I i - -TTi - ...... . i ... - - 7- i ... i i mi 1 ' " ' . ' . HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor aSO Ecjujsheb. K'LJSl'CO UHfTT'TIlE i.'E P V S L ICA 2V PJLtlTT. Two Dollars rxa Avxcx. VOL. I. RIDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1871. NO. G. BUCKWHEAT CAKES. BY W. B. B. WESTCOTT. 1 litre to see, In summer time, The farmer plow the Innd ; And broadcast o'er the furrows sow . The buckwheat with his band. 1 lovo to geo tho Utile germ Come sprltiKlup up to view i And fee at morn the growing plant Besprent with sparkling dew. I love to see the blossom opc, As white as pearly snow, While o'er the field the gentle winds With laden perfume flow. I lore to sec tho blooming Held Put on Its oont of brown ; And ree the heavy-laden stock With ripened grain hang down. I love to see, in even swath, The cradled buckwheut lie; And help to rake and bind the shewes And set them np to dry. 1 love to see the loaded sheaves Before the old bnrn-door, And hear the sounding of the flail Upon the threshing-floor. I lovo to see the fannlng-mlll Blow off tho duety thaff; And see them measure up the grain. And "strike" the bushel half. I love to see the water-wheel Revolve with mighty power, Which sets the rulll-stone whizzing round, To grind the buckwheat-flour. I love to hear the thumping bolt, Within the noisy mill, And see the miller sioop tho flour, i'he farmer's bag to fill. I love to see the busy cook, Her pancake batter make, And on the heated griddle pour The limpid, flowiug cake. I love to see the half-done cako With skin turned upside down, Until the stove, with steady heat, Has buked the pancake brown. The buttered cako npon may plate, I dearly love to see, And when with sirup sweetened well Jt looks most temptingly. Than all the pleaures I have named, A greater ouo I take 'Tis at the table, when I sit . And eat the Buckwheat Cake. THE TVRECKElt'S WAGE It. From the AVw York Timet. Thero are few parts of England more wild and desolate than the mining dis tricts of Cornwall. Nature, as a coun terpoise to the treasures which she huB lavished on this region, has given to its external feature's a most forbidding as pect. The eye takes in a prospect of bleak and barren plains, with neither tree or shrub to protect the traveller from the wind that sweeps across them, and presenting danger at every step from the numerous shafts by which they are intersected. It is truly an inhospi table country, and the nature of its in habitants quite accords with its un friendly characteristics. They are to a great extent repulsive in appearance, forbidding in manners, and cruel and cunning by natural disposition, and seem hardly to have, risen very much above the barbarous state of their an cestors. It was late in the autumn when I visited this region, and toward the close of a gloomy day that I found my self at the residence of Capt. Thomas so I shall call him a man whom I had met in London, and who had persuaded me that the only sure way to make a fortune was to invest a trifle of ready money in a copper-mine. He held the rank of Captain, by the custom of the country, as a mine, like a ship, is con ducted by a captain and officers. The Captain was rather a decent npecimen of his class, for where there are so many combinations of miner, smuggler, wreck er, and consequently ruffian, a man of even tolerable manners and address is something. My worthy friend, however, had one besetting weakness which I af terward discovered, he would have con sidered it quite admissible to have rob bed his own father rather than not .to have robbed at all. Oar supper being over, he proposed an adjournment to the " Red Dragon " or red something it is so long ago 1 have almost forgotten where he .as sured me, I would meet a most respecta ble society of gentlemen, and where I might pick up much valuable informa tion. They were all particular friends of his, he added, captains and pursers of mines. It was a dismal night, when w sallied out, a thick mist was gathering around, the sea was breaking against the huge rocky cliffs of the coast, with a deafening roar, and at times was heard the distant thunder. It was then with a most comfortable feeling that I found myself safely housed at the rendezvous of these choice spirits of the mines. The party to which I was introduced were seated at a long deal table, in an apart ment half kitchen, half tap-room, at the upper end of which appeared a blazing fire. On one side of the room a door opened into a small parlor, and in the corner was a bar, to enable the host to dispense to his customers their various potations from his smuggled treasures. The arrival of Capt. Thomas was hailed with marked satisfaction. We were soon seated, and in a twinkling a large tumbler of hot brandy and water was placed before me, and a pipe thrust into my hand. The conversation, which was rather loud when we entered, was now suddenly hushed, and intelligent glances were quickly interchanged, which I saw related to myself. - Thomas understood them, and said : " You need not be afraid: this gentleman is a. particular friend of mine, and a great patron of the fine arts." I then begged to assure the company of my veneration for mi ners and mines, and all connected with them.