THE COLUMBIAN. -nuilA MMOOaAT.STAK OFTBB NORTH AMDCOLCM. issued weokly, ever y Friday morning, it . .....uannno. COLOMDIA COUNTY. PA , , , -o pollasj por year, M co n la discount allowed ESSntrtho terms aro ft por ycar.strlctly In advance. liver discontinued, except at tho option of the LnMiQuicrt. unman arrearages ro paia,uui long fflnuoil credits nftor the oxplratlon of the nrsl ' ll PP" enf out of the Htato or to dlsUnt post !iwo person In Columbia county assumes to pay the ! ."kSSmiou duo on demand. 'YostAOE Is no longer exacted rrom sunscrlborsln k. (.mini?. .,o'.inMiieirliepartmontof the Coi.tHBUNlsvery Lnmnieie. and our J p Printing will compare favora- Mr witn IMt of tno largo chics, aii wore aone I'rrMJcnUud jo-William Klwell. Associate Judgci-I. K. Krlckbaum, P. L. Bhuman, vrotlionulftry? AC-Wllllam Krlckbaum. rt Menograplier-s. N. Walker. !iiister Hocorder Williamson II. Jacoby, ims r ci Atlorney-nobertll. Utile. .'V.Viir Mhn Ilonmnn. Surveyor Samuel Neyhard Tre, rrewurer-ll A. Hweppenhelscr, jnimHsloia'rs Stephen Pone, Charles lllchart, A.'.'.'-Jii'iII S&rs' Klerk- J. 11. Casov. Auditors-!!. II. smith, W. Manning, C. D. 8eo- jury't'ommlssloners-Kll ltobblns, Theodore w, Ii'i'irv M-.im,rtntondont-Wllllam II. Hnvder. iiiooml'oor District 1) trccUirs 1 1. 8. Knt, Scott, Win. Kramer, llloomsburg and Thomas Itcecc, icon. Bloomsburg Official Directory. President of Town Council 1, 8. KU1IN. Clerk-Paul K. Wirt, chief of Pollco-I). Laycock. President of Has Company S. Knorr, LLn.t r.-t:. w. Miller. liliKiinsourg Hanking company John K. Funston, President, Jl llturnii, usuier, uuuu i euAXjVK, lei' nr National Dank Charles It. Paxton, President J. r. TUSIIQ, t;uauier. Columbia County Mutual Saving Fund and Loan AsiooU'loa-li. ii. Little, President, c. W. Miller, liloomsLiiirg Building andsavlng Fund Association Wm. I'eacocW, President, J. 11. Uoblson, Secretary. llloomsburg Mutual Having Fund Association J. j urower, President, P. E. Wirt, Secretary. ' CHUKCII DIKECTORY. BArTIST CHURCH. llev. J. P. Tustln, (Supply.) Sunday Scrvloes-lOX a. ml and 1 p. m. Sunday school 9 a. in. Prayer Meeting Every Wednesday evening at ejf slSts'trco. Tho public are Invited to attend. ST. MATTItaW'B t.CTnSHAtt CHUKCII. Minister Hot. o. I), s. Marclay. Sunday 8ervlccs-10X a. in. and 1i p. m. Sunday school-9 a.m. I'ravcr Meeting Every vVednesday evening at IK scats' free. Nopows rented. All are welcome. rKBSBTTRRIAH CnCKCU. Minister IlcV. Stuart MUchell. Sunday Sen lccs iox a. tn. and )4 p. m. Sunday school-!! a. m. prayer Meet lug Kvcry Wednesday evening at t seais'free. No pews rented. . Strangers welcome. MRTItODIST EPISCOPAL CnURCH. Presiding Klder licv. W. Evans. Minister llev. E. II. Yocum. Mtnday Services 11) and 6X p. m. sundav School 2 p. m. lllble Class-Kvcry Monday evening at o'clock. Voimg Men's Prayer Meotlng-Evcry Tuesday e7enlng at o'clock, (leneral Prayer Mcetlng-Every Thursday evening 7 o'clock. KXPOHMID CHUKCU. Comer of Third and Iron streets. I'astor-llov. W. E. Krebs. itesldence Corner 4th and Catharine evcets. Sunday Services 10 a. m. and Tp. in, bundav School 9 a. m. prayer Meeting Saturday, I p. m. All are Invited Thero Is always room. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH.., Hector Rev L. Zahncr. Sunday Services 10J a. m., In p. m. Sunday School 9 a. m. First Sunday In tho month, Holy Communion. Senlees preparatory to Communion on Friday eenlng before the st Sunday In each month. Pews rented J but everybody wolcome. ITANOIUCAL CHURCn. Presiding Elder ltov. A. L. lleeser Minister llev. Georgo Hunter. . Sunday service! p. m., in tho Iron street Church. Praver Meeting Every sabbath at 9 p. tn. All aro milled. All are welcome. mit ciiDRcn op cnRisr. Meets In "tho little llrlck Church on the hill," known as tho Welsh Baptist Church-on Kock street Caiiegula?'mcetlng for worship, every Lord's day at lernoon at 3J o'clock. . . . seats frooi and the public ore cordially Invited to attend SCHOOL ORDERS, blank, just printed and neatly bound In small nooks, on hand and or sale at tho coi.uubiah onico. DLANK DEEDS, on I'arclimint and Linen l" Paper, common and for Administrators, Execu tors and trustees, for sale cheap at the Columbian offlce. MAPRIAOE CERTIFICATES intt printed nnd for sale at the Colombian Oftlce. Minis era of tno oospcl and Justices should supply them selves with these necessary articles. 1 IJSTICES and Constables' Fee-Bills for sale . P 'ft tho Colombian oftlce. They contain the cor rected fees as established by tho lost Act of the Leg. .lature upon the subject. Every Justice and Con- table should havo one. VENDUE NOTES just printed and for sale cheap at tho Columbian oDlce, BLOOMSBURG DIRECTORY. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. CI G. BARKLEY. Attornev-at-Law. Office j , lu Brower's building, 2nd story, Rooms 4 5 JB. ROBISON, Attorney-at-Law. '. in Uartman's building, Main street. Office s AMUEL KNORR. Attorney-at-Law.Office in Uartman's Building, Main street. It. WM. M. REBER, Surgeon and Physi side. cian, uiuco marKCb sueci. auuvo dui jvuai T R. EVANS, M. D., Surgeon and Physi I . clan, (omce and Resfdenco on Third street T B. McKELVY, M. D., Surgeon and Pliy J slclan, north sldo Main street, below Market. Tyj. J. C. RUTTER, PHVSICI AN J; SOUUEON, Offlco, North Market street, Mar.ST,74 Bloomsburg, Pa. T)R. I. L. RABB, PRACTICAL DENTIST, MnlnMreet, opposite Episcopal Church, Blooms- aug M, n.ly, ' MISCELLANEOUS. r M. DRINKER, GUN and LOCKSMITH. sewing Machines and Machinery of all kinds re dalrcd. Opbka nousi Building, Bloomsburg, Pa. AVID LOWENBERG, Merchant Tailor Main St., above Central Hotel. IS. KUHN, dealer ii. Meat, Tallow, etc., Centre street, between Second and Third. H' ROSENSTOCK, Photograpliex, over . Clark Wolf's Store, Main street. A UGUSiUri FREUND, Practical liomec j pathlo Horse and Cow Uoctor, Bloomsburg, Pa, IHl. 14, 19-tt "y Y. KESTER, MERCHANT TAILOR, RoomNo. 