VOL. LVI. HAKTER, AUCTIONEER, REBERSBURG. PA. J C. FCPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Next Door to JOURNAL Store, Millhkih, PA. HOUSE, ALLEGHENY STREET, BELLEFONTE, - - - PA. c. 6. McMILLENi PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. Bus# to aud from all Trains. Special rates to witnesses aud jurors. 4-1 IRVIN HOUSE. (Most Central Hotel Id the Cltyj Corner MAIN and JAY Streets, Lock Haven, Pa. 8. WOODS CALWELL, Proprietor. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers on first floor. JQR. D. H. MINGLE, Physician and Surgeon, MAIN Street, Millhkim, Pa. JOHN F. UARTER, PRACTICAL DENTIST, Otfiee in *2d story of Touriiusou'i Gro cery Store, ON MAIN Street, Miltheim, Pa. BF kintf.R. a FASHIONABLE BOOT A SHOE MAKER Shop next h>or to Foote's Store, Main SL, Boot*, StK-es and Waiter* made to order, and sat isfactory work guaranteed. Repairing done prompt ly and cheaply, aud in a neat style. S. R PKAI.B. H. A. MCKIK. PEALE &; McKEE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office opposite Court House, Bellefonte, Pa. C. T. Alexander. C. M Bower. A BOWER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office to Carman's new building. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street. QLEM.ENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Northwest corner of Diamond. P U. MASTING*, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, 2 doors west of office formerly occupied by the late Arm of Yocum A Hastings. C. HEINLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre county. Spec al attention to Collections. Consultations In German or English. F. REEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. All hus'ness promptly attended to. CoUectlon of claims a speciality. j. A. Beaver. J W. Gephart JgEAVEK & GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street, North of High. A. MORRIStfN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Woodrlng's Block, Opposite Court House. S. KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Consultations In English or German. Office In Lyon's Building, Allegheny Street. JOHN G. LOYE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. # BELLEFONTE, PA, 4 Office in the rooms formerly occupied tef tts late W p. Wilson. Sir Ipilliriti Soutrmtl CLOUDS. Soft and Aecoy clouds alcove me Scarcely seem to move at all. Yet arc rolling, drlftlug, shifting, Free from ev'ry sort of thrall. Sun-lllumlneil, gray and silver, Banked against the azure sky— On such couches bathed tu nectar, Might the gods from heaven lie. Twisted iuto shapes fantastic, Frowuing cliffs aud lowers high, How 1 oft have gazed upon them With a beauty-raptured eye! Those light forms, so freely floating, All my soul with longing till, Kill U with a languid longing, That is out of reach of will. Fill It with a restless longing, For what things I know uoi well; Fill It with a mournful longing That no words can ever tell. TIIE INVISIBLE 1.1 HI.. Having decided to finish the year in Italy, I looked around me for a dwelliug, to be had upon reasonable terms. I" found what I wanted in the outskirts of the ancient city of Lucca, one of the loveliest spots on the peumsula. The house was quite new, and in every way desirable, while the rent asked for it was absurdly low. I questioned the agent in regard to this circumstance. Having my money safe, he could afford to be truthful. "There is nothing against the house itself, but the grounds have the reputa tion of being haunted. Strange sounds are said to be heard near that ledge of rock in the park youder. We Italians are superstitions, signor," he added, with a bow, "but I presume to an Americau a ghost is no objection." "So litttle," I replied, laughing, "that I am obliged to you for the opportuni ty of making the acquaintance of this one." Such superstitions are common in Italy, and the agent's story made very liltle impression on me. During a tour of inspection around the premises I came upon the rock m question. It consisted of two walls of granite, perhaps 20 feet in height,meet ing at an oblique angle, covered over their greater extent with wild vines. It struck me as an exceedingly beautiful nook, and appropriate for my hours of out-door lounging. On the following morning, provided with a book and a cigar, I went thither, and disposed myself comfortably in the shade of an olive. I had became absorb ed in the volume, when I was startled by the sound of a voice near me. It was evidently that of a woman, wonderfully soft and sweet, singing one of the bal lads of the country. I could distinguish the words as perfectly as if spoken at arms' length from me. I sta: ted up in amazement. I had no visitors, and my only servant was an old man. Nevertheless, I made a thorough exploration of the neighborhood, and satisfied myself that there was no one in the grounds. The only public toad was half a mile distant. The nearest dwell ing was directly opposite, across a level plain—in sight, but far out of ear-Bhot. In a word, I could make nothing of it. 