ALtAMv-llUNTEB. A cup of coffee, egg anil rolls Sustain lilin ci )i ftgiornliii: strolls t Unconscloi b of tliu pas' m by, He trudges on llh iloivncnt eye: He wear a queer oM liat an J co-tt, SusjgcstVii f 11 st.vic remote; llU'innm i:r 1st p;o cciiplcd, A Miamblltig g.iil, from s!lo to fide. For lilm the deck, br.Klit-wluilowcii'sliop Is all n vain lie do-'B n it stop. Ills tlnugMs ore fixed on ilmlv Miches Where musty volumes little themselves, Hare prints of poo r nnd prose, And qu i nil? lettered folios, 1'crcliuncc a piircliuiciit iiMHU'crlpt, In seme forgot eti corner slipped, . Orir.o k llluinlncd ml-slii bound In vellum wl h t.russ clnsps mound ; TIicsj aiollu plciurul things thatthiong Ills mind the while ho walLs tilling. A dlnjy street, a c c lar d m, "Willi boitU-laicd ah, Milllces hltn. The uust Is white upon his shcvis; Ho turns the yellow, dog-careO" Ioavet Willi Just the sninu religious look That pr csts give to the Holy Hook. He does t ot ho d t ho flllllng air If so he finds a treasure there. He knows tare hooks, like precious nines, Arc hid len where the sun ne'er shines j For hltn delicious fl.ivors dwell In books a In old Muscatel; He finds in (entires of the typo A clew to ptove the nape was rlpo. And when lie leav s his dismal piece, Ilclio d, 11 smile light up his facet Upon h's checks a gen'al glow, Within his hand lloccncclo, A first edition worn with age, "Flrcnze" on the title-page. Frank Dempster Sherman, in The Century. Mates Sandorf. -Bt- JULES VERNE. atjtiioh op "journey to tub gentiie op thk kaiitii,". "tiiip to tub moon," "ABOUND TUB WOIlIiU IN KIUUTX DAYH, " " MICHAIU, BTIlOUOl'F," "TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES DNUlill TUB SKA," I7rO., ETC TEANBI.ATION COl-VJUdUTI!!), 1883. CHAPTER V. ran MusaAau in oirnnrt. Two days nftorwards Sareany wan installed in tho houso of Ladislas Zath nmr. Ho liml been introduced by Silas Toronthal, and on his intvoditction had boon received by Count Sandorf. Tho banker mid his agent lind beoomo ac complices, tho object of their Hellenics boing tho discovery of 11 secret v,'hioh might cost tho chiefs of tho conspiracy their lives, nnd tho result, as tho prioo of thnir infonnation, u fortuno fulling into tho pocliot of an adventurer, that it might 11ml its way into tho strongbox of a banker who had reached tho point of boing uuablo to honor his engagements. A formal ngreoment had been drawn np batwoon Toronthal and Surcany, no cording to which tho expected profit was to bo shared equally. Sareany was to havo suflioiont to enable him and his companion, Zirone, to live comfortably nt Trieste, and to meet all outgoings and expenses. In exohiiiigo.ind as a guar antee ho had handed over to tho banker tho frto-flimilo of tho message which con. tninod-thero could bo no doubt tho uecrot of tho conspiracy. It may, perhaps, bo said that Sandorf was imprudent in acting thus. Under such circumstances to introduce a Btrauger into tho house where such im portant matters were in hand, on the vory ovo of a rising, of which tho signal might bo sont at any moment, might Boom nn net of Btrango imprudence. But tho Count had not acted thus with out being obliged. It was necessary that his personal af fairs should bo put in order now that ho "was about to enter on a perilous adven ture in which ho risked his life, or at least exile, if ho wnsobliged to lly in tho uvont of failure. Resides tho introduc tion of a stranger into Zathniar'H house appeared to him calculated to provont mtspicion. llo fancied that for somo days and wo know that ho was not miatukon there had been spies in the Aoquedotta; Bpies no other than Sareany nud Zirono. Were the police of Trieste kooping their eyes on his friends nnd him nuil thoir proceedings? Sandorf might woll think so and fear ho. If tho mooting placo of tho conspirators, hithorto bo obstinately kept hidden, iseomed to him to bo nuspeoled, what bettor means of batliing suspicion could bo devised than to admit within it an accountant merely busying himself with accounts? How could the presence of n clerk bo dangerous to Zathniar and his guests? In no way. There was no longer any interchange of ciphered cor respondence between Trieste and tho other townsof Hungary. All tho papers relating to tho movement had been de stroyed. Thoro roni.iiuod no written trace of tho conspiracy. Thu measures bud been taken i they were not intended to bo taken, Count Sandorf had only to give tho Mgnal when tho moment arrived. So that tho introduction of a clerk into the house, which tho Govern ment might ham under surveillance, was calculated to allay all suspicion. That is to say, tho reasoning was just ttuil tho procaution good, had the clerk hr.