Tl)e Coltuqbikq. COLOMBIA DEMOCRAT, STAR OF TltS KOHIII, and C .' MMtub, Consolidated. Issued Weekly, ery Prli1n .Horning, Ml lll.OO.MSIlUIKl, COLUMIIIA CO.Pn, at two hollars per year, to subscribers out ot Xae county Hie teriusarostrlctlylti ndvnuee. .'!C0 WW ,,l!,"i'"1;'J excor.i t the option of the publtihers, until nil arrcafai saronntd.but Inncf m.ntlnunil pt-i.,111. ivtll nm ,.n ..i. .... 1 ' 1M 911 13(0 12. V) 3011 4P0 4 at bio 51 TOO (1(11 B0 ton tarsi It ttOD SHI 1100 1S0O 1.M0 won 60 00 It 18 tO U 1ND0 raw moo Mio loo to One Inch .Tito Inches iTbtce Inches ,. rnurlnches ouartrr column. IS CO BOO 700 810 10(11 17 CO SO 00 J 1 'uaircniun n . oneeoluinu,,.. S.I 00 UtXI .. .st. h.,i.hliiniiBHfll. 1 easi lent advertisements must bopnldforbeforclnfftt led except whero parties havo accounts i Legal advertisements two dollars i per Inch i for ,lhrir insertions, nnd nt that rnto for additional 'insertions without reference to length. 1 Executor's, Admlnlstrslor',RndAudltor'snotlc ithreo dollars. Must bo paid for when nseited. 1 Transient or 1-oeal notices, ten cents ft line, regu lar advertisements halt rates cards In tho 'Business Directory" column, one dollar a year for each line. AVI papers sent out ut the Stato or to instant ivost oHet imMt bo n ilit for In advance, unless u rospon mUlrtpjMmilnCjoliimtjhi cmnty assumes to par the subscription duo on demand. I'OSTAOKlanolodifercxacted from subscribers the county. JOB P KIM TING. Tho Jobbl nir Department of tho Colum st m Is very complete, nnd our .fob PilntlwrwlU compare favor, ibty vvl h that of tho larcenies. Allworkdoneon snort notice, neatly and atmoderatc priced. 3. E.HIiWHLL, lr.,.,..(ii J S MTTSNBENDEB, f rm " 3, E, SIiWBLL, BLOOMSBU11G, PA., FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1885. THE UOIiUMMAN, VOL, OOLUMUIA DEMtll.'llAT, VOL, XIX NO 10 XL1X', NO S lie PROFESSIONAL CARDS. r" E7WALIiKI," J ATTOIIMUY-A'I'-LAW, lllooms burr, Pa OtTlco over 1st, National Hank. U. FUNK, 1 ' ATroilNEV-AT-LAW. Bl.OOHSBCR'J, Pa. timcoln Snt.'a lluttdlnft. J OHN M. CliAIUC, ATTO UN K Y-AT-L A W. AND JUdl'lUK OF THE PEACE. llLOOMSBCIlO, PA. i 'ntcM over Moyer Uros, Drug store. C1 1 1 W. UILt.tfll, VI'POItNtSY-AT-LAW. iMTlcein "drawer's bur.dlnj.BccondflOur.rootn No.t UlooMiHUnrt'i Pa. ii. c' HA NIC ZUIR. ATTORN ICY-AT-L AW. Bloomsburg, P3 0,11 corner otContro and Main Btrnets. Clark Hutidlutf. (Jan bo consulted lu Uermau, 120. E. KlAVKMj, ATTO UN 15 Y-AT-L AW. Nkw Ooi-cmbiam llutLunta, MoomaDurir, I ito.rtier ut the Unttod States Luw Asboclatti .il. onions made In nny pin ot Ainerlcn or K ropf , pAOL E. WHIT, Attorney-at-Law. onico In Columbian uvilsiko, Itoom NO. 1, 8-C1I, floor. RLOOMSIWRO, PA. a. KNORtt. L. 8. WINTHKSTBIN. KNORR & WINTERS TEEN, A ttornoys-at-Law. Ofllcf) lu 1st National Ilank bulldtnir, second door, flrstdoortothel ft. Corner ot Main and Market streets uioomsDurg, r. Bdrl enttons and BoutUUi Collecttd. J H. MAIZE, ATTORNEY AT-LAW omco tn Malzo'a bulldJir over nilimeycr's grocery. JOHN 0. YOCUM, Attoriiey-at-La'i CATAW1SSA, PA. OfUce In Nkws Item bulldlcg, Main sttect. Member of the American Attorneys' Assotla- ColSjctlons made In any part ot America, K. OSWALD, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW. Jackson BuiUUng, Rooms 4 trad B. BKHWICU.PA y. II. UIIAWN. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Catawtssa Pu. omco, corner ot Tlitrd and Maluutrcets. E. SMITH, Attorney-titLaw, Ucrwick. Pa. Cm lie Consulted in German. At-bO Flf.ST-CLASS FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IlUriiUSKSTED. 3"0nicu llrst door below the post ofllco. MISCELLAHEOUS. Cn. BAKKLEY, ,ttoriiey-u-l.:ivi , otllce lu llrowerv bulldlnir, nnd Htory.wocn i s JH, McKELVY, M. D.,Hurgtoii nnd Phy .slclan, north side Main atreet.belovi. Marlni AL. FKITZ, Atioroey-at Law. OCiee lu Columbian jmlldloK, p M. DRINKER, OUN & LOCKSMITH ntTiuif Mactiliiea and Machtuory of all Klndu i re utrtUT OrKRi HocaK Butldtng, Uloomsbtu'i;, Pa. D R. J. C. RUTTER, pnvsiciAN SSOItOEON, Office, North Market strttt, Ulccmtlmtt,. Pu P. R. WM. M. REUER, Surgeon and Physician, ottlco corner uf Uovk and Market it. Jit, EVANS, M. D., Surgeon and . PLysloiau, vuftlco and liesldenoo on Third street. II HOUSE, DENTIST, Rloomsuuiio, Coi.usihia County, Pa. All styles of work done In a superior manner, work warranted oa represented. Tbbtu txiRACi . ko without Pain bj the use of Has, and freoot charge when artificial teeth are inserted JOlceln Columbian building, 2nd floor. Jo be ujch ai all houri during the da$ Nov.ss-lJ' piRE INSURANCE. ;CUUI8TIAH f knapp, uloomsbduu.pa. 110MK, OP N. Y. M Hltl'il ANTS', OP NKWA1IK, N. J. CLINTON, N. V. PEOPLKb' N. Y. ItKAUl.NO, PA. These ld corporatiovs are well seasoned by age and riHK TisTxn and liae never jet had a lOBSstttledbyanycourtof law. 'ihelr asbtts aro all invested In solid tEci'KiT ES aro liable to the hazaidotFiRBonly. . Ixisseo I'lioMrrLY nnd kovbstlv adjusted and ald us soon as determined by christian k. nait, arECiL aoent anu APJrsiKR Uloomsburo, Pa. The people of Colu i bla county should natron, lie the agency where losses If any ira settled and paid by one ot ther own citizens. PltOSIl'lNESS, EQUITY, PAIHDnALI.NO. for infants "Castorlalssowelladaptedtoehlldrcnthat I IrommendltasBuriortoanyprescrlpUoa 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y, ENTAURl(iilaliiT An absoluto euro for Rhoiunatisin, Sprains, Talu ia tho Back, Hurus, Galls, &c. An Iiistaiifancous Pain- reHovlnc ami iloallnt; Koitiedy. Lots of People Say, "OH MY back:' REMEDY ivrn imtirttim Hero Is Solid A 1 TESTI3I0NT from Hard Working Men. Mnclilalut nnd IlnlMer. "I havo been troubled years with kidney and bladder dimcnlly. After using fonr bottlci of Hunt's Kidney and Liver P.imeot I havo been completely cured." William