NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. III. MDGAVAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUltSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1874. NO. 45. HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. A Little Girl that Sold Matches. The painful scene I have here en deavored to portray, says a writer in New York Graphic, is founded upon an occurrence that recently came to the notice of one of the teachers employed by the Children's Aid Society, and is no whit more distressing than other scenes that are enacted nightly in this metropolis. ' If I might hope to interest one single reader to the extent of in ducing even the smallest contribution towards the noble charity conducted by that society I should feel that I had ac complished something in the cause of humanity. Oli, I hope she aint been drinkin' Yes'm, every match is Bold ; But I ain't got all the money Three cents, mammy's, all I stoled. Course I knowed you'd lick me for it. Lemme tell y' how it come Then perhaps you'll whip me easy, 'Less you've been a-driukin' rum. I was dreadful tired walkin' Keenied as like as not I'd drop ; Bo I stopped to rest a minute, Eight afore a baker's shop. Suthiu' gripped me in the stummick At the sight o' things to eat j Cause I hadn't struck it lucky Findin' scraps along the street. No ! not yet just wait a minute Till I tell y', thnn you may. tUneo you gave mo that portater 1 ain't had a liito to-day ; And them crullers looked so temptin', I got crying where I stood Never tasted nothin' like 'cm, Tint I knowed they must be good. Thou I seed two girls a-comin' Thoy was just about my size Pressed fo nice and warm and handsome With such pnrty-lookiu' eyes ; Watched 'em walk right in so careless, Like it wa'n't no harm to do : When I see 'cm buyiu' crullers I went in and bought some, too. Got three cents' worth come out tremblin', Kind o' scared at what I'd done s And a loafm' boy that seen mo Snatched 'em out my hand and run. Theu I sot down on the curbstone, Feelin' weak and sort o' sick, Till a ploeeeman come an' tolo me Get up now, and travel quick ! Lick mo now ; but you must give me Just one little bite to eat ! J can't ttantl it 'thout no isupper Xo ! no ! no ! Don't tie my feet ! Oli, that great big stick '11 kill me ! Mammy, I'll be good I'll try ! Well, then, kill me please to kill me ! Oh ! riease, please to let me die ! WHEN' I WAS DKOWXEI). For the third time I had called on Laura Mansfield, and for the third time the servant had met me with, "Miss Mansfield is not at home to Mr. Talbot," and I had turned away from the door. What this all meant I was at a loss to conjecture. When I heard it the first time I was puzzled and amazed ; the next time pained ; but now I was mad dened, and felt that it had beenintended as an insult. "Not at home to Mr. Talbot!" riparit message from tho woman who hpA promised to be my wife, was it not ? Why, 1 was but a week ago that she had placed her face to mine, and con fessed she was very happy because I loved her; and now she was " not at home !" I-had known Laura Mansfield for many years before I asked her to be my wife. So far as the world judges, I was her equal in family and in wealth, as well as in intellectuality. I say " so far as the world judges," because I do not judge men and women as the world of fashion does. That man would be a very shallow one, in my opinion, who could think of measuring his love against aught but the woman's love for him. I Joved Laura and loved her truly. I was no weak, puling boy, full of crude fancies of love, but an earnest man, who knew, why he loved and trusted. She was a woman, guided by her reason and her love ; not a giddy, capricious girl. But we differed in that I was somewhat sluggish in thought and de cision, while she was impetuous in her decisions. I tried to recall every word and look of our last evening together, but could remember nothing that would give me a clue to her present action, and for the hundredth time in the last few davs , v as forced to give it up. " JYot at home to me ! ery well. I ould not trouble her to send the nies- age again. T lie world would waff on much as it had done, and men's lives wre made of tougher material than to be withered by a woman's frown. While these thoughts were running through my i.iind I had walked on and on, pay ing bnt little heed to my steps until I had passed the village, followed the lane leading to the river, and stopped only when I reached its bank. I was aroused from my reverie by the sound of the busy hammers of the bridge builders, and I threw myself un der a tree and watched them hew and match the timbers and planks, and then raise them to their places. The hum of the workmen's voices had a ciieery sound in it, and at last led me to go out rfmong them. I picked my way among the timbers carefully, and was almost at the end of the completed part, when I fancied I heard my name spaken by some one on shore. 