-it any ouo else than Sarcauv, nud his introducer any other than Silas Toron thai. Sareany was a past-master in duplic ity, and took full advantage of tho gifts ho posbesHod - his open face, his frank, clear oxproKMon, and his honest, straightforward look Count Sandorf nud his two companions could not but bo taken with lum-mid they woro taken with him. In no way did he show or learn that ho wuh in tho presence of tho chiefs of n conspiracy to naso H'o Hungariau race in revolt against tho Germans. Mathias Kandoif, Stephen Uathory ami Ladislas Zuthnmr seemed at thir meetings to bo only occupied with (lisou&sions on nrt and science iuxo was uo Bceiet ooiroapoudouoo; SAHCANY FINDS TUB thoro woro no mysterious comings nnd goings about tho houso. Hut Sareany know what ho wanted. Tho chance ho wanted was sure to come in turn, and ho waited for it. In ontoring Zathmar's houso Sareany had but ono object in view to possess liimsolf of the grating that would cnablo him to decipher tho cryptogram; and as no ciphered despatch arrived at Triesto, ho began to ask himself if, for pruden tial reasons, tho grating had been do stroyed? This would bo rather annoy ing for him, as nil the scaffolding of hia sohonio was based on his being able to read tho letter brought by tho pigeon. Thus, as lie worked at putting in or der tho account! of Mathias Sandorf, ho kopt his eyes open; ho watched, ho spied. Admission to tho room whoro tho moatings took place between Zath niar and his companions was not forbid den him. Very often ho worked thero illalono : and then his oyes and his fin Rors woro occupied in quite other tasks than making calculations or casting figures. Ho ferreted among tho papers ; ho opened tho drawers by means of skeleton keys made for him by Zirono, who was qiuto an adept in such matters. Anil all tho timo ho kopt a Btrict watch on llorik, witli whom ho seemed aamo liow, quite out of sympathy. For llvo days Sarcany's search was useless. Each morning ho eaino with tho hopa of succeeding; each ovoning ho roturncd to his hotel without having discovered anything. Ho feared ho was going to fail aftor all in his criminal on ferprizo. Tho conspiracy if thero woro ii conspiracy, and ho could not doubt that thoro was ono might como to a head at any moment before it had been discovered, and consequently before it liad boon reported. "Hut rather than loso tho benefit of a discovery, even without satisfactory proofs, better inform tho police," said Zirono, "and givo them a copy of the letter." "That is what I am going to do if necessary," said Sareany. Of course Toronthal was kopt inform ed of all that went on. And it was not without dilllculty, that the impatience of the banker was duly curbed. Chance canio at last to his assistance. On the first occasion it brought him tho message, and now it came to him to show him how tho message could bo uoeiphored. It was tho last day of May, about four o'clock in tho afternoon. Sareany, according to his custom, wii' going to leave Zathmar's houso at flvo. Ho was greatly disappointed that ho had advanced no further than on tho llrst day, and that tho work ho had boon doing for Count Sandorf was ap proaching its ond. When tho task was tlnished ho would evidently bo dismiss ed with thanks and rewards and ho would havo no chance of again ontoring Iho house. Zathniar and his two friends were not it home. There was no one in tho houso but Rorik, and ho was busy on tho ground iloor. Sareany, finding himself froo to do as ho liked, resolved to go into Count Zathniar's room which ho had not yet been able to do and then search everything ho could. Tho door was locked. Sareany with his skeleton koys soon opeued it and entered. Hotweon tho two windows oponing on to tho street thero was a writing desk, whoso