. . f- y y . . ' ' :-. .... - - - - - ; i- y '.-; ; . .A TJ it. it- k I t- . J t; ' iv.i 1 - T r : . , i . ' ' . : . ; . ' . i - . ' ' : ' . " HENRY A.' PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. J I ,' ! j ,r , , NIL;-DESPERANDT.M; .. :'. .:;..;r .Two Dollars per Annum. UtOti YH. . BIDGWA Y, ELK CQUNT Y, FA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1877.; --y: -:lr,r:. ' NO. 24- V :'Trt' a Scomslms. )L)li! v.fratboaora but must yiolJ, J Whdi, like Pallan, yon advance, j Vr'itU a tlilmMe for a illicit, r And yoUT.aiedle for a lance? VnirOTt Ofthe stitching train, ' EaSti iny passion by your art ( And In pitj for my painj Meii(J'tho hole that's hi my heart. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT. .1 baeholor bttll young and well-to-do is for obvious reasons hu object of the deepest interest ,to hi friends of the op posite sex. Lord IVatheritone waB os popular with ladies as if ho had been a spirit-rapper, or an Hindoo . potentate with diamonds to scatter broadcast nnd n suppressed begum in the background at home. They were nlwnys tolliiig him that it wns n Bin mid a shame tlie blinds in the towm house should be rouptantly down ; the hnll filled only with Hhotiting pnrties ; the jewels buried in the slronff room at the bank. Only he would nt settle down. He meniit trfhave his fling first; and pvob nbly it wni Ins habit of throwing himself about that made him ho difficult to catch. Ho was as wary as an old cockatoo; prompt to cut hliwelf free from the most serious entanglements. After making hot love fur a week dur ing wet weather iu the country house, papa nud mamma heard that he had broken his leg in two places, or that ty phoid fever had laid him low. His hist affair was w ith a gay widow, who thought him safely hooked; but at the last -mo-mcnt he, scut a postcard, conveying brief regrets, and sailed iu his yacht for the Mouth Sens. He was absent after this for two or three years; but presently, wearying of the constant wandering to and fro, he returned, and took up the threads of his old life. The season was at its height, if that Inmibrions season of 1S76 can be uoiil fit linru ate, riwitti nl.vn n il.ia.l tl l I.-, I tr" i i ii linn,-, o oaqunii an 'ulrtw" l.il. if nn linr, ft p.rpntnr in tnwn lil, it I" 41. T .n..,! t,'....ll. uc vrifii io uituie jus way serried ranks upon the this kind is especially 1 1, .11- ha i iust seeu Fusinma and 1 ; and Lord Featherstone ; a i.. ii. . i. it, i a iu mo crown aircsit-ii i e 11... 1 i -1 l, and he resolved to stay at quito a new face to huu: the i'.h iir il iriri sr.i I i lrAan nni Rmiiiir r accustomea to the town. A merry, piriidiit face, with small but perfect fea tures, violet eyes, nnd a laugh.'ug mouth, showing often the whitest teet:i. A face strikingly beautiful, Imt iunoceut nud childish, just as the ways of its owner ere unconventional ami uiicoustraineit. A mo:-t liewitcnincr captivntmg voumr person, and Featherstone was deter mined to find out who she was. Surely some one could introduce him. Quite half an hour clap ed before he caught Tommy Cutler, who knew all the world, and then, going to where he had last seen tho girl, they found she had disappeared. Ho had been riding on at ft sharp can ter, which increased, as he left tho more frequented parte of the Row, to a haud gallop. But an unexpected vision suddenly ar rested his course. " By jove ! That face again !" Yes, the girl he had seen but a few nights since; the fair fresh young face which had taken his fancy by storm. She was alone, seated in a quaint old-fashioned yellow chariot, a ramshackle mediteval conveyance, probably as old as the hills. But where had she come from; who could she be i He was determined to find out this time. The carriage would dimbtk-ss trawl by tho conventional rout?i across the Serpentine bridge, and back totbeerowd ed drive. But, tolas surprise, the chariut passed out at the Miirble Arch, and lolt the park. Ho pursued, promptly, along Ox 'fiird street to the circus, up Langham ' placo into Portland place, sharp to the right by Weymouth street into Albany street, and no to Park street. What could have brought this young lady so far out of town i Business, . j Measure, or mere desire for'change of air and scene ? While Featherstone was Mui ueuutmg, tue carriage stopped snort i irout ol a modest .cottage. Presently i old gentleman issued forth and asist- 1 41. .' 1 a . , i i mi . i m, and as she went iut ttie house she . 