I XT: mu ffiili HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per , Annum. YOL.VlI. IUDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1877. NO. 9. . K The Widow's Mite. A widow shs had only one 1 A puny aud decrepit son j But day aud night, Though fretful oft, and weak and small A loving child, he was her all ' The widow's mite. The widow's mite ay, so sustained, She battled onward, nor complain'd, Though friends were fewer And while she toil'd for daily far A little crutch upon the stair, ' Was music to her. I saw her then and now I see Thot, though resigned aud cheerful, she Has sorrow'd much ; She has. He gave it tenderly, Much faith ; and carefully laid by, A little crutch. ALL FOR LOVE. There were two things favorable to the success of Dowley's love suit with Miss Orville his pcrseverence and her friends' opposition. To the lust named causa he was already much indebted. Marion's brother-in law, whenever he found the aspirant for her hand in the parlor, prowled out the briefest possible saluta tion and turned his book on him, while her sister, still more cuttingly, ignored his presence in the house altogether, or if she chanced to come into the hall as he was taking leave, was in the habit of cast ing suspicious glances as if she feared for the overcoats, and meditated calling a servant to attend to this very doubtful unknown intruder. After a scene like this Marion could not, as she otherwiso might, forget the young man the moment the door closed cm him; occasionally her beautiful dark eyes flashed with indignation as she thought upon the injustice of these family friends, and the insults they dared heap upon one from whom she chose to re ceive attentions. Sometimes the petted sister fancied Mary and Charley treated her will coldness on Dowley's account and then she would weep and long for affection which was devoted and un changeable and " uuexacting such, for example, aa Job Dowley had ventured to hint ho carried about with him, ready for her acceptance. She fell into the habit of wasting the midnight gas in poring ovr poetry aud novels portaining to " love that cannot die," thwarted at tachments aud runaway matches. Under these circumstances, and possessing a fair shave of engaging qualities, a lover would bo pretty sure to win. Marion's admirer was not remarkable for either personal or intellectual endowments. If wa sum up the former we find them to consist of a beauteous mustache, upon which it.) owner -laced great reliance. A pood deal of time wasted away, and still Job was unable to perceive that in his love affair any material advantage was gained. It would not do to let tilings go on so much longer. He knew well it was not sufe to make a formal declara tion yet; but while he waited, content to receive the smiles of the angelic girl, some one else might carry off the prize, leaving poor Job, if possible, in a more deplorable strait than even his ancient namesake. How would it do to affect illness and have Iiss Orville sent for? Seeing him on the threshold of eternity, might not her precious, waxen heart melt sufficient ly to allow his image to be surely im pressed thereon ? When her blessing ap peared about to take its flight, it would brighten to her vision, according to the poet, giving him the opportunity of mak ing the demand with a fair prospect of immediate surrender. There were fevers very respectable disease, to be had at short notice florid face no objection. The malady of all others to which he seemed adapted. He resolveel to have a fever a genuine ty phoid, and no hypocritical pretence, which at the best may not succeed. In view of the glorious results which were to follow, he could afford a first-class ar ticle. His room was in the third story. It was a windy winter's night, with the thermometer within whispering distance of zero, and the moon careering in the blue heavens as glittering as a bride in tulle, satin and diamonds. ' Unable to keep off the shivers, Dowley had rung for the fire boy three times in as many hours; and while the latter heaped coal on the grate, the former heaped maledic tions on the grinning, woolly head. This was preuiovs to Job's fever attack. The wind had risen higher; it rattled and shook and rocked whatever it came in contact with. But its violence bore hardly a comparison to the force of Job's determination. The lower sash of his window was raised and a pair of nude feet thrust unflinchingly across the sill, the nucleus of the coveted fever. Tlio residue of Mr. Dowley lay back in his chair, smiling benignly as the shadows of coming events passed before his men tal vision, seeming intensely real. ne drew a deep inspiration. " Ah, my Marion ! my angel ! why does she not come to me ?" Affecting the treble he answered him self "I am here, Jobie your own ! Marion is by your sme, noldin on to the bedpost with both hands, the better to bear the anguish of my heart. Don't die, won't you ? Say quick ?" Job here raised his head and glanced through the whitened pane, to see how his feet prospered. His toe nails appear ed to be edged with frost, and, in fact, the entire feet looked very much like a couple of eccentric? loaves of wedding cake. But he was not yet