'I observed that when I left my origi nal position under the olive, the voice became instantly silent. It was only within the circumference of a circle of about two yards in diameter that it was audible at all. It appeared to proceed from tbe angle between the two walla of rock. The minutest examination failed to reveal anything but the bare rock. Yet it was out of this bare rock that the voice is sued. I returned to my former station in downright bewilderment. The agent's story occured to me, but even now I at tached no weight to it. I am a practical man, and was firmly convinced that there must be some rational explanation of the mystery, if I could but discover it. The voice was certainly that of a young girl. But where was she? Was the old fable of the wood nymph a truth after all? Had I discovered a dryad em bosomed in the rock? I smiled scorn fully even as these fancies ran through my head. For more than half an hour the sing ing continued. Then it ceased, and though I waited patiently fqr its renew al, 1 heard no more of it that day When I returned to the house I made no mention of the matter, resolving to keep it to myself until I had solved the mystery. Tfie next morning at an early hour I returned to the spot. After a tedious interval the singing began again. It went softly and dreamily through one verse of song then ceased. Presently I heard a deep sigh, and then in a slow, thoughtful tone, the voice said: "Oh, how lonesome it is! Am Ito pass my whole life in this dreary place?" There was no answer. Evidently the person was only soliloquizing. Could she hear me if I spoke, as I heard her? supposing her to be a liviug at all. I determined to hazard the experiment. "Who is that speaking?" I asked. For some minutes there was no reply; then in a low, frightened whisper, the voice said: "What was it! I heard a voice." "Yes," I answered ; "you hear mine. 1 spoke to you." "Who are you?" asked the voice trem ulously; "are you a spirit?" "I am a living man," I returned. "Can you not see me?" "No," answered the voice, "I can MILLHEIM, PA.. THURSDAY, MARCH 23,1882. only hear you. Oh, where are you! Pray do not frighten mo. Cotno out of your concealment and let mo see you." "Indeed, I don't wish to alarm you," I replied. "I am not hidden. I am standing directly in front of the spot whence your voice seems to come.' "You are invisible," was the tremb ling answer. "Your voice comes to me out of the air. Holy Virgin! you must bo a spirit. What have I done to de serve tlna?" "Have no fear of mo, I entreat you," I said, earnestly. "It is as much of a mystery to me as it is to you. I hear you speak,but you are otherwise invisi ble." "Are you a real living being?" asked the voice, doubtfully. "Then why do I not see you? Come to me. I will sit here. I will not fly. "Tell me where I am to come," I said, "Here in my garden iu the arbor." "There is no arbor here," I returned, "only asolidroek out of which you seem to be speaking." "Saiuts protect me," answered the voice. "It is too awful. I dare not stuy here longer. Spirit or man, farewell." "But you will come again," I pleaded "Let me hear you speak once more. Will you not be hear at the same hour?" "I dare not—but yet your voice sounds as if you would do me no harm. Yes, I will come." Then there was utter silence—the mysterious speaker hail gone. I return ed home in a state of stupid wonder, questioning myself if I had lost my senses, and if the whole occurrence was not a delusion. I was faithful to my appointment with the voice on the fol lowing morning, however. I had waited but a few moments, when the soft, trembliug accents broke the silence, saving: "I am here." "And I, too," I answered; "I am grateful to you for coming." "I have not slept the whole night," said the voice, "I was so terrified. An I doing wrong to come?" "Are you still afraid of me?" "Not exactly, but it is so strange." "Will you tell me your name?" "I don't know—Lenore. What is yours?" "George," I answered, imitating her example and