1 liillrl nnimrrli fni lAiiflim.f i .nil ti " In nu hour' time, (Jeorgr ;' he disappeared. ;; Under her arm rttoiio, m tiie other linnd an un due color Inn. !? slowly to and fro, Featherstone hue the time slipped. Presently - 1 - . - iiuiifr I'uuit? nut, ftiiiioiv Junius, F.to the carnage, and was driven r the first time, Featherstone ware that the coachman had king, and was almost too un it upon his box. chman's erratio course soon there was some ground for dings. really time to interfere. rode up rapidly. t fit to drive I You're'on- is lady's life. Here," lie h uuinuirous jsouiiv. fellow into custody. Take nd all. My name is Lord hat is to become of me ?" , a little tremulous in Inot without asperity. i into custody too ?" : on ins nat. gies. My inter en linnardonabln .the situation. If you wish e, as soon as ein terror." L drive yon; he .bold," said H 1002, " there's good livery stables at the Chequers, You might put the carriage up, or get another driver there." ' . '? A very sensible suggestion, adopted forthwith. " ' . The chariot was conveyed thither in safety. Featherstone dismounted, then helped the young lady to descend. " I trust yon will hare no more coh trctempa." He spoke gravely. "This new conchmnn is sober, but he is of course an utter stranger," There was a shado of misgiving in his voice, which had the desired effect. " Dear, dear, suppose ho too should play some trick. I ought liot to have come alone. Auntv said so. What shad I do now ?" ! "If yon would aceppt me as an ' escort " How deep he was! " Only too thauklully. But it would be trespassing too much upon your good nature. You have been m kind al ready." " lly horse has gone lame in two legs." It was it wonder he hadn't developed navicular lnmiritis aud farcy. " Then I shall be doiug you a service , really ?" she cried, with animation. "Distinctly." Then they got in together aud drove i off. For a time neither spoke. Fen' her- 1 stone felt upon his good behavior; he ! was disposed to be as deferential ns to a ; royal princess. " Do you think he know where to tnkf us ?" she asked. " Not unless you've told him." t " Don't you know j" j "How should I? To London, I sup pose." - 1 " That's a wise address," and she i laughed aloud. "No, Kensington squiire; i that's where we live, Lord Feather- ' stone." ! He started. ! " You kuow my name, then ?" Artful young person, why did not she j confess to this sooner j j " Of course; I heard vui tell the po liceman." "That's well; now may I know yours ?' I "Kiss." " ' Good Heavens 1 Featherstone was near saving. " Kiss ? Kiss whom ? Kis-i I her." " Kiss Legh; short " "And sweet." that's my name; it's I my name; Featherstone could uot check himself. "Short," she went on, seemingly un conscious, "forKeziah. Wecomeof an old Quaker stock on the borders, bet ween Shropshire and Montgomeryshire. My father and mother are dead; all my peo ple are dead. I went to school in France, and now I've come to London to bo finished." She prattled on now, frank, fluent, and uniffected. " And how do you like it?" "What? Loudon?" "No; being finished." " I haven't got to the end yet That'll be when I'm inarmed. But there is not much chance of that yet a while. " "Why not?" asked Featherstone,: highly amused. " I don't like anybody well enough." ! ' Perhaps nobody's asked you ? " ! " You are quite a stranger, Lord 1 Featherstone, and you have no right to ask me such questions." "Well, I won't; we'll talk about some thing different. We're getting into the streets. Do you knowing part of Lou don ? It's called Kentish Town, because it's in Middlesex." " I'm not well up in London geogra phy. It's my first visit to town." " He's taking us through the park !" cried Featherstone, in some consterna tion. "Yes; why not ? I am glad of it. It's pleasanter than the streets." ! " Oh, if you prefer it. Only " j He was thinking that it was now well j on in the afternoon, nnd the park would be crammed. For the girl's sake it i would be better they should not be seen thus publicly together, aud alone. For j his own also; few men like to be carted ; round the drive in a carriage, least of ' all iu such an antiquated conveyance ', ' as this old yellow chariot with its' high i springs. i " WVll go out at Hvde Park Corner I i then." " No, no; I love the drive best. Per- : haps the princess will be out; and I like i to see the other people, and yon cm tell 1 I rue who they all are." ' Like a martyr he succumbed. It ; ; was best to put a good face on the matter. j Bdfore night it would be all over Lou ' don that Beau Feiitherstono had turned : i into n chaperon for country cousins, or that he had been takeu captive by a fair : i face in a yellow " shay." . i Here, hansom !" and his lordship ; drove on to Brooks',' ' ' i " Here is Featherstone himself," said ' a man, in the bay-window; "we'll ask ; : him. I say they're betting five to four I j you've started a yellow chariot, and were j j seen in it iu the park." ! " Did you pick it up in Japan f" "Is it the coach Noah drove home in ; i when he lauded from tho ark ?" j Featherstone abruptly left the room. . j The absurd story was evidently on the 1 I wing. More serious was the next on- I slaught. "You ought uot to have done it, ; j Featherstone," said old Mr. primrose, I i who had been his father's friend, and i presumed therefore to give the sou ad- ' vice. " You have compromised the girl i seriously; and she is such nu absolute 1 child." j " Excuse me; I am Dot called upon to i give account to you