Show TUESEMI-WEEKLYTELEaBAP- M3LX5IUD EVKBY MONDAY AXD TUEMDAY Hi BTEirnOVSK Editor T B ' iCIIAl’TKBYI It: DKJUPBBAXDI-- : - E “Xot Stay!" exclaimed Ileleu Lyle In a tone so emphatic and with a gesture so commanding os suddenly to arrest the steps of like u statue Joseph Morriss- who stood where she stopped' him" ' Sbe-w- aa still very much agitated her bosom J washeanng and setting' her' cheeks flashing and paling her eyes flashing and mouldering with the passion she conkl not v entirely subdue “It is very bitter—very hard to swallow but it is the— truth!” she cried with an effort that seemed to choke her os she sank down into a corner of tho sofa and bowed her head upon her hand for a few moments Then looking upland seeing him still: standing she beckoned him to take tho chair at her right ' ‘'1 -- i A FOBi CONTIXVED : - fcTbat opinion very flattering to me the said lady “Buthow do you at any rate not was knowiliat it my personal worth that attracted her?' Because Helen your personal worth if it been ton times as great would not havp attracted her ladyship had you remained a is-n- ot And you know that quite And even now greatly as aro changed for tbe better some very important object 'that brings Xady Moatlyon to your house Marchionesses donot often ‘take’ up’ city heiresses no matter how wealthy the latter daily governess as weB as 1 do your fortunes thero must bo - maybe" 1' v You are painfully candid! But what view?T? ject do you suppose her ladyship has in Your half million of pounds sterling to the debts of her profligate second son George Pewbilis whom upon account of hisveiy had character even lier influence has ob- a 1 failed to get either into the army navy or I er church ladyship thinks that a city broken-dow- n heiress would be glad to endow i younger son with her the iare sake'br being her daughter-m-la- being a fortune for and of w - 'cal led Iidy George- Dewbills is one of mere courtesy- - although ” I should be only one remove from the which would bp mine incaso tho cider brother should go - oil ! ITow do yon ‘ think I shonld adorn itr the title ‘But coronet at all IIelenr Not r Bccauseyoa are- ‘ - j: shall I say? tluh-tair he the expression the— what — shall 1 say? — the indefinable something tlm— subtle aroma of high birth around so to spent-of tibe daily governess' pervades yoaf-tnr r jour: “Well really Mr Morriss I do not know whether that last ipccchof yours is niorfi frmar&tble lor its politeness ' or its perspicu-ifj- t? said the O4tonihcd :girl Ifeowit waa not polite! All Helen tlie truth seldom is! And I am sure itwas not clear' for 1 tried to was really indefinable but you kiio w what I meaun: “Ye? and if thieMs true I Wonder you should think that tlie marchioness could tolo rate hie as a daughter-in-law- ! “Nor would she for her cider sou bat for lier profligate penniless and deeplycinbur--nitteTunngcr one she thinks that your splendid fortune would make a comfortable ' manor born —you have — v4 iij T is: t -- ! "!:S6 :'" tat iw 1 ni'I V 11c i' W' - ’i I V d' ' - -- -- Mi' friiri i ’ provision” “jill site would be obliged her set" '! - to have me iii ‘ “In the first place because I fool them to true! ' In the second place to save Vou if "! possible from a false and fatal stepl’iZ 1 YYes" “Whyr - I am' in danger of taking it?” - “Because your manner to thc marchioncss disreputable son was— — ” wfiat? what was iny maiinor?’ " what I expected from Idea Lyle!” Jon have told me vrhat it was not!— wil tlo uhatit was!' v -- “Toadying- xciaimeil P011 — my— word—and— noxoa!’’ llelon with her large brown eyes sparkling with 'Indignation as upland down the : started up and paced room- exqui-sitopa- in - m i tr’-- er f®C® flnshM’ her eyes ‘still Wfllafing light llis veiy heart sank like bosom His face grew deadly hands icy cold— lie1 felt: if be uld have died on he would the rather spot nave offended- tlie whole world than Helen - - ff 'i‘‘ u ' U ''1 ? - Ti - lAOf :t $39 ri ii & - ! ft ltfnV' on tea ’&? J7-- - - r BP- l it S' bhf You said toadying!’