uutiquo form would have delight ed a connoisseur in old furniture. Tho Bhut-down front prevented any ono in specting what was inside. It was the first timo Sareany had Uio ohauco of getting near this piece of furniture, ami ho was not tho man to waste his opportunities. To rummago in dilVerent drawers, ho only had to fores the front. And this he did with tho aid of his instruments, without the lock being in any way injured, In tho fonr.h drawer under a pile of papers, was a kind of card cut into curi ous holes. Tho card caught his atten tion at once. "The grating!" ho Biiid. Ho was not mistaken. His first idea was to take it with him, but on rcllectiou ho saw that its disan pcarauco would awake suspicion, if Count Zathniar noticed it hud gone. "Good," said ho to himself; "as I oopiod tho message, so I'll copy the grat ing, ami Toronthal nud 1 can read tho despatch at our ease." Tho grating was merol' a squaro ol card altout two and a half inches loug, divided inl thirty-six equal squares. Of those thirty-Bix equal squares, urraugod in six horizontal and vertical GBAT1N0 IN TUB DESK. lines, liko those on a Pythagorean tablo of six ciphers, tweuty-soven wero shaded nnd nine wero open that is to say, nine squares had been cut out of tho card and left niuo openings in different positions. Sareany had to bo careful to take the exact size of tho grating and tho exact position of tho nine blank squares. And this ho did by tracing tho grating on a sheet of white paper and marking on his copy a small cross which ho found oh the original, and which scorned to dis tinguish tho toj) side. By moms of this grating, which it would bo easy to copy on a pieno of ordinary card, Sareany felt that ho would havo no difficulty in deciphering tho fuc siiiiiloof tho message then in possession of Toronthal ; and so ho put back the orig inal giating among tho papers, as ho had found it, left Zathniar's room, loft the house, and returned to his hotel. A quarter of an hour afterwards Zirono beheld him enter tho room with such a triumphant air that ho could not help exclaiming : "Hullo! What is up? Tako caro of yourself! You aro not so clover in hid ing your joy as you are your grief, and you'll betray yourself, if" "Shut up," answered Sareany, "aud to work without losing a moment " " Reforo wo feed '(" " Reforo wo feed." Anil then Sareany picked up a card of moderate thickness, lie cut it according to hia tracing so as to obtain a grating of tho oxuOj shapo of hi3 copy, not forget ting tho little cross which showed tho right end uppermost Then ho took a rule and divided his rectangle into thirty six squares, all of equal size. Thou of theso thirty-sixsquares nino wero marked as they appeared on tho tracing, and cut out with tho point of a penknife so as to show through them, when applied to tho message, whatever signs or letters wero to bo read. Zirono sat facing Sareany, and watched him as ho wi rked. Ho was deeply inter ested in tho performance, becauso ho thoroughly understood the system of cryptography employed in tho corre spondence. "Now that is ingenious," ho said, " highly ingonious, and may bo of Fonio uso ! When I think that each of theso empty squares may perhaps hold a mil lion of money" "And more!" said Sareany. Tho work was at an end. Sareany roso and put the cut card into his pooketbook, "The first thing to-morrow morning I call on Toronthal," ho said. "Keen an cvo on his cash box." "If ho hai tho message, I havo tho grating!" " And this timo ho will givo it up." "Ho will givo it up." "And now we can feed?" "Wo can feed."' " Come on, then." And Ziroue, always blest with a healthy appetite, did full justice to tho excellent meal ho had, according to hia custom, ordered. In the morning it was tho 1st of Juno at eight o'clock Sareany presented himself at tho bank, and Toronthal gave orders' for him to bo shown into tho ofllco immediately. "There is tho grating," was all that Sarcauy said, iu ho laid tho card on the table, Tho banker took it, turned it round and round, jerked his head first on ono Bido then tho other, aud did not seom at all to share in the confidence of his ussociate. "Let us trv it," said Sareany. "Well, we'll try it." Toronthal took tho fao-similo of tho message from ono