of all my notions." " You ought not, I repeat, to have ap- C eared with her thus publicly. It was ad enough to take her down to Rich mond, but to put your arm round her waist openly in the park " " Really, Mr. Primrose !" Feather stone's face flushed, but he restrained himself. He knew gossip grew like a rank weed, and he wished to root up this scandal at onoe and kill it outright. . " I may as well tell you at onoe; ths t young lady is about to become my wife." " Featherstone, I beg your pardon, aud I give you joy, I knew something of these Leghs; not over-wealthy, but charming people. I am heartily glad to think this girl has done so well and so soon. Is it to be announced at once '" "Well, uot exactly at once," said Featherstone, thinkinij perhar U would be as well to consult the young lady her self. Of course she would say " yes ;" 'but as a matter of form he ought to ask her. It was quite with the air of the grand seigneur that he presented himself next day in Kensington square, To his sur prise lie was not very well received. There had been a scene betweeu Ke ziah and her aunt directly the former re entered the house on the previous eve ning. The girl, without attempting to withhold one iota of information, had given her aunt a full account of what had occurred the coachman's miscon duct, the danger only averted by ' the timely intervention of a strange gentle man, who had kindly escorted her home. " His name was Lord Featherstone." " That wretch 1" instantly cried Miss Parker, an old maid, prim and precise in her appearance and iu all her wayB, yet not disinclined to listen to at least half the scandalous gossip iu circulation through the world. "Do you know him, Aunt Parker ?" " Who does not ? He is a notoriously wicked man " "I thought him very. nice." Keiah spoke defiantly and very firmly in de fence of her new friend. " Of course you did. He can be most agreeable. I have heard of him over nnd over agnir. That's the danger of him." "He was so kind and obliging. He told me who everybody was in the park " " Can it be possible that yon were so mad as to go into the park with him in : the afternoon, when it was crowded, when hundreds must have Heen you to gether Y " Of course we carue through the park together; it was the shortest way home. I cannot see any great harm iu that." " It s not likely; you are so young and iuexperieuced; yon see no harm in any thing. But he knew the mischief he was doiug. only too well. The wretch, the wretch 1" Mild Miss Parker would have been glad to see wild horses tear him limb from limb. . " However," after a pause, "you must promise me faith i'ully that you will never speak to him again." " He said he would call just to inquire how I was," Keziah said, in a low voice, which might easily have meant thnt she hoped he would not be told peremptorily to go away. " I will see him if he comes," Aunt Parker finally replied. " It is not fittiug that he should pursne his acquaintance with you, begun ns it was under such questionable auspices." And in this decision Keziah was forced to acquiesce. When, therefore, after some delay and demur, Lord Featherstone was admitted to Aunt Parker, her manner was perfect ly arctic. She sat bolt upright, with a stony look in her eyes and only frigid monosyllables on her lips. "I called," said his lordship, with much aplomb, " to see Miss Legh." " Yes ?" Auut Parker asked, much as though Lord Featherstone was the boot maker's man, or hnd come to take orders for a sewing machine. " My name is Lord Featherstone." " Is it ?" He might have been in the habit of assuming a dozen aliases every twenty-four hours, so utterly indifferent and incredulous was Aunt Parker's tone. "It was my good fortune to be able to do Miss Legh a slight service yesterday, " he went on, still unabashed. "A service!" Miss Parker waxed in dignant at once. " I call it an injury a shameful, mischievous, unkind act; for which, Lord Featherstone, although I apprehend it is not much in his line, should blush for very shame." "Really, madam1' he hardly knew whether to be annoyed or amused " I think yon have been misinformed. Prob ably but for me Miss Legh's neck would have been broken." "I know that, I know that, and I nl most wish it had, sooner than that she should have so far forgotten herself." Miss Parker looked up suddenly and sharply, saying with much emphasis: " Oh, Lord Featherstone, ask yourself you are, or ought to be, a gentleman, at least you know the world by heart was it right of you to take such an advantage? Did yon think what incalculable harm this foolish, thoughtless mistake which is certain to be magnified by malicious tongues may work against an innocent, guileless child ?" " I know I was greatly to blame. I ought to have known better. But it was Miss Legh's owu wish to go through the park, aud I gave way." " How noble of you to shift the burden on to her shoulders. But we will uot, if you please, try to apportion the blnme. The mischief is done, nnd