- There was a visible brightening up at my declaration, and doubtless at that moment various were the plans of rascality that were batched to puc my devotedneas to tbe proof. "A likely night this, Capt Thomas," said a beetle browed, short, muscular man, 'whose dark eye peered from beneath a brow of peculiar ferocity. M Uncommon like ly," returned the other; "and if we should have a bit of luck to-night it would not be a bad beginning this win ter." " Ah 1" said the first one, who an swered to the name of Knox, " my wife tays she thinks Providence has deserted our coast Ve haven t had anything worth telling about these two years. I ve seen the time when we've had a dozsn wracks a season." " Well, never mind, Master Knox,'' said a pert-looking, snub-nosed fellow, named Gray, whom I at first took for an attorney, but afterward found that he was a min ing agent. " Never mind. Master Knox," said he, jingling a bunch of seals, which peeped from beneath tho waistcoat of that worthy. " You have made the most of your luck, and if you don't get any more you won't harm." " Why, yes," said the fellow, drawing out a handsome gold watch, which hard ly seemed in keeping with his coarse at tire, " I don't complain of the past, and yet I had a narrow etcape with this. It it hadn't been for my boy Jim; I should have lost it." " He s a cute child, that boy of yours," remarked one. " There never was a cuter. I'll tell you, sir," said he, addressing me, " it is two years ago, come December, on a Sunday, when we were all at church, that we had news of a wreck. Well, off we all started, and the parson not tbe last, to see what God had sent us. We found, on coming up, that it was a French India-man. She had gone to pieces on the rocks, and the goods were floating around like dirt. I wasn't long in making the most of it, and Jim was jest a going off for tbe cart, when I spied, half covered with weeds, and hidden by a piece of rock, the body of a Frenchman. I soon saw I had got a prize, for he was loaded with money and trinkets. These I quickly eased him of, as he'd never want 'em, but to make sure, I hit 'un a good slap over the head, just to see whether lite was in 'un or no. (Here a general grin went round ) Well, I was just going away, when I ee'd a diamond ring on his finger, and the finger being swelled with the water, I cuts it off, and walks off with my goods. I hadn't gone far when little Jim runs after, crying, ' Dad, dad, hit 'un again, dad; he grin'th, he grin th. 1 looked back, and sure enough that rascally French thief whether it was drawing the blood or not, L don't know but be was moving his arm about, and opening his eyes as if he were bent on taking the bread out of my mouth. This made me mad, for those Frenchmen are a spiteful set, and hate Englishmen as they hate the devil, so I makes no more ado, but I hits 'ira a lick with the tail of a rudder, laying close by, and I'll warrant me he'll never come to ask for my -goods." The mis creant chuckled over this horrid recital with all the self satisfaction that one. might feel at the recollection of a vir tuous action ; while his companions, to whom the story was familiar, felt no other sensations of uneasiness at its re capitulation than from the recollt ction that they had not been able to do the same thing. Knox was evidently the villain par excellence. I saw others around me whoso countenances would have hung them at any bar in England, but none ventured to boast so openly of crime. Knox was the only avowed pro fessor of villainy, and seemed to glory in his right of pre-eminence. I have trav elled somewhat, and have met ruffians of every grade, but never before did I have the fortune to hear depravity of such a character so freely confessed. " Well, Knox," said Gray, after a pause, " so you have seen Hobart; how's poor Bill V" Knox placed bis finger significantly on bis cheek. "How," said the other, "dead?" "Dead as a fish," returned Knox. " You know I was in it, and a sharp fight we had. Poor Bill had three balls in him ; he died the same night." A universal expression of sympathy fol lowed this announcement, and various were the questions put as to the details of his death. It appeared that he was killed in an engagement with a revenue cutter. " He was as likely a lad as ever run c irgo," said Thomas. " Where did you bury him Y Alongside of the gauger, I 'spose," said Gray, who ventured a ma licious glance, though apparently half doubtful of the consequences. I never saw so speedy a change as that remark produced in Knox. In an instant his brow became us black as the stoim that was raging without. " What have you to do with that, you meddling, conceited fool '(" said he, as he fixed his black eyes, almost concealed by their overhanging brows, on the object of his wrath. " Now. mark me, Master Gray, play off no more of your jokes on me. This is not the first time I have warned you, but it shall be the last." I learned afterward that tho gauger alluded to was Kuox's half