V j I (jj;0fLj it HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. .'" NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VI. TUDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1876. NO. 37. ' Railroad Rambling. A REMIHIBOBNOa OF TBI ORNTIKHUIi. September enoBhtae'e golden light Was patting the darkneee and gloom to flight, When, after a romewhat rcctlf-wi night Had departed, we started To take the ears from Commnnipaw That dropped na at Jenkintown Junotion. And what we dirt, and what we taw, From fie time when without eompnnotion We wrre landed there, in a oarrent of air, Ten mintitpd too late, with an honr to wait Bofore the next train's conjunction, Until we came back, on a different track, It is proposed to etate and briefly relate If these rhymes perform their function. Jenkin'own Junction is near a town, . And " Jenkins" to ns still remains but a nonn; The " town " constats of a depot of stone, Standing with one or two sheds alone By a muddy stream, in a very stiff breeae, Between bifjh bills and surrounded by trees; The nearest dinner twelve miles away And the final result five hours' delay. We left the ttation as soon as we could, With its wind and water and hills and wood; At Fort Washington got a good, dinner, and then Begun to approve of the land of Penn. Stone honsesnd barns, all built to remain, Granaries filled with their e tores of grain, Rich pai-turfB, orchards and fertile fields, The choicest fruits whic'i the autumn yields, Herds on the hillsides everywhere Prosperity, comfort and thrifty care We noted, wicb plenty of time to spare, For the train was late, we bad to wait (Our perpetual fate in the Kt yetone State, Thon-h not to be o immended); But at last, ai the sun its course nearly run, With lengthening shadows blended Deeeended to rest, in the bluing west, Our first day's Jiurney ended. The next day we rested, the next invested In Centernial exploration. 3 he morni'ig wa fine at a quarter past nine We arrived tit our declination; Bod a fountains, hotels, steam whistles and bli, Cars, certs, a conglomeration Of sigh's, Bounds and smells inoeeeantly dvrol's Around the Centennial station. To eyes an! to eara "money!'' "money!" appears ' In persistent reiteration On the sins at the gato, by our side as we wait, And in every domestio relation. A specimen graveyard on entering is seen To the left while before us, in glistening green, The Barthnl Ji fountain while off to the righ Maiu building and sick-chairs attention invite. Within we found OUina, Japan, Algerines, Bowls, bureaus and bedsteads, maps, kettles a: d screens, N mwmv and Sweden, with figures in platter Ropresenting tbeir people in joy and dir aster, The Ceuteuuial urn, Brya t vase, Buseian eablos, Fienoh glvc-, Spanish b-ota, Turkish pipes, Chinote table, Silks, satins und laces, rags, hardware and drugs. Model steamships, oil, diamonds, dried lizards and bugs. We went on the roof and then came down to dine Near some big earthen pots of domeBtio design, Then hurried across to Memorial Hall As a shrieking steam engine came rushing along For locomotive?, great and small, Buu rattling about through the sight seeing throng, Who somehow contrive to get out of the way, Avoiding a Juggernaut display (We bad several narrow escapes that day). Here are paintings and siatu:a of all degrees, From California's giant trees To an infant attempting its very first sneeze; And up from the juvenile aneeasr To B zpau watching beside the slain, The fieedman dashing aside his chain, And the death of Julius Cesar. In Mat hinery Hall we got some bricks And candy, examined the weaving Of oarpets and ribbons and glass, until six O'olock oMuicei the signal for leaving. The crowd was great, we got home late, It rained and we got a wetting; But things like these are borne with ease As scarcely worth regretting. After the rain we went again, Completing investigation; Saw Iceland and Spain, but searched in vain For a Sioux delegation; Stuffed sj'dtors and flib, frozen meat on a dish, A lighthouse and fog horn and cannon, An improved oannou bill, Horticultural Hall, Patent cars, and the traok that they ran on Aorots the ravine, a dish washing maohine, State buildings, New England log cabin, With cradle and clock from behind Plymouth Beck, A bazaar with a living Arab in, Agricultural Hall, where it seemed nearly a'l The machines had been sold to the Japs, The Women's pivilion, instrueting the million In infantile dresses and oaps. We got some tin pails, were weighed on the soles Of Fairbanks and looked at a mummy, Saw Japan's nous and rails, all built without uaile, And had a short ride with the dummy. On a subsequent day we proceeded to pay Our respeou to thi shiines of the nation-. Philadelphia then, with Its charter from Penn, Commanded corisidertiou. Independence Hall, Declaration, with all The names of the signers faded, Aud Liberty bell that sounded the knell Of tyranny truly as they did. At the mint we saw gold stamped, melted and