giviug my tirst name only. "Shall we not be friends, Leuore?" "Oh, yes," answered the voice with a silvery peal of laughter. Evidently its owner was getting over her fears. "Don't be offended, Ueoxge. It is so strange —two people who cannot see each other and perhaps never will, mak ing friends, "I will solve the mystery yet, Le nore," I answered, "and find out what you are. Would you be gh/1 to see me in my proper person?" "Yes," she replied, "I should like to sec you." "And 1 would give a great deal to see yon, Leuore. You must be very beau titul if your face is line your voice. "Oh, hush!" was the agitated answer. "It is not right to speak thus." "Why not? Do you know, Lenore, that if this goes on, I shall end by fall ing in love with you, though I never see you." "You are very audacious," was the reply. "If you were really horo,before me, I should punish you for it. As it is, I am going now." "But you will come again to-morrow, Lenore?" "If you will promise to be more iis creet, George, yes."* - As may be imagined, I did not fail to keep my engagement with my invisible friend. For many consecutive days these strange meetings continued. As absurd as it may seem, the voice was be ginning to make a powerful impression upon me. I felt in its soft toucs the manifestation of a sweet, refined wo man's soul. True, I had make no progress towards unraveling the mystery. Nevertheless, 1 was confident that through some in explicable dispensation of Providence 1 had been permitted to hold communion with a real, liviug woman, from an un known distance. She ha i net yet told me more than her first name, and I did not press her for more as yet. Her only answer to my question as to where she was, was "In the garden." She did not seem capable of grasping the fact that I was not invisibly near her. She seemed content with matters as they stood, and for the present I could do no more. I made no one my confidant as to my daily occupation: first, because I knew that I should be regarded as a madman upon my mere statement of the facts, and, next because I shrank from having an auditor at my mysterous conferences. Will it be believed? I was in love with the invisible girl—in love with the .voice! Absurd, of course, but lam not the first man who has fallen in love with a woman's voice. Besides I was confi dent that it was only a matter of time before I should see tne girl in person. One day, towards the end of summer, we had been talking, as usual,and I had said: "My stay in Italy is nearly over, Lenore." "Ah," was the quick reply, "you will leave me, George." "No, Lenore." I answered, "not if you wish me to stay." "How can I help it, George, whether you go or stay? I have never seen you— -1 never KHALI HOC you. What am Ito you?" "All the world, Louore," 1 aiiHwored. "Ours has been a strange experience. Without knowing each other an people ordinarily do, we have yet been dose friends. You are more to me than a friend. I love you, Lenore." There was a quick, suppressed cry,llo other reply. "Be truthful, Lenore. Toll me your heart. If you love me, trust me to dis cover your whereabouts and come to you. If you do not, say it and I will spare yon the pain of meeting me, and let us never speak again." There was a pause; then she tremu lously said: "1 have never seen you. but my heart tells me to trust you. I know you are good and noble, and I am willing to leaye my -fate 111 your bauds. Yes, George, 1 love you." Even as she said the words she utter ed a cry of alarm, Then a gruff man's voice spoke: "Go to your room, Leuore As to this villain with whom you have been holding these meetings, we shall soon tiud him and punish him as he deserves. Search for the rascal, Antonio, and briug him to me." There was a quick trampling of feet and the sound of crushing shubbery, as if the men were breaking through it, Then another man's voice spoke: "He has disappeared, your excel lency." "Very well, we shall dud him yet. He cannot escepe me. Thiß is a tine piece of business, surely—the daugh ter of Couut Villani holding secret meetings with some common vagabond. Lenore shall take the veil." "Yes," I cried, "the bridal veil.count. 