II fie f fl ' iiiih v Jitcik . f t 1 - ' ' 1 ' ' - 5 HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEHANDDM. Two Dollars oor Annum. VOL. X. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1880. NO. 8. " Strike While the Iron's Hot." Strike while the Iron's hot) Strike and with a will ; lie is no skillful smith Who let the iron eliill. Ere tlie Iron harden, strike, Shape it to vhnt shape you liko, To the scythe or knile or sword, To slay or heal or mow the sward, Strik while the iron's hot, Strike with hand and heart; Quickly turn the bar, And smite on every part. Bring the sledge down with a swing Till it makes the anvil ring. So great master workmen wrought, So struck the iron while 'twas hot . So, when the time is ripe To net, or think, or say, The. precious moment seize Before it pass away. Shapen the action to your ends, As the smith the iron bends ; Let the word and lit the thought Promptly into deed be wrought. Strike while the iron's hot, Or do not strike at all; Strokes the cold bar will break, Not fashion, when they tall. If you're slow in arm and brain, All your labor will be vain; The quick ol head and quick ot hand May rise from serving to command. John Francii Walter . THE TURN OF AN ACCIDENT. It was sx o'clock of a crisp October morni'jjt, pnj Jolm Boyd, farmer, rous ing '.rom hi9 sound nig Fit's sleep, sprang o'jeofbed with the alert readiness of a man who knows the value of the first hours of the day. It was a tavern bed from which he jumped; home and its cares were many miles away ; but a lon ride lay before him, and he washed and dressed briskly, as one in haste, hum r1!". a ol-riial air meanwhile, as be came a man who felt himself in good spirits, and bad ample reason for doing so. For, be it known, this year had proved the best for farmers since John had besn his own master. Harvests had been large, prices high, and John, on his way back from the annual mar ket, carried a sense of freedom and lib eration at his heart from the final ex tinguishment of a mortgage on his farm a mortgage which had pressed as heavily on his conseitnee as did the burden of Christian on his shoulders The. burden was lifted now ; and, fur t her than th..t, John carried in his fat red wallet two fiundred dollars, over and above, toward the expenses of the next yenr. He had never been so ' fore handed ' before, and the sensation was ajiyul one. 'My neck is out of the collar now,' lie muttered to himself as lie brushed his thick brown hair. ' I thmld be a tool indeed it I put it in agiin. No more mortgages for me!' Then, his toilet completed, he ran downstairs, two steps at a time. Farmer-like, his first visit was to his horses. They were munching their corn satisfactorily; and after a look or two, and a pat, John returned to the inn, where a jangling bell announced breakfast. It was smoking on the table a substantial meal of the kind univer sal in taverns thirty years ago; and John Boyd, whose appetite was of the kind proverbially said to accompany a good conscience, was doinn it ample JUSti.-e. when a sudden instinct led him to thrust hi hand into the inner pocket wuiuii itPtct iue two hundred dollars. The wallet was gone! In the suddenness of the shock, John felt himself pule, and then flusn pain fully, as he confusedly tried to remem ber if he had taken out the wallet, and when. Under his pillow that was it. He rocoiiected distinctly, orsoit?eemed, putting it there, for security's sake, 'j-n ne went to bed ttie night before. nth a muttered excuse, he left the table and hurried upstairs. The door of his room stood open, and a maid servant was putting fresh sheets on the bed, tho soiled linen lying in a heap on the floor. Toward this heap John hurried and began turning it over. Have you lost something, sirP' asked the maid. John straightened himself up to an swer. He had not noticed the maid be fore, though she had waited upon table at supper. Now fie observed that she was young and rather pretty fair, with a trim, sltnder figure, beautiful glossy hajr, neatly dressed and braided, and a pair of sweet, apprehensive blue eyes. He.' voice was soft,, too; and she had a shy. modest manner which suggested an idea cf refinement. All these facts Farmer Boyd absorbed in a flash, and instinctively noting, weighing, estimat ing, by that wonderfully rapid process of which the human mind is capable, while yet his thoughts were full of his money and his loss. 'Yes. I am looking for my wallet, which I left under my pillow. Did you find it?' J1 . ' The girl's face blanched to a deadly whiteness, and her eyes dilated as with sudden terror. 'No, sir,' she said, her voice trem bling and sinking away as she spoke. I didn't see any wallet.' John looked uther distrustfully; but there was something in the pale face which disarmed suspicion. I'd like to search the bed,' he went on. 'It may have slipped under the mattress.' Together they turned the mattress, but no wallet was visible. That off horse of yourn has got his shoe loose somehow,' announced Mr. Nash, the landlord, at the door. 'I thought I'd better tell you, so's you could stop to the blacksmith's as you pass, and get him to put in a couple of nails. Why, what's the matter!" John explained. The landlord looked very grave. He whistled softly to himself for a minute, with his eyes fixed on the tumbled bed-di.