there is no more to be said, except to ask you to make us the only reparation in your power !" "Aud this is" he looked at her in surprise. She did not surely mean to forestall him, aud demand that which he came to offer of his own accord ? " To leave the house and to spare us henceforth the high honor of your ac quaintance." " That I promise if you still insist after you have heard what I am going to say. I came to make reparation full and com plete, but uot iu the way you suppose. I came to make Miss Legh aud if she and you, as her guardian, will deign to accept of it au offer of my hand." Little Miss Parker's faee was au amus ing study. Her lower lip dropped, her eyes ojtened till they looked like the round marbles ou a solitaire board. " Lord Featherstone, you j" " I trust you will not consider me in eligible; that you have no objection to me personally, beyond a- natural annoy ance at this silly escapade." " It is so sudden, so unexpected so so" Poor Miss Parker was too much bewildered to find words ; a thousand thoughts agitated her. This was a splen did offer, a princely offer. Match-maker by instinct, ns is every woman in the world, she could not fail to perceive what dazzling prospects it opened to her niece. But, then, could any happiness follow from such a hastily-concluded match ? These latter and better thoughts prevailed. " Lord Featherstone, it is out of the question, or, at least, you must wait; say a month or two, or till the end of the season." - The engagement ought to be an nounced immediately to benefit Miss Legh," "And this is your real reason for pro posing ? Lord Featherstone, I retract my harsh words; you shall not outdo us in generosity. We cannot accept yonr offer, although we appreciate the spirit in which it is made." - - ' "I assure yon. Miss Parker,' I esteem Miss Legh most highly. I like her im mensely. I am most anxious to marry her." The bare possibility that he might bo refused he of all meu in the world gave a stronger insistence to his words. Miss Parker shook her head. " No good could come of such a fer riage; you hardly know each other. You say you like her ; perhnps so ; but can you tell whether she likes you ?" "At least let ine osk her. Do not deny me that. I will abide by her an swer." There was no resisting such pleadiug as this. " I may prepare her for what she is to expect?" asked Aunt Parker, as she moved toward the door. " i " No, no ; please, do not. Let me speak my own way." . He did not distrust the old lady, but she might indoctrinate Keziah with her views, nnd prejudice her against him. It. was becoming a point of honor with him to succeed, and he thought he could; He was no novice in these matters . ere now he had often held the victory iu au issue more difficult than this in his grasp, and all he wanted now was a fair field aud no favor. . , "Aunt Parker said . I was never to speak to you again," Kiss Bald, as she came into the room, with an air of ex treme astonishment; "and now she sends me to you of her own . accord I What does it mean ?" . "It meaus that I have something very particular to say to yon. You are no worse for vonr drive, I hope?" k "Is that all? Yes; I am ever'st much worse in temper. You should have heard Aunt Parker go on 1 Did anybody scold yon ?" ,. "I escaped any very serious rebuke except from my conscience." "Dear me, Lord Featherstone, you make me feel as though I were in church. vWas it so very wicked, then, to help me iu my distress ? I thought it wt i most good of you. " This simple but italicized earnestness was very taking. . , " No ; but people are very censorious. They will talk. They are coupling our names together already." " Does that annoy you ?" Her air was candor itself. " Do you mind very much ?" " Well, perhaps not very, very much. It can do me no harm." "I am glad of that." " But it may you, and it ought to be stopped." , . " Of course ; but how ?" "There is only one Vay that I can see. Let us have only one" name between us. I cannot very well take yours. Will you tnke mine?" "Why why" A light seemed t break in on her all at once. " Oh, wh a funny man you are I That's just t e same as an offer of marriage. You o: 't mean that, surely ? It would be t quito too absurd." " I don't see the absurdity," said his lordship rather gruffly. Were well meant overtures ever so shamefully scorned ?" " Oh, but I do !" Keziah's little foot was- playing with the fringe of the hearthrug. " I do. That is, if you are in earnest, which of course you're not. '' ' But I am in earnest. "Why should you think I'm not ?" " You don't know me; you can't care for me. Yon never spoke to me till yes terday.' You are only making fun, and it isn't fair. I wish you'd leave . mo alone."' Her eyes were full already. "I am to go away, then? That is your answer V" She hid her faee in her hands aud would not speak. "You w:ll be sorry for this, perhnps, some day." She shook her head most' vigorously. "Keziah Legh, you are the only woman I ever asked