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VOL. 60. it Qtißßi< iitiffaio 6nut- White recently traveling through the northern portion of Missouri, I was highly entertained one evening with the narration of a Virginia backwoods roan, who had settled in that section when all around was a wilderness; and as this story of the old farmer, con cerning the manner in which he be came acquainted with his present wife, contains a rather curious and singular adventure, I have written it out, under the assurance of its being a real occur rence, which bad never beeu told in print. Joseph Tompkins (for so I will call the farmer) was a true specimen of a frontiersman—tall, lank and muscular, and much better acquainted with the mysteries of the woods than the refine ment of books ; and he had married a wife nearly as tall as himself; but who bad the additional qualification of weighing some two huudred and fifty pounds, and whom Mr. Tompkius of ten playfully desijuated as "that thar tiny leetle woman." "She's a prize, that thar,same leetle woman is I" proudly replied the good farmer, to a compliment which I paid to her domestic qualities; "and if you'd like to hear a bit of romance, I'll tell you how I fust got acquainted with her." Of course the story was demanded ; and the worthy farmer, settling himself well back in a bearskin-covered arm chair, proceeded with his uarration, in the following characteristic language : When I first moved to this here couuty, from old Vargin'a, I reckon it was as wild a looking place as you ever seen. We come right here where we now live, and settled down right in the heart of the woods, that war pow erful gloomy jest then, as yoc can fan cy. Thar was dad himself and four of us boys, making a purty strong team; and going right to work, we soon had up a right smart chance of a cabin ; and what time arter that we warn't hunt ing for something to eat, we war c'lar ing off a patch of ground to put corn into the next coming spring. All that wide prairie that you've seen stretching away to tbe right, and now dotted oyer with fine housej, was as wild then as the big prairies towards the Rocky Mountains; and the tall, dry grass made it look awful drear, as the fall winds begun to whistle oyer it. Arter the weather begun to git purty cold, and we found our feed gitting 1 >w, we concluded we'd better fake a ween to lay in game, to be ready for needing times ; and so one day we got together some neighbors' boys, that lived about eight or ten miles off—us four and them making ten in all—and sot off on a reg'lar bunting bout; and a* wilder, merrier set of young rascals you copldu't skeer up the whole 'arth oyer— no sir-ee 1 Well, we tuk right acrost that thar prairie, intending to go to a wood on t'other side, whar thar ;was a famous salt lick; but we hadn't gone mor'n two mile, when we seen the awfullest big herd of bufflerf that ever showed their shaggy heads in these here dig gings. They war the fust that some of us bad ever seen in our lives—me and my three brothers special—and if we warn't nearly tiefcieu cuten our moc casins, at the chance we'd now have to try our skill on the critters, than you can stop off my backer for a month— yer sir-ee t Well,you'd better believe thar warn't much fooling about then. The buffiers was slowly feeding along towards the fur side of the prairie, and we at once sot off to try our hands on 'em, taking pains to keep well down in the long grass, so's they shouldn't see us, and now and then gitting a chance to kivei ourselves for a while in the low, scrub by timber and lmle uit bushes that growed thick along the different sloughs. I reckon the old brutes must a got the scent of us once in a while,though, for several times we s en 'em sniff the air and then start off at a sort of trot, which they'd keep up for a mile or two, and then feed along slow agin,till we'd a'most come up to 'em, and then up and trot < ff ag ; n. In this way we f-dlpred 'em up purty nigh tbe Whole blessed day, without gitiing a dump J shot,and by that time I'd got about as mad as any human ev er should git without nothing to bite ; and 1 up and svoie I wouldn't go back without one of them thar buffiers, if I had to stay a week for't ; and all the other boys jined in,and swore the same tiling. Then we took asmack from our wallets, aud fullered ou, eating as we went, and mumbling cur vengeance with every mouthful we put in. But still the same confounded luck ! The more we pushed on, the more the buffi rs pushed off, till at last down went the sun, and I felt like breaking something. 'Who's a-going to gin in now ?' says I. 