'I turned, without thinking of where I was, missed my step upon the plank, had time to call for help, and the next instant was under the water. It seemed an age to me before I arose again. Down, down, down I went in the greenish water, and then, without any apparent cause, I began to rise. The water hurt my eyes, and there was a roaring noise in my ears as if a thous and eannon were thundering in discord upon every side of me. But my think ing faculties were unclouded, and my mind was busy turning over and recal ling all that I had read or heard of what mea should do who were in danger of drowning. I wondered if the workmen would be ready with assistance for me when I reached the surface, and I re membered I would have but three chances for my life. Then I was above the water. No one was near to help me. I called out with all my strength for help, and struck out with my hands and feet as I had seen swimmers do ; but it was an of no avail J I sank again. Oh I the horrid, horrible noises with in my head ! They were growing loud er and louder. I cursed my foolish fan cies, that had prevented me learning to swim when 1 was a boy. And why were not the men doing something for me ? They had but to throw out a board or a rope and I would be saved. They must have seen and heard me fall. Will they bo ready now ? O God I have mercy and send me help I There is a man with a rope I Ah 1 It fell short ! The fool I why is he so slow ? Help ! help I He , O God 1 the word is finished tinder the water, and I have choked myself with what I swallowed. This terrible, terrible roar ing noise ! Mv head will split asunder I I have one more chance. If but a hand was near me ; if but some one would save me ! I cannot die I I cannot die I am not ready ; it cannot be 1 There is light again. Father in heaven, help, oh I help me I There comes a boat 1 Hurry, oh I hurry I How slow they come I O hea ven ! one minute more, but one short minute ! Help ! help ! Oh 1 tho clum sy fool ! He has lost his oar, and I am lelt to drown ! I won't go down ! I will not die I Oh, this cursed, yielding water ! These garments of lead I I won't go down ! Ha 1 I am rising ! No, I cannot fepl myself move. But the infernal roar in my head has increased and maddens me. There are ten thousand shrieking devils within my ears. They yell like tortured souls in hell ! Louder it grows! Louder ! ! Louder ! ! ! Why, what is this ! Music ! Yes, sweetest, dreamiest music comes steal ing upon my senses and drives awny the hordes of Satan. Tis sweeter, this, than life. Am I in heaven ? No water covers me ; no dread or fear rests upon my spirit ; I am content ; my soul is full of peace and rest. This must be heaven, but I am all alone. I must have iloated in tho invisible ether, for here I sae another world. There are hills and mountains, trees and flowers, and there are men and women walking to and fro. How like the place where first I lived I Why, it is the self-same place ! I seem t) re member that little boy who runs about the street. Ah, I thought so ! He is myself. Follow him ! See him pinch the Initio boy, push over the little girl at the corner, worry the old blind sol dier ! Yen, I did all that ! They were funny then, but they seem fearfully eruefnow. 1 vl.:: I lnd never been so had.,,- Follow him still. He drinks and swears and gambles. Follow him ! stop him ! Oh, if I had never done these things ! But ho goes on to worse yet. His life is all bad. It was my life, my own evil life. If I but had it to live again ! But his heart is not all bad. See him kneel beside that maiden and swear to live a better life ! Love has touched his heart, and love is but another name for God. lie strives hard to conquer himself; he is succeeding slowly. There he sits beside the womau he loves. Yes, it is Laura and myself. My face is trustful and happy, but Laura's is somewhat suspicions. I hear our words, and I am living over again my last night with her. There, a letter drops on the floor, but I do not think it is mine, and I turn to go with " good night " on my lips. Before I close the door I turn around, and there is a bit ter, ' Bcomfnl smile upon her face. What could that letter have been? It was not mine. Hold ! It must have been the one I lost and had forgotten until now. I saw it fall, but thought it dropped from Laura's baud. I ought to have remembered it before. It was from my old friend Jessie King, and I thought I had put it on my fable. That must have been the letter Laura found ; yes, and it accounts for her sub sequent behavior. The letter was but aline: "Dear Frank, I will wait for vou at H , Saturday." Laura must Lave supposed Jessie was a lover, while she iu. . reall married to my Cousin John. ' "Saturday?" When will Saturday come, I wonder ? ' She will not find me there. And Laura? ,She will learn, some day, that Jessie was but my friend. How remorseful she will be ! And mother, poor old mother I what will she do when they tell her I am never coming I to her again ? au J me, me, you were pleasant and bright, but if this is death, give me what I have. I hear the heavenly musio once more, and my spirit turns to it. How sweet ; how enchantingly sweet ! 