sure whether they were done enough. He was in hopes he began to feel a stricture in the throat; and certainly he did, with only a reasonable effort, cough very triumpantly. The treble tones were heard again, but Job interrupted himself with a sneeze, then he snuffed and tried whether he ' coidd say Marion, and found to his do light (hut it sounded like Barryodd. There could be no mistake now, he was caMiing cold sweetly. The bell rang sharply. Job did not hear it, since he had business of more importance to attend to, but it was the second application which had been made at the house to the same end. The servant came bouncing up stairs. "It's the perlice," said she, -and he axed to know was it a corraps that's crapin' out backward out of the windy in the third story, and he reckoned it might be a new style of layin' out, but ye better be takin it in, and if the dead man didn't object to the tratement, he should. " The servant thus informed her mis tress, who was looking through the key hole into Mr. Dowley's room, and the mistress gave the order for the door to be broken in. Crash, smash and Job Dowley recalled his abused feet, finding them very convenient to stand upon when confronting the excited crowd that blocked up the doorway. "I'd like to know what's all this," ex claimed the matron " the perlice com in' to this house " " I will return your question," said her boarder, fiercely. "If you can't per mit a gentleman to pare his toe nails by moonlight, why, madam, there are other boarding houses in the city that's all." The threat was effectual ; the land lady withdrew her forces, tittering as they went, and Job was alone with his disappointment. He strode up and down like a tiger in his cage. "It's no use," he muttered, "a man could never enjoy sickness, be it ever so severe, in this abominable pest of busy bodies." Suddenly he paused. "There, I know what I'll do; at last I've hit on tho very thing. I'll get garroted blame me if I don't ! If that doesn't fire her heart it must bo incombustible." He dressed himself and rushed down stairs and into the street. How terrifically cold it was ! He felt all over like au ice house, but his feet especiallv, from their previous discipline, were so horribly stiff and clumpy lie could have bantered a Chinese female to swap, and afford to pay boot. They appeared to operate on the rotary principle, the instep perform ing for the sole as often as any way. They slewed around like a boy's sled, and Job had hard work to tell which way he was coasting. The intense cold had frozen the streams of humanity in their beds or other in door refuge so that, being almost alone on the street, ho stood an excellent chance of getting served to a garrote with out unreasonable delay except, indeed which might Heaven forbid ! the par roting fraternity themselves should be frozen in likewise. In the latter case he would have to give up fever and garrot ing altogether, as alike infeasible. His beaver was beateu down hard over his eyes, so as to resist the rude snatches of boreas. A lurge pocket-book, plump ed invitingly out with yellow paper, was carried in his hand, aud appeared to be used as a balance weight hi helping its owner maintain the perpendicular along the slippery sidewalk. But reaching a corner and coming sud denly in contact with the full force of the windy current, Mr. Dowley was swept off his awkward feet and. fell. The edgestone, having no conscience in the matter of not hitting a man when he'o down, gave him a free blow across the forehead and nose, and tho effect was like pu lling the cork out of a bottle of claret and turning it bottom upward. Groaning with pain, but soothing him-i-elf with the murmured name of Marion, Job struggled partly up, slipped agaiu upon his hands and knees, falling hard; his coat-tails flew up in tho wind, which, using them for a sail, drifted him into the middle of the street. There, after sprawling a moment, he succeeded hi re covering his base. A cold judging world is extremely liable to confound faidts with misfor tunes; it is fortunate, therefore, when we are not obliged to let the world into our personal and private affairs unreservedly. Our hero recognized this truth in look ing around to see whether anybody had witnessed his predicament. It just then occurred to him that here was capital complete for his enterprise in plainer terms, that he had been sufficiently gar roted for all practical purposes, and his nose would furnish the evidence. The thought was cheering. As I have said, he looked around to see who might be looking. People al ways do when they slip in the street. Oa either hand he taw rows of lighted man sions, carefully drawn curtains separat ing their inmates from the scenes with out. A single human figure appeared in sight, and that only a queer, muffled up little thing some homeless beggar shrinking at the foot of a flight of nteps leading to one of the carved and orna mental portals. Our hero congratulated himself, and applying his handkercliief to his wounded countenance, staggerod over to the pitiful little wanderer, who shrank closer in the corner of the frozen granite at his approach. " You poor sis, would you like to earn a