-g; then lie went to the stair head and called his wife. Presently they came in together, the landlady a face very red and troubled. Such a thing never happened in my house before,' she protested. 'But there's only one person been in your room since you came besides yourself, and she's the person you must reckon with,' pointing to the maid, who. with white cheeks and downcast eyes, leaned against 'the wallas if awaiting sen tence. O.i, indeed, indeed I didn't take It! I ik-vw uw any wallet," she said ; but her voice was drowned in Mrs. Nash's louder tones. 'And pray who else took it. An vmi suppose? Who else had the chance? Answer me that. It serves me Just right for taking in a girl with ho recom menda girl I didn't know nothing about, not so much as her name, or where she come from, or who her folks are. Five weeks tonnorrow. that'a nil the time she's been in t.hn hnimn oir but this is the end of it. It's the last time I'll ever have n. beln r Hnn't kn. all the long and short of, so you needn't feel alrald to stop with us again no, nor none of your friends, either; and as for uui, tun sue pacKS tnis day.' ,' Id better go for the constable, hadn't I" if vou re sum ft. mm tinW tho Pillow you put it,' suggested the land lord. 'Oh. don't, nlefiqe; nlnncn ilnn'f. ' pleaded the girl, weeping violently. ' Give the gentleman his wallet back, then, and perhaps he'll let you off.' ' 1 can't. I haven't cot it. f nmr saw it. Oh, please believe me. Don't send me to jail .' she urged. The 1 and lad V onlv nnswernri hv n sound expression of disgust. And throwing her apron over her head, the poor girl wept in silence, saving no more. John had held bin altercation, sharply eyeing the parties concerned in it meanwhile. The Nashes he knew something about. They were of good reputation as far as he was aware. The maid was a stranger to mem, as to mm; out spite ol the err cumstances, and her manner, which was naraiy less suspicious, he could not bring himself to believe her guilty. He was not a hastv man. and he was a iust one, with a kind heait to back his tem perate judgments; and after a few min utes' reflection he made up his mind what to do. ' I can't swear that I put the wallet under the pillow or anvwhere else.' he said. ' I'm pretty sure that I did. but my thoughts about it are confused somehow, nnd it may be that I left it at Bolton, where I slept on Tuesday. I don't want no injustice done on mv ac count. So don't cry like that 'address ing himself to the girl. ' I'll tell you wnat i n no. uet tlie bay shod during the day, will you?' to Mr. Nash' and if you'll lend me a saddle I'll ride back to Bolton and make inquiry there. If I find the money, well and good; if I don't, it'll be time enough to talk fur ther nbout it to-morrow.' 1 I'm sure it is very good of you to take so much trouble,' declared the landlady. ' But whether or no, the girl don't stay lure. I'll have no suspected thief in my house.' ' There'll bo no thing to suspect her of if I find the wallet,' rejoined John, dryly. 'Don't give the poor thing a bad name till you know that she de serves it.' Then he left the room, un mindful of the look of gratitude which shone upon him from the blue eyes of the girl, who had dropped her apron, and gazed after him till he was out of siht. His reflections were not agreeable as he retraced his footsteps over the dusty highway traveled but yesterday v:ith so light a heart. The loss ot his money meant a great deal to John Boyd. The pressure of anxiety seemed to settle again upon his shoulders, as he thought over tho probabilities of its non-recovery. 'But I won t give in without a light for it,' he thought, grimly, as he urged on his horse. Miles seemed doubly long when measured by a heavy heait, and what with dust, heat and the continual effort to clear his mental con fusion 83 to where and when he last had seen his wallet, the young f irmer was fagged and dispirited enough before noon was fairly come. He slopped to dine at a little tavern attached to a toll-gate, nud with some vague hope that the money might have been picked up on the road by some one, mentioned his loss. The toll-keeper shook his head. ' Bolton's your only chance,' he said. ' If 'twas on the road vou dronned it. there's na likelihood that you'll ever hear of it again. The dust's eight inches deep, 1 should say, and there's been three big droves of sheen and one of bullocks along since yesterday, so if your wallet was a-lying tuere, they must have trampled it under pretty thor oughly. It is buried deep enough, you may be sure, unless, which is just as likely to happen, some one ha picked jt up and made off with it. Your chance is a slim one, I reckon.' Cold comfort this; but John was forced to agree with the opinion. De spondingly he rode through the after noon, scanning the way as he went; for, despite the toll-keeper, a faint hope still lingered in his heart, though the track, deep in dust, and churned and trampled by the crowding droves, presented a sorry field for either hope or discovery. He had gained the top of a long hill, from which Bolton was dimly visible, wheu a movingobject far ahead caught his eye, and he rose in his stirrups in order to see more clearly. As he did so his horse made a false step, stumbled, and