to bo my wife. I shall never ask another. Good-bye, and God bless von !" Anil Lord Featherstone, with a strange feeling of dejection and disappointment, left the room. He could not have be lieved thnt within this nhort space of time he could have beeu so irresistibly drawn towards any girl. Now he was grieving over his failure as though he were still in his teens. Presently Aunt Parker came iu and found Keziah sobbing tit to break her heart. "I don't want him! I don't want him ! He can go away if he likes to tho other end of tho world." N "Have you been very ill used, my sweet ? What did he say to you ?" " He asked me to marry him," she Baid, with difficulty, between her sobs. " Was that such a terrible insult, then?" . " He was only making fun. I don't like such fun. And I don't want to see him again, never, never, not as long as I live!" " Kiss, you are right to consult your own feelings in this. But Lord Feathei -stone was in earnest, I think, and his in tentions do him infinite credit." Then she told her niece what had passed. " Still, if yon don't care for him, it is best as it is. Dry your tears, Kiss, aud think no more about it." " But I think I do care for him,'' she said, and began to cry again. Lady Curst airs became very m aoh ex ercised in spirit as the days passed, and yet nothing positive was known of Lord Featherstone's intentions towarxls Miss Keziah Legh. She made many futile efforts to meet him, then she called nnd sounded the la dies in Kensington square, with whom she was moderately intimate. - They put back her cross-examination, mildly but effectually. But at last she met Feather stone face to face, aud attockejd him at onoe. " Your high-flowu sense of honor did not bear practical test, then ?" " How so, Lady Carstairs ?" His cool ness was provoking. ' i. - . ' : i . " Why, rush off to Central Africa, ex cept to escape scaudal?" " Am I goinjr to Central Africa ? Per haps I am. Why not?" " Can it be possiblo that she has re fused you ?" - "Who could refuse me Lady (ur. stairs?" ' ' "J No ; but do ell me, I am dying to know." .'! You must fl .d some one else to save your life, then. ' 'But, Lorn Featherstone, we shall see you once more before you start? You will come and dine with us ? Just to say good-bye." He could not well escape from an invi tation so cordially expressed, aud the night was fixed. .'But he little thought what malice lurked beneath. The party was a large one, and he, as was often the cane, very late. But he entered gaily, as if he had come a little too Sfton, shook hands with the hostess, bowed here and there, nodded to one friend aud smiled at another, then, las of all aud to his surprise, his eyes rested upon Kiss Legh. j Lady Carstairs had done it ou purpose, of course; that was self-evideDt. Unkind, unfeeling, ungenerous woman. For himself he did not care, but it was cruel upon the timid birdling, so new and strange to the world. But fast as this conviction came upon him, yet faster came the resolve that Lady Carstairs should make nothing by the move. A thoroughly well-bred man is never taken aback, and Featherstone rose to the oc casion. Without a moment's delay, be fore the faintest flush was hung out like a signal of distress upon Keziah's cheek, he had gone up to her, shaken hands, and spoken a few commonplaces which meant nothing, and yet set her qnite at her ease. ,y ; " MiiiS Legh aud I are very old friends," he said. " How do you do, Miss Parker? How is the coachmau ? Have you heard, Mr. John, the prince is expected next week ? There will be great doings." And so ou. That little Kiss was grateful to him for his self possession, was evident from the satisfaction which beamed iu her eyes. Oh, those tell-tale eyes 1 . Now Ladv Carstairs brought up her reserves anil fired another broadside. " It is so good of yon, Lord Feather stone, to come to us; And yon have so few nights left." i " When do you go, Foatherstone ? and where ?" ...... " Haven't you heard ? To Central Africa." Lady Carstairs nnswersd for him. Can this be true ? Keziah's eyes asked him in mute but eloquent language, which sent a thrill through his heart. " Where this story originated I cauuot make out," said Featherstone, slowly. " I am not going to Central Africa. On the contrary, I have the very strongest reasons for staying? at home." " And those reasons?" "Are best known to Miss Legh and myself." f Thoughts for Saturday Mt'ht. Fortune is the rod of the weak and the staff of the brave. Death is a friend of ours, nnd he that is not ready to entertain him is not at home. A jest's prosperity lies in the ear of him that hears it, never in the tongue of him that makes it. Friendship is the medicine for all mis fortunes; but ingratitude dries up the fountain of all goodness. ' Laughter is, iudeed, akin to weeping, and true humor is as closely allied to 1 pity as it is abhorrent to derision. ' As the touchstone which tries gold, but is not itself tried by the gold; such is he that has the