shilling?" "A shilling, sir?" shiveriugly. " Yes, ft wholo shilling. Does it seem so much ?" " I can't remember when anybody ever gave me that sum," she replied, bending lower over her poor hands and trying to warm them with her breath. " I'm an orphan I've neither father nor mother." "Nor any homo, I suspect. Never mind, I want you to do an errand which will take you only a few minutes, and here's a shilling for your reward. Do you know the streets about here ?" j " Oh, yes, sir. Are you much hurt ?" "Confoundedly." With a look at his blood stainetl handkerchief. "I wish you to go to No. 40 , and ask for Mis3 Orvillo don't let the servants turn j you away, and don't consent to do the errand to any one else, but persevere and see the young lady herself, and toll hor I have been garroted." " Have you ?" astonishment mingled with fear in her voice. " But who shall I say you are ?" "Job Dowley you won't forget the name ?" " No, I won't Dobe Jowley," return ed the beggar. " And I'll go quick. " "As to that," said Dowley, "I want tune to get home. I wouldn't like the young lady to arrive at my boarding house first. Now remember Miss Or ville Mr. Dowley garroted. Make no mistakes." He dropped the shilling on the child's lap, and with all the impetus at com mand, hurried toward his boarding house. All was quiet, and he reached the third story and his own room unmo lested and unobserved. There he waited up for two full hours in momentary ex pectation of a call from his adored Ma rion. But the door bell seemed a dumb bell and gave out no urgent summons; Mr. Dowley was forced to conclude that on account of the lateness of the hour and the depression of the mercury, Miss Orville was not coming. That she would hawten to him next morning and no earthly power could hiuder, ha felt certain. lie imagined the sweet girl at that very moment sleepless and agitated for his sake; and how natu rally wouhl follow his declaration ot love and her promise to be his forever and forever. With a sigh at being com pelled to wait ever so .short a time, Mr. Dowley went to bed. Morning came. It brought no fair lady to her wounded knight, but it did bring a letter superscribed in Marion's own hand. Very likely then her brother-in-law had forbid h'.sr coming. Never mind; tho fact of the dear, precious mis sive Euffio ently proved that the effort to bring on a crisis had not beeu been in vain. It would be neither strange nor indelicate if, in this emergency, Marion should have here confessed her attach ment, with a "come and take me." Job's devoted seat of life beat ecstatically as he drew the letter from its envelope. It read as follows: "Mr. Dowley: Until last night, whatever other charges were preferred against you, I had never had reason to suspect your temperance principles. If you happen to have any recollection of staggering, and finally falling iu C street, about ten o'clock, I may save my self the trouble of describing the Bcene to you. However that may bo, I am sat isfied you could not have observed the sleigh that the moment after you left drew up at the steps where you had ne gotiated with the beggar and orphan, nor the hand that plucked up this poor out cast and plunged her under the buffalo robes, between an animated pair, who brought her to this their homo, aud hers. " Lest even now you mav be slow to identify your errand girl, I proceed . to explain. I had attended a fair in the evening with my aunt. The closing scene of the entertainment was a tableau, in which I represented a gypsy queen. Without any change of costume I re turned to my aunt's house, where we had just entered, when I peeped out again to see if Charley and Mary were coming from their ride for they had engaged to call precisely at ten to take me home. Thus it chanced I was a witness to your parroting I Seeing is be lieving. Yours finally, "Marion." " P. S. It may concern you to know I think of endowing th Home for Little Wanderers with the shilling you gave me. "M. O." Job Dowley took the blood Btained handkerchief from under his pillow and cast it on the fire. ..He had meant it to create a sensation ; it created only a blaze. A fortnight and more elapsed before he left his room ; he was said to be Buffering from chilblains. The Population of Ireland. It has been supposed that tho regis tration of births in Ireland must be ex cessively defective, as the ratio of regis tered births to population is so far short of that of England. But Dr. W. M Burke, who signs, as registrar-general, the detailed report on the year 1875, re cently issued, calls attention to other ro turns in explanation of the difference. He has, indeed, to state that in the ten years 1805-75 the rate of legitimate births, which in England averaged 33.4 per 1,000 of the population, was only 20. 1 per 1,000 in Ireland. But he has also something else to state. The cen sus of 1871 show that in England 14. 