threw him forward in the saddle, so that his head grazed the horse's neck. It was in this position that a tiny object, a patch of red not over an inch square, in the dust beneath, caught his quick eye. His heart gave a little leap; then he called himself a fool; but all the same he dismounted to examine. Already a random hoof-stroke had buried the red patch from sight, but John recollected the spot, and stooping, dug and scooped till again it became visible. His fingers recognized a solid substance. Trembling with excitement, he continued to dig; another second the object was uncovered, lifted out, and with a wild, incredulous whoop of joy, John Boyd held in his hand his wallet, buried deep by the liurrving herds, and uncovered for one passing moment that his eye might detect it, and no other. Except for that luckv stumble, he too would have ridden over the lost treas ure, and never dreamed what lay be m ath his horse's feet. 'And some folks say there ain't no God !' was his mental comment, spoken half aloud. Then for John Boyd's re ligion, though a homely, was a true one he bent ins head and said a few words of thanksgiving; after which, jumping on liis horse, he took the backward route, eager to tell his good fortu le and exonerate the poor girl. who. as he now remembered with self-reproach, must have passed a painful day under the stigma of undeserved suspicion. The heat was yielding to evening iresuness, ana ne urgea ins Horse, im patient to set matters straight; but. with his best endeavor, it was after eleven before he at last drew rein in front of Nash's hotel. He was expected, that was evident, for lights were burn' ing. and both Nash and bis wife hur ried uut to meet him, wearing faces of lugubrious length, which only In part changed to cheerfulness when they heard of the recovery of the wallet. 'There, what did I tell yottr" cried thohUBband. 'Haven't I ben assaying and a-saying ail day that likely as not this Scare would turn out all for noth ing? And you wouldn't listen to a word, but just kept On to that poor thing inside there, and she's nothing to blame all the time. 1 declare, it's too bad the way women act to each other and folks calling them " the softer sex!" A man would be ashamed to be so nara. Well, do tell! and so the money was a-lying there in the dust all the time! Well. I'm mighty clad, for your sake and ours t x. Go right in, sir, and wife '11 give you some, supper. I'll see to the horse.' " Mrs. Nash waited on the meal in grim silence. She seemed only half re joiccd at the denouement. ' It's mighty queer,' she remarked, as she set the last dish on the table. 'I don't feel as if we'd got to the bottom of it yet. Why didn't Lucy deny more positive?' 'But she did,' said John, between two mouthfuls; 'she said she hadn't got it.' 'Whv, course she said as much as that. You didn't expect her I o say that she had got it, did you?' rejoined the landlady, with a fine scorn. 'But she didn't speak up violent and bold, as you d expect an innocent girl would. nut sue was innocent all tne time, you know.' I ain't so over sure about that, re plied Mrs. Nash, with a shake of her head. ' It's a queer business.' Hurrvins out to the barn next morn ing in the best of spirits, a low siehing sob called John's attention to a bench outside the kitchen door, where sat a hgure crumpled up into a forlorn little heap, in which he recognized the pretty maid of the day before. She wore her bonnet, and a bundle lay beside her. Her lace was hidden on her arms. which were crossed on the back of the bench. ' Why, what's the matter?' said John, turning back. The girl looked un with a start. ' I beg your pardon,' she faltered. 'I'm just going. I didn't mean to stay so I An a 'Going? Where?' 1 1 don't know where,' she said, de jectedly. 'I'd try lor another place, only tuere doesn t seem much chance of getting One without any recom mend.' ' Do you mean to say that they are sending you nway from here?' Yes.' ' But, in the name of goodness, why?' ' 1 don't know. Mrs. Nash says she don't like to have servants about who are suspected of stealing.' The blue eyes filled again as she spoke, and she h A her face. 'By George! I never heard of such injustice in my life,' shouted John. ' Now, Lucy, if that's your name, you just sit still where you are Don't stir or move till I come back. I'll see Mrs. N ish. I'll put things right.' To out things right seerns easy enough to a trong, hearty man, with justice and argument on his side, but that is because he do's not calculate properly on those queer hitches and crotchets of human nature, especially woman nature, which have no relation to justice and fair dealing, and are unaffected by ar gument Mrs. Nash proved impervious to John's choicest appeals. Her mind was made up ; she ' didn't watt to hear no more on the subject ;' finally, her temper rising, what business was it of his. she demanded, what help she kept. or if sjie kept any help at all? He'd got his pocketbook back; accounts were squared between them; there was no timber call, so tar as she could see.whj he should meddle with her concerns. The upshot of the interview was that John flew out of the kitchen with his face as red as fire, tackled hi3 horses. threw valise and feed-bag into the wagon, flung the amount of his