A Gray Feather. Aa eagle I rom his flying, Piscoed with an at row, dying, Fell irom his sky-won place; His golden eyee last glaring That were wont to bo garing Full in the sun's flerce iace. Prone on the ground, so lonely, He that to reach sought only Height and peak lor bis rest, • Saw that the shalt whose speeding ~ Gelt him Inllen and blooding, Still remained in his breast. Aye, and more cruel oven. The very force that had given The arrow power to fling Its sharpened death-dart thither, Was a simple chance gray leather, Plucked lrom his own gray vjing. I.ot tall some time, unnoted,! Perchance, as far as he floated, A speck in the distance dim; Yet vigilant hunter lound it, And on to his arrow bound it, And sent it home to him. A word thus, as a leather, May tall, none noting whither, An idle moment's breath; Yet a stranger's hand n ay take it, And pieree his heart who spake It. Until it bleeds to death. —Mrs. Clara Doty Bolts. • "All's Well That Ends Well." . "A valentine?" cried Julia, coming upon the scent just as the letter fluttered to the floor, and picking it up and read ing it. " A mighty queer valentine, I must say! An outrageous one—an in sulting one. I can't think what Osric will sayand she turned to find two lovers in each other's arms. But let Julia or Osric say what they would, never was valentine so welcome before as the letter that came to Evelyn on that snowy February morning, and no gilded and embossed wreaths of roses nnd Cupids surrounding little looking glasses, set there to show the reader the smiling face of the writer's true-love, ever told half the good news that this did, insulting and outrageous as Julia called it when she spoke of it to Mrs. Black—singular and unhcard-of, as Mrs. Black called it when she spoke of it to Mrs. White. Lovers, however, might well have sent the standard valentines in all their glory to Evelyn, for she was one of these sweet brunette beauties that they tell as are to be found nowhere but in America, and that touch all hearts alike; the tea-rose-tinted skin; the hazel eyes; the hair just singed, as one might say, from brown to chestnut by the sun; the lithe and rounded figure; the dainty little foot; the whole face lighting with its smile as if a sunset flame shone over it. and never half so lovely as in tears. But tills beauty of bers had a hard time of it in all those things that heighten and dimin : sli effect, for, a poor little teacher on Inlf-naid lessons in a few houses, and obliged to dress herself and her mother, and pay drugg ; sts' and dot tors' bills and other little incidentals, she never had such a thing as a com tiletc outfit at oi.ee. She had been the nappy owner of but one silk dress in her life, and that had been tuned and turned again, turned wrong side out, turned bottom side up, and was still doing service as her best, in a condition, she was wont to say, that would have brought her a premium for patchwork at any county fair. "There never was any one so unlucky as me," she said. " And I do like pietty things so! But always, if my bonnet is just to my mind my shoes are sure to be shabby, and hy the time I get n new cloak my gown is it sight to see. Why haven t we any rich uncle in No Man's Land, motner mine? Why doesn't the last will uiime in the mistress of those millions!" " It's only half a million." "Only half a million!" " Well, we'll stick to the truth. And Mrs. Grey is iiis cousin, and loves him to distraction. I don't see why. Hut she always has. She's welcome." " How can you be so unnatural, when you might do so much for your family? You'd marry him soon enough," cried Julia, through her angry tears, " if his name wasl'ierrcGillancl"' And then Evelyn rose and left the room swiltly. But where should she go? There was no corner of the house where she couid be alone for a single sob; for Osric was here, and his chil dren were there, and one does not at all times wish even one's motlier to see the tears with which she has no sympathy. There was always all out-doors; she threw her shawl over her head, and inn out into the street. It was a pleasant summer night. She moved nlsng quiekly, thinking only of walking awav from her trouble—the trouble of an old love for the handsome, headstrong hoy who had been the friend and companion and lover of all her ycais, who had re monstrntrd with her one day when lie heard that Osric was calling frequently at the house, and storming with resent ment at the gales of laughter with whieh she met every sentence he uttered about it. had marched out, only to meet Osric