brother, who was supposed to have met with his death by the hands of his rela tion, his body being flung down a shaft near the sea. What confirmed the sus picion was that he had frightful dreams about his brother, and would tremble like a child if left alone at night. Be that as it might, however, a fierce alter cation was now proceeding between Knox and a friend of Gray's who had replied to the other's threats, and serious consequences might have ensued had not the attention of all been diverted by a loud knocking at the outer door. This seemed so unusual an occurrence that the host hesitated to unbar the door, for never was a stranger known to arrive there at such an hour and on such a night too, f or the rain was still pouring in torrents. The knocking continued, and although we were too many to fear anythiug like personal danger, fctill I could see an evident uneasiness spread ing throughout the party. The knock ing was now fiercer than ever, and the host was compelled to unbolt and unbar. As the door opened, in stalked a tall, weather-beaten man, enveloped in a huge, shaggy great-coat, and a broad oil-skin hat on his head. , " What do you mean by this V" be said, dashing his hat upon the floor,- aud shaking the ruin from his coat like a huge water-dog" keeping a traveller outside your house on such a night. As he sooke. was heard a heavy, boom ing sound from the sea. "A wrack, a wrack." shouted Knox, and instantly a dozen fellows were up and ready to rush like blood hounds on their prey. " Keep your places, you fools, ' cried the stranger; if Bhe goes ashore it will -be many miles from here, with the wind in this quarter. I've heard the guns some time, but she has good offing yet, and she may manage to keep off. I'd lay my life she is a foreign craft ; they are al ways iu such a hurry to sing out." The company had now seated them selves' and resumed their pipes. They likewise took the liberty of scanning the new arrival. There was nothing in his appearance very remarkable beyond the fact of his being a tall muscular man, having short, black hair, and immense bushy whiskers, meeting under his chin, together with large, black eyes. Alto gether, his countenance was not an un pleasant one. He did not apologize for nis intrusion, but called at once for his pipe and his glass. " Did you come from the Portreath side Y" asked Kuox. The stranger took a whiff and nodded assent. " Who brought you across the moors " Do you think no one cm tread the moors but yourself and the louts of the plaoe 'f " answered the stranger. ' None that I ever heard of except the devil," said Knox, peering suspici ously at the stranger. The latter laughed. "The path is dangerous by night," said Thomas, " few strangers find the way alone." " Then I am one of the few, for here I am," Baid the stranger. " I've lived here, man and boy, these forty years," said Knox, " and I never knew u stranger to do that ba fore. And you must be a stranger, for I've never seen you before." " Are you sure of that r" Knox scanned him at tentively. "I never saw you before." "You see, then, a stranger cin find his way in these parts. I came by the Gaugcr's Shaft. Thou knowest the Gauger's Shaft," said he, significantly. " Do you come here to mock me," said the other, with a furious imprecation ; " if you do, you had better return afore barm comes to you." " You are a strong man," said his opponent, " but I am so much stronger that I could hold you with one arm on yonder fire until you were as black as your own black heart. Come, if you have a spark of courage, I'll put it now to the test." " Courage 1 I tear neither you nor the devil. " 1 will wager you this heavy purse oi French louis d'ors against that watch and ring that bents toy linger so oddly, that you dare not go into yonder room alone and look on the face you shall meet there." "You are a juggler and a cheat," cried Knox, " I'll have nothing further to say to tbee. " There's my gold," said he, throwing a heavy purse on the table ; " look at it, count it ; a hundied as bright louis as ever was coined in France against your- witch and ring not worth the halt. The eyes of the wrecker glistened at the bright heap. "What is the wager r" he de manded. " If you will dare go into yonder room that 1 will raise the form of one whom thou would'st most dread to see." " I fear nothing and believe you to be a cheat." " There's my gold." " Take the wager," tried several of Knox's friends, " we'll 6ee you have the gold." " Done 1 cried ivnox, with a sort ot desperate resolve, and he placed the ring and watch on tbe neap of louis. " I must have arms and lights." " Take them, said the stranger, " but before you go I will show you a portion of your property you have never dis covered. He took the ring, and touch ing the inside with tbe point of a pin, it flew open and discovered a small space rilled with hair. It was not till that moment that it was discovered that the stranger had lost tho little finger of his left hand. For a moment all was still us the grave, a frightful suspicion seem ed to have taken possession of every one around that tbe murdered