of tho drawers in his desk mid laid it on the table. It may bo recollected that tho message was composed of eighteen words, each containing six letters the words beiug quite unintelligible. It was obvious that each letter ought to correspond with n square of the curd ; and consequently that tho six tlrt words of tho message, composed of thirty-six letters, must havo been obtained by means of tho thirty-six squares. And in the grating tho nrrmigomout of thu blank uptaros hud been so ingen iously thought out that for every quarter turn-that is. for tho four times tho blank squares changed their position they came in a different place. It will be Been that this must bo bo ; for if ot tho-tlrst application of Iho grat ing to white paror tho figures 1 to 0 aro inscribed in each blank space, and then, after a quarter turn thu figures 13 to 19, nnd then after another quarter turn the figures 19 to 27, and then, after another quarter turn, tho figures 28 to 3G, it will bo found that no squaro has two num bers, and that each of tho thirty-six squares is filled in. Sareany very naturally began on tho six first words of tho message, intending to mako four successive applications of tho grating. Ho then thought of treating tho nest six, nud then tho six finals in tho samo way, and thus use up tho eigh teen words of tho cryptogram. It need scarcely bo said that Sareany hnd told Toronthal what ho intended to do, and that the banker had approved of tho plan. Would thopractico confirm tho theory? Therein lay all tho interest of tho experiment. Tho eighteen words of tho messago wero theso : ihnalz zncmen ruiopn arnuro trvrco mtqssl odxhnp cstley ccuart acceil ennios noupvg Bpesdr crssur ouitso cedgno toecdt artuco At first they set to work to decipher the first six words. To do this Sareany wroto them out on a sheet of whito paper, taking caro to spaco tho letters ond lines as to bring each letter under ono of tho squares of tho grating. And this was-tho result i h n a 1 a n n x o o d a r o d a o s p o o u h a s r n i d o P 1 r g Then tho grating was placed over tho letters so that tho littlo cross was on top, and then through the nino openings thoro appeared tho nino letters shown below, whilo tho other twenty-sevon wero hidden : hazrxoirg CHAPTER VL CAN THE CirilEK, HE (SOLVED ? Then Sareany mado a quarter turn ol tho grating from right to left, so as to bring the side with tho cross to the right. And these woro tho letters that appeared through the spaces : n o h a 1 o d o c At tho third attempt tho letters visiblo wero these : nadnopodn To tho astonishment of Toronthal and Sareany, nono of theso combinations gavo any senso. They endeavored to read them conclusively in tho order thoy had been obtained, but they proved us meaningless as tho despatch itself. Was tho messago to remain iudecipherablo ? Tho fourth application of tho grating resulted thus : ilruoposs which was as obscure as tho others. In fact, tho four words which had been discovered wero : hazrxoirg nchaledco nadnepdu ilruopeas ond theso meant Nothing. - - - Sareany could not conceal his rago at such a disappointment. The banker shook his head, aud remarked, in a slip-lit tone of irony: "Perhaps that is not tho grating !" Sareany simply writhed in his chair. " Lot us try it again 1" ho said. "Try again," said Toronthal. Sareany, having mastered his nervous agitation, began oxperimonting on tho six worda forming the second column of tho messago. Four times did ho apply tho grating; and theso aro the four meaningless words ho obtained : - amnetnoro velessuot etseirtcd zerreoncs This timo Sareany throw the grating on the table with an oath. In curious contrast, Toronthal kept quite cool, no was carefully studying tho words hitherto obtaiuod, and re mained deep in thought "Confound all gratings and all who uso them !" exclaimed Sareany, rising. "Sit down," said Toronthal. "Sit down ?" "Yes ; aud go on." Sareany gavo Toronthal a loolc. Then ho sat down, took tho grating, nnd applied it to the last six words of tho message, as ho had dono to tho othors. Ho did it mechanically, as though ho took no interest in what ho was doing. Aud tho words given by tho four appli cations of tho grating wero : uonsuoveu glangisro inierpuata