16, opkba lleuu! Bcouino, Bloomsburg, aprlll9,18l8. TJR1TISII AMERICA ASSURANCE CO NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. The assets of tneso old corporations are all In vested in SOLID SECURITIES and are liable to the hazard of Fire only. jiuueruuuinea on tue uest risks ure aione acvepieu. Losses from ptly and uomsti.y udjusted and paid as soon as determined by Christian F. Knapp, Spe cial Agent and Adjuster, U'oomsburg, Penn'a, Ihoiltlzensol Columbia county should patronize tue agency where Iosscb, if any, are adjusted and paid by one of thelrown cltlieus. nov.Ie, '7My IJKEAS BROWN'S INSURANCE AOEN ? CY, Exchange Hotel, Bloomsburg, Pa. Capital. tna,insco., of nartford, Connecticut... 6,600,000 Uveniool, London and Olobo . 20,ijOu,ouo Jiojalot Liverpool U,6oo,ooo Lancanshlre', , lo.ooo.ww nro Association, Philadelphia s.lo,ooo rarmers Mutual of DonvUle 1,000,000 puTUie Mutual K,ooo Home, New York, .. 6,000,000 lS0,aai,0O0 As the agencies are direct, policies are written for tosured w lUioul any delay In the offlce at Blooms- Slarch 9,lT-y F. HARTMAN KIPRKSINTS THX rOLLOWINO AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANIESi LKcming of Muncy Pennsylvania, f?fSAm;rlcan of Philadelphia, M 'ranichn( of toasylvanla of " f Armere of York, Fa, HAohattanof on Muket Street No. e, Uloomahurg, Pa, jT THE OBANOBVILLB ACADEMY. You can get a Thorough Education with the LEAST OUTLAY OF MONEY. For catalogue, adareas tne;prlnclpal, - .., ' ' " - S 1U I Ot UOLlTMlIf A I1KMOCI1AT, VOL. XLIV, NO. J4 -!, imMn DnllntV Official DirOr.tnrU. I r.inrvnnn I " rmmmmmmm'm!mmmmmmmm'mmmim.mmmmmmimmmm on0. E. ELWELL, Etori nl Froprlitcri, liTnOMfiPTTT) il DA IT'DTTi A "V7 A TTn TTPm o E. WALLER, Attornoy-at-Law. iEcrease of Pensions otUlned, Colletioniadi. ornco, second doorfrom 1st National Bank. BLOOMSBURO, PA. Jan. 11, 1578 JJ U. FUNhi Attornoy-at-Law, Increaso of Pensions Obtained, Collections Mado. , BLOOMSBURG, PA. Offlce In Knt's Bcii.dino. gROCKWAY A ELWELL; ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, CotpiisiAN BciLntNO, Bloomsburg, Pa, Members of tho United states Law Association. Collections made In any part of America or Europo Q 1 av7j.buckalew, ATTOltNEYS-AT-LAW, Bloomsbarg, Pa. Offlce on Main Street, first door below Courtnouse JOHN M. CLARK, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,' Bloomsburg, Pi onico over Schuyler's Hardware Store. r. BILLMEYER, ' ATTORNEY AT LAW. Omci-ln Harman's Building, Main street, Bloomsburg, Pa, H. L1TTL1, mo,.,, UTTU. H. & R. R. LITTLE, ATTORNKYS-AT-LAW, Bloomsburg, Fa. Q W.MILLER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW omce In Brower's building, second floor, room No. Bloomsburg, Pa. B. FRANK ZARR, Attornoy-at-Law. uuojioounu, ra omce In Unanost's Bcildino, on Main street second Can be consulted in German. Jan. 10, 19-tf CATAWISSA. "y-M. L. EYERLY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Catawlasa, Pa. opposite Catawlasa Deposit Bank. em-89 H. RUAWN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, CutAwlnflA. Pa. omce, corner of Third and Main Streets. July 11, 19-tt QLARK F. HARDER, BUILDER AND MANUFACTURER OF Doors, Sain, Blinds, Honlilngc, Brackets, ami dealer In LUMBER and all kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL, HARDWARE,., THIRD STREET, CArAWISSA, PA. May lo, 9-sm BLATOIILEY'S PDMPS ! The Old Reliable STANDARD PDMP For Wells 10to 75 feet Deep New Price LisTJan. 1, 1879. ADDRESS C. G. BLATCIILET, 4 40 MARKET ST., PHILAD'A, April 11, 1879-m THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY I GRAY'S SPEOIHO MEDICINE fRA.DE mark. Is especially recom-TRADE MARK. mcnuea tu, an un failing euro for sem inal weakncss.Spcr- matorrhea, lmpo tencj', and all disea ses, such as Loss of memory, Universal Lassitude, Pala In. .tin llinlr lllmn...' Before Taiiiieoi vision. Prcma-. v'i.. .uo.uio ioiuu ture oM A ana After Taking, many other olscases that lead to Insanity, Consump tion and a Premature (Jrave, all of which as a rule are first caused by deviating from the path of nature and over Indulgence. The specino Medicine 13 the result of a Ufa study and many years of experience In treating theso special diseases. full particulars In our pampblets,whlch we desire to sen J tree by mall to every one. The ipccltlo Medicine Is sold by all Druggists at II EerpacKige, or six packages for $s, or will be sent y mall on receipt of the money by addressing TUB GRAY MEDICINE CO, No. 10, Mechanic's Block, Detroit, Mich. sold in Bloomsburg bye. A. Klelm, and by all Druggists everywhere. Harris At Ewlng, Wholesale Agents, Pittsburg, sept. , is-U M, C. SLOAN & BRO. BLOOJISUURO, PA, Manufacturers of Carriages, Buggies, Phaetons, Sleighs, PLATFORM WAGONS, Ac. First-class workalways ozdhand. REPAIRING NEATLY DONE. Prices reduced to suit the times, Jan. 5, isn-tt. EVERY DIRECTOR. TEACHER AND STUDENT Should subscrlbo for THE EDUCATOR, A Lire Educational Monthly, published at ORANGEVILLE, PA., for co cents per year, send six cents for specimen copy. C. K. CANFIELD, Editor. April 18, Ulft-U $2 uoo A YEAH for honest. Intelligent business men or agents. New business; light work. Address Co-Ohbativi AaiNcr, Madison.lnd' June 91, iOT9-4ta Private Sale The following valuablo property, the Estate of tho late John SwtBher,deceased,wlll be offered at private sale up to SEPTEMBER Ut 187'J. The property Is situate in the village ot Jersey town, Columbia county pa., ana contains aoout FIFTY ACRES nf excellent farmlnir land unon which are T"WO HOUBEBi BABN, and other out buildings, and Is one of the nnest localities In the county. There are TWO GOOD ORCHARDS tr-For inlormaUon concerning the property ap ply to C. B. iirockrway, or muuiasuiuv, v .J Swisher, of Jersey town. May w,-u He Poetical. FAITH. ST CEL1A TIIAXns, Fain would I hold my lamp of llfo aloft Like yonder tower built high abovo the reef Steadfast, though tempests rave or winds blow soft, Clear, though tho sky dissolve In tears of grief. For darkness passes j storms shall not abide. A little patience and the fog Is past. After the sorrow of the ebbing tide Tho singing Hood returns In Joy at last. The ntght Is long