudriMl llw brttk. mmI Juliit ivujit rwUtuI lit Imi Ut U turty-liwdl dnvr liMOil lllullllHg. MlM t)Uull)tl!" iw Ailll UlU l I'J'l'd ,oU 'Well, 1 declare!" cried Ella Os borne, in a clear, ringing voice It's John Kent, come back to old Miudlo tonl" Tho young man smiled sadlv. "Yes," it is I." he said. "I'm going to take a last look at tho old farm." "And where havo all these years since Sam died?" you your boon Uncle "In tho West," ho answered, with an ambiguous wave ot tho baud in that direction. "And you didn't niako your for tune?" "No; I camo back poorer than when I went away." "That's too bad!" sho said, pitying ly. "Havo you been up to see KaQ?" "I called on Miss Alcrriinan as I came from the train. Sho was at home, but not to mo." "Tho proud, stuck-up-thing!" cried the girl, indignantly. "As though you weren't as good as she any day! Well, I declare!" "1 suppose I would havo been roy ally welcomed if I had returned a rich man, or been, as I onco hoped to be, the owner of the Hill Farm." "Well, 80H10 peoplo aro mighty queer in their friendships. How, when I'm anybody's friond I'm out and out thoir friend, and when I don't liko them I tell tlioni so. It wouldn't have hurt her to come down and said, 'How d'ye do?' I'm glad to sco you, although you ain't looking so well as you woie when you left Middloton." l vo been sick," said Kent, "and I've worked verv hard tho last vear." "How that you've got back home you must take a long rest. Father will bo mighty glad toseo vou. Wo'ro living at tho farm now. He's foreman of the factory. You wouldn't know tho old place: it's changed a good deal since vou woro there. I'm just going up to tho store to get sumo tainggt and if you will Wtttt hftro, 1 11 hurry and gtTO you a rido back." "Thank you!" said Kent, cratcfuU lv. Aud tho girl, touching the pony With her whip drove on. "Sho at louet is honest and sincere," mnsed Kent, leaning un tho bridge rail aud gating into the water. "Sho ulways was straightforward and out spoken, and sho's grown lo bo a very beautiful woman." There was a school of little fiHb jtwt nudor tho edge of tho bridge, aud ho amused himself by watching their playful gtumbuls, until the pony came trotting buck. Then ho clambered in beside the girl, and, under tho influence of her cheer manner, his face brightened, and ho talked freely about hiiuaclf and hiu adventures. "1 suppose Hill Faro, is still owned by my cousin?" ho asked. "Yes, Hiok Warnor is still master, nnd iw mean us over, llo's getting richer every day, what with tho farm, aud the factory, and tho orchard. But he gets no pleiwure out of big money, and works evi-y day liko a slave. He's rutting down nil tho vtoodlaud, and this morning gavo orders tha the big elm that oferhangs tho enotern corner of tho house, bo felled." "That's a pity!" said Kent. "It wus my uncle fv oritp trco. ily great jrffoat grandfather, who was un oiliuor h Viwbingtun3 tinny, planted it. 1 ka?6 heard tho story "often. Ofto day ho entortainetl tho Father of his Country und sonio oflicers in tlio old ma ns. on. Thoy iodo over from tho headquarters of the Continental arhiy, which was then at Danvers. General Washington's filling whip was a small elm branch. When hnjtarted to go back, my gnctt great grandfather noticed it ad presented the General with his own riding whip. In re membrance of the Fatiior of his Con n-. try, ho planted iho elm br&ueh nnd it grow U bo a great tree, lvould have valuedit, but my Cousin Warner is not a man of poiuic tomporainontv ami would very quickly sacrilico a family relic.Oif it added to his rov eiiuos." Thoso rellections led Kent into a reminiscent vein, and ho regaled his fair listener with stories and quaint anecdotes of hi ancestors, who had been among tho iirst settlers and had been prominent men iu tho infant colony. "If your undo had only mado an other "will boforo he died, as ever v body believed ho intended to do," said the girl, when ho linished," "you would havo been master at Hill Farm." "Yes," ho answered, with a sigh of regret, and relapsed into silence. When tho pony turned into the well remembered carriago road which led by the graveyard where la' tho bones of his 'ancestors for many gen erations, and dually mounted tho lit tlo hill, on whoso brow the tonant house was built, Ella Osborno noticed that there were tears in her compan ion's eyes and her hand touched his with womanly sympathy. "I am rorry, John," she said, "that it makes you'feol so bad." "1 am all right now," ho answored. bravely dashing away the tears; ami jumping from tho wagon, walked through tho neglected grounds to tho great elm troe, at whoso base two sturdy woodmen wero industriously chopping. Ho watched them awhile with misty eyes, and was about turning away when an exclamation from one of thu choppers caught his ear, and caused him to approach nearer. "1 swan, Jim!" said the man to hU companion; "we've had our labor for our paliiN. The old tree is only a ahull, and it is lit for nothing put stove wood," " Thu boss will he tu mnd a a hor net!" vuuuhsufod tho other. And thoy resumed thoir cutting "Uko my bonus!" murmured John K u ut, watohlng thani. "Thu old true is a delusion.' PitMouily it Imgtin lo loiter, und thu ohuppem hiiiljiul linw Ui jump lu uuu UId Iih It ftMl with gmi ortih. ami twig hhiI Ui uf Imi k Jlmv in all Out ul ihn iumh oliHiUw) up lu liwl law trunk mid Uwkam lopptu ull llm IimIm J.d. ii (tout ifiquid fonurd mtvml ID ttik fur l'U.y ul Ihu ut Iruvttj a souvenir, when tho man among tho limbs dropped his ax and jumped ex