f ( ( ( l U HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher, Vtt.K COUNTY- Tit K REPUBLICAN PAHTY. Two Dollars ter Annum. VOL. IT. lUDUWAY, PA,. THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1872. NO. 21. rojJT .it r. A WOMAN'S VEIL. BT 1. B. BRADFOKD. It was full many a season since, Whon I was summering at Cnpe May ; They had a foolish fashion then Mnyhap they have the same to-rtuy That every laily In the dance, II' pleated with any should not full I'nto the partner she prefenod, To givo hor veil. And there was ono 1 mind mo of, Whose name well, nevermind her name: Helen or Alice, Dtancho or Maud, fo yon who read will be the same. But that old rashlon of tho veils, Haply roenlls the pat, and stirs Momories that cluster round the night. She gave nio hers. Bhe flushed, poor child. In Riving It, And I too felt my brow grow warm, As laughingly, with Angers deft, Bhe knotted it about my arm ; And though the color on her cheek Was like the liffht in morning skies, 1 thought I saw a holier dawn Within her eyes. Tlio dance was over and we slrolled Out from the ball-room's glittered press. To meet the breeze that many armed Clasped each one in its col caress j And sauntering en we rcachod the sea The far walta music's cadence sweet, Mixed with the sound of waves that died About our feet. We talked of what I now forget. But carelessly, or seeming bo ; Next day I was to leave, but then In town we'd moet again, you know. Ah, well-a-day I the gods dispose And ruined hopes are worso than vain ; She laughed good-by I new saw Her far. again. Timo changes us not for the best, Though grief sometimes dofeats bis art, And kocps a little patch spring-green In tho whlto winter of the heart. And mine, though colder grown with years. Feels that It is not frozon quite. As memory goes wandering back To that Juno night. And sometimes on the summer eves. Within my chamber all alone, I wutch the moon riBe o'er tho roofs And think I hear the ocean tone; And through the smoke of my cigar Bee loves and Joys I have not met. That, as they vanish In the haze. Leave inv cheeks wet. L fe's a sad puzzle, and our hearts Grow luiut In searching for the clue ; She went before at twontv-flvo, And I live on at fltty-two And wait the end ; tor well I know That I shall meet her without fail. On somo spring morning and till then, I keep the veil. THE STORY-TELLER. JOHNSON'S FOLLY. A TALE OF THE FRONTIER. Nearly thirty years have elapsed since the events I am about to relate occur red, and yet uiy remembrance of tho details of tho narrativo is as distinct as if the terriblo scones through which I passed had taken plaoe but yesterday, so vividly wero they impressed on my youthful inind. Sometime in tho winter of 1810, my father, Eben Johnson, emigrated in company with four other families to what was then a Territory, now the State of Kansas. The emigration asso ciation consisted of my father and mother, my elder brothor, Thomas, niy two sisters, Annie and Mary, an adopt ed brother, Eliphalet, familiarly known to us all as Liph ; the Willis family, tho Montanyos, tho Starbucks, and old Hanks (as our boys used to called him), his two sons and daughter all agricul turists. Besides these families, there were several artisans a blacksmith, wheelwright, carpenter, a physician, and some young men from Buffalo, with the usual complement of wagoners and guides. I was then eight years old. I re-' member it was winter, from the fact that our wagons wero frequently stop ped by snow-drifts. We hod in our train fifteen wagons three wagons to each family each vehicle drawn by six oxen ; thero were, besides, two spare oxen allowed to every wagon. There were also in our party five young men on horseback, each of whom brought with him two led horses for future ser vice, all of them carrying packs propor tionate in size ana weight to tho strength of the respective animals. Tho wugons wore, of course, packed with such wares, provisions and utensils us were necessary tor use in the new country to which we were wending our way. The settlers, except in-very bad weather, walked either in front or rear of the wagons, with the exception of the old women and such of tho emigrants as were taken sick by the way. There wero iu our party, as 1 said before, rive families ; they, with the young men who had joined us after starting, made up our numbers to sixty-three people. Of this number, sixteen were women and ten children. My father, who had planned the expedition, was what is called a well-to-do farmer in Indiana, and the families who joinod him were all pretty much of the same class ; hav ing sold their farms, they converted the proceeds into such articles as were re quired on the frontier, and such trink ets as would prove attractive in ex changing with the Indians for furs, skins and other things. We proceeded at the rate of about tor miles a day, al though sometimes, in good weather, we travelled fifteen. This, however, was generally more than the women could walk. At night the