in the hail, in tin' ac.t of taking from his pocket a little solitaire ring, which l'ierrc hadn't a doubt was lor Evelyn, and of which Julia, she used to turn it on her finger, never had a doubt tiiat it was not area. stone. And Pierre had left the town for the Pacific coast that night; and if she had wished to write to tell him of his absurd mis take, she had no address, and she only knew lie was so much as alive by now and then catching a rumor of him'nt his work laying out some, railway up under the clouds of the mountains of Peru. But she di pay her. " So you are really going to marry my cousin?" said Mrs. Grey, when he brought her to call on Evelyn, and iefl her at the door. " I suppose so," said Evelyn. "You suppose si, | Don't you know?" asked the pretty widow, nestling in her laces. "I have promised to marry h m," said Evelyn, then, looking up in the sudden hope of softie help, some sym pathy, and remembering how unreason able that was to iiopo for from his cousin, who loved him herself, people said, although how she could, as Evelyn said to herself, with a sort of shudder, was a mystery. " You have promised," repeated Mrs. Grey. " And you are the kind to keep your word, I suppose. Tell njp—l have a right to know—would you marry him If he were a poor man P" said Mrs. Grey, imperiously. "I should marry him now, rich or poor, since my word lias been given," replied Evelyn. "That is not answering my question." "I will answer it. then, when you tell me what right you have to ask it." Mrs? Grey hesitated. " Everv right -r-every right," she cri d then, with sudden swift emphasis. " The right of years of waiting, of patience, of nope less devotion. 1 have the right at least to demand that the woman who wins where I fail shall give him some por tion of the love I would have la vis lied." "I am very sorry for you,' said Eve- , lyn, simply, after a moment or two of silence had followed this outbreak. " I — I wish he did love you!" Apd then, as Mrs. Julia was coming into the room, she dashed by her and ran out, unable to control the tears she could not boar to weep before this woman. "I ciune to pay my compliments to your siHter," said Mrs. Grey, coolly, to Julia; " but she seems to regard her approaching marriage as Anything hut a subject for compliments. lam sorry she is so unhappy in it. I suppose there is another attachment P" "Oh, dear me." drawled Julia, who never had more than half sense, as their old nurse used to say," we don't consider her old affair with i'icrrc flllland ol any consequence—" "Pierre?" asked Mrs. Grey, gently, with an air of interest in Julia s conver sation. And when the carriage came round for her she knew all Julia knew. "A very lovely girl," said Mrs. Grey, as her cousin, who had not gone in with her, took the seat beside her again in the carriage. " But I can't congratu late you, 119 I could not congratulate her. She is in love witli another man —a young Pierre Gilland, a civil en gineer on a Peruvian railroad, who had always expected to marry her, but who left her incontinently on supposing she was going to accept the ring of that lit tle wretch who is now her brother-in law. Dear me, what a fool thut woman is!—the sister of your pretty Evelyn. liow fortunate you are not going to . marry the family!" "Humph!" said Mr. Bryce. But when he returned that evening, and found Evelyn still excitedly ready , for tears at a word, and obliged to go early to bed with a sad headache, he . went round for a little comfort from his cousin Kate; and every time that Evelyn , seemed to shrink from him, and show ; him the coldness that she could not help, he inv iuntarily sought with his cousin tlie sympathy he had found witli tier before. At Christmas-time lie gave Evelyn 1 some pearls that made Julia's eyes fairly run over with drops of ecs'asy, and at New Year's some diamonds, over which Osric bung gloatingly. But 1 Evelyn gave tliem back, and begged 1 him to keep them till by-and-bye. "You mean," he said, "that you don't love me well enougli to take them now?" 1 " I think." she said, " that 1 may care more for you if I am not so loaded with obligations.' I#et your cousin Kate keep them for me." And then, looking up. in a sudden boldness, she added : " Why did you not marry her? She would have made a ix'tter wife than —than nnybedy. And she— she is very fond of you." " Marry my cousin Kate! Why, the thought never entered my head. A man doesn't marry the women of his family," lie pxclnimea. " I mean to marry you." I But the thought had entered his head now. And