C. Clark, Maion and Dnlldcr, Anbnrn.N.Y. "Health i better than wealth." ' ninchlnlsti Mr. ncorso Karg. Machinist, 1183 nidge Ave., Phllideltihla.Po., av; ".My tllscaso started when 1 was quite it yonng lad by having weak kidneys. I havo used Just (lx Imttlesnf Hunt's Kidney and Liver ItEMtDT, and 1 eolcmuly proclaim, 'I feci like anew man." "Good conntel has no price, obey it." Mccknntc. Mr. Henry Williams, Mechanic, East Brldgo. port, Conn., says: "About two months ago I caught a heavy cold, which settled In my kldncj . I got a bottle of Hunt's Kidney and Liver ItEsir.DT nnd with the first dose began to getwell." "Light suppers mokei long lives." ltnllrond Ilnll. Frank It. Lee. ofllco N. Y. C. & Tt. It. It. Ltttlo Falls, N. Y., June 8, 18M, says: "My father, (S3 yoars old, had severe kidney and bladder disease for 20 years, urination causing ociito pain. The weaknesa was bo great he was obliged to wear a rubber big. Twelto bottles of Hunt's Kidney ItEMEnv completely cured him, nnd wo consider ft remarkable. Wo clieerf ully recommend It." "Deeds aro better than words." Hunt's Kidney and Liver ltrsiEnr has stood thetestot time, lthasbeen beforetho public for twenty years, and has cured t very year thousands of pcoplo BulTerlng from various dlCR6es of thn Ktttneys and Llvcr.'nn 1 kindred dlordPrs, who had failed to get relief from doctors nnd who expected never to bo cured. Thonsands of testimonials from such persons attest Us value. Send for book. "Alls well that ends well." Sold by all druggists. Price 31. 55. 9 HUNT'S ItCMCDY CO.. Providence, R. I. X. ClllTTKSTOX, Oencral Agent, S. Y. Health and Jiappiness. 00 S OTHERS HAVE DOHE. Aro your Kidney3 disordered? wore, nricrl had n i;lT(itUi by 13 belt doctor! in Detroit." M. V.Dcleraux(lIechanlc,lonU,Mlcu. Aro your nerves weak? f 'KLIucy Woi t cured tn from nervous wralcnw CC.afl.T 1 not elTwrtct lollre."- Ur. M. M. U. Uwdnln, J.U. vhrtalian ilonllor CKiTeloiiU, u. Havo you Bright'a Disease? 'ManoyWo.t ritred mo when lay water wai Just Uko chalk oiU tacn like bl.Kxl." Viante WUaou, Pcabody.Mau. Suf f orincr from Diabetes ? "JUdn y.Vor. utliotuubti.ucciH'sriilrciQctly thafe over used. ul?ci almost linmo.llnto rcllel." Ilr. phllUg c. Iuliuu, aonkton, Vt. Havo you Liver Complnint? 'Kldnrv.Wort rum I ma nf rrirnnLi l.irieniitiini after I proycJ to 1Ic." iii?nry v.aru, nte cji. cctii Nat.Gaard,lv,y. IsyourfBack lamo and aching? tuJLuu i iiau iu i on out or itcd." i O. 11, Talluiaee.illlwftukee. Wl. V Havo you Kiclnoy Disease? f JaJncy-W ort mndo mo noun linllccr antlkidneyi n;itT yearn rz unmctTbLtui ii.HtorlPir. 1 worln $14 n bos.'-8at'i llodajt, Wilhambtuwii. Wert V. Aro you Constipated? ('K'Mnnv.H'ni t. ntiona i it a. n.ninl Intu nn,l iiiw1 tj mo after 1ft jtara ot oibtr mrrtlcinra." Havo von Malaria? Ivldnoy-Wort Iia douo better than any otlicr remwiy I havo cTtr ihk'-I In try practice,' Pr. 1U K. HOIK, Bouthilero.Vt. Aro you Bilious P "ITMney.Wurt has done, mo more tood than any other leiiicJy 1 luv ever taken." 11 re. J. T. Oallo ay, Elk Flat, Oregon. Aro you tormented "with Piles? "Kldney-WortiTiiioiififlj tumj mo cf Lloeduiff piles. Or. V.'. t'. Kl no rc- mime-i!o.l It to me." Utio. II. Uorat, Caltic r 1. tuuk. 11) cralown, Ta. Are you Rheumatism racked? Kldn.'y.Vfort cured me, nfler 1 was clrcii up to dlo Ly pnyslctai.s and 1 1. id suirereil tlility years. Elbrido Milcolta, l'bT; llatu, Maine. Ladie3, aro you Euffering? "Kldney.SVort curtd I la c,r pecliar trouble! of sorcral years stanillo ? tlany frieuds use and praNe it." Airb. U. LamorLa jx, luo La AtuUe, L If you would Banish Disease i and gain Health, Take The Ulood cleanser. i m "What li tho nso of auHtrlas with XacL r 1 1 ( ' PainlutlioBidoorlllp.-Ectfttloi.r - a. -Htf Kidney Ecaccu, CrlcU, fctiltSu j, J"--. -i-L .a i trl cd Muscles , Cicot c.:: Lvr-j re tj.cyr y,' oortof ralno'ecreniX'B, citb r jc u crC-x eatcdTrvlienftltop V.zzX r v.-"' r r icilxtr relief? rrcparedfronl.urTir c'i,C-iiv.M da Ealsim, aaii tho aia, Miac vii-tuto cf5 tlleps. T..o bc6 ttrf il.z c piMtv? oxer i known, -inousanajicjoo. LciaoytuiceiucrB. Mailed on receiptor pr.-e, .0., 6 f7lX t( noprrAAOTEncoAv".i n.7" sr-itMifcr.A'tli ". Jyfrrr n A MONTH nnd HOAltl) for three llvo vouDg M' n or Ladles lu each county. Address P. W,ZIK(ll.blto;co., Philadelphia Peb B tw il B, F. HAHTJIAJS rkfrbsknth the rotxowiKa AJIERICAN INSURANCE COJIPANIKS North American of Philadelphia. Franklin. " " Pennsylvania, " " York, of Pennsylvania. Hanover, ot . Y. oueens, or lindon. North lirltlah, ot t.ondon. nice on M trket .-ill cut, No. s, llloomsburg. net S4, I and Ohijdren. Cnttorla cures Collo, Constipation, - oaa ,,Vomute. dl- Without injurious medication. lis sssMssHssHfiM liT Wiif'j SELECT STORY. JOHN'S HAtTQHTEK. "Vtiii .. ill cut i for my diil'l 7 You will not lot tliu lilllo one suffer V My olil frieml iintl collt'm) olnini, John lliiriuoti hftiil this !i liu wtiiii(f my lininl li.inl. I it'iuiitt,'il my I'romist that in tny own hoincni'St, wlifii lliern was n nurVury hill of llttlu oiiu, Snsio Ilnnnon t-liuuM hold it iluiightuiH lilauc. We wt'tu stittidiiif; iiion tho wharf waiting Tor tlu fignal that it was timo for my frt-'tiil to ttc ttltoatil nn outgo iti Calif' rntit rlvaimr. IIu had lost his wife within tho year, and sonti nf tor was hoifyatcd ly a lire that totally dt'slmyt'd thu cotton mills in whiuh ho had hold tliu losition of niiii;rinioad out for ten ju.iih. With Inn homo des olate, his purse t-mjily, hu resolved, .n many .1 man had iloiio beforu him, to seek'his fortune) in the modem Kl Do rado, nnd dij for gold in her mines. The only drawback to this sehetne was tho (lillieulty of taking his three-year-old daughter, who had been in the oaro of hired nurses since her mother died. I, who shared every thought of John's mind, talked