Our Own. Our oettage may be small, the landesape imme Our flowers may lack a new highweoundin name; Our chosen paths be reeky or wind-blowns, And yet we love our own! The little ohild that site beside our fest May rob us of our strength and rest so sweet And oause omr way with cares to be thisk strewn, And yet we love our own! There may de fairer lands and brighter skies There may be triends more faithful or more wise Than any we have ever seen or known; But each will love his own! Clara B. Heath, Pilikia.* {The incident narmted in the following lines actually corurred pear Avon, N, Y., and the innocent viotim of the joke is 8 lady dearly ninety years of munity where she resides. | A Indy of age, and experience rare, Sat knitting and rocking her old-time chair; When on the cold wintry air there came to her ear Through closed windows and doors, distinot and clear, The tell-tale onckle of hens from the barn; And laying aside her bright needles and yarn She sighed, “Oh! tobe young! But I'm not too old now To go hunting agin for eggs in the mow, For since the lar-time when but a wee girl, whirl; That old dominic hen thinks her nest hid AWAY, But 1 know her trick—she has laid in the hay.” So straightway she entered the barn's open door, Where a ladder invitingly stood on the floor, And mounting as fearless us any hall stair, She climbed the steep ladder with dexterous Cae. One step at & Lime, one round after round, And a nest in the orisp, fragrant hay is scon toand. Now a soft faint peep irom a corner is heard, And sha doubts it the veipe ean be chicken or bind, Heard apn and againg after searching and bother The chickens appear and their fidgety mother; Fresh wges, ill.timed chicks and hen well secured In apron all seug, the long-rearching endured ; what work Had been dose by a peripatetio barrel of pork — Ur what would have been pork in a day or TWO INOS {What a pity it bad not heen made so before); Now & pig's not a dunce, the' pig-headed, is rue, } : 1G ahow; for while the lady was busied, piggie was busy below, osopher’s oar, And be reasoned, * the barn door's now open, to me it is clear Go in and come out ?—Uil try my luck then; | remember tie sheaves and piles of sweet wheat, Some few grains, perchance, are yet leit to eat. "Tis good tor my diet —for die-it I should, One cannot always eal corn be it ever so good.” So roasirg himself from his nest near the door, To the inquisitive pig came disappointing surpra Oo beady eyes; : "Twas ail safely stored or transformed into d, For antumn had gone; t'was winter and cold. But bent on discovery, this soquisitive pig Rourd the barn floor begins to soull and to di With - long strong nose—soon the ladder he spies “ Why, cries; “Of what use is it now, for the summer is over, And the tresh, cool grass and sweet-smelling clover Are spoiled for me now, for I canvot eat bay; 1 could est it while growing in flelds far away Now it's piled sbove there for somebody's nse An! nothing's left piggie save corn and he der and madder; Isdder » Or, it may be, to judge this poor beast with due charity, He assayed to asoend it himself, for a rarity ose, A bry push he gives it and over il goes! Ussaspecting and careless of the mischief now done, Like thousands of human ones under the sun, He bhastes in affright to get safely away, While she poor lady above him is exiled in bay The wintry hall.day is tast nearing its close, That she has been there alone & long time she OWS; It is strange she is missed not- that ne onc comes near her, And vainly she cal’s, she's so far none can hear her. of her going, But believed her still busied with reading or sewing; Bat the quietness there, too profound sod too k ong, : Hint surely what research proves, something is wrong. Long searchings, loud callings, prove quite to be vain In her chair only Bible and knitting remain All the house ard the garden, hunted over and over, No trice of dear grandma can any discover; When at length from the barn, eries a well. known voice, At which all the household exclaim and re. joice; “Girls, the ladder's fallen—I guess the pigs can tell how— Please put it ap for me, I am here in the mow." 80 the Inder is placed; * angels ” ascend and descend, Like the angels of Jacob, and grandma attend. Half laughingly, seriously, they chide her and tell her: “ Until all mischievous jigs are packed down in the cellar, It is saler by far, than to hunt eggs in the barn, To be in your own room with needles and yarn.” * “ Pilikia ” is » Sandwich Inland word meanivg “ in a tight place,” or, * in & corner.” ~8. P. Walsworth. A RARE CASE. Mattie’'s story was simple enough. The orphan child of a former servaut in a wealthy family, Mattie had shared the lessons and she play of the young daughter of the bouse, until a time came when it was convenient to turn the hum- ble companion adrift to work for her- self. It may have been a piece of the ill-luck his neighbors ascribed to Drew, that it should have been to his farm the girl came as help to his sister, or it may have been a piece of his good-nature that made him agree to take under his roof this pretty lass, untrained for ser- vice and educated far above her station. Drew’s widowed sister, Mrs. Bankes, who lived with him, and whose child it was Mattie had come to nurse, amongst other duties too numerous to mention, for there was but one servant kept— Drew's sister exclaimed in despair when the farmer brought home the yours, lady-like, delicate-looking girl. “ We want a strong, hard-working, lass! This one does not know her right band from her left. She is as good as a lady—or as bad—and has never milked acow in her life! What were you think- ing of to bring her here?” ** Ah! that's just my luck; well, we must do the best we can with her. If the steward had never mentioned her to me, now—but then he did mention tier, and here she is.” There she was, and there she stayed. Apt to learn, willing to be taught, grateful for the real kindness she me, with, Mattie was soon the best hand at miiking for miles round, soon devoted to the baby. Three years passed quietly, nid then came the romance of Mattie's ile. She was twenty that summer and Adam Armitage, a grave man, was fully ten years her senior. A great traveler, member of a world-renowned scientific soviety, a student and discoverer— he was, between two scientific expeditions, refreshing heart and brain by a walk- ing tour through the home counties. Adam’s walking tour ended at the farm Drew had taken only a year be- ore, and the dwelling house it had been ound more convenient to inhabit than he smaller building on the old land lose to the road. Mr. Armitage found the pure air of the Downs good for him. Ile made friends with all the family. To Mattie it was delightful to meet once more some one with all the tricks of speech and manner x jag mute refined society amongst whic youth had been passed. Little Harry followed this new he went; ——— EP A SARS ID VOLUME XIIL ! i Pe a good man, They all missed him when he went {away. Mattie most of all; but the fol. lowing summer saw him there again, a ! welcome old friend this time, and no | stranger. i Drew, a keon observer of all that! { went on around him. was not so much | { taken by surprise as his sister was, { when one day, toward the