! - ’w 8aid toadying! ana cbnnot take bacV because it expresses jnst what I en ®nd I can think pf no civiller place You aced mq for ean you! do nKk e?cn ani ? ffay® help mel cried the a voice of anguish using quite Mcoo8ty:th9 yery wordirthat lirtia the hour of his greatest ex-iiwaying! tess ' Xt ' l '! T ! bedl away from him and Walked ieat Sn eav up and Mown the’ floor Vp CJthat IJravo mortally offended yon p thatVJ mast dcnart'Vsaiifthe Jonn6’ and bowing lowly ai b°J£takin(g hRf 1 KjC vi iX4 ix:r ’ exclude such stuff from our columns we cannot r the eliminevils ignore their existence-anate we think may always be employed they To point a moral eri adorn t a tala' 'i i v’ ' very nsefally Hence our commentary in the -- man-witho- porting awifoV "And1 has your': uncle Indeed disinherited yoa?' inquired Helen in cori3tcrriatioii “Ho has indeed Ilelen’ “Bat for heavcaVBakeapan what account?” “Speaking the truth’ - ' ' r truth!”the “peaking “les Helenf for confessmg? when ‘the - may fly into a passion with my Meritor as I havo done ' this :: : afternoon”1 V Xot withstanding even tliat” - ‘Ali Joseph yoawere right inanotherthing you said tome!! have u°t the evortm that marks the highest have 'proved that by entirely ireeiingv osing my temper this afternoon - No' I have the passions or my class nd Vf ’“ITavo not tho repo(o Tliat sta'mps the caste of Yere Uo Yere’ f said Helen smiling i “And yet dear Helen I doubt whether” tie most statuesque of all ossified pcerrtsses could havet borne what you have this afternoon without some disturbance of their solidity And yon Helen could not have been blamed if you had ordered me from your presence that instant the act wouldhave been natural - sclf-pQsses-on I ’ i l ’ v 1 i ! : ahdjpropcr” “T could nothavejdone that for your words though they wounded me to the quick-werthose: of truth — truth painfully but nobly spoken!” said Helen with a vivid blush Yet do not think of me worse than I deserve! If into '‘toadying’ thnj I was betrayed' y marchioness believe mb such is not niy ' habit!" ‘Tliat such is not consistent with'your character ‘I’ know Helen' and therefore ’that' sueh is not your habit I believe” “You are but just to me- in saying this I do not indeed court the1 upper clasles with”’ whoni T am sometimes brought to 'associate But this” Lady Mr— with her overpowering affectionateness seems to bewilder - me and compel from me an excess of courtesy in Te turn tlmt must indeed seem to an honest very liko ‘toadying’ But it is the in- iluehce of this lady's presence over me Joseph Xotliing more serious I assure you!” -- “I understand it all now Helen 'arid yet I do Wonder (tliat ybu should have been so car- ried away'fDut then I knew that Lady M — — is said tobe the most attractive and fascinain ting woman to women as well as to men ' all London'': - “Yet do not think Joaeph j that with all me into her enchantments shot could bewitch : e to-da- Z - - ‘ - ob-serv- er : : ': v toe-woma- I thought’ as I arid ly the materiali leatherrhad beon used in their J construction O that mother Eve-lier primias she perambulated Ederi in could have seen leaves of tive garment fig how skillfully ‘her "sons arid daughters 'should convert the skins of such animals as those over which she held'-- ' dominion into the multitudeof articles both useful and ornamental which meet our eye on at every “l every side and supply our needs " the seen girdle step Could she have formed to encircle ihe slender waist- - of some fair damsel— the coquettish little how which fastened the collar of your ' fashionable belle the trimming of her : dress tlie rosettes upori herhat the buttons scattered in delightful confusion’ brer her garments or arranged in mathematical precision in rovscontaming twelve ' as fashion and eighteen or twenty-fou- r U taste shall dictate the gauntlet to shade the delicate wrjst the bracelet for ’Tti Is adornment the anklet tQ protect the f ankle 'the page" to'" elevate ' the trailing ' yjs skirU'frbin contact with muddycrostsings the reticule the fan for subduing sumts mer’s heat— --these and many other too numerous to! mention and oU-- J made of leather and stitched and pinked and otherwise decoratedas almost to lose its identity' yqt leather are additional evI idence of ihe AruthJof: the saying at the head of bur paragraph— Shoe and Leath- - -- 4 r 'ti -- ' he-reall- - orria-men- erlleporter:-k'i ' SCRAPS J A: Iki " J r tif - - - ’ - J t -- '? -- : - : : - : - - i 1 ‘ they-burs- t - d -- : n but-even flattened-trunk- V s ? - - ' - -d"r f 4 j L' - cross-examinati- on i j - ' J t f 'f ! : - I ‘m Ferry-hou- se - i MJ s u': J ! - -- r shaft-whic- ‘ 1 double-heade- trem-blingiHyoi- - : sofa-tabl- self-possessi- on d ce! ! ' ! -- All alongshore from' upper West assignations both a$ 6 theirnumber arid con- - ) New York to Upper- East and thefr: opposite Siiestion adirec inspection is therefore: houses on the Jersey Staten Island Brooklyn Wilare Point shores more or both to provide for their pres- -' liamsburg and Hunter’s' leas patronized Young girls well dressed women necessary ent requirements and their fixture remo-the denizens of shops and what not sit there one or two days in ihe week for an hour and then go vaL yi away alonp or in company as they are met or dis!An amusing scene occurred lately atii ' appointed’ Young men flashingly'got up the more staid and fnrther advanced of the mole s£x an Austrian theatre- in a representation il parade backward and forward peering iu at the Of Hamlet'' a windows to see if she's come till finally they are By preconcerted arrange rewarded with the sight of! tho looked" for face ment the actors-changed- ' tfieir ’’allotted ' More than jialf the matrimonial advertisements in those papers which do not publish bogus ones to places)n the stage in the ghost scene fill np their poverty-stricke- n colantng find their whereHaralet exorcises the spirit of his fo6i of Fnlton at the' correspondent' regularly the prince con-- ) Wall Southland Court Grand 6r Canal streets 'murderedfatherr )Vheri There they ait and chat and go away to come again eluded his harangue' arid the ghost tola ' each' tiaie - a pproachiug nearer the lighted flame his tale of yoeT the trapdobr upon which r which too often burns into them the regret of a life Hamlet uasstaadingsuddenly gave xvay The result has been to produce aatity gpeiterlxf--' arid the ghosLwaAleftbefore - the- footis equality of the sexes Female have always ranged lights with the word “Adieul” on-hlips' considerably in advance of the males and a a con- while he that was supposed to be of “the sequence masculines have held themselves aloof a not coining'within the meaning of the' matrimo- earth earthy” sank from the gaze of the feminine mind always more or less excited and amused audience: ''The mir-ta- ke nial lawi--Thexcited op the subject of matrimony which occurred ibqpause the -- machinist of feels just now their well-bein- g readid die ffieatre was not 'made Aa ware of r the : grea t danger— that of old maidfenism--auin run — imprudence — to the otber eitremo ly ’ : change in the position of the acton 'Dispatch - - t r- o 1 - l-- : ttaei q ea ! I i - ' f-- ' - it yj- - ri la- - - '--- ! A- BP ': - - m i : i 'i S’ - I 'VCrf V: ' v - ft - f : -- y -- ’ paid-Mis- ' - n - rioted how'free- - The New Yorkers have been fayored v HOW COAL MAY- HAVE BEEN FORMED V with an "old fas wiriter!1 this time 1 't ivnflmed Blot is about ‘tq A Frenchman That the ancient seams of coal were” produced ' for the most part by terrestrial plants of all sizes establish a cookirig academy in New York not drifted' but growing on the spot" is a theory toteach young ladies in the culinary art more and more generally adopted in modern times ' and the growth of what may be called sponge in Henry Smith while' operating with a such la’ swamp and such a climate a? the great Dis" circular 'saw at Grass' Valley Cal bad' mal (of America) already cohering so many ( square: miles of a low level region bordering the every finger of his right hand torn offsea add capable of spreading: itself Indefinitely J f " “Yes” : over theadjacent country helps us greatly to con Umatilla in folks The j county Oregon “AYliat a veiy weak old man and how very coive tlie manner iu which the coal of the ancient haver now blessed are carboniferous They trebly rocks just : formed Tho been unfortunate that you should have been commay have heat perhaps may not have been excessive when a vigilance committee a recrili ting insti- pelled by truth to cross his weakness” the coal measures originated but the entire abrevival all in full ' “It was1 indeed” V’’1 ”‘V sence of frost lirith a warm and damj atmosphere tuiiori'and a religious ' V “And you told me I think that' your em- may have enabled tropical forms to flourish in blast at once latitudes far distant from the "? had V’vi liqos ployers ' v Lucerne papers bring intelligence of a Huge swamps in a rainy climate standing