rptsetuot That was nil. Tho words wero as meaningless as tho others. Sareany, enraged beyond all bounds, took tho paper on which ho had written the barbarous words which tho grating had yielded, aud Was about to tear it into tatters, when Toronthal stopped him. "Do not get excited," ho said. " Eh!" exclaimed Sareany, "what can you do with an insoluble logograph liko that ?" "Writ all those words in a line, ono aftor tho other," said tho banker. "And why?" "To seo." Sareany oboyed ; and ho obtained the following : hazrxeirgnohttUxltcnetJnejvtinilritoptuwmi ttnortKUssouteimrMzerrecneiWimwreuqlan gisreimttyuaterptutuot Tho letters had scarcely been written boforo Toronthal snatched tho paper from Sareany nnd read it and gavo a Bhont, It was tho banker who now lost his head. Sarcauy .thought ho had gouo mad. "Head 1" said Toronthal, holding out tho paper to Sareany. "Read !" " lUuid 1" Yes I don't you Reo that, before thoy used the grating, Count Sandorf s cor respondents wrote the letter backwards ?" Sarcauy took tho paper, und this is what he read, proceeding from the lost to Iho first: Tout ost nreL An nromier sicnal auo vous nous onverrcz do Trieste, tout J solevcront cn masse pour l'independ. ence do la Hongrie. Xrzah. " And the four last letters ?" ho asked. "An ngreed-upon signature, or some thing to fill up," mid Toronthal. "Oh, then! 'All is ready. At tho first signal yon send us from Trieste, all of us will riio together for the independ ence of Hungary!' That is it, is it? Well, wo havo got them nt last 1 " Hut tho polico havo not got them 1" "That is my business." "You will act with great secrecy?" " That is my business." said Sarcauy. "Tho Governor of Trieste shall bo tho only person to know tho names of tho two honest patriots who have nipped in its bud this conspiracy ngainst tho em pire of Austria 1" And as ho s2ioke, the mockery of each tone and gesture betrayed tho tnto feel ing with which ho tittered the words. "And now I havo nothing elso to do," said tho banker. "Nothing," answered Sareany, "ex cept to tako your share of tho profit" "When?' "When tho thrco heads fall which aro worth a million apiece." Toronthal and Sareany bid each other adieu. If thoy wished to gain anything out of tho tecret that chance had handed over to them they must bo quick and denounco tho conspirators before tho plot broke out Sareany returned to Zathmar's houso as if nothing had occurred, nnd went on with the accounts. His work was nearly finished. Count Sandorf, in thanking him for tho zeal ho had shown, told him that ho should not require his services after tho next eighteen days. " To Sarcany's miuC this meant that about that timo tho signal was to bo given from Triesto to the chief of Hun garian towns. Ho continued, therefore, to watch with the greatest care, but so as to givo rise to no suspicion, all that took placo in Zathmar's house. And ho played his part so well, ho seemed so imbued with liberal ideas, and had taken bo littlo pains to hide tho invinoiblo repulsion ho said ho felt for tho Gcrmuus, that Sandorf thought of giving him a post later on, when tho rising should havo mado Hungary a freo country. It was not so with llorik, who had never got over tho first feeling of disliko with which the young man had inspired him. Sareany ncared his triumph. It was on the Oth of Juno that Count Sandorf had agreed with his friends to give tho signal, aud tho Slh hnd come. Hut tho informer had been at work. In tho evening, about eight o'clock, tho polico suddenly entered Zathmar's hoitfco. Resistance was impossible. Count Sandorf, Count Zathmar, pro fessor Rathory, Sareany himself, who made no protest, aud Rorik were secretly arrested. I TO HE COHTI.NL'KD. I The Rrahmhi's link' of Life. "Eat, dr. nk, nud bo merry, for to morrow wo die!" which is the ex hortation of the modern materialist, as it was of tho ancient Etryr.tinns at their banquets had no placo in tho great creeds of India. Tho soul was undying; and purity, nsqoticisin, qui etism, wero the universal watchwords in the required work of spiritual liber ation. The first ntep in this turning away from the wot Id is when tho in dividual begins to seo through tho il lusiveness of life; becomes conscious of tho unreality of his