1 shall pay my resjiects in person to day." Then leaving them to get over their astonishment as best they might, I re turned to the house iu high spirits. The name, Count Villaui, had given me the clew to the whereubouts of Lenore. The dwelling of which T have spoken as situated across the plain and opposite the rock, was the residence of Couut Villaui. I had met the old gentleman in the city aud formed a speaking ac quaintance with him. As neither of us had mentioned our private affairs, I had 110 means of connecting his daughter with my invisible girl. That afteruooti I presented myself to the count, and after amazing him with my story, which a few tests convinced him was true, formally proposed for his daughter's baud. As my wealth and social position were well-known, he offered no objections and his daughter was sent for. As she entered the room. I saw that my idea of her hail been less than true. I had never seen so lovely a woman,nor one who has so perfectly embodied my highest conception of grace and beauty. Her dark eyes, still wet with tears, met iniue enquiringly. "Lenore," said I, "I have come as I promised." "George." she cried, with a radiant smile, "is it you?" "Are you disappointed?" I asked, "am I what you expected?" "You could not be more " she an swered naively, "you are no less." "Now that we meet as solid and mate rial beings," I continued, are you wil ling to ratify the contract we made when we were only voice, Lenore? Your father gives us permission." It may be supposed that I received a satisfactory answer, when the good natured count found it discreet to turn away his eyes during my reception of it As to tne strange circumstance which was th 3 means of uniting us, a series of tests revealed a remarkable acoustic property in the rock, by which persons standing in certain positions with refer ence to it, were able to hear each other with ease, more than a quarter of a mile apart. It is a matter-of-fact solution of the mystery, but Lenore and I are none less grateful for the good oflices of the rock. Fertiliser Experiment*. Nitrogen is the most costly ingredient used in commercial fertilizers, and the most diflicult at the present time to ob tain. It would be wasteful, therefore, to use a greater quantity than is really needed, and such waste is exceedingly costly to the farmer. As it is found that less nitrogen is required, the price of fertilizing has been gradually drop ping in market, and this gain is greatly to tlio benefit of the farmer. It enables him to buy more, and to use more with a fair prospect of obtaining a profit. One objection to the use of guano, he believed, was that it contained a larger percentage of nitrogen than is needed and consequently a larger proportion than farmers can afford to p%y for it. A saving of one per cent in the amount of nitrogen in a ton of fertilizer will cheap ed the cost about four dollars. The most profitable way to use fertilizers is in connection with stable manure, the fer - tiliz :r b6ing compounded in such away as to make the manure and fertilizer to gether just meet the wants of the crop to be grown. Exactly how the nitrogen is taken by plants, is not explained, but it is evident that soil which is well filled with the tops and roots of clover and other plants contains a large amount of nitrogen that the growing crop will in some way appropiate. How the Spanish Ladies Nhoot. While her Majesty was at Madrid the great banker and railway contractor, Salamanca, gave a hunting party in her honor at his seat, near All>ecete. All the royal family except the young Queen whose health is not satisfactory, went. Prodigal expense was gone to by tie; banker to receive them worthily. The hunt was a battue of easy butchery. This is how the august, royal and noble personages hunted. The Comte de Sal amanca has a forest in his domain. Large spaces are cleared in it. In the centre of these spaces pavilions or stand houses like those one sees at race courses are erected. They are beauti lully painted and adorned with sylvan trophies. The royal family was taken to one of these stand-houses and its diff erent members piesent took up their stations according to the order of court ly precedence. The courtiers stood on the steps behind. Those who were least distinguished were higher up. In front of each to whom a gun was given there was a forked support on which to rest the muzzle. But no courtier was to fire until his betters in the front row had had enough of sport. A band of guitar players had a tribune lx> themselves and played lively airs. The musicians were dressed like Figaro in "The Barber of Seville." Then tHbre were wood rangers, whip pcrs-in, Huntsmen and sylvan guards, tbe nobis of whose horns contrasted sharply with the frivolous music of the guitars. While the former instruments were blowing loud blasts a herd of deer rushed before the pavilion, followed