'Tis full of rest and perfect peace. A delicious languor creeps up on my soul, envelops me, wooes me to sleep. Oh, horrors ! What was that ? There it is again. Can I be in hell ? Millions of devils are torturing me. They are creeping into my lungs, my heart, my brain ! Now they pierce my every nerve ! O God J have pity. They come in myriads 1 They pour hot lead in my veins, they dance upon me, and their feet are full of hot irons that pierce me through and through. Have pity, Lord, have pity I Oh ! they grow more cruel ! Let me out of this ! Away from me I By Heaven, I will meet the very prince of dovils hand to hand I I will not be here, bound and tortured. Unhand me ! I mado a glorious fight. I I open?d my eyes. I was not in hell, though the torments were real. I was lying on the bank of the river, and men were rubbing me, forcing air into my lungs, and doing all they could do to call me back to life. One of them saw my eyelids open. " Hurrah I he's all right," he shouted ; aud in a short time I was at home with loving friends ministering to me. Mother I" I cried. " Yes." " Send word to Laura and tell her who Jessie is." " Jessie who ?" " Jessie King." " I will ; but keep quiet now. I closed my eyes, aud when next I opened them Laura was sitting beside me. She kissed me, saying : "Can you forgive me, Frank ? Yes, I could forgive her love. " How did yon know I was jealous of some Jessie ?" she asked. "I saw it all," I answered, " when I was drowned." Snakes In Sonth America. There are a good many venomous snakes in Central America and the West India Islands. The rattlesnake abounds in Demerara, and I believe the bush master ; the tigerillo in Santa Martha. This is a venomous little beast that kills in a couple of hours. I recollect walking one evening with a shipmate along one of the acacia-shaded lanes outside the city of Santa Martha, when one of these snakes coiled round his leg. He fortunately had a whip in his hand, with which he struck and killed it. The rat-tail snake, so called because its tail is prolonged and finished like that of the rat is a vicious animal, the poison being very active. The history of the rat-tail snake in Martinique is rather peculiar. It flour ished there to such an extent that of late years every cane-piece that was cut was accountable for at Jeast one death by snake-bite. It was originally im ported to destroy rats its favorite prey which infeste'd and destroyed the Biigar-caue. W ithin the last tew years the people of Martinique have adopted another member of the snake brother hood a non-poisonous but very vo racious species. The carpet-snake is a black snake with a white belly, and he appears to have conceived the most in satiable enmity against the rat-tail snake. A sight of one throws him into a state of semi-insanity, and if you find a gorged carpet-snake, his meal is sure to be a rat-tail snake a few inches longer than himself. The most marvelous thing is that the rat-tail appears to be come quite paralyzed, aud his poison, if used, has no etlect on the other snake. On one occasion I saw a carpet-snake thrown alive into a bottle of white rum. As he struggled in death, a curious phe nomenon arose ; he appeared to grow longer, commencing at his head, the growing half being of a different color. At last, when the struggles, gyrations, and twistings ceased, it was touud that he had disgorged the whole of a rat-tail snake, except the head ; he died with that in his jaws. Tho rat-tail is fast disappearing before the carpet-snake in Martinique, but it still remains in suffi cient numbers in both that island and St. Lucia to render it necessary for the pedestrian to be careful where he puts his foot. Death generally follows in an hour if the uncovered flesh is bitten. The choice between being squeezed to death or poisoned is generally open to the traveler in tropical America, some of the constrictor snakes being of enormous size and strength. Picking your steps through a swampy bit, and finding the log you are about to step upon is an enormous boa constrictor ; or haviug undressed in a shady nook to revel in a mountain stream, the ther mometer at a hundred in the Bhade, to find yourself pursued by a little water snake (they are always ready to fight), with death for a dozen strong men in his fangs ; or, instead of a mellow gnava, you put your hand on a tree snake are some of the pleasing adven tures (to read about) which wanderers under the sun meet with. Felix Grundy M'Connell. Among the many odd characters who came to the Twenty-eighth Congress, says a writer in Harper's Magazine, was i elix urundy JM Conuell, ot Mis sissippi, lie was a man of humble origin, and by trade a harness-maker. He had a reputation at home for a kind of rough and ready extemporaneous speaking, which sailors call slack-jaw, and was said to have uncommon power among the people. But he was so far gone in the lowest kind of dissipation when he was elected to Congress that he soon became a mere drunken buffoon. He was a man of Cm appearance and commanding presence when sober, and with the generous forbearance which generally characterizes