and pain weighs heavily j But (lod will hold Ills world above despair. Look to the east, where up tho lucid sky Tho morning climbs I The day shall yet bo fair 1 THE WIFE'S S0NG-"LIN0ER SOT LONG I" Linger not long I Home Is not home without thee, Its dearest tokens only make me mourn i Oh I let lis memory, Uko a chain about thee, Gently compel and hasten thy return. Linger not long I Linger not Ipng I though crowds should woo thy staying. Bethink theo-can the mirth ot friends, though dear, Compensate for tho grief thy long delaying Costs the poor heart that sighs to have thee hero t Linger not long I Linger not long l-how shall I watch thy coming, As evening's shadows stretch o'er moor and fell i When the wild bee hath ceased her woary hum ming, And silence hangs on all things like a spell I Linger not long 1 now shall I watch for thee when fear grows stronger. As night grows dark and darker on the hill I now shall I weep when I can watch no longer t Oh, art thou absent, art thou absent sUll t Linger not long I Yet I should grieve not, though tho eye that seeth me Gazeth through tears that make Its splendor dull ; For oh, I sometimes fear, when thou art with me, My cup of happiness Is all too full I Linger not long I Haste haste theo homo unto thy mountain dwell ing. Haste as a bird unto its peaceful nest I nrste as a skiff, when tempests wild are swelling, Files to Ita haven of securest rest I Linger not long I Mi seellaneous. A WHAHF HAT. He was a levee 'Rat,' and his name was Dick. As a child he managed somehow to escape the massacres of want, neglect, and dlseaso in great cities ; and we find him a small boy 12 years old living where he may, eating what he can get ; his band against everything (that will sell at a junk store), and every one's against him. A human rat a thing to bide itself in dark places, and to be chased and worried when it ventures into the light. The levee which Dick infests is that of New Orleans ; down by the foot of Jackson street where the English steamers lie, is his happy hunting gronnd,and on the day when we make his acquaintance.it Is not very pro ductive. The hunting has been all on one side, and how Dick is discovered hiding be tween two bales of cotton is the query. He is kicked, punched, dragged, jostled back ward and forward by the stevedore's men, like a ragged shuttlecock, every one has a curse and a blow for the 'Rat,' with whom things are going hard, when 'Oh, how shameful to beat that poor boy so 1' exclaimed a soft voice with a ring of genuine Indignation In it. The speaker is a lady, clad in crisp, cool muslin a lady, beautiful in face and form. 'Oh,' she exclaimed, how shameful, to treat that poor child so t Do, please, Cap tain Gilbert, make them let him alone.' Captain Gilbert, whose guest sho is, and who leads her up the stage, shouts : Halloa 1 quit that 1 Let the boy go, and get on with your work.' Dick who, unable to dodge his tormen tors, has emulated the example of a hedge hog, and made himself nearly as spherical as possible against a cotton bale does not rise. The foe has not sufficiently retreated, but he keeps a bright lookout from the cor ner of one eye, so as to be ready for a jump. 'They have hurt him,' said the lady. 'He can't get up, poor little fellow 1' and before any one can interfere, she trips down the stage and stooping over the 'Rat' who is so taken aback by the apparition that he for gets to jump, and rolls over straight. Hit plight when it appears that no bones are broken makes the lady smile. He has been cuffed against a lot of oil cake, and is russet brown. He is Huffy all over with cotton waste. Ilia mouth is open' and his eyes are wild with astonishment. His mouth is open' and his eyes are wild with astonish ment. He had never been so near to a lady, and don't know what will be dono with him. 'Come, get up, says the Captain, 'there's nothing the matter with you.' 'Can you rise ?' asks the lady, and she touches him with the most wonderful thing Dick ever saw her hand I The creamy glove upon it, the shimmer of lace and glit ter ot gold at the wrist, and the soft, white flesh beyond ; never had he felt such a touch or been spoken to in such a tone. 'Ob, ain't I in for it now V he muses, and then he looks up into the lady's face. There was no chance for & bolt now. The lady, the gentleman who came with her, the captain of tha steamer, and its chief officer formed a semi-circle in tront ; behind was the bale of cotton against which he had rolled himself for protection. He sits up drinking in that strange expression which at once scares, puzzles, and pleases him, till a sort of sleepy, faint feeling makes him close his eyes. 'He's going to faint,' says the lady. 'I knew he was hurt, Oh,see how he Is bleed Ing.' He is bleeding badly. Iligdrods are trick ling fast down his ragged sleeye, which will soak no more. These come from an ugly tear (caused by a nail iu the wharf plant ing) on his arm just above the elbow. 'Don't look, Mrs. Austen,' says the cap tain ; I'll have him attended to. Ho, quar termaster I come and carry this boy on board and give my compliments to the doctor, and ask him to plaster up this cut.' Dick has no power to resist, He is carried on board, muttering, "Come, I ain't done nothing to you.' They were all standing on the main deck, Two other ladies, with their escorU arrive, but the meal Is delayed by the appearance of some of the crew, bearing squat heavy boxes which jingle as they are lowered through' a trap door la the deck,partly under the lunch table, 'Mexican dollars,1 tain. explains cap- 'What a lot of money I ed. the lady remark- 'Not so much as you suppose, tut a tidy sum. Each box contains 12,000 and there ate fourteen of them eh, Mr.' Mansfield ? This is the officer in charge, who confirms the count. They have got their first glass of oham pagne, when the doctor joins them, 'Well, how's your patleut J' asks the cap tain. 'AH right, and clean for once In his life, but rather weak,' Is the medical report upon the Rat. 'Poor child,' sighs the lady, 'what ought he to take?' 