rolled, And silver in brioka and in bars, Coins tarnished aud bright, from the widow's mite fc - -To the broadest gold pieces of the ecars; Spent a couple of hours with the engines and flowers, f At Fairmount, passed Glrard bridge aad sol- lege, And street after stieet that df not onmp'eto Our architectural knowledge; For the dwellings are small, with dark base ments and all Alike and without variation; Bed brick and white atone being made to atone for want of imagination. Limestone, iron ores, the pioluretqne shores Of Wissahickon in turn olaimed attention; Norristown on Its bill, the historio Sohujlkill, And objeots " too numerous to mention," Aa the notices say, beguiled us aoh day, That found but too soon termination; Until Lehiifh and Easton, though last net the least on Our tour of investigation, Faded slowly from eight, and the engine's swift flight Soon ended our twelve days' vacation. THE RINGLEADER. A STORT O WILDACRE SCHOOL. When Mr. Red cami to take the school at Wildaci'j. he found it no bed of roses. lie watt a handsome young fellow, with an eye like Mars, which was greatly needed at Wildacre to threaten or command, aud ta - muscle of an ath lete. But Mr. Reed had an iuherited habit of blushing, and the young ladies were not slow to take advantage of it Perhaps the 1 inffcder of the school was Georgia Jones, as pretty a little witch as everwjrked mischief: she it was who 6rst discovered his one weakness, which, let us add, was not the result of busbful ncss, but merely of a thiu skin. Per haps there was no less bashful man in the world than Mr. Reed, and Miss Georgie was a mntch for him there, and did her prettiest to put him to confu sion. She sketched his unmistakable caricature on the blackboard, whero she had been sent to work out an algebraio equation, of which he caught a glimpse, turning his beael inopportunely. Before her quick hauel could erase, he had stay ed the movement by his own. "Is that your unknown quantity, Miss Jones ?" said he. "Please to finish your problem." Miss Georgio seized the crayon in an instant of daring impudence, and wrote off against the caricature, " plus his !lush equals," aud then she paused. Now the woman who hesitates, we know, is lost. "Can't you finish it?" asked her teacher. "I thought you had committed your lesson. Give mo the crayon, if you please. " " Equals Miss Jones, plus her imper tinence," he wrote. "Now prove it, Bir, if you please," said Miss Georgie, demurely. " You may take your seat, Miss Jones, and finish your lespou after school." But presently the bell rung, and the young lady whose business it was to an swer the door brought up a note, which run thus: " Will Mr. Reed kindly dismiss Miss Georgie Jon s at half-past ten, and oblige her aunt ?" "Miss Jones," said he, " you may bo dismissed." "it she as Keel, with an air of sur prise. "I was to remain after school." " Your aunt requests that you should be dismissed." "Oh, thanks." There was a general titter as Miss Georgie decamped, casting a triumphant look over her shoulder, for they were all very well aware that the note was a fabrication of her own, carried out by Miss Eew, who had been dismissed on account of a violent fit of sne zing, aud returned by means of a saiall urchin sho had bribed wjtli a penny. Unfortunately for Miss Georgie, Mr. R-jod, having au errand at the railway station after school, encountered her aunt just stepping from the train. "I didn't know you were out of towu," said ho. " Have you been away long?" " Only a week's shopping. How is Georgie doing, Mr. Reed 7 Do you think she will graduate this year I I'm anxious, because she will have to teach when she gets through." " Indeed I I hope she may find pu pil -i as docile as herself." The next time Miss Georgie brought her pencil aud requested Mr. Reed to sharpen it, as she sometimes did, he a-ked : "Are you going to write me an other note, Miss Jones ? ' "Another note!'1 she repeated. " When did I ever write you a note f " " Cau you say that you never did 1" "What do you mean, Mr. Reed ?" What does this mean V and he pro duced the note in question. She gave a light Jangh. " It means that you haven't proved that problem yet. All's fair in love and war, tbey fay. Mr. Reed's face did not reflect her smile, aud Georgie noted the fact with ustouishment. " Do you think this quite honest I" he asked. "Horrent!" she repeated, coloring. I certainly do not think it is polite to coll me dishonest," defiantly. " was it polite to deceive me I " Please give me my penoil," said Miss Impertinence. " Your riddles are too hard for ma." "You may taks your seat. Miss Jones." Miss Jones took her seat obediently. and presently the bell rung in the lower ball. A straLger might not have discov ered any connection between the two facts; but the young ladies were allowed to answer the bell by turns, and it so happened that it was Miss Georgia's week to perfom that pleasant office. She rose quickly to the performance of her duty. "Oomposo