end of this | second visit, Adam and Mattie were | both mysteriously missing, A strong farmed court:y lass made her appear ! ance before night. She was the bearer of a note from Mattie, confessing that | she and Mr. Armitage were married, and hoping the servant sent might sup { ply her piace so that no one would be inconvenienced, Drew mightshake his i head and look thoughttul, but Mr, | Armitage was his own waster, and it was not the first time a gentleman had married a country lass. Besides, the | deed was done and past reeail. They had gone quietly to one of the churches in the town from whence the sound of | i bells @oated up to the farm, and had been married by special license. Adam had taken a lodging for his bride, and | | there they passed one brief, bright week "of hanpiness; then one morning walked quietly hack together, Mattie blushing Iady-like in a simple dressthat she used to wear before she came to the farm, Adam explained that he meant to in the care of her old friends: at the | There were arrangements to make with regard to the scientific ex- pedition about to start immediately. It would sail without him now, but it be- hooved him to do his best that his place prepare for receiving Mattie, Mattie walked a little way with her | and the farmer along the | breezy uplands, and then Adam sent her back, and hastened his own steps in the dircetion of the little station at the toot When he came again, he Mattie went away smiling as he meant It was a little as they remained in sight. she should feel mother, but that fear was the only | shadow on Mattie's path, It was an | idyll, a poem, as true a love story as the i world has seen, that had written itself i here in this out-of-the-way spot on the | On the third day they might look for | | and many another, until the days were weeks, and the weeks months, and he | neither came nor wrote, Mattie remem- | back for the last time upon that home- | tinct against the sky for one instant, | ‘and in the next lost it entirely as he | line of hills, Just so she seemed to have And yet, she never lost faith and trust | Drew after a time, either goaded to ments, or prompted to it by his own the ing the address of Adam Armitage in | London. It was strange how this girl | and her former master both trusted silence; in the face of even a more in town—the discovery that he had | never mentioned Mattie’s name to his | mother, or alluded to Mattie at all. he was not with her then, and that she could not give an address that would | find him: an assertion that confirmed Mattie in the idea that he had started on those far-away travels he had so often spoken of to her. As autumn passed and the evenings | grew chill with the breath of the coming winter, Mattie's health seemed to faii. | The deep melancholy that oppressed her threatened to break the springs of life. | In order to escape from Mrs. Bankes the girl took to lonely wanderings over the | Downs; wanderings that ended always | at Stonedene; until, with the instinct of | a wounded animal that seeks to endure its pain alore, or from the ever present | recollection of the last words of Adam, when he had said it was by way of Stonedene that he would return, she besought the farmer to send away the woman in charge of the house and allow | her to take her place. Drew yielded to the wish ot the wife, | whose heart was breaking with the pain | of absence, and the mystery of silence, and Mattie, on this foggy day had al ready lived months at Stonedene, on the | watch always for the coming of Adam. | The fog increased instead of diminish- ing with the approach of evening. Drew could not see his own house unti| | he was close to it; as he had remarked, | the mystery of Mattie's aflairs was not more impe 1etrable than the veil hiding | all natural objects just then. When he | had put up the horse and gone into tea | Mrs. Bankes, as she bustled about, pre- | paring the meal that Mattie's deft little | fingers had been wont to set out with so much quietness as well as celerity, did not fail to greet him with thie ques- tion: ** Well, how is she?” “She” had come to mean Mattie in the vocabulary ot the farmer and his sister. ““ About as usual in health,” Drew re- lied, lifting the now five-year-old arry to his knee; “ but troubled in mind; though, to be sure, that is as usual, too.” ** She is out of her mind,” exclaimed Mre. Bankes, irritably. * Every one but yourself knows that; and if you do not know it, it is only because you are as mad as she is—or any one might think 80 from the way you go on.” ** Nay, nay,” said Drew gently, as the | butter-dish was set upon the table with | a vehemence that made the teacups rat- | tle. “There are no signs of madness | | 1 about Mattie—unless you call her trust in her husband by so hard a name.” * Husband! a pretty husband. indeed! I've no patience with him, nor with you, either. As if it was not a com- mon tale enough! It would be better to persuade the girl to come home and get to work again than to encourage her in her fancies, while you pay another servant here—and times so hard as they are.” “I was thinking to-day,” the farmer went on, softly passing his broad palm over the blond head of the child upon his knee, ‘*1 was thinking as I came along of how it stands written: ‘He that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen?” At that instant the shadowy form of some one going round to the front door passed the window, against which the fog pressed closely. Drew set little Harry on his feet and rose slowly, lis- tening with intentness and a surprised Jook that made his sister ask what ailed im. “ Rover—the dog does not bark; who —by the merey of heaven, it is the man himself!” cried Drew, as the door opened with a suddenness that caused rs. Bankes to drop the plates on the brick floor. For Adam Armitage stood upon the threshold; Adam, pale and worn, a shadow of his former self, but himself unmistakably. Sem locked around the Joo ; as ough see 8 omeoue, sm inh old fashion iy, gave a halt enri- By my wife “ Mrs, Armitage is waiting for you at | " wok that way, : . “* Waiting!" Adam threw up his hands with a passionate gesture; what can she * She has thought you were gone after all upon that voyage, and that your let. | had miscarried. Sometimes she | has thought that you were dead, Myr. | Drew broke | “We knew you could explain what has happened, sir,” he concluded, Adam drew his own hand across his | way a man might do who lately been roused from a bad | his thoughts. dae] “That has happened,” he said, | which, if it had not befallen me myself | and become a part of my own experi- | ence, 1 should find it difficult to believe | possible. A strange thing has happened, | and yet "here the old smile they re. membered so well broke slowly like | light over his face—"* and yet a thing not | more strange, as the world gOS, than that vou—1 say nothing of Mattie—but that you should have trusted me | throughout. I detected no mistrust in your voice, no doubt in your eyes, not even when they first met mine just now. They call mine a rare case, friend; they | might say the same of Jour belief in | me. But-—Stonedene, did you say? | Walk with me there, and hear my tale | as we go." ; “This evening; and in this mist; and you, sir, looking