the next time lie came into j the presence of pretty Mrs. Grey, he I could not avoid looking at her and re j membering Evelyn's words. Yes, yes, he thought; Kate was very fond of him. And she would make any man a fine I wife. II only Evelyn were as fond! j For the rest, that little speech of Evelyn's was like leaven, and leaven will work. He Watched Kate when he I gave her the jewels to take care of till he could give them to his wife, nnd it slowly began to dawn upon him that here was a woman who adored him, and lie was passing her by to marry a child who adored somebody else! and some times then it used to occur to Evelyn that Mr. Bryce was growing a little tired of hr indifference, a little vexed at her aversion. Still, troth was plight ed, ■ vows were pledged, the engagement w.-w public and the marriage had been fixed for the first of March. " Oil, mamma!" broke forth Evelyn, as she threw open the window to air the room one morning, and looked out upon the (lying snow-squalia, "only a fort night more and 1 am in Tetters." "You silly child." said her mother, pulling up her slinwl. " Fetters, in deed! You'll hate a lovely valentine to-day, I dare say. with a diamond in it, : if you call that fetters." "St. Valentine's day! So it is. Oh, what a dreary, dreary thing! As if - there were any happy iovers in the I world! Oh, I wish— I wish this snow were falling on my grave!" " Well, Evelyn," said her mother then, severely. " if you are going to con tinue feeling this way. the sooner you put an end to tilings the better. I will see Mr. Bryce myself this very day." j "No. My word is given. I shall not break it. He is very kind," she sobbed. | " I—l know I shall r>e ail right in time, only I—l cannot help—" And, without I finishing her sentence, she thrust her I head, where the hair was always hr< ak i ing into sunny little rings, out into the j falling snow to cool and bide her face. To cool her face? What sudden i flames were those that* swept up over j throat and cheek and forehead ? What i was it, who was it, she saw below j there ? Why did she spring hack, and | dart from the room, and take the stairs ; ala bound, to throw open the front door ; and be clasped in a shower of snow and | the embrace of a great dark fellow who [ would not let her go ? | "Oh, Pierre! Pierre!" she was wliis [ pering, clinging to the stranger. " And the ring wasn't for you after all, my darling! She wrote and told [me— Mrs. Grey, the trump! What a' fVretoh I was! What a— Bless mv soul! what's this ?" She had sprung from liiro, and was wringing her Panda at a safe distance "Oh, I mustn't! you mustn't.! 1 can't —1 mean—oh, I mean, Pierre! Pierre!" she cried, "that I am going to marry Mr Bryce!" " Not now!" "Yes. yea; I have promised—" "Mail!" cried the postman at the open door, in which the snow was driv ing. and which they had both forgotten, end a letter fell at tier feet. Pierre picked it up. "A valentine, I suppose,"he bitterly s.id. "Probably from your Mr. Bryce. Evelyn! Evelyn! do you mean that I have come home to emptiness, to desolation, to—" She had opened the letter mechani cally, and had run her eyea over it, not really auite conscious of what she did. She whirled it toward him. "See!" she said, with a wide staring gaze. " Read it! I don't believe I can under stand it. Perhaps I tun —a little —out of my head!" Ann lie read aloud: "'Mr DEAR— I know you will not feel badly when I set you free from your obligation to mo by telling you what I have not had the courage to do before, that, by vour advice, I shall marry my cousin Kate this evening, but married or single, shall ever remain your Mend, . "' WAI.TKR. BKTCE.' " The lottsr fell to the floor, for Evelyn WM under the capes of that great coat, held close to the beating heart, there. "Where's your cloak Pierre was whispering. " Where's the little moth er? Here's the carriage at the door. ' They are going to be married this eve ning. Let, us get the start of them by being married this morning. Who ever in all time before had such a glorious valentine?"