7 per cent, of the total population were marrieel women between the ages of fif teen and fifty-five, but in Ireland only 11.8 per cent., so that there were five married possible mothers in England to four in an equal number of the popula tion in Ireland, and, taking the ages fif teen to forty-five years, the difference is even greater. Thus the birth rates of the two countries bear the same ratio to each other as the relative proportion of married women iu the population. Look ing at the returns from another point, it is found that the births in England are annually equal to 224 to every 1,000 mothers, and the registered births equal to 223 per 1,000 iu Ireland. The mar riage rate in Ireland is low in propor tion to the total population. This is partly owing to the largo annual immi gration of unmarried persons of the marrying ages. There is a popular opin ion that Irish mothers are more fruitful than those of England; but this, if true must, under present conditions, be to a certain extent neutralized by the com paratively late period of life at which many marriages in Ireland are now solemnized. The annual excess of births over deaths in Ireland is about one per cent, of population. Some Advantages of Caiidur. Do not let the idea that you know it all get away with you. Don't try to make your wife believe that you are a great man because she will know better. Do not try to make your children be lieve that you are a saint. They will find you out. Acknowledge that you are human, and establish a bond of sympathy with them. Tell them not to he. b ecause you know lying to be bad. Children are thinkers, and in their quaint, quiet little way, sharp logicians. Do not impose on them. A child trained contrary to its inclinations is not worth three nothings. Do not try to direct their minds into channels that are uncongenial to them. When children ask questions you cannot answer honestly acknowledge your ignorance.' They will think more of you for it, and it is far preferable to have them think you ignorant than catch you in a lie. Let us raise leaders in stead of followers. Church Union. The Advantage of Paleness. Alphonse, the clerk in Merrill's gro cery, was somewhat indisposed on Mon day, so much so as to cause comment from the customers as they came in. Two young ladies were in after a pound of starch, and Alphonse was waiting upon them, when a man at the stove, having intently observed him for a mo ment, suddenly remarked: " It is a decided advantage for you to look pale, Alphonse." The young man looked up with a grateful expression. "Because it makes your mustache show," added the man. Alphonse winced. FARM, HARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Domestic Ilclns. Suet Puddiso. One-half cupful chopped suet, one cupful Indian meal, one-half teaspoonfiil soda; scald thase together; make a thick batter; one cup ful chopped apples, one-half cupful sugar, two eggs, two large tablespoonfuls of flour, one-half pound raisins, spices to taste; baked in a hot oven for two hours. Keeping Carpets" and Furniture. Carpets and furniture can be entirely pro tected from moth by care, cleanliness and turpentine. Nice carpets should be well beaten to remove dust aud moth; papers wet with spirits of turpentine should be placed over the seats and backs of stuffed furniture aud the whole sewed up in cloth. The most dolicate mate rial will not be injured by applying tur pentine in this way. lor carpets a free use of tobacco leaf or stems is desirable. Papers dipped in turpentine here and there will do their share, and for outside Eacking each carpet should be sewed in nrlap. Removing. Tea Stains. The stains will come out of buff linen lunch cloth by being put in the boiler in a suds made of two pailf uls of water, a teacupful of soft soap and a tablespoonful of the "Magical Mixture" for washing. Let these ingredients boil together five min utes; then put the boiler on the corner of the range and put the cloth in, stir ring it around, but not letting it boil. The color will not be injured in the least by this process. Veal Pie. Three and a half pounds breast of veal, cut in small pieces, placed in a hot frying-pan, with a quarter of a cupful of fat; fry quickly each side to a rich brown, then turn into a pot, with enough boiling water to cover it; add one small white onion, one heaping table spoonful grated carrot, one teaspoonfiil thyme, salt and pepper to taste; cook till very tender; add a piece of butter the size of a large walnut and sufficient browned flour to thicken the gravy; boil well, and turn into a baking pan or dish, the sides of which have been lined with paste; place a small cup upside down in the center to keep up the upper crust, which should be half au inch thick. The uudei mist to meat pies is apt to be slack baked, therofore it is frequently omitted. To Recook Cold Fresh Fish. Pick up in flakes any cold fish, boiled, broiled or fried; brown some batter, add to it a pinch of grated nutmeg and a few whole pepper corns, a little minced parsley, and one onion, with a tablespoonful salad oil; stir the fish in this sauce, and when dish ed squeeze the juice of a lemon over it. The Orchard. What is -Grafting ? Almost every ono knows that a cutting, or piece of the stem, of many plants, if placed in the soil, will take root, grow', and booomo a new plant. In grafting, wo take a piece of a stem, and instead of put ting it in the soil, we plant it in the branch of another tree. Let us saw off a branch of an apple tree, and