ELK COUNTY THE REPUBLICAN rARTT. VOL II. RIDGWAY, PA,. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1872. NO. 35. PO.ET.Rr. THE ELEVENTH HOUR. Whist, sir I 'Would ye plate to speak alsy And sit yo down there by the dure f She sleeps, sir, so light and so restless, , 8ho hears evory step on the flure. What alls hor? Ood knows 1 Suo's been weakly For months, and tho heat dhrives her wild i The summer has wasted and worn her Till she's only the ghost of a child. All I have f Yos, sho is, and God help me I I'd three llttlo darlints beside. As purty as iver ye see, sir. But wan by wan dbrooped like, and died. What was it that tuk them, ye're asking? Why poverty, sure, and no doubt I They perished for food and fresh air, sir, Like flowers ahrlod up in a drought. It was dreadful to lose thorn t Ah, was it I It seemed like my beait strings would break. But there's days when wid want and wid sorrow I'm thankful they'ro gone for their suke 1 Their father? Well, sir, saints forgive me I It's a foul tongue that lowers its own ! But what wid the sthrikes and the liquor, I'd betthor be sthrugglin' alone t Do I want to kape this wan ? The darliut, Tho laat and dearest of all I Shure you're nlvor a father yourself, sir, Or you would'nt be askln' at all I What is that t Milk and food tor the baby I A docthor and modicine freo I . Von're huntin out all the sick children. An' poor toilin' mothers, lik. me 1 Ood bless you ! an' thlm that hayo sent you I A new life you've given mo, so. , Share, sir, won't yon look in the cradle At the colleen you've saved, 'fore jougo? 0 mother o' morcles 1 have pity 1 O darlint why couldn't you wait I Dead ! dead I an' the help In the dureway I Too late I O my baby t Too lato I THE STORY-TELLER. BE AX-PORRIDGE, HOT. " Zekiel Pritchard, indeed !" exclaim ed Margaret, drawing herself up to her full height, and letting a wrinkle of vex ation form on her pretty forehead. " The idea of that old widower with grown children coming after me !" H You may turn up your nose at him, now," returned Aunt Sukey, with a de liberative air of wisdom particularly try ing to Margaret's rather quick temper, and at the same time leisurely drawing a long thread through a triangular hole in one of her brother Hiram's stockings, " but when you have passed the first corner, and got on to the old maids' list, you may bo mighty glad to marry as likely a man as Zekil Pritchard. You are going on twenty-five, Margaret al ready ; and when I was young, a girl past that age was considered soedy. You can't pick and choose much longer ; and the time may eome when you'll thank your stars for a husband that stands well with the community, is a good provider, pious, and Btiddy." " I don't want a steady old man," re torted Margaret, giving an energetic snar to a table-cloth sho was folding down. " Why Margaret '" exclaimed her aunt, with an accent of mild horror ; " any body to hear you talk would think jou preferred an intemperance man or a pro fane Bwearer." " Drinking and swearing were not mentioned," replied Margaret, with a laugh at her aunt's remarkable agility in skipping to conclusions. " All I meant to Bay was that I don't intend to take a man old enough to be my my father just because he is steady. There are steady young men in the world I much prefer. And then it looks out of place for Zekiel Pritchard, who was a family man as long ago as I can remember, to be casting ahecp's eyes at me. If he had come from a distance it would seem different ; but only a year ago, I was watching with his poor sick wife, and I shall never forget how ho used to get up and go about in his stocking feet." Mrs. Sukey Stepford'g sense of the lu dicrous was not acute. Her mouth did not contract evon into an intimation of a smile. She sat with eyes still bent upon tho triangular hole in the too of her brother Hiram's stocking, and said, quite seriously : " It don't look well, Margaret, for you to be making fun of a good man like Zekiel Pritchard, and one who was so devoted to his wife in her last sickness. Of course a man can't mourn forever. Human nature won't bear no such strain. It's consistent with reason that he should get over his grief, and feel lonesome, and want to take another pardner. I'd hare him wait the proper time, and not be in too big a hurry ; for it ain't hardly de cent to marry agin in three months, as Jim Bradley did. A man ought to show respect to the memory of a deceased com panion ; but I always think the more of him if he begins to look around pret ty sharp within a year or two after his affliction." I don't," returned Margaret, spirited ly. " I'm like the girl I read about