( V " V -V X : ' - HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher NIL DESPERANDTTM. Twvo Dollars per Annum. VOL. VII. KIDGrAVAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JANUAEY 31, 18787 NO. 50. I The Song? Sparrow, . Bird of the door-side, warbling clear In the sprouting or fading year, . Well art thon named from tby own sweet lay Uped from paling or naked spray, As the smile of the sun breaks throngh Chill gray clouds that curtain the blue. Eyen when February, bleak, Smites with his frost the traveler's check, While the air has no touch of spring, Bird of fromise, we hear thee sing, Long ere the first rathe blossom wakes, Long ere the earliest leaf-bud breaks. April passes and May steals by June leads in the sultry Julyi Hweot are the wood notes, loud and sweet, Heard from (he robin's and hang-bird's seat, Then, sb the green months glide away, Singest with them as gayly as they. August comes, and the melon and maize Bask and swell in his firey blaze ; Swallows gather, and southward bound Wheel like a wbirlblast round and round s Thrush and robin their songs forget, Thou art cheerfully warbling yet. Later still, when the sumach spray Reddens to crimson day by day, When in the orchard, one by one, Apples drop in the ripening sun, They who pile them beneath the trees Hear thy lay in the autumn breeze. Comes November, sullen and grim, Spangling with frost the rivulet's brim, Harsh, hoarse winds from tho woodlands tear Each brown leaf that is clinging there ; Still art thou singing amid the blast, "Soon is the dreariest season past," Only when Christmas snow-storms make Smooth white levels of river and lake, , Sifting the light snows all day long, Only then do we miss thy song, Sure to hear it agaiu, when soon Climbs the sun to a higher noon. Late when the sorrowing south wind brought Tidings of battle fiercely fought, Tidings of hosts in war array, Marking with graves their bloody way, Still wert tbou singing near my door, " Soon is the stormiest season o'er." Ever thus sing cheerfully on, Bird of Hope ! as in ages gone. Sing of spring-time and summer shades, Autumn'B pomp when the summer fades, Storms that flee in the conquering sun, Peace by enduring valor won. William Cullen Bryant in "Great Songs of Ureal Poett." Solimin: A Ship of the Desert. The biggest desert in tho world is in Africa, and is called the Sahara. It is nlinout as large aa the Atlantic ocean, but instead of water it if) all sands and rockn. Li'ie the ocean, it is visited with fstoiiiis, dreadful gales, when the wind Keoops up thousands of tons of sand and drives them forward, burying and crush ing all they meet. And it has islands, too small green patches, whero springs bubble through the ground, and ferns and acacias and pnlin-trees grow. When n traveler sees one of these fertile spots afar oiT, he feels as o tempest-tossed sailor dne.9 at sight of land. It is de lightful to quit the hot, baking sun, tit in the shadow under the trees, and rest the eyes, long wearied with dazzling nanJs, on tho Bweet green and the clear (spring. Oases, those islands are called. Long distances divide them. It is often :i race for life to get across from one to the other. Sometimes people do not get across I In 1803, a carvon of 2,000 persons died miserably of heut and thirst in the great desert, and the sand covered them up. Do you wonder at my saying that the desert eat men ? Now, you will be puzzled to guess what sort of ship it is which swims this lry ocean. It is the camel an animal made by God to endure these dreadful regions, m which no other beast of bur ben can live and travel. I dare say many of you have seen camels in mena geries. They are ugly animals, but very strong, swift and untiring. With a load of 800 pounds on his. back, a camel will travel for days at the rate of eight miles an hour, which is as fast as an ordinary ship can sail. More won derful still, ho will do this without stop iug for food or water. Nature has pro vided him with an extra stomach, in which he keeps a stsre of drink, and with a hump on his back, made of iellv- like fat, which, in time of need, is ab sorbed into the system and appropriated as food. Is it not strange to think of a creature with a cistern and a meat-safe inside him ? A horse would be useless in the desert, where no oats or grass could be had, but the brave, patient camel goes steadily on without com plaint until the oasis is reached; then he champs his thorn bushes, fills him self from the spring, allows the heavy packngo to be fastened on his back agaiu, and is ready for further travel. Now you know what sort of a ship it is that I am going to tell you about. It was a camel, named Solimin. He was of a rare and valuable breed, known as " herie," or coursers, because they are so much swifter than ordinary camels. Bolimin's master, Ahmed, was a poor man. He never could have afforded to buy a full-grown camel of this rare breed ; and Solimin had become his through a piece of good fortune. When a little foal, Solimin was found in a lonely place in the desert, standing over the dead body of