'Not me,' says one teller arter anoth- MILLHEIM, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 14., 1886. er till every feller hud said It. ♦Well, thar'a cl'ar moon for us,' says I, plating towards the east, when she wus jist com lug up beautiful ; 'and if them critters don't guv us a chance to shoot some of 'em, I'll ho hanged if they shall sleep a wink this blessed night.' So wo pushed on, and in less than a half hour arter t hat we got right near the long black li-.e of beasts. Whether it was bekase we'd now got the breeze blowing towards us, 1 don't know; but somehow the buffiers appeared to havo got over thar skeer, and war now tak ing their ease, picking out the green sprigs of grass close down to the ground. Well, we crept along till we'd got within good, easy, shooting distance ; aud then I told the boys we'd all git ready and fire together, and fotch as uiany's we could, for it war jest as like as iiot we wouldn't be able to git the second shot. The moon by this time was shining so cl'ai and bright that we could see almost as clear as day ; and then it was, jest about the time we war gitting ready to take aim, we did see something so curious that we stopped to look at it, and wonder over it, and, as I'm telliug facts, I'll be frank enough to own up, gitting a lee tie bit skeered at it too. The bufflers, as I've said, was stretched away in a long black line some of 'em purty near us aud some of 'em a good ways off—when right sud den one of them nearest us, and one of the old fellers we'd laid out to throw with our furst shot, gin a loud, awful beller, like he'd got pain in bi3 stom ach, and began to caper round like I did onct when I was stung by a hornet. Now that wasn't so very much in it self, for it might be something had hit him; but when he broke away toward us, bellowing 'all the time—aud theD stopping sudden and begun to paw the earth—and then stopped that and'pear ed to be braciug himself on his legs, putting them as far apart as he could— and then purty soon rolled oyer, with a powerful groan—it sort of looked a bit queer. And tben, when three or four others went to doing the same thing, and all eudUig in the same way, it really looked a durn sight queerer. 'Hello ! what's the mallet thai r says one. 'The old Scratch or a Injun, I don't know which !' says another. •Don't you see that buffler calf, that looks like it might be a yearling, dodg ing about alongside of them frllius as gits the pain ?' siys a third. We all allowed we had seen it—but what then ? 'Well, that's the critter as kicks up all the rumpus.' says him that piuted it out, 'and its eyther a Itijun,a sperret or the devil—for if thar's any buffler in it, you can hang me 1' We boys all had our superstitious be liefs. as well as the old folks, and as we looked at that thai calf, flying round 'mongst them as perred to be a leetle bit fuider off. 'Let's shoot at it I' says one ; and three or four rifles war immediately p'inted in that direction. 'Don't I says I ; 'for if it's a Injun, he's only making meat, and we'll di vide the spiles; and if its a sperret, or the Old One, you'll only waste your powder. Let's wait a bit and see what comes on't 1' Well, after the other buffiers had gone through all the motions of the first, and keeled over in the grass, we seen the thing, whateyer it might be, leave the herd and come quiet towards when we war. 'Dowu in the'grass, boys,' says I, *aud keep powerful still,till we git that thar critter in amongst us,and then its like we'll git at the mystery !' So we all popped down and waited quiet for the spook to come up; and as I war one of the nearest to it, I felt .ny hair kind 'o bristle up, and I hur ried over a prayer or two into my own miud, jist to be ready for the wo'st. At fust, alter I'd dropped down, I couldn't see it at all ; but I hadn't laid there long when I seen its shaggy head, with its short horns hobbling up and down, as it come right ou towards the spot whar I war. I was skeered then, I won't deny, bekause I thought it might be some wild prairie sperret ; and if I'd beeu alone,thar ain't a doubt in my mind that I'd done some purty tall walking right off. Well, I waited, holding my breath and trembling, till the awful thing come up closer aud closer, and I some how thought I could see the devil in the shape of a young buffler; and then, feeling like a man does when he's cornered up to desperation, 1 jumped up with a yell right in front of it. / s I done so,Bome of the other boys jump ed up with a yell too, and then with a scream, that made my blood curdle, the thing dropped right down in the high grass before me, and I thought it had gone into the 'arth straight. The next breath, though, I seen it a fl aun dering ; and p'iuting down my rifle, I A PAPER FOR THE lIOME CIRCLE. was jest about to fire, when a woman's voice said : "You've skeered me a'most to death, and I'm bound to box Lite ears of the man that's done it." And, with them words, up jumps a