yourself, Miss Jones," said Mr. Rued. " Miss Samp son, if you will take charge of the school, I will answer the bell myself 1" There was a general titter, led by the disgraced Georgie, as he suspected, for when be reached the lower hall, nobody was to be seen, not so much as a naughty urchin scampering down the green or peering from behind an elm. He went quietly up stairs, but said aothing. The next afternoon the bell . rung again. You may go down, Miss Georgie,'' he said. Miss Georgie did as she was bid den, for a wonder, and returning after a reasonable time, remarked that Miss Kew was wanted. . Miss Kew was on her feel bvfv.ro tho words were well out of Georgie's mouth. "Sit down, if you please, Miss Kew," said Mr. Reed. " I will go down myself and see your friend; if it is anything urgent, yon shall follow." Mr. Reed ac cordingly descended; nobody was there. " Yon may remain after school, Miss Jones," he said, when he returned; " and in the meantime I will, to prevent any further interruptions from visitors, invite you to take this seat, which, I think, is more than arm's length from the bell wire." Miss Jones had sat where she could watch her chance, touch the bell spring, and take an airing, fol lowed by her favorite chum. It must be confessed that after the last lingering girl had disappeared and left Mr. Reed alone with Georgie in the echoing schoolroom, with its paneling of blackboard and chalk marks, as if it had gone into half mourning, that he felt juRt a little nervous and uneasy. It was rather tmgallant to ask her to come to him, it was equally undignified to go to her; however, he went presently, and sat down in the seat just in front of her, facing, and leaning one arm upon her desk. " Mis3 Georgie," he began, " I am disappointed in you." "In me I" looking -op arohly. "I hadn't promised anything, that I'm aware." " I wish you would be serious, Miss Jones," he pursued. " I assure you this seems to me a matter of too much im portance to admit of trifling. I could not believe that you would stoop to such devioes and deceits I Don't you see how you wound, how you disappoint me! How hard it goes with one who has formed an ideal, and " he paused in his eloquence; Miss Jones was regard ing him with an air of surprise; he blushed and stnmbled in his speech " and and I don't know what I was about to say ; however, I hope you are sorry. Miss Georgie I" "I am dreadfully sorry to lose my tea; we were going to have hot muffins. Aren't you hungry, Mr. Reed f " " You tlon't mean to say that you are not sorry ?" he flashed. "It cannot be possible that you have so little regard for truti, you in whom I have believed, witL whom I would have trnsti d every thing and anything, you whom I love " He paused again, confounded by his own words, which seemed to have slipped from his lips unbidden. "Mr. Reed, did you keep me after school to listen to a proposal" she ask ed, rising quite angrily. "It is some thing quite unusual." "I did cot intend it, believe me, Miss Jones. Pardon me; but ont of the full ness of the heart the mouth speaketh I must have been thinking aloud. It you havo found out my secret, I dare say you are none the happier for it." "I suppose I may be dismissed if you have nothing more to say ?" There were tears of anger or of something standing in her eyea. " You may be dismissed. I have said too much; you have been terribly non committal." He held out his hand, but she did not choose to see it, or the dusk prevented. The stars were coming out in the evening sky, scents of wild rose and sweet fern were blowing in through the open windows, and a bell was tolling softly in some remote church tower. "Shall I walk home with you, Miss Jones ' he asked, as he locked the schoolhouse door; "you have quite a walk over a lonely road." "You'-E.ight have thought of that earlier. I am not afraid, thank yon. I know every rock between here and the farm," she answered, as he held the gate open for her to pass. Mr. Reed's emotions were not of an enviable nature as he walked home alone that evening; he bad proposed to that little witch, whom he found it impossible to hate, and she had rebuked him. A pretty affair between teacher aud pupil, verily I How pleasant it would be to open school next day, with each yonng lady ready to touch his wound with the scalpel of her ridicule, and Miss Georgie more auda cious than ever 1 But Miss Georgia did not present herself, and the mischief of the others seemed to proceed lamely without her. Mr. Reed thanked Heaven that it was a half-holiday, and instead of going home to dinner like a sensible man though what lover ever is sensi ble, for the matter of that! he struck ont for the woods ami the river, a long tramp in the burning sun, and being ex bausted on his walk homeward, he threw himself down in the shade of some wild blossoming shrubs and fell asleep. He was awakened by the sound of voices. Were the leaves talking ? Was the .wind syllabling familiar words f " Georgie