the House of Representatives, his irregularities were regarded with much sympathy and commiseration. Congress has always been remarkable for this trait in its character. During Jackson's first term there came to Washington, from South Carolina, a mnn ot brilliant parts and finished education, who brought with him a high reputation acquired at the bar. JUucli was expected trom him, and on several occasions he addressed the House with great pertinence aDd force. But havniK no domestio ties. and released from the social censorship that had a restraining influence upon him at home, he was unable to resist the temptations to which men bo placed are always exposed at Washington, aud before the end of his term he had sunk down to the level of the lowest de- bauchee. He was popular with his people, but his dissipations and his utter neglect of his public duties were too flagrant to be overlooked, and it was determined to supercede him by a more respectable man. in order to gather sufficient evidence of his irregu larities to insure his rejection by his constituents, a committee was sent to Washingt-jn for that purpose ; but al though his intempeiate habits and utter disregard of the decencies of life were notorious in Washington, known to hackmen, other citizens', and members of Congress alike, the committee was unable to procure the necessary proof thereof, and he was re-elected to the next Congress. Poor M'Connell 1 he came to a tragi cal end during the recess. His disso lute habits left him in a necessitous condition, and he had not the means of returning to his family. After a pro tracted debauch, terminating in a fit of delirium tremens, he shot himself through the head, and died in the prime of life. A Titusville paper says: "A man called at one of our shoe stores and vainly essayed to get on either number 11, 12, and 13 shoes. The storekeeper then suggested that he should put on a thiner pair of stockings and try on the box." Clothing for Cold Weather. The usual dress is sufficient in quan tity, and often good in quality, bnt it is very badly distributed. There is too much about the trunk, and too little about the lower extremities, if one quarter of the heavy woolen overcoat or shawl were were taken from the trunk, and wrapped about the legs, it would prove a great gain. When we men ride in the cars or in tho sleigh, where do we suffer 1 About the legs and feet. When women suffer from the cold, where is it ? It is about the legs and feet! The legs and feet are down near the floor, where the cold current moves. The air is so cold near the floor that all prudent mothers say, "Don't lie there, Peter ; get up ; .Terusha Ann, play on the sofa, you will taka your death cold lying there on the floor." And they are quite right. If the room be well ventilated, the air down near the floor is very much colder than it is up about ourheads. And itisinthat cold stratum of air that our feet and legs are con stantly. Besides this, the feet and legs, on ac count of their being so far away, and on account of their size, with the air all about them, are disposed to be top cold, even without being in a colder atmos phere. Under all these circumstances, men wear one thickness of wool and cotton, and one thickness of black broadcloth about his legs, and three or four times as much about their chests ; and now they often add an immense pad called a " Uhest Protector. And women in dulge in a full greater contrast. Without discussing tins blunder fur ther, I will give you a little practical advice, which my observations and ex perience during more than thirty years fully endorse. During tlre-datnp aud cold season, the legs should be encased in very thick thick woolen drawers, the feet in thick woolen stockings (which must be changed every day), and the shoe soles must be as broad as the feet when fully spread, so that the blood shall have free passage. If the feet are squeezed iu the least, the circulation is cheeked, and coldness is inevitable. The free circulation cannot be secured by a loose upper with a narrow sole. If, when the foot stands naked on sheet of paper, it measures three aud a half inches, the sole must measure three and a half. I will suppose you have done all this faithfully, and yet your feet and legs are cold." Now add more woolen, or if you are to travel much in the cars, or in a sleigh, procure a pair of chamois skin or wash leather 'drawers, which I have found to be most satisfactory. I have known a number of ladies af flicted with hot and actiing head, and other evidence of congestion about the upper parts, who we're com pletely re lieved by a pair of chamois skin draw ers and broad soled shoes. Three ladies in every four suffer from some congestion in the upper part of the body. It is felt in a fulnes3 of the head, in sore throat, in palpitation ot the heart, torpid liver, and in many other ways. It is well known that a hot foot bath will relieve for the time being any and all of these difficulties. The bath draws the blood into the legs and feet, relieving the congestion above. What the hot foot