—/fdrper's Barar. Diamond Making. A New York paper says that trying to make diamonds will be—at least until they have been made—an interesting subject to the majority of men. The late effort of James Mactear, of Glas gow, to pioducc diamonds artificially is by no means the first that lias been made. The earliest experiments of any importance were recent, however—only tifty-two years since. I.atourand Gan nali, the French chemists, then pre sented pure pieces of cryHtalizcd earlion to the academy of sciences, and caused thereby the greatest excitement, thereby supposing that the secret of muking diamords had been discovered. The result proved that the small crystals, although transparent, brilliant nnd harder than quartz, would neither scin tillate nor refract rays of light suffi ciently to render them valuable. Not withstanding that they were composed of the same material an diamonds, they hud little beauty. They were sub mitted to the heat-test, as Maetear's crystals were, but like his, they under | went no perceptible change. Chani- I fiigny, director of a celebrated diamond ' firm in Paris, pronounced them genuine; : whereupon followed tin great diamond ! panic (ISBBI, which affected the whole j commercial globe. A few years later | the French savant. Dcspretz, again startled the world by annnum-jng that in- had produced artificial diamonds. His method was to fix a cylinder of l pure carbon to the positive pole of a j weak Danioll pile, and a platinum wire ! to the negative pole, and then to plunge both poles into acidulated water. In two months the negative pole was cov ered with a black coating, which was sent to Gaudin (Mare Antoine) to be tested on hard stones. Mixed witli a little oil, the black particles would polish rubies, and as the diamond alone will do this,.Gaudin did not hesitate to declare the particles diamond-dust, a conclusion generally accepted al tlip I time by men of science. The question. | "Can diamonds be made artificially?" is still open, and many chemists feel sum that it will ere long be answered in the affirmative by experiments abso lutely successful. "They have already been produced in material, though not in properties It is thought that these may be obtained by cutting the crystals | differently from what they are now out ' Such a discovery would not be much i more remarkable than the discovery made by Enguiner (M 56) in producing I tarols, and perfected l>y Coster in mak j inft pianos on the Koh-i noor. The j effect of such a discovery may be eon jjcotiired by reference to the diamond I panic of It would revolutionize values, nnd create a prodigious eommo -1 tion in both hemispheres; but the com motion would abate in due time.and gcssl i would unquestionably result. The value of all the diamonds in royal treas | uries. in mercantile, titled, and private j bands, and elsewhere, is stupendous. | It has been estimated at live billions, j °r according to the French numeration, ; $5,000,000,000. To destroy capital to that amount would upset for a time the world's commerce, were the capital active. Rut the capital locked up in i diamonds is wholly dormant. The Marriage of (treat Men, Robert Burns married a farm girl, j with whom he fell in love while they J worked together in a plowed field. Milton married the daughter of a ! country squire, nnd lived with her but I a short time He was an austere liter ary recluse, while she was a rosy, romp ing country lass, who could not endure the restraint imposed upon her; so they ! separated. Subsequently, however, she returned, and they lived tolerably happy. Qu<-tn Victoria nnd Prince Albert | were cousins, a rare example in the long ; line of English nionarclis. wherein tin* i marital vows were gaeivdly observed , and sincere affection existed. Shakespeare lovcJ and wedded a : farmer's daughter. Washington married a woman with two children. It is enougli to say she was Arorthy of him, and they lived as I married people should live—in perfect harmony with each other. John Adams married the daughter of a Presbyterian clergyman. Her father objected on account of John being a lawyer. John Howard, the great philanthro pist, married iiis nurse. She was alto gether beneath him in social life and in tellectual capacity, and. besides this was tifty-two years old while he was but twenty-live, lie wouldn't take "No" or an answer, and they were married and lived liappily until she died, which occurred two years afterward. Peter the Great, of Russia, married a peasant. She made an excellent wife and a sagacious empress. Humboldt married a poor girl because lie loved her. Of course they were happy. It is not generally known that Andrew Jackson married a lady whose husband was still living. She was an amiable woman, and was most devoutly attached to the old warrior and statesman. A Hermit's Fight With a Hear. A bear story, ol which a hermit is the hero, is recounted in a letter from Bush kill, Pa., to the Philadelphia Prrmt. O™ man Sheldon has no companions, and his lonely cave is several miles from any house