had a headache this morn ing when I called for her ; lectures don't agree with her digestion." All at once he sat upright. It was Miss Kew who was speaking, and he could see her and half a dozen others through the opening among the boughs, weaving oak leaves and gossiping idly. " Poor Mr. Reed looked like a ghost this morning a broken reed indeed ! I guess he found that Georgio belonged to a stiff necked generation." "I wonder what they talked about. Do you suppose she promised better be havior T" " Maybe she promised for better or worse." " Pshaw 1 put in Miss Kew: "I asked. her if he said anything tender, and she said : ' Tender 1 is a bear tender?'" "He hugs " "I've told her that he was dead in love many's the time," continued Miss Kew, " and meant to marry her some day, with all her imperfections on her head." " I dare say she wouldn't say no.'" " Indeed, you needn't dare say any thing of the sort. ' Georgie Jones is above marrying a poor pedagogue." one s poor nerseir. Her uncle s only a farmer, and she's got to teaoh." ' " But a beauty like Georgie doesn't need to jump ont of the frying pan into the fire. What sort of a match would Mr. Reed bet" . , : ' " A lucifer, I guess." . ; . ! V,'; . Surely listeners never hear an) good of themselves, thought Mr. Reed, t n he picked up his hat and strolled quietly rway, screened by the friendly leaves. He felt as miserable as a man of twenty nine Is capable of feeling who has been guilty of nothing but an error of judg ment. His t rm would end in fort night, however, and then he would throw up his situation and leave Wild acre forever. He walked on and on in an unnatural mood, taking any route that invited, trespassing over cornfields olimbing stone walls, crossing lazy streams, till all at once the sky seemed to change to inky blackness, shot across with blinding flashes of light j an Atlas weight seemed pressing upon his brain, the sound of roaring cataracts was in his ear, and unconsciousness followed. There was a young girl rocking and sewing in the farmhouse near, who, roused from some absorbing reflections of her own by the approaching feet and the tremor of anxious voices, moved leisurely to the doorway, and encounter ed the hired men bringing in a burden. " It's a sunstroke, I reckon," said one. " Don't ye be scared, Miss Geor gie; 'taiu't none of your folks." "Oh! oh! ohlv' cried Georgie. " Call Aunt Sue ; call TJno'e True. Run for the doctor, Jake run for your life. Oh ! oh I Is a sunstroke very danger ous ? Can't I bathe his poor head, or do something f Poor fellow ! it'll break somebody's heart. Why, it is it is," with a gasp "it is Mr. Reed! Go, both of yon, all of you go for the doc tor. I will take care of him. Mr. Reed dear Mr. Reed speak to me look at me. I am your own Georgie, and I am so sorry so sorry, and I will never, never vex you any more if you will just say, 1 love you,' again, just once again !" and the tender words somehow reached the half consoions ear, and he moved his lips feebly, whispering, half inandibly : "Love i love you ! Hove you !" And so it happened that Mr. Reed did not resign his situation at Wildacre, though the trustees were obliged to find a substitute for many a week, while be was recovering from the sunstroke, while he made a wedding tour. And so it happened that the Wildacre school became the most orderly in the country, perhaps because he married the ring leader ! The Man who Gave Odds. After a strange man had finished eat ing a hearty meal at one of the stands in Detroit, the Free Prest Fays, he re marked to the woman : " As I was sitting down to this meal I said to myself that I'd bet ono dollar against the dinner that the greenback candidates would not carry a singlo State. If I hey do, yoU have won the dollar, and shall have it." " I want thirty-five cents of you," she replied, pulling off her comforter. "Or I'll bet you five dollars against a meal that the Democrats carry New York State," he continued. " I want my poy,or there '11 betroublo right here I" she eT.olaimed, slipping off her bonnet. "Or I'll bet the same sum, on the same terms, that the Republicans will carry it," he remarked, as he wiped off his sandy goatee. " I never bet, and I want my pay I" sho called out, being now all ready for action. " Great Heavens I but look at the odds I offer you I" he gasped. "I not only let you bet on either side, but I offer you the most fearful odds that have ever been given since the advent of the Chris tian era I" " I can't help the odds," she answer ed, as she got hold of his coat tails. "You don't leave here till I got my money." . " Or, I'll bet you $35 against this thirty-five cent debt," he went on, " that neither Hayes nor Tilden will be elected. One of them must be, but I effer to bet thoy won't be, simply to per mit you to coin $35 out of my hard earnings. Great Jigs ! but such another offer was never known since Oliver Cromwell kept a fighting dog 1" " Thirty-five cents I" she shrieked, pulling