bath does for an hour, the broad soled shoes, with thick woolen stockings and a pair of flannel drawers, with a pair of wash leather drawers added, will do permanently. Of course I am speaking of cold wea ther. No one hesitates to multiply the clothing about the trunk. Why hesi tate to increase the clothing about the legs? As' a preventive of many common affections about the chest, throat and head, including nasil catarrh, I know nothing so effective as the dress of the lower extremities which I am advoca ting. The bath is a good thing, exercise is a good thing, friction is a good thing, but, after all, our main dependence in this climate must ever be, during the cold season, warm clothing. Already we overdo this about our trunks, but not one person in ten wears clothing enough about their legs and feet. Dio Lewis. 'ew York Harbor. The harbor defenses of New York, says a local paper, awaken special inter est at a time when a war with a foreign country has been the possible result of difficulties. The narrow neck ot .Long Island Sound is commanded Ivy Fort Schuyler, at Throgg's Neck, on the op posite side by the tort atwillett s Point, Both of these are well adapted for the heaviest guns. Fort Columbus keeps guard on Governor's Island. On the Long Island shore, near the Narrows, stands Fort Hamilton, with its batter ies, where repairs and improvements have been going on all through the past season. Just opposite, covering the hill on Stateu Island, and surrounded by an imposing array of earthworks and defenses, is Fort Tompkins. The guns in use are the heaviest ordnance in the service, and the works are believed to protect thoroughly the entrance of the harbor. Plans have been made for a casemated battery for heavyordnance on the site of Fort Lafayette, which, being so near the channel of the JSar rows, would be a serious bar to the pas sage of any hostile fleet! The batteries at Sandy Hook command the anchorage ground in the lower bay ; and, though not fitted for Jieavy work, as the chan nel runs near them, they would prevent an enemy's fleet from lying inside, and thus sailing up the JNurrows, A California farmer, being ereatlvan noyed by the myriads of squirrels which infest his premises, recently pulverized an ounca of strychnine and boiled it in one-third of a pint of vinegar, thus thoroughly dissolving the poison. Then he added six quarts of water, and this mixture he invited the squirrels to drink. They appear to nave besieged an old rusty nuik-pan in whioh the de coction was exposed. There were eight een dead the first day, within a radius of nve rods, twelve the second day. thirty-two the next day, and hope of lurcner extermination nad not vanished Two children sent out after the cows at Coon Creek, Wis., were lately eaten up oy bears. Polish Convicts In Siberia. A St. Petersburg letter to the London Standard, contains the following : " Tho convicts in Siberia are divided into two categories, those condemned to hard labor, and those who are sent as settlers, and with very few ex ceptions, the exiled Poles now belong to the latter division, in consequence ot the frequent occasions on which their punishnieut has been mitigated within the last ton years. As settlers, they are free to do as they like, so long as they remain within the limits of the locality to which they are assigned. It is now proposed that those among them whose conduct has been satisfactory should be allowed to go back to their native coun try, provided they can return at their own expense, and are able to find the means of subsistence at home. There is one other condition namely, that the head of the administration of their native district should not object to their return. The Poles in exile are very different from their countrymen at home. Once in Siberia, those who are not kept at hard labor soon become useful members of society. Political agitators forget their dreams of personal ambition and their plans for making people happy by pntting them through a course of constant agitation. They have to work, and they do it. Their labor is well paid, and if they do not live comfortably as honest workmen, it is their own fault. The long journey is always a pinful trial to them, and when they reach their place of destina Hon they find labor of any kind a relief, Some of them, it is true, continue their old habits of intrigue for a time, aud try to work out the political and social problems which they consider it their mission to solve ; but in a very Bhort time they become convinced of the utter inutility of such a course, and set tle down into good subjects. Those who have any skill get on very well. As artisans they are preferred, for they al ways show superior knowledge and taste, and ' Polish work ' in Siberia means superior workmanship, seeing this, those who do not know any trade soon learn one. We have heard of Pole who could do nothing ; but as he must either be content with the misera ble pittanco allowed by Government of two pence a day, or turn his hand to some usetul occupation, he tried ooot- making. but that did not succeed : then he turned his attention to sausages, and made them so well that he sold as many as he could manufacture. At Irkutsk the best shops are kept by the Poles, There are undoub tedly many who can not become sausage-mnkers or shop keepers, but for those who would more willingly work with their heads than their hands there are careers open. En gineers and doctors find ready employ meut, and indeed Polish medical men have a high reputation in Siberia. Authorships in any shape is, of course, out of the question. The only remain ing career, that of teaching, is accord ing to the law strictly forbidden ; but, notwithstanding the prohibition, it is well known that educated Poles are en gaged as teachers in the families of some of the most important functiona ries in bibena, and they are never known to abuse the confidence reposed in them. The Pilot Fish. Sharks, says a writer, appear to have keen noses ; a piece ot meat overboard in a sharky place is never left long un touched. They smell or detect in some way and as I should imagine they are not very nice in their palate, the proba bility is in favor of the nose being the organ oi discovery auyiiiing oujecuon T 1.1 1 ' A able, no matter how deftly concealed It is often admiringly stated as a fact that sharks are preceded by a little fish to act as pilot to the animal's prey. No doubt there is a considerable amouii of sagacity displayed by this pilot-fish they are not, however, the disinterested creatures our authors would have us believe. The fact is, the pilot-fish is nothing more than a parasite of the shark. He is a scaleless fish, from one to three feet in length, and is provided with a pow ertul sucker on the top of Ins head whilst his under jaw projects consider ably beyond the upper, lie gives one the idea of an eel with his head put on upside down ; but the use of such formation is evident : he attaches him self to the Bhark at the angle or open ing of the jaw by his sucker, and with his projecting shovel under-lip catches the morsels which drop from his mas ter's mouth as he chews. Thus it hap pens that, there being only two con veuient points of attachment on the shark's head, he is seldom accompanied by more than two fish. As to these fish themselves, their power of suction is so great that a moderate-sized one will draw blood through a man's skin if al lowed to attach itself. Eel-like, they remain active for a long time out of their native element, and can be made to adhere to any object for many nun utes. The writer on one occasion tried the strength of one of them, about eighteen inches long, by allowing it to attach itselt to a gun-case, with double-barreled gun and paraphenalia within. Lifting the fish by the tail, it raised the gun and case easily, and afterwards bore the addition of several heavy books without giving way. The appearance of the sucker is somewhat like a gridiron. Wild Horses of the West. Large numbers of wild horses aboun on tho prairies between the Arkansas and Smoky Hill rivers. They are of all sizes and colors, and are the wildest of all wild animals. They usually roam m bands of from bix to twenty, and will run at sight of a man two miles away, A great many domestio horses as well as mules, which have strayed away from their owners, have taken up with the wild ones. After running with them for awhile they become as wild as their untamed companions. Various meth ods have been adopted to capture these aboriginal horses, but they have gener ally proved fruitless. A scrubby colt or a broken down inulo is as a general thing the only reward for all the time, labor, and expense in such visionary schemes. The King of Dahomey has joined the Asliaatees against JSngland, Curious Custom Among tlio Kabyles. There is a very curious custom pre valent among the Kabyles called the anaya, which they all equally respect. The anaya is botfi a passport and a safe conduct, with this difference, that in stead of its being delivered by the legal authority of any constituted power, every Kabyle has the right to give it. Not only is the foreigner or stranger who traveles in Kabylia under the protection of the anaya, free from violence during his journey, but he is also temporarily able to brave the ven geance of his enemies or the penalty due for an anterior crime. The Kabyles rarely confer it on people who are un known to them ; they only give it once to a fugitive ; they regard it as worth less if it has been sold, and any one who obtains it by stratagem incurs the penalty ot death, in order to prevent; fraud the anava is usually made known by an ostensible sign. The person who confers it delivers at the same time, and as an extra guarantee, an object well nown to belong to him, such as a gun or a stick. Sometimes he sends one of is servants, or even accompanies his protege himself. The value of the anaya is in proportion to the quality of the person who gives it. (Joining irom a Kabyle of an inferior position, it will be respected in his village and m tne immediate neighborhood ; but it it is given by a man who is esteemed in au adjoining