standard of judgment. In the affairs of life activity is to be preferred to dignity.and practical energy and dispatch to premeditated composure and reserve. Many judge rashly only for tho pleas ure they take to discourse, and make conjectures of other 'meu's manners by way of exercising their wits. To doubt is an injury; to suspect a friend is a breach of friendship; jealousy is a seed sown but in vicious minds; prone to distrust, because apt to de ceive. Judges ought to be more learned than witty, more reverent than plausible, and more advised than coufideut. Above all things integrity is their portion aud proper virtue. "There is nothing." said Plato, "so j delightful as the hearing or speaking of I truth. " For this reason, there is no con versation so agreeablo as that of a man of integrity, who hears without any iuten j lion to betray, nnd speaks without nny i uiionuon to neceive. Monkey and Their Antics. From "A Village of Wild Beasts " iu Ht, Nicholas for August we cull the fol lowing pen picture: Near the Lion Houseis a smaller building, which is appropriated entirely to monkeys, and is therefore a favorite resort lor children, many of whom learn ; a lot of curious tricks by watching these i lurii y annuals. Here 'are monkeys of all colors, and all sizes, aud ull kinds. There are about fifty of them iu a great high cage in the middle of the room.and here you may see them climbing up swinging ladders, hanging from ropes, dropping down on each other's heads, pulling each other's tails, and doing everything that they can think of to tease and bother each other all skip ping and. jumping and tumbling and chattering as if they had been in school all day, and had just got out for a little play. Some of these monkeys look like old men, with gray hair and beards, aud you might suppose that they were much too grave and reverend to ever think of cutting up monkey-shines. But if you watah one of these little old fellows, who is sitting, looking wisely and thought fully at you, as if he were just about to explain the reason why the sun gives us less heat in winter, when it is really much nearer to us than it is in summer, you will see him suddenly get up.anTl instead of taking a piece of chalk to show you on a blackboard the relative positions of the sun and the earth at the different seasons, he will make a tremendous jump, and seizing some other monkey by the tail,, will jerk him off a swinging ladder quicker than yon could say "pterodactyl." I:: .7 ; J I Why I " Why is that tent on the lawn yon der," asked Spilkius, one hot afternoon, " why is that tent like the last Presiden tial campaign ?" Everybody at once knew something awful was coming, and gave it np. " Because it's a heated aanvass," said Spilukins, dodging around the cor. ner of the piazza, FAItW, GARDEN AND HOCSEltOLDi I .1 i, i I- .!'.. rr. 1 . Ilnrloy or Onfx. : , i In regard to whetherit is better to sow ' oats or barley, much depends fin climate and soil. In sections where oato do well,' and barley usually fails, it-wonld be unwiso to sow barley. But iu those sec tions where the climate is alike favorable for barley or oats,aud where it is a ques tion of soil and preparation, it mny be observed: .,..' 1st. That oats sometimes do well on an old sod, but barley rarely, if ever, does so. 2d. Oats ripen Inter than bar ley, aud while it is very desirable to sow oats as enrly as the laud can be got iuto good condition, still you stand a better chance of a crop from late sown oats than from late sown barley. 3d. Oats will do far better on low, mucky land, than barley. If such land is well drained and is in good heart, aud iu tine, mellow condition as after a well cultivated corn, potato or root crop a grent crop of bnrley m.iy sometimes be grown, especially if the land has beeu limed, but the chances are altogether more favora ble for a great crop of oats. 4th. Ou low, mucky land; that is only partially drained, and which cannot be worked enrly in the season, it would be folly to sow barley. If sown at all, I would drill in oats, if the land was dry enough to admit the use of the drill; or if not, sow the oats broadcast, and if they could not be harrowed iu, let them sprout on the surface, and roll the land when it is firm enough to hold up the horses. It would be better, however, to summer fallow such lnnd, working it thoroughly, and make it clean nnd mellow, nd then seed it down heavily with timothy, (and per haps red top) next August. At any rate, do not sow barley." ftth., Oats will do better on heavy clay land than barley. This is the, rule. iThe exceptions are rare. The heaviestcrop of barley I ever saw was on a field of heavyclay land that was summer fallowed the year previous for wheat by three plowings, aud then not s iwu to' wheat in the fall, but plowed again in the spring early and sown to barley. Everything was favorable, nnd the crop was immense. 