by dogs. The King, his mother, sisters, Prince Philippe of Braganza, fired. The ex-Queen knocked down two stags; the ex-Princess of the Asturias, four, and the other two Infantas three each. When this herd had swept by the ex-Princess of the Asturias got on horseback to be ready to follow the second herd, which she and the King chased tlirougli the forest. They hod small fowling pieces slung to their holsters and sometimes took flying shots. I daresay the whole scene was picturesque and stirring. English or American taste would be shocked if Queen Victoria aud her daughters, or the ladyhood of Fifth ave., indulged in sport of this kind. Span iards like to see their senoras aud sen oritas intrepid huntresses. It is a sign, they say,of old race when a woman hand les a fowling-piece deftly. Shop keep - era' and aitisans daughters have few opportunities for using guns. Velasquez painted the beautiful little Coudessa de Haro, daughter of D>n Louis de Haro, equipped for a battue or butchery such as was organized the other day at Al becete for the delectation of the Queen Mother and the Infantas. She had on a inousquetaire or cavalier gray felt hat and feathers,a steel cuirass damascened, a farthingale, strong-soled buskiu9. and a gun in her baud, which she manipu lated in a soldierly manner. This por trait, which I saw eight years ago, is still before my eyes, so vivid was the impression that it made on me. There is nothing theatrical in the Condessa, who is a pocket Diana. She moans to do business with her gun. A French lady when she goes out to shoot has an opera comiqne look. If high heels are the fashion she wears them, although they are detestable for walking over soft ground. One sees that she has not the taste for sport and only thinks of it as affording an opportunity to appear in a new, striking, original and saptivating toilette. Six Thousand Years Old. The Ashmoloan Museum, at Oxford, eoutains one of the oldest monuments of civilization in the world, if. indeed, it is not the very oldest. This is the lintel stone of a tomb which formed the last resting-place of an officer who lived in the time of King Sent, of the second dynasty, whose date is placed by M. Marietta more than six thousand years ago. The stone is covered with that delicate and finished sculpture which distinguished the early periods of Egyp tian history, and was immeasurably superior to the stiff and conventional art of the latter ages of Egypt which we are accustomed to see in our European mu seums. But it is also covered with something more precious still than sculpture, with hieroglyphics which show that even at that remote period Egyptian writing was a complete and finished art, with long ages of previous development lyiug behind it. The hieroglyphic characters are already used, not only pictorially and ideo graphlcally, but also to express syllables and alphabetic letters, the name of the King, for instanoe, being spelled alpha betically. In the hands of the Egyptian scribes, however, Egyptian writing never made any further progress. With the fall of what is called the Old Empire (about B. C. 3500) the freshness and ex pansive force of the people passed away, Egyptian life and thought became fos silized, and through the long series of centuries that followed Egypt resembled one of its own mummies, faithfully pie serving the form and features of the past age, and of a life which had ceas ed to beat in its veins. Until the in troduction of Christianity the only change undergone by Egyptian writers was the invention ot a running hand, which in its earlier and simple form is called hieratic, and in its later form domotic. Drugged Again. "Well, Catharine Davis ?" "I'm not well, at all, sir; and what lady would be after passing the night on the hard benohes here!" "Catharine, you are charged with drunkenness. "Then the charge is false, sir. I was no more drunk than that stove." "But you were arrested while trying to make a speech on the street, ami you couldn't walk down here." "Well,your Honor,l wasn't drunk. On my way home I stopped into a grocery to buy some soap and the clerk offere d me a glass of cider. In five minutes after drinking it I was as crazy as a loon." "Do you think the cider was drug ged?" "Of course it was." "There wasn't any drug in this, was there?" continued the Court, as he held up a whiskey-bottle taken from her pocket the night before. "Bless me, I never saw it before 1" she gasped. "But it was taken from your pocket.' "Then some one put it there to con vict