'I should prescribe something to eat.' the doctor replies, helping himself to a slice of tongue. 'Captain, I should like to give him tome dinner,' It is unnecessaary to say who speaks, and the skipper would Indeed have been a stern man If he could have resisted the pleading of those brown eyes. The quartermaster Is summoned again, and appears, leading Dick, It has begun to dawn upon him that he Is not going to be abused. 'What is your name, little boy ?' asks the lady. 'Dick.' 'Are you hungry, Dick ?' 'Rather.' 'Only rather?' in a tone of disappoint ment, 'Rather,' explains the captain. 'In that tone, means 'very." The lsdy takes the plate and fills It with cold chicken, stuffing, salad, bread, and what not ; adds a knife and fork, and gives it to Dick. 'I should keep some of that for to-morrow if I wero you,' observed tho doctor. 'Then you'd be a fool,' Dick replied with a scoff. 'The big fellows on the levee would take it 'fore you'd gone two blocks. To morrow ain't here, but the grub is, and so I'm going to get outside it while I can,' There is a general laugh at this philoso phy. Dick 'gets outside' his grub without further comment, and is walking off, when the captain calls him back with a Why you young rascal I are you going ithout saying thank you?' 'Thank ye.' 'No, not me. Thank the lady.' 'Thank ye kindly ma'm,' says Dick. It was the first polite speech he had ever uttered, and heaven knows where he picked it up. Tho party remained on board till aoout G o'clock, and by the time it broke up every one had forgotten about the 'Rat,' but as Mrs. Austin was crossing the levee he ran up, much to the annoyance of her compan ion, who had had enough of him. 'I say,' says the Rat,' 'do you like him ?' with a chuck of the thumb toward the steam- 'Captain Gilbert?' 'Yes is he your feller ?' 'Get out, you scamp,' cries the gentleman, indignantly. 'Let him speak,Fred,the lady pleads, 'No, Dick, I am married,and this is my husband; but Captalu Gilbert is our friend. I crossed with him once, and be was very good to me when I was sick.' 'Was you ever sick ?' asks Dick, with a face full of wonder. Often. So I can answer your question, and say that I do like the captain very much.' 'You'd hate for anything bad to happen to him? 'Why, of course to him or any one else,' 'Wot, to me ?' 'Indeed I would, my poor boy. O, Fred, see how wistful he looks 1 Mayn't I give him some of Charley's left off things ? I have a little boy at home,' she goes on, see ing astonishment in her husband's eye, 'about your size.' 'Does ho get chickens to eat ?' asks the Rat. 'Yes.' 'Every day ?' 'No, not every day,' she answers smiling ; it is well she does qualify her reply, for Dick's credulity was not yet sufficiently elastic to bear such a marvel as a boy about his size, who had chickens every day. So they bade him follow them, and more wonders were in store for him. He sees Charlie. He was taken up to the lady's room where the promised things were produced and tried on over his rags. Here he stood lost in admiratiou. He gazed about him be wildered, and some dim sense of shame stole over him as he saw his own reflection in the looking glass. 'Mayn't I put'em on now V he asks, as the things are selected. 'Better not,' says tho lady. Put them on In the moral ug. Come here again about 10 o'clock.and we will see what we cau do with you.' 'He submits, and goes down very reluct' antly, with two whole suits of Charley's left-off clothes bundled up in a large hand kerchief, and fifty cents In his pocket. As soon as the hall door closes after him the brute instincts of secrecy and evasion pull his jelly bag hat over his eyes and send him off at a run. Captain Gilbert spends the evening with his agent,and then returns tq the ship about 11 o'clock. 'Sorry to say sir,' begins the chief officer, 'that most of the men are on shore. 'Without leave ?' A shrug of his shoulders is his only an swer , 'Whose watch is it?' 'Mr. Andrews.' 'Bend him here.' 'How's this, Mr, Andrews,' asks the cap tain, angrily. 'It's net my fault, sir. They don't go over the gangway. They crawl over the side and onto the beams of the wharf, It's Impossible to Btop them.' The captain knows New Orleans, aud be ing a just man, had no more to say. It is very provoking. He Is going to sail to morrow, and theso men will come on board either drunk or stupid from the effect of drink. Borne of them, perhaps, will not come at all. Tho weather for the last few days has been oppressively hot, and now there ii hope of rain. The iky Is dark and low, and the faint evening breeze has gone down. The captain has gone down to bis cabin,and tries to read, but the mosquitoes won't let him, so he get Into bod, tucks In his bar, and sleeps the sleep of a tired man, the Something makes him conscious that two bells (I o'clock) is striking. Then he hears a whisper, 'Cap'n I Cap'u I' close by his side. In an Instant he had his revolver ready, and In the act of striking a match, when the whisper says, 'Hush I It's me Dick. Don't say a word ; don't light a match. Hush I Is there a man named Phil Woods In your crowd V 'Yes, a fireman; but he deserted last week,' the captain whispers back, 'Have you got any specious aboard V 'Specious ? Oh, specie, you meau,' 'Wot's that ?' 'Money.' 'I thought so. Well, Cap'n, Phil Wood and five more are after that there spcclousi and they are aboard now.' 'Good God I why didn't you tell me be fore ?' gasps the captain. 'Policemen cheved me, 'cos I'd got a bun dle that the lady gave me. Ho took it away, he did, and locked me up,' exclaimed Dick, 'but 1 got out.' 'On board now ; do you say 1' asks the captain. 'Yes, and at work, too. Listen I' What the captain hears sends him out of hrs4iirth with a spring. 