in the nowspapor the other day, who said she didn't want affections wurmed over." Margaret had finished folding down the clothes, and had packed them tight ly in a big willow basket. Bhe stood leaning against the table, with a rich damask-rose bloom on her cheek. A pair of dark eyes shone out under curling lashes, and a delicious little pout around tho corners of her mouth made her face altogether bewitching. " Well, y vu're bo mighty pertickerlcr," responded her aunt, with a sigh, " I shouldn't a bit wonder if you lived sin gle yet. A settled-down man like Zekiel Pritchard is worth a dozen of your skit tish young fellers. He's been through the mill, and knsws how to treat a wo man. He'd considerate and thoughtful . about making work, and handy in case of sickness. Then Mrs. Pritchard left such a sight of nice things crockery and bedding and silverware. I dou't believe bhe ever used them much, for she wasn't no gre't hand for company, and her things were always kep' as choice as gold. I guess anybody that steps in there will find every thing to her hand." " I don't want to marry Mrs. Pritch ard' things," broke out Margaret, impa tiently. " If ever I do marry, I shall look eut for a man, and not for old spoons and feather-beds. Zekiel Pritchard would look better to come courting in his every day clothes, ag I have Been him a hun dred times on top of a load of hay, or behind tho plow, dressed in a tow frock and trowserg, and a palm-leaf-hat. But this summer he has rented his farm to make a business of getting a wife, and must go and dye his hair and whiskers, and dress himself up in a new tuit of broadcloth, with a tall hat, and a gold watch-chain. To my eyes he looks as much out of character as a crow would in the feathers of a yellow-bird." " It's the nature of a widowerto spruce up," gaid Mrs. Stepford, speaking from the depths of profound knowledge. " Ho puts the best foot forward, and makes as good an impression as he can, just as naturally as a rooster crows ; and for ray part I don't Bee a mite of harm in it." " You seem so much in favor of Mr. Pritchard," returned Margaret, rather saucily, " I think you had bettor take him yourself. Who knows, after all, Aunt Sukey, but ho comes shining round you r " Margaret, you ought to be ashamed of yourself;" and Mrs. Stepford put on her dignity, with an angry flush suffu sing her nallow cheek. " You have no right to ridicule a person of my age, and your own father's sister ; aud you know well that when I laid Chester away in tho burying-ground I made up my mind to remain a rcliek tho rest of my life. I haven't ever thought of taking another pardner." "But why shouldn't you'f" persisted Margaret. " If it's such a propel thing for a widower to marry again, why shouldn't it be the same for a widow '( It's a poor rule thaf won't work both ways, auntie. And now I think of it, you would be just the wife for Mr. Pritchard suitable in age, and with a pretty penny of your own, and then you are a careful housekeeper. I do believe he's been after you all along. The next lime he calls I shall act as it he was your visitor, and keep out of the way. Uo and put on your dress-cap, Aunt Sukey, with the purple bows. If I were you I wouldn't wear that daguerrotype pin with Uncle Chester's likeness, but a pink neck-ribbon, which is becoming to your complexion. You are a real good-looking woman when you are dressed up, and I don't wonder Zekiel Pritchard has ta ken a fancy." " Margaret, you can be the provoking est creature I ever saw ; and if you chooso to insult me, it doi't signify. I'm nothing and nobody ; but it is a shame for you to make light of serious things." " Oh, I won't," responded Margaret, with an exasperating air of penitence. " I didn't know it was serious. I wasn't aware things had gone bo far. If ho should call this afternoon, auntie, I shan't stand in your light. I am going to stay here in the kitchen until nearly dark to cook bean-porridge for the men's supper. Then there is a b utch of bread to bake, and I may stir up a cake between whiles. I don't even ' intend to take time to change my dress. This old calico is pretty well soiled," and she d'ew it around her and looked at the back breadths, " and my hair is tousled ; but never mind I don't expect to see any body. You, auntie, can go and fix your self up nice. Courting seems to have a deal to do with dry-goods ; but for my part, if I found a man to my liking, I shouldn't care what kind of a coat cov ered his back, or whether he was rich or poor." Margaret's lost speech cut Mrs. Step ford's sensibilities to the quick. She rose in high dudgeon, and, gathering her