stood before them to claim his own. The stranger broke into a loud laugh. What ails you all, are you afraid of a man without a finger, and his laughter was louder than before. " I'll not go into the room," said Knox in a low broken voice. " Then the watch and ring are mine," said the stranger ; " you have to forfeit tbe wager," aud he began to fill the bag with coin. " It's a base juggle to rob me of my own, cried Knox, whose courage re turned as he witnessed the business-like maimer in which the stranger fingered the money. "Keep to your wager, man," cried Thomas, "we'll see you rightly dealt with. He can no more do what he says than raise old old 5eelz.bub himself. " Will you stand to your bargain ?' asked the stranger. " i win, and dety you and all your works." He took a candle and loaded pistol and went toward the room. If ever the ugony of life was oondensed in to the short space xt a lew minutes it must have been so at that moment. Ruffian as he was he was a pitiable ob ject. Pale and trembling, without even making an ellort to conceal bis distress. he paused and turned irresolute even at the threshold of the door. Shame and avarice urged him on. He entered the room and closed the door, If 1 say that I looked on as a calm spec tator of these proceedings I bhould say falsely. I began to grow nervous, and was infected with tbe superstitious feel ing which had evidently taken possess ion of my compauions. The only unconcerned person was the stranger, or at least he was apparently so. He tied up the money, watch end ring in the bag and placed them on the table. lie then took two pieces of pa per and wrote some characters on both ; one be banded to 4 nomas it was mark ed with the name of the gauger the other he kept himself. He advanced to the tire, and, muttering a few words, threw into it a small leaden packet, and retired at the same moment to the end of the room. The flames had hardly time to melt the thin sheet lead wht n our ears were erected with the most terrifio ex plosion that I have ever iu my life heard, and it seemed as if the elements were in unison with it, for a deafening thunder crash at the same moment shook the house to its foundation. Every man wan thrown violently to the ground, the chairs and tables tumbled about, every door was burst open by the shock, and hardly a pane of glass remained entire. This, with the groans of the men and tbe screams of tbe women, completed tbe terrors ot a scene which, it any one could have withstood without actual fear, he must have been a bolder man than I was. For several minutes at least so it appeared to me did we lie stunned on the floor, expecting every moment the house to fall over ns in ruins. All was, however, silent as death, except the roaring of the storm outside. So when the tense of suffoca tion was somewhat removed by the fresh air forcing itself through the open doors and windows,' we ventured to hail each other. It was some time, however, before we could get a light, and then our hrst care was to look to our mend in the back parlor. We. found him ly ing on his face, quite insensible, and bleeding from a wound m bis head, which he must hive received in falling. We brought htm into the large room. and after a time we procured restora tives. I never shall forget the wild and ghastly look with which he first gazed around him. He looked as though seek ing eome horrid object. " It's gone," he cried ; " thank God 1 what a horrid sight who saw it'r" "Saw what who t asked Thomas. " Just as bloody and ghastly aB when I pitched him down the shaft," cried he, incoherently. "Hush, bush, said 1 nomas; "you don t know what you are talking about." " Who says I murdered him ; who says I got his money Y He's a liar, I sav, a liar ! His money is sunk with him. Let 'em hang me ; I'm innocent ; they can't prove it. It became too distressing, fortunately, for the feelings of all ; the unhappy man, or rather, now, the mani ac, relapsed into insensibility, and in that state was conveyed home. It was not till then that we thought ot tbe stranger, is o trace ot mm could be found. Tbe money, ring and watcb had disappeared. Strange were the ru mors abroad next day. Some men going very early to work swore they saw a horseman fiying over the moors, cross ing shafts and pits without once staying to pick his way. It could have been no human horseman nor steed that could have sped on such a wild career. There was another report, which accounted for the appearance and disappearance of the stranger in a more credible way. Some smugglers reported that oh that night they saw a beautiful .trench smuggling lugger sheltering from the gale iu a lit tle unfrequented bay along the coast. It might bave been one of tbe crew who had made himself acquainted with the circumstances mentioned, which ,wera no secret, aud ruaue this bold dash for a prize. But this version of the story was scouted as quite unworthy ot the slight est credit, and the former remains to this day the popular belief. It. THE TtXAS CATTLE KIMJS. The Mighty Stock Fartus of the riaius Tcma Cattle Breeding Immense Uiruea In the Heart of the C'outlncni-Tbe