him around. "Last, but not least, I'll bet you forty to on that I haven't had thirty five cents about me for a month ! Come, now, I offer you every chanes to win." She gave bim two solid kicks, and was designing and drafting a third, when he made a bolt and left a coat tail in her grasp. While an officer was looking for him around the market he was placidly surveying the soldiers' monument and picking his teeth with a straw. James Lick's Old Flour Mill. One of the late James Lick's most profitable investments in California was an old flour mill in Santa Clara. It did not cost much, and at first was of little use or profit to its new owner. He used to get up at daylight, breakfast sparing ly, aud trudge off to Santa Clara with a lunch of doughnuts in bis pocket pre pared by his landlady. Returning in the evening, he would retire after supper to his own room, whioh no one ever enter ed but the person who kept it in order, and not emerge until next morning, when the routine of the day before was renewed. How he amused himbelf in his privacy no one knew and no one cared to inquire. Subsequently he built a mag nificent new mill on the site of the Santa Clara mill. He is said to have spent upon it at different times an aggiegate of $100,000, tnough the exact amonnt can never be known. He finished it in the most elegant manner, the office, staircases, floors and even the hoppers being of mahogany. But the flour made there was of a superior quality like everything else that Mr. Lick had any thing to do with and commanded a dol lar or two more per barrel than that which came from other millers. He se lected his wheat carefully and always paid a high price for it. "Lick's flour " was known far and wide upon the Pa citio coast, and the demand for it became very general. Mr. Lick was very proud of his mill, and finally gave it to the Tom Paine Society cf Boston, by whom it was forced into the market at $18,000. The owner was highly indignant at the sacrifice, and eschewed the society thenceforth, Masteb Tommys View of It. Master Tommy (he had been very naughty, and was now amus i g himself with his Scripture prints)" u ere's Daniel in the lions' den 1" Mamm u (incautiously) "Ah I what was he out into the lions' den fori" Master iMnmy (with tri unph) 'Cause be was good I" Sealskin Sacks, Ltc. Sealskin sacks remain the most popu lar fur wraps, notwithstanding the in troduction of seal dolmans and long cloaks. New sacks are sloped in to the figure by a seam in the middle of the back, and are longer than those of last season, measuring twenty-eight to thirty-two inches. The front is double breasted, and is fastened by crossbars made of bars of fur and cords. The rolling collar has fur on both sides, so that it can be closed high about the throat if liked, or else worn open ; the breast pocket is inside. Cheap seal skin sacks are npt to be badly made by inexperienced workers, who out the gar ment from the whole skin of the animal, and piece it so badly that the fur turns the wrong way, so that, after being sat upon, the garment is all out of shape. More plain, nntrimmeil seal sacks are sold than trimmed ones, because the first are less expensive, vet the trimmed sacks are most fashionable. Many ladies who have worn plain sacks for two or three winters are now having a border of different fur put on, not merely for its beauty, but to add greater length. The strong Alaska seal sacks without trimming cost from $50 to $200 ; $125 buys a very good durable Alaska sack. Kuotland seal sacks, untrimmea, are from $75 to $300. Trimmed seal ; sacks are usually longer than plain ones. The fur borders are wider than last year, measuring six inches if the purchaser can afford it. The most inexpensive trimmed sacks are those that have black marten borders, and cost from $100 to $150. Black beaver borders are very popular this season : a sack with border of this fur costs from $100 to $200. There is also an especial fancy for what is called silvery black marten andflUveryr- beaver borders, which are merely the usual black furs with gray hairs sewed in at intervals. The purchaser should blow back the fur and make sure that these gray hairs are sewed into the pelt, hair by hair, instead of being pasteil there, as in the latter ease they will fall out when exposed to dampness. It is a new idea to trim seal sacks with Chin chilla borders, and in the present fancy for this lovely gray fur this will meet with favor, especially for yonng ladies ; with Chinchilla borders, the sacks cost from $150 to $200. Warm looking blnck jeaunette borders are also used. Among the richest borders are those of dark otter. The handsome unplucked otter, with its long glossy fur, is shown in' sacks that cost from $75 up to $275 ; the plucked otter borders with shorter fleeco, from which the longer points have been plucked, is very soft and velvet-like ; with this border, the sacks cost from $100 to $200. Exceedingly fine sacks of Shetland seal with sea otter