THE OLD MILL. Here from the brow of the hill I look Through a lattice of boughs and leaves And the moss on its rotting eaves. I hear the clatter that jars its walls, And the rushing waters sound, And I see the black floats rise and fall As the wheel goes slowly round. I rode there oft when [ was voung, With my grist on the house before, And talked with Nellie, the miller’s girl, As I waited my turn at the door. And while she tossed her ringlets brown, And flirted and chatted so free, The whee! might stop 6r the wheel might BO It was all the same to me, "is twenty years since last T stood On the spot where I stand to-day, And Nellie is wed and the miller is dead, And the mill and I are gray, But both, till we fall into ruin and wreck, To our fortune of toil are bound, And the man goes and the stream flows, Aud the wheel moves slowly round. SL TS A NIGHT OF FEAR. were samphng the punch several per- dance. There wus but one young and fresh face, that of the daughter of the house. increased minute by minute. ‘‘Poor have fallen into a trap! not have allowed themselves to caught by it!" They danced until midnight, be The fifty the was guests, The punch danseuses were strong, demanded—the students At midnight, however, they wished “Not if I know it!” cried the master “Supper’s ready; at Montauban, having the good looks and accents paculiar to that locality, entered the omnibus running from the Madelaine to the Bastile in Paris. At the station of the Passage de "Opera a passenger with a high color, carefully dressed, uneasy in the stylish seated himself beside the student. Glittering charms hung from his handsome and grave young girl, whom he installed in front of him upon 1ast seat remaining vacant, The passenger, so brand new in ap- pearance, did not seem to pay any self solely to staring at the other pas- sengers, striving to make their acquaini- ance or recognize them. After a re- peated examination of everybody in the omnibus he suddenly turned toward his neighbor, and, slapping him on the knee with his broad, firm hapd, ex- claimed: “It's youl” Even though one is from Montauban, and has brought from his province an opinion in regards to Paris that pre- vents him from being amazed at any- thing, one cannot be slapped on the knee and spoken to in this way without giving a start. “I don’t understan dent. “Tell him, girl,” responded the man with the charms, addressing his daugh- ter; “tell him I like him, and perhaps be will understand better.” The youug girl blushed, 1g her head, confused, supplica and the student then perceived that she was very pretty. “How can I serve you?" he demanded in a softened voice of his neighbor. “All right, I'll explain,” man with the new garment. “To morrow night I have a house-warming. 1 said to myself, as soon as I saw you, that you should be there, Oh, no cere. mony with me; you needn’t come alone if you're afraid, A young man so 0 astonishing how well I like 3 da, or = hu ii +4 Erie i, friends, Select half a dozen of them and bring them with you. It's agreed upon, isn’t t* Here's my card.” rassed; every eye was fixed upon him, The people in the omnibus laughed and whispered. The only way to escape from the dilemma was to accept the card and get out. stop, hut leaped from the omnibus, the Latin quarter, the young student we won't!” the address given, Through a magnificent iron gate they The supper was for three hundred in the festal hall. They drank, they laughed. omnibuses stopped running, the guests again strove to withdraw, The old gentlemen and old ladies were per- mitted to depart, but the host made a new barricade before the young Inen. “You shan’t go!” said he, in a louder voice than he had vet used. “You would be robbed on the way home! You are fatigued; so am I; let’s go to bed! Your chambers have been pre- pared!” At once, and in spite of appearance, our young friends stared at eaeh other with a certain fright. The ambuscade was undeniable, What were they to do? Qur rash heroes consulted together, accepted with good grace, demanding ments t turn in the garden and smoke a cigar. jailer pushed his irony so far as to offer them some excellent Havana cigars, which they lighted with hypocritical gratitude. Once in gate, It was fastened. Impossible to awake the concierge; he was without doubt an accomplice in the prepared crime! They concluded their escape with the same uvanimily that they had concluded the night before to go to the rendezvous. They, herefore, searched the garden for a tree that might help them to scale the wall. They found one, It seemed to been planted there expressly against the wall, with the branches that reached over into the street, They climbed it one by one, and after- ward let themselves slip down the wall, But, unfortunately, three sergeants de ville, who chanced to be on the spot, received the young men in their arms, refused to believe the incredible story they