above “Dismissed me yeS"’ the ' level of the surrounding firmF land and sup- denunciation in the pulpit of Hergiswyll ‘‘Strange that two such misfortunes should porting dense forest fai? and may havo have happened to you upon the same day!’ wide invading the plains like ( spread some European by the local iricumbent against the prac ? “And fop the same cause Helen” and the 'frequent tice of insuring farmhouses brother prop-- ’ peatmosses when Submergence of those masses of vegetable matter -“For the same cause?” benhatli the seas or estuaries! as often ashe land erty such an act being "a defiance hurled “Yes for speaking the truth?" saiik down daring subtcrra'nfcariYnovcinents may against Divine Providence and an attetnpY “For speaking the truth?”- have gven rise to the deporitionof strata- or mud to frustrate the purposes of the Alriiighty’’ sand or limestone immediately upon the vegeta“Yes” v how unlucky that yon ble matter The- conversion of successive surfa“How 8ingular!-anThere are on exhibition in the muceuin into dry land where other swamps supporting should have been obliged to speak so many ces trees may have formed might giv origin to a con- rooms of riie Department of 'Agriculture offensive truths-isb short atimeasto de- tinued peries of coal measures of a great thickness twd clusters of raisins of extraordinaiy-size- j once texture J4 apof 'your inheritance and In some kinds of coal tho vegetable prive you at': ' and cured in California grown throughout under the microscope m your employment' But hour was it "ini this parent! has it others were presented to the Land1 Office only partially disappeared second instance?vWhat fatal fifots were you in this! coal the of troeq of the They Senator Conneiss' of California and by 4 compelled to ’diyulger' genus Ipidodendron SigilLila and others conver- by the officers are coalof that bureau deposited in ''“When plainly questioned by our custom- ted Into pore occasionally met with and observed in the overlying tLq museum ers I was obliged in one instance to confess erect fossil trees are The: largest of these clusiny earns of coal has that the print3 marked ‘fust colors woukl strata terminating downward 175 ters berries upon it md the small- s'!" (Sir fade in another that the silks marked ' y:120eat oJ HALF-Wi- Y ‘French and three shillings a ’yard vero HOUSES ir The Levant Herald- ays it is i'reported inferior English worth only two shillings and Jf any one will take the trouble on any that the Ottoman and Russian govern- - ' 89 on through a morning of the usual the' different into stroll to of tetpoou by customers to urhom this the city and those on the opposite side with which ments will send a Joint Commission to in- morning I wa3 resolvfcd to- answer' truly” they cunnect they will have their eyes opened to spectlthe position’ of the Circassians at this bne fact Tliat these places with their warm j to BK CONTINUEn-- l -- iV“Ladies! Boom’! are just now the inostfrequented Soojakr These emigrarits are reported houses of the city for appointments meetings and at fifty thousand men but there is some ! L - - Trines! : r' marrying Lord George' “I'ehonld hope not' indeed" v ' “And! ai’ for the lady I shall : break her spellby Creaking off the acquaintance”- f?You will do well Helen V A NEW: THING IN MIXING! “And now let us returnto the subject that a'' was interrupt ed by the visit of the marehion-ess- ! l jThe following description of a new Idea in hoistLyle drawings toward her a ing works by which the bld system of ropes and e small "upon which stbod( a casket of chaina is entirely superseded is from the! London i opened y sand displayed say- - Mining JouriiaL t jewels Whichshe v jwj With a view entirely to obviate the inconveni“ITere Joseph hero are somo firie pearl3 ence and danger resulting from the breakage of which 'I Havo gelectc? for your brije they will ropes and chains Messrs Allison A Shaw propose well become her childlike beauty' You will an invention for dispensing with them altogether and employing in tlieir place an apparatus someoffer! tlicm to herin my name iia ascher to what similar in form to that introduced by the accept with theinr the best wishes of her Pnematiu Dispatch Company but which is' worked bridegroom’s oldestfriendl-r- i' by pressure instead of exhaustion" The inventors