tribe, it will be renewed by a friend, who will substitute his own lor and so on until the traveler reaches the end of his journey. If it is given by a Marabout, its value is unlimited. W hile a Kabyle chiet can only give nis protection within the circle of his own government, tho safe-conduct of a Mar about reaches even to places where his name is unknown. Whoever is the bear er of it can travel all through Kabylia without fear of molestation, whatever may be the number ot his enemies or the nature of their grievances against him. He will only nave to present himself to the Marabouts of the differ ent tribes, and each will hasten to do honor to the anaya of the preceding Marabout, aud replace it by his own. A Kabyle has nothing so much at heart as the inviolability of his anaya. In giving it he engages not only his own personal honor but also that of his relatives, his friends, his village, and. in tact, the tribe to which he belongs. A man who would not be able to find a friend to aid him in avenging himself for a personal insult, could cause the entire population ot his village to rise if it were a ques tion of his anaya being disrespected, it is extremely rare that that ever hap pens, but tradition has, nevertheless, preserved to posterity a memorable ex ample of it. As the story runs, a friend of a Zouaoui presented himself one day at his house and asked for the anaya. In the master's absence, the wife, who was rather embarrassed, gave the fugi tive a dog which was well known in that part of the country. Shortly after he had left, tho dog, covered with blood, returned alone. The inhabitants of the village assembled, and, following the traces of the animal, discovered tne traveler's body. They declared war to the tribe upon whose territory the crime had been committed, a great deal ot blood was shed, and the village which was compromised in the quarrel bears even to this day the name of Dacher-et-el-Kelba, " The village of the dog." The Gentleman 8 Mayazinc. The Adirondack Wilderness. Some time ago two gentlemen were passing a littlo clearing in the Adiron- .lack wilderness, in Aortheru Aew York, in which a man was endeavoring to raise a little corn, which was strug gling up amid the rocks. " Toor man," they said, " he is to be pitied ; what a hard life he has of it. The man over heard them, and looking up, leaning his face on his hoe handle, said: "Don't pity me ; I ain't so poor as you think I am ; I own but five acres ; pity my neighbor over there he owns live hundred." Mr. Headley, who was one of the first to explore this region, says that this is a fair illustration of the value of the land for cultivation. Following the Backett Iliver down for a hundred miles, and you find only two of the four or five new clearings are in tended to be turned into farms. The rest are for the hunter and tourist. Striking back from the great water courses, you have at one extremity Brown's tract, once laid out for a large settlement, now little more than a clear ing ; and in the center, the Adiroudack Iron Works, where were forges, shops, warehouses, a store, church, school house, and some fourteen dwelling houses, all occupied ; now all are silent and deserted, save one building, in which dwells a Scotch family. They have lived alone for tho last fifteen years. A deserted village, it is slowly falling into ruins in this far solitude. In the last thirty or forty years more land has gone back to its original state of wildness than has been reclaimed by the hand of civilization. Certainly a park is not needed to protect such, a country from the axe of the pioneer. The only thing that directly or in directly can effect the destruction of these forests is the Adirondack Bail road. It goes through the heart of the wilderness, and it has a grant of land from the State a mile in width on each Bide, making a belt two miles wide. This, of course, in time will be swept of trees. Iudirectly it will have a still more disastrous effect on the forest, for it will lay open to the market the vast mineral wealth of this region, the extent of which is not known, nor will be till it becomes more accessible. There is literally an iron dam across the Adiron dack Biver here. Now let these mines be worked, and the hard-wood timber that forms so large a part of the forest. and is now useless, will be used for charcoal for the manufacture of iron. One evening a tender swain said to his "sweetness," " Some of these fall ing stars seem to leave behind them a bright path, as if they were celestial messengers flying earthward, the dust of heaven falling from their feet, and making a track of light behind." To which the maid replied : " They allers make me think about the circus man that b wallowed fire. Items of Interest. TIia Pmne.h Assembly has passed the bill increasing President MacMahon's salary. Au English wag says that machin ery wheels are so modest that they gen erally travel in cog." Gordon, the convicted Tnornaise murderer, says now that he wouia rather be hanged than imprisoned for life. Porannd w ith small capital are ad vised to