wagons were park ed, and tho oxen and horses picketed ; the fires were lighted, and a regular guard detailed to keep a lookout for tho wild tribes of Indians who occasionally were seen on our trail. We were thoroughly armed and equip ped, everv man provided with two rifles, a brace of pistols, and a long knife; even the boys carried a ritlo. By day we amused ourselves on the march in - doing a little hunting after buffulo and antelope; but this was only when the train halted for several hours, as they did once in each day. Our destination was a point on the prairie about sixty miles southwest from Fort Leavenworth, and on the edge of a belt of wooded country which bordered tho Kansas river, now the tortile region in tho heart of which tho city of Topeka has lately reared its spires to tho sky, ami from whoso workshops and factories the smoke curls up lazily in the clear atmosphere ot the prame-land. Three weary months were passed from tho timo wo left Indianapolis (where wo fitted out) until we reached our destina tion. Arriving at our journey's end, after a careful examination mid survey of tho country, tho ground on which we agreed to settle was parceled out among the different families, and axes were' soon brought into requisition, timber felled, and in a few days a dozen or more log-cabins were erected, and the settlement, as it had now become, was beginning to put on quito a business like appearance. Let it not be under stood that the log-houses of the settlers were near to each other; on the con trary, each settler built on the land as digued to him by the association, loca ting his cabin in tho centre of a plot of from ono to two hundred acres, or as much as ho thought he could cultivate. This arrangement brought our cabins at least a mile apart from each other ; it would have been better, as the result will show, if they had been nearer to gether. Four years had elapsed ; tho cabins were all built with stockades to protect us from sudden attacks of tho Indians ; tho farms were all in a high state of cul tivation ; settlers had been arriving and filling up the nearest town, which was about fifty miles distant, and we lived in comparative security. Trading with tho Indians had been carried on exten sively, and my father's wisdom in tho selection of the site, near tho confluence of tho Kansas and Missouri rivers, was acknowledged by all, us furs and skins wero brought down in great quantities by the red men in their canoes. I think it was the spring of 1814 or 1N4.J, if I recollect rigutly, my father had built an addition to his house, which consisted of a second or upper story, and as this was rather an innova tion on tho prevaling style of architec ture of tho settlement, it was shortly designated as Johnson's Folly. Whether this act of my father's was one of wis dom or the contrary we shall see. I say I think it was 1843, for I am very sure we had just heard of the election of Polk. For several months previous there had been occasional marauding parties from a new tribe, the Arapahoes, who had lately made their appearance, but they were friendly to our allies, the Blackfeet, and we apprehended no seri ous trouble ; still, there was uneasiness felt in the settlement, and tho Indians who had como to live with us shared the anxiety. It was not considered safe to bo away from home after, nightfall. My eldest brother at least I call him such, though he was really but an adopt ed son, whose name was Eliphalet Busch Liph was in the habit of visiting at the Hanks cabin. Old Hanks had a beautiful daughter named Amanda. She was a perfect picture ; her features were regular, hor eyes deep hazel, her hands small and delicate, and, as her old father said of her feet, " they wero too small to bo stood upon much ;" her hair was a dark, rich brown, with a golden tinge though it, I never saw a sweeter girl. I don't wonder Liph was deep in love with her. He was a noblo fellow, and deserved a good girl, and father used to say " it was a pity Liph was not born a prince, for ho was noble enough to bo one." Indeed, some thought he did come of gentle blood. No one ever knew his father or mother ; they were lost in tho surf, with a whole ship's crew, try ing to land from a wreck on tho coast of Virginia, and Liph was the only one saved. Ho was brought up till he was seven years old by a man named Busch, who had himt christened, and gave him his own name, EKphalet. When Busch died, father adopted Liph. Everybody loved him. On our way out, ho would carry Bill Starbuck's biby in his arms for miles, when the jolting of tho wagon would make the little thing fretful ; he was always sacrificing his own comfort for that of other people. But I am get ting away from my story. Liph had gone over to the Hanks's one even ing ; it was a dark, threatening night ; a light, drizzling rain had fallen early in the day, and now a raw, piercing wind was sweeping over the prairie ; it came in fitful gusts, and died away in a dismal moan. A great log-fire filled tho clay