his mother, who had fallen and perished by the way. Led to the brown tent which, was Ahmed's home, the orphan baby grew up as a child of the family, lay among the little ones at night, and was their petand plaything all the day. The boys taught him to kneel, to rise, to carry burdens, to turn this way and that at a signal. The girls hung a necklace of blessed shells, saved for him the best of the food, sang him songs (which he was sup posed to enjoy), and daily kissed and stroked his gentle nobe and eyes. As he grew big and strong, the pride of his owners grew with him. Not another family of the tribe possessed a herie. Once and again, Ahmed was offered a largo price for him, but he rejected it with disdain. " Would I sell my son the eon of my heart ?" he said. " Neither will I part with Solimin. By the prophet, I swear it" Of &U the dwellers in the brown tent owiiunu loveu dbbi Aumeu nimncii, ana hin Allaat. inn Mnafjinliit Willi tlinm he wag docile as a lamb; but if strangers drew near, or persons he did not like, he became restive and fierce, screamed, laid Vinck bin pnrn nnH 1m1tai1 vHt.li Viih ftfmniv hind legs. A kick from a camel is no ' 1. - A 11 . 1, IV 1 . j orb, jl can reu you. ah me aesert million lrnACT Rnlimin. And. fnr hia MaVn Ahmed was often hired to accompany caravans. Nay, once, at Cairo, Solimin was chosen to carry the sacred person of the Khedive on a day's excursion up the Nile bank, which event served the tribe as a boast for months afterward. It was the year after this journey to vuiru luut Anmea met with a terrible adventure. He and Mustapha, making their way home after a long journey, had lain down to sleep away the noontide iiours, according to ine custom of desert travelers. Their camels were tethered bp.niria tlmm. all nftamofl Buinra nrwl peaceful, when, sudden as the lowering of a cloud, a party of Arabs, belonging 10 a wuu iriue ac enmity with all men, nniinrarl nnnn tViom Alimiul tin A nta son defended themselves manfully, but ..1.1 4 . ; j L5 wiiuu i;utiiu iwiv tiiou, Biirpriseu ill sleep, do against a dozen ? In five minutes all WAR nver. ThA nannilania vanielin.1 in a cloud of dust, and Ahmed, who had been ... 1 n .... - i . . . mrucH. uown in ine ruBn, recovered ins senses, to find wimpln lincn-ncrA Kiel money, everything gone, and Mustapha wounded and motionless on the earth beside nun. Ahmed thought him dead. They were alone in the desert, a hundred miles from home, without food or water, and with a groan of despair he sat down be side his son's body, bowed his head, and waited until death should come to him also. An Arab believes in fate, and gives up once for all when misfortune occurs. But Mustapha stirred, and Ahmed at once sprang up. There was nothing he could do for the poor boy, except to chafe and rub his hands ; but this was something, for presently Mustapha re- vivea enougn to speaK. "Are they gone?" he asked. ' " Yes, the accursed ones, thev are gone, with all our goods and with Soli min 1 The prophet's curse light upon them 1" And passing from despair to fury, Ahmed threw sand upon his head, and. flung himself on the ground in help less rago. Aiustapha joined in with groans and lamentations. When the father and son grew calmer, they began to discuss the situation. Ahmed knew of a small unfrequented oasis, about twenty miles away. It was .1 1 i a. r . . -. ineir ouiy cnance oi satety, uut could they reach it t " I think I can walk," declared Mus tapha, tying up his wounded leg in a fold torn from his turban. IJut he limped sadly, and his tightly pressed Hps showed pain as ho moved. He was faint with hunger beside. Neither of the men had eaten since sunrise. Suddenly Mustapha uttered a joyful cry, and nitoi somctning from ttie earth. "The prophet be praised 1" he cried. " My father, hero is food. The robbers have dropped a bag of dates." Sure enough, there it lay, a heavy bag of dates, shaken off from" some camel's pack during the struggle. Heavy as it was, and nard to torry, Ahmed would fain have it larger. It was their safety from starvation. A handful of its con tents satisfied hunger, and gave them strength to begin their walk. What a walk it was I Poor Mustapha lav down every half hour from pain and weakness; the sand was heavy, the darkners puzzled them. When morning broke, they had not accomplished more than half the distance. All through the hot day-time they lay panting on the ground, eating now and then a date, tormented with thirst and heat; and when evening came. they dragged themselves to their feet again, and recommenced their painful journey. Step by step, hour by hour, each harder and longer than the last, moment by moment they grew more feeble, less able to bear up, till it seemed as though they could no longer struggle on. At last, the mornine broke. Ahmed raised his blood-shot eyes, seized Mns tapha's arm, and pointed. There, not a hundred yards away, was the oasis, its trees and bushes outlined against the sky. Poor Mustapha was so spent that his father had to drag him across the short dividing space. It was a small oasis, and not very fertile; its