reckon ing on the table, and addressing Lucy, who. pale and terrified, stood, bundle in hand, prepared for flight, called out: ' Now, then, my good girl, you've lost one place by my fault, and I'm blamed if 1 don't offer you another. Will you jump into my wagon and go home with me? My old woman's been talking this long piece back of getting a smart girl to help along when she's laid up with the rheumatics; so you're just the one we want She'll treat you fairly enough, I'll be bound, and you shall have whatever you were getting here. And if you behave yourself vou'll be well used, not turned out of doors for nothing, I'll engage to that; it isn't the way up in are parts,' with a vindictive look at the landlady, who stood rigidly planted in the doorway. ' We don't set up to be extra Christians, but there's a little honesty and decency left among us, which is more than can be said for all places. Well, wh.it do you say P Yes or no. There's my hand on it if it's yes.' He held out bis broad palm. Lucy hesitated, but for a moment only. ' Yes, I will.' she said. ' I've nowhere else to go. and you seem kind.' Another moment and they were driv ing off together down the maple-shaded road, whose yellow and crimson boughs danced overhead against 'October's bright blue weather. There were peace and calming in the fresh stillness of the early day. Gradually a little color stole into Lucy's pale cheeks, and John's hot mood gave place to wonted good humor and chee. ' You've had no breakfast, I'll bet,' he said, with a smile. 'And no more have I. I was so mad with that woman that I couldn't swallow a mouthful, but now I be-in to feel sharp enough. We'll stop at the next tavern, oouthwick. frn't it? Five miles and a half. Can vou hold out till then?' 'Oh, yes, indeed,' with a grateful look out of tne blue eyes. John s tone grew more and more friendly. ' We'll have something hot and hearty there,' he said. 'You look pale. I guess vou didn't sleep any too much last nifrllt. ' 'Oh. I couldn't sleep at all. Mrs. Nash told me that I must po the first thing In the morning, and I felt so badly' ' I shouldn't think you would want to stay with a woman like that.' 'But it's so dreadful to have nowhere to go to. And besides' She stopped abruptly, with a look like terror in her eyes. 'Have you no friends, then?' asked John. ' No.' The tone was very reserved : but reserve could hardly fail to melt under so sunshiny a presence as John Boyd's, and before the long day's ride was done he had won from her the main facts of her story. Lucy Dill washer name. Ilermother had married for the second time when Lucy was twelve years old, and three years ato, when the girl was barely fifteen, had died, leaving her to the protection of her stepfather. ' She didn't know what sort of a man he was,' said Lucy. 'And he wasn't that kind of man when shi was alive. I was too young to notice much, and mother always put herself between him and me when things went wrong. After she died it was dreadful. . Elkins that's his son came home to live. He never lived there before, and and he' Wanted to marry you?' Yes t and his father said I must. But I was afraid of him of them both. And people began to come to the house bad people, not good and I began to suspect things.' ' What kind ot things r It was not easy to get an answer to this Question. In fact, the terrified and inexperienced girl had hardly dared to formulate her own fears; but' John gathered the idea that coining or other unlawful practices were going on, and Lucy, only half comprehending, had un derstood enough to startle and frighten her into making her escape. She had effected this by night six weeks before. and her great dread was of being dis covered and forced to go back. John reassured her as well as he could. ' You 11 be just as safe at the farm as if you were in an iron safe,' he pro tested. But, spite of his assurances, the lurk ing terror never left Lucy's eyes, though weeks sped safely by and nothing oc curred to aiarm ner. Jivery sudden noise maae ner start; tne sight of a strange figare on the road blanched her roses to paleness. Except for this fear fulness, she proved an excellent ' help ' in all ways, quick, neat-fingered, sweet tempered. Old Barbara wondered how ever the farm had got on without her, and John in his secret heart wondered also. It never should be without her again on that he waa firmly resolved. ' Lucy,' he said one day, three months after she became his inmate, ' I'm tired of seeing you jump and auivtr and scut tle upstairs whenever the peddler or the ragman comes along, it s bad tor you, and it worries me almost to death. Now, there's just one way that'll make all sate, and set your mind at ease, and that is, that you just marry me out of nana, ana give me tne right to protect you. Once my wife, I shouldn't cure if your stepfather and all the gang came after you; let them lay fiuger on you at their peri!, while I'm alive andhave the right to interfere. Will you, LucyP It's the best thing to bo done, trust my word for it. I don't mean to pretend that I'm doing it for your sake entirely," added John, 'with a br.md smile, " lor I ain't. I want you for my own sake the worst way, but both ways it will be a gain; so, unless you have something against me, .say 1 es," Lucy, and we 