far from weil," began sliza Bankes. ** Mattie has waited so long already that one night more will * One night, one hour more than I can help will make all the difference between willful! wrong and a misfortune that has fallen on both alike,” said | Adam. He would not be dissauded from setting out at once, and in another | minute the two men were pursuing their way through the driving mist, Adam After parting from Mattie he had | in due course he drove in a cab toward | his mother's house in Grosvenor treet, oveturned and Adam was thrown out, talling heavily upon his head. ARer a long interval, however, he opened his eyes and recovered consciousness; and as he did so slowly at first, alter a time was made that memory was entirely gone, : ~ However, this state was one from | which, so said his friends, science could | at will recall him, and the operation | necessary to restore Adam to himseil was deferred only until his health ad. | mum of risk. It was while Adam was in the state | above deseribed that Drew had seen | Mrs. Armitage. A proud woman, she | fact that, stripped of Drew's panegyries | upon Mattie's superior education and refined manners, alone stared her in the ace. Hastily resolving that there was no need to embitter her own life by an at. tempt to rec! to her son this ill-fated marriage, she did not hesitate to de- ceive her unwelcome visitor. Change | of scene had been ordered for the pa. tient, and before Drew called at the house in Grosvenor street for the second | time Adam and his mother were gone, | It was in Paris, months after, that the | operation was finally and successfully | performed, and then the first word of | Adam's was Mattie's name. The tirst | effort of his newly-recovered powers was to relate to his mother the history | of his marriage and to write to his wife “(God grant the suspense lias neither killed nor driven her mad!” he ex- claimed. It was to his mother’s hand the letter | was confined, and with that exclama- | tion of his ringing in her ears, Mrs. Ar. with charcoal and burning in the ante | Elysees. She was not a bad woman, | ». If the girl were | dead, why no harm haa been done, and | this terrible mistake of her son's was | rectified at once. If the other alterna- | tive were to prove true and Mattie had | be i taken to insure so desirable a result. | Mrs. Armitage tore the letter into pieces | and waited by the brazier until the | fragments were charred. Adam asked | surprised at receiving no answer to his | The first day his health ad- | mitted it, he set out alone for England. | Such was the story. When Drew | i reached Mattie, Adam was at no loss | | had played. But he never | spoke of it, then or at any future time. The house door at Stonedene stood | the chilly fog was still abroad, but the Adam hastened his steps. “ For heaven's sake, sir, be careful! brain,” cried Drew, laying a detaining hand upon the arm of his companion. Adam gently shook him off. ‘* Suddenness,” he repeated. *‘ Aye, it is sudden to you—and to Mrs. Bankes, but for me and for Mattie, whose thoughts are ay and night, night and 1 other, how can it be Drew stood still and Adam went on alone until his footsteps became audi ble and Mattie turned her head to see him standing at her side. Adam had been right; no fear was there for Mattie’'s brain. All excite- ment, all surprise and wonder came afterward; at that first supreme mo- ment, and with a satisfied sigh, as of a child who had got all jt wants, Mattie held out her arms to him with one word - * Husband!” As Adam drew her to him it was not only the mist or the darkening evening that blinded Drew so that for a moment or two he saw neither of them. People say Drew's luck has turned from the day Stonedene found a tenant It is newly done up and prettily fur- come down there once or twice a year, with their children, for a breath of sea air and to visit old friends. The Dairy Interest, Mayor Caven, of Indianapolis, in an address to the national convention of the butter and egg association, a few days since, said : ~The manufacture of butter and cheese is rapidly growing in importance. We formerly imported cheese in large quan tities, whereas we now export, and in England Americar produce is rivaling and taking the place of the best stand- ards of English home-made, both of butter and cheese. The Stilton, Ched- dor, Neufchatel Vashreine and Bric cheese of Europe find in the United States an article fully their peer, and in Oneida county, New York, they are turning out a brand of Limburg cheese that has caught in all its delicate per- fection the exquisite spiritual aroma of the original, indeed, with a self- stirring perfumery, beside which the oldest Limburg cheese in all the king. dom of Bavaria would be tame and unromantic. What the world is in need of is fewer men of an inquisitive turn of mind, men who are contented with looking at a buzz-saw without a desire to feel of ” HALL, CENTRE CO., PA. THURSDAY, JUNE TIMELY TOPICS, nm EPITAPHS, one er milos from Edinburg | : Owar Hie is but a winter day, Some Quaint and Cuartows Insoriptions on | Some only breakiast and away; Tombstones tia Old English and Amerie (thers to a dinner stay can Churenyards, Aud are full ted I'he oldest yuan bat sleeps in { Forty per cent, of the Chinese of San | Francisco have been back and forth be | tween the United States and China four cor five times, Most of the Chinese go { back once in five years, and rarely any | One stays longer than eight years contin. { wously in this country. Many Chinese merchants return regularly to spend the [| Chinese New Year at howe. { Bartholdi, the French sculptor, says a . { there is no doubt that the great statue Tight Shoes. of Liberty enlightening the world will The wearing ot shoes which com- | beready for its place in New York har. Let us pass by the ordi- | press and distort the fect is a singular.y | bor in 1883, the year in which New | injurious custom. Suppose 1 said that York's great world’s fair is to be held. | pine-tenths of the feet were rendered This statue, when erected, will be the misshapen by the boots and shoes worn, | largest in America. It was presented | the statement would seem extreme, hut | to the United States by the French peo- it would be within the truth. The | ple, and Bartholdi is hard at work at it pointed shoe or boot is the most signal | In France, | instance of a mischievous instrument designed for the torture of feet, In | | this shoe the go eat toe is foreed out of | its natural line toward the other woes, giving a reverse curve from what is natural to the terminal part of the inner side of the foot, while all the other toes are compressed together to- wandering through the various And goes 0 bed. Large is his expense I'bat lingers out the day; He that goes soonest Has the least to pay. New York Evening Mal, A" well exolaim: ** Where are the sinners | buried? Surely their graves are not | here; the inscriptions on marble, shaft | or siab indicate the resting pinoces of the | But in going here and | there through old cemeteries, especially | in England, one often comes across in- | scriptions strancely unlike those of the | nary ones, and read some of the extra. ordigary, The two wives of Thomas Sexton are buried in a churchyard