citedly to tho ground. "Ho, Jim!"" ho cried. "Hero is a tin box wedged into tho forks. Maybo there's gold in it, for old Sam. Kent was considerable of a miser, aud this may bo some of his store." "That is certainly a box that be longed to my uncle," said Kent, ap proaching. "I am Mr. Kent's nephew " Tho man who had discovered tho box, pulled it from its hiding place, and muttering something about "Find ings being keepings," passed it over to Kent. With trembling hands tho young man wrenched oil' tho rustv lid, and the young men bent forwariCibagerly to seo what it contained. Only a bundlo of pnpers, yellow with age, and tied together with a faded nieco of bluo ribbon. "Only papora!" thoy cried, in chorus, and turned away in disgust. John Kent, howover, soiled tho package, and brushing aside tlio mold road this endorsement on tho back of tho topmost paper: "Last Will and Testament of Snmiicl Kent, Yeotnau." "Found at last!" he cried, joyfully.1 "Thnnk heaven!" Ho dropped the empty box, and wav ing the papers triumphantly in tho air, ran toward Ella Osborne, who was advancing to meet him. "The will is found!" ho cried. And both, Vory much excited, pro ceeded to dceipner tho crabbed writing of tho moldy document. It? Was indeed the old farmer's last will, and in it ho bequeathed all his property laud, cattle and stocks-rto his duarly beloved nophow, John Kent. "It is a perfectly legal document," said Nicholas Warner, when tho mat tor was laid before him. ,vWo will go to a lawyer to-morrow, Mr. Kent, und I Will turn over to you tho prop erty, aud tlio prolits for the last live years." Tho naws of John Kont's pood for tune spread lihn wildliro, aod con gwtulntiona poured in on hiio from Vry quarter. When he vidrcd the villago, next day, Miss Kato aiorritnnn met' him on tho street uad greeted him gushingly. "I sun so sorry," Bnidsbo with a be witching smile, "that I did notenoyou when jou called yeKterday." "Tho aervant told, mo you wero; not at homo to roe." HUid Kout, coldly; "but Ella.. Osboroo has promihtd to bo my wife, und after we aro married 1 shall always bo at homo to you." (Jcof-gc )Vi Men THio Bvcak Down, Mr. Conant. tfuyw an eastern paper, belonged to a olac-s which, ta.Xcn b tho larger sense, includes nearly nil; professional men physicians, lawyers and clergymen, as well as journalists. This class is misnamed tho infcdloctunl olaas, for the work of merchants, bank ers inTentors, baildcrs, ia fact alb uv& who aw required tQ incessantly nso their jndgniout and designing foonltiftfl, is as strictly intellectual asC that of tbo mau who edit a nowspa por, writes a poem or composes ser oion. Hankers and builders, mer chants and master mechanics, break down as frequently as editors and preacher's, tho only dillerenco being that they aro not "so..prominent, aud consequently not so nmch talked about. I know a lloor-wtilkor in a great dry goods storo whoso mental organization is exactly liko that of certain clergy nien and journalists, ami once in awhile breaks dowu just as sonio preachers and editors do, and for tho atno reason. I know a contractor who, is of pure mind and correct hab its, but for once, after having secured a contract in which there waCH sure littlo fortune, strayed from homo and was not found ami brought back until hisQfumily nnd business friends had givon away to tlio crudest suspicious as to tho cause of his disappearance. What is tho matter with those men? Well, tho same trouble that drives thousands of women to tho mad-house,, tho invalid chamber, or untimely death. Their work is never done not if thoy aro fit for their respoctivo positions. A managing journalist may havo the ploasatitcst positioti aud most considorato employers in tho world, blithe wants it bettor; his competitors aro as energetic as himself, and tho doings of the day will not arrange thoiusolves according to tho mental convenieuco of any man alive. So tho editor falls into a rut that is, ho gives his entire time and thought to his work. His ollico hours may end daily at a stated time, but Ins work does not end with them; ho tills his pockets with nianuscriiits, another with books, takes a handful of news papers and starts for homo to continue his daily routine. Iu the oourso of time ho finds himself forgetful or sluggish of mind; then ho consults either a physician or a barkeopor and swallows whatever is given him. With tho relief thus temporarily obtained he goes on, imagining himself cured, but soon ho finds himself obliged to return for stronger doses. In tho course of time stimulants, no matter how honestly taken, ceaso to stimulate, for tho simple reason that nothing is left to work upon. Tho man is used up and tho day conies when tho tired mind, incapable of do ing anything else, begins to turn upon nnd de'stroy Itself, just hi any other broken down nuiuhlno always does. Mut wheru ono editor fails in this way tt seoru of other professional men fol low dlllt. Tho Hilly Weighed Half ft I'oiuitl. Tho wlfo uf (iiiorgu Vlrrleiu. n ilrivur lor Wlulor's browory, gate birth on Tuonduy ul In it girl imhi weigh- IIIL' lut null tt Hum iut Imlf tt pound. I ho t-h ld win luriMtiuy ioi uitwi, nun ui muu neau . I M ... ... I I . . . I . . 1 iuil miilu u ifr.ivvtll id UfXHLl Luir. Tim diiiillliillvo fiuUir w hidUroiit- ritowiiihlttuiu) ty tkun uf U niulhar Tti luiuutti tMb livtd Uiut twiMily fttvU biU!f WIiIIh bw ft all it cum vvtu vWlli'tl by iuau) iili)lyi atul mul ullltwr of ih hMUiij dtMiri ipni Mm Virtue fm,i u,m ehil tllVU lllU lddkl f Hltutu l lu. hiw u c