border cost $450 to $500. Fisher tail borders make the sack equally expen sive. Seal dolmans have been intro duced, and will be worn to some extent, but they are too heavy and clumsy for comfort, and will not be generally used. Long cloaks with mandarin sleeves are also made of sealskin and lined with squirrel lock fur. They are fifty inches long, are left open up part of the back seam, and have a broad Russian collar. These garments are excellent for car riage wraps, and for invalids who re quire great warmth, but are too clumsy to be comfortable to walk in. They cost from $400 to $600. Bazar. No Savey Sue. Sansome street, San Francisco, re sounded to the echoes of a policeman's whistle in the hands of a miserable, miserly looking old Chinaman. A policeman hurried to the scene, and found that the celestial wanted a citi zen arrested who owned him some money and refused to pay it. It was in vain that the officer tried to point out ivith the legal acumen that the China man's remedy was at civil law that ho should sue the refractory debtor. No, he wanted criminal process. " Me no savey sue ;' savey, he got my money ; savey, me want it back." " Oh, come, get out of this," said the guardian of the public peace, gently shoving him away from his debtor, who walked quietly off. " What you shove me for. Get me back me money. Chinaman he no pay white man money he go to prison ; white man ho no pay Chinaman he walk off. You say 'sue, sue.' Me no savey sue.' Savey you allee same fool." Here the officer made a grab for John, who effected his escape. Spunk by a Woman. A Colorado correspondent writes : We had the honor, not long since, of seeing one of the first ladies who ever voted in the United States. She ca-t in her ballot in Wyoming, and gave the following reason why she voted at all, laughing as heartily as any of htr hear ers. She said she was standing in a store one day, when a largo black dog came in, holding a basket in his mouth. It was election day, and some of the men standing round talking about the late woman suffrage act, passed in the Territoiy, said Jack (the dog) should be allowed to pnt his vote in if the women were, for he certainly had just as much sense about such things. The lady said she made up her mind instantly to go directly to the polls and vote, thortgh sho hod no idea of doing so before that man so slandered her sex. A Man's Life. Wm. H. Erwin shot Royal H. Plumb at Pittsfield, Mass. Erwin was a man of standing and influ ence, and his viotim, who had given him some provocation, was of bad reputa tion, shiftless and - friendless. Erwin was convicted of manslaughter, and hij counsel pleaded for a light sente -.ce on the ground of the dead man's worthless ness. The court, however, did not take that view, and sentenced Erwin to im prisonment for twelve-years. Understood It. A native citizen of Bangor, Me., was passing by where some Irishmen were at work exoavatiug for a sewer, and one of them was jabber ing away briskly in his mother tongue, whom he saluted, saying: - w Why don't you talk so that one can understand ?" Pat, with the ready wit of his people, responded: " Yer grandfather was the boy that could understand it, and talk it, too, be jabers 1" Anecdotes of Rnfus thoate. On a very hot day Mr. Choate was arguing a case at a law term of the su preme court before the full bench. He evidently had the wrong side. Besides other ca"es against him, a decision of the supreme court of Pennsylvania had been cited, which was exactly in point and conclusive against his positions. He was apparently in the full tide of suc cessful argument, and was approaching its end, when the chief justice said : " What do you say to the Pennrylvania case, Mr. Choate 1" " Your honors, I have not forgotten that case. By no means. I was coming to it-directly. By turning to it you will notice that the de cision was given in the month of July, in the height of the hot season, in the extremely hot town of Harrisburgh, in the interior of the State, far away from the ocean breezes which heri', at this moment, are beginningto fan the heated brow of ju tice. We all know that Homer sometimes nods; and I submit to your honors whether it is not indisput able that the judges of the supreme court of Pennsylvania convened in the very heated interior of the State, in the extremely hot month of July, probably on one of the hottest days of that month, and in the afternoon, as the report for tunately happens to inform ns were, at the time of pronouncing this abnormal decision on which my brother so much relies, either most of them profoundly asleep, or all ' nodding, nid, nid, nod ding,' and so not responsible for the strange doctrines laid down." There was great merriment amoDg the judges, and it was-, increased by the profound pravity of Choate. The chief justice (Shaw) shook bis sides till it was thought he would roll off his chair, -A priori, one would have said that no sncn style oi speaking as unoate s wouia be tolerated