'Fire that,' be says thrusting a pistol Into Dick's band, 'and run forward shouting for help as loud as you can scream.' Then he darts out on deck. And no timo to spare I Tho thieves, have overpowered and gagged the men on watch; have cut around the fastenings on the hatch leading to the specie room, and already two boxes are out and ready for spiriting away. It is a brisk affair while It lasts ; which is until the chief officer, doctor, steward, aroused by Dick's shouts and the firing.come upon the scene. Then such of the thieves as can do so jump overboard for their re treat forward Is cut off. Three remain ; one, the leader dead, and another with his thigh Bpllntered, and a third with several balls in his body. The first thing they do is to release poor Mr. Andrews, whom they find still insensi ble from a blow on the head. By this time the police have come, and are searching the ship, lest others of the thieves might be hid ing. 'What's that in the wheel-house says ?' the chief officer ; 'bring a lig.ht here. Ah I It's another of them. Turn him over. Ob. Lord I captain, look here. Here's grati tude 1 It isn't that Rat that the lady ' 'My God I' cries the Captain, 'I forgot all about htm ? Is he hurt ?' 'Shot right through the body, and serves him right,' is Mansfield's reply. It struck the Bpeaker 'silly' as he afterward said, to see the skipper fall down on his knees be sido the 'Rat,' lift his head upon his should er, and in a voice hoarse with emotion say, 'are you hurt bad, boy? Don't start. I'm your friend the captain, Dick speak to me 1' 'Is the police gone ?' he moans. 'They shan't hurt you, Dick no one hall. Oh, doctor, come and attend this poor, brave little fellow. Any drop ot blood Is worth more than all the lives of these scoundrels. Do your best for him,and send for all the surgeons in the city, if they can help poor Dick I Poor little faithful chap I' the wounued tbieves are carried oil to the charity hospital by the police. Dick Is taken to the captain's cabin, and placed in his bod. The Bhip's doctor does his very best for him. Tho most famous in the city comes and looks grave. Captain Ullbert never leaves him. 'Say ?' Dick's voice has become very low and tremous 'was that there money yourn ?' o ; but it was in my cnarge. You'd a got it if you'd lost it, eh ?' 'I should have been ruined.' 'She wouldn't ha liked that.' 'She?' who do you mean, my boy?' 'The lady her as you was good too.' The captain turned aside, and tried hard to swallow something which had never pass ed his lips. 'Was it for tier sake, he asked that you did this?' 'She Bald she'd hate to have anything to come to you,' replies the Rat, 'cos you was good to her when she was sick. Two nights ago, I heard Phil Wood and his crowd talk ing about robbing a ship of specious. They said they was going to 'tice all the men ashore with drink, and there'd be only one man forward besides the captain. There was to ha' bin one put at the cap'n's door to knock him on the head If he came out. I didn't know for aartin it war your ship, and I was a-coming to ask If you had specious when the p'liceman chevied me.' 'Who was It that shot at you ?' 'Don't know. When I see the p'lice I crawled away to where you found me, I was skear'd, for fear they'd think I belonged to the other crowd.' The Rat is skin and bone, and nervous as a cat. He has lost more blood than he can spare from that slight wound in his arm. When the lady come early in the morn ing, the Rat is Binking slowly. His face brightens up as he sees her. 'I say don't you cry like that,' Bays he. Childlike he puts up his hand to withdraw hers from her eyes. He touches it with awe. It does not break nor fly off, and nothing is done to him for his daring. Encouraged by such immunity, he ventures to give it a lit tle pat,and then the face which he is watch ing intently Is lit up with a smile through its tears. Into his unloved life into bis half-savage mind dawns the first idea of ca ress. He clasps the lady's band and draws It down and presses it there with both his little brown paws. Then he leans back with a long-drawn sigh, and shuts his eyes. Three years have passed, and Captain Gilbert's steamer is again at her wharf at the foot of Jackson street, and again Mr, and Mrs. Austen are to lunch on board. As the lady Is stepping down from the gang-way, a well-grown, handsome boy, tn a blue flan nel knlckerbocker suit, and Btraw hat with ship's ribbon, came slyly forward. wuy, mat la never lite 7 sue ex claims. 'Diok all ovei,' says the captain, proud ly. 'Ob, Dick, how you have grown, and how improved 1' 'There was plenty of room for that,' laughs the quondam Rat. Then the captain takes her aside and ex plains. 'He's been at school ever since be got well, and has learned more than other boys in double the time. Ob, he i smart! I'm educating him now for my profession and belieye he could past for mate to-mor- row.1 'What name have you given him ?' asks the lady. 'My own. My wife thinks as much of him as I do j and we've no children of our own, why ' 'Captain Gilbert, you are a good man I' and,' lowering his voice, 'a grateful.' This Is thn end of the Rat's tale. Some scraps from a lunch table, kindly given, stood between a man and ruin ; and a tender touch of a woman's hand saved a boy's life. ICELANDIC COSTUMES. The full dress consisted of n helmet shaped head dress of some stiff white stun", with a golden tiara around the front of It, and a large lace veil over all ; a black cloth jack et, partly open In front, trimmed with vel vet and gold embroidery ; a black cloth skirt of moderate length, and pretty full, embroidered wilh yellow silk. The belt was very handsome, being covered with cold ornaments. For out of doors thero was a long, round, black velvet cloak, trimmed with white fur, and lined with green cloth. The shoes are generally like those worn In the Faroe Islands. The everyday dress li a black cloth jacket trimmed with velvet, but not embroidered ; a dark skirt, and a large apron of some bright color. A silk necktie is also worn, the color of which ought to match that of the apron. Diversity of taste, however, is exhibited both In the color of these parts of the dress and In the fineness ofthe work on the chemhette and cuffs. The head dress is a small black worsted cap, with a long black silk tassel, and It is worn by all classes, the only difference being in the gold, silver, or tinsel ornament on the tassel, and the slightly larger size of the caps worn by the old women. Oooo! Words. UUICK WIT WINS. Years ago, into a wholesale grocery store In Boston walked a tall, muscular looking man, evidently a fresh comer from some backwoods town iu Maine or New Hamp shire. Accosting the first person he met who happened to be the merchant himself, he asked : You don't want to hire a man in your store, do you ?' 