6th. On weedy laud it is better to sow oats than barley. Drill in the oats deep and use a plenty of seed. Roll the land cither at the time of sowiug or after tho oats are up. Then, when the weeds are sprouted, and are in tho seod leaf, go over the field once or twice.or three times.if necessary, with a light, fine-toothed harrow, for the purpose of killing the young weed plants. Oats can be harrowed with less injury to the plants than barley. And if the soil and weather are favorable, and the operation is performed at the right moment, thousands of weeds will be de stroyed, and the stirring of the ground will bo favorablo to the growth of the oats. Amrriran Agriculturist. Knrm Nolm. Dressing foh Fkcit Tiikbh. A barrel of ashes with eighty pounds of ground i .1.. . .-It. i-- :n i: i.. uoiif , mam: mi mm w ii.ii wait- j , w 111 uibbuj r and constitute n good dressing for most ! fruit trees. ! Colic in Houses. An officer who eommsuulod nrtillory during the hite war informs us of the following remedy for colic iu horses which he has tried with perfect sucft ss iu hundreds of cases: Rub the horse well between the fore legs and around the girth with spirits of tur pentine. Immediate relief follows. The Fabmeii's Gmndstone. There is . no tool as essential on the farm as a good grindstone; it is therefore necossnry that every farmer should havo one and know how to take proper care of it. A grind stone should always be kept under cover, as exposure to the sun's rays hardens the grit and injures the frame. The stone should not stand in water wheu not in use, ns this causes soft places. The water should be allowed to drip from some ves sel placed above the stone, and the drip should be stopped when the stone is not in use. All greasy or rusty tools should be cleaned before beiug harpened, as grease or rust choke up the grit. The stone should be kept perfectly round. Weaning Colts. A Vermont farmer says he weaned a last spring colt in the following manner: I fed grain or meal to the mare when the colt was with her. The colt soon learned to eat meal with the dame. After he has been taught to eat with the mare he will eat as readily when he is removed from her. , I put my colt in a stable where he could have plenty of exercise iu a large yard; fed liini with hay and bran mixed with milk,' which I soon taught him to drink without the bran. I weaned liim from the mare in this way when he was three months old; he seemed contented, and I think did as well ns though he had run with the mare two months louger. It is much better for the mare, nnd more convenient if one wants to use her, as most people Meeker meantime reached South Bend, do in the country, while the colt is with Indiana, committed a burglary there, her. This way of weaning colts is very ; was caught and sentenced to the North convenient, and one can feed milk at ern penitentiary at Michigan City for such times ns seem judicious,. Hubstitu- five years. The Canadian detectives fol tiuar grain or shorts for the milk at anv J inwM him nn ui nnt(,i i,,-u vrai,' ressonablo time. . .1 A Plague of Ratx.' The St. Louis ' Jouni at sayB that I' wheu Samuel Davis introduced a bill into the Legislature last winter provid ing for the destruction of rats, the press of the State was inclined to indulge in a great deal of badinage at Sam's expense. If all reports be true, however, the i people, nnd especinlly the farmers of central Missouri, have this summer begun to realize the benefits of hjiu Davis effort m their behalf. The counties oi oaime, uooper and I'ettis are literally overrun by rats, and the crops ore receiving incalculable damage thereby. ' In many localities whole fields 01 corn have been uprooted and destroy ed by rats, necessitating replanting or abandonment for the season. ( The rats burrow in the ground close to the fences, iu the hedges and ravines, breed large litters three times a year, and devour everything they come upon. u They are the old-fashioned wharf rats,,, such as abound in every city. It is feared that they will ultimately become .a. great er scourge than the grasshoppers have been, although there is now a wholesale movement against them in the counties named. Ono farmer in Saline jwunty has within the past three months, killed over 1,000 of the pests,- for the scalps of which he received $60, in accordance wjth the provisions of Sam Pa vis' biH." r I Items of Interest, r. 1 '. Seven thousand immigrants have ar rived in Oregon this year, i '' ' A sparrow and a chicken fought in Pottsville, and the chicken was killed.. ' The ninety-two papers in Mississippi have a combined circulation of 60,223. The woman who neglects her hus band's shirt front is not the wife of his bosom. The United States raises twenty-eight millions of swine, and Europe about thirty-three millions. The boys at Reno, Gal., amuse them selves lassoing Indians. Indians used to lasso them, but they know the ropes now. One of the first pennies issued by our government bore the inscription, " Mind your own business."