mending into her apron, went loftily into her own bedroom and shut the door. But tha words had fallen on other ears besides those they were intended to reach; and just as Margaret was swing ing the crane around from the black throat of tho chimney, preparatory to hanging the porridge-pot over tho fire, sho caught sight of a young man fuce framed by a careless wreath of hop-vine which embowered the window whero he stood. There really seemed no reason why Margaret should blush vividly becauso Mark Thorpo had overheard her foolish words. Mark was only a poor student, working his way through college and the medical schools, who had hired out to her father for the summer months, in order to harden his muscles with farm labor and put a few much-needed dollars into his pocket, Margaret knew"he was up by four every morning to study and writo before the day's work began. He had tho manners of a ti ue-hearted gen tleman, always easy and pleasant, ready to pitch quoits with the men, or whittle out wonderful boats for the boys, or walk after a hard day's work to prescribe for an old womau'g " rhuinatics." He was so strong and healthy, every thing he did seemed a pastiuio. If Margaret re membered that Mark Thorpe was only hor father's hired hand, she did not forget that ho was as much at home in a lady's Earlor as he was in the hay field. He ad a rich tenor voice, well-trained, and a temper like sunshine and bird music mixed in equal parts, The pail of drinking-water stood on a shelf near the windew, and Mark was reaching through the open casement to secure along-handled dipper which hung just above it. He had taken off his straw hat, and his hair lay scattered abut a broad forehead, un tanned and white, al though the rest of his face showed a man ly brown. His mouth, under its fringe of golden mustache, and his eyes, large and blue, kept mischievously smiling at Margaret, while the blush deepened on her cheek. "So you wouldn't mind, Miss Marga ret, whether tho man was rich or poor, if you conld find one to your liking. All I can say is that I wish ho was about my size." Thero was a little mockery in the tone to cover the serious moaning of the words ; and then, after a long draught, while his eyes still did good servica watching Margaret's becoming confu sion of face, Mark let the dipper plash into the water-pail, and weut with his strong stride along down the meadow path, singing a snatch of ' Kathleen Ma vournoen." Margaret was vexed, bocause her ready tongue and quick wit had once failed her ; but a new feeling, vague and sweet, arose and overpowered till others. She stood leaning: en the mantel-jam, with sparks from the fire snapping dangerous ly near the skirt of her dross, and was in this posture when Mrs. Stepford re turned, with the daguerreotype bosora- fin conspicuously displayed on a nice ace collar. She sailed through into the gitting-room witliput deigning to give her niece a word. Margaret gat down in a great split-bottomed rocking-chair, and with her head resting against the faded patchwork cushion, fell into a reverie, which was braided with tho robin's gong outside in the cherry-tree ond the lingering cadence of Mark Thorpe'g voice as he marched away down the meadow-path. She was awakened by a hisg from the bubbling porridge over the side of the pot into the hot em bers, and at the same' moment came a sharp rap upon the knocker of tho front door. By this latter sign Margaret knew that Zekiel Pritchard'g roan horso was hitched to the front-yard fence. Mrs. Stepford, slowly putting down her work, went and admitted tho widow er. He was a lean, wiry man, well sea soned by hard work anil exposure to tho weather. There was a cast to his small gray eyei and he had the habit of raking his jaw with his brown hand and cough ing in a dry and husky fashion before getting ready to speak. Now ho drop ped his buff silk handkerchief into his hat, and deposited it under the chair whero he was sitting, and allowed his eyes to wander rather eagerly about the room. There was a little desultory talk between him and the widow ubout the fine hay weather and last Sunday's ser mon, and then Zekiel cautiously inquired after tho folks. Mrs. Stepford knew well enough that.Wfa meant Margaret, but sho answered heartlessly, quite awny from the subject. " Oh," gaid Bhe, "nirain is driving at the hay to beat all. There's a sight of grass down, and every nerve must be stretched to got it into the barn before another rain-storm." The widower could not muster courage to inquire directly after the lady of his love. He was ill at ease ; his eyes roved from place to place ; he crossod and un crossed