woman, leaving the I uffler's hide on the ground ; and afore I ki.owed what was what, 1 felt my ears sing like you've heerd a tea-kettle afore now. If I was afeaid when expecting to find it a sperret, I war dreadful astou ished to find it a woman, and so war all the boys, who begun to gather round, hanging thar heads, as if they'd been cotched in some mean trick. "See here," says I, catching hold of ber, make sure she was human ar ter all, "if you aint a hoss of a gal, then I never seen one that was—no, raarm 1 Jest tell me whar you come from ? and how you've done the purty trick we've jest see ? Dem me, if you don't beat all the snakes in these parts! Yes, marm I" She laughed right out wild,and called me a skeered goose—which warn't true, bekase I wasn't skeered then, nor a goose nyther— and then she says, p'inting over the prairie to a hut, that we could jest see as a black speck, says she : "I come fiom thar. Me and my mother lives thar by ourselves. My father's dead, and my only brother's gone to hunt his fortlu. I has to kill all tbe game we lives on, and I'm git ting purty used to it now, though it gives me a heap of trouble sometimes. I seen them buffiers feeding along this evening ; and knowing as how we're nigh out of meat, I determined to run all risks and stretch a couple of 'em anyhow ; and so, taking the hide of one, that I'd got fixed for the purpose, I crept in amongst 'em, and made good use of this here long knife, in the way I'd been showed how by a Injun. I've killed five to-night ; and I was jest a going home to git our bosses to drag 'em off, so's me and mother mought smoke, dry, or salt 'em down agin a wet day, when I run agin you, and got an awful skeer from a yeell more like Beelzebub nor anything human." "And for which I've got a pair of awful boxed ears," says 1. And so you oughter have, you gOOSA I" Bdpa oliOj of endearment twice-times. Well, my friend, the up shot on't was that we boys all helped that gal home with her meat, aud helped her eat some on't too, whilst wo hunted a bout thar with purty good luck. She war a screamer, and I war a alhTga'or, and so in course we tuk to each other amazing. I liked her for her spunk, and she liked me tor my beauty ; and so in the end we got a traveling preach er to jine us according to law ; and here we is, as happy as two clams. Thar, I've told you how I fust seen that tiny 'eetle woman, who can knock the hind sight off of any thing in these diggings in the way of corn fixing".and I hope and pray that the day may be a long ways off afore Joe Tompkins sees the last of her. Yes, sir I Hurricanes at Honolulu. 'Talk about tornadoes and cyclones,' said Reserve Officer Stark. 'People living in this section of the country don't know what they are. In the neighborhood of the Sandwich Islands, aud particularly off Honolulu, which is at the head of tbe landlocked harbor, is the place for hurricanes. The moun tains back of Honolulu are saw-shaped and they have a queer effect on the at mospheric currents. There is no an chorage outside the harbor and yessels that don't care to touch at Honolulu usually 'lay off and oo,' as the sailors have it, while they send a boat ashore. I have seen half a dozen ships lying off Honolulu within hailing distance of each other—one in a shower of raiu, a nother in a dead calm, with a bright sun shining overhead ; a third in a smooth brer z?, and a fourth in such a gale that everything had to be clusc reefed. 'Different air currents are so close together and so sharply defined that I have baen standing on the deck of a vessel with the sun shining brightly overhead and not air enough moving to fill the sails, while within ten feet of 1 me on one side it was raining big guns, and not twenty bet the other way blowing a regular hurricane. 1 never shall forget one incident. It was about noon and I was leaning over the port rail amidships. There wasn't air : enough blowing to lift a feather. Sud denly I heard a roar and knew that a tornado was passing by the ship. It was so close that when I stretched out my hand the wind struck it witu such a force that I was whirled completely around. Our poit anchor, which ! weighed about a ton and a half, was hanging on the rail forward, and the : same gust struck one of the flukes. It ; tore loose the fastening, whirled that anchor through the air like a bit of thistle down, and left it hanging on the miin yard arm. It put us to a heap of trouble to get it down again.' THE Other day a young housewife left her home in. this town to spend a few days viith sevaral lady friends in Bellefonte. Before going she provided a good supply of eatibles for her hus band, and told him that he could hi Ip himself whenever ho was hungry. lie took lunch down town and went home in the evening lor dinner. As he