take a twig, say as large as a lead pencil from another apple tree, whittle the lower end of it to a chamfer or half of a wedge, for an inch or more, then carefully, by meansof a wedge, push tho bark of the' branch away from the wood, and slip the twig with its cut part innermost, between the bark and wood, coverall the cut parts with some kind of an air-tight plaster, we shall essentially plant the twig on the branch. It will not take root, but wood will form aud unite the two, putting the twig in com munication with the roots of the tree. This is one kind of grafting, but a kind not suited to general use, though it illustrates the principle. Why do we Graft ? To plant twigs of a kind of fruit that we know and want, upon the roots of. a kind that wo know nothing about, or of au undesirable kind. In the nursery, seeds of unknown kinds of apples, pears, etc., are sown ; if these were allowed to grow up, they would in ten or more years bear fruit, but very likely poor fruit, and each seedling dif ferent. The nurseryman takes up these young trees, cuts them nearly to the root, and grafts, or plants on them a twig of. a well tested and valuable kind. This is the usual way of making apple trees iu the nurseries. If tho seedling treo is allowed to grow up and branch, then a graft may be put in each branch, all the rest of the tree being cut away, allowing the growth from the grafts to form the head. Agriculturist, Two HuudrcdKniis a Year. F. F. R., of Lowell, Mass., writes: "My poultry have not laid more than an egg every third day. I would like to know by what kind of management or care I can get over 200 eggs in a year; mine don't lay more than 125 each in a year. I feed them well. " Reply. One hundred and twenty-five eggs in a year is a very fair production for a hen. This is about seventeen pounds, and probably four times the weight of the hen herself. At twenty cents a dozen these are worth two dollars, and to feed the hen should not cost more than one dollar, leaving one dollar profit, which is doing very well. Hens that lay 200 eggs a year, that is two in three days leaving out Sunday without stopping, are often talked and bragged about, but are veiy rarely found. One hundred and twenty-five a year is one egg every third day, winter and summer, and it must be an unreasonable person that would expect a hen to do more than that. Hens should not be fed all they will eat. A quarter of a pint of food a day is enough. They should have some ex ercise, and plenty of grass and clover in the summer, and if fed to much they will not forage for themselves. On the whole, your hens do pretty well. The Tearl. The commonly accepted idea has been that the pearl is the result of some acci dental deposit or extravasation of the liquor secreted by the animal in the gradual enlargement of its shell, slight in the first instance, but increased by successive layers of pearly matter. ' Ac cording to a paper read before the Lon doe Linnsean Society, the production of pearls in oysters is simply due to the ir ritation occasioned by the attacks of the minute entozoon known as ditcma. The author of. the paper held that, by arti ficial means, the abundance of this para site might be greatly increased and made profitable in a pecuniary sense. Industries of tho United Slates. There is a number of extremely im portant industri s which the United States is fitted, by the natural resouroes of the country and the peculiar talent of the people, to carry on, on a much larger scale than at present. Cot ton manufacturing is one, and the manu facture of all sorts of tools, implements and machinery is another. There are still others, and one of the most im portant to the country is that of iron shipbuilding. The experience of the past has not been favorable to iron ship building in the United States, and little or none has been done up to within a very few years. It has, however, long been apparent to the observer that the time must come eventually, at some period or other, when the country would go into the business on a large scale. The land is supplied with an extraordi nary abundance of all the materials which compose iron ships, in the first place, and in the second place there has never been any doubt at all but that the vigor and talent and other causes which have enabled cotton and other manu facturers to achieve success in their arts, in competition with the world, would also in the eud enable the iron ship builders to do the same in theirs. It would appear from the statements of an article on this subject that iron ship building has already become successful in the United States. At any rate, it has had a most interesting growth and development, and the builders now claim to be able to serve the country as well as they can be served anywhere in tho world. An industry which spends such enormous sums of money annually and so benefits a people among which it is conducted, deserves the good will of the public Sew York 1'ribune. Husband and Wife. Can a wife steal her husband's prop erty? This question recently arose be fore tho English court for the considera tion of crown cases reserved, where only criminal causos are heard. The prisoner, who had been