fire-place, which blazed up now and then, and shot out bright gleams across the planks of our little cabin. It was cheerful enough within ; mother sat by the fire knitting, and father was reading by tho lght of a tallow candle some old newspapers, about six months old, which he had got the last time he had ridden over to the nearest army post, Fort Leavenworth. My brother Tpui lay on a buffalo-skin in the corner, fast asleep. My sister Annie was busy with tho hired girl in the other room washing up tho plates, while May and Susie wero sound asleep up-stairs in their little beds, which Liph had made for them out of red cedar wood. There was a ladder only to mount to the second storv. and though mother had often teased father and Liph to build her a stairs such as she had always been ac customed to, father was obstinate, and seemed to have some reason of his own (though he never expressed any) for not acceding to mother's desire. Old Nero, my father's pointer dog, lay before the tire, occasionally growling iu his dreams. Over the fireplace, on two wooden brack ets, my father s ritle was laid, tor the day ; the charges had not been drawn ; he and Tom Lad been hunting deer, and had come home after a fruitless search. Suddenly old Nero jumped up with a howl, and ran to the door, put ting his nose close down to the floor, scenting somethiug without ana growl' ing incessantly. As I said before, a high stockade sur rounded our inclosure. The gate was left unfastened until Liph came home. As we all sat listening, a low sound, as of the opening of the stockade-gate, was heard, and presently a knock at the door. It was a very unusual thing ; no one ever came near the cabin at this hour. My father rose to open the door, " Don't do it, Eben," mother said ; out father stalked across tho room,- and, ealherinir himself ud to his full height, drew the latch and swung the door wide open. Tho light of the fire streamed out upon tho dark, crouching lonn ot a hail breed, who had always been looked upon with distrust by the settlers, but who made himself useful in various ways. My father s astonishment upon seeing him at this hour did not in tho least dis concert him. Ho said ho had run out of powder, and, as the store was fifteen miles olf, and ho wanted to go hunting the following day, ho had callod to bor row some powder and shot, if my father could spare any. My father cautiously replied that "he could not spare much," but let tho fellow have some. He thank ed him, and left. My father walked out with him to the gate ot the stockade, leaving the door open. I heard dis tinctly the clattering of a horse's hoof over the hard ground. My mother, whose hearing was impaired, did not oo scrve this. When my father returned, my mother asked what he thought of the half breed's visit. Sho was much alarmed, and insisted that it boded no good. My father laughed, but when he approached tho candle again to take up his paper, I observed his countenance was deadly palo. Y hat could he have seen when he went out to tho gate of tho inclosure ? My father was a brave, strong-hearted man. My mother presently went to bed she slept in a room adjoining the main sitting-room. About nine o'clock the gate of the stockado swung open loudly, and my brother Liph came walk ing up the pathway, and hammered a loud knock on the door, which echoed' back from the corner ot the stockado ; but as Liph came in, I thought ho was not as cheery as usual. Father took him aside and asked him if he had soon any thing. Liph said ho had; a man riding a white horse very rapidly, just after ho left Hanks's house. " Then," says my father, " thero is something wrong, for tho fellow who rode past the stockado an hour since was on a black horse." Then my lather called mo to him, and said: "Stevie, you uro not afraid of anything, are you '" I said I supposed not. " Well," said my father, " I've a mind to send you over to Hanks's cabin for some powder. I would not let that half-breed rascal know how little I had, but haVe nearly run out, and we may want all we can get before morning." So I started for Hanks's. At the gate, my father said : " Stevie, be careful how you go ; tho reason why I send you is, they will not notice you, as you are small ; if Tom, or Liph, or I should go, we could not hide as well as you. I fear there are somo bad Indians about. Keep close along the timber ; don't show your self in the open prairie at all. Keep your eyes about you. Get all the pow der Hanks can spare. Hurry back be fore tho moon rises." I reached Hanks's in safety, saw noth ing, told him what father thought, got all the ammunition I could carry, and started back ; but I had not proceeded far before I saw half a dozen Indians riding on tho prairie. They wero going at the top of their horses' speed in the direction of our house. My father let me in ; wo closed and barred the gate, then we closed the door and barred it, as usual. Father exam ined the heavy shutters ; they were all tight. Then, said he : " Boys, wako