11 have the parson over to-morrow, ana make all sale Will you, LucyP' 'Oh. how could I have anything against you?' replied Lucy, with the sweetest blush. ' Well.' declared John, a moment after, as he raised his head from his first long lover s kiss, ' now I forgive airs. Jsasur tiarper s aaxar. Victoria's frown. As described by hermaiestv's mineral ogist, the crown of England's queen is quite a bauble, it wasmadc by Messrs Kundell 5c Bridge in 1838, with jewels taken from old crowns, and furnished by command of her majesty. It consists of diamonds, pearls, rubies, sapphires and tmeralds, set in silver and gold; it has a crimson velvet cap with ermine border, and is lined with white silk. Its gross weight is thirty-nine ounces, live pennyweights, troy. I lie lower part of the band above the ermine bor der consists of a row of 129 pearls, and the upper part of the band of a row of 1 12 pearls, between which in front of the crown is a larae sapphire partly drilled purchased for the crown" by his majesty, King George IV. At the back is a sapphire of smeller size, and six other aupphires three on each siae between which are eight emeralds Above and below the seven sapphires are fourteen diamonds, and around the eight emeralds 128 diamonds. Between the emeralds and the sapphires are six teen trefoil ornaments, containing 160 diamonds. Above the band are eight sapphires surmounted by eight dia monds, between which areeight festoons containing 148 diamonds. In the front of the crown, and in the center ot a dia mond Maltese cross, is the famous ruby said to have been given to t award ill calledVthe black prince, by Don Pedro, king of Castile, after the battle of Va- rj, near Vittorio, A. D., 1367. This ruby was worn in tho helmet of Henry v. at the battle ot Aginrourt. A. u 1415. It is pierced quite through, after the Eastern custom, the upper part of the piercing being nlled by a small ruby Around the ruby, in order to form the cross, are seventy-five brilliant dia monds. Three other Maltese crosses, forming the two sides and back of the crown, have emerald centers, and con tain respectively 132, 124 ard 130 bril liant diamonds. Between the four Mai tese crosses are four ornaments in the form of the French fleur-de-lis, with four rubies in the centers, and surrounded by rose diamonds, containing respectively eighty-five, eighty-six and eighty-seven rose diamonds. From the Maltese cross issue four imperial arches composed of oak leaves containing iza rose, table and brilliant diamonds; thirty-two pearls form acorns, set in cups contain' inr fifty-four rose diamonds and one table diamond. Tho total number of diamonds in the arches and acorns is 108 brilliants, 1 16 table and 559 rose diamonds.- From the upper part of the arches are suspended four large pendant pear shaped pearls with rose diamond caps, containing twenty-four very small rose diamonds. Above the arch stands the mound, containing in the lower hemisphere 304 brilliants, and in the upper 224 brilliants, the zone and arc beinar composed of thirtv-three rose dia monds. The cross on the summit has a rose cut sapphire in the center, sur rounded by four large brilliants and 108 smaller brilliants. Tucker, a lunatic, assailed Wood with a butcher knife at Sandusky, Ohio. Wood was unarmed, but he threw the madman on the floor and clutched his throat. TuckeT struck again and again with the long b)ade, and Wood choked wjih all bis nikht. The fight lasted half an hour, an ended in the death of Iwth men one l.Tpm stabbing, and the other from chokin FOR THE FAIR SEX. Fashion Notes. Stockings are now made in all the colors nnd combinations of color that enter into other fabrics. The gold and silver laces follow closely the patterns of the Mechlin and torchon laces, and are neither pretty nor becoming. Many marazin collars are still worn. both of white and black lace. Two plaited pieces of "dantelle de Pau" make a very pretty collar. French thread hose are open-worked in fanciful designs on the instep, as are the fine silk hose intended to be worn with the low cut shoes and fancy slip pers. Silk kerchiefs bordered with lace in serting, a band of silk jardine embroid ery, another band of lace inserting and a border of lace are the latest fancy for the neck. ' Among the many colors in silks are changeable " gorge de pigeon," with blue heliotrope and blue, nre color and water green and mauve with gray; these silks combine admirably with satin. Beaded fichus of nearly the same shape as those old-time crotcuetea shoulder afghans worn by ladies in the house and under their wraps, nre among the imported Parisian novelties for street costumes. Straws lined in various colois in shirred silks or satins are fashionable. and the outside may be trimmed with ribbons the same shade ot the linings, but richly brocaded in all kinds of flowers in rich hues, while clusters of blossoms to match those of the brocade are placed in front or at the side of the crown, or perchance under the upturned brim. ITnnqfi alinnera are cut verv low in front, and have a right and left bow; that is, the loops and cut steel orna ments are di lerent for each side of the slipper, while the bow in the middle may be of a third arrangement still. The loops may be of black velveteen or of any shade ol ribbon matching