take a three-acre sand patch in Virginia and raise $5,000 worth of pea nuts on it. Wlinnninff- couch is afflicting the adults in Trinity County, Cal., to an annoying extent, and the children are laughing at them. rirw Newton Booth received sixty votes in the California Legislature, and was elected to the United States senate for the full term. Three men were lost in the woods near Chebovgan, Michigan, recently, and subsisted for an entire week on basswood sprouts. The Massachusetts Commissioners offer prizes of $1,500, $1,000, and $500 for the best for a State Prison to "ac commodate" 1,000 prisoners. A postmaster sent to an inquirer a letter which reads: " I Received your Lines & To the Best of My Noleg thair Has Never Bin eney such Letter com to this offes." Mr. II. J. Dunlap, an Illinois farmer, has warmed his house and done all his cooking for two years by natural gas which he discovered on his farm in bor ing a well for water. The Massachusetts Dental Society has adopted the following resolution: Re solved, That in the opinion of the Mas achusetts Dental Society, the use of chloroform is not advisable. Have the courage to cut the most agreeable acquaintance you have when vou are convinced he lacks principle. '" A friend should bear with a friend's infirmities." but not his vices. A wooden railroad is suggested to connect Cliutou, Iowa, with the coal mines at Knoxville. It is to bo con structed of wood entirely, even to wooden rails aud wooden car wheels. A family ot six persons in Fort Wayne, Intl., has been reduced within a short time to a single member by a mvsterious disease, which is supposed to have been caused by using impure water. The editor of a Colorado paper was asked by a stranger " if it were possible that that little town kept up four news papers," and the reply was : "Mo; it takes four newspapers to keep up the town." Two Kentucky clergymen have been experimenting "to see how cheaply a man can support his family. One re ports that ho does it at $1 a head per week, and the other claims to have given "good, plain food" for ninety cents each member per week.. The West don't seem to be a better place for workingmen than the East. A Denver editor says that a wagonful of coal stood for twenty minutes in front of his office, and he had not less than twenty applications to unload it from men anxious to earn half a dollar. A shoal of herring, so vast and dense as to be almost a compact mass, recent ly swam into the harbor at Waterford, Ireland, and the fishermen caught them by the netfull. The total catch was immense, cart loads being taken into the country, and ship loads in barrels, sent to England. A lad in Worcester, Mass., has been fined S5 and costs, amounting to S11.50, for stealing a sopy of a newspaper irom thedoor of a subscriber. In passing sentence the Judge said it was not the mere market value of the goods stolen that called for severe punishment, but the great annoyance attending such pet ty piltenng. Mrs. Workman, the wile of a liaptist preacher, charged with the murder, some time since, of a lady of whom she was jealous, was acquitted, after a trial lasting several davs. The parties live in Eureka, 111. Mrs. Workman is said to have believed the woman wn was murdered to have been intimate with her husband. Liguine is a chemical substance which is found in old rags and otner unattractive articles, trom which tempt ing syrups for the table are extracted. Sulphurio acid is tho dnneerous ele nient in these seductive articles, and no person with a proper regard for his in testines can abide it. But what can be done in these days of adulteration to correct these evils ? Everybody can not go about with chemicals iu his pockets to test such deleterious sub stances. As for the coiicoctors of can tankerous syrups, let no mercy be shown them. A Friend In Need. " Confidence." says the proverb, " is a plant of slow growth." It is, per haps, best not to grow it all in the Aus tralian bush, judging irom tne ioiiow incident related by a Melbourne paper. A certain person was traveling through a lonely district, when he heard a great outcry. Thinking bushrangers were at work, lie fired off a pistol t intimidate them, and presently the noise ceased and a scampering was heard, un com ing to the open ground, the traveler discovered a man tied to a tree. " Oh, sir," cried the victim, I am so glad you have come. I have been attacked by ruffians, and they were robbing me when they heard your pistol." "And couldn't you get loose, my friend?" asked the traveler. " No ; they tied me so very tightly." "And did they rob you of everything ?" " No, only of my watch. They had not time to search for my money, which I placed in my left boot." 'How fortunate," obseived the traveler; "was the sum consider able? " Over a thousand, thank heaven," said the poor man, " Are you sure they are gone?" asked the other. "Oh, certain." The new comer looked around and around, and seeing the coast clear, said coolly, " Well, as they're gone, I think I'll finish the job myself." And he proceeded to rob the unfortunate victim,