'Well,' said the merchant, 'I don't know ; what can you do ?' Do ?' said the man ; 'I rather guess I can turn my hand to almost anything what do you want done ?' 'Well, if I wag to hire a man, It would be one that could lift well, a strong, wiry fel low ; one, for instance, that could shoulder a sack of coffee like that yonder, and carry it across tho floor and never lay it down. There, now, Cap'tin,' said the country man, 'that's just me. I can lift anything I hitch to ; you can't suit me better. What will you give a man that will suit you ?' 'I'll tell you,' said the merchant : 'If you will Bhoulder that sack of coffee and carry it across the store twice and never lay it down I will hire you a year at $100 per month.' 'Done,' said the stranger, and by this time every clerk in the store had gathered around and waiting to join in the laugh against the man, who walking up to the sack threw it across his shoulder with perfect ease, although extremely heavy, and walk ing twice across the floor went quickly to a large hook which was fastened to th-3 wall, and hanging it up, turned to the merchant, and said 'There, now.it may hang there till dooms day, I shall never lay it down. What shall I go about, mister ? Just give me plenty to do and $100 per month and it's all right.' The clerks broke into a laugh, and the merchant, discomfited yet satisfied, kept bis agreement, and to-day the green country man is the senior partner in the firm, and is worth a million dollars. Utica Obierver, If you want to prevent Typhoid Fever, or f you ieel as if you were going to have the chills and fever, take Dr. Bull's Baltimore Pills. Price 25 cts. SUB-SOILING AND DEEP PLOUGHING. Discussions are going on continually as to the merits and demerits of deep plough ing. The following from The World is one of the best expositions we have seen: The depth of soil can alone determine tho depth of plowing. When the soil is shallow the gradual deepening of it should be sought by the use of appropriate materials for improve ment until the object is fully attained. The sub-soil ought not, as a rule, to be brought out of its bed except in small quantities to be exposed to the atmosphere during the fall, whiter and spring, or in summer fal low ; nor even then except when such fer tilizers are applied as are necessary to put it at once into a produciug condition. Two indifferent soils of opposito character, as a stiff clay and rllding sand, sometimes occu py the relation of surface and sub-soil to each other, and when thoroughly mixed and subjected to cultivation they will produce a soil of greatly increased value. Soils ap propriated to gardens and horticultural pur poses are often deepened to fifteen and even eighteen inches with decided advantage, But whatever is tho depth of the oll the plow ought to run up the entire mass itbin ita reach, and what is beyond it should be thoroughly broken up by the sub soil plow. Wbeu all circumstances are fa vorable lo tue use or the sub-soil plow an increase In the crop follows, as the bard earth below the reach of the ordinary plow has been loosened. This permits the escape of the water which falls on the surface, the circulation of air and a more extended range for the roots of the plants, by which they procure additional nourishment and secure a crop agalust drought. The benefits of sub soil plowing are most apparent in an im pervious clay sub-soil and least evident in loose aud leacby soils. Most of the objec tions to deep ploughing were from those wnu bring tue poor Bub-soil to the surface. Cured of Drinking. 'A young friend of mine was cured of an InBatiable thirst for Liquor, which had so prostrated him that he was unable to do any business. He was entirely cured by the use of Hop Hitters. It allayed all that burning thirst ; took away the appetite for liquor made his nerves steady, and he has remain ed a sober and steady man for more than two years, and has no desire to return to bis cups; Iknowcf a number of others that have been cured of drinking by it.' From a leading It, R. office, Chicago, Ills, nODD LUCK IN WHEAT. During the past five years the good luck of American financial and agricultural In terests has been remarkable. It Is true that our enterprise and Industry have been very great and have deserved suc cess, but the forces of nature have worked with us to make that success hardly less than marvelous. For example, take the wheat crop that has just been harvested. It Is almost without precedent In tho acre age under cultivation, the yield per acre, the quality of the grain and the heaviness of the demand and the consequent high price. To our own Industry is due tho fact that a larger area has been planted In wheat, that It has been well cultivated and econo mically harvested and transported. But there our ends meet the rest Is the gift of good fortune. A bad season would havo ruined our crops as the crops of England and France have been ruined. The grass hoppers might have attacked them as they did tho crops of Southern Russia. War might havo laid waste our fields as In Bulga. ria and Roumania, or floods like those along the Danube, might have washed them away. We have escaped all these perils and have harvested a crop superabundant In quantity and of the finest quality. But unless this our good fortune had been supplemented by the III fortune of our neighbors, the advan tage would not have been bo great. A su perabundant crop would have proportion ally lowered the price and the incomo of the farmer would havo