a police constable, was convicted of receiving stolen money and goods, which- he knew had been stolen from the prosecutor, an innkeeper at Burslem. The theft was alleged to have been committed by the innkeeper's wife. She had undoubtedly left hor husband's house, cecretly, and without his consent, carrying away with her about $700 of his money, his gold watch, and other arti cles, which she transferred to the pris ouer. But his counsel contended that there could be no felonious receiver of stolen goods, without there first being a thief, and that the conviction was wrong because a married woman could not in law steal the goods of her husband. The court so held, anil quashed the convic tion, saying that although the goods were taken by the wife, they were not stolen; that husband and wife were one, and it would be a violation of the law of England to hold that a wife could steal her husband's goods. White Wool Dresses. Soft white wool goods resembling flun ncl, but ot less weight and as cool as muslin, will be used for country toilettes next summer, says the Bazar, especially at the seaside, where the moisture takes the starch out of cottons and linen. This is called seaside barege, and is the nice fabric that is being imitated by bunting, ami which originally suggested tho use of bunting for dresses. The French wool barege costs seventy-five cents a vard, while domestic bunting is only half this price. The barege suits are made with draped priucesse polonaise, or with plaited waists and scarf over skirts, and are given character by rich brocaded silk trimmings that form deep square collars, wide Josephine belts, cuffs, pockets, and scarf sashes on the skirt. Sometimes the Breton cloth em broidered bands are used in quaint olive green or robiu's-egg blue, with vests, collars, and chatelaine pockets wrought in characteristic desigus. Suppose a Cane. Suppose you desired to address a lady with the intention of marrying her some future time, but your present circum stances aud condition preclude the possi bility of your doing so, in what mauner would it be appropriate to convince her of your love for her and "future inten tions? What would you do? Mrhy, tell her exactly how it stands with you, and ask her if she is willing to wait until you can afford to marry. If she loves you she will wait. In such affairs the best way for a man is to expose his whole heart to the object of his affection, and urge his suit with entire frankness and boldness. Girls like to see a fellow make love courageously. Very likely the young lady will respect you all tho more for wishing to put off the happy day when you may claim her as your own until you can provide suitably for her. The Wife Beater's Pillory. The woman beater's post, which now stauds grim and inexorable at the corner of the county jail, is au object of interest to scores who visit it daily. ' It is about eight feet high, and eight inches square, made of pine, with two round pegs, about an inch iu diameter, run through ifc at a point about five feet from the ground. The arms of the victim will be run through these pegs and tied behind. No one passes the wife beater's post without stopping to inspect it and make some remarks. A woman who passed it the other day paused before it for a mo ment and ejaculated: " Thank God I" The post has several inscriptions scrib bled upon it in pencil, some of which read as follows : ' Stewart's bill. " ' The Widder," " Fee the Judge," " Here's the Place to get Well Posted," "A House hold Treasure," " No Family should be without it." Virginia City Chronicle. Insects. The last Arkansas traveler tejls a Btory of a citi2enof the State who, while on board a steamer on the Mis sissippi, was asked by a gentleman " whether the raising of stock in Arkan sas was attended with much difficulty or expense." "Oh, yes, stranger; they suffer much from insects." "Insects! Why, what kind of insects, pray?" " Why, bears, catamounts, wolves, and sich like insects. " The stranger stopped further inquiry. TWO PARISIAN HORRORS. The Murder Trlnl of nillolr Tbe Anaamin Confronted by a Wax Model of the Corpse of Hut Victim Truth Stranger than Fiction. , Lucy Hooper, in a Paris letter, says : The trial of Billoir, the sensational as sassin who killed his mistress, disem bowelled her corpse, chopped it in two, and threw the pieces into the Seine, was begun a short time ago. A dense crowd was present; many ladies, among whom was the Prussian ambassadress, the Princess von Hohenlohe, being among the spectators. A curiou3 gentleman disguised himself in a lawyer's gown to gain admission, but the cheat being dis covered, he was iguominiously expelled from the court room. Among the persons present were noted Mounet Sully, of the Comedie Francaiso, and Grand Duchesse Schneider, which last had brought with hor a fanciful hand bag iu Russia leather full of eat ables, and who sat munching bou bons and nibbling mandarine oranges through the whole course of the proceedings. The scene was a highly dramatic ono. On a table before the judge were placed glass jars containing the hair and vis cera of the victim, samples of sawdust found in the assassin's room, portions of the flooring, etc. On