Para- due of Fortune Hunters In America. From the ritUourg Commercial. Texas alone has 3,800,000 cattle, divid ed into 950,000 beeves, 950,000 cows, and 1,900,000 young cattle. The plains on which these cattle roam contain about lo2.000.000 acres of ground. The prin oipal pasturages are on tbe Nueces, Bio lirande, liuadalupe, ban Antonio, Uolo rado, Leon, Brazos, Trinity, Sabine, and Bed Rivers. The cattle are owned by scores of ranchmen, each one of whom has from 1,000 to 75,000 head. On the Santa Catrutos river is a ranch contain ing 84,13'.! acres, it is owned by one man, Kicbard lung, and has on it bo.UUO head of cattle, 20,000 horses, 7,000 sheep, and 8,000 goaU. This immense number of live stock requires 1,000 saddle horses and oOU Mexicans to attend and nerd it. Ten thousand beeves are annually sold from the ranch, and 12,000 young calves branded. There is another ranch on the San Antonia river, near 'Goliad, which grazes 40,000 head of cattle, and brands 11,000 bead ot calves annually. 3ir. O'Connor, the owner of this ranch, sells 175,000 worth of stock each year, and his herds are constantly increasing, in 1802 he began cattle raising with 1,500 head. and his prtsent enormous herds and wealth are the result of natural increase. On the Gulf, between tbe Bio Grande and Nuecus, is a ranch containing 142,- 840 acres, and owned by Mr. Robideaux, It is on a peninsula, surrounded on three tides by water, aud, to enclose the other side, has required tbe building of thirty one miles of plank fence. Every time miles along the fence are houses for the herders, and enormous stables and pens for the stock. There are grazed in this enclosure. 30,000 head of beef cattle, be sides an immense number of other stock A ranch on the Brazos river contains 50 000 head of cattle, 300 horses, and 50 herdi rs. John Hitson, the owner, drives 10,000 cattle to market annually. Ten years ago he was a poor farmer in Tennes see, but selling his land aud going to tbe Brazos, be succeeded by diut ot bard labor in getting together sixty cows and nine brood mares, wben be want to rais ing stock. He has now 50 000 head of cattle, worth at least $150,000, and he is still only forty years old. This man is establishing a stock ranch on the South Platte, in Nebraska, where he now has 5,000 head of cattle, and next spring will brine in 10.U0U more. - ' There is a ranch on the Concho river, Texas, where, 1 am told, one man owns 70,000 bead of steer and much cows. The best grazing counties in Texas are those of Throckmorton, Stevens, Jaok, Young, Callahan, Coleman, Brown Tarrant, Ellrath, Comanche, Palo, Pinto, Hill, and Johnson. These counties lie along the Bio Grande, Nueces, Guadu lupe. San Antonio, Colorado. Leon. Bra zes, Trinity, Sabine, and Red rivers. The stock from these countries are driven to the Gulf in great numbers, where thev are slaughtered, packed in steamers. or put on alive, and shipped to New XorK, jioston, ana other northern mar kets. A great many cattle are driven North on toot by way of Abilene, Kan sas, and Schuyler, Nebraska. Home fol low the Pecos, and pass into Arizona and California; others keep along the Arkansas to Bent's Ford, thence across Colorado over the Black Hills and into Wyoming, and on np into Utah, Mon tana, Nevada, aud Idaho. , There are some drivers whose names I cannot men tion, but the wholo number of cattle brought North overland from Texas dur ing tbe year 1870 did not not tall short of 100,000 head. Of these, 20 000 went to Montana, 8,000 to Utah, 8 000 to Ne vada, 9,000 to Wyoming, 10 000 to Cali fornia, 11,000 to Idaho, and 30,000 to Colorado aud New Mexico. The amount of money handled along tbe base of tbe mountains iu transferrins this stock was over 11,250,000. At Abilene, the great Kansas cattle market, over 200,000 bead were handled. Tbe shipments in Sep tember reached CO 000 head, and in Octo ber nearly 75,000 head. This immense trade may be estimated when it is stated that it took 111 cars per day to transfer the stuck, and one bank in Kansas City handled 3 000,000 cattle money. In Nebraska tbe cattle trade with the South is just beginning ; yet last year 27,- 000 head changed hands at Schuyler, aud the b irst N atlonal is auk ot Uuiaha band- led $500 000 in consequence of this trade, It is likely the trade at Schuyler in 18 il will reach 100,000 head of cattle, and it will require $ 1,500.000 to carry it on .Large as tbe cattle trade may set m, it is as yet in its infancy, not only in Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, on the Platte, but throughout the United States. The rapid increase of our population, both troni foreigu and domestic sources, de mands a corresponding increase of food, and at present there is no product of cattle thut Is anything like equal to tbe demand. Beef can be raised on the plains, and delivered, at six cents per pound, and until that IB done there need be no apprehension of crowding the cat tle market. That beef can ever be had in our day so cheap as six cents does not seem probable, and yet even at four and a bait cents per pound large fortunes can be made in cattle