well was shal low and scanty, but no ice-cooled sher bet ever seemed more delicious than did its brakish waters to the parched tongues oi ine exuausteu men. All day and all night they lay under the shadow of the cactuses and the acacia-trees, rousing only to drink, and falling asleep again immediately. Shade, and sleep, and water seemed the only tilings in tho world worth having just then. The second day they slept less, but it was nearly a week before they could be said to be wide-awake again. Suoh a pair of scare-crows as they looked! Ahmed was almost naked. The rob bers had taken part of his clothes, and the desert thorns the rest. Haggard, wild, blackened by the sun, they gazed at each other with horror; each thought, " Do I look like that ?" and each tried to hide from the other his own dismay. They could never tell afterward how long they remained at the oasis. It seemed years, but I do noi suppose it could have been more than weeks. All day long they looked wistfully toward the horizon, in hopes of a caravan, but the caravan never came. Slowly the dates dwindled in the bag; slowly the precious water diminished in the well; a little longer and starvation would be upon them. They scarcely spoke to each other those last days, but sat eaoh by himself in a sort of dull despair. At night, when they fell asleep, they dreamed of food, and woke in the morn ing to feel themselves hungry. It was terrible I Then came a morning when they rose to find the hard desert outline, which they knew so well, vanished and gone, and in its stead a imooth, shining lake, fringed with trees and dotted with feathery, fairy islands. So near it seemed, and so real, that it was as though they heard the ripple of the water and the rustliagof the wind in the tree-boughs. Mustapha stared aa though his eyea would burst from his head; then gave a Wild erv and warn irmViino irnio but his father held him fast ' "Stay, my son I Stay, Muataphal it is ho lake. it is a device of Satan, What you behold is the mirage, spread Dy devils for men s destruction. "Let me go I" shrieked Mustapha, writhing and struggling. But even as he strove, the soft water outlines shifted and trembled J the lake rose in air, melted, end sailed off into curling mists : the trees, the whole fair picture, dissolved, and the well-remembered sands and black rocks took its place. With a crv of horror. Mnst- apah slid through his father's arms to the earth, hid his face, and cried like a child. Next morning, only one date was left in the bag. Ahmed put it in his son's hand with a mournful look. "Eat my son," he said; "eat, and tnen we will die. Allan ii Allan I" A long silence followed; there seemed nothing more to say. Suddenly. from afar off, came to their ears the tinkle of a bell. Mustapha raised his head. " Is it the miiage again, my father ? he askf.d. " For it seems to me that I hear the bell from the neck of Solimin, our camel. " Eagerly they listened. Again the bell tinkled, and, looking through the bushes, they saw, floating toward them, as it seemed, the form of a gigantio camel. Soundless and still, it moved rapidly along. Jieiund, but much fur ther away, other forms could be seen, still dim and indistinct, veiled by the jl... r i uiiMt oi unving sana. Suddenly Mustapha gave a start. "My father." he cried, in an excited whisper, " it Solimin I I do not mis take ! What otner camel ever resembled Solimin? Do you not see his lofty hump, his arched neck? Does not the bell tinkle as with the voice of home!" Then, half raising himself, he gave. with all the power of his voice, the well- known call. Solimin for it was indeed he paused as the sound caught h's ears, and Fnuffed tne wind. Again came the call; he wheeled, plunged, threw his rider, dash ed forward, oroke through the bushes, and in a second was on his knees before his old master. " Up, up, my father I there s no time to lose !" cried Mustapha, grown stronger in a moment. " Up, up I for the rob bers are clos tipou us 1" In fact, wild cries and clouds of dust showed that the foe had taken the alarm and were hurrying on. But already Ahmed and Mustapha were mounted, and Solimin, like a ship at full sail, was speeding away with them. And where was the camel could overtake him, even when he was loaded double ? Fast and swift his long, swinging trot bore them onward, and before two hours were gone, all traces of the pursuers had disappear ed behind them, and they were free to turn their course toward the brown tents where rest, and food, and welcome had waited so long for their coming, and where, after a little time, their hardships and sufferings seemed to them only like a bad dream. As for Solimin, he .hardly could be more tenderly treated or beloved than before this adventure ; but if the fresh est water, the prickliest furze, if bowls of sour milk, if a triple neck lace of shells, if brushing and groom ing, if soft puts from childish fingers, and sweet names murmured in his ears bv girlish voices can -make a camel happy, then is Solimin the happiest of ueries. (solimin no longer, however. His name is changed