a chair was placed a large object covered with a sheet of paper. At a certain moment in the in terrogatory the paper was drawn aside, and Billoir was confronted with tho grinning, ghastly visage of his victim, not the corpse itself, be it understood, but the bust modeled in wax, which was exhibited at the morgue when the re mains had become too decomposed for recognition to be possible. Au immense sensation was created by the testimony of the physician, who declared from the perfectly bloodless condition of the body when found that the poor creature must have been cut open while she was still alive. The president of the court gave a vivid, but, of course, wholly imaginary description of the struggle that must have taken place between the assassin and his mistress, whereat Billoir was visibly affected. He is said not to re semble in the least the usual ideal of a murderer, being a quiet and respectable looking elderly man, with a bilious com plexion and a vague, dull eye. He was carefully and neatly dressed in black, his linen being of irreproachable cleanli ness. The trial only lasted two days, at the end of which a verdict was ren dered of "guilty without extenuating circumstances," so that unless his appeal to the court of cassation be successful, Billoir will soon bo called upon to under go the dread penalty of the law, or ac cording to Parisian slang, to "kiss the basket." But I am told that a petition for his pardon, based ou his military services, will shortly be presented to the authorities. The other criminal, he who threw his little daughter down a dry well alive, and left her to perish slowly of starva tion and of the injuries received in the fall, is to be brought to trial likewise in a very short time. The wildest sensa tional novel of crime ever written could hardly surpass in its incidents the career of this scoundrel. How. after murder ing his child, he contrived to escape; how he tried to kill his wife aud his father-in-law, wounding them both; how though his house was surrounded, he managed to escape a secoud time, and how for a month he lived in concealment, baffling all tho researches of the police such are the facts of this desperado's career. JNor was his capturo at last by the police, but through the intervention of a former acquaintance who recognized him as ho was examining the pictures in an illustrated paper, suspended at the uoor of a newspaper vender. He. too. like Billoir, was subjected to a sensa tional experience by the authorities. After the first interrogation was over. he was led into a gloomy hall, one end of which was concealed by a dark green curtain. At a given signal the curtain was drawn aside, and there was revealed to the murderer, stretched out on a marble table, the corpse of his innocent victim, which had been preserved by some chemical process. He endured the sight with stoical firmness, confessed that he had done the deed, aud only recrretted that he had not succeeded in killing his wue as w en. His Personal Sacrifices. An applicant for tho San Antonio post office is absolutely certain that Hayes will give it to him. As there are about twenty in hot pursuit of the office, we hod the curiosity to know what made mm so positive. "Are you the widow of a deceased army officer, with a family to support ?" we asked. He replied that he had never tried to be anybody's widow. " Did you stump for Hayes, or were you on the returning board, or did you save the Union iu the same regiment with Hayes, or did you go to singing school with Wheeler, or how is it, any how, that you know Hayes will appoint you r- "Well, you see, I've mode personal sacrifices for Haves. " "How so?" " "It's confidential, remember." "Certainly, honor bright. " "Well, I lost five gallons of whisky aud 50 worth of cigars betting on Tii den. I have sent on the receipted bills with my application. " Plutes After a Mule. The Winnemucca Silver State tells this story : Yesterday was a field day among the Piutes. A number of them, mounted on ponies, appeared on the flat on the other side of the river chasing a wild mule, which threw its rider last December and escaped to the moun tains. Last week " Montana " offered the In dians $10 reward for the recovery of tho mule. This incentive led the noble reel man to scour the country in search of the'animal, which they discovered west of Winnemucca mountain, but, as he was wild as a deer and the fastest runner in the country, it was a difficult matter to catch him. They succeeded in driving him into town and capturing him. The saddle and head gear were still on the animal, which was in pretty fair condi tion, notwithstanding it had carried a saddle on its back and a hackamore and blind on its head all winter. A Woman's Hand. Onlr a little, soft. wh!te thing Mnde for wearing the costly ring Made for flirting the dainty ran Ag onlv tho belle of the season can Made for the stolen pressure or kins (Long Branch fashion;, raituig io onus By merely the touch of fingers white. Her escort down on tho beach that nigh Made for a " prize " for tho highest Did fKnA under the rose a thorn lies hid) A thing which tho honont summer sua Has taught bin ardent teams to shun,. Lest freckle