up Tom. We must get to work and load every rifle and pistol in tho house." I woke up Tom. After wo got through loading, my father made me lie down, and he lay down himself. Liph said he would keep watch. The clock kept ticking away, as though nothing unusual was at hand, and father seeing the hands pointed to two, said he thought it was a false alarm, and turned over and fell asleep. It seemed to me I had been asleep only a few minutes, when Nero sprang up, and gave a loud bark that brought us all to our feet. Father had his rifle in hand instantly. We listened not a sound tho dog with his nose to tho sill kept up a low growl. Father and Liph talked in an under tone, then they unbarred the door, and Liph Btalked out into the gloom. He walked to the stockade, and raising him self up on a barrel, looked cautiously over the top. Liph theij crossed the inclosare, and getting up on a log, looked over on tho other side. Then he called to my father and Tom, and they ran out with their rifles. My mother had been awakened, and also my sisters, and they came run ning into the sitting-room, all very much excited. When mother heard what was the matter that my father was afraid the hostile tribe of Indians, the Arapahoes, were about she took from a corner a riilo, and handed it to my sister Annio, Then she called in the hired girl, but she cried and shook so she could nt hold tho gun. Presently father called to mo to come to him. 1 ran out, and mother and sis ter Annie, too, each with rifles, loaded and cocked.. And father said : " There they are. Do you see them, just coming from the belt of the wood '(" The moon was partially under the clouds, but there was light enough to see about a dozen crouching torms com ing through tho high grass toward the stockade. ' Now, all draw your rifles on the ras cals, but don t fare till 1 give the word, and then all together. The Indians came on, noiselessly, fear lessly ; they did not suppose they were discovered. We waited for them until they came within twenty yards of the stockade, when father gave tbe order to fire. We must have knocked over fully half of them. The rest lay still tor a while, and then rose of a sudden and ran back to the belt of woods. " Thank Qod ! tfiose fellows are out of the way," said niy father; "they didn't expect so warm a reception. But load up your rifles till we see, and you. Stevie, go round the cabin and look out behind the house, and find out if they are to be seen there. I did so. What was my astonishment when 1 saw at least twenty of them com ing right down toward the stockado, and at tho sumo moment a large band of them swarmed out of tho woods and came running across the prairie, firing as they advanced. My father saw there was no timo to be lost. " Back to the house, quick, for your lives !" ho shouted. In wo all rushed; the door was barred and barricaded ; tables and chairs wero placed against it. t " Now, up tho ladder, all of you I" said my father. He was tho last to como up, bringing with him all tho extra guns, powder flasks and shot-pouches. Father ordered the upper shutters to be thrown open. Then he drew up the ladder and let the trap down, and then pulled a' bedstead over it. He pulled off the mattress and stuffed it in the window; then he got all the bags of meal he cr.uld find, and, with our assist ance, piled them up against the window, leaving a narrow place in tho centre, through which we could fire. It was not long before we saw the wisdom of theso preparations, for the Indians had now cleared tne stockade and Burrounded tho house, and soon the terriblo crashing of glass announced to us their intention of killing us all. They fired two volleys through the win dows of the lower story, where they sup posed us to bo, and then bursting in the doors, discovered that they had not harmed us. But, with cries of vengeance, they prepared a more terrible fate for us than their bullets ever could nave acconv plished. Again a hailstorm of balls poured in throusrh tho window, but father had or dered us all to lie down fl.tt, and we obeyed. By-and-by father got up, and, holding a mattress doubled up in lront of him, peerod out at the side. "My trod I he said, " Hanks s house is in flames !" and he came back from the window. With that up sprang Liph like a tiger, and rushed to tho window. He would have thrown himself out but for father, who caught him and dragged him back by main force ; and, after struggling again and again with lather, .Liiph loll back on tho floor, with his hands to his head. Then we heard a crackling Bound un derneath, and the wild cries of the sav ages broke out with renewed vigor, and several shots were fired upward, from below, but tho bullets only thumped hard against the yellow oak flooring they did not penetrate. Soon we per ceived strong fumes of smoke, and it seemed to rise from without, and curled up past the window, and at tha same time from within, where tho flooring joined tho side of the house, and where the joints were not perfect. My