to "The Blessed." in memory of the day when, like a state ly ship, he came over the desert sea, aud bore his starving masters to home, and life, and liberty. Susan Coolidge in St. Nicholas. - What Two Words were Good For. Dean Stanley never loses a chance to make a point on an anniversary. When called upon to preside at any meeting, he always asks himself if the day is the anniversary of any great event, or the birthday of any famous person, in order to deduce some fitting lesson. On the last Saturday of the year he appeared at the industrial exhibition in Loudon, and at once reminded the working-classes that that day was the anniversary of an event which happened 700 years ago. and which caused a great disturbance to the country. It was the anniversary of the murder of Thomas-a-Becket. in con nection with whose life there was a cir cumstance whieh well illustrated the principle on which he was about to en large. People sometimes imagined that the small things they Baw before them were not worthy of pursuit; whereas, in reality, small things often deserved con sideration. A story was told which re ferred to the father and mother of Thomas-a-Becket. His father, who was a Londoner, went to the crusades, and having been taken prisoner, married an Eastern lady. He was afterwards ran somed and returned to England, but he was unable to carry away his wife with him, and Hhe remained in Syria. She, however, determined to travel to Eng land a difficult task, as she knew only two words of English, " Gilbert " (the name of her husband), and "London." She got through Europe by mentioning at every town she came to the word " London," at which place she eventu ally arrived. When there she made use of her other word, " Gilbert," and, hav ing found her way from street to street, she at last discovered the house of her husband near London bridge. This was an example of the effect that could be produced by making the very greatest uso ef whatever little knowledge she possessed. New York Tribune. Sea Serpents. The gigantio whale captured in Febru ary last in the Gulf of Taranto, Italy, has been subjected to a critical examina tion by Professor Capellini, who, in a report lately published, states it as his opinion that the whale is of a species hitherto unknown to science, and he has named it Da lasna tarentena, in allusion to the locality of its capture. This unlooked-for discovery of a new species of huge marine animal, taken in connection with the alleged appearance oi another " monster " a short time later, and in the same neighborhood, as vouched for by the officers of the royal yacht Os borne, is regarded as a strong argument in favor of the existence of unknown huge marine living objeots, such as are popularly indicated by the aame of "sea- serpent," ... ... - FIRM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Winter Farm Ecoaaalea. The Prairie Farmer says : There are so many things that the farmer may do at home, in his own workshop) m Well as another Call do it for him, that it is surprising that so few are without a kit of wood working tools, a shoeing ham mer, some horse nails, pinchers for iron, copper, rivets, screws, and other neces sary articles as will enable him to com plete many a handy job without the intervention of the carpenter. The time required to do the worl "il of ten be found to be less than that spent in going to and from the mechanic's place of business. Thus with a few tools the wood work of harrows, plows, cultiva tors, and other tools pbont the farm may be repaired. By having a few extra handles of forks and other imple ments on- hand, these may be cheaply repaired and made as good as new. Wagon tongues, and many other duplicates for farm vehicles and ma chines, are now prepared so as to re quire but little fitting. In the case of machines, all that is necessary, as a rule, is simply to fasten them in place, In doing this the farmer not only renders himself handy with tools, but at the same time he becomes thoroughly con versant with the working parts of each individual machine no small matter to the practical man. In fact every farmer ought to be able to take apart, and put together intelligently, any machine on the farm. Unless this be the case, they cannot be worked as economically as they should be. While the farmer is thus educating himself, he will come to see the neces sity and economy of having everything in its place, and a place for everything, when not in use, and when in use they will be just in place. So he will come to occupy his leisure hours ip repairs of various kinds. Barn and stable doors that are getting shaky on tber hinges will be repaired at once. If he burn wood, it will be prepared and piled secure from rain, and with proper ven tilation, so it may dry perfectly. If he burn coal, a proper shed will be built to keep it dry. The pumps about the place will always draw. Water troughs will never have sloughs of mud about them in soft weather, to mire stock, nor glare ice in hard weather, to maim them. Sheds will be made comfortable. The best facilities will gradually be