near Newmar. ket, Upon the stone over the grave of the first one is the following: Here lios the body of Samh Sexton-- : She was a wile that pever vexed one Buckley is a Texas horse thief and murderer, for whom the law officers | searched long and fruftiessly. A man | ealled on the governor, ee duesd him. self as a friend of the outlaw, and said that he was prepared to buy his pardon by giving information against other ward the great toe, the whole producing | criminals, The governor was inclined a wedge. like form of foot which is al- | to make such u bargain, and sent him together apart from the natural, Such | to the attorney-general, who recognizad 'n foot has lost its expanse of tread; | him as none other than Buckley him- Isuch a foot has lost its elastic resist- | self. The rascal drew a long knife out | ance; such a foot has lost the strength | of his bootleg, but was overpowered | of its arch to a very considerable de. | and locked up | gree; such a foot, by the irregular and | unusual pressure on certain points of | The New York Bulletin makes a com- its surface, has become hard at those pliation of erop reports which shows— | points, and is easily aflected with corns | so far as can be shown at this time— {and bunions. Lastly, such a foot be- | that the wheat preduetion of 1880 will | comes badly nourished, and the pres- | fuily equal that of 1879. lowa and sure exerted upon it interferes with its | Kansas will fall off, but their deficiency cireniation hy nutrition. It ceases to | will be fully made up by gains in 1ili- | be an instrument upon which the body | nois, Ohio, Minnesota and Pennsylvania, | oan sustain itself with grace and with | If present promise shall be verified, that | pasiness of movement, even in early | will be the fourth successive great grain life: while in mature life and in old age | cvop in the United States—a continu. it becomes a foot which is absolutely | ance of prosperity aimost if not quite unsafe, and which causes much of that | without precedent. irregular, hobbling tread which often | ere—— renders so peculiar the gait of persons | who have passed their meridian It sometimes happens for a time that these mistakes in regard to the boot | and shoe are increased by the plan of raising the heel, and letting it rest on a sone, In the cemetery of the Friars, Edinburg, we find Here snug in the grave my wile doth lie; Now she's at rest, and so am 1. Here is another: Here lies my dear wile, a sad slattern and shrew; It I said | regretted her 1 should lis, too. Old Gray On a tombstone in Cyford: Here, doep in the dust, The old moldy orust (4 Nell Batohelor lately shoven ; Who was skilled in the arts Of pies, puddings and tarts, And knew every use of the oven. When she had lived long enough She made her last puff A puff by her hasband much praised — Now here she doth lie And makes a dirt ple, In hopes that her erast may be raised. ——— But these are rather unjust toward the fair sex. Let us look for something more truthful, We find it in St. She was But words are wanting T'o say what Look what a wile should be And she was that. In memory of Katherine Gray, who kept a pottery shop at Chester: The New York State fish commis. sioners are advocating the culture of | carp. [he experiments at the govern. | ment ponds in Washington have been very successful, fish that were pul in there three years ago having grown raised impediment of a pointed shape. | much larger than in Europe under the Anything more barbarous can scarcely | same circumstances. They are an easy be conceived. By this means the body, | fish to raise. Any kind of a pond, no which should naturally be balanced on | matter how restricted, can be used a most beautiful arch, is placid on an | Providing that the water is not too cold | inclined plane, and is only prevented | earp thrive, no matter how impure it | from falling forward by the action of | is. No natural water has been found | the muscles which counterbalance the | too warm for them, They thrive on | mechanical error. But all this is at the | plants growing in the water, on boiled expense of lost muscular effort along | E¥ain or even offal. A pond may be {the whole line of the muscular track, dug in arable land and used for three or from the heels actually to the back of | four years as a carp pond, after which the land may be again cultivated, Beneath this stone lies old Katherine Gray, Changed (rom a busy lie wo lifeless olay; By earth and elay she got her pelt, But pow is turned to earth hersell, Ye weeping friends, let me advise Abmte your grief and dry your eves, For what avails a flood of tears? Who knows but in & ran of years, In some tall piteher or broad pan She in her shop may be again ? Upon the tomb of Martha Wells, wife of John Wells, in Yolkstone, we i the head --a loss of foroe which is abso. intely useless, and, as 1 have known in | several cases, exhausting and painful, A correspondent of the Leavenworth In addition to these evils arising from | Time: calls attention to the similarity the pointed heeled boot, there are yet | between the stand storm in Kansas and In the first place, the elastic | one in the island of Sicily, in the Medit- terranean, two days afterward, and be. lleves both were of meteoric origin. The tact with the earth at every step causes | Kansas dust was composed of brown a concussion which extends along the and bhiack impalpable matter, and so whole of the spinal column, and is | abundant that on the next day traces of sometimes very acutely felt. In the | the deposits could be seen on the surface second place, the EXPAnSe of the foot | of the ground, and on a north porch being limited, the seizure of the earth suflicient to receive the hoprints of a ont's feet, The writer says: The near | coincidence of dates between the phe. nomenon in Sicily and here, with an ap- parent similarity in the physical proper- ties of the dust, might suggest a common origin, We tar from here did some Each other tor to join, In peace with all men bere we lived, And did in love combine. But oh, remark the strange, Yet heaven's wise decree, two more 1 spring of the arch being broken by the I'm lodged within the silent grave, heel, the vibration produced hy its con- He's rolling In wandering through the old Sleepy Hollow cemetery I paused before an old mossy tombstone. Stooping down and brushing away the moss I read the following: Pacse, re wer, pause as you pass by, As YOu are now, so ones was |: As | man now so you will be, Prepare for death and follow me. And near by I read: - ; Afliction sore long time | bore, Needlessly Frightened, Physicians were in vain; Till death did seize and God did please People who fly to pieces at every sud. I'o ease me of my pain. | den loss or alarm or provocation are the But enough for the fair sex. Let us | kind « { maniacs who do not goto insane | poi i and the United States, provides see if the sterner sex can boast of any. | hospitals; but oftentimes SIrRnges | oo 0 subscription of $12,000,000, which We wilt begin with the | would naturally think they belonged | is $2.000.000 more than the centennial In the churchyard at Norfolk | there. The Hartford Conrand tells of 81 enodition estimate was based upon, wamithy W entiierstie 4 plYSieIs who { the commissioners of that celebration missed HE POCKELDOOK, Bi APPEATSa | 11s itd si Hi TY pf Crazy SRD. even to an old ante | Suiting Sn ae oa aous. 10 ance. Believing that he had grappe’ | not by any meansrepresent the increased | the nc during a X hi St Fans | magnitude of the proposed Exposition i MT. eis, A alcoll ii, thal morn. | sep ¢ last one held in the United | ing, who had taken him to his stock- | SYeF the dad # a expected yard to see his fine fat sow, he drove | (nat the receipts alone, owing to the pell-mell to the place and rushed to the | metropolitan location of the exposition pen, expecting Jo sue the wreck of his | and its ready means of acoess to ali parts MOCKELDOOK sCALLETEA Around i o id illbei Pnsely eale But he was disappointed. Nota sign | 8 he — PioteimEely BT mor was there. *'Griat guns,” the doctor | Besides this, the commissioners having exclaimed, “Theoldsow has swallowed in charge the projected fair believe it wyiiole a Well | there will be no difficulty rh raising en Mr. lis appeared on the | the amount mentioned in the act, or scene, and in a moment the excited doo- | sven more. tor cried cut, “ What'll you take for | that sow i “Oh, I don’t know,” moderately re. sponded the other. “1 don't want any ‘don't knows’ about it," roared the docter., ** What'll you take for that sow?" “1 don't know as I want to sell it," replied Mr. Wells, who evidently didnt understand the situation. “You must sell it. Set your own by the foot is incomplete both in stand. ing and in walking, so that it becomes a ! new art to learn how to stand erect or | to walk with safety. Harper's Weekly, i ——————— | The act incorporating the New York {world's fair of 1853, in celebration of the treaty of peace between Great we find God works a wonder now and then; He, though a lawyer, was an honest man, And in Stepney churchyard, London, upon a lawyer named Strange: Here ies an honest lawyer—-that's Strange! | Upon the tombstone of Stephen Bum- bold at Brightwell: He lived one hundred and five, Sanguine and strong; An hundred to five You live not so long! Which is probably true concerning the most of us. In Walton churchyard we read upon the tomb of George Miles, | Women are doing a good work in { foreign fields under the direction of the | Woman's Union Missionary society, | whose nineteenth anniversary was cele- | brated recently at the Broadway taber. [ nacle in New York. In Calcutta and | Rajpore 1,162 women and girls are under | the instruction of one iady and her assist. ants. An orphanage has been estab- | lished at Calcutta, where more than My My My My My My And upon a collier: Here lios the collier, John of Nashes, By whom death nothing mined, he swore; For, living, he was dust and ashes, And being dead, he is no more. sledge and hammer lie reclined, bellows also lost their wind; fire's extinct, my lorge decayed, vice i’ the dust my (riends have laid, coals are spent, my irons gore, nails are drove, my work is done. Here is one which 1 fear the majority of the male sex will never deserve. will not vouch for the truth of it: An honest fellow here is laid, His debts in tull he always paid; And what's more strange, the neighbors tell us, He brought back borrowed umbrellas. We pause before a stone in Luton churchyard, and this is the warning it | gives to us: Reader, 1 have loft a world In which I had a world to do, Sweating and fretting to get rich Just such a fool as you. In Lillington churchyard upon the tomb of John Trees: John Trees, aged 74 years, Poorly lived and poorly died; Poorly buried and no one eried. The following curious epitaph will be | found in the churchyard at Lyford, | Devonshire: Here lies, in a horizontal position, The outside case ot George Kontledge, Watehmaker. Integrity was the main spring, and pradence the regulator of all the actions of his life; i Humnne, generous and liberal, i price, but I must have it," pleadingly | “Well, then, say seventy-five dol named it, supposing the price And he ns he would cool the doctor's ardor. was astonished at the reply, “I'l take it: now kill the hog," was Mr. Wells now knew he was crazy. but this only added fuel to the flames, “Kill that hog, 1 say,” again thud. “She'll digest if you don't.” “* Oh, come, get into your wagon and ride home with me,” soothingly sug- “Bill Wells, doyou think I am crazy? lars in it, and if you don’t hurry up and have her killed she'll digest it and I'l} lose every dollar.” Mr. Wells still looked on in silent as. “My friend, will you kill that hog?” overcoat he discovered a hole in of the pockets, and as he dove his one 500 children receive eare. Twenty-five pupils are now boarding at the mission in Pekin, and there are also a large number of day scholars. Moreover, village schools are being opened in China. In Cyprus a school has been opened for Greelegirls, and about sixty are in attendance, In Allahabad, India, where there are about 450 pupils under instruction, the earnestness of the women in their mission work has been rewarded by a gift of $4,000 from the government. A Mexican Hacienda, A long train of Mexican carts, such as do much of the general freight busi- ness of Mexico, wended its way into the city yesterday and stopped on Commer- cial street, The carts were drawn by fine- conditioned mules and were laden with beans. The beans were produced on the Hincenda del Rosario, at Parras, Mexico, distant from San Antonio four hundred and fifty miles. The freight was consigned to the wholesale grocer house of Hugo & Smeltzer, and consist of one hundrod and fifteen sacks of beans, » in weight aggregating thirty thousand pounds. They were raised on the naci- enda above named by Madero & Co., whose enterprise is unexcelled in ali Northern Mexico. The land under cul- His hand never stopped till he had relieved deeper his excitement gave place to a distress; | feeling of satisfaction. Between the So nicely regulated were his movements that | lining and the cloth of his coat Le found he never wont wrong, | the lost pocketbook with its contents un- Kxeept when set a-going by people who did | not know his key; ! Even then he was easily set right again. i He had the art of disposing his time so well | That his hours glided away in one continued | round of pleasure, i Till in an unlucky moment his pulses stopped | beating. Ho ran down Nov. 14, 1802, aged 57, opes to be taken in hand by his Maker, | Fhoroughly cleansed, repaired, wound up and sot a-going In the world to come, when time shall be no | more. Wandering to Gillingham church- yard we will rest awhile beside the | grave of Thomas Jackson : Sacred to the memory ol Thomas Jackson, comedian, who was engaged December 21, 1741, to play a comic cast of charactors in this | great theater-~the world, tor many of which he was prompted by nature to excel. The | season being olosed, bis benefit over, the charges all paid, and his accounts elosed, he made his exit in the tragedy of Death, March 17, 1798, in tall assurance of being once more onlled to rehearsal, where he hopes to find bis forfeits all cleared, his cast of parts bet. tered, and his situation made agreeable by Him who paid the great stock debt by the love He bore the performers in general, In the Roman Catholic cemetery of Mayne the following epitaph has caused considerable trouble between the priests and the people, the former declaring that it is * profane, immoral and scan- dalous,” while the latter maintain that it shall rewain as it is: Beneath this stone here lieth one That all his friends did please; ‘Lo ueaven I hope he’s surely gone To enjoy eternal ease, He drank, he sang, while here on earth Lived happy as a lord; And now he bath resigned his breath, God rest him, Paddy Ward, Bankes, and ous, half indifferent glance to Eliza | then turned to the farmer it with their fingers.