lather exclaimed, with an agonized look : "We are lost!" The fumes grew denser, and we heard the fire beneath us crackling lotrier, for the Indians had piled up blazing fagots all around the cabin, and in a great pyramid in the sitting-room. , Mother strove to raise Liph of the floor, but he lay like one dead, t athor sat motion less, with head between his hands, groaning aloud. My sisters sobbed and cried. Tom, only, seemed perfectly himself, but he was always stolid. " hat s tho use of blubbering t he said ; " they can't do more than roast us !" This was poor consolation. Thicker and denser grew the smoke ! We could scarcely see each other ; and a suffocating heat tilled the room. 1 be gan to feel dizzy. J. he names below crackled louder. The shouts of the demons increased, and it seemed in very truth as though all hope was gone. Just then, through the wild yells of the savages, the noise ot the flames, the cries and lamentations of tho women, there burst in a sharp, shrill, distant bugle-call. It was tho glorious cavalry charge sounding. U p sprang my father. " Hush !" cried Tom ; " do you heur that ? That's tho dragoons' bugle I" Yes in deed it was! Louder and nearer it sounded! A tremendous tramp of horses followed, and then pistol-shots were fired, right at the door of the house, it seemed. Then a strong, manly voice criod out : " Give it to them, boys ! No quarter ! Sabre them all ! Down with the scoundrels! Such a clanging of steel was nover heard before. There seemed to be no end to it. Cries and supplications on one sido ; impreca tions und shouts ot triumph on the other. Then, comparative stillness reigned for a moment, and the captain (Uod bless him) called out troui below " Is any ono up there '(" My father sprang to the window, and cried out, " Captain, you have saved us 1" Then, quick as thought, he pulled the ladder to the window ; two stout dragoons caught it as it touched tho ground ; then, through the smoke and flame, we all got out. But the ladder was too short, and was several feet below the window. Father had to drop us all down to tho first rung, one by one. Liph just recovered his strength in time to get out. There was no time to lose We were scarcely all down before a sheet of flame shot up through the trap door, and in another moment the hole cabin was in flumes. We were huddled together next the stockade. I then recollect seeing my father throw his arms around the captain, and heartily embrace him. Day was just breaking. Off to the right the smoke ot Hanks house was drifting away on tho wind ; and to the left, the Starbucks' cabin was rolling up blaclf volumes of smoke to tho sky 1 The red men bad made a simultaneous at tack upon the cabins comprising the colony. - Oh. what a morning ! What a spec tacle ia our stockade ! A dozen dead Indians lay in front of our 'door, and as many more wounded lay outside ! Some had fallen as they tried to escape. Off on the horizon (tor yon can see a great many miles on the prairie) we could see the remnant of their band fleeing on their swift horses, ttnd a few dragoons pursuing and bring occasional shots at the retreating savages. Outside tho stockade the dragoons tied their horses. The men, regardless of the cries and moans of their adversa ries, were watering their animals from the tank in tho yard, while the flames of our cabin curled upward with de vouring rapidity. Captain Lecompte, who commanded the detachment, then told my father that, two nights before, he hud boon warned by a friendly Indian of tho contemplated massacre of our colony. Ho had at once saddled up, and he and his gallant band had ridden sixty miles, at a hard gallop tho best part of the way, hoping to reach us before they had done us any harm. Soon the dragoons began to come in ; for their captain. with commendable skill, had distributed his force through the colony before at tacking. They brought woeful tidings. The Starbucks were all murdered. So were the Willis family. TheMontanyas had shared a similar fato. Old Hanks had been found murdered, by tho side of his son Joshua ; his younger son Sam and bis beautiful daughter Amanda wero not to be found ; either they hod been burned in the house or carried off by the Araphoes. V hen Xjiph heard this, he raised bis hands to heaven, then tore his hair in a frenzy, and grasping a rifle that lay on tbe ground, essayed to take his own life, but some dragoons seized hiin and held him fast. He raved like a nianiao for several hours ; then, his strength ex hausted, he sank to the ground. Not long afterward the dragoons commenced making preparations for de parture. Their horses were watered and ted ; the men sat down, and, open ing their haversacks, partook of a frugal meal of salt pork and army biscuit the latter better known among military men as hard-tack their canteens all be ing filled from our tank. Everything being ready, and our own horses having been saddled up (for I omittod to state that tho stable was un touched by the flames, and tho Indians