accumu lated for accomplishing the work of the farm, and a general air of thrift will be observable, not only about the homo Btead, but oyer the form. In this we do not mean to assert that the simple possession of the tools neces sary to do odd jobs will accomplish all this ; but the handling of tools soon gets a common sense man conversant with their use, and the investigations neces sary to enable a man to do tho work in telligently, broadens the mind, and one soon comes to see where money may be saved in many directions, and how easy it is ' to make all things tidy about the house and place, and also, where the profit comes in, in rendering tho stock about the farm comfortable. These may seem like small economies. In truth they are ; but it is these small economies that go to swell the profits of the farm, just as in any other industry in life. It is, in fact, attention to small economies that make the prosecution of business successful in its best sense. Household Uinta. Bad cooking spoils good food. Apply common baking soda to burns. There is no dignity in work half done. Bottom heat is not good to raise bread. Cold corned beef is best for making hash. Eat what your appetite craves if vou can get it. Husbands must not expect their wives to make good, white bread from poor flour. Save the Feathers. To utilize feathers of ducks, chickens and tumeys, generally throw aside all refuse, trim the plumes from the stump, inclose them in a tight bag, rub the whole as if washing clothes, and you will secure a perfectly uniform and light down, excellent for quilting coverlids and not a few other purposes. To Clean Paint. Take one ounce of pulverized borax, one pound small pieces best brown soap and three quarts water; let - simmer till the soap is dis solved stirring frequently; do not let it boil. Use with a piece of old flannel and rinse off as soon as the paint is clean. This mixture is alsa good for washing clothes. Wnablnff Flannels. A lady correspondent says: "I will give a little of my experience in washing flannels. I was taught to wash flannel in hot water, but it is a great mistake. In Italy my flannels were a wonder to me; they always came home from the wash so soft and white. I learned that the Italian women washed them in cold water. Many a time I have watched them kneeling in a box. which had one end taken out, to keep them out of the mud, by the bonk of a stream, washing in the running water, and drying on the bank or gravel, without boiling; and I never had washing done better, and flan nels never half so well. I have tried it since, and find the secret of nice soft flonneh to be the washing of them in cold or luke-warm water, and plenty of stretching before hanging out. Many recipes say, don't rub soap on flannels; but you can rub soap on to the advan tage of the flonnels, if you will rinse it out afterward and use no hot water about them, not forgetting to stretch the threads in both directions before dry ing. Flannels so cared for will never become stiff, shrunken or yellow." Japanese Beggars. A ParaGraph assertinir that thnra ant few or no beggars in Japan has attracted the attention of a reader of the Washing ton Star, who has tm aA in ftiot rtountry, and who writes: "Any one -V.M I. . .1 . . wuu uw over riuueu irom Brussels to the field of Waterloo knows how many beggars line that ride of nine miles. From Yokohama to Tokio (Yeddo), by the Tokioado, or old national road, is sixteen miles. I hav riAAan r.o i,. splendid and often thronged highway vw uiuu uuuurwi umes, and never saw the time when there were not more beggars in proportion to the dia tanoe and comparative population than between Brussels and Waterloo," - A Remarkable Duel. A correspondeut in the South writes ! Once in a while duels are fought in which a lady is a purely incidental cause, Suoh a duel took place in South Carolina, in 1853, between Mewrs. John Dunoraht and J. D. Legare. These gtintlettteh were . devoted friends. Legare was attentive to a young lady of beauty and worth in the upper pan cf the State. The two friends went to the village where she lived to get some shooting. They were, of cours fre quent visitors at her father's ho. s. One day Legare imagined that he de tected a sudden coldness on the pttrt of the young lady and the family towards himself. In questioning his friend as to the probable cause of it, he asked him if he hod ever made any re marks about him td any of the family, Dunorant replied that he had said nothing of consequence ; that on one occasion he had been asked if Legare ever drank, and had answered that he sometimes did. Legare at once attribu ted the change, real or supposed, in the behavior of the lady to this statement or admission on the part of his friend. A prolonged discussion ensued. Dunor ant was disposed to be conciliatory, while Legare was very much aligered. The issue between them was finally narrowed down to a demand on the part of Legare that Dunorant put in writing precisely what he had said to the father of the lady. Dunorant declined to do this. He contended that the demand was an implied insult. Legare persist ed, and, upon Dunorant's remaining firm, sent him a challenge. Dunorant promptly accepted it, and the details of a meeting were arranged. Dunorant was a very poor shot with the pistol, It is said that on the evening before the duel he went out to practice, and literally could not hit a barn door. Le gare was a capital shot. From the very first, however, Dunorant contended that he would kill Legare at the first fire. He never modified his assertion, but said all the time : "I will kill him when I draw the trigger 1" When the men were on the ground a curious thing occurred. When the sec ond who was to give the word called, "Are you ready, gentlemen ?'' Dunorant re sponded in a firm, steady, tone "No." He then drew a small pen-knife from his pocket, opened it deliberately, and, fixing his eyes squarely on Legare, walked toward him. When he had traversed only two-thirds of the inter vening distance he stopped, and, reach ing down, cat off a small twig that stood between him and his opponent. He then returned to his position, shut his knife carefully, aud returned it to his poc'tet. Without taking his eyes off of Legare, he announced " Ready," and said to his second, " I am going to kill him." The men being in position, the command "Fire 1 one twb three!" rang out upon the air. A ring of smoke sprang from the nipple of each pistol, and Legare dropped dead in his tracks. Dunorant stood for a moment as if he were carved in stone, and, then drop ping his arm slowly, turned to his second unhurt. A Scheming Woman. The number of women who live by their wits in New York, says the Herald of that city, is very large, and is daily growing larger. Some of these women are really very industrious and very clever in their peculiar line; one, now residing in elegant style uptown, has acquired quite a little fortune by trading in her "influence." She has a large circle of acquaintances among moneyed men, and has also a ready perception, a glib tongue and a keen, instinctive knowl edge of human nature. These qualities she is turning to the utmost pecuniary account. She is a married woman, though her husband is a nonentity, practically speaking, and keeps house up town. There in the evenings she re ceives calls from numerous bankers, brokers aud others, whom she elegantly and pleasantly entertains, and mean while " talks them " into, wheedles or coaxes or argues them into favorable notice of any scheme she may have at the time a pecuniary interest in. She does a paying business in this line, as she never undertakes any but a big scheme and a plausible scheme, aud when once she undertakes it does her " level best " to carry it through. Not long ago the lady talked up a mine, got most of the stock subscribed through her own exertions and took her pay in the shape of an extensive roll of green backs, for it is characteristic of this per sonage that she will never take " com missions. " She demands so much money down and generally, having proved that she is worth it, gets it. By her earnings in this line, sub rosa, of course, she makes the major part of the family in come and clothes herself and her daugh era in excellent style. The ladv is widely known by Wall street and Broad street magnates and is held in high es teem with them, as she is considered equally shrewd and "square." How Mood is Done. You know the touching lyrio of Long fellow, which he has called " The Arrow and the Song." It is so familiar that it looks like an affectation to quote it, but I must indulge myself onoe more by re peating its sweet lines ; " I shot aa arrow in ths air t It fell to f artb, I knew not where ; For 10 swiftly it flew, the Bil.t CJU'd not follow, in i's flight. I breathed a hour into the air It fell on earth I knew not where ; For who his sin lit so keen and strong Tat it can follow tbe fl gut of to g ? L ng, long afterwa'd. tu an oak I I mud the arrow, st 11 nnbroke ; A d the sen j, from beginning to (nd. I found again in tbe heart of a frietd." This is exquisite. But you observe that both the arrow and the song were found juBt as they had been sent out. The poet has not told, and no poet can fully tell, of the impulses that are given, the changes that are wrought, and the work of self-sacrifice and devotion that is sug gested, by a fitting word dropped at tbe right moment into a human soul; and among the many pleasant surprises that are in store for us in the upper world will be the discovery that efforts put forth by us, and. which we supposed to be so feeble as to be well-nigh worthlers, have been, under God, the germs from which rich harvests of good have resulted to multitudes whom we have never seen, Writ. M. Jtoyior, - Fashion Notes. Chenille embroidery is in high favor. Seaweed is the garniture for tulle dresses. There is a bow diagonal, soft, heavy serge. Bonnets are smaller and hats larger than ever. Orange color is the fancy of the mo ment in Paris, Epaulettes of flowers are the novelty of the moment, MetaMio ribbons are to be used for trimmings of ball dresses, Brotlerio antique with a corded ground is a popular trimming. Satin and velvet are favorite combina tions in trimming materials. Silk, satin, velvet, and lace pockets are still worn for evening dresses. Colored sets used for trimmings are cut both in facets and flat-dresses. Necklaces of lace with drooping pen dants are pretty on well-shaped necks. Young ladies have their dancing dresses made with very short pointed trains. Arabesque patterns in braiding and embroidery are the favorites of the hour Some of the new bonnets and hats have doublo brims. Others have split brims. Buttercups and Marshal Neil roses are in demand for evening dress trimings. Long lace mittens, black, white, and colored, are to be worn for full evening dress. Yellow, orange, and brown tints are used to a great extent in ball dresses this season. Among new ornaments in silver and gold filagree are large gad flies with jewels for eyes. Long Louis Quatorze waistcoats, simulated in brocade, satin, or damassee appear on evening dresses. One of the coming fashions is ribbons seemingly woven of metal yellow and red, gold, silver, steel and bronze. In coiffures the hair is worn less high upon the head, but there is just as much chevalure needed as ever. Plastrons and puffed fronts, extending from the throat to the bottom of the skirt, are very much worn for evening toilet. Evening dresses are given an antique appearance by short, high-puffed sleeves, or Medici frills, in the armholes and around the neck. Crimped crepe lisse frills are formed into cuffs to be worn outside the sleeve instead of inside; deep collars of the same go with the cuffs. It is said that elderly ladies are goiug to wear evening robes of white silk and satin, mado up very plain but profusely trimmed with lace. Among the new goods is found duvet, or down cloth, a material made of the feathers of fowls, extremely light, warm, pliant, and impel vious to rain or snow. A new version of Fourreau is " the Cardinal robe," an elegant dinner dress made of scarlet faille, and trimmed with ssarlet velvet fringes and passemen teries. An elegant novelty is feather ribbon. Tho centre is a wreath of flowers on a light ground. On either side a border of soft unravelled silk forms a feather like fringe. Oae of the prettiest of the new trim mings brought out this season is the marabout ribbon, made of woven swan's down ; it comes in all colors and shades, and in pure white. Among new things are stuffs for even ing wear silk or satin, in electric colors pale blue, rose, or green which seem to emit sparks of light ; these effects being obtained by a new process of dyeing, Wheat from High Latitudes. There was brought into the city of Winnipeg, in Manitoba, last fall, a half bushel of wheat, said to have been grown fifteen hundred miles north of that point. The bearer was a half breed In dian, who had come from the far north to Winnipeg to trade, and the grain was brought with him to exchange for other commodities. It was regarded at the time as quite a curiosity, and was parsed around from one to another for trial in the spring in that locality. A few grains of it fell into the hands of a gentleman from Minneio'.a, who waB in that city at the time, and was brought home with him on his return. At our solicitation it has been presented to Professor Lacy of the State Agricultural College, who has laid it away till time for seeding, when he will give it the most careful culture, and endeavor to prove whether there is any virtue in it or not. The berry is very plump and bright, and we suppose from the vtry high latitude in which it was grown must be hard enough to satisfy the most fastidious miller. Whether the distance north of Winnipeg was precisely 1,500 miles we cannot say ; but from all that could be gleaned from the Indian it was raised a long distance to the north probably nearer the pole than any wheat that has ever reached Minnesota before. St. Paul (.1tin.) Pioneer Press. Fraud iu Buuk Bills. The United States treasurer is advised of constantly increasing attempts by per sons in various sections of the country to cheat the government aud innocent people by practicing what is known as the " piecing process." whereby a given number of currency notes of like de nomination are cut in pieces and so pasted together as to give an increased number. The manipulators generally take ten notes, aud by cutting and adroit pieoing make eleven, thereby gaining one at the expense of the other ten. Of course the diminished notes get into the hands of innocent holders, and when sent to the treasury department for re demption they are at once detected by the treasury experts and thrown out. The regulations for redeeming mutilated ourrency do not admit of the redemption of anything except in a single piece con taining at least one-half of the original, which makes it still harder for those into whose hands these nioely-pasted frag ments fall No person wishing to avoid slang words and nicknames will oall it " banio. " A Woman's Wish. Would I were lying in a field of clover, Of elover cool and soft, and soft and sweet, With dusky clouds in deep skies hanging