his legs, and fiddled nervously with his watch-chain ; "but his senses were on tho alert to detect Bomo trace of tho person ho was seeking. Presently there came through the window, mixed with the scent of Prince Albert roses, the wholesome, old-fashioned smell of bean-porridge, and Mr. Pritchard, sharp ening his ears, thought he detected Mar garet's light tread upon the kitchen floor. It was Zckicl's habit to disguise his courting errand under somo thin pre tense of business with the men-folks, so ho now said, rather hastily : " I called to-day, Mrs. Stepford, to take a peep at your brother Hiram's new mowing-machine. I am thinking about buying one for my own place, and would like to see how it operates." Whereupon he arose, quite forgetful of his hat, which rested peacefully under neath his chair, and started for the kitchen, although tho front-door afforded more convenient means of egress. Zekiel's enterprise was rewarded by the sight of Margaret, who, even in her messed calico, was tho pleasantest object his eyes could rest on. Ho stopped just beyond the threshold, prepared to break the ice with care. Margaret's back was still toward him, but hearing Brother Pritchard's dry, chirruping cough, she faced about and said, " How do you do'f" rather languidly, holdincr out at the CJ . ij same time the long iron spoon iu her hand, as if sho expected him to givo it a snake. " What a pleasant place this is !'.' ob served Mr. Pritchard, lifting the tails of his obnoxious broadcloth, and sitting down unasked. Although the enamored widower showed flurries of embarrass ment on tho surface, he was of a slow, obstinate type. " I always feel more to home in the.kitchen, he added, compla cently, " than in any other part of the house." " When I am busy, and have a good many irons in the tire, retorted Margar et, " I am not anxious to have the men folks around." Zekiel laughed us if he considered this tart little speech a delicious joke. , " xu)u neeau l teei utraid to nave your kitchen seen any time ot day, Miss Mar garet," said he, giving his chair an ularin- ing hitch toward the young lady s vicm- ity. " It's as neat as a posy, and every body knows how you've got your name up tor housekeeping. " I don't care for tho opinions of peo ple who think women were made for nothing but to scrub and scour." "I'm not one of that kind," Zekiel struck in, eagerly. " Tain t my wish, Margaret, that a wouian should overdo and go beyond her strength. My idea of you is that you've got good judgment and hrst-rate common-sense. " I am too obstinate and independent to ever try to come up to any body's idea of me," retorted Margaret, courageously, although, in truth, she was suffering from a panic of apprehension. " You are not obstinate, Margaret, Zekiel's dry tones had acquired a ludi crously sentimental twang. " Oh yes, I am," cried Margaret, feel ing that something must be doue to avert the crisis. ' 1 am dreadfully self-willed, Father says I take after grandmother Baker ; and from all accounts, sho made people stand round. " I'll run the risk, Margaret, and take all the chances, if I can take you." And with that Zekiel made such a bold and startling inantcuvre iu tho navigation of his rocking-chair that Margaret, to avoid closer proximity, sprang a little to one tide, and the ladle slipping from her grasp, Bent a wave of the boiling por ridge over her right hand, at the same time liberally besprinkling the person of the widower. Margaret .moaned with pain, ami went stooping about the room half crazed by the terrible smart. Mrs Stepford found Zekiel standing; in the middle of the floor, the very picture of despair, and conscious, as it would seem, that the spilling of the bean-porridge had irrevocably upset his own dish. He had sustained no bodily injury, but the courting clothes were hopelessly spotted. Aunt Sukey gave him a task which brought him to his senses. " Run out inta the hay field and call , mark Thorpe, lie is more than half t doctor already, and dretful handy dress- ing cuts and burns. This is ft bad scald, and I don't feel like undertaking it my self, but I'll have all tho things ready against he getg here." Zekiel started oft witnoHT. nis nat, i-r- getting entirely where he had left it, until the hot duly sun tailing straight on his bald crown brought a painful re minder.' Mark, who wag at work alone at the shady end of tho field, judged from Mr. Pritchard's plight the accident was worse than it was, ond dropping his rake set off toward the house on the keen run. His long legs soon out-dij-tancod Zekiel's short ones, and when, some minutes later, the widower stealth ily entered the