— Danielso Sentinel. gory Ville had been He disturbed. Not a dollar digested by the innocent old sow. bill to say nothing about it, but the 5 | Destructive lufluences, Doubtless countless myriads of liv- destroyed. One aphis may be the pa- mies in mass, it 1s no minute individual as n mouthful for the Balenovtera, they ox licks up, or the vegetation of a dis trict that is devastated by locusts. It is the unwritten law of nature that one race must die that snother may live; this other, in its turn, subserving the same end, and so, constantly, until the cycle Le complete. Without this law, against which there is no appeal, na- ture would be a chaotic 1mpossibility. The destructive influences are so pre- dominant that the carnage is indiscrim- inate and without struggle.—~Contem. porary Review. A guide and hunter known as Colo- rado Bill at Fort Stekle, is astonishing the far West by his wonderful piste] shooting. A short time ago he broke ninety-two out of 100 glass balls with a 45-caliber Colt’ srevolver. Hechallenges We will olose this grave subject with the world to shoot with him at any dis. tance from ten to 300 yards. tivation in the hacienda embraces eigh- teen square miles, all of which is sub- ject to irrigation. Madero & Co. sow annually three thousand bushels of wheat and plant four hundred and fifty bushels of corn. The past year they produced six hundred thousand pounds of grapes, and manufactured two thou. sand barrels of wine, besides a large quantity of brandy. The population of the hacienda, which includes workmen and their families, is nearly twenty-five hundred. Three hundred men are con- stantly employed on the farming sec- tion of the hacienda, while four hundred persons are kept busy in a large cotton goo is manufactory. Most of the cotton used at the mill is produced in a lake country seventy-five miles to the north east of the hacienda. In thissection the plant grows, producing each year, for from three to seven years, It attains an immense size. The past season, how- ever, the cotton crop was a failu e, and the enterprising manufacturers have been foreed to look to Texas for their supply of the staple.—~San Awlonio (Texas) Sun. When James T. Brady, the eminent lawyer, first opened a lawyer's office in New York, he took a basement room, which had previously been occupied b a cobbler. He was somewhat annoy by the previous occupant’s callers, and irritated by the fact that he had few of his own. One day an Irishman entered. “The cobbler's gone, I see,” he said, “1 should think he had,” tartly re- sponded Brady. ‘“ And what do you sell?” he said, looking at the solitary table and a fow law ks. *‘ Block. heads,” responded Brady. *‘Be gorra,” said the Irishian, ** ye must be doing a mighty fine business—ye hain't got but one left.” srr THE THUNDERER. Nome Faets of Interest About the Great English Newspaper, A letter to the Philadelphin 7TVmes ives the following interesting particu. ars about its great London namesake: Let me enumerate some of the most im. portant points illustrative of the seope ofthe T¥mes: First— Manufactures its own presses, Second-—Founds its own type, Third—-Provides its own EP t-sloo- trie, Fourth—Feeds its employees on the spol, Jish--Rm its own electrotyping SHOP. Sixth—Has its own telegraphic ser. vice and wires— in the main; and Seventh—Repair shops for all these fifferen. machineries, All these great shops and offices are under one rool, and the cluster of them, with the other ordinary departments of a newspaper office—editorial, compos. ing, proof, stereotyping, ms king-up, press, business, advertising and dis. tributing rooms—form the Tones build- ing. i the press-room ef the paper stand eight presses; six go evory night and two stand by as a reserve brigade. Each press prints a whole copy of the Tines, oth sides, sixteen pages, and at the rate of 12.000 an hour. These presses are ranged in three columns in an im. mense room on the first floor of the building, the enormous weight sup- ported by arches. The paper-room, another [arge space, is just below the press-room, the paper being hoistea up by a lift (American elevator) into the press-room. In the spacious paper rooms below you wander through long avenues of huge rolls of paper, each roll four miles long. 1 watched at one of these roils, and it was striking to see how quickly it was done. Much ofthe mechanical interest of the Idmes centers in its type department. 1 brought away with me some type made under my eye in the foundry- room. But that is only the beginning of the wonder. Following this type by machinery. All publishers are familiar with the history of the long effort of Mr. Walter in this direction. Here is the result: One-half of the Times every night is set by machinery. One machine does the work of six or eight skilled com- positors. It eannot correct, however, and Lere is its weak point, or the whole paper would be set withit. As itis, the work is about divided. Doubt. ful copy and all revisions are done by hand—the steady regular work by ma. A young man sits before what looks liken piano board, with four or five banks of keys nil lettered. © He plays on these keys with the fore-fingers of each hand rapidly, and the type are as rapidly shifted into a kind of minute steel galley, the exact width of the body of a type. There is po system of fingering, as with piano music, only the paws fly like lightning. The distributing machine just re- verses the powers of the setiing in. strument, and in the last stage each letter of the alphabet is rapidly shunted off onto its separate side track, where they stand like Jong trains of freight cars in the yard of a colossal depot. It is a wonderful machine, but there are others I think now surely approaching perfection, of much wore interest and importance to newspaper property. The last permanent investment of the Times has been the manufseture of its own light on the electric system, using carbon points, Thecost for the plant of this has been ver sucoessful, and the cost of producing light is now very moderate, The entire building is now lighted by sixteen electric lights, each Right of from 800 to 1,000 candle power—far more than is needed, Sixteen wires— are used to distribute the light, and posertul steam engine. This engine iad to be built expressly for the elec tric battery, and its power cannot be used for any other purpose; the light would waver acd be unsteady, Quite the dark shadows are in part corrected by reflection from white cowls. no reason why the new Edison light desirable. The electric manufacture has been a striking advertisement for the Times, but so far it is not an economy. liave more light than they need or want to have, and the cost ot the plant is the capital of a gas company—not a legiti- mate expense of a newspaper establish. ment. The employees of the Times are fed in the building—a great Saving of time to employer and employed. The canteen consists of a fine, large kitchen and two dining-rooms. ¥ issupplied at cost rates to the men—* everything except | beer, on which is charged a little Profi which saves the canteen always from loss, and the margin of profit, whatever it may be, is always turned into an em- vloyees' relief fund which we have "— it was explained to me. “That is very excellent; but we donot call beer ‘food ' in America.” ing institution It supplies a kind of cheap club to the men, but there could | be no better illustration of the differ- | ence of habits and manners on the liquor question between the two coun- | tries. Here was a careful and con | scientious employer furnishing liquor to his force--and, more than that, long rows of bright, burnished pewter ale- mugs, each with “The T¥mes ” proudi engraved on its beaming face, greet my vision as one of the embellishments of the canteen. The electrotyping shop is a well-appointed room, equipped with all modern applinnoes of the trade, where are made the plates for the weather diagrams of the Times, and also maps, charts, ete. So well is this shop perfected that a moderate-sized hate can be turned out in a few minutes. Practical newspaper managers will recognize the economy and desirable use of this attachment. The Times has its own wires over much of England and n ost of thecon- tinent, and its own service of them by accomplished correspondents—men of ability and influence. It uses Reuter (the associated press of Europe), but only partially; and, as an incident, its page or move of telegraphic news being generally exclusively its own, and the Reuter news coming in only in a sup- plementary way. It is a common ex- pression Among newspaper men in our country that we only use the telegraph largely. I think that the special tele- graph service of the Times exceeds that of any American newspaper, saving, possibly, the New York Herald. It doves not strike the popular and unedu- cated eye perhaps so strongly as ours, because it does not deal in criminal news, small fires, petty accidents, sen- sations, ete.; but every morning the Times does have a dispatch from every capital in Europe, from a “stick” to a column and a Ralf or two volumns in length, giving the political situation of the day snd the great business and socin | features—the matter that states. men and scholars and leaders read and taik about. They nre its constituency. Its telegraphic service of special matter averages, 1 think, about a page a day; and a page of the Times is equal in superficies to over twenty per cent, more than a page of the Press or New York Herald. It is all solid news—no padding or whipped cream. The reception of the telegraphic news of the Tymes is something unique. The lines from the continental capitals, Ber: lin, Paris, Rome, Vionoa, ete. all of course converge in one room, and the NUMBER 23. dispatches are received over an instru- ment that prints. The printing, how. ever, serves moreas arecord, The dis- patch, as it is received, is read off by tue telegraph operator to the operator of a type machine, who plays it off by ear, and the dispatch, thus reduced to a written form, is supplied to the edi. Wr in Printed pool, of saurse oly the work of responsible correspon likely to need no alteration, is honored inthis way. It would be too expen. sive thus to treat matter requiring edit- he type-setting machine compositors are, of course, a class to themselves, Every ordinary compositor going ir to the concern obligates himself to aban- don all unions or outside organizations, Indeed, in many things the office is exclusive in this way. It does not em- ploy men who serve on other papers, and those who work on the paper are protected in many ways from outside affiliations. As a curious instance of this fecling 1 was shown in a distinet | portion of the building s rather deso- ate, cheerless looking room for casual | employees or temporary contributors— | ** persons that we don't want to mix up with our own men, you know.” : The New York Reporter, | A reporter's life is not a happy one, | He is the slave of duty at all of | the day and night. To-day hs is here, | to-morrow there. On Monday he may | be among thieves and murderers, on | Tuesday hmong politicians and states. | men, and on Wednesday smong ladies | and gentlemen. He may be even ! all three on the same day. | remember | scold, raw morning in Fe when | I had to get up long before daylight and | make a fast out of Oliver Hitoh- ‘cock's coffee nad cakes and run for s (train. Thatatternoon I found myself on of a European steamer, | which had stranded high and dry on the | New Jersey sands. 1 shared the eap- tain's dinner while the waves came dashing against the vessel's side with s | force that threatened to make us food for | ses wormsat any moment, [came back | wet and weary that night, but there was no rest for me yet. To Delmonico’s 1 i as soon as | could change my | clothing, and partake of a great banquet. | Such is the life of a newspaper | He knows not at any time where he will take his mext meal. He often is sent | from a wedding to a funeral, or from a | ball in the Academy to a murder at the | Five Points. Likean army on the march, | he must siways have his baggage pre- | pared, for at five minutes’ notice he may {be sent several hundred miles where | hirt-collars and handkerchiefs are un- ‘known. He may be sent to scour the | bay for missing Jersey shanties, or Long i leland woods for mysteriously disap- | pearing personages. | Not only must the reporter be able to tell an interesting s . but he must also, if he wants to earn his salt, haves | knowledge of the world and possess that tact and discretion which comes of such { knowledge. Young men fresh from some | inland college, who come to New York | newspaper offices under the impression | that reporting is something that they | can do if they cannot do anything else, [are quickly undeceived. half of | the news which is printed in the local columns every morning is obisined | from le who do not care to furnish | it, and who have to be “run down" very | often with as much skill as the most cunning of foxes. And for all this the | reporter is paid but little more than the | average mechanic. It may | some of you to learn that ne gets even that Tout, Jus pe does if he th good for { anything. good ones no more | is mainly due to the fact that there are | so many bad ones competing with them. | Yet with ail the drawbacks of long | and irregular hours, inadequate remun- | eration and “assignments” that are often | uncongenial, there is a ahout a | reporter's life which all who have ever been members of the profession must | acknowledge. There is a romance con- nected with it which does not entirely die out of even the older members who now keep to it because they have been | spoilt for anything else. The new genera- | tion of metropolitan reporters, which | differ considerably from the old, is kept to its work p ly more by this flavor i of the adventurous than any thing eise. ! The Bohemian spirit of poetry and beer | has