either the hose or some portion ot the toilet. Newi and IWolei for Women. Twelve States have now extended the right of suffrage to wonienso far as to vote lor all school oinciais. Manchester, England, has a society of female painters to which the other sex is not admitted, even at the yearly exhibitions. An American woman writes to the English queCn that an American farm er's wife works ten or twenty times as hard as.an English Iarmer s wife. Some time ago Miss Hester Parker, of Bangor, Me., pressed a number of very pretty autumn leaves and sent them to the Queen of Spain at Madrid. Re cently, Miss Parker got an autograph letter from the queen, acknowledging the receipt of the leaves. A lady passenger on the ship Rotter dam, which arrived at flew xork re cently, was detected by a customs in spector with forty yards of broadcloth wrapped around her body. She was in charge of two physicians, who were es corting her to the hospital, "seriously ill." An American lady in Paris, anxious to inaugurate a novel entertainment, hit upon the idea of a " sap-bubblc party." I he guests found tables furnished with soap and warm water, and clay pipes gayly bedecked with ribbons, and tliev vied with each other in the agree able pastime of blowing bubbles. The more serious business of eating and dancing followed. A Female Hat Black, Her face is her fortune, ns many another s has been. 1 he best pictured woman in America, write the New York coriespondent of the Boston lfei aid. not even excepting Maude lsniin- eouibe andiMary Anderson, is a pretty girl at the cashier's dejkof a fashionable millinery establishment in the metiopo lis. She poses as a hat block before ihe camera several times every week of her lite. Ihe fashions shown in ttie plates used by lulf the milliners in the United States, as well as in the mil linery pictures m three of the leading fashion weeklies, are all pro vided by this concern. They are ob tained by photographing the fiats that are regarded as be?t illustrating the new styles. Ibis girJ,as you Eee, has what may be called a negative face. Her features are small, regular and without any strong characteristics, making a face that is both pretty and commonplace. With such a face, any possible style ot hat or bonnet is be coming, and she is recognizable in all the pictures. Her lace is her fortune or, at least, it is good for about $10 a week. A Terrible Duel. A sickening account of a duel in Mo rocco is given .by a correspondent of tbe Republique Franuiise. Two young men ot noble birth were paying their attentions to the daughter of a neigh boring chief, and aa she showed equal favor to both of them, it was arranged by mutual consent that they should meet in single combat and fight a duel to the death. The con ditions of the duel were that they should meet on horseback, each of the combatants being armed with a rifle, a revolver and a hunting-knife. They were placed a hundred yards apart, and upon a signal given by one of the seconds, they set their horses at full gallop and rushed at each other. For a few moments tli9 spectators could see nothing but a cloud of dust, from out of which were heard two succes sive reports of a rifle, and then a third, followed by the neighing of a horse. When the dust had cleared away, a shocking sight met the gaze of the spec tators: one of the combatants, coneea'ed behind his dead hortc, was taking aim at his adversary, who still remained in the saddle. The latter spurred his horse and m de it rear, the noble be.ist receiving in his chest the bullet meant tor his master. Ihe ridei, as soon as lie was dismounted, rushed forward to grapple with his adversary, but a second shot rractured his left shoulder. Nevertheless, he retained sufficient strength to discharge two chambers of his revolver, both shots taking effect. A hand-to-hand combat then ensued, the two adversar ies, neither of whom was able to stand, stabbing each other repeatedly. When the seconds and spectators at last in terfered the two were picked up dead one with his teeth firmly set in his ad versary's cheek, while the latter's hand was thrust into a gaping wound in the other's chest. TISELT TOPICS. The Oermantown Telcaravh says that since the law to prevent tiie spread of contagious diseases among the cnttie oi New Jersoy was passed by the legisla tiirfl nf that State, little has been heard of the pleuro-pneumonia which at one time was quite prevalent tuere. xne report of the State treasurer states that the gross sum paid last year in the proper enforcement of the law was 923,431.81, of which veterinary surgeons received $14,624, and other sources of expense the balance. Eighty head of affected cattle were killed, for which $954 were paid by the State. Wabash. Indiana, has walked in ad vance of many larger and older towns by introducing the e'jctrio light in its streets. Four electric lamps of 3.000 candle power each went into commission recently. Tho lamps, suspended mid way ot tne iron nagstatt on tne court house, which towers two hundred feet above the business part of the town, were furnished with electricity by a No. 5 generator driven by a seven-horse power engine. According to contract the machinery was to light one mile in diameter from the court-house, and be equal to a gas-burner 2,680 feet