in the midst of a forest. He has no weapon save a knife which lie manufactured by rubbing an old file i on a stone until ft became sharp. A short time ago the hermit went out in sesrch of firewood, nnd was absent from his cave about an hour. When he re turned he was amazed to see a large black bear crouching in one corner of iiis underground abode. Before he oould get out of the cave, however, the bear sprang toward him, dealing him a hard blow on the shonider. Sheldon drew his knife and struck bruin in the neck, bnt the wound only infuriated the beast. He again attempted to retreat, bnt the bear renewed the attack. The hermit then endeavored to deal him another blow in the neck with the knife, but the weapon glanced and sev ered one of the animal's paws. Shel don succeeded in getting out of the cave, where the struggle was renewed, the hear getting him In hia embrace and nearly bugging the breath out of him; but the old man waa plucky, and drove the knife into the monster's heart, kill ing him instantly. As ths bear fell dead, Sheldon fainted and was found unconscious, several hours later, by a party who had set out from ths village to visit bis oavs. TIMELY TOPICS. At Rheims is the largest champagne establishment in France. In one vast sub-cellar are deposited 1,000,000 bottles 1 of the raw whine, and in another part of the town are some 3,000,000 bottles. "Hie wine is treated most delicately, and thousands of men. women and children, veiy carefully trained, are employed in the process, to complete which requires three years A strange disease has appeared in the • ast end of Ixmdon. It is an affection of the eye. known in the affected district a* " the blight." and not familiar to the i native- oculist. it is virulent and dangerous, not seldom destroying the sight if not promptly taken in hand. Several weeks ago there wen- sixty-nine cases of this disease in Whiteehapel alone. The epidemic is supposed to be a foreign importation. A singular and yet very sensible gift is that of liOthnr von Faber, the well known German lead-pencil manufac turer. He has just presented the sum of 125,000 marks to the city of Nurem berg. the interest on which he requires to be paid annually to some intelligent, skillful, and in a!! respects worthy me chanic, for the purpose of establishing him in an independent business. The recipient must He of respectable family, a resident of Nuremberg or Stein, and must have attended the school* in one • of those towns. An Idea of the condition of the United | States nary is given by the renort of the , House naval committee, which says that of the 142 vessel* of the navy forty-eight are not capable of firing a gun, eleven steamships are laid up lor repairs and eight others are out of service, leaving only sixty-nine capable of doing naval duty- The navy is also short in guns, having only 250 pieces in the whole navy, of which less than forty are rifl<*s, ! all the others being smooth bores, wliieh are out of all comparison with the modern gun for effective service. A man may be able to keen poverty 1 from his home if lie be president of a j railroad company. H. J. Jewett. presi j dent of the Erie railway, has a salary of $40,000 a year; Tom Scott, president of 1 seven railroads, draws $lOO,OOO salary, ¥24,000 from the Pennsylvania road | ion- . J. W. Garrett, president of the j Baltimore and Ohio, has a nominal salary of $4,000 a year. There are u,- j day fifteen general managers ot railways j in the United States whose salaries run I from $lO,OOO to $15,000; nine general | superintendents, with a salary of $7.000 | to $lO,OOO yearly, and a number of ofli- I eers in the same rank who rroeive over , SB,(SSI It is'somewnat hard to maintain a | free reading-room in New York. The numlier of articles stolen from the | Cooper Union is giving the managers a | great deal of trouble. Not only are the I ordinary books stolen, but it is found | next to impossible to keep up the sup ; ply of Bibles on the desks, as they are | stolen as fast as distributed. The br iss i rods that keen the papers in place are j constantly stolen for the metal, and even i the worthless rubber cheeks given at I the floor arp stolen instead of being given up as the person passe* out. Two I years ago there were 2.000 checks, now j there are but 450. Twenty-five hundred I person* enter the free reading-room i dai'y. HeieafVer persons desiring to use | this immense reading-room will be obliged to make application for admis j sion to the librarian. The Ixindon Buiitling N>WH says that the