over, And scented silence at my head and feet. Just for one hour to slip the leash of Worry In eager haste, from Thought's impatient neck, And watch it coursing in its heedless hurry . Disdaining Wisdom's whi-tles Duty's beck Ahl it were sweet, where -clover clumps at a meeting And daisies hiding, so to bide and rest ; Mo sound except my own heart's sturdy beating Hocking itself to sleep within my breast. Just to lie there filled with the deeper breathing That comes of listening to a free bird's song 1 Our souls require at times this full unsheath ing AU swords will rust if scabbard-kept too long. And I am tired ! so tired of rigid duty I So tired of all my tired hands find to do ! I yearn, I faint, for some of life's free beauty, Its loose beads with no straight string run ning throngh 1 Aye, laugh, if laugh you will, at my crudo speech But women sometimes die of such a greed; Dio for the small joys held beyond their roach, And the assurance they have all they need 1 Items of Interest. The boneless wonder a well done steak. " Put your lips on ice," is the latest slang. Very useful to the tiller of tho soil steers. Highly connected the man in tho moon. In South America the cities are lighted with castor oil. Europe obtains her sole supply of shoe pegs from America. To cure a bachelor's aches enrry to the patient eighteen yards of silk with a woman in it. Under Spanish law a man suspected of crime can be keptia prison for five years before the case is called. Straws show which way the wind blows. You can get the same informa tion from a pan of ashes. It is said that when Jonah saw the whale getting ready to swallow him he looked " down in the mouth." Those young ladies at fairs who sell five cent pin cushions for $3 ought to be arrested for robbing the males. A little boy inquired concerning the stars : " Pa, what are those things up there are they little drops of sun ?" An Irish lover remarked that it is a great pleasure to be alone, especially when your sweetheart is by your side. Constantinople contains 750.000 in habitants. The old eastern empire walls, twenty-one miles in circuit, still surround it. It was the late N. P. Willis who dis covered that King Henry VIII. always married his wives first, and then axed 'em afterwards. A Montana justice of the peace doesn't splurge any when he marries a couple. He says: "Arise I Grab bauds 1 Hitched I Six dollars." A lady living near Cynthiana, Ky., has used the same six pins for twenty years. She is eighty-three, but her neighbors say she is the same old six pins still. In a wrestling match between Lucien Marc and a bear, in Cincinnati, Maro succeeded in throwing the bear, but iu the struggle the bear bit off one of Maro's fingers. Enamored writing-master (to a young lady pupil) : "I can teach you noth ing ; yoa hand is already a very desira ble one, and your I's are the most beau tiful I have ever seen. The coffee plant thrives finely in California, producing a bean of strongly aromatic flavor. It grows best in cen tral and southern California, and its culture is becoming profitable. " I say, Charley," said one friend to another on meeting, " I hear our friend Biown hus been dabbling iu stocks late ly ; has he made anything!" "Yes," says Charley, " he has made an assign ment." After the failure of the late insurrection in Japan, a richly-attired Japanese young lady was found lying dead in a castle moat, with her father's head in her left hand and a bloody knife in her right. The devoted heroine had cut off her father's head, at his command, and then killed herself, that the two might not be taken prisoners. The heaviest court in the United States, in proportion to the number of its judges, is probably the court of ap peals of Kentucky. Chief Justice Lind sey weighs 232 pounds, Judge Elliott 220 pounds, Judge Pryor 208 pounds, and Judge Gofer 201 pounds. The averago weight is 215J pounds. If wisdom and weight go together, then Kentucky justice is all right. There's nothing to exceed the diaboli cal satisfaction a man will take in an nouncing to his wife, after he has got his shirt on, that there is a button miss ing, and the keen delight he feels in seeing her dance around the room after a needle and thread, while she listens to a lecture on carelessness, approaches ecstacy. But look out when she gets that button on, bites the thread off with a snap and commences" There now ." A Bee-Hive In a Church. The Manchester Mirror says: "The Congregational society at Boscawen Plain, N. H. roently held a festival that was broughtr about m a most singular wav. A few weeks since George Knowles dis covered a swarm of beeB inside the finish under the eaves of the church. The construction of the building at that point was such that the bees were en abled to form a box hive about four feet long and eight or ten inohes square, and which was nearly filled with honeycomb. Sixty-nine pounds of honey were found,v and the society decided to make it a source of profit through a festival, which for a moderate admittance fee, gave all who attended, a, n.ioe supper; and plenty of honey,"