a poor woman who lost her hus band by a tornado nineteen years ago. Oh, sir, if yon only knew how I had struggled. "I do know, Catharine. Yon have struggled with the officers at least four time* in the past year." "But I was drugged, sir." "That's the fourth time you've told that same story. Come, Catharine, you must go up." "For one day. sir?" "No—for thirty." "Then I'm a dead widow, sir. I can never stand the disgrace of it. Can I send out and buy some poison ?" "Brjah will fix all that Please fall back into the corridor, and I hope this will he a lesson to you." Bijah gave her an apple, promistalher his photograph, and so cheered her up that she forgot all about the poison, and entered the omnibus singing "The Jug I Left Behind Me." A Pennsylvania Stage. 0 '•All aboard for the Liniestoue Ridge Limited Express!" Travel between New port, on the Pennsylvania Railroad, and New German town, Pennsylvania, a dis tance of thirty miles, is conducted by means of the primitive stage ooach. The order to board came from the lusty lungs of Zaek Rice, wtio comes of a family of stage drivers, his father, Zach ariali Rice, Sr., and his brothers before him having driven the same route for "nigh on to forty years or more." The "expre a s" is an uncouth, box-like ve hide, with blood-red panneled siles running gears the color of yellow ochre, and an enormous leather boot in the rear for s'oring mail pouches, Saratogas and other luggage. Sixteen passengers can be packed like herrings into the coach which is sometimes dragged by four horse® and sometimes by two. Five miles toward sun-set New Bloomfield is reached, a country town, with a popu lation of seven hundred and sixty, which requires four newspaper to keep it alive— a Hreculean task that none but news papers could accomplish. Not long ago a reorganization and election of officers of the People's Freight Railway Company occurred. This oom pany was chartered by the last Legis lature under the old Constitution, and is one of the many projected lines from New York to the West. The surveyed route crosses the Delaware at a point near Trenton, N. J., and passes through the counties of Bucks, Montgomery, Berks, Lebanon, Dauphin, Perry, Hun tington, Bedford, Somerset, Westmore land, Allegheny and Washington, in this State. By reason of the fact that over fifty thousand dollars were expen ded in grading a portion of the road the charter has been kept alive. The fin ancial crisis of 1873 stopped work, but recently new life has been infused there in. The officers eleoted are H. H. Bechtel, president;* Jacob L. Markel secretary; James H. Graham, Jr., soli citor; 0. H, P. Ryder, George F. Ens ruinger, W. F. Sadler, Hon. James H. Graham, H. H. Bechtel and John M. Smith, directors. The name of the com pany was changed to "The Pennsylvania Midlaud Railway Company." The cor poration rights and franchises under the charter being very liberal, negotiations for their sale to Issac B. Hymer, of New York and Council Bluffs Railroad, are now in progress. The work of locating the South Penu svlvania Railroad, which runs parallel with and crosses and recrosses the Peo ple's Freight from Marysville, on the Pennsylvania Central, through Sher man's Valley to the Broad Top regions, is how being vigorously prosecuted by two corps of engineers. Naturally the excitement among residents along the proposed route, many of whom have never seen a locomotive or heard its soporific shriek is intense. Again to the westward twelve miles "bj the same primitive mode of locomo tion. passing en route through a fertile valley, bustling villages and one of the most reliable agricultural districts in the State, where the farmers invest five dol lars for rearing palatial barns for hous ing crops and protecting stock to one dollar expended on their private res dences the little village is reached. A tramp of a mile to the northward and the solitary traveler stands amid the almost buried ruins of an old fort erected by the early settlers of Cumberland (now Perry) county in pre-revolutionary times to which with their families they could flee for the better protection of their lives from the o't-repeated and oft-time deathly assaults of the aborigines, upon whose domain they were encroaching and battling for supremancy. as is attest ed by the mounds in the vicinity which mark the graves of the Indian braves. The fort were erected in 1740 and was of unusual dimensions for its day. Its site was on a bluff commanding a good view of the surrounding coutrry and is on the farm