breeding. It is only on the limitless plains, where laud is of little or no value, that Btock can be rais d to great advantage. But even the plains, boundless as they may seem, are fast disappeaiing before tbe "advancing waves ot population. Texas, tbe great cattle hive of the country, has during tbe past year received 300,000 settlers, and already cattle growers there feel that they must soon look elsewhere for untrammelled ranges. A few more years like tbe past a few deductions of a mil lion acres of pasture lands in a single season, and Texas will be no more of a grazing State than New York, Pennsyl vania, or Uhio. let, compare these Ktpe, and how do they stand now Y New York, with her settlements 230 years old and a population of 4,000,000, has (48,000 oxen and stock cattle ; Penn sylvania, with over 3 000,000 people, has 721,000; Ubio, with U.OOU.UOO people, has 7 19 000 ; Texas, with 800,000 people, has 3,800.000 cattle alone. The ifreat Platte Valley has over 8,000,- 000 acres of lich pastures ; but how long will these acres remain grazing grounds V ho L mon 1'acihc liailroad has already divided these lands from their eastern to their western extremity, aa,d towns and villages are springing up everywhere along its iron rails, and farms are being opened on every side of them. It is no exaggeration to say that the population ot the United States before tbe close ot the present century will probably reach 100,000,000 of people. Then there will be no West to settle up, no great stock ranges, but farms and cities and cities and farms everywhere. I predict that those men who begin now by raising cattle on Government lands, and are wise enough to buy a portion of these lands as soon as they are offered for sale, will hnd before thev die that these lands will be worth more to them than their herds ever could have been. Your great Ohio Senator, Benjamin Wade, ones said that he believed " within tbe present century every acre of good land between tbe Missouii river and the Cali fornia coast will be worth fifty dollars in gold. Mild as this declaration at the time seemed, it has already been realized in many portions of Nebraska, and is likely to come true in all our States aud Territories west of the Big Muddy. Great, then, as are the fortuues which are being inide in cattle, still greater will be the fortunes made in land. Those who are wisest will make all they can on their cattle, and the mo ment the lands are for sale buy all they can get, even if they have to sell a part of their herd to pay for tbe lands. Tbe Homestead law precludes the possibility of getting much land in one body, but by buying out settlers at fair prices, suf ficient grounds for grazing purposes may be had tor many years yet. The Accumulation of Riches. The acquisition of riches seems from the beginning of time to have been one ot man s universal passions. Many causes have tended to inspire it. In the hands of the good riches have been a blessing ; but who will say that in tbe hands of tbe majority riches bave not been a cor rupter and a curse t Yet it is not money which is the rock of all evil, but the love of money for its own sake, or merely for the luxuries and pleasures it can bring one s-self. This tceling is the real curse of gold. Thb Only Loos " Can I induoe you to invest in a lock Y" smilingly iuquired a travelling- agent for an improved door- fastening, of a plain-looking old maid, whom he encountered sweeping the doorsteps. " Xou might, air, sae re plied, with a ghastly smile, eyeing him carefully for a moment from head to foot, " in wed lock." UNITY IN UIVEESITY. hat is one man's salvation is another one's bane ; this old saying is an axiom. Those who urge their remedies or medicaments on others dq pot understand that in una nimity or oneness there may be divers ity. Talking prevents doing, bilenoe is I the great fellow-workman. ARTHUR Helps. A HEADER'S SOlE. Brantlra ot Thought anil Word From New and old nook. The subject needs to be considered in all weathers of tbe soul, for it is very largo. Arthur Helps. The origin of a parvenn is forgotten if he remembers it, remembered if ho for gets. ConceiU and Caprice. One great art of managing with small anxieties, is to cease thinking about them just at that point when thought be comes morbid. ARTnu jiKLrs: cin- panioni of My HolilmU. LeHsing, when he was Librarian at Wolfenuttel, proposed to start a review which should only notice forgotten books. Max Mullgr : Chipt. The wise man acquires with each ac cess of learning, an increase, at least, of one special sort ot knowledge, that, namely, of his own ignorance. Black LEY: Word Qomv. There are doubtless as many good people in towns as there are in tbe coun try, only, perhaps, the good would be better still it they lived in the country, miss MULOCH : Fair France. The chiefest and sublimest end of music is the graceful return of our thanks to the gods, and the next is to purify and bring our minds to a sober and har monious temper. Plutarch: MoraU. Our men of Art, contemning its ancient majsty, instead of that manly, grave, heavenborn music, so acceptable to the gods, have