kitchen, he wag startled by a suggestive tableau. Mrs. Stepford had eone up euamber to nunt ior oia linen, and there sat Margaret leaning back in a large chair, with signs of suf fering still visible upon her lace. Mark knelt before her in his coarse working clothes, his shirt sleoves of gray flannel showing, and with a cotton handkerchief knotted about his neck. Beads of per gpiration stood on his forehead, and there was a curious sort of trouble on his comely face. He had wrapped the scalded hand in cotton, and was adjust i"g bandages with the skill of an artist. In his heart ho wished the operation might last forever, but it did come to an end ; and still, with Margaret smiling faintly, he held the hurt hand in his, and almost unconsciously, his other hand, largo and brown, closed over Mar garet s well one a dimpled, warm, cozy little thing, that fluttered in his own like a scarol bird. It was an ecstatic moment, when all heaven seemed dis tilled into a drop of ineffable sweetness ; and silently, by that strange magnetism which draws two hearts together, Mark bent forward and pressed his lips to Margaret's. Zekiel saw it, and he saw that Margaret blushed and trembled, but did not draw away her hand. Be wildered, he slipped out, ana stole around to tho front entrance by moans of which he regained his hat, and teok himself away, a wiser and a sadder man. A fortnight nearly had passed, and Margaret's hand was almost well. One warm uttcrnoon, when doors and win dows were all open to catch a wander- g breeze, Mrs. Hukey bteptord came into tho house with her things on, and as sho sat dow in tho rocking chair she heaved a sigh profound, but not utterly heart-broken. " What is the matter, auntie '(" in quired Margaret. "Have you got one of your hot flashes f " o, returned Mrs. Stepford, untying her bonnet strings and fanning herself with her pocket-handkerchief, " but 1 am quite overcomo. AVhat wonderful, unlooked-for things are all the time hap pening, and what a strange world this is, to oe sure. " Perhaps it is," said Margaret ; " but it s a dear, lovely world, and the best we know anything about." " hen 1 went out of this house, put in the widow, scarcely heeding her niece's words, " 1 had no more thought f changing my condition in life than I had of going to France. I had laid out to visit Chester s grave, tor 1 was afraid the long spell ot dry weather had killed the white rose bush 1 planted by the tomb stone last summer. There I sot medita ting and renecting tor nothing ever passed between Chester and me but what it's pleasant to think over and when I rose up to come home, who should I see in tho path before me but Zekiel Pritchard ! After we had passed the time of day, I thought of course ho would turn down toward his own house, but insteid of that he asked mo to take his arm, and as it was a warm afternoon I made no objection." Hero Mrs. Stepford paused a little and began fingering the fringes of her Can ton crape shawl. " I supposed his attentions was out of sympathy, she resume" ; ' bocause we had both been to visit tn-3 grave of our deceased pardnerg ; and pretty soon the conversation turned on the lonesomeness of a single lot. Well, Zekiel grew kind of cosy and confidential, and told me about his Irish help. It's dreudful to think how good victuals is mussed up and wasted in that house ; and there she is using tho bt st crockery every day, and the Lord only knows how much she steals. All of sudden Zekiel said he thought we was fitted to make each other happy, and go down this vale ot tears arm in arm, or something to that effect. I was bo struck I don't know what I said, but I s'pose r gave the impression I meant yes." Here Mrs. Stepford was quite over come, and Margaret embraced her de lightfully. " Didn't I say he was after you, auntie '(" she cried. "I shall like him ever to much as my uncle. Margaret was in the milk-room when she heard her aunt go about singing, in a cracked soprano, " This is the way I long have sought, Aud mourned bocause I found it sot." A roguish smile still dimpled her face when she looked up and saw Mark's tall, broad-shouldered person tilling the door way. ' Oh, Mark," she exclaimed, " I have wonderful news for you. Aunt Sukey is engaged to Mr. Pritchard. Just think from what a fate that bean-porridge saved mo ! Mark, with his eyes smiling, went for ward and took Margaret's hand the hart one, which was strong enough now to wield the skimmer. " Margaret," said he, " would you think it worth while to take such a poor fellow ag I am if he kept you waiting three years, and could give you nothing better even at the end of thut time