surroundings and of tho soul's independence of tho external world and ot the sensations which it produces upon him through the glamor medium of tho senses. If ho bo an orthodox Hrahniin ho says: "What havo I to do with this phant asm of nature, this mirage of an ex ternal world? Why should I allow myself to bo subject" to tho painful or disturbing sensations which it imposes on mo through thu senses, when in re ality there is no existence but Hrnliui, of whom I am a part?" This hist pliraso is tho mint intelligiblo to a Eu ropean; but what the Hindu sa.vs is, "1 tun Hralini" in tho senso that a drop taken from tho ocean is thesanio in substance with tho ocean. Truo knowledge sees through tho decep tion of Maya; it dispels tho darkness from tho embodied soul, and thereup on tho soul seeks to liberato itself from this bondage of illusion; it conies to know that it is part of tho soul of tho universe, and, l.ke tho reclaimed prodigal, cries, "1 will arise and go to my father!" The rule of common lite, as preached by tho Hrahiuius, was to fulfill tho duties incumbent upon each ono in the position in which he is born. No ono was to disturb another in the discharge of his duties; hu must not injuru oither man or beast, and ho must bo tender oven to plants and trees. When ho had set up his houso, had married and begot a sou: when he hud fulfilled the duties of a house master; when ho was old and had seen his children's children, then ho must prepare lor futurity and rotiro into tho forest to load the life of an ereniite, and work out his "libera tion," or tho salvat'on of his soul. This was prescribed even for tho com mon throng although, doubtless, the injunction was hut littlo, or vory slightly, observed. It was acknowl edged that it is not over ono who can beoomo n truo ogee, much less a Sannyasin or Arhat. Hut to all who nsniro aftot tho higher grades of libor atfon aud spir.tual existence, marriage itself was forbidden, and all sexual indulgence pruh lilted, as most fully retaining tho soul under tho bondage ot tho senses and keeping it from rising into the fuller and higher lite which it outers upon when emancipated from tho fetters of tho body. The Uri'.ish Quarter y J,ciucw. Too (iood to His Faiur. A formor resident of Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, and now of Utah penitentiary, says in a lotter to a I'r.eml: "1 tun serving asix months' sentence for loving, cherishing and caring for my dear families, consist ing of thrco of tho best, noblest ami loveliest wives in tho union, and twen-ty-threo just ns good and pretty child ren as over canio from heaven to so journ for a season on this mundane sjihoro." Council Blus A'o;ir.e'. OTllULLO. How It was 1'orfbriucd by a Xcsro Com jinny. There was a performance of "0 thello" in New York recently which ono may well believe to bo "without n, rival," oa the Times says it wns, judging from its account of tho tragedy. The piny, wo are told, diflered from that with which New York audiences are fnniiliar in ninny particulars, chief of which tvaa that the characters wero all Moors. This made the rago of ono Urabantio, because his dauahtor had married Othello, ulittleditHcult to understand. This trivial circumstance, however, did not weigh heavily upon the minds of the Astor-placo tragedians, and they proceeded to make things just as lively for Othello as if ho had been common white trash. Tho Times critique runs tliuslv: Othello, the lord'high executioner of Venice, was impersonated by Ben jamin J. Ford. Mr. Ford makes tho part up much darker than Salvini does, and even than GustavusBrooko was wont to do. Mr. Ford's dark make-up, however, does not prevent him from standing considerably over six feet in his thights and giving the audience a great deal of Othello for their money. Mr. Ford has a voice which extends from tho sub-cellar of the base clef to the third Iloor, back of the tenor, and is capable of spreading itself over a largo portion of the com munity at one time. Tho quality of tho voice is distinctly cheerful. The lower notes have much of the pathetic mellowness of thecontra fagotto, while the upper notes are like tho lascivious piping of the E-tlat clarionet. Iago was represented by J. A. Arneaux, of whom it may bo said, in the langungo of a classic song composed in tho timo of Nelsonidis Seymourus, that French ballet girls are in the shade when ho puts down his shoe. Desdcmona, the Yum Yum of the drama, was acted by Miss Eloiso Molinenux. The various episodes of the play wero watched with deepest interest by the audience. When Othello ran away with Desdemona, and stood up like a littlo man before her irate papa, tho spectators hailed him with loud excla mations, and when ho talked business to a lot of disabled base-ball catchers, whom ho called senators, the audience shouted with joy. The efforts of logo to convince Othello that his twilight colored bride had shaken him for ono Cassio were watched with intense in terest, and when Othello's counte nance was distorted with a "fright ful, fearful frantic frown," and his voice fell all the way downstairs from high C to D flat below tho bass cleil, every one knew that thero was a good stout rod in pickle for logo, and cheered Othello to the echo. Subse quently when Othello seized Iago by his little pigtail and drew his snicker snee, while Iago flopped down iipontho unyielding pine boards and "gurgled anil guggled," the ajiplauso roso to a pam of wild glee. Rut it was in the final act of the trag edy that Othello woke up the fullest senso of tho situation and demon strated that he was boss in his own house. He grabbed Desdcmona. by her flowingswitchos and swept thesplinter.s of the'stngo with her. He jerked 1 c from L. U. E. to K. 1. E.. across tho stage and down the middle, lie scat tered the English language in about 300 parts of speech all around her, and though she moved earnestly for a new trial ho gave her to understand in plain words that the jig was up and that she hnd to seek a field of useful ness in another and better world, llo then proceeded to stufT a boarding houso pillow down her throat and sit on it, whereupon Desdemona, knowing when she had enough of a good thine, curled up in a heap and died. Then Emilia, impersonated by Miss Belle Martin, in a black dress with brass buttons down the front, gave away the deal which her husband had made, and Othello awoke to a consciousness that his friend wns a bunco steerer of the lowest type. So ho once more drew his snickersnee and proceeded to per form tho difficult, not to say danger ous, operation of self-decapitation. The auiiienco roso and departed. Tho spectators evidently had no great de sire to behold any manslaughter, as they hnd seen wonuinslaughtcr suf ficiently widespread to last"them for several months. Too Stronsr a Temptation. The postmistress of Corning, Lehigh County, Penn., has been arrested un der somewhat singular circumstances. Tho people of tho neighborhood had complained for somo timo that their mail showed evidence of having been tampered with, and investigation re vealed tho fact that tho lady in chargo of the ollico had been amusing herself nnd adding to her stock of general in formation by opening and reading everybody's letters. On being taxed with this she is said to have ac knowledged tho truth of Mieacusation, nt thesanio timo observing that she did not know she was doing anything for which she could bo punished. Dur ing her periods of innocent law-breaking, therefore, she must havo enjoyed ono of the most delightful privileges conceivablo from tho point of view of a healthy postmistress with a natur ally robust thirst for insight into tho private affairs of her neighbors. That with such a fund of knowledge at her disposal sho did not convert tho quiet village of Corning into a Pandemonium such as was created by tho diabolical ear-trumpet ot Dame Eleanor Spear ing may bo regarded ns conclusive dem onstration that she know how to keep somo kinds of secrets. In his "Historical Sketches of the Town of Swiunpscott"Wnldo Thotim son, of Lynn, states that about lb'Hj John M. Ives, of Salem, received two or three marrow squash seeds from a negt'ess, whoso husband was a t ook upon ono of tho merchant ships, Cap tain Lord, from alparuiso. lie also obtained the tomato seed in the sama manner as "lovo npple," and, after growing them a yoar or two back ol bis store, be was told by usea captain that they were eatable, and from that time they were ned as food."