brought into the theatre a sort ot effeminate musical tattling, mere sound without substance. Plutarch: MoraU. If the works of the great poets teach anything, it is to hold mere invention somewhat cheap. It is not the finding of a thing, but the making something out of it after it is found, that is of con sequence. Lowell : 21 y Mudy Windows. What a strange, desperate notion it is of men, when they have erred, that things are at their worst that nothing can be done to rescue them ; whereas Judas might have done something better than hang himself. ARTHUR ilELPS : Com panions of My Solitude. To contrast the size of the oak with that of the parent acorn, as if the poor seed had paid all costs from its slender strong-box, may serve for a child's won der ; but the real miracle lies in that di vine league which bound all the forces of nature to the service of the tiny germ in fulfilling its destiny. Lowell : My ktudy Windows. To dig in the mellow soil to dig moderately, for all pleasure should be taken sparingly is a great thing. One gets strength out of the ground as often as one really touches it with a hoe. There is life in the ground ; it goes into the seeds, and it also, when stirred up, goes into the man who stirs it. War rex : My Hummer in a Garden. Again and again nations have seen their noblest descend into the grave, and have thought it enough to garland the tombstone when they had not crowned the brow, and to pay the honor to the ashes which they had denied to the spirit. Let it not displease them that tbey are bidden, amidst the tumult and the dazzle of their busy life, to listen for the tew voices and watcb lor tbe tew lamps which God has toned and lighted to charm and to guide them, that they may not learn their sweetness by their silence, nor their light.by their decay. Ecskix: Modern Painters. By the time a man gets to be eighty, he learns that he is compassed by limitations, and taat there has been a natural boundary set to his individual powers. As he goes on in life, he begins to doubt bis ability to destroy all evil and to reform all abuses, and to suspect that there will be much left to do alter he is done. I stepped into my garden in the spring, not doubting that I should be easily master ot the weeds. 1 have simply learned that an institution which is at least a thousand years old and I believe six millions, is not to be put down in one season. Wabren Jui bummer in a Uarden, Just so many misdirected letters every year and no more 1 Would it were as easy to reckon up the number of men on whose backs fate has written the wrong address, so that they arrive by mistake in Congress and other places where they do not belong ! May not these wanderers of whom I speak have been sent into the world without any proper address at all r And it wiser social arrangement Bhould furnish us with something of the sort, fancy (horrible thought!) how many a woikingman's friend (a kind of industry in which the labor is light and tbe wages heavy) would be sent thither because not called for in the office where he at present lies ! Lowell : My btudy Windows. The more we examine the mechan ism of thought the more we shall see the automatio unconscious action ot the mind enters largely into all its processes, Our definite ideas are stepping-stones; how we get from one to the other, we do not know; something carries us; we do not take the step. A creating and informing spirit which is with us, and not of us, is recognized in real and in storied life. It is the Zeus that kindled the rage of Achilles; it is the Muse of Homer ; it is the Uaimon of bocrates; it is the inspiration of the seer; it is the mocking devil that whispers to Margaret as she kneels at the altar ; and the hob gobliu that cried, " Sell him, sell him 1" in the ear of John Banyan; it shaped tbe forms that filled tbe soul of Michael Angelo when he saw the figure of the . r : ; . , . i great awgiver in toe yet unnewn mar ble, and the dome of the world's yet un built basilica against the blank horizon it comes to the least of ua as a voice that will be heard : it tells us what we must believe ; it frames our sentences ; it lends a sudden gleam of sense or eloquence to the dullest of us all, bo that, like Hatter felto with his hair on end, we wonder at ourselves, or rather not at ourselves, but at the divine visitor, who chooses our brain as his dwelling-place, and invests our naked thought with the purple of the kings of speech or song. Holmes Meehanism in Thought and MoraU. Clergymen wbo preach against the acquisition of wealth seldoin object to an increase of salary. An oyster weighing three Mtms U on exhibition in the window of a New ark saloon. Tho cost to the Unito'l States govern- ( roont of the occupation of Alaska, ac cording to Major Tidball, ia t!).3M a month, besides supplier and is divided as follows: Army, $3 900; navy, 3,5- ; revenue cutter, $2,200; and custom house, $700. The Lynn shoemakers have a yacht, -the hull of which is composed entirely of old shoe boxes, the Btays are made of shoe bindings, and the sails of 1 split ' leather. And they have now formed a yacht