of Andrew Troy. It was fashioned after the block houses in vogue at that early day and surmounted a deep excavation which has been nearly filled np with stones and other debris hauled from adjacent fields. Within sight of the fort stood the old Presbyterian kirk erected by the Scotch Irish and German settlers in 1766. As the neighborhood was but sparesely set tled at the time of which I write the people came many miles to worship God in the rude s ructure dedicated to the advancement of His kingdom on earth The local antiquarians are antagonistic in their description of the kirk, yet ail agree that it was a log structure, quaint and curious. The first pastor was Rev. John Linn who died in 1820. It is said of Mr. Linn that he exerted a most wonderful influence througout the entire . western end of the county in his day and generation, and as he moved among his parishioners in later years was in variably spoken of as "one of those hills nearest Heaven." The lemodeied chrn oh stands on the site of the old kirk, and although its situation in midwinter ap pears bleak and desolate in the extreme it is one of matchless loveliness in the spring and summer time, when its flow ers come shyly out in all their aesthetic beauty; when its sloping banks and briad avenues aie carpeted in delicate emerald and wooded by oaks which tower above all surroundings Kke Cyclo pian giant. It would seem that here, if anywhere on ear*h the worship of God c >uld be oonducted in all the beauty and simplicity of holiness. The ohurch edifice overlooks an old graveyard, in whicji repose the remains of mahy who were identified with the settlement of the oounty, not a few of whom bore his toric names. The oldest engraved head stone bears the inscription: "Martha Robertson, died December 22. 1766, aged 81 years," although there are many more antiquated. The Demon in the Skj. One of the most interesting sights in the sky, and one which can be watolied without a telescope, is the variations in the light of the star Algol, whose Arabic name means the Demon. It is some times called the Winking Demon. This wonderful star is now in a good po sition for observation, being nearly overhead at nightfall. It is the brightest of the little cluster called the Head of Medusa, which, according to the old fa ble, Perseus carries in his hand as he hurries to the rescue of Andromeda. For a little over two days and a half Algol shines as a star of the second magnitude. Then its light logins to fade, and in about three hours and a third it sinks to the fourth magnitude, glimmering so feebly that a casual observer would bs unable to distinguish it from the faint stars in its neighborhood. Thus it re mains for 18 minutes, and then begins to brighten again, and in the same time that it takes in growing dim, attains its former brilliancy. From one minimum to another is two days 20 hours and nearly 49 minutes. There will not be another minimum visible on this longi tude early in the evening until February 18 at 8 o'clock and 24 minutes. The fact that a star thus brightens and grows dim at regular intervals is in itselt wonderful,but it appears all the more wonderful when we are told that Algol is a sun, probably larger than ours having an enormous dark body revolving around it at tremendous speed. Some astronomers think that this mysterious body will fall into the star, produc ing an outburst of light and heat that would be fatal to any living beings who might exist within millions of miles of that distantsun. Such a catastrophe would be visible to us in the sudden increase of splendor in the star. Fugitive Inks. 1 The aniline violet pencils now exten sively used in this country, as well as inks made of the same coloring matter, must be understood to produce writing of a very fugitive character; well enough perhaps, for amatory correspondence, which, in order to be in character with the feeling that prompts it, is possibly better to be of a somewhat transient kind. It is, however, different with most writing, and permanenee is com monly recognized as an essential charac teristic; and, as we have said, this quali ty does not belong to inks of the aniline violet series. A druggist whom we know found out this to his cost. He labeled some of his bottles with purple ink of a most telling brilliancy, but some time after was much surprised to find that not a trace of the writing was to be seen. The light effectually bleaches the aniline and we have noticed that exposure in a damp place produces the same eifoot. NO 12.