almost died out and the ranks are | recruited from a class which has less of | the literary and more of the “be up and . | doing” spirit about it. They want an active life and they find it here. Asthey grow older, however, they © more | straight in their desires snd there ave | onnsequently constant droppings out. | Either they work their way into | the editorial chairs or they go into some | other profession or business and their | places are filled by new-comers, who, nowadays, are generally graduat:s of the leading colleges. So then, here is To the truthinl reporter Who never prints but what he oughter; An example sublime Of the men of his time. — George OC. Clement An English Moor. The aspect of the moor is totally un- like that of any other scene; it has an yrepares one nst surprise on behold- ing it for the first time. We could not see it fairly from the village street, but sauntering one day across a bridge that lane, we came saddenly in view of the rich up. brown and yellow. No for us to fee! the strong pure air blown across it; it typified in a glance the “ wind-swept mooriands of the West,” We would scent the breath of the strong air, the heather, the mingled odors of herb and earth which made the mooriands keen with fragrance. We feltall im ence tor a drive out upon the desolate, fas- cinating region, but Brunt shook his head. * Not tew-day, zur,” he said, looking at the shy. “Yew can’t go on to the moor if it has been rainy. “Why not, Brunt?” “Why, sur, it be so moist and soggy like horses can’t stand in it; they gets their feet caught tew once, zur. A day or two later, however, our de- sire was gratified, and we drove across the bridge, snd round by a pretty, peaceful country, the road curvingabout a hill. We came suddenly upon = strong, fresh breeze charged with life. At the same moment we found the sur- roundings swiftly changing; from a grcen-embowered lane we em upon a rocky, trackless hillside, thick with furze and heather, except where gray boulders were heaped up. The groun was soft and elastic, with a Juxuriant vegetation. Above, the sky was half hidden by swift-flying clouds that cast deep shadows on the moor, with shafts of purple and golden light between. The moor seemed endless, yet when we reached a high point we looked down upon a wide sweep of country, a group of villages framed in the rich landscape of two counties, Devon and Somerset. Church and tower, park and hamlet lay peacefully below wus, while the wild, dark upland we were driving across had a uliar character of its own, suggesting perhaps some un- painted picture, some touch of Hardy's pen, some bit of witcheraft, yet in reality wholly unfamiliar to our eycs and minds. A gale was blowing luri- ously before we reached the lower plains again, the twilight was fitful enough to satisfy our ghostliest farci s, the two orturee figures we p of women gathering brambles and furze seemed to close in the scene with a curious t. Color, fragrance, solitude and storm— ments, and it emphasized our im sions of the western country vi Harper's . Like musio, with no presence of the time When o'er her lite, which love so lo Clothed in white—her form We seem to Shine in the glory of 8 new existence, Detying time snd night, And from all earth born memories set free; While we, like uavelers toiling in the dis. {ation § or A display of American plants is to held sanually in Hyde Park, London. Two 1 men had a sow race | te Tht phe as the country editor ssid Ants 19 TY oh © bask fay v trian—"* Is your lantern nr That's slipped into the cans hy stealth. by pi ain Site ately d, ytwo -One, egalizing marriage wih 8 wife's aister or a decessed with the stiliness which is the store of the man who doesn’t | vertise. * a A wasn who offered fou fee. a vestment, an applicant bet the rails of the Boston and Albany r road .— Rochester Express. One of the first things which the class Wait 10 Jeutl 18 S07 mage the ; remarks after a cumory gianoe over the paper as it comes from the he season w next few months more Shanti any other part of the year — Keokuk Gate nd A koff palace, the resi » A Bow connected theater by the telephone, and the czare- vitch and bis wite listen to the music without having to go to the theater. That which takes the conceil cut of a rising youn esman as quick as any Sar to Be caught ihe act of going for a cent’s worth: of yeast in his native village. He feels like Hing bitmstif in the hands of his friends. — ; An old miter, who was notorious for seif-denial, was one day asked why he was so thin. *1 do not know," said the miser; © [ have tried various means for getting fatter, but without > “Have you tried vi friend Miss Tillie Deversus Blake writes of 4 being pretty.” ee ered oom Tene Saad Yantates ves ¢ hese 3 but not much ; not much. — New Haven The Groonville (N.X.) Zool basa | The Groans Ni who. writes his Strange to say, up 0 to press we Lear of no Ee a A man bad $100 with which he was told to buy 100 cattle. He went into the market and found be rouid buy cows 31810 each, steep at 53 cath 2nd HES a ] Animal with his $100. How did he A report the Mormons ans ital ulation i is Shrch in that Feritors Bas lost, 4 . and that the receipts in that period were over $1,000,000. ing much attention ia RE ng n : iN in bloom and some of its plant was BD : : carefully flowers graced the ast. The a hy tliis season it has nt ever since, ever: into flower for the first time since he wedding day. kl A ton of gold or. silver 29,166.66 ounces. A ton of is worth $602,875. A ton of silver,3% the present : Tae pb Oe EO A cubic foot of gold wei unds, : nd is Worth HON av andis ver WORE about $10, We. The yalué of gold coin, bars an lion ino the world is estimated at $3,500,000,000. This would make in a mass s twenty- five foot cube. A sub-editor and a reporter were quarreling one day in the editor's room. “You are a donkey!” said the sub-edi- tor. * You are another!’ said the porter promptly. * i retorted the sub-editor, (Jou are the greatest donkey I know!” “Gentle- men, gentlemen I” said the editor, look- ing up from his desk. “you 1 think, that I am pre-ent.™ The sub- editor apologized. — Eubbard's’ Advcr- Loser. " & ré- im Railroad Statisties. T ere are some 85.000 miles of rail. road in the United States operated iy some 600 different companies. ; There are o er 20,000stat ons. On these lines are 1 000 locomotives, 13,000 passenger cars, 5,000 baggage, mail and express cars, and some 500,000 freight cars. No reliable statistics show the number of men employed on this 85.000 miles of ro: d, but it is estimated that there are about 40,000 engineers and firemen, 20.000 passenger train conductors and brakemen, about the same number «of , mail and express men, and at past 50,000 men on freight trains, A'd station agents and clerks, train dispateh- ers telegraph operators, men, Yoni. masters, trackmen, watchmen, 36, freight laborers, machinists, ear-buili- ers and repairers, employees in roun!- houses and shops, and last, ut not least, presidents, general managers, n- perintendents, the auditor's depaii- ment, treasurer's department, ete, a: d we ha almost 1,000,000 men e:.- loyed in the railroad business of tie i ted States. Add to this sie nui ber of men employed: in ture of ting ties, ete., and,