tells the story, tie found cold chicken, cold butter,cold pie, cold milk, cold salt, cold mustard, and several other cold dishes, but with all that he was not entirely satisfied, and hunted high and low foi something else. At first he did not know what it was. but finally concluded lie wanted Dread. He knew cheie was some in the house, but could not find it. Finally he conclud ed to telegraph to his wife,for he could not live without bread. Accordingly a telegram asking "Where is the bread?" was dispatched. The wife received it in the midst of a number of ladies, and it frightened her nearly to death. With the cry, "I knew it was bad news ; I kwow Mr. B is killed !" she fell in a faint. Theladhs present cried from sympa thy, and a most lugubrious scene pre sented itself when the man of ths house happened in. What's the matter here V" he asked. "Mrs. B's husband has been killed and she has fainted," was the reply. "How do you know ?" he asked. "Oh, she got a telegram." "Where is it ?" "We haven't opened it yet." Imagine the scene when the sympa thetic creatures read the message. In about an hour the reply was sent back to him : "You mean thing. It is in the bread box, under the piano, where I hid it from the cook." Deep Students of Human Na ture. Some weeks ago a widow moved into Detroit from a town in the west ern part of the state. She brought with her a bulldog which showed game in every movement, and it was not long before every butcher and sport in the neighborhood wanted to buy that dog. The widow wouldn't sell at any price. The next thing to Luyingf the dog was to get up a fight between him and another canine bf blood-thirsty appearance; but the widow wouldn't hesr to this. "I want you to understand," she indig nantly replied, 'that I am a respecta ble woman and give no encourage ment to such things.' Still there were one or two men who did not dt spair. They began to conspire, and as a result they led a fighting dog in to a barn near the widow's house the other day, and one of them paid a call to the house and said: 'ln course we know how you feel about this dog fighting. We feel the same, but there's a woman across the alley who owns a dog which she brags on.' 'She can't be no lady,' was the retort. 'Exactly, ma'am, or she wouldn't speak of you as she does*' 'Speak of me ! Why, I don't know her!' 'ln course you don't, and I would hate to tell you what she says of you.' 'But you must.' 'lf she's talking about me I want to know what she says!' 'But, ma'am, you'll excuse me you know.' 'No, I won't. What does she say ?' 'Well, then, begging your pardon, she makes fun of your red hair.' 'She does V 'And she ridi cules your dress.' 'TLe Vixen !' 'And she says she never saw such feet on a woman.' 'l'll sue her for slan der ! I'll see a lawyer at once!' ex claimed the woman. 'We've got her dog in the barn, ma 'am. It's a dog she brags on. She was a-saying yes terday that if her dog could only get at your dog once, there—' 'But he can. You go into the back yard and untie Bravo and take him over there. If he can't whip any such woman's dog I'll disown him.' 'Exactly, ma'- am, and you can trust me to see fair play. The arrogant head of such a slanderfnl, boisterous woman should be humbled, you know, and it's you who'll do it. The dog was taken to the barn, and he did not disappoint his backers. After a fight of fifteen minutes he was declared victor, and as the referee gave his decision the widow's voice was heard, saying .• 'Good! That pays her for abusing my hair. I'll fix her on the big feet before the week is out.' She had been watching the fight through the cracks of the barn.— Detroit Free Press. —All those who have used Baxter's Mandrake Bitters speak yery strongly in their praise. Tweuty-fiye cents per bottle. For sale by J. SpigeJmyer, and V. S. Kauffman & Co. Terms, SIOO per Year, in Advance. II i\ [i'isl] li6gejqd. Between two forest-covered moun tains, on the Emerald isle, was a nar row valley, into which the sun shone but six hours of a long summer's day. Beautiful flowers and luxuriant trees flourished here,and mu'litudes of musi cal birds built their tiny uests and reared their young unmolested. Near the centre of this lovely vallej, beneath a drooping willow, whose loug, sweep ing branches mingled with the rich grass, was a deep well, whose clear, cold waters occasionally overflowed its brink,"bubbling and boiling as if a great fire were beneath them. Won drous power and strange virtues were ascribed to this well of the valley; and, among other things, it was said to have the gift of rendering perfectly beautiful any maiden who would bathe her face in its pure waters at twelve o'clock on a midsummer's night. On the side of one of these moun tains stood a rustic cottage,the abiding place of Kathleen Burns, a young and gay lass of some twenty summers. Though well-formed, lithe, and active, Kathleen was very far from being handsome; her cheeks were thin pale and her eyes, though blue as the bluest, had very little expression. Greatly she mourned over her want of beauty ; and many were the sleepless nights she passed, after coming home from a fair, of a dance, were lovely maidens dazzled the eyes of young men and received all their attentions, leaving herself and others, who had little claim to beauty, alone and unnoticed. But a stronger reason than this caus ed Kathleen to loug for the fatal gift she loved. For two years her affec tions had been given to a youth who dwelt near her, but who had never be stowed upon her a thought of more than friendship. Poor Kathleen 1 Had beauty been hers, Edwin McLane would perhaps have returned her affection when he be came acquainted with the excellence of her character and disposition ; but not being attracted by personal appearance his thoughts seldom rested upon her. And so Kathleen loved on in silence and in secret, no ray of hope brighten ing her earthly path ; her greatest con solation being, unobserved, to gaze, with her soul in her eyes, upon his UcM.niaO'Qac and as he mingled among other girls, gay and happy, the favorite and admiration of them all. Kathleen had,from her tarliest child hood been aware of the reputed virtues of the well of the valley ; but up to the present time she had felt a sort of su pernatural dread of touching its magic waters on the eve of midsummer, the only time it was supposed to have the power of conferring lasting beauty up on her who bathed her face therein. But loving and suffering as she now did, she determined that the epoch should not pass with out finding her kneeling upon the brink of the well of beauty. The twenty-first of June had arrived. The midnight hour was near at hand, when Kathleen silently left her cottage home and wended her solitary way down the side of the mountain towards the quiet, moonlight valley. She was dressed in pure white ; her fair hair fell in curls around her shoulders, and her blue eyes were filled with a light of hope that almost rendered them beauti ful. There lay the magic well, beneath a drooping willow—the thick.soft grass growing to its very edge—its cold, bright waters boiling tumultuously. Kathleen trembled as she stood gaz ing, as if fascinated by the sight. Just then upon her ear fell the deep sound of a distant abbey bell, chiming the hour of midnight. She kneeled down, and was about to dip her hands and face into the boiling waters, when a voice, as if from another world, caused her to start aud look upward. "Pause !" said the spirit voice, for such she imagined it to be. "Thou need'st not bathe in the blessed waters —beauty may be thine whithout their aid. "How V" escaped almost uncon sciously from the maiden's lips. "True beauty," replied the voice, "is au emanation from the soul. Look inward. Be humble in mind, be pure in thought, be .upright in deed, and thou wilt grow be&utifnl. A pure soul shines from the eyes and radiates the whole countenance. Heed my words, maiden, and in time the desire of thy heart will be granted thee I" Kathleen listened, entranced. The voice grew silent, the waters of the well hecame snddenly calm, and the moon sailed pensively behind a cloud. The maiden rose from her knees a new being. Her blue eyes glowed with a happy light, and her cheeks were mantled with a beautiful crimson. She was no longer pale, listless, plain. From that hour she was happy. She strictly followed the dictates of that spirit voice ; and, to the wonder of all who knew her, became more and more lovely. The light of purity and goodness irradiated ner countenance ; the light of hope neamed from her brow ,• and ere long Edwin McLane saw, with the deepest ioy, the light of love scintillatiug in her blue eyes when 1 they met his gaze. NO. 2 NJBWSPAPBR UVB If subscribers order the dlseonKfbnatlon of newspapers, the pnoliebers may continue to send thein until all arrearages are paid. II subscribers refuse or neglect to take their newspapers from the office tc which they ar sent they are held responsible until they have settled the bills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers more toother places without In forming the publisher, and the newspapers are sent to the former place, they are rcsjiontdhle. ▲ DVBBTHSHIO BATBB. 1 wk. 1 mo. 1 3 inos. 6 mos. I yea 1 square t2fid *4 oo | $a oo sr, oo g kcoluinn 400 —6 OH| -40 00 15 00 18 00 % " 700 10 00 15 00 3000 4000 1 " 1000 15 00 | 2500 4500 75 00 One iooh makes a square. Administrators and Executors' Notices 03*50. Transient adver tisements and locals loeeateper line fur first insertion and 5 cents per line for each addition al insertion* Cellar Ventilation. a We have on more than one occasion called attention to the importance of oieanlinesa in cellars. There can be no doubt that much of the ill health a roong farmers and their.families is at tributable to foulness around and un derneath their dwellings. The Amen tum Agriculturist raises a warning voice on the subject of cellar ventilation. Farm-house cellars are often filled in winter, it says, with cider and vinegar in barrels beef barrels, pork barrels, apple barrels, potatoes in bins, vegata bles in heaps, wash tubs, butter tubs, and other articles too numerous to mention. Besides, flowering plants takep up for the winter, are here stored away to be safe from frost, and the leaves from tbem fail and decay. There are boxes, old timbers, boards etc.. which become moist and mouldy, and there are shelyes and comers, that any one can see to have been only half cleaned, and liable to be, if not already, damp, mouldy and unwholesome. The thing to do is, to provide outside cellars as soon as possible, for fruits and vegetables, and all those things lia. ble to decay ; but before that is done, we must do everything possible to have our cellars under the dwellings sweet and clean. First the cellars should be swept (hoed out if necessary) once a week. Decaying things, whether fruit, vegetables or boards, should be remov ed. Then quicklime, or half slaked lime, should be scattered freely in cor ners, under shelves, under bins, and a round and among tho barrelo -of all kinds. When the lime has slaked to a powder, it may be swept about over the floor. If the floor be of earth, it will harden it; if it be of wood or cement, it will help to keep it sweet. Fioally, on every suitable day, windows and doors should be thrown open, and fresh air allowed to pass freely through. The ceilings and walls ought to be white washed not less than twice a year, for the sake net only of having the cellar light and neat, but to purify it and kill the fine mould which attaches itself to stone, brick and wood, in warm, moist places. In building, it is important that there should he a flue in one or more chimneys, going directly from the cellar to the top of the chimney, so that there may be a draft to carry away the • inevitable exhalations. These do little harm in summer, for our houses are then open, and the air draws more or less through them at all times. Where as in winter, we too often shut our selves up, and the cellar exhalations draws up through the floors, and grad ually. bill surely, poison those members of the family whom we most love and cherish, and would screen from eyery harm. A Good Plaoe for Dentists and Photographers. Throughout South America all the dentists and nearly all the photogra phers are immigrants from the United States, and if there is any oue among them who isn't getting rich he has no body but himself to find fault with, be cause the natives give both professions plenty to do. Nowhere in the world is so large an amount of confectionery consumed in proportion to the population as in South America, and, as a natural con sequence, the teeth of the people re quire a great deal of attention. As a usual thing Spaniards have good teeth, as they always have beautiful eyes, and are very particular in keeping them in condition. Hence the dentists are kept busy,and as they charge twice as much as they do in the Un ited States, the profits are very large. In these coun tries it is the custom to serve sweet meats at every meal-dulces, as they are called—preserved fruits of the richest sort, jellies, and confections of every variety and description. Many of these are made by the nuns in the con vents, and are sold to the public either through the confectionery stores or by priyate application. A South Ameri can housewife, instead of ordering jams and preserves and jellies from the gro cer, or putting up a supply iu her own kitchen during the fruit season, pat ronizes the nuns, and gets a better ar ticle at a lower price. . The nuns are veiy ingenious iu this work, and pre pare forms of .'delicacies which are un known to our table. The photographers as well as the dentists are Americans, and have all they can do.*/ The Spanish-American belle has her photograph taken every time she gets a new dress, and that is very often. The Paris styles leach here as soon as they do the North A merican cities, and where the national customs are not still worn, there is a great deal of elaborate The Argentine Republic is the only country iu which photographs of the ladies are not sold in the shops. Elsewhere there is a craze for portraits of reigning beau ties, and the young men have their rooms filled with photographs of the girls they admire, taken in aU sorts of costumes and attitades.— New York Sun. —SUBSCRIBE for the JOUBNAL.