stammered out, searched them, found very little money upon them, were nevertheless suspicious of them, and took the seven rash fellows to the sta- tion-house. Next morning, when our seven stu- dents were taken before the commissary they must make have supper guests, the husband of one of the “Parbleul is it you, messieurs?” house?” They were then compelled to confess the suspicion, the terrors that had pre- sided over the scaling of the wall, Al} most choked with merriment the com- missary gave the following explanation: The individual who had invited them to his housewarming soiree was an hon- est omnibus conductor who had just walks, had made a mistake and timidly. A lackey In grand livery informed them that it was the right house, and, after having conducted them up the wide, marble front steps, introduced balmy with rare flowers, “Complete,” cried the host on per- ceiving his acquaintance of the omnibus and his six companions. “I was cer- tain you would come; youth 1s not dis- trustful. Now you are here you won’t get away easily, “There’s my mother, a good old lady who has had her day; there’s my wife who 1s now having hers; there's my daughter whose day Is yet to come, A fine family, are they not?—and they don't turn up their nose at pleasure either, “It’s singular,” added the master of House, ‘‘though I sent out at least three hundred invitations you are the first to arrive, But it is not yet 9 o'clock. They will come; they will gome, Meanwhile, will you take a lit- tle refreshment?" ' They warmed up slightly while re- freshing themselves, The young men found the mansion delightful, the bourse. “It is not astonishing,” added the astonishing, therefore, that he should give his invitations mn an omnibus.’ “Ah, if his daughter had not been so pretty!” responded the bewildered son “Parbleu! He wishes to find a hus “Do you think be will retain any ani. mosity against as?’ “He will laugh over the affair with you.” 1 know not if this story will termin- ate with a marriage. It is possible. At any rate, the young man from Mon. tauban now remembers that his father was a former chief of the prefecture of Tarn-et-Garonne-chef cook ~ and thinks that circumstance sufficient to Exposition of Lock Ploking and Bate-Blow. ing by an Expert, A young fellow with a bright face, a suit of | clothes, has visited almost all the down { town business offices’ during the past week with the model of a door in his | hand, the door being equipped with a strong lock, a bolt and a steel key. A little satchel strung from a strap | his shoulder was generally pulled around in front of him as he deposited the { model of the door on the desk of | person he had selected as his victim, | and while the latter was regarding the | door model and the impudence of the | man, the young fellow selected from a | bundle of brass wires in the satchel one | tattered hat and a much-worn | or two particular ones, with which be first ejected the steel key from its place in the lock and then threw back the | bolt, finally turning the lock and open- | ing the door, which being placed be- tween himself and his vis-a-vis illustra- | ted more quickly than words could tell | how easily an expert lock-picker can | enter your room, after the | been bolted and locked and the key left in the lock, should he desire to do 80, fascinating to me,” he sald, ‘‘as the astronomy is to scientist, I know bur- glars who are and apparently well-cultivated men. Just a little thought will enable you to see that a burglar must be a man—that is, & successful burglar—must be man of good mental quality as well as of courage.’ “And the safe-blower? “1s invariably a well informed man. Of all the fraternity of lock workers the combination lock-worker 18 the most expert. The cashier of the Wane county bank, in Wooster, Ollo, coun- ted over its securities in his possession and finding them correct closed the safe door with & bang and went home, The next morning, by some freak of | mind, the combination which | alone let him into the fire and supposed burglar-proof safe had slipped his mind. In vain he endeavored to conjure up the magical numbers, and in vain | officers and directors of the bank work- ed on the turning knob, “There were $20,000 worth of bonds and money behind that invulnerable door, and for two months the men fretted and struggled to them. One day a stranger | into the little town, and the first thing | he heard of was the dilemma of the { bank, | “He strolled leisurely up to the bul ing and quietly informed the cashi that he could open the safe ina short The cashier, who had fumed for two months at the same job, looked up- on the stranger as a lunatic, but as the case was a desperate told the stranger to go ahead and doit. The man walked over to door, and on one knee began the combination knob, The click of mechanism pleased him, for he smiled. “@ would $he wilt bank I'ed ch sauntered time, one he “al gave the door a pull, and it slowly on its hinges, and revealed swung tha the weeks 50 earnestly longed to see, “You asked me a moment ago about safe-blowers, workers who resort to powder to open a door, Having acquired mastery over one combination, a safe-burglar is too shrewd to let his secret out. After en- or sound, open the combination and then secure bis plunder, gins the work of safe-blowing. first locks the safe deor, and then fills all the cracks with putty, and through | a little orfice made in the upper crack fills the safe with powder by means of a | little bellows. He then fills the hole | attaches a slow match to a small orfice { mage I e lower crack, and walks off | Yeisurdi¥ with the fragts of his crime, | In a half hour the fe fnbas ignited the | powder, and the sate doot is shattered | from its hinges. Then the po rush in, and the next day report al head- | quarters that the robbery was accom- | plished by blowing the safe, The truth is, after beating the combination the | thieves, to conceal how 1t was done, | ‘blow the safe.’ “The robber masters a combination | with almost mathematical accuracy. | Just as the music teacher 1s trained to detect one false note in a large chorus, | 80 the safe robber studies the click of the ratches within the lock and marks the drop. The expert safe worker is as scientifically familiar with the relative resisting power of the different makes of vaults and safe doors as he is with the expansive force of the different ex- plosives, A pneumatic pump was used fn the robbery of the Quincy, LiL, bank in this manner: The crevices of the safe door were puttied up all around, an opening was left at the top and bottom tube which was fixed to the pump, The air in the safe was exhausted through the tube in the bottom, and the vacum i | followed by lock-pickers, sneak thieves Among the ho~ { and hotel plunderers. three divisions ‘nights’ and the tel thieves there are the ‘daylights,’ the ‘mornings.’ The room worker gener- ally locates at hotels the theatrical stars, jewelry salesmen, bankers, bridal parties and all persons who are likely {to carry valuables or money. The thief having located his man, proceeds | in his operations in this manner: At the dead of night he slips from his to the door of the apartment wherein lies his victim, snoring probably, in heavy sleep. A pair of nippers, or out» siders, and a silk thread and pece of wire are the tools needed, He turns the key inthe lock from the outside and the lock is opened. He pushes the key inward and drops to the floor; waits to see if it disturbed the sleeper, if all is well he proceeds. He places his knee to the door and by this means finds the exaet location of the bolt. He then fastens a thread to the wire, making a sort of bow, and after bending to suit he pushes this instru- | ment through the keyhole, and by giv- ing the handle of the wire a turn, holds his contrivance until it proper position and tl draws it slowly along. As the thread passes along on the inside of the door it catch- es the knob of the boi easily from the noosing, and making the slightest noise, it has reaches te en and draws it This ts is known by the profession as a ‘widdie.’ Wis The thief that enters secures his booty and returning places the key in knob of the bolt, and closes the his thread, using his or siders, the it. All this can be N g ¥2 utes, nippers done in five min- EE ——— itn Waking ap the Wrong Fasstaear. In 1830, when visitors traveled there by stage coach, a famous old named John made West. He was a hard drinker, but in those days whiskey didn't hurt a man much. Before leaving Buffalo made a bargain with the driver that he was to be waked up every + wy sdoneer Oldershaw scheme worked well until they cam within a day’sdrive of Chicago. were only two passengers in and they had evidently discovered what Was going on. As the journey was neat its end all hands agreed to ride all night in order to reach Chic ing. With iriver not bargain i John When | begun to snore, one of the ot many to went to i Oi forget sleep. he her passen gers crowded him out of his piace sal own hat for John’s coon skin, and pre- All ni kept up, the driver 1 0%T aiidti tended tn be asleep. the deceplion was stopping every hour, nudging the ma: that he supposed was Oidershaw and giving him his bitters, When Chicago was reached John found himself in his own corner, but be knew that he had no whiskey, and be became so furious that they had to put him under guard. He sued the stage company {or damages, and after ten years of Litigation got a judgment for $15,000, That is what came of waking up the wrong passen- ger. ght long swallows Attack and Conquer a Hawk, | Recently a hawk swooped down on a poultry yard near Youngsville, N, Y., { and seizing a hen, flew with it to the | top of a neighboring tree. The hen | made a great outery, and before the | hawk could kill it and make a meal of | it a swallow made a dash at the hawk and pecked and worried it so that it | released the hen and attempted to fly | away. The hen fluttered to the ground | and ran back to the poultry yard, The | swallow kept up its attacks on the | hawk, aud it was soon joined by other swallows, The courageous little birds surrounded the hawk and assailed it | fiercely, until the big bird dropped to | the ground. The farmer on whose ground the conflict took place hurried to the spot. The swallows had the hawk on the ground and were pecking it | mercilessly. They were so much en- | gaged in the atiack that the farmer walked within three feet 4f them before they discovered him and flew away. The farmer picked up the hawk, Both of its eyes had been put out, and it was so badly hurt in other ways that it died in a few minutes, It was a very large hawk, and had been doing much dam- age to the poultry in the neighborhood for several days, Insists MI MIS California Forests, It is said that the permanence of the California mountain forests is seriously threatened by the herds of sheep and cattle which are driven into the moun tains every year to graze. From the foothills to the highest meadows every blade of herbage and every seedling, shrub and tree is devoured. Young trees are barked and ruined, and the roots of grasses are trodden out by the hoofs of animals, The life of any for SIRT | TE res 4 3 yy NEWSO¥ THE WEEK a——— ~The President on the 18th appoin- ted the following mternal révenue coi- lectors: Daniel J, Welch, for Montana: John C, Henderson, for the Eleventh District Indiana; Willlam B. An- derson, for the Thirteenth District of Illinois, and Thomas Cooper, for the Eighth District of Illinois, The ma- jority of the internal revenue offices of the country have been filled, only nine- teen remaining vacant. William B, Webb Las ept the office Commissioner the District of Columbia offered hilo by the President on the 18th, The law provides that voth political parties shall be represented in the District Cominis- and Mr. Webb, who is a republi- BUCCeeds one that party in the of id decided 10 of Of 8i0n, Can, Board, ~The U. SB. steamer Despatch, hav- ing on board Secretaries Whitney Endicott, Generals Benet, Newton Abbott, and Captain C, 8, Smith and Edward Magruder, U. 5. A,, and Mr, Joseph Morgan of Pennsylvania, mem bers of the Board to inspect forlifica- tions, arrived at Newport on the 19th. —J olin Roach, the ship-builder, made assignment on 15th in New York, The preferences amount to about $122,000, and and ~—Twenty cases of prostration from heat and five deaths, were reported in New York on the 185th, Five cases of prostration and one death were reported n Brooklyu, -A violent wintry around Kalamazoo, Michi 1 19th, At Vicksburg mn to property, and sev- 3 1% 5 3 4 persons injured by lightning. Was one ~The court-martial appointed for the al of Paymaster General Smith of the on the charge of ‘‘scandalous mduet and culpable inefficiency in the avy, on the itd in’ Washington. —The Governor of Louisiana has or- the execution of Charles Davin, ge Wilson and Mathilde Jones { we murder of Mrs, Henrietta ow of Judge James A, Cole, in of Plaquemine, Jberville parish. ¢ execution will take place on Fri- July 31st. -The Chief of the Bureau of Stat tics reports that the number of in the United States i # is ry diiie™ 880, was 387 fryy tl { vier the 1 JUINNE Lt £21, being 122,013 less previous year or 401,171 than during the year ending June #1, 1882 the year of the grealest immi- ~The Dominion Parl 3 ne nn amen was ¥ snr 1 ' Ruel On ~The present hol wave extends over he greater portion of the United States tocky Mou ratures were report n Washington, | » of the 1 arg, 98 in 101 in Baltimore. Henry nted a 8] and of North Care Hal 1 $i y ial Indian agent. woial agent Was ol 14 ~-William B. Webb pmissioned as a Commis of Columbia, ~-1t is reported from Fort Reno that General Sheridan has organized jan police fore composed of young Cheyennes. It 1s thought the General in his report will attril the dissatisfretion among the Indi chiefly to the cattle leases, - By the premature explosion of a blast on the South Pennsylvama Rail- pear Fort L Fulton COunLY, Penna, , « 20th, tires 3 were Killed and injured, perhaps fataly, au In- d ©, road, ittieton, it m Lhe two ~The town of Skidmore, Missouri, was burned on the 19th. Loss, nearly £100,000, The fire was started by boys playing mith matches na hay mow. Since the 18th a fire has been raging seven hundred feet below the surface in the Hollenback mine at Wilkesbarre, but it is now reported under control It was started’ by a lamp falling from one of the miners’ hats, ~The President on the 21st, appoin- ted Joseph K. Bogert to be Postmaster at Wilkesbarre, Penna, vice A S, Orr, suspended; A. H. Keller, U, 8. Mar- shal for Northern Alabama; Edwrd J. Dawne, of Oregon, United States Judge for the District of Alaska; M. D. Ball of Alaska, United States At- torney for Alaska, and Barton Atkins, of New York, United States Marshal for Alaska. ~Secretary Whitney, it is said, hes decided that the Eight Hour law shall hereafter be enforced In the different navy yards—that is, the employes shall receive ten hours® pay for eight hours’ labor. Heretofore they have received eight hours’ pay for eight hours’ labor, *“The general order directing the change has not been issued yet, but informa tion of the proposed change has been received at the Washington Navy Yard.” —The trial of Louis Kiel, on the charge of high treason, n at Regi- na, in the Northwest Territory, on the 20th. — William Wessel, a saloon-keeper of Youngstown, Ohio, was “badly whip- ped’? on the 19th, in a fight with his wife. For revenge, hé untied a bull dog on the 20th and set it at his wife The dog tore the flesh from the woman’ himbs, infl injuries which way prove fatal. easel is in Jail, ~The American Rural Home, of Rochester, publishes special crop reports from all the winter and spring wheat ying states, These reports say that fi the orthwest the winter wheat site uation is Northwest Oats stand great. ime great gain it. The grass crop of the will not equal that of 1884, bountifully. Corn shows provement, having wade a in the last fourteen days. ~The Democratic Lancaster county, Peuna,, 224 elected ten delegates 10 the Plate Con. vention and nominated a county ticket, The delegates were not i but are understood 10 be 1 ~All B meeting State Commities the 224, George F. preside at the next Convention, and Het as the Chalrman of Resolutions, gnyvention of ii 44 ii a . o¥ girl Face, Hensel. ~ Inspector Armstrong lelegrapis t the Interior Department the count of the Indians on the Cheyenpe anc Al pahoe reservation is progreseing 3 and no further trouble is apprehended, obtained an a { — Biel's counsel has journment of has trial until inst., to allow witnesses from and Montana be produced Quebec witnesses inclu experts who are Lo his insanity. ~The President Wil- liam H. Moffett, of New Jeresy, 10 Le Consul at Athens, and John Deviin of Michigan, to indsor to ie two medica Pots AID ned Lo prove has appoiuled W be Consul at —Becretaries are expected early next week, —A terri th over | Endicott and Whitney eturn to Washingt to ¥ ' Ln nderstorm passed AMIGETSOTIN Pasion r Valiey, Pa., on the were uprooted ¥ al the wind the Catawissa 21st, Trees and fe and houses damag while the corn, were also levelled submerged by the throughout the v ] £50,000, A viol wind New Britain, Cor ti nees oul he wind The « estimate stor v it, on the 2180, devel ed a wind somewhat of of a cycione. TI wholly or HINNeys party blown Fort Do out Mou: he her leader of our armies | Union, and twice United States, died on t McGregor, New Y of his stati eigit he 23 ork, int The M ashington, dueed 0 viDenis, et whiel have beer A Ter weme Court ~The President oun the 25d i Samuel H., Buck to be Pos 8, in place of W. Mr. Buck that city, and is {the New Orleans o ndge, chant of Director Lion. ~The resignation of Wil Bunn as Governor 1dalio accepted by the President. ~Captain J. M. Lee, of the Ninth Infantry, has been appointed Inc Agent at the Cheyenne reservalion. SE —————— ft ————— Too Mashial for Any Use, In Sumatra there is a very singular race called the Kubus, who are too shy to mix with the other races of the island, and dwell in the recesses of the forests. They are looked on as inferiors by the Malays, and thought to bea little better than beasts. Such is their shyness that they will never face a stranger. Their trade with the Malayansis consequent ¥ carried on in a strange manner. The trader announces his arrival by beating a gong, and then retires from the place of rendezvous. The, Kubus approach, put their forest treasureson the ground, beat a gong, and retreat. The trader re- turns and lays his commodities down in quantities sufficient, as he thinks, for the purchase of the goods on Then he retires, and the Kubus reappear and consider the bargain. And so, after more withdrawals and approaches and gong beatings, the respective parties come to an understanding, and carry off independently their bargains. The Kue bus in their wild state do not bury their dead. They live on snakes, grubs, fruits and the flesh of any deers or pigs they can slay. They are skillful spearmen, and throw stones with marvellous socu- racy. They know of no state after death. In some physical respects they assimilate closely to the anthropoid apes, of ian AIT, Farm, Buffalo Bill has the e4t thorough- bred stock farm in America al North Platte, Lincoln county, Nebraska. The ranch consists of 8 acres under one fence and he claims land is not wild vernment land, but pad for by him. fie owns 12 dwellings in the town and is a Western our weeks ago, while in Chicago, he bought 41 head of imported cattle the: Hereford and Pl Angas he 3