had not timo to get away with any of the horses), we took a last look at the smoldering embers of our desolated cabin ; tho bugles sounding " Boots and saddles," we, preceded by tho dragoons, started out on tho prairie in the direc tion of Fort Leavenworth. Poor Liph ! he was terribly shattered. He spoke not a word ; his eyes wandered hopelessly across tho prairie, as if he could penetrate to where his beloved one had been taken. Then a look of horror would succeed this, and his head drop despondingly upon his breast. The stout, Btrong man bent beneath the weight of aiUiction. Walking the horses slowly, wo pro ceeded that day without an incident to disturb our monotonous march. At night we laid down by tho bivouac-fires and slept; refreshing and welcome Bleep fell alike on wearied man and boast. The next morning we were all up at break of day, and, after partaking of the same frugal meal as 'before, we proceeded more rapidly, we all having somewhat rocovercd trom tho latiguo ot the previous night. Arriving at a little settlement known as Allersontown (since destroyed); judge of our astonishment at seeing Sam Hanks sitting on a stump in front of a cabin, and besido him, on the grass, wrapped in a buffalo-robe, Amanda ! Amanda, the pride of the colony ! Amanda, safe and well, but pale and haggard, her eyes red with weeping, her hair unkempt, and hanging wildly about her shoulders. To spring from his saddle, to seize the prostrate girl in his muscular arms, was for Liph tho work of an instant, and tho dragoons opened wide their eyes with amazement at seeing him, in an ecstacy of joy, kissing his lost sweet heart. Amanda had been terribly shaken by the news of her father's death, and still further overwhelmed at hearing the rumor that all of our family had perish ed in the flames of our cabin. The account given to us by Sara Hanks was, that on' that memorable night, shortly after I left his house, his father became alarmed, and ordered hira to saddle up two horses, and, taking Aman da with him, to ride with all speed to ward Fort Leavenworth. His sister, however, becoming exhausted, they could not proceed beyond Allersontown. This accounted for our meeting them thero. What a goodly spectacle it was to see Liph and Amanda riding side by side all the way to Fort Leaven worth, which we reached in safety the next day. We wero treated with groat kindness, and romained upward of a year near the post. Amanda shortly afterward was married at Captain Lecompte's quarters, the noble captain giving her away to Eliphalet Busch, who swore eternal love and truth. Every one who heard his manly voice felt that he was worthy of all trust and confidence, and particular ly Qualified to become tho guardian and protector of the beautiful and gentle Amanda, " the pride ot tne colony. A Pathetic Picture. Georgo William Curtis paints the fol lowing pathetio picture, which every ono could wish wero less true to nature: " I think of many a sad-eyed woman I have known in solitary country homes who seemed never to have smiled, who struggled with hard hands through melting heat and pinching cold to hold poverty and want that hovered like wolves about an ever increasing flock of. children. How it was scour in the morning and scrub at night and scold all day long! How caro blurred the window like a cloud, hiding the lovely landscape ! How anxiety Bnarled at her heels, dogging her like a cur ! How little sho knew or cared that bobolinks, drunk with blithe idleness, tumblod and sang in the meadows below, that the earth was telling the time of year with flowers in the woods above. As I think of these things, of this solitary, inces sant drudgery, of the taoiturn husband comine in heavy with sleep, too weary to read, to talk, to think, and I da not wonder that mad houses are so richly recruited from the farmhouses as the statistic show." Laboring Men and Men of Leisure. One of the prominent speakers, at the meeting of employers in this city the other day, stated very distinctly that thero were in tho late strikes somo very marked traces of communism, and that the question had been frequently heard among tho strikers, " Why should wo, too, not live in brown stone houses '" Twenty years ago, tho sole object of a strike was to obtain a slight increoso in wages ; to-day most ot the leaders, at least, look on themselves as doing some thing to hasten a social reorganization, in which there shall bo no class exempt from manual labor. Professional men, dorks, and all others whoso work is mainly of the mental kind, or is at all events clean work which may be done without disfigure ment of any kind, have become in their eyes nearly as obnoxious as the regular loungers. Ik short, the ideal society of the labor reformers, everywhere, though more vaguely held in some places than others, is one in which all shall be in a greater or 'loss degree manual laborers, so that the social distinction now created by a man's not laboring with his hands shall disappear. The effect of such a revolution as this on civilization that is, of the disappear ance from society of everybody who did not settle down every morning to some distasteful physical task and work at it as long as his nervous energy enabled him, and of everybody who owed any thing in the way of greater social free dom, or the greater freedom in the choice of pursuits which wealth gives, to his father's accumulations or his own rapid success would form a curious subject of speculation. It is well to remember, when we talk about " civilization " and glory in the difference it has made between us and our skinclad forefathers, that ninety-nine hundredths of it are the result of the work of what wo may call the " loisured class," that is, the class of whom our so cial arrangements permit to live in what to the manual laborer seems idleness. In fact, the first tttep in, civilization is not made until some portion of tho com munity is released from the necessity of toiling with its hands and allowed to occupy itself with thinking, speculating. or in other words, following tho train of abstract reasoning and playing with the imagination ; and the rapidity of the rise of every people into civilization has been in the ratio of the number of those whom it was able to release in this way from the common drudgery of life. A great majority of these have always, will always, to all outward appearance, think and imagine in vain, as if it wero an es sential feature in the moral order of the univeise that there should be this seem ing waste of effort in every department of human activity. But the number of those who have tried to make such contributions with out succeeding, and the number of those who have niudo trifling contributions not great enough to rescue their names from oblivion but good enough to help the others, the Keplers, Newtons, Davys, and Harvcys, to their discoveries, has doubtless been almost beyond count. But they could not have shown them selves at all, in a society of manual la borers such as somo working men dream of. God has somehow not organized soci ety according to our notions of justice. lio has mado some men strong and healthy, others weak and sickly ; some men wise and able, other men foolish and stupid; some women handsome, other women plain ; He has imposed on one half of the human species the pains ot reproduction, to the other halt He has given only its pleasures, and on this inequality, human society is organized, v i irr.. 1 1 : jjveiy uuu mis uis puot, uui tueiv ta mi enormous differenco in the comfort and dignity of the different posts. The safety and progress of humanity, as a whole, depends on each man s serv' ing faithfully and without murmuring. The rude fishermen of the Northern sea, as a great English writer has finely said, collects tho oil which fills the schol ar's lamp in the luxurious capital three thousand miles away. Should the day ever come when the fisherman will in sist on tho scholar's collecting his own oil, the day when there will be neither scholars, fishermen nor oil will not bo far distant. Christian Union. How Long: should a Man Stick to His inline A correspondent of tho Locomotive L'n- gintcri Journal, writing from Rutland, Vt, speaking of the duty and extent of tbe responsibility ot an engine man in case ot accident, says : " where an accident takes pluce, such as going down the dump or colliding with another train a bridge may be gone, a culvert washed away he may see tbe fatal leap ; 1 ask you, thinking your experience is worth as much as mine, would there be anything beroio for me to stand on the toot board and plunge with my engine into certain and dreadful death f Is there anything brave about it V nave you no responsi bilities here on earth, no matter if you have ten cars loaded with . passengers that must follow the engine as the case may be ' Now I consider an engineer's responsibility ceases, in such cases, when he has sounded his whistle properly and reversed his engine, opened his throttle, pulled open his sand box. He has done his whole duty to God and man as far as he can to stop the train, and if he has time and opportunity, if he is true to himself, he will try to get off and not go down to tha bottom calling for brakes. Many engineers go down and collide and are killed, for the reason they do not have time after doing their duty. 1 never should feel as if a man was fit to run an engine if he had not courage to do his whole duty. But af ter he has stood to his post and done all that has been put into his hands to do, then I say he ia a man who will try and save bis own life. A young lady in Plattsburg asked her mamma, " How long does the honey moon latit'f" to which the practical mother replied, "Until you ask your nusoanu zor money. Facts and Figures, A Detroit ferry boat passes freo all citizens over 90. Georgia banks closo at ono o'clock during the summer months. A Georeria babv has a double set of uwb all full of teeth, but no eyes. Kansas has a wild sea serpent travel-1 ling about and devouring ctittlo. Tho Mayor and Council ot Dos Moines have been arrested for contempt of court. A woman has had to pay $100 for" selling a glass of whiskey at Whitehall, 111. A lady of Springfield, Va., was bitten by a cat having the hydrophobia the other day. A budget of 2,912 love letters passed between a couple now about to unite at Fort Wayno, lnd. The 100 girls in the St. Louis Normal School wear calico dresses, and no chig nons as waterfalls. Nebraska is tho only State that had A railroad in running order when admit ted into the Union. A Cedar Falls minister preached in defense of croquet. His text was, " And sho took the mallet' A prying reporter in Richmond do- clares that a lady there has ordered a 42 pair of stockings for her wedding. A man in Richmond, Va., has worn the same pair of linen trousers forty- nino summers, ihey are just in style this year. A vicious horse in Michigan lately kicked his master's jaw off and knocked bis teeth down his throat, choking him to death. Macon, Ga., disputes Brooklyn's clilim as the " City of Churches." Sho has a church to less than every thousand in habitants. Mrs. Robinson, of Dubuque, was mar ried on Tuesday, unmarried on Wednes day, and on Thursday ran off with an other man. A California jury, in a suicido cast; lately, returned the following verdict : "We, tho jury, find that tho deceased was a fool." A daughter of tho owner of tho Crys tal Gold Mine in California, lately fell 1 10 feet down a shun, and was brought out a shapeless mass. An Irish lecturer of note solemnly said, ono evening. " Parents, you may havo children; or if you have not, your daughters may have." The Colorado desert, by a late railroad survey has been found to be in places 200 leet below tho level of the sea. Scientists are in a quandary. They have a flower in Alameda, Cal.. called " Aaron's cup," which measures two feet eight inches from the base of the flower to the tip ot the cup. A gontlo father in Vicksburg, Miss., a short time ago, tied his twelve-year-old son to the rafters of the house by his feet and flogged him till he was nearly dead. Limestone, 111., boasts of a porkor with a head and tail at each end, and two sets of logs between. It must bo awkward for tho animal to attempt to go ahead. An advertisement in a Western paper informs the public that board for the summer can Tie obtained " at a large and shady brick gentleman's residonce in the country." Tho latest snake story is to the effect that lately in Crawford j., Ind., a viper attempted to swajjow a black snake larger than himself, and was choked in the operation. Solomon City. Kansas, does not seem to be a very healthy place for married .. One day last week nve wives de serted their respective husbands and went back East to " livo with mamma." The following is a certificate given by a Troy lawyer to an applicant for ad mission to the bar : " i uereoy cenity that the bearer, , was a student in my office for ton months ; that dur ing the whole of that time his character for piety, chastity, and honesty was above reproach ; and his examplo was such that Irom my aauy contact wun him I have now become a pious and consistent member of the church, and a useful member of society. The subject of impressions at first sight was being talked over at the tea table, when the lady whoso duty it was to preside said ; " She always formed an idea of a person at first sight, and gen erally found it to be correct." " Mamma," said hor youngest son, in a shrill voice, that attracted the attention of all present. " Well, my dear, what is it "' replied tho good inothor. '" I want to know what was your opinion when you first saw nie'f" The question gave a sudden turn to the conversation. One of tho most extraordinary facts revealed to us by Dr. Livingstone's ex plorations in Africa is that tho high table land of the interior, with,' its rich agricultural resources, its noblo flora, its fine temperature, broad inland seaa, and inexhaustible stores of mineral wealth, is rendered all but impenetrable to civilized man, certainly beyond all reach of colonization, by one of tho most apparently insignificant of causes, a fly. This terrible insect is a little brown, yellow-striped fly called the tsetze, scarcely larger than our common house hold pests, but whose sting is absolutely fatal. So deadly is its poison that it is said three or four flies will kill tho largest ox. Soon after tho bite, which gives little or no pain, staggering and blindness comes on ; the body (wells to an enormous size ; the coat turns rough, and in a few hoflro follow con vulsions and death. And yet this deadly poisen under the effect of which the'horse and ox, the sheep and the dog full as if plague-stricken, is perfectly harmless to man, to wild animals, to the pig, mule, ass, and goat. Here is an achievement of science that would bring glory to the discoverer the discovery of some antidote to the sting of this venomous fly, which would open tha treasures of Central Africa to tho uee of tho world,