- -Very -cent-Bible advice. The French mint lins struck 10,000 francs worth of centime pieces iu bronze, each representing about the twelfth of an American cent. The new jail at Fort Worth, Texas, in described by a local paper as a " miser able failure, and not a safe place to con fine prisoners iu." Fifteen masked men went to a ball near McDade, Lee county, Texas, took out four men from among the dancers and hanged them to a tree. t When the czar's soldiers got into Paris in 1815, they drank all the alcohol in the jnrs in which the scientific French preserved the museum serpents. Under the head of " Marriages " in an exchange we find one commencing "Paris Green." The happy couple should never be troubled with potato bugs. ' The Turkish soldiers are taller than the Russians, and will average at least five feet aud ten inches. They wear full beards, but have their heads shaved, or the hair cut very short. The cereal product of Europe is about five thousand millions. Of this, Bnssia grows 1,00(1,000,000 ; Germany, 743, 000,000 ; France, i87,000,000 ; nnd the Austrian empire, 650,000,000. Stereotype printing was used in Hol land earlv in the last century. The rollers for inking the. type were invented by Nicholson. Stereotype printing was introduced into London by Wilson in 1804. The United States, with a population of about 45,000,000, produces abont bushels of cereals to each inhabitant, while Europe, with a population of 297,000,000, produces only about 161 bushels to each person. A Brooklyn man went to the peniten tiary for his health. He was uuwell, and his physician told him to go right home and take something. He went right home and took his employer's watch. He calls that going to the penitentiary for his health. At a recent party in Iowa a young man sat on a pyramid of ladies hats. Rising . V n l quickly he glided from the room, and ,,oll"(l 101 lue oepor-, wm.-ie iiw puncu his Head into uio ucKei oiuce unu juneu, "When does the next traiu leave for Batoum?" A locomotive on the Lake Shore rail road struck a two-year-ol bullock. The nnimnl bounded over the smokestack and fell across the. boiler, the fore legs on one side aud the hind legs on the other. The fireman went out on tho engine and held the animal until tl e train could be stopped. The lively little bullock was scratched, nothing more. A famous old horse, owned by a geu- I tlemau iu the northwestern section of Baltimore, kills from three, to a half dozen rats every night. When the rodents eoine into his trough to eat the feed, and old equine just peizes them by the bnek, gives a grip with his teeth, opens his mouth, and they fall dead at his hoofs. He is worth a half dozen cats. A lady in the suite of the Princess of Wales, when that lady and her husband Tisited Constantinople, speaks'of a dinner with the sultan as being very good, and in the European style, but as a very dull affair. It whs the first time that the sultan had ever sat at dinner with ladies, or that any of his ministers, except the grand-vizier, had sat iu his presence. Tlmi-A writ t.wpiitv-four nt the table. ' There I 4. ..1.... ,.f ...1...... I'livlm n-lin Inflll-fifl 1H111I7 Ul 11 w 1 11 1. 11 J- 'il iv", " frightened aud astonished, aud dared not speak. , Pardoned to be Arrested. A strange extradition' case has jnst beeu settled in Indiana. On March 10, 1874, a rough named Meeker shot a man in Toronto, who ultimately died from his wound. Meeker fled, but left behind au overcoat with tho name of a Cleveland tailor thereon. The tailor identified the coat nnd told to' whom it belomred ' tion. and for the first time in the historv of the peniteutiary .a prisoner declined to leave. .The question now arose, should he satisfy the law of Iudiana, or should he be turned over to the tender' mercies of Canadiau jurisdiction ? Judge Per kins feared that if the Cauadians took him they might find him not guilty, and ii.i... T,.,i;n.,.. ....,, i.i i.u,ii i.,.. l. ..i, U1VU 1UU1U11U VTWIilll 1U3IT U.l lUVlUg UiWip j on the prisoner. , The question was re ! served for a full bench of the supreme j cnnri and thev ilecidp.l t. vmmpi.,i , the governor to pardon Meeker. This W1W done, aud tho unwillingly forgiven 0Onvict is now a guest of the Toronto I iH;iar Win trinl tnr ii..ii. will v,rtw 4 place, 1 ,,; ,e i , - . .a A: Practical Mining Class. Thirty Students of the Columbia College school id mines are to have practical instruction in mining coal this summer in the mines at Drifton, Pennsylvania. A rough frjnne house has been leased as a sleep-. ing place, and n New York cook engaged ; to accompany them and provide them with food. The students will be divide! iuto parties of four each, and put in charge of a miner, w hose duty it will be to instruct them in the method, of ex tracting the coal. The coal mined by them will be subjected to the same se vere examination s: that dug by- the miuer, credit 4ieing given for clean coal ana no credit lor impurities, like slate. The parties will work for four hours every day with pick and Bhovel.