than bean- porridge f" Margaret's answer made her lips and eyes eloquent, but was not translatable iu words. If it failed to satisfy Mark Thorpe, he deserved his happiness much loss than 1 think be did. Apple Cobbler. Pare, core, an Hiiro tnrnlva lars-a tart armies t them the juice of two lemons and the p-rahed nni'1 of one: aweefon fn facto stew very slowly for two hours; turn into a mould. When cold, serve with cream. An Old Story Retold. If any one believes that all the stories of the glorious old times of Jackson and Clay campaigns have been used up, he will hnd how easy it is to ba mistaken. Witness the following, which comes to us from Old Kentucky, by the way of Louisiana. Our entertaining friend be gins: " You must know (but we did not know) " that around and about the beau tiful city of Lexington, in the State of Kentucky, for a distance of twelve or fif teen miles, there lives or did live, twen ty years ago a great number of small farmers, who find in that city a ready market for tho surplus produces of their tarmn, and there tbey carry it to sell, and buy finery and nick-nacks for their fami lies. One of these fanners, a poor but industrious and fearless man, had a pork er, a few bushels of meal, potatoes, beans, etc., which ho wished to dispose of; and, borrowing a horse and wagon ho packed up his things, and, just at dusk, get off for town. Arrived at one or two o'clock in the morning, he enter ed the market-house, and selecting a stall, he split the dressed pig into halves, and hung them on the stout hooks, and with a big of meal for a pillow lay down to sleep till morning. Ho slept soundly and late, and when ho awoke the market people were crowding m ; and, lo l one half of his pig had been unhooked, and hooked. It was clean gone 1 He made known his loss, and, raving and swear ing, ho drew the whole crowd about him. Ag he grew warm with his wrath, he said : " ' I know the sort of man that stole that pork I do I' 1 Well, why not let it out, it you know, and we will help hnd turn tor you I they cried out, in reply. " ' Yes, 1 know what sort ot a man no was ; he was a Ulay man r "As old Harry Clay lived within a mile of tho market, and every man here was ready to go to tho death for him, this was a bold speech, to accuse a Clay man of stealing half a pig in Lexington and they closed on him to give him a sound thrashing; when one demanded of him what made him think so. 1 Why, nobody but a Clay man would have done it ; ef he had been a Jackson man he would have gone the whole hog I " This turned the tables. The humor of the robbed farmer was irresistible. The Liexingtomans carried mm on to a coffee-house to a hot breakfast and a morning spree ; and after drinking to the health of Henry Clay, thoy mado up his loss, and sent him home rejoicing. How he Proposed. A story is told of a preacher who lived about torty years ago. lie was a bach elor, and wo could write his real name, but prefer to call him Smith. He resist ed many persuasions to marry, which his friends were constantly making, until ho had reached a tolerably advanced age, and hehimself began to feel the need of, or, at least, to have new ideas of the comfort of being nursed with woman's gentle care. Shortly after entering one of his circuits, a maiden lady, also of ripe vear3, was strongly recommended to him, and liis mends again urged that ne bad better get married, representing that the lady named would probably not refuse to accept him, notwithstanding his re puted eccentricities. "Do you think thor responded tho dominie, for he very perceptibly lisped " then I'll go and thee her. He was a man of his word. His ring at tha door-bell was answered by the servingr-maid. t Ith Mith P within '(" briskly but calmly asked the lover. " i es, Sir. V ill you walk in f " No, I thank you. Be kind enough to thay to Mith P- that I with to thpeak to her a moment. Miss P appeared, and repeated the invitation to walk in. " No, thank you ; I'll thoon explain my buthiness. xm tne new preacuer, I'm unmarried. My friendth think I'd bettor marry. They recommend you for my wife. Have you any objection " Why. really, Mr. Sm " There don't authwer now. Will call thith day week for your reply. Good- day." On that day week he reappeared at tho door f Miss P 's residence. It was promptly op jued by the lady herself. " Walk m, Mr. Buutu." " Can not, ma'am. Have not time, Start on my circuit round m halt an hour. 1th your anthwer ready, ma'am Y " Oh, do walk in, Mr. Smith. "Can't indeod.'ina'aui. Pleath authwer e Yeth or No." " Well, Mr. Smith, it is a very serious matter. I ihould not like to get out oj the eau of rrotulcnee " 1 perfectly vmlerawul you, Mith P . We will be married thith day week. I will call at thith hour. Pleath be ready, ma'am." He called on that day week, at that hour. Sho was ready j they were mar ried, and lived happily several years. Jewels. Waste of wealth is sometimes re trieved ; waste of health, seldom ; but the waste of time, never. True courage is cool aud calm. The bravest of men have the least of brutal, bullying insolence, and in the very time of danger are found the most serene and free. Let us take care how we speak of those who have fallen on life's field. Help them up not heap scorn upon them. We did not see the conflict. We do not know the scars. He who betrays another's secret be cause he hag quarreled with him wag never worthy of the sacred name of friond ; a breach of kindness on one side will not justify a breach of trust on the other. To understand the wor,ld is wiser than to condemn it , to study the world is bet ter than to shun it ; to use the world is nobler than to abuse it; to make tho world better, lovelier and happier is the highest work of man. Systematize your business, and keep an eye on little expenses. Small leaks gink great ships. Died Yesterday. 1 Died yesterday." Who died V Per haps it was a gentle babe one whose laugh wag as the gush of summer rills loitering in tho bower of roses whose littlo life was a perpetual litany, a May time crowned with the passion of flowers that never fade. Or mayhap it wag a youth, hopeful and generous, whose path wag hemmed by flowers, with not a ser pent lurking underneath ; one whose soul panted for communion with the great and good, and reached forth with earnest struggle for the guerdon in the distance. But that heart is still now ; he died yesterday." " Died yesterday." A young girl, pure as the orange-flowers that clasped her forehead, wag stricken down as she stood at the altar; and from the dim aislo of the temple she wos borne to the " garden of the sfumberers." A tall, crowned man, girt with the halo of victory, and at tho day's close, under his oiii vine and fig treo, fell to dust even ag tho an them trembled upon his lips ; and ho, too, was laid " where the rude forefath ers of tho hamlet sleep." An ancient patriarch, bowed with age and cares, even as ha looked out upon the distant hills lor the coming ot the angel host, sank into a dreamless slumber, and on his door-post is written, "Died yester day." "Died yesterday. Daily men, women, and children are passing away, and hourly, in some grave-yard, the soil is flung upon the dead. As often in the morn we find some flower that blushed gweetly in tho sunset has withered up forever ; so daily, when we rise from the bivouac to stand against our posts, we miss gome brether soldier, whoso cheery cry iu the sieges and struggles ot the past has been as lire irom Heaven upon our hearts. Each day gome pearl drops from tho iewel thread of friendship some lyre to which we have been wont to listen hag been hushed forever. But wise is ho who mourns not the pearl and music lost ; for life with him Bhall pass away gently, as an eastern shadow from tho hills, and death be a triumph and gain. Fruits Preserved by Drying. At Vineland, whero over a tract of fifty square miles, with nearly ton thou sand inhabitants, there is not a single groggery or other place where intoxicat ing liquors are sold, and where people go to bed without locking their doors, they have put in practice a method of preserving a considerable part of the abundant iruits, and even some part ot tho roots, which their soil produces, in such a manner that they may be sent to distant climates. The larger iruits are sliced and dried by rapid evaporation, with artificial heat, and the smaller fruits are dried whole. The egg-plant, the apple, the peach, the pear, the tomato, and the sweet potato are sliced in this manner, while the raspberry, the straw berry, tho crape, and even tho cranberry are dried entire. The advantage of such a process in a region whero Buch vast quantities of fruit are produced as In Vineland, is manifest. Most fruits are rapidly perishable in their natural state, and this method, when tho market is over-supplied, projects them into the fallowing soason. At Vineland they are conveyed in loaded wagons, over the smoothest roads that can be imagined, to the drying, or, as it is there called, the dehydrating establishment, and there is no longer any danger of their spoiling on the owner's hands. The vineyards of Vineland at present cover large tracts, and the cultivation extends from year to year. The peach orchards are extensive and produce tho finest of fruit, and the pