HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM., . Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VIII. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1878. NO. 27. . . 1 . ; ' ' ' 8 it To-Pay and To-Morrow. When thou art by, I know not why, I love thee, bnt I love thee not bo deeply) Bnt when thou'rt gone, And I'm alone, I marvel that I held tbee then m ohaaply. Thy imile and talk, Thy glanoe, thy walk, In Tain regret I picture and remember; At well I might Booall the light Of June amid the darkness of Deoember. Ah, crnel fate ! That all too late We lesrn the goldtn value of onr pleasure That it must go Before we know How passing sweet it was to hare our treasure. Preverse are we, Too blind to see Chat idle memories only lead to sorrow. Enjoy to-day, While yet you mayj Why wait until to-day become to-morrow ? Edmund Whitehead Bmrmon. The Tramp's Revenge. A great, fertile hollow, in the midland hills, and one man owned it alL Five hundred acres of level and upland, field and forest; and well might Milly Van Vleeck complain that she oould not even visit a neighbor without climbing over the hills. But old Squire Van Vleeck had no use for neighbors. Was not the land his own, and the homestead and the sawmill itself, half way down the hollow ? Such barns 1 Why, the biggest of them bad scarce ly a rival in the county. There was twenty feet of sheer fall, between the mows, packed as they now were with tons of clover and timothy. What did ho or his need of neighbors ? Not much, perhaps, but that fall, when his ambition goaded him to reach out for the civic honors he deemed the rightful due of so much land and for est, saw-mill and crops, and all that, he tmddenly discovered that the people in the other hollows and on the hills and in the villages, all had neighbors of their own. Such a snub they gave him ! No wonder the grim old squire went lack to his ample homestead and gruw'o I at his patient wife, and even nt Millv, in hpite of her gentleness and her beauty, nui behaved himself, gen erally, like the old bear be had grown to be. The first heavy snows came earlier thnn usual and the cold weather brought with it immunity from the one thing tho squire hated most. Not a tramp had been seen in the hollow for weeks, and no man troubled himself to ask whither they had flown. All the more, however, that bitter af ternoon, did the old man a angry soul stir itself within him when he met, at his own (rata, the most outrageous spec imen of the abhorred race that the whole season had brought before him. ' If other tramps had sometimes borne only the seal of misfortune or of com mon vagabondage, this one was clearly and undeniably a chosen vessel of vice and crime. Plenty of bone and muscle had he, and the very Bwing and spring of his slouch ing gait proclaimed that no lack of mere physical capacity had made him what he was. Can a tramp have in him anything like energy? The squire would have said " No," at any time before he gave that roving ruffian su large and so acrid a piece of his mind and temper. He hail scaroelydreamed of such a chnnge as his words produced. There was some magic in them stirring up evil into a power. The begging whine swelled into a vol ume of hoarse and strident vituperation. The relics of a mind glowered fiercely through the hairy, filthy face. The whole hulking frame seemed to quiver as the tramp strode away, with the meaning of the threats and curses with which the air was blue behind him. Fear is a bitter ingredient to put in the cup of anger, and Squire Van Vleeck was in even a worse humor than usual, ten minutes later, when a somewhat fine-looking young man reined in his horse at the gate, and seemed about to spring from his sleigh. "Good morning, squire' " Don't stop, Gil Morse ! Drive right on I" roared the old man. " Don't stop agin anywherein this holler. Ter father s son needn't quit the road anywhere on my land. Ef it hed't a-been for him, I might a-had the nomination." More than that be said; but while the young man's face deepened to a hot crimson, he controlled his temper suf ficiently to give his horse the reins and do as he was bidden without another word. A tall, strongly-built, broad-shouldered youth was Gilbert Morse, and a year in a city business-house had made cone the less a man of him. H's greet ing at the squire's had been clearly alto gether unexpected, and he pulled his horse to a walk, a moment later, as if he wanted to give the matter some kind of consideration. How he would have driven if he oould have looked along the road ahead of him, just beyond where it entered the hemlock-woods 1 . Distant as were her neighbors, Milly Van Vleeck was too robust and healthy minded a young lady to remain housed np, even in winter weather, and she had never looked rosier or prettier in all her life than she did that afternoon, as she tripped along the frosty road home ward. Away beyond the sawmill, and into the woods she had been, almost aimless ly, in sheer exuberance of youth and high spirits, never dreaming of such a : possibility as danger there and then. Down the road she was ooming, and the frosty snow that orackled under her light feet was not more innocent or fear less. A man in the road I It might be Jake, her father's sawmill hand, or it might be one of the farm boys, or it might be neither. Why should she car ? And yet. as that man drew nearer. Milly walked more slowly, and her heart began to beat, she oould not have told why. Hue oould see mm more distinctly now, and never had her eyes fallen on anything like that before. "I almost wish I had the dags with me she said to herself with a shudder. "What a horrible looking man. 1 thought the tramps were all gone." More and more slowly walked Milly, for, as the hideous human form drew nearer, a pair of blazing, hungry, wild beast eyes gloated fiercely and triumph antly upon her through the matted locks which hung from under the battered felt on his head. " A darter of his, I reckon," growled the tramp. " It's all the same, anyhow; some rich man's gal." A wild scream burst from -Milly's whitening lips, and she tried to spring past him; but his long arm caught her as she went by, and in an instant her shawl was wound around her head. ' "No more screeohin'," growled the hoarse, deep voice, " though there's no body nigh enough to hear ye."r Nobody ? Then why was it that the lash had fallen so suddenly on the good horse Gilbert Morse was driving, just beyond the turn in the road ? A scream from vigorous lungs goes far in frosty weather, and the whip fell more than once. Milly struggled hard, even in that grasp of iron, but her strength was fail itg fast, when a wild, angry shout rang down the road, and the tramp loosed his hold for a moment. "Don't meddle.youngster," he began, s a fiercely plunging steed was Bulled up in a flurry of snow at the roadside. The answer came from the loaded end of a whip, square between his eyes. A thinner sknll might have been cracked by it, and, even on his brazen forehead, the blow brought him to his knees. Milly Van Vleeck was free, and she almost instinctively bounded into the cutter. There was no room to turn and Gilbert Morse gave his trotter the reins, for he saw the tramp was feeling among his rags for something whioh might have danger in it. He longed to stay and finish his work with his loaded whip, but there was Milly. "Ob, Gil I" she exclaimed, "how shall I get home ? ' "The saw-mill road," he replied; "the track has probably not been bro. aen. but the snow isn t deep. "Yes, but it has," said Milly. "They were hauling logs, yesterday." "Safe enough, then," said GiL "But ain't 1 thankful I came along, just then I "Did father tell you I was out this way? I knew you would come to see me first thing. . And how you have im proved !" Milly's excitement was taking a form that could not be unpleasant to her com' panion; but a deep cloud was settling on his race, notwithstanding, and she checked herself suddenly to ask him: "But what can be the matter? He did not hurt you. did he ?" ' No. but your father has, Milly. I cannot stop at your house. Tour father has forbidden me. Something between him and mine, about the election. When we get to the gate you can get out and go in. remaps he 11 get over it soon. and I don't want to make him any worse just now. A wise young man was Gilbert Morse, in spite of his Milly s all but tearful prr testations, for the sight of his daugh ter returning home in such company. aroused old Squire Van Vleeck to the uttermost. It was even an aggravation that Gill so deftly pulled up just long enough for Milly to lump out, and then raised his bat so politely to her father as he drove away. So choked with wrath, indeed, was thf bitter old man that he could not find words to express himself, and, before he had recovered his utterance, Milly was rapidly recounting to her mother her awful peril from the tramp, and the gal lant manner in which she had been res cued by Gilbert Morse. The squire could not' help listening. although it seemed a good deal like a romance at first. But Milly had bruises to show, as well as her torn shawl and disordered dress. and in a moment more the old man was striding up and down the room like a tiger in a cage. " On my own land! in my own woods! My own daughter!" he gasped at inter vals; and then stopped in front of her. with: " Did you say Gil Morse knocked turn down? ' Tes, father." "And saved ye?" "Yes, father; and he brought me borne in his cutter. "And I drove him away like a dog or a tramp this very afternoon!" roared the squire. "I'll drive them all away. I'll shoot 'em on sight. They'll burn me out of .house and home next" Milly's mother bad her arms around her, almost hysterically, but her excite ment was calmness itself compared to tne a most inaicrous irenzy of the old man. Lack of love for his own had never been charged upon him, whatever were his other faults. The events of the afternoon had not. moreover, been of a sort to induoe any unusual quietude. His expected supper and evening at oquire van vieeck s having been so un ceremoniously out out of the anestinn. his afterthoughts equally forbade an im mediate drive home, for that would be ten miles at least Just over the hill, and less than three miles from the Van Vleeck homestead, was a pleasant eountrv hostelrr. and there Gil naturally betook himself for supper and horse-care. This attended to, he said to the land lord, an old acquaintance: "Al, can you keep a secret ?" "Did, once," replied AL "Then lend me your shotgun," said Gil, and, with the request, he added an aooount of his exploit on the road and the differences between himself and the squire. "Can't go to the house, von see, Al, but I'm bound to know if that rascal is loafing around there." "I'd go with you in a moment, if i oould get away," almost shouted the landlord. "Gun? Yes, two on 'em if you want. I wish my wife wasn t sick. It won't do for yon to arrest him all alone, and without any warrant, but try for a chanoe to fill him full of buck shot." It was somewhat dark when Gilbert Morse began to retrace, on foot, the road he had so recently driven over, for the moon was not yet over tho hills, but he felt all the better for Having the double-barreled duck-gun over his shoulder. . "Better than a Pistol for night-work. he said to himself. He did not keep the road up to the homestead, but made a detour through the woods and came out beyond, not far from the saw-milL "Better go on toward the main road, he muttered: "it's early yet, and he's likely to oome in from that direction." "Hullo! he exclaimed, a moment later, as he stood among the sheltering shadows of a clump of trees, "three of 'em. The big fellow's the same one. They're making straight for the saw mill. Bent on mischief not a doubt of it." There was no earthly reason for any sort of doubt. The big tramp had met his two asso ciates, returning from an expedition somewhat more successful than nis own, and they had promptly agreed with him that the circumstances called for the infliction of the extreme penalties known to the laws of their guild. it was already getting well into the evening, and rural retiring hours are notoriously early. JNot -that slumber was likely to oome very promptly to the Van Vleeck family that night, though the squire had calmed down a good deal and was un usually silent. Mrs. van Vleeck had kept very close to her daughter all the evening, and had taken the precaution to bring the two dogs, both large ones, into the house. J. he dogs and the family might be the safer, but how about tramps ? J.he big ruffian, as has been said, was not without some traces of a vicious intellect, and was quite competent to be the leader of a little affair like that. " Set the saw mill first," he said. " All the men folks '11 start for it to put it out. Then the barns, to call away the reel, and we kin work the house a nick and get to the woods and over the hills as safe as so many foxes." So they could, indeed, if no mishap came in to interfere. The house-folks must be in bed now. A match, some kindlings and bits of wood, on the opposite side of the saw mill from the house nothing easier than to start a fire. " Now, boys, for the big barns. We kin wait there till this 'uns well a-go-iug." They made a run for it, but the only reason they were not more closely pur sued, or even fired upon, was that Gil bert Morse deemed it nis duty to stop and scatter the growing blaze behind the saw mill. It was not hard to do, although the fire was beginning to come up very well when the desperadoes left it. The brands could all be kicked into the snow, and there was not a trace of it in three minutes after he get there. But those three minutes I The big barn was better thau either of the small ones, because further from the house and more easy of entrance. It contained no horse, and was not even locked. The three tramps were inside quickly enough, and the big one climbed one of the high mows. " Better light it up here," he said to his frijnds below. " They can't get at it to put it out. ay when. Is the saw mill well a-going ?" -. .'. " Can't say edzactly," growled one of the smaller ruffians, peering through the door. "And there s a feller runmn' scrost the field." " Here goes then I" exolaimed the leader, as he caught up a wisp of hay and scratched a match. jnow, boys, I'm ooming. Make for the shed. We'll work it." A slippery thin a; is a hay-mow, and uncertain footing in the dark. Instead of ooming down as he went up, the big tramp found himself sliding, sliding helplessly into that twenty -foot gulf be tween the two mows. In vain he grasped at the dry timothy aud clover, he did but scatter his lighted wisp among the tinderish masses he pulled down with him in his fall. Down in a half stunned heap, with a vast pile of kindling hay on top of him. to choke and stifle him with its smoke as he limped about in the suffocating dark ness and vainly groped for a way to escape. Bang, bang I One of the smaller tramps went down amid a storm of leaden pellets, but the other reached the shed just as the door of the house swung open, and the two mastiffs bounded out to see what might be doing mere. Squire Van Vleeck and his " hands," old and young, were out in the shortest order, and the female part of the house hold were not far behind them; but it was too late to save the big barn, what ever might be done for the others. Well for the squire's pockets that he had built them some distance apart As for Gilbert Morse he was calmly reloading his old duck gun when the squire discovered his presence. " I'm going in a minute, " he remark ed, ooolly. " Don't be in a hurry. I've put out the fire at the saw mill, and I think I peppered the fellow lying there by the shed. If I'd been a little quicker I might have saved the barn." " So you've been out here this winter night lookin' out lor my property, hey ve? said 'the naif-bewildered squire. "The barn's gone, and no mistake; but we kin save the others." The old squire was just the man to be steadied by an actual calamity; but, while his "bands" were doing what lit tle oould be done in the way of a fire de partment, be strode straight for the two tramps. The one who had been in the way of the buokshot would never answer any more questions, bnt the one the dogs were holding down gave some informa tion. 1 " Where's the man that attacked my daughter this afternoon?" asked the squire, sternly. " In the barn," replied the tramp. But the barn's burning up," said the squire. "So is he," doggedly returned the ruffiian; "and sarved him right, for getting me into seoh a sorape as this." Some profanity there was; but the dogs were taken off, and the man was tied up. . ' Oh. Gil, oome into tne house," were the pleasant words that came to the young man's ears, as he stood looking at the tramp he had shot " Not till your iatner asss me," was the half-haughty response. " Don't be a fool. Gil M jrse. iusl be- cause I am," growled the old man. "Do as Milly tells you, now and hereafter. Go right in. We'll take care of things for ye for a while: but I reckon it'll all be yourn one of these days." And so Gilbert Morse did not go back to the hoetlery that night, and when, a few months later, at the trial of the cap tured tramp, he was asked, "Are you in any manner connected with Squire Van Vleeck f " he manfully responded : " tie is my iainer-iu-uw. But nothing more was seen of the big tramp, not a relio of him, until they re built the great barn the following spring. W. O. Stoddard, in Hartford Timet. Miss Lee and a Kaples Landlord. A letter from Naples to the Columbia (8. O.) Regittera&y t Miss Mary Cnstis Lee, a daughter of General Robert Lee, arrived here a few days ago, :n oompany with some lady friends from Malta, who registered at the Hotel Royal des Etran gers. It appears that during the night of the 8th the mosquito bar around the bed ignited accidentally from a candle which Miss Lee had lighted. In a few moments the flames spread and caught the lace curtains, and the room was soon enveloped in flames, which Miss Lee heroically endeavored to suppress, but without success, and fearing that the hotel might be burned she gave the alarm of fire, which soon was heard by some gentlemen who were occupying rooms on the same floor, when ex-Judge Samuel W. Melton and Mr. A. W. Clark, of Columbia, S. C, were the first who came to the rescue of Miss Lee. aud succeeding in saving her money and valuable jewelry from the flames. The morning following the fire Miss Lee ex pressed her willingness to pay all dam ages, though the fire had occurred from accident The propneter, taking ad' vantage of the lady, demanded 2,000 francs, which was a preposterous and enormous charge of the damage. The friends of Miss Lee at once demurred to thin charge. The American consul. Mr, Duncan, at this place was exoeedinglv kind and protested against the payment of any such sum. The proprietor, now being foiled in his disgraceful effort to overcharge for damage occurring from accident, became insolvent and spoke in a manner which reflected upon Miss Lee. The insult was qoiokly resented, Mr. Clark, of Columbia, 8. C. struck him over the head with an umbrella. In a few moments the proprietor was sur rounded by a number of Italians, who were clerks, waiters and attaches of the hotel, bnt they were met by Judge Mel ton, uoionei John T. nioan, Jr., Mr, D. A. F. Jordan, of South Carolina. and Dr. I. B. Roberts, of Georgia, who, by their oaurage and determination. caused them to stampede and call for the police. A large crowd soon assem bled about the hotel. The proprietor was denounced by Colonel Sloan for his conduct toward Miss J-iee, and chal lenged him to go into the garden and answer for the same with swords or pis tols, which the proprietor declined to accept It would be well for Americans to avoid this hotel when coming to Naples. Words of Wisdom. The great are only great because we are on our knees. After crosses and losses men grow humbler and wiser. All who know their own minds know not their own hearts. He is happiest, be he king or peasant, who finds peace in nis home. The praises of others may be of use in teaching us not what we are but what we should be. ' Do nothing in thy passion; why wilt thou put out upon the sea while the norm is raging. Most of the shadows that cross our path through life are caused by standing in our own light A man may say a thing twice if he says it better the second time than he was able the first Good counsels observed are chains to grace, whioh, neglected prove halters to strangle undutiful children. Our passions are like convulsive fits. which, though they make us stronger for the time, leave us the weaker ever after. Health is the only nohes that a man ought to set a value on; for without it all men are poor, let their estates be what they will. . , v Whatever you would not wish your neighbor to do to yon do it not unto him. This is the whole law; the rest is a mere exposition of it . " The goodness which struggles and battles and goes down deep and soars high, is the stuff of which heroism is made, by whioh the world is salted and kept pure. It is the seed whioh bears fruit in martyrs and makes men nobler man ineir nature and demi-gods and tne prophets of a better tune. A Piece of Impudence. Professor Johnson, of ; Middletown University, was one day lecturing before the students on mineralogy. He had before him rmita a, nnmhnr nf inui. mens of various sorts to illustrate his subject A roguish student, for sport, slyly slipped a piece of brick among the stones. The professor was taking up tne stones, one aiter another, and nam ing them. " This," said he, "is a piece of gran ite; this is a piece oi feldspar, eto. Presently he came to the brickbat Without betraying any surprise, or even onanging bis tone oi voice: " This," he said, holding it up, niece nf imnndenoe." Thara m a shont of lftn crhkoi an A the student oonoluded that he had mad little by that tnoK. TIMELY TOPICS. Property on Sixth avenue. New York, has been injured (so it is claimed) to the amount of $60,000,000 fey the elevated railroad. Herr Strousberg. the European ex- railroad king, has offered his creditors three cents on a dollar. Their claims amounting to $16,000,000. An interesting black worm, an inch long, that falls to pieces on being handled, has appeared in Colorado, and taken to boring through the roots of the corn. A young woman residing in the neigh borhood of Headley, in England, recent ly arose in her sleep, and, taking a car ving knife from the kitchen, proceeded to the fowl house, where she out off the heads of six fine cocks and hens. She afterwards slaughtered five pet rabbits, and wound up her somnaoibulistio ex ploits by mortally Btabbing a favorite donkey. L. D. Atchison, who fell a distanoe of 200 feet from the trapeze bar of his bal loon at Elmwood, 111., being killed in stantly, was a veteran aeronaut and acro bat, having replaced Donaldson with Barnum's show. Some five years ago, while exhibiting in Kentucky, his bal loon burst at an elevation of 2,000 feet, but he clung to the pieces and escaped with his life, though he was badly in ured. A Texas. fMich.) girl tried to get in to a rear window of the school-house the other dav. when the sash fell and held her fast about the neck. Several men across the street heard her scream, but supposed it was children at play, and it was ten or fifteen minutes before she was seen and her unconscious body re leased. It were long before indications of life was discovered, and several hours before the child regained oonsciouness, An electric alarm has been recently designed which may be fixed to an ordinary clock. It is so arranged that when the hour hand of the clock tonones a button an electric circuit is completed; the minute hand passes over the button without effect There is a series of holes for the different hours, into any one of which the button can be pushed according to the time at which the alarm may be desired. The completion of the electrio circuit may ring a bell or sundry other alarms. Karl Piloty, the great historical painter, recently heard from a brother artist that Dr. Trettenberg, an old phy cioian of seventy-three, Piloty's fnend for many years, had said that the at tempts on the emperor's life were the legitimate fruits of the emperor's mas sacres in 1848, when he was in command of the Prussian troops. The painter denounces the physician, who was sen tenced to eight months detention in a fortress, which at his age is next thing to a sentence of death. When Piloty appeared in court he was hooted and hissed. The total area of Denmark, says an English exchange, is 6.900.000 acres; 5,200,000 acres are under cultivation, of which 300,000 have been added during the last ten years. The area is divided into more than 200.000 different proper ties, of which 170,000 are each owned by a different proprietor; and out of 280,000 families not living in the towns only 26,000 are cottagers. It will thus be seen that in Denmark, as in France, the sou is divided among a number of small proprietors, and not, as in Eng land, accumulated in a few hands. .During the last ten years an extraordi nary increase in the breeding of oattle and a corresponding decrease in the production of grain has taken place, Two thirds of the imports and exports fall to the share of England and Germa ny, Sweden and Norway ooming next. A Mathematical Prodigy. Gilbert Miller, a lad nine years old. living at Keokuk, Iowa, has recently exhibited most remarkable powers in mathematics, being able to give answers to difficult problems with scarcely any hesitation. He is a strong hearty boy, not overly fond of school, and differs only in this one respect from other children of his age. His parents are averse to any display of precocity and will .not allow him to be questioned. But enough has already been elicited to show his wonderful faculty. He prob ably inherits this gift from his father, Prof. Miller, of the Keokuk Mercantile College, who has long made a specialty of rapid commercial calculations. We here present a few examples given recently to the lad as a test The answers were forthcoming at once, with out any apparent effort: Cube 74. Answer 405,228. Multiply 9,876 by 7,117. Answer 70,287,492. Divide 678,632 by 823. Answer 2,069. How many times will a clock tick in a year of 365J days? Answer 81,557, 600. Find the fifteenth term of a geometri cal progression first term five, ratio three. Answer 23,914,845. These results were found to be exactly correct Other questions involving diffi cult fractions were also given and an swered, but we cannot represent them in type, r Birmingham (Iowa) MJnter prise. Presidential Summer Resorts. A Washington letter says: Presi dents John Quinoy Adams, Jeffer son, Madiaou and Monroe used to go to their respective rural homes for an "outing" during the heated term. An drew Jackson went down the Potomac to the "rip-raps," a fort on the edge of the ocean, or rather in it, whioh was begun in his day and has never yet been finished. Polk, Fillmore and Pieroe hired summer residences on Georgetown heights, Buchanan occupied aa a sum mer residence a house at the Soldiers' Home, and his example has been follow ed in turn by Lincoln, Johnson, Grant and Hayes, HnlilU of the Eskimos. Let us examine the more immediate environment of the Eskimo their house. It is composed of a hillock of turfed earth, of square form, recalling some what our military fortifications. It is entered by a low door giving aooess to a narrow and very low passage, in which the Greenlander himself, notwithstand ing his small size, is forced to bend down. The single apartment to whioh this passage gives access, and the floor of which is lower than the surrounding ground, is ventilated by an orifice in the upper part It is lighted by two open ings on each side of the door and Her metically closed by strips sewn together of a sort of goldbeater s skin made of the intestines of the seal. This kind of immovable glazing sifts into the apart ment a sufficient light, but appears from without altogether opaque. The furniture consists of a sort of camp-bed which oconnies the entire half of the apartment, provided with sealskins, and ou which the entire family pass the night, after having taken off their day costume, and put on another more am ple dress. On the ground a stone basin, said to be of serpentine, tne lorm oi which resembles that of a fish, is filled with seal oil, in which are steeped sev eral wicks. The flame which rises irom this vessel gives a sufficient light, and maintains the confined spaoe at a high temperature. The cotton wicks come from Denmark, as also tne onemioai matohes whioh the Greenlanders con stantly use to light their briar-root pipes, which, with their tobaoco, their aloohol, and their coffee, are sent them each year by the Danes. Their costume is maae almost enureiy of sealskin. It consists, in the case ef the men, of a shirt (Danish), above which is placed a woolen vest The pan taloons are of hairy sealskin; the boots, under the pantaloons, of sealskin leather. Gloves of fur, armed, when neoessary, with bear's claws, blue spectacles against the wind and the reflection from the snow complete the accoutrement. The oostume of the women is not want ing in elegance. The hair is raised a la Chinotse on the top of tne neau, ana bouid into a sort of vertical chignon, tied by a colored knot. A well-fitting blouse of European material, trimmed with fur, is provided with a hood, in which the mother carries, when neces sary, her latest born, as the opossum does her yonng. The women wear very tight breeches of sealskin and high boots reaching above the knees; red. embroidered with yellow, after marriage; white, embroidered with green, among unmarried girls. Their arms consist of bows witu wuicn they shoot arrows pointed with bone or iron and similarly madeharpoons, which they throw from the hand. When the harpoon is to be thrown into the waiei it is attached to a cord provided at the other end with an inflated seal-bladder which acts as a buoy and prevents the loss of the wounded animal, which would run away into deep water with their harpoon. Their other apparatus are iron fish-hooks, wooden baits repre senting fish, colored, and very well imi tated. To these we may add cases of skin which they put on the paws of the dogs when the cold is very intense; leathern muzzles to put over the snout of the dogs, smoothing-irons of fetone, knives identical with those which iron tanners use to dress skins, aud intended for the same purpose. This will give an idea of all that the Greenlanders have to help them to struggle against the in clemency of their native climate. Before concluding what relates to the surroundings, one word about tne all' mentation. The word Eskimo is not the name which they give to themselves, They oall themselves Innuit (the men); so true is it that under all climates hu man vanity prevails. The name Eskimo (eater of raw fish) is a nickname given them by their American neighbors. It is not, however, so well merited now as it was last century, at the time when Crantz observed them. They continue, nevertheless, to eat the lard sent them from Denmark and also the lines of the seal. The rest is eaten cooked. Na ture. Popular Superstitions of the Turks. The interpretations of dreams gives rise to much cogitation, and furnishes a frequent topic of conversation for Turks, meu and women. Fire means sudden news, as water forecasts a journey. A person who has a reputation for explain' ing areams unas a reaay welcome every where in the East. The Evil Eye is feared by all classes. It is to divert harmful admiration from her own beau ty to her ornaments that a Turkish bride deoks herself with diamonds pasted on chin, cheeks and forehead; for this that she shrouds her face with a glittering veil of thin, copper-colored strips of tin foil; for this that she sits under the aski a festooned canopv of artificial green boughs, with bunches of dyed feathers aud shining metal balls completing the deoorations. It is for this that every Turkish baby has its little muslin skull cap, adorned with a medallion of pearls. And if you happen to say "Ne guzel tchouajouK ' (What a pretty child I) you are instantly asked to spit in its face or to say "Mash-Allah !" to correct the mischief of your words. Divination is often made at holy wells, by observing the surface of the water. At Eyoub, the sacred quarter of Stamboul, near the mosque where the sultans are girt with the swerd of Os man, in lieu of coronation, is a famous well. It is to be found in the back garden of a poor, tumbled-dcwn house belonging to the Khodja who takes charge of it ft is an ordinary round welL about a yard in diameter. A low coping-stone runs round it, over which the votaries at Dame Fortune's shrine stoop low, to catch, if they may, some image in the depths below vouchsafed for their enlightenment. All Mussul men, before looking in, reverently hide and stroke their faoes with their open hands, and as is their manner in praying for some favor. llelgravia Magagine, He btood barefooted on the seashore in the moonlight and turned his poetic ear to oatoh what the wild waves were savitg. but when a wandering crab an propriated one of his toes for a tooth pick, he keeled over and let out the other nine in a shadow dance that just made tne goaa scream. . . Items of Interest. " Green pears" Young married folks, A lazy cook. One that "fritters" away her time. Rome has 865 churches a church for every day in the year. A leading physician says heat is the sole eause of cholera infantum. " Yon can't do that again," said a pig to a boy who had cut off his tail. Why are good resolutions like fainting ladies ? Because they want carrying out. A boy says that when he eats water- t melon his mouth feels as if it were in swimming. Leprosy has made its appearanoe in the United States on the Atlantic and Paoiflo coasts. Why is a philanthropist like an old horse ? Because he always stops at the sound of woe. Two or three centuries ago there were a hundred hospitals for lepers in Eng land and Scotland. "Here is your writ of attachment," said a town olerk, as he handed a lover a marriage license. "Maria, I'm almost disoouraged. How many times have told I you not to say tater, but pertater ?' Monday I dabbled in stock operations! Tuesday owned millions, by all calculation! Wednesday my Fifth-Avenue palace beganf Thursday! drove out a spanking bay spanf Friday 1 gave a maguifioent ball) And Saturday " smashed," with nothing at all. Many a young man's fate has been adversely settled by his persisting in walking his sweetheart down shady side streets when she expected to be taken to an ice-cream saloon. The barber is an independent chap, and, like all strapping big fellows, can alwavs hold his hone. Alta California, Great fellow, though, for getting into scrapes. Philadelphia Bulletin. Says the New York Commercial Ad- vertiaer; "Lightning gettetu over a good deal of ground in a very short space of time." Bnt we'll back an American youth against the field when he flops out of the water without stopping to comb his hair, and legs it along the bank witn policeman two lengths penmu. Rochester Union. The greatest eel-pond in America is on the farm of James N. Wells, in the town of Riverhead, Mass. It covers five acres, and is now so full of eels that they can be raked out with a garden rake. Two years ago Mr. Wells put 2,000 dozen of eels into the pond, intending to have them undisturbed for five years. They have increased to millions. They are fed regularly every tniru uuy vu " horse feet," a peculiar shell-fish. The eels know when they ore to be fed, and the stroke of Mr. Wells' whip against culls thousands of them np to dinner, although anvone else may pound away all day without any enecs. uuo ui these shell-fishifasteued to a strong cord and thrown into the water, may be drawn out in a few minutes with hundreds of eels clinging to it Roses Their Increase. "According to De Prouville, a French writer, there were, in 1814, only io' varieties of roses, and the advantage of multiplication by seed is sufficiently evinced by the fact that mere are now more than six thousand varieties, the poorest of which are much better than any which existed at that day. Among the earliest cultivators of roses from the seed were three Frenchmen Dnpont, Vilmorin and Descemet. The former was the gardener of the Empress Joseph ine. When the allied armies entered Paris in 1815, the garden of Descemet contained 10,000 seedling roses, which Vibert, in his anxiety to secure from de struction, succeeded in carrying to the interior. In England very little attention seems at that time to have been paid to the production of new varieties from seed, and the English relied very much upon the continent for their choice roses. Now, however, they are abundantly re deeming their reputation, and many fine varieties have been produced by the English rose-growers, at the head of whom stands Rivers, whose efforts are seconded by Wood, Poul, Lane and others. They are still, however, com pelled to yield to the French cultivators, for to these we are indebted for our fin est roses for Lamorque, Solfaterre, La Reine, Chromatella, the new white Perpetuals, Souvenir de Malmaison and others. The varieties of roses became increas ingly great after the introduction of the Bengals, Noisettes, Teas and Bourbons all these classes producing readily from seed, and in endless variety. There is a willingness to cast asi' e the old for the new, and however much we may re gret this disposition, for some bid and truly deserving favorites, we cannot feel willing to denounce it, for it exhibits a gratifying evidence of a desire for im provement, and the existence of a spirit of progress, which, dissatisfied with things as they are, is continually striv ing after nearer approaches to perfec tion. New England Farmer. President Polk's Cocktails. Judge Carpenter, of California, tells this anecdote of James K. Polk's term of the Presidency: Polk was a temper ate but not abstinent man, of very regu lar habits. He rose early at the White House, and had his servant bring, punc tually, a very large oocktail in a tall glass, of which he drank just one-half and left the other half for his return from his morning walk. On this walk he required the company of Marshall Polk, Iiis nephew. Young Polk was also fond of a oocktail, though his uncle did not know it and would not counte nance it However, they would hardly have left the house on the daily occa sion, when Marshall, pretending to have forgotten something, would slip bacfc and drink nearly all the remaining half of the cocktail and pour in some water. After returning from the walk, President Polk repaired to his chamber in a brown political study, and seizing the tumbler gulped down the water and sediment, aud then exolaimed: "Paughl" This oontinued with regularity, and the cheat was never found out Polk now lies be fore bis dwelling in Nashville, interred in his yard, and Marshall Polk baa not been heard from since the beginning o f the war,