extraordinary den and for Italian marble lias raised a question na to bow i long the quarries are likely to hold out. According to a report of the French geological commission there yet remains a considerable surface and depth of the true I'enteliean marble untouched, but I no specific statements are grim on this heap. At Carrara a dreadful waste of material goes on. A late traveler was assured on the-pot that hundred* of tons are needlessly thrown away through I sheer carelessness and the elumsiness of ! workmen. Mueh of this exquisite ma ! terial is removed in enormous masses j for the decoration of commonplace edi | Hces. The Italians are at length btsom | ing nlive to this. The quarries have been worked almost without intermis sion since the days of the Roman eni ' perors. A little community of sculp tors is established around the quarries, , and the artist's chisel is plied almost side bv side with the marble mason's saw. The marble goes everywhere. It is the habit in Scotland as in America to sell insurance tickets, with j railroad tickets when the traveler de , sires them. The cost of these insur i ancc tickets, good for one day. is but a penny, and the compnny agrees | to pay a certain sum in case of death | within the twenty-four hours, or a j certain sum weekly in case of in jury. It is rather remarkable that there should not be n single insured person on that fated Dundee train, but so the in surance companies assert. This nrlngs up a suggestion of impgDveuient in the ! method of giving tickets for this pur ! pose. There should be some method by which the friends of the deceased could find out whether or not he hod been insured. Almost every one on the train tiiat went into the Tay might have been insured, yet there is no way of find ing it out. Many of the bodies have h*-n swept out to sea and if they an ever found it is doubtful whether an in surance ticket on their persons would be decipherable. A romance of mining life comes from -Santa Cruz, near the Patagonia mines, on the line which cuts the United States from the Mexican province of Sonora Since the establishment of the Patago nia it has been found necessary to pro tect Santa Crur. from the Apache In dians, and cavalrymen now tak*- care that the surrounding country shall not be molested. Rut Santa Cruz has bad a wild history. Along the Pacific coast it is known as •'tue indestructible Santa Cruz." Then* is not a family in town that has not lost a father, mother, brothers or sister.-. When one Rduarao Gracia saw that the place hereafter would have protection he left Santa Cru* for the Apache country to seek his brothers and sisters, who' had been carried away into captivity. He foufhl that one of the brothers and one of the sisters hail died, but the others were living. Both had married among the Apaches, and in answer to the prayers of Kduanlo that they should return with him to Santa Cruz they pointed toward their dusky offeprings and shook their beads. It is Interesting, and t> many people It may be profitable to know the cons punitive value of diff. rent kindsof vr„rw* H for fuel. Hhellhark hickory in r<-g;,rdM a* the highest standard of our form, tree*, and calling that 100, other tree, will com pare with It for real value , I fuel lor house purpose* ItM f(,]] fJW , Shell bark hickory, 100; pignut hickory tf2; white oak, 84; white ash, 77- (\,l' wood, 75; scrub 0ak,73; white ha/,. 72; appletree, 70; red oak. 07; whip. ' beach,os; black birch, 02; yellow oak 00; hard maple, 50; white elm 58- r ,,j ■ cedar,9o; wild cherry, 95; yellow pin, 54; chestnut. 52; yellow poplar si' butternut and white birch, 43; white pine, 30. It in worth hearing in mind that in wood of the same spot !<•* there i< si great diio rencc, according to Use in which they grow. A tree that grow.. | on a wet, 1..w, rich ground will be : solid and !em durable for fu.j, and I therefore of less value than a tree of t|, I name kind that grows on a dry and p< j noil. To the ordinary nurclmaer oak i i oak and pine is pine; hut for house u,, the tree grown on dry upland, 'and ! standing apart from all others, is worth ! a great deal more. 1 Although to-day there are at many j beard* in the IIoue of Commons as in I any assembly in the world, twenty-fiv, I years ago tliere was but one. It be longed to Mr. Munta, member from | Birmingham, who did the public a mt i vice by persuading the government to adopt the perforating machine ir, tl • manufacture of |K,tage stump*. Mr. Munts shaved until he was forty, when i hi* brother returned from Germany with