club, in order to have a commo dore's flag, which is to be of Turkish morocco. A Springfield (Yt.) lady left her little boy at home to amuse himself with matches, and when Bhe returned met bim in the street, crying. He said he only made a little fire in the bureau rawer, and a lot ot red-shirted men with a great big tea-kettle came and squii ted. water all overthe house. .They saved the cellar door. Humboldt, Kansas, claims to have the champion nailer of the world, in the person of Albert .Minor, a lather by trade, and a son of Vermont. Minor can drive more nails in one day than any other living man. He will drive nails faster than the fastest compositor can pick up type. He will drive sixty lath nails a minute, ten hours out ot tbe twenty-four, the year through. A mysterious occurrence took place lately at Haverhill, Mass. Four sailors, with trunks and carpet bag, landed there an open boat, set hre to the boat, watched it until it was entirely destroy ed, and then took cars for Portland. No body knows who the strangers were, or whence they came. But for the trunks and carpet bags, they might be i-up- iosed to be some ot Captain Hidd s free booters. Who knows 'i In a New Hampshire oity on Tuesday a respected citizen was upon the ticket of one party as a candidate for the School Uommittee, while bis daughter was a candidate of the opposite party for the same omce, the latter having received the nomination, not on account of any female suffrage proclivities, but because she was a very efficient teacher. As she shrank from the responsibilities of the position, the nomination, even, having been made without her knowledge, her father was generally voted for and elect ed. Horse thieves in Michigan are prac- ticiuar a new dodge. Four, mon am to- quired to carry it out. Two of them go n advance with a horse and buggy, and, when an opportunity presents itself, the horso is sold, and the two hire another hor.-e, and proceed to the next neigh borhood in search of another purchaser. On the following day the two arrive in hot haste, inquiring for the two who had left, representing them as horse thieves ; learn that they have sold the horse ; one of them claims it, and proves ownership by the other, and gets pos session of the horse as having been sto len from him ; then they pass on to the next neighborhood to repeat the process on another victim. A good story is told of himself by a Beason ticket holder on the Boston and Maine Railroad a wide-awake, jolly, generous, joke-loving gontltman, liberal in his religion. Itidiug in a horse car a short time since, with tbe Catholic priest of his village, who has been active in trying to induce his flock to become temperate, he familiarly addressed him in language something as follows : "Father , yon are. doing a pretty good work just now I don't know but you are doing as much good as all the other clergymen in town." The priest quietly replied that he was doing wbat he could to improve his people. " I'll tell you what it is," continued the gen tleman, " I've been thinking about at tending your church, but was afraid it would cost too much to get all my sins pardoned." " Oh," said the priest, " we can manage your case ; when we have a very largo contract we make a liberal discount 1" John Bellows has a weakness for pret ty women. Among these he includes a little apple-vender near the market. He makes love to her sometimes, and yester day tried to kiss her. She wouldn't be kissed, and a little disturbance resulted, which procured John the pleasure of an introduction to the recorder. " And so you insulted the girl yesterday," inquired the magistrate. " 1 was only loking. pleaded John. "But didn't you try to kiss her Y" " Well," said John, straight ening himself up. "I made out like I wanted to kiss her, but it was all non sense ; 1 didn t care anything about it. Indeed !" " Certainly not." " Then you were trying to deceive the girl, and that can t be tolerated by this court. Here is a pretty girl whom you lay you wouidn t care to kiss. Well, a man of such bad taste ought to be punished; and I'll fine you for not wanting to kiss ner r Ana be aid. .ft. v. I'ic. , Last fall a party of thieves stole a train on the Central Pacifio Railroad, and robbed the express car ; but were followed bo clobely that they were obliged to conceal a part of their booty in the mountainous region west of Salt Lake City. The robbers were appre hended and brought to trial at Elko, where they secured the services of two lawyers to defend them. The agents of Wells, Fargo & Co. suspected that the accused might turn over some of the stolen property to the lawyers in pay ment for their professional services, and determined to keep a watch on the lat ter. The legal gentlemen started for the mountains, closely followed by de tective. When they had found and se emed the hidden property, amounting to several thousand-dollars in, value, they were apprehended and taken to Salt Lake City, where they were exam ined before Judge Hawley and bound over to appear at the Distrust Court ia the sum of $5,000 each. Tbe stolen Droo- I erty was returned to its owners.