in a Massachusetts court of law, it was sometimes so violent, so fran tic, so extravagant. When greatly ex cited, ho appeared to be almost in con vulsions, every fiber in his body quiver ing with emotion, his faco ashy pale, his eyes flashing, his gestures most violent ; aud ho would shout, and even scream, with all the force of his lungs. He did not, "in the very torrent, tempest, and, as I may say, whirlwind of his passion, beget a temperance that gave it smooth ness." Like a high mettled steed, he was off at a tremendous rate from the word "Go!" and he kept up or increased the pace to the end of the course. When I have seen Choate employ two extra ordinary instruments of expression his nose and his - heels drawing in the whole volume of his breath through his large nose with a noise heard all over room, and then, to double the force of the expression, closing bis sentence by coming down on his heels with a muscu lar effort which shook the whole court room ; when I heard of his tearing his coat from top to bottom, by the violence of his gestures, I was pleased at reading that a gentleman in England told Choate that he had frequently seen Erskine, in addressing a jury, jump up and knock his feet together before he touched the floor again. How Badly they Felt. Term was over, the coach was full of young Oxonians returning to the respec tive colleges ; the morning was cold, wet and miserable, when a well appoint ed "drag" drove up to the "White Horse Cellar," Piccadilly. " Have you room for one inside" asked as pretty a girl as you would wish to see on a sum mer's day. "What a beauty !" exclaim ed one. "Quite lovely I" said another. "Perfect!" lisped a third. "Quite full, miss, inside and ont," replied the coachman. "Surely, you can make room for one," persevered the fair one. " Quite impossible, without the yonng gentlemen's consent." "Lot'sof room," cried the insides ; "we are not very large ; we can manage to take ono more." " If the gentlemen consent," replied the driver, " I can have no objection." " We agree," said the inside quartet. " All right," responded the coachman, the fare was paid, and the guard pro ceeded to open the door, and let down the steps. " Now, miss, if. you please ; we are behind our time." "Come along, grandfather," cried the damsel, addressing a most respectable looking, portly, elderly man ; " the money is paid, get in, and be sure you thank the young gentlemen ;" at the same time suiting the action to the word, and, with a smile, assisting her respected grandfather into the coach. " Here's some mistake ; you'll squeeze us to death," cried the astonished party. " Sorry to incommode you," replied the intruder ; " I hope you won't object to have both windows up, I'm sadly troubled with a cough." At this moment, "All right, sit fast I" was heard ; and the " Defiance rattled away, best pace. drowning the voioes of the astonished Oxonians The First he'd Heard or It. A blacksmith having failed in busi ness, a friend, to enable him to start onoe more, loaned him some iron. which a creditor attached at the forge. The friendly owner sued for his iron. Choate appeared for him, and pictured the cruelty of the sheriff's pro ceeding as follows : " He arrested the arm of industry as it fell toward the an vil ; he pnt out the breath of his bel lows ; he extinguished the fire upon his hearthstone. Like pirates in a gale at sea, his enemies swept everything by the board, leaving him, gentlemen of the jury, not so much not so much as u horseshoe to nail upon his doorpost to keep the witches cfl. The tears came into the blacksmith's eyes at this affect ing description. One of his friends, noticing them, said to him : " Why, Tom, what's the matter with you! What are you blubbering about! ' hau no idea," was the reply, lu a whimpering tone " I had no idea I had been so much a-a-a-abused I" . Thr Mean Wbetoh. Mr. Dorkins hurried into the house, and exclaimed: " I ve got another, my dear a good one. If you were on the top of a ehurch spire on the back of a goose, how would you get down I" Mrs Dorkins thought she d jump down, slide down the liuht ning conductor, fly down on the goose, full 'down, and then she gave it no. " Why, if you wanted to get down, you uuuu pick it oo me dock oi me goose, said Mr. Dorkins, exultantly. Items of Interest. A large number of cotton seed oil fao tories are being erected in Georgia, Ala biuna and Mississippi. . Since 1873 the Consolidated Virginia mine has yielded $40,000,000, nearly one-half oi which was gold. The London Timet has been trying American made paper, and praises it as the best article in the market. Great Britain has 75.OCO.000 of Mus sulman subjects, and is, next to Turkey, the largest MuEsulnfan power in the world, A tall man having rallied a friend on the shortness of his legs, the friend re plied: "My legs reach the ground what more can yours d; I" The value of the natural and manufac tured produots of Rhode Island for thu year 1875 was over $500 for each man, woman and child in the State. Gen. Cortina, the notorious Rio Grande robber, but recently a prisoner in the city of Mexico, is again at work plundering and murdering on the fron tier. " Bright of my xislOce I give me an M--1" said a printer 2 his sweetheart. She made a at him and planted her V between his 2 ii's, whioh made him O . Thoughtless, that is to .say, selfish people who hoist car windows at this season of the year, and let the wind blow upon peoplo behind them, are morally responsible for colds, consump-" tion and frequent deaths. A Springfield girl, having rebuked her brother for using the term "sweat," the latter bitterly remarked : " When it's a horse, he's sweaty; when it's a man, per spire is the word; but when it's a yourg lady, like you, she only glows." When any one is run over in St. Petersburg, the carriage causing the ac cident is confiscated, the horses arc taken to the fire brigade for public use, and the driver is imprisoned and flogged. Hence fewer acoidenta than anywhere elr,e. One of the chief results of the election is to convince a large number of young men who made bets that.it isn't going to be a very cold winter, and that an um brella trimmed with fur will be a very comfortable substitute for a winter over coat. She wouldn't stand to have a tooth pulled for one million two hundred thousand dollars, she said, and yet the walked the street all day in tiny gaiters, two sizes too small for her, and thought nothing of it; but then nobody saw that tooth, and several saw the gaiters. An agent representing several compa nies of English capitalists, has written to the Tennessee bureau oi agriculture, statistics and mines, asking whether or not there are 300,000 acres of coal lauds in the State for sale, and if so, to in form him at onoe, that his principals can purchase. Several months ago the practice of shaving the heads of prisoners in the San Francisco jail was resisted in the courts by Chinamen, who prqserva their queues as a part of their religion; but the judicial decision is in favor of the officials, and tho hirsute desecration goes on. When Prince Allrert died, an editorial in the Ijondon Telegraph so gratined the queen that she ordered a copy of the paper to be sent daily to each of the royal palaces. Ever since then a royal edition of twenty-five oopies has been daily printed in the highest style of art and duly forwarded. No payment has ever been asked or ordered. A professional trapper with two hun dred traps is catching musk rats on the Housatonio river, below Pittsneld, Mass., moving two miles a day anil catching about three hundred rats a reek. He bd that' in twenty years' experience he has never seen them better or pleutier, and he gets twenty cents apiece for tbem from the dealers of New York. One of the richest men in a New York town put au attachment upon the pots toes of a poor creditor, and in its exe cution the matter was complicated by the exhumation of fifteen bushels, more or lefs, of potatoes belonging to a paupet who bad expected soon to be able to re lieve the town of caring for him by the crop, but now falls back into the arms of the town again. "L." writes to the London Times that his butcher sent him prime ribs of American imported beef at nine pence a pound. The meat was fresh and teuder, although perhaps not of quite so fine a quality as the best English. He pub lishes the fact as an encouragement, not only to American exporters, but to ail countries where meat is cheap. The lowest market price for prime ribs in London is a shilling a pouid. A Ladies' School. A school for ladies has been opened in Berlin on a plan decidedly novel, but very practical. The building contains lodging-rooms for forty girls, school rooms, working-rooms, an immense kitchen, and a permanent bazaar. In the schoolrooms every branch, that will fit the girls for situations in banking, commercial or mercantile establishments taught. Various trades that ladies can follow are exempiinea by skiuea operatives. The kitchen is, perhaps, the chief schoolroom, for all the work there is done by the girls under the su pervision of one of tho best cooks in the city. This feature has become so popu lar, from the large number of betrothed maidens who flock thither to obtain good domestio educations, that the man agers have begun to charge for instruc tion in cookery, and the receipts gener ally pay the expenses of the other do- dartments. , The Widow and ihe Bouquet. A pretty widow, whose husband has been dead several years, received a beautiful bouquet the other day. The man that sent it has been flying around her with an earnestness worthy of a dry goods clerk, and it was with extra de light he saw her pass his store that even ing with the bouquet of flowers in hand. "Am so pleased to see you with them," said he, and a thousand little cupids dimpled in his smile. Yes," she replied, it was very kind in you; I always knew yon liked him-1 am taking them to his grave." 1