or tan its beauty bpoil, And mako it too near a hand of toil, Timtsad of onlv a daiutv thins Meant for ease aud the diamond ring. Only a sunburned, useful thing To which the hearts of the needy cling j To which they turn who have learned th worth Of a woman's hand on this weary earth j Made for healing, for smoothing o'er The hearts of thoBe who are faint and sora Made for honest work each day, For driving the shadows of life away, For holding the "cup of water " to all Who, faint and thirsty, for succor call j Made for leading the timid on, For blessing all it may rest upon Made to be worn by a loyal heart, Who in its labor will bear a part j Made to bo clarped by a loyal hand, Which chooseth tho beat in all tho land. Worth oh 1 doublo its weight in gold, This useful hand that can ne'er grow old. Items of Interest "Meat doesn't spoil in this climate," said a Californian who took the last fork ful of steak. The Editorial Association of Pennsyl vania will make ah excursion to the Delaware Water Gap this summer. The best old charade: "In my first my second sat, my third and fourth I ate." Answer In sat-i-ate. A Cincinnati quack, known as Dr. Ra phael, became conscience-stricken be cause of the death of several patients, and killed himself. Brother Moody has converted a news paper reporter in Boston, a mau who describes himself as having led "a wild, rollicking, blasphemous life." Soup houses are growing in favor all over Germany, owing to the distress caused by business depression and the resultiug'hard tunes among work people. Several charlatans who treat victims of the opium habit have received the at tention of the Chicago Tribune, which says that their prescriptions almost in variably consist of lessening doses of the drug. A gentleman had occasion to correct his daughter, aged four, recently. After it was over and she had sat a while, she wentto hor mother and inquired:" Don't you think it would do papa good to go out-doors ?" A Chinawoman was sold by her hus band to a fellow countryman in Cali fornia for $250. She was then healthy, but she soon fell sick, and was disabled for work, so the purchaser killed her with a cleaver. Was it not rough on Ella, just as she was telliug Frederick, at lunch, how ethereal her appetite was, to have the cook bawl out: " Say, will yer have yer pork and greens now, or wait till yer feller's gone ?" A friar, when preaching in a nunnery, observed to his female auditors, " be not too proud, that our blessed Lord paid your sex the distinguished honor of ap pearing first to a female after resurrec tion; for it was done that the tidings might spread the sooner." On the arrival iu Boston of tho news of the capture of Lord Comwallis aud his whole army, one African meeting an other salutes him thus: " Oh 1 how do, Cuffee. You hear 'bout Comwallis ?" "No. What about Comwallis ?" "Why, General Washington shell off all de Corn, aud now he C'o&wallis." A Western farmer charged a stick in his wood pile with gunpowder, for the purpose cf detecting a thief. The thief didn't get hold of the loaded stick, but his wife did, and after paying for a new stove, a dozen panes of glass, and a plas terer's bill, he confessed it would have been cheaper to let his neighbor carry off the entire wood pile. An extraordinary suicide recently took place on the Circular railway, Paris. A well-dressed young lady asked at the St. Lazare station for a ticket for Passy, but then, correcting herself, said: "I think Batignolles will be far enough." As soon as the train was in motion she descended on the opposite side of the platform, threw herself under the wheels, and was crushed. We use a seidlitz box for a match safe in our kitchen. This morning we went there for a match and found a broken hinge, a metal knob, three screws, five sizes of hails, a knife-blade, two corks, a spoonful of disabled tacks, a piece of court plaster a piece of worsted, a can celed postage stamp, a recipe for muffins, and the part of a three-cornered file. Wo got a light from the stove, Danbury News. At a Southern hotel bar an eager con troversy was pending 'twixt various gen erals, majors, etc., when a quiet fellow observed: "I happened to be there, gentlemen, and possibly may be able to refresh your memories.' Thereupon he proceeded to give a succint account of a smart action. "What might have been your rank, sir ?" asked the hotel keeper. "I was a private." About to start next day, he demanded his bill. "Not a cent, sir; not a cent. You're the very first private I ever met. " A poor woman was lately mounting a hill in France, dragging after her a little carriage containing her child, when the carriage of the mayor of Marissel came slowly along. Feeling weary, she at tached her burden to the mayor's car riage, but he, knowing nothing of what was going on, suddenly touched up the horse, which started at a canter. In vain the poor woman screamed; the car riage rolled swiftly away, and when she reached a village none could tell what di rection tbe mayor had taken. At length a gendarme was found who threw some light on the matter, and the poor mother found her child in the mayor's nursery, where every possible attention had been lavished npon it.