with my wile, and found her eagerly willing to take tare of the little one. "1 am sure i. loved Mary nt well nt yon loved John," she said, "and there H 110 one can have stronger claim upon the child than we have." .Si), sine of her cordial welcome in our nitrseiv, I madu John tin- offer of a home fur hit littlo one, and it wat ac cepted iw lovingly its it was offered. This care removed, my friend hastened hit preparations for departure, and I accompanied him to New Yoik and saw him off. The next morning I returned homo to find Susio almost inconsolable, cry ing perpetually for "papa to come to Sutie." My wife was distracted at tho fail ure to comfort this childish borrow, and our own three children looked on wonderingly at "Naughty Susie, who cried and cried, after mamma told her to bo quiet." Fortunately,5mie win accustomed to see me, to snuggle in my arms when I talked with John, to associato me with her father, and she allowed me to comfort her. In thit time violent giief wore away, and the child became very happy in our care. Mv business that of a hardwaro merchant, being very prosperous, we did not feel tho addi tional expense of the child's suppott a burden ; and as the years woro by, slit was as dear to us as our own little ones. But sliu understood always that she was not our child, but had a dear fath er who loved her fondly, and was away from tier only to make a fortuno for her. As soon as she was old enough she had her father's letters read to her, and her first efforts at penmanship were letters to "1'apa.1' John wroto often for ten years, re counting his varying success, some times bending money to buy present-i for Susie, llo was winning fortune slowly, not at tho mines, whero his health broko down, but in the employ of a San Francisco merchant, and some speculations in real estate. lie was not a rich man, ho wrote, af ter an absence of ten years, but pros pering when he purposed paying us a visit. Ho wrote hopefully of seeing his child, perhaps of taking her home with him, setting no delinite time, hut leading ut to expect soon to see him. Then his letters coated, and ho did not come. I wiotu again ami again, Susie wrote. No answeis camo to cither one or tho other. Wo did not know tho name of his employer, and after nearly two years more passed wosadly thought ho must be dead. It might have seemed to many un natural for Susie to grieve bo tleeply as she did for a father almost unknown to her in reality, but sho was a girl of most sensitive feelings, with a tender, loving heart, and we had algays kept her father's tiamo before her, stiiving to win him a place in her fondest affec tion. That wu succeeded only too well was shown by her sorrow, when week after week passed, and there was no good news fiom California. When wo had ically lost all hope, it becaino Susie's great pleasure to sit be side mo and aik mo again and again for tho stories I leuiembeied of her father's boyhood and youth, his col lego life, our many excursions, and, above all, of his marriage and the gentlu wifu and mother so early called to heaven. She dearly loved those talks, and no. memories weto m o r e prec ious than my description of her father's pain in patting from her, and hisdisire to win money in California only for her. Time softened Susie's grief, and at eighteen sho was one of tho sweele-t, most winning ,t,drls I ever saw. With out being a wonder of erudition, sho was well educated, had a fair musical talent and a sweet, well-cultivated voice. She was tall and graceful, and when introduced to society with Joan na, my handsome, brunette daughter, both became poimlar, Albert ana Will, my boys, were old er than the girls; Albert in business with me, ami Will at college, the win ter when Joanna and Susie, made their debut. It would take mo quite too long to tell of the pleasures of the young folks during this winter, but Joanna was won Irom us by a Cuban gentleman, and Susie became, if possible, dearer than ever. Spring had come, when 0110 evening Albert camo into my library, whero I was plodding over a bonk, having woiked busily nil day. lie fussed about tho books in a nervous way, quite unlike his usual quiet manner ami filially said : "Father, you have often said Susio is n dear to vou as one of your own chil dren." ' I looked up amazed at this opening speech. "Well !" I a-ked. "Will you make her your daughter in fact by giving her to me for a wife!" Dear ! dear 1 To think I had been so blind. Susie had in (ruth become so much one of our children that I was as much astonished as if Albert had fallen in love with Joanna. But I booh found, when Susie's blushing facti was hidden upon my breast, that she, too, had given away 1 her heart, and I was only too well ' pleased that no stranger had won tho I precjous gift. In September they weto married, i my son and the child of our adoption, j atid I gave them a houo next our own for a lintne, having olil-lasuionoil ideas about such matteis, nnd believing it is better for young married pcoplo to live iiy themselves aud assume house keeping cares. 1 lie new homo was a gem of neat ness under Stttie's dainty fidgets, and tho spirit of perfect love kept it ever bright, Having been brother and sis ter for so many years, Albert and Su p'ui thoroughly understood each other's dispositions and I hayo never known domestic happiness more pel feet than theirs. Suio's first child, named for her father, John Harmon, was two years old, when the mail brought mu a letter iti nn unknown hand from Cincinnati. I opened it, and upon a large shict of paper found written, in a scrawling, uneven hand, three lines : "Dkaii Sin : Will you come to me nt 47 M street without letting Susie know. Joiin'IIakmon." At lirst I belived it wan a hoax. John had written n bold, cleik-liko, hand, clear as print. This was a scrawl, struggling all over tho paper, uneven as tho llrst penmanship of a littlo child. But tho more I pomlercd over the matter the moro I was inclined to obey j the summons. So pleading buines, saying nothing of tho litter to anyone, ! I lelt home tiy tliu night ttain lot' Cin cinnati, No. 4.7 M street I found to be n hoarding house for the poorest class es, and in a shabby room, half furnish ed, I found an aged, worn man, per fectly blind, who tose to greet me, sobbing. 'Fred, I knew you would come." "Why, old friend," 1 said, when sur prise and emotion would let mo speak, "how is this? We thought you wcio dead." "Does Siiie think so V "Yes. We all gavo you up " "Do not undeceive her, Fred. I meant to come home to her rich, able to gratify every desire of her giilisli heart. Do not let her know that only a blind, sick wreck is left for her to call father. Tell mo of hor, Fred. Is she well t Is she happy ?'' "She is both, John a happy wife and mother." "Married I My little Susie t" "Married to Albert, my son, of whom you may judgo when 1 tell you folks say he is his father over again." "I would ask no more for my child," said John. Then, in answer to my anxious questions, he told me the story of thu years nf silence. He was preparing to pay us hit promised vUit when a great tire broko out in San Francisco, that mined his employer for the lime, and swept away a row of buildings, uniti Mired, in which John had invested all his savingt. Worst of all, m trying to save tho books of the firm, John was injured on the head by a falling beam, aud lay for months in a hospital. When he 90 far recovered as lo bo dis charged, his mind was still impaired, and he could not perform the duties of clerk or superintendent, while his health was too feeble for manual la bor. "I struggled for daily bread alone, Fred," lie told me. "and A'hcii I receiv ed your loving letters, and dear Su s'c't, I would not write booing to send better tidings if I waited for a turn of foi tune's wheel. It never came, Fred. I left California three yeats ago, and came here, whero I was promised the place of foteimn in a great poik-paek-ing house. I saved a littlo money and was hoping for better times when my health failed again, and this timo with it my eye-sight. 1 hoped against hope, spending my savings to have the best advice, aud not 11 11 til I was pronounced incurable would I write to you. I want you to take me to an asylum, Fiedi and, as I must bo a pauper pa tient, l must go to my own town. Vou will take me, Fred !" "I will take you to an asylum, John," I promised. "And Susie 1 You will keep my se cret. You will not disturb Susio's hap piness ?'' "I will not trouble Susie' happiness,'' I said. Yet an hour later I was writing to Sutie, and I delayed our dcpailure from Cincinnati till an answer came. It was tho answer I expected from the tender loving heart, but I said nothing nf it to Jon. Caring tenderly for his comfort, I took him on his way homeward. It was evening when wo reached the rail way depot of our town, and as wo had been long cramped in tho car seats, I proposed to walk home. "Is it not too far oil t" John asked, "I thought the Asylum was a lung way from here." 'Oh, the whole place is chang"d from the littlo village you left I" I an swered ; "We have a great town here now, and your asylum w not very far from here." He let ine lead lit in then, willingly etiottt;h, and wo were not lorg in reach ing Susie's homo. Sho was ul"ne in the cheerful sitting-room as wo enter ed, but obeyed my motiou for silence, as 1 placed John in a great arm-chair, after removing his hat and coat. Ho looked wretchedly old and worn, and his clothes were shabby, yet Susie's soft eyes, misty with tears, had only love in their expression as she waited permission to speak. "John," I rnid to him, "if I had found you in a pleasant home, happy and prosperous, and I had known that Susio, was poor, sick and blind, would it have been a kindly act for 1110 to hide her misfortune from you, and pass, ing by your home, to have placed her in thu care of charilablo strangers f "Fred, you never would have done that 1" ho said, much agitated "Never I" I nnswered. "You are right. But you, John, a-k 1110 to take from Susie tho happiness of knowing a father's love, thu sweet duty of caring for a father's allliction," "No, no, Fred, I only ask you to put no burden upon her young life, to throw no olotid over her happiness. I am old and feeble; I shall trouble no one long." "And when you die, you would de prive your only child of the satisfac tion ot ministering to your wants tako from her her fnlher's blessing." lie turned Ids slghtluts eyis toward me, his whole face working convulsive ly. "Whero is she, Ficdt You would j not talk so if you did not know my child still loves her father." "I am heie, father," Susie saidt and I stole softly away as John clasped his child in his arms. Albert was 111 the dining-room with Johnnie, nnd 1 was chatting still with him, when I heard John culling : "Fted 1 Fred I" I hurried to the room to find him struggling to lite, Susiu vainly trying to calm him. "I want my child 1" ho cried dcliri ouly, "you promised rao my child I" I saw at a glauco that the agitation of thu evening had brought back tho wandering mind, of which he had told me. Albert ami I released Susie, who left us quickly. Some tiin r institit than we possessed guided her, for she returned willi John nie, nnd whispoing him to be very good and kits grandpapa, sho put him 111 her father's arms. In n second his excite ment was gone and ho fondled tho cur ly head, while Johnnie obediently pressed his lips upon the withered cheek. So, in a littlo time, they fell asleep, Johnnie nestled in thu feeble arms and tho withered laco droptng upon tho golden curls. Wo watched them silently, till wo saw a shadow past over John's face, and a change settle there that comes hut once 111 life. Gently Albeit lifted the sleeping child, and carried him to the nursery, while Susie and I sat beside the arm chair. "Uncle Fred," sho whispered, "AI-b-it will go for a doctor. But may I waken him f Let 'him speak to mu onoe more I" Even as sho spoke John opened his eyes. All the wild look was gone from them as hu groped a moment till Susio iut her hands in his. Then a heavenly smilu camo upon the wasted lips am! ho said softly, tenderly : "Suk, my own littlo chiid, Susio." Aud with tho name on his lips John's spirit went to seek an eternal asylum, in which there will bo no more pover ty, pain or blindness. Dutch Towns. Amsterdam, so intei eating to the student of art, is a wonder of delight to any visitor by reason of its extraor dinary construction. Tho whole town is built upon what was once a mnrsh, or, worse, than thai, a sea, and is a vast marvel of massive water works, dams, embankments and buttresses, built of very heavy stone above, but resting upon millions of piles below; Piles are, in fact, the suppott of the whole town, for tho tipper soil, most of which lias been brought in from dis tant plncis, is composed of sandy loam, which affords no firm support. Am sterdam, is, in fact, a city upon stilts, the stilts being piles from fifteen to twenty feet long, upon which tho buildings stand, as it were, in the air. You easily recognizo tho character of the foundation when vou look at the houses in thu older part of tho town. Here a building is leaning forward in such a ticklish way that you wonder at the foolhardiness of the people who are sitting in the windows and thus adding to the weight of tho downward side and you feel safer to pass it on the other side of the way. There an other bat -dtled sidewise, nnd leans, as if wearied, on its neighbor, and a third has started backward, "?is if at tempting to save itself from the gen eral crash into the street, which stems likely to come at any moment. A fourth seems trying to look around tho corner into the next street, as if tired with forever staring at tho canal, and the general clfteiis like looking into tho racks of scenery in tho wings of a theatre, where eerything has fallen up against everything else, or as if an earliiqu ike shock hail lately occurred, and another and a severer one was momentarily expected. You see this thiug in nearly every town in Holland, but more plainly in Amsterdam than elsewhere, because of tho greater height of tho buildings. No doubt in tho course of time, Amster dam will have to be taken down piece meal, furnished with new foundations, and set up again, but thu patient Dutch who built it will have tho virtue to re build it if necessary, and defy tho hu mid soil, the percolation of water and tho endless threat of thu sea to tho end of time. The courago of thu Holland engineer impresses me more and more profoundly with every day I spend in this hollow country, and I am fully convinced that if they seriously attempt to uirry out their present project to put a dam over tho Zuyder Zee and pump its h alert into the ocean they will easily sttecced. A tieoplo that added jhu bottom of tho lake of Haar lorn to their cultivated lands by stead ily pumping for three mortal years, a little sea, whereon shipwrecks had hap pened and naval iiatlles had been fought, can hud the greater work of diaing tho Zuyder Zee to bo only a luestion ot a longer time. Alnkiug farms out of seas cities out of swamps, mainland out of Islands, changing go ography and bringing distant people to bo neighbors are very easy matters with these slow and earnest Dutchmen. How Oapt, Kidd Was Hanged. Tho thrioe-repeated failure of tho hangman deputed to execute John Lee, the English convict, will remind many readers of tho parallel catastrophe that marked tliu end of Knld tho notorious pirate of William Ill's lime. When the "Captain" was hanged, at Execution dock, tho ropo broke, anil ho came to th ground still alive, but a second at tempt proved more sticcesslul, A still more striking occurrence of tho same kind took placu in Uussia during the present century, within tho memory of many men still living. When Hylaieff, tliu celebrated jioet and conspirator of tho last generation, was sentenced to denth by the Czar Nicholas in company witli Festal, the composer of the fa minis waltz, and others of equal note, heiusistul 011 dying tirst, in order to encourage his comrades by thu undaunt ed bearing. But tho rope broke, and the otlicer in command, who was his personal friend, tuned tho proceedings till ho could itiaku 0110 more effort to obtain a paidon. "Did he say any thing when lu fellt" asked Nicholas, on hearing the story. "He said," answer- oil the ollli er reluctantly, "that it seem od'the Russian government could not even hang a man properly," "(5o back, then," roared tho czar, "and show him ttiat it can 1" Tho Inuieitsiiig number of Jewish tintleigraduatcrt is much remuiked at Uitord. Peculiarities of the Mule. Tho Now Orleans mule is 'latching it from every point ot tho compass just now. Tho impression exists there and is apparently borne out by the facts, that thu mule is equal to nny demand that may bo made upon its strength or endurance. Thcro are no two-mtito cars. One muio is considered sum- cietit to draw anything that runs on wheels, no matter what its size or weight. Tho strength of the animal is really extraordinary. There is some thing pathetic about thjNow Orleans mule. It is lambent-eyed, and tho droop of its mouth reminds 0110 some what of tho mouth of a very small boy who has been whipped and stands pouting in the corner. Neatly every mule in town looks as though il woro bald. This is because tho win has ap parently burned the hair from what might bo termed the ridge pole of tho mule, nnd lett it oclire-tmted and bare. The mule has a delicate way of mov ing. Its legs are small, aud it lifts its feet as though stepping on tacks. There is something careless and merry about tho action of its legs quite out of con sonance with Us bald back and solenii) face. Having otic'o started, a mute keeps on going as long as there is nothing in front of it. Car horses as a rule, h ant to stop with alacrity and stat t again only under the lash ; with the initio, however, this is different. It leaves its stablo with a steadfast, earn est, and determined resolution to get away lrom the car, and never relaxes its efforts until it is unhitched some hours later and led back lo rest nnd quiet. When the driver jams down tho brake the mulu keeps tight on pulling, and the result is that the ear starts up with a suddenness that sends the passengers toward the door. As tho cars pass my window now, the mule is seen at his level best. Pco plo aro going out to the Exposition, and going to a very considerable ex tent at that. The bobtail cars aro near ly as big as the two horse cars in New York, but they are obligrd to carry conductors during the rush, as tho ex cursionists cannot hang on with both hands and feet to the roof or railings and put their fares in the box at the same time. A moment ago a car pass ed hero with six men standing on tho step. At first blush this may seem like a reckless statement, as thu step itself is about the size of an ordi nary music book. I do not know how so many men managed to stand on it, but it is a iact that tho ordinary com plement on an 8 by 10 inch step of a New Orleans car is six full-grown tourists. People aro bulging from tho windows, and tho forward platforms aro so ciowded that tho driver sits with his legs hauging over tho dash board, whilo one of tho passengers operates tho brake. The car is crowded to this state of fuleucss a tthe beginning of the trip ; tho driver then starts thu mule, and no stops aro tnado until tho Exposition is reached. Occasionally men pursue a car frantically through the mud, with the idea, apparently, of climbing to the roof, but the six men who are precariously poised on the steps looked at them coldly, and after ploughing along a block or two, they return to tho sidewalk and wait for an empty oar, which never comes. Then they start off in disgust and walk to tho Exposition. On some of the roads here thu oars run 011 tho right hand track, and on others they run on the loft. Thoy never think of stopping fur a m.in, and ringing tho bell oueo will stop tho car at tho next corner, whilo two bells will cause a full stop if tho driver and mules at 0 so in clined. Mules receive about as much consi deration from cart drivers as they do on the railroads. I baw mi immense cai t yesterday downtown, piled high with boxes, standing in front of the grocery store, and stopped to look at the mulo hitched thereto. It looked like a little, old, decrepit negro. Its eyes blinked with thu habit of old age, and It wore a stolid and mournful ex pression. A perftct picture uf a life time of toil and hardship was printed on its wrinkled mug. Its legs were thin and weak kneed, and it was so miserably small iti comparison with thu huge cart that more than one passer by stopped to gaze at it. It was a two- wheeled cart, and very heavily loaded aft, the result of which was that the shafts were lifted high in tho air. This hail the ettect ot raising the mule somewhat, so tha; its hoofs rested very lightly on the ground, l'teseiilly a large, fat, and guff man came out of the shop and placed a heavy hairel on tho tail end of the cart, making it fast with a rope. The belly band now lilt ed tho mulo higher yet, and in a spirit of mild but conscientious rebellion the mule kicked vigorously with both of its small hind logs. Its hoof struck the whiilletreo, and then it sank once more into stolid repose. The man finished lashing thu barrel to the cart, aud, stepping briskly around to tliu ftont of the cart, casually kicking tho beast in the ribs as he passed, climbed up to his seat aud veiled : "Gee yerp.'' The forelegs of tho mulo started away briskly, followed in n leisurely manner by its hind legs. There seem ed to be n thorough independence of uction between the fore and hind parts ot the mule, which was explained bv the iact that its fore legs were off the ground, whilo the rear legs were firm ly planted there, liverybody lias no ticed how tho wheels of a locomotivo tiy around when they fail to catch hold of the track. Tho mule kept Hying away with its lorelega in tins fashion tor somo time, encouraged by 11 stream of voluble profanity from the driver and tho encouraging shouts of tho by- slanders, livery one hero has tune to slop and be amused, finally thu dim cully was pointed out lotho driver. He descended once more to the ground, walked around tho mule's head, nnd tried to lead it on, but it was a futile task. Then a bright idea struck him. He borrowed half a paper of tobacco from aDystamier, ami, kicking tiiemtiiuouco more (this little gesture being apparent ly a mamiestaiion ot amnion), vaulted on thu mule's back. But tho animal stood meekly staring at tho stones in front of it. Presently, aftor all other means of exciting the mule to locomo tion had failed, tho man, still silting on its back, gently but firmly twisted tho mule's tail. This is the dearest insult j that can be offered lo a mulo, and the ancient animal kicked, plunged, and balked vigorously. Then It stood still for a moment, and suddenly without a moment's warning trotted briskly up thu stieet and turned the corner, dragging the huge cait after it with ease. That siimii day there was another episode, in which the mulo was a prin cipal actor. It was on tho leveo front, and half a dozen roustabouts were try ing to get a lank, body, and belligcrant mulo aboard of tv steamboat. Tho im prtssion existed thai tho mulo could be urged down the stage plank forward, but after a few trials that was found impossible. The mule was then blind ed and its head turned toward tho shore. Tho disposition of the mulo lo go 111 the opposite direction to that re quired of it was then taken advantage of. The mulo was kicked and cuffed shoreward, and thu natural result was that it moved toward tho river. The roustabouts guided their chargo gently, nnd when its blinds were taken off and it found itself actually on the boat it kicked fourti en times before relieving Is ieelmgs, by a snott which as only lalf a bray. A useful Table. Tho following table will bo found very useful to farmers, showing, as it does 1 ho proper distances far planting various fruit trees : Standard pears, on pear stocks, for orchards twenty five feet apatt. Pyramidal pears on pear slocks, not rcot-pritned--twenty feet apait. the same, root-pruned ten feet apart. the same on quince stocks, not root pruned six feet apart. Tho sama on quinco stocks, pcriodic pllv lifted fonr feet apart. Bush pears on pear stocks, periodi cally lifted six feet apart. JJush pears on quince stocks, penodi cally lifted four leet apart. Pears on pear stocks, trained hori zontally on walls or epsaliers eight een leet apart ; the samu to be root pruned as occasion may require. Pears trained in vertical, obliquo or horizontal cordon fashion, may bo planted, if upon walls, eighteen inches apart, or more or less as the taste of the planter may dictate. Pears trained in horizontal cordon. to form edgings to walks,, or quarters of the garden, should be planted on stems one foot high aud trained on galvanized wire, trained and supported on iron pins, a singlu shoot only being made use of. Pears trained fan-shape and root- pruned fifteen feel apart. The above distances will also do for apples, cher ries and plums ; these last, when train ed as pyramids, require to bo grown with stems eighteen inches to two feet high, as, if cut shorter they will threw out so mauv strong branches iust above tho junction of the graft and took that it will bo found, with the greater number of sorts, eo much cut ting will require to be done that the trees will gum ami die, and present groat difficulty to form them into nice pyramids. reaches, nectuities, apricots, plums and cherries, when planted againsl alls ate generally and best trained fan-shape, and should be from twelve to fifteen feet apart, and kept periodi cally lifted and replanted on tho stir- lace, merely covering Ine roots with a few inches of tho hoil. Bush trees of pears on quince, ap des on the Paradise, cherrns 011 the Mahateb, nnd pumt, may bo planted about the samu nistauce apart at goose berries and currants, that is, live feet nparl in the rows, and live feet from row to row. They should bo lifted bi ennially, or as often as required, in November, and they will then form a charming fruit garden. A Story "by a Ureat Wag. LITTLE FAIKY TALK ONCK TOI.H KOItK. TUP. NATIONAL 1101'SK. Tim !ll In a speech in Coneress by Sanrcnt S. Prentiss, (hat waggish ruembsr told the following story: "Unce there was a lion thai wanted to know bow polite nil the beasts were. So he made a great smell in his don with brimtonu or something else I don't mind what jist but it shnielt enough lo knock you down intirely ; and then he called in tho bear, and says he : 'Good morning, Mr. Bear, and what d yo think of the Rlimell hero this morning t' and says the bear, says tie, 'why it shmells bad. 'Phats that you say V says thn lion, 'take that,' savs he (ating him up altogither), 'take that and see if it, will taclie yo polite ness, yo unmanly eon of a cub I' ".Now, when the bear was ate up tho lion called in the monkey and ak ed him tho same question precisely. Now, the monkey, seeing tlio bear that tho lion had swallowed Ivin' dead in the eoiner,says ho : 'May it plazo your majesty,' says hp, 'it's jist the most de lightful shmell I ever shmelt in my life at all, at all.' 'So it is,' said the lion (patting him on the head nisy like, so ns to bate the breath claim out of his body), 'so it is' said lie. 'and now you'll tell another lie soon I'm think- ltl!T." "Now, when the lion had kilt the bear and tho inonkev ho called in tho for to him and says ho (lookuig very ssvago and ready to atn him up if ho should maku the lastu fox paw at all.) " 'God moruiii', Fox,' says hu ; 'how does my parlor shmell to-day ' And says thu fox (wiping his noso with the biush ot his tan and pulling down his eyelid witli his paw, as much as to say, 'U yo see any green there, my honey V) 'Faith,' sai lie, 'may it plazo your mnieslv, l'vo 11 very bad cowld this mornin', and it's mo tliat can't shmell ' at all, at all 1' So tho lion laughed and tould tho fox ho was a very clever baste and tha', he might tread in ills footsteps if ho could straddle wide enough, aud that all other beasts should mind him or he would ate them up as he had done tho bear." "Well, tny young gentleman, ami how would you like your hair cut V "Oh, like papa's, pleasn with a littlo roinid hole at the top." A grease spot can be taken out of a carpet by applying a warm buckwheat batter, and the batter can be taken out by euttitig a holo in the carpet where tho batter was applied. An English dairyman says he keeps a kicking tow quiit at milking timo by simply "placing just over her loins a cloth wet with cold water." Keeplng the Boys on the Farm. In treating of tho home-life of tho farm nothing is more common than tho complnint that the ber-t nnd brightest of tho youth manifest an unwillingness lo follow tho occupation of their fnth eis and go off to swell the population of tlio towns nnd cities. Probably this tendency has bean exaggerated, for wo aro sure tho young farmers of to-day aro as intelligent and progress ive in their views as any generation past. But this could not bo if it were trup, as represented, that tlio best cle ment had gone to the towns. The statement has Ritfliciont warrant, never theless, to merit' serious consideration. Tho question is, whether in the sur roundings nnd appointments of farm life sufiicietii allowance is made frr tho natural wants and tendencies of the young. Is there sutlieient pains taken to render tho surroundings attractive, and lo furnish a reasonable amount of that diversion from regular pursuits tvhieh tho youthful nature demands 1 No doubt very many aro led away from the quiet walks ofeouutry life by an unhealthy craving for chango and excitement, stimulated in many oases by pernicious leading and rose colored descriptions of town-life. Others with better reasons havo been impelled to nban Ion tho occupation of their fath ers by that system of drudgery and dull routine too often in practice on tho farm, .and under which young, sprightly and elastic spirits feel that they nro unnecessarily repressed and circumscribed Without going over ground on this subject that has been repeatedly traversed by others, wo may say thnt in order to keep tho boys on tho farm, everything should be done within reasonable limits, UiM means and circumstances will permit, to causo them to feel and boliuve that tho pur suit of agriculture is as honorable and ennobling as any they may chooso ; that it offers as many opportunities as any other for the cultivation of mind aud heart, and for tho development of the best and noblest tendencies of their natures. They should bo made to feel that, if they so desire, thoy may keep abreast of tho times nnd bo "up with tho world" in tho best sense of tho phrase, even though they live outsido tho busy haunts of men. They should be led to look upon agrictilturo not as a pursuit governed by chance laws, whero there is no opportunity for in ttoducing new methods, and systems, for research, experiment and progress, but that no department of human ef fort to day offers a wider and more promising field for careful study and research than that of agriculture. Let them learn also that with less means than would bo required in the cities they may have tasteful and oonvenient homes, and live to as high and useful purposes as thoy may in any place on earth. Jim Pisa's Door Boy. Peter Douoliuu has been made as sistant paymaster of the New York, L ike Erie ito Western railroad com pany in placo of Fred Wright, resign ed. When Col. Fisk Jwas at the head of the Erie, Peter was his messenger and dour boy. Ono day Peter had in structions from Fisk to let no one in to see him. Dining tho day a big, do-termiued-looking man called and ask ed, in a peculiar falsetto voice, to see Col. Fisk. Peter told the man that tho colonel could not bo seen. Tho visitor said it was highly important and necessary that he should havo Fisk's ear for a few minutes. Peter stood linn to his declaration that no ono could see tho boss of Erie. The man persisted, and, sicing that the youthful guardian of Prince Erie's door was not to bo changed in his de termination, put the boy !rapaiiently aside and said : "Here, boy; I'm John Monissey, and mnst seo Col. Fisk." Ho then pushed by and passed to ward tli" door. But i'eter Donohuo wasn't tliero to be used that way. "1 do t care if you aro John Mor risy 1" he exclaimed, ns tlio broad back of tho famous ex-prize fighting con gressman loomed iu front of him ; "you can't go in ther"!" With these words Peter jumped for ward, nnd, with a spring liko a cat, lit square on Morrisy's back. He climb ed up it liko a squirrel, threw both arms around the congressman's neck, and hung on for dear life, shutting off Motrisy's wind and fetched him up with a turn. Morrisy shook tho 1 oy off with ditllculty, and at lirst seemed inclined to pulverize him, but ho look ed down at tho pugnacious littlo fel low, standing in a determined attitude between him and Col. Fisk's door, the humor of the situntion struck him, and ho burst out laughing. "All right, havo it your own way. I'll call again to-morrow," said he, and he walked out of tho ollice. He had been gono but a few minutes when Fisk called Peter, aril told him to let John Mortisy in if ho called. "Ho's been here," said Peter. "Where is lie V asked Fisk. "Well, he was bound to como in against orders, and I put him out," said Peter. Morrisy told Fisk tho story of his encounter with the door boy ilext day, and several bottles of wino were order ed on tho strength of it. Don't Wear Tight Shoes. A letter from Warsaw, N. Y., says : Probably one of the gri-atist of suffer ers, nnd" from a peculiar cause, is Ad am Piaff, a well known resident of that town. Time yeais ago he was drawn as a juryman, and woro to court, at Baih, a new pair of boots for the first timo. Thoy weto too small for him, and although they gavo him intense pain he kepi them 011 all of ono day. When ho removed his boots ai night be found no relief from the pain, and was unable to sleep. Du ring the night his fiet, legs, hands, arms and body began to swt II, and his bufferings became so great that ho wns obliged to summon aid, and was re moved to his home ns soon us possible From that day to this the pain has never left him for an instant. His joints are etdatgul greatly, whilo his tots, fed, nnd bunds aro greatly swol len tot Into times their natural size. Tlie llesh on some poi lions of his body is shiutiken and withered. Ilo is en iirely htlplcss, nnd cfynnot havo his chair without hi lp, sd bus to bo fed like a child. Mr. Pinll's suffering aro at linns ttrnblo to wittier, and lie prays for death.