a fine beard, which the M. P. d< : termined to emulate. "H. U.," the famous caricaturist, was soon at "the man with the beard," as every one called Muntz. and represented him in a cartoon as "a Brumniagcn M. I'." In this por j trait lie carries a stout stick, which In i special prominence, the reason Is ing j that an irrepressible practical joker, the , Marquis of Waterford, was supposed u. j liave laid a wager that he womd shav, Muntz; hence the cudgel to defendhiiu : self from disbarb;uncnt. Mr. .'dun;/, 1 died, very wealthy, in 1*57. The autopsy of the remains of the woman who starved herself to death in I Cincinnati did not reveal any matria,,y I diseased condition of the stomach. Tie i fact til at she lived for thirty days witl,- out using any nourishment whatever ! would justify the conclusion that per } sons possessed of strong will power, and having the hallucination or delusion | that they are suffering with some or ganic disease or bodily disorder, may ] live until the body is entirely consumed. This lady was possessed of great power of will, and she had a delusion that she • had no stomach, and therefore made up her mind that she would not take food ] or drink, and continued in this eondi ' tion until there was a general exhau*- ; tion of the nerve-centers and mentv faculties, when she went quietly into a calm sleep and died without a struggle, j The pathological ooadition of the pas sages leading to the stomach all being ! normal, with no obstruction, and •>.. the | organs in a healthy state ready to p ' engaged in chopping some fuel he cu' one (d his feet. Failing to appreciate :it : the time the extent of his injury. !he continued on his way. and when out about twenty-five mil"* from Rockland he discovered that his wound j was a serious one and required the offices of a surgeon, and .is there w.n r, > physician at Lac Vieux Desert, he r< - I traced his steps toward Rockland where lie could get one. His foot rapidly got 1 worse, so that he could not bear hi weight on it. Alone, on an unbrok' n I trail or road, heavy with snow, with .* crippled and painful foot, his horrih | position can he imagined. It was a c.w of life or death witii Irwin, so failinc > n bis knees he commenced crawling cr. ; " all fours " and after thirty-six days he was found within three miles of Rn, k- I land, having crawled twrnty-two mil, ■* in a most deplorable condition, and barely life enough left to stir. Tli" wounded foot had to be cut off. ar d it was thought he would lose to other one, which was frozen. For sev eral days he had nothing to cat. A m*n who would undertake to accomplish what Irwin did was not turned out ot a common mould. wj He Dismally ttroaned. _ In this country, no matter where, re side two lawyer*, no matter whom Suffice to say these lawyers are young genial and deep in legal lore, and a.* such are occasionally sought after in criminal cases of small import. A very short lime ago, no matter when, profc* sional duties called them befoie a cer tain justice of the peace in the county. One was to prosecute and the other de fend. The ease was conducted with skill and ability, and the court, una, - customed to such, beamed witii deep admiration upon the young lawyers, and was happy. The time arrived for the prosecuting attorney to deliver his speech, and lie waxed eloquent on the subject of carrying concealed weapons, and made moving appeals iratiie name of the law that visibly affected the court, who wept muchly and mentally vowed vengeance against the culprit. All at once, however, and for some un accountable cause, bis eloquence sud denly ceased- His left leg seemed to be troubling him beyond measure, and he affectionately grasped R with both hands and groaned dismally as he cast an appealing look toward the door, as it tie drained above all earthly thing* to bo on the outside All at once the mys tery was cleared up. An Innocent re volver serenely glided out of the pants' leg on the floor. The young attorney was incontinently floored and the court, who had been revolving in his mind the propriety of sending for ail the doctors in the neighborhood. was astonished— wiped his eyes and ahem'd ominously. The young attorney wss unable to offer any excuse, and the court promptly fined him twenty-five dollars and cost, and hereafter lie will be more careful.— Vickt&urg (Jft**.) Ih raid. ft is said that ttiere :a one cow for every four persons in this country, and If the wells and springs wrre to lail some of us wouhl le put on short allow- t anee of tniik and creaui thru hi. %