been materially in creased. Tho excess of supply over the de mand would have taken all tho profits out ofthe crop. Ourciowning streak of good luck has been the partial failures of the European crops and the consequent enor mous demand for American grain. It was officially announced the other day by tho French minister that France would need $1,000,000 of American wheat. The Eng lish demand will be considerably larger. There will thus be no difficulty In disposing of our immense surplus at high prices. ringiug to the wheat growers a very hand some return on their investments of capi tal and labor. This will give them some $200,000,000 to spend, and the merchants will in turn get the benefit of It, It was said that Good Fortune brought us these blessings, but still they are iu largo part the reward of our former labor. A consid erable portion of the profit lies in the mod ern economies in handling, transporting and loading the grain on tho outward-bound ships. If it were not for our large railroad facilities and the competitions which keep freights down, together with the terminal facilities in the way of grain elevators, it would not be possible to supply the Eu ropean demand for grain ; and the cost of landing it in Europo would put the price too high for a very large consumption by putting it out ofthe reach of large classes of consumers. The elements of our good fortune-are largely the results of our own en ergy, forethought and invention. Heaven has helped us becauso we first helped our selves. But our wheat successes have not been our only strokes of good luck. The increas ing foreign demand for American petroleum is due chiefly to our improved appliances for handling, transporting to the coast, and shipping It. It has thus driven out other illuminating-oil in many parts of Europe and has become an enormous article of ex portation. Our crops of Indian corn have in the same way been creating European markets for themselves and there is still room for vast expansion in this direction. The cotton crops for the past four years havo been far larger than the crops raised by slave labor before the war, and the pri ces considerable higher. The current cot ton year product may prove to be the larg est crop ever picked in this country and yet, owing to the large demand, the prices have kept up remarkably. It is this long series of fortunate events which has given us the enormous balance of trade in our fa vor, which caused the premium on gold to disappear, made resumption possible, and the reduction of a large part of the bonded debt from six to four per cent. This is in deed a happy land. A JURY OP MATRONS. A curious incident occurred at the crim inal court of the Old Bailey, London, on the 8th of last month. On that day a wo man was tried nd convicted of murdering her mistress under Circumstances of great brutality. After sentence had ;been passed upon her she pleaded in stay of execution that sbe was soon to become a mother. Up on this plea the judge dismissed the jury by whom a verdict of guilty had been found, and within ten minutes thereafter a jury of matrons, selected from a crowd of'females in the gallery, was etnpanneled and sworn to give a true verdict on the Issue. The ma tron of the prison was first called. She tes tified that the prisoner had been under her charge since May 21, that she had made such examination in her case four days be fore as was customary where women were charged with murder, and did not think the statemeut correct. The judge not satisfied with the testimony of one person on the subject, directed that the prisoner be taken from the bar to a Bide room, and that there in the presence of tne jury of matrons, fur ther inquiry be made with the aid of Bklllful physician. The report ofthe latter was adverse also to the prisoner's statement Judge Deuman then seemed at losswhat to do. He remarked that "after thirty-two years in the profession he had never been at an inquiry ofthe sort." Mr, Avery who conducted the prosecution, aud whom the judge called "one of the most experienced criminal lawyers in England," said the same thing, and Mr. Sleigh, an old practi tioner, who defended the prisoner, Bald, "I also my lord, have never had such exper ience.' I be judge summing up said : "This Is a very unusual inquiry, and ladles of the jury, it has never happened to me before. T he law If that is it be estab lished to the satisfaction of a jury that the prisoner is as she claims to be, then the' ex ecution must be respited." Thejurywomen after two or three minutes' deliberation, sta ted they had agreed upon their verdict, and rendered it to the effect that the woman was not in the condition she represented. So the sentence stood without stay, Rare such an incident Is, the right to summon jury of matrons In certain cases Is a part o the common law of England, and hence, though fallen Into disuse, may be a part of the law Id this couutry,; RATES OF ADVERTISING. unci. in. ,.s.oo . S.IM1 ... 4.(0 ... a.oo .. s.vu 1.10.IK) IV, M, In, 11.60 13.011 tt.Ofl ..( S.lfl S.00 It One I DCS Two Inches Three Inches. fBXO ia.no is.no so.o H.00 4.M T.oe 1.00 n. f.00 11.00 10.00 ie.00 rourmcnes... . urter column., alf column. . .. One column. s.00 11.00 15.00 IB.00 W fo.ool 10.00 to.vo loo.oii vnrlv Ailvertlsempnta nnVAble nnartrrlv. Trail slent advertisements must be paid for before Inserted except wuere parties nave Bceuuuis. tjitml Ki1vrtljuiinentatwndollarRirlnehforthret Insertions, and at that rate for addlllonallnseruont wiinouirererence to icngin. lSterutiir'n. Amtnlstrator's and Auditor' notlcet ihrM. rintUrH. Must hnnhlilfor when Inserted. Transient or Local notices, twenty cents a lint regular advertisements half rates. "...I. In tttn 'illitalnn IHrortnr" rftllimn. fill dollar per year for eacn lino. Items. The hackman's business U driving, Tho ladles say that home-made dresses are generally cut by us. Pride goeth before a fall, but a great deal of bad language cometh after It. A German nbvslclan orders fresh fruit and oysters for gout and ludigestlon. Gotham's lawyers are the men to work with a w'll, says tho New York Mall. Of all classes that employ the brains men of science are said to live the longest. Eighteen hundred girls under twenty years of age were married In New York last year. One who knows says that mixed voices on't produce bait as much music as mixed drinks do. Daw's brewery yielded a profit of $2.- 000,000 last year, to bo divided among eight partners. Market imitations do not affect the price of liberty, which always remains at eternal vigilance. A Maine naner complains that money is I lull t thero. And this in the heart ofthe prohibition paradise I Why is a corner peanut-seller like an pothecary? Because he does business on tbe small scale, Puck says. worth says I-.nglisb women do not dress as extravagantly as the women of France and America. It has been observed that although birds in their little nests agree." whales often come to blows. A little girl, on being shown a neigh bor's bonnet said : "Mother says it's a per fect fright, but it don't scare nio." "Can a clergyman marry himself?" asks an exchange. All we can say is, that if he does, he gets a duced poor wife. Seventy vessels, from five to seventy tons burden, with 350 men are now engaged in the Key West sponge trade. A well known wnlkist mikes the aston ishing announcement tint ho is about to cover two thousand miles "on his feet." There has been a IniiU application of hardly ever" invented. It runs thus : Quoth the raven, never well, hardly ever more. Under the sceptre ofthe Czar of Russia live thirty-eight different nationalities, eath speaking its own language, which is foreign to all others. An atlracton at a recent church fair was a shooting gallery ?with five shots for ten cents. We,hope that the moral aim of the gallery was good. The last Ohio idea was invented bv a divorced wife, who sues her successor for alienating the affections of her former hus band. Experience in Africa proves that the bayonet is a poor defense, and the nronrietv of arming the British infantry with revolvers is discussed. When you are losing money, the most economical thing you can do is take in a partner, that is tbe wuy carclul business men do. Men nrate about women tonkin? beau tiful in calico, but somehow the young lady no promenades once in calico, never gets second invitation. The New Orleans Picayune assures us that dreaming on a piece of wedding-cake is not always a sure mine. Mince pie and cheese are much more certain. "Painting." says Charles Blanc, "holds the middle place between sculpture, which we can see and touch, and music, which we can neither Bee nor touch."; There is a man in the Taunton alms house who, a little more a year ago, was assessed and paid one hundred and lourteen dollars taxes on real estate. It Is a common belief of Dhilosonhical minds that the anticipation is more enjoya ble than the realization. This applies to strawberries when you eat too many. -Mr. Edison might turn his attention to the invention of a patent safe lock, which, when meddled with by a burglar, shall seize him, handcuff, and take him to a police-sta tion. "Never put on" till to-morrow what can be done to-day," is a pretty good motto ; but tbe man who believes in it firmly will, nevertneiess, ueiay a visit to tne dentist as long as possible. When a tireless book agent left a small town, after getting all he could out of it, tbe people had just spirit enough left to remark that, by going away, he was "filling a long- ieit want." Dairymen may be interested to know that there are 10.705.000 cows in the United States, which represent a value of $299,705, 000. The country can certainly stand on herd dignity. A New Jersey grocer can fill a dry co- coanut with water and plug up the hole so demy mat tne small boy suspects no cheat. And yet men say that inventive geulus is in Its Infancy. A lady, who has long been recognized as an uncompromising opponent ofthe use of tobacco I n any form did ac tually account for early rising, the other morning, by aaying she was "up to snun me early breeze. -The average salary of Methodist minis ters in fourteen Southern conferences is said to be $672, aud tho average amount paid t-tzs, in northern conterences tue average is $700, and the deficiency in pay ment about 12 per cent Rev. Samuel Marks, Episcopal minister at Huron, Ontario, has just preached !a ser mon on his fifty-fifth anniversary of his or dination to the ministry. He is 82 years of age. lie was ordained In l'blladelpbla, by Bishop White in 1824. An Oil City boy, who had run away from home, and at last returned, was asked 11 bis tatber killed tbe rattened call lor tbe prodigal. "Not much," he replied. "He didn't kill tbe fattened calf, but bo wanted to slay me prodigal." We read that the Strand Theatre. Lon don, recently had the following droll se quence oi plays on its bills: "i-.ngaged, 'Xrarrlcl ' "llnhv All van, natural on, I if It bad only followed these up with "Di vorce," the list would have been complete. Some ofthe missionaries In South Afri ca are engaged in an attempt to prove that the Zulus are lineal descendants of the lost tribes of Israeli It is said they "havo gen erally marked Jewish features, and their language is full of Hebrew idioms." Emerson, on his 70th birthday, was on ship board. Onel of his fellow-passenger congratulated Mr. Emerson on his birthday, health, and vigor. "Yes I yes I" said the Concord sage, in his mot-t reflective tones, "but I consider it the end of my youth. The Protestant churches of Ireland complain that they are constantly losing their beet and brightest ministers. Presby terian minesters go to Scotland and Amer ica, and Episcopal ministers go to England, receiving in both cases better appoint ments, The first apple ofthe season, with a hectic worm-flusu on Ita verdant cheek, in sinuates itself into the confidence of thejuv eniU, and plays with his ttomach as with a band-bellows, and the fond mother anxious to allay intestinal strife, administer caster oil upon the troubled waters,