state that in their improved elevators which are -- Helen's Tittle1 the t‘close at faltered a joice applicable’ for raising either water or minof this’ speech as she gentlyriushed the casket equally erals' from collieries and mines a cylinder-otube toward Joseph Morriss lie wa3 dumb with' is placed in the rises a few feet above astonishment for a moment' ere he could ro the top of the shaft and reaches afewfeet below ' the bottom of the mine This cylinder is ’made of cover hia and answeN-- r: malleable or cast iron or Other suitable material Thank jou dearest iIelen'for this gene-ro- us and of a diameter according to the' weight of minthought but thank? Heaven Ihare no erals water or other substances to be lifted In ' this cylinder or tutm a '' bride! piston works SY’r iil and between the two heads of tlie piston a fixed or ' “No bndet jYThy whateyer ’dp you mean? movable receiver or barrel or wagon is placed was —positively assured Which holds the mineral or water to be raised An I thooght----I was —the eve of marriage with airpump- - worked by a steam engineor waterthat yoiirwere upon wheel or other power is used for forcing air down Elizabeth BeU exclaimed lleleii ln: a shaft in tubewhich air passes into the cybn- arid J withia 7 rapidly changing the Not forcing only Uer "below the under piston-hea- d may be nsed‘bat exhausting and forcing may be eoIpB I' ‘ 7 - s you to be ‘ 4I do not know at alleycnta ho did riot like to bd told btherwiso :: unreaaonablo an what old soul! “Why even wish do not children their Why parents ' to break their excess hearts 'from of filial " v1 their decease” at piety “JTo but you see uncles are more egotisti-calan- d less disinterested than parents : “And: lias disinherited- yon upon -v this account?” ! ’Vv’ - -- ’ - - ' ’premises -- :!- - 4 ) 1 r l ’ ’ f married women it is clear should be far mure on their guard against the insidious advances of rakes and married men should take more pains to render themselves-aagreeable- after the nuptial ceremony as they were before it Married women should never sees sympathy from : other tnen for the'snpposcd: wrongsithey endoro question was forced - upon me that should at the hands of careless husbands and married not: be absolutely inconsolable lf he were to' men shonld never delude themselves into the bewhose charms once attracted lief that v dio1 others the moment attract them not : may how “Bnt strange! Bid he really expect nity lends strength to inclination— N Y opportuSunday so?” ' vv-T- ' a her tempter It:showsin short der tie the holiest associations of life are kept in- -' tact nnfler circumstances which current habits make too common and bids na contemplate the fact With becoming reflection We say nothing of the details in this special cose because? even if it were proper to1 prejudge the result before the court we shonld not feel it judicious -td spread such prurient stuff bekre our readers We have wontemporories who revel in the publication of each gross matters and who fancy that their patrons gloat Overall tlieinde-cencie- s they can accumulate :r We have a better bat while we opinion of the taste' of our friend? ' slen- by-wha- t ” - die followed her with his eyes" Tier bokmi - ( - g : ' '' ’ and-wron- : : wn up-to- loose conception of morals pervades the minds of some people undoubtedly intelligent blest with wealth 'and taste and supposed to mingle with “good: society-- ' It shows too 'how the indolence of life at a hotel may tempt even an otherwise good woman to Indulge fn the companionship Of roues until hey principles are sapped and her idea of right confused and her honor Is gone past all recovery ' It shows how an excellent business manby daylight may i be a dissipated brute when the gas is turned on and how readily his want of regard for his wife may be taken advantage of with impunity by those who have nothing else to do bnt attend to tlieir toilette make love to the feminines and play the ‘lady killer! generally It shows how easily a married woman may go astray when left to the gallantry of onto of theto libertines and also' how - readily she may procure a divorce oat West ffoni her liege lord and become the matrimonial partner of 1 - ' -- ns s it-wa- - 1 ‘ ’ - J: -- ‘ - - “Not she! You ' would be only thewife of her younger son When the family should lie in town during the season you would be stowed away ut some remote country hod&e George could live at his club alien the faipily should be in the country indeed you might be invited - to dinner with the parson ami the doctor!” l' V 1 r:' ' ' Ikink ’ not--wh- at at S! ': hand saying—' t ‘“Sit down Joseph Morriss I have ho right to be offended with your straightforward honesty nor must you think of leaving my house for such a cause For the just rebuke yon have given mo Joseph 7 I esteem and hoiiorryou the “Helen! oh if you did bnt know the it caused me to tell you that truth yon would almost forgive ihe!” said the young man in a broken voice a3 Jie stood humbly before her-' “I know! I know! and I do not forgive but thank you! I witnessed the great effort that it cost you to speak that humiliating truth and 1 feel that it wa3 all the more noble in yon to do so Great Heaven what a thing the truth is!1 It shook yon like a storm to utter it! Tit convulsed iny whole nature to receive it! The passageof electricity from one to another was nothing to it!: tempest-clou- d Bnt sit down" sit'dowTi “and ptomlse me now that henceforth you will always do as yon have done to day— always tell- me the truth of' myself" however ' bitter humiliating ' or be ” ' ’ - ' f JThio - - 'T K not as they say to the - ': - sliaft-Lond- 1 1 t - - - MANIFOLD USES FOR LEATHER oid’saying thaiTihero is “nothing bottom being opened the pistori descends and the like leatherfJ: is amply7voriied in ?the air which escapes ventilates tho minis iThU Ini-- thousand and one little articles of feininine proved ventilator not only acts a an elevator and ventilator' but provides a safe and expeditious decorations which hladame Fashion- - has mods - of? conveying workmen up and down the recently d ecreed for her daughters: wear on Journal Mining i ' ' 'T' ' o' stroll the other dayr :I In my j " ESTRANGED AFFECTIONSl paused before! the tastefully arranged widdqw of a fancy store wherein were rf Tlie c&siknow before one' of our courts in which the usual miscellaneous colled-lioone gentleman such another for alienating from displayed of ornaments' trimmiugtc which him the affections of his wife is very sfiggeative to a thoughtful mind It allows what a remarkably go to make ihe sum! total of an" establish-meri- t' ed : ' - 'ti'gPBlKnrOTHB TBDTH wed la conjanction VVhen the load is put la in-st the bottom a valve 1st Opened so that the Itair la load troduced under the piAoU which with then rises to the top ' On arriving at the' top the load and on an escape valve at the “Such an engagement did exist bnt it bus been broken off by mutual ' consent1- said' the young man gravely Helen was too deeply disturbed to reply for some momept3AtlpnthfprciDg herself to V i epftit sho said in a low roico?: “This Is some foolish lovers quarrel that r must' be made up “Xever llelen! It can never be made up 11 Joseph exclaimed earnestly ‘‘Oh but you say that because youdire still veiry angry with her bnt you are also very unhappy— you must be so and she no doubt is at this moment breaking her heart —— “She is at this moment probably chuckling at the idea of having got rid of a most unpromising engagement” 'V v “You only tlunk soviet irienn old friend ' mediate between you ti i' “Not for the world—n6t for ten thousand worlds!- In this seemingly exaggerated lan' guage Helen I only speak the truth No-- 1 thing in the universe would tempt me to bind myself to that fataTengagement from which I am now so honorably and 'so happily freer : exclaimed the yonng man earnestly “You astonish me beyond meosnrq! Will you explain how this occurred? I hope it was not you Joseph' who first broke tho engagement or gave just cause to her to break it” said Helen in a deeply interested manner' -- “No not! who broke the troth! Lizzy’s own act this morning freed me from' the consequences of ‘a tremendous mistake that- might have niined lier happiness and thatmust have rolried mine’: “But why did she: do this? I hope yon gave her no just cause?” ' “None was off then broken ?f j“Why yon? marriage “Because she did not love me at all!” r " ‘And when did she first find this bnt?’’ “When she found qut tbat iny uncle had disihherited me and niy employers had disr charged me and that I was in fact sua almost Visible means of suppenniless ' ' ' : i ri i i ii W- - t |