from the light. The council placed men at different parts of the city to observe, and they reported satisfactorily. At Arbana. five miles north, the light was said to be beautiful. The Detroit Free Press says the teat has given general satisfaction. Some Italian physicians have been in vestigating the peculiar condition of the miners who worked in the St Gothard tunnel. They have discovered that the labor in remote galleries engendered in the intestines of the workmen animal cule resembling trichinre "The gene ral appearance of tho St. . Gothard miners," says the London Times, " par ticularly those of them and they nre in the majority affected by the malady in question, is described as deplora ble in the extreme. Their face3 are yel low, their features drawn, eyes half closed, lips decolored, the skin is humid end tho gait difficult. If they at with appetite they cannot digest, and when wine is taken it is invarinbly re. ected. Let a man bo as strong as he may, three or tour months' work in the tunnel ser ously miures his health, and at the end of a year, of a little more, te is a confirmed invalid." The inve3ti gators have given the worm the name of anemia ankylostonia, and the malady arising from its presence is said to be epidemio in Egypt and Brazil. According to tho report of .the board of trustce.3 of the ce'ebrated Greenwood cemciery, Brooklyn, for 1879, there wore 231 lots sold last veal, making a grand total of 23.076. Theto were 5.132 burials. making an aggregate of 199.747.- The gross receipts amounted to $453,207.0ti, The gross disbursements, including in- ve-tments which aggregated $271,000 aroounled to $440,908.28. Thegennral fund for the improvement and permanent cure of the cemetery is now ,5fi5,2iil .31, nn incieif.e during t he year of 13,479.15. During the year 345 lots were enclosed, nnd 190 monuments and 482 headstones were erected. The report says: The interment in Greenwood, in a private lot, of a favorite dog, elicited much com ment, and was the occasion of many re monstrances, addressed to the trustees, requesting them to prohibit such inter ments in tho future. The intensity of feeling exhibited could not but bo re spected, and tho board accordingly passed a resolution prohibiting hereafter all interments of brute animals in the cemetery. Tricks olLlttle Llciilinnts. Tho large elephants, after btingmade to fctand on their hind legs and elevate their trunks, were allowed to go back to their stalls, while the keepers went to a small shed, partitioned off in one coiner of the room, and brought out five small elephants, three of tho Afri can species, which had almost attained their full growth, and two small Asi atic elephants, c illed Venus and Adonis, aged respectfully four and six years. These two are the most amusing of the whole- collection and there seems to be no end to the tricks they go through. The moment they came out one of the' keepers took up a large dinner bell and called "Don!" Upon this Adonis, the smaller ot the two, slowly walked up and, catching the bell by his trunk, be gan to ring it. The keeper then turned away to give his attention to Venus, when Don began to tire of his work ana the ringing became fainter and fainter and presently had almost entirely stopped, when the keeper slipped up and struck him across the nose with his stick. At this Don gave a howl and began to ring the bellfuriously, grow ing louder and louder every minute, until at length the keeper returned and held out his hand to take the bell. But the little eleghant was angry now and would not give it up, and kept ringing harder than ever, as though determined that since they had wanted him to ring it so much he would give them enough of it, nor did lie cease until the keeper walked up and forcibly wrenched it from him. Then the keeper took Venus down to a place where a double cable was stretched across the stable, about a foot from the ground, bhe was commanded to get on there and walk across, which she did, moving very slowly and per forming the feat without a single slip Next Don was called up and commanded to go through the same performance. This little elephant got upon the rone and began to walk, when the keeper turned his back away. Suddenly, when Don had got about one-third of the dis tance, he looked around and seeing the keeper not looking he quickly supped his hind feet off the rope on to the ground and thus propelled himself auicklv to the end and hurriedly disap peared into his shed. This sly trick created great merriment among the on-lookers. It was found, however, that this trick had been taught him by the keeper himself, who is preparing Don for a clown's part, whose business is to burlesque things. The keeper had purooselv turned his back awav. as that is the signal tor Don to go through his trik of deception. Mr. Craven, the trainer, says the elephant has more in tellect than any other living animal, and believes they can be taught to appear on the stage, taking parts in a drama the SRine as individuals. Philadelphia limes. During 1879 forest trees were planted on vb.oou acres ot land in Minnesota. In Dreams. She comes to me in dreams, Just as ot old; With form ol fragile grace, The sweet remembered tnoej Even her garment's fold la just the same In dreams she comes to tne, - Only in dreams. She oomes to me in dreams, No change is there, No gathering shade of gloom, No hint of coming doom, Is on her lace so fair. In dreams she comes to me Only in dreams. She comes to me in dreams, When glittering light Shall drive earth's clonds away And with its welcome ray, Bring the long-looked-for day, Heaven's morning bright Then will she come to me; Or must it ever be That I her face shall see, Only in dreams T A. Hallowell, in the Boston Journal. A, ITEMS OF INTEREST. Jail birds are confined in guilt cages. Boston Transcript. A cat recently died in Philadelphia in her twenty-fourth year. Pheasant brown is one of the most fashionable spring colors. A household with a baby is founded on a rock. New Haven Register. The home stretch Putting up a clothes line. Ntw York Nttvs. Thejewel for a frilled shirt-bosom is a diamond in the ruff. Picayune. Ships nre frequently on speaking terms, and they lie to. Dcston Tran script. There's the sickle, the bicycle and the tricycle, but the most worthy of these is the sickle. Rhinebeck Gazelle. Walking boots are all cut high and made of French kid foxings, with fine satinlaine uppers, constitute the choice walking boot of the season. When lovely woman hears strange news What lorui of speech so efficacious To give expression to her views, As this plain English " Goodness gra cious!" Mr. Allbort, the retiring traffic mana ger of the English Midland railway, has occupied his plnco for twenty-six years, at a salary of $20,000 a year. He now takes a seat at the board worth about $1,000 a year, and is presentni with an honorarium of $50,000. His family is to receive a service of plate, and his por trait is to be painted. Tho unseemly haste with which some persons go for the shoes of dead officials waa. ludicrously illustrated in Washing ton whea Judge Hays died. About mid night a mercher of Congress and his wife were aroused by a ring at their door. A note was ham.Cd to the halt awake member. He reiuri. ' Judge lavs is dead, advise me pfelftly what to do to secure the place." THeV answer was: " uetter not disturb tne President to-night; it would I e u little more decent to wait until , utter the funeral." The Common Law. What is called the "common law," is, in the united htates, with some modification, the same as the "com mon law of England." The phrase means, in lact, ancient custom, us de clared by the courts. Suits are con tinually being brought, in which arises some question of law or equity that has never belore arisen. 1 here is na act or statute law that applies to it. Ihe ccurt then decides the matter accord ing to the general principles of justice. The l ud ae, ;n announcing his decision. lays down a rule that, under certain cir cumstances, a certain lesult follows. This decision, if not reversed, becomes a guide and rule for all inferior courts, and usually for those of equal dignity. l he whole body ot Filch decisions forms the common law of England. When a lawyer is preparing to argue a ciue, lie searches through mo volumes of reports to Had decisions upon simi lar cases. Of course, there are rarely two suits where the facts aro entirely alike, and consequently the lawyer on one side undertakes to prove that the decisions cited do, and the opposing lawyer that they do no:, apply to the case on trial. The phrase usually employed to show that tho common-law principle is an cient is "whereof the memory ot man runneth not to the contrary "that is to say, nobody can prove that at any form er time the law or custom was differ ent. The common law governs only when there is no special act. A statute supersedes or reverses common law. Indeed, tho statute is usually passed for that purpose; nnd when it is repealed tho common law comes into force again. Our fathers came to this country from England, and naturally brought English laws and customs with them. When they separated from the mother coun try, they retained the old laws, ana bui't the new ones upon them. Tho New York constitution of 1777 adopted as law within that State the common law of England, and the statutes also as they stood on a certain date, so far m they were applicable to the new State. Aa our national customs have de parted further and further from those of Ureal li it tin, the common jaw oi me two countries has be.ome different. Yet, even tow, there are no very wide differences, and decisions by English judges are often cited in our courts as establishing the law. Countries which do not supphment their legislation with what we call com "ion law, are governed by a "code." This is a collection of laws and princi ples, to which all cases, as they arise, are referred. Fi ance is governed by the Code Napoleon, whiih also forms the basis of legislation in a general way in some other European countries. Our Stale of Louisiana, which came to us by purchase, has always been gov erned for the most part by a code, which was modified from theCode Na poleon. But the English common law is also in force even in that State. The result of living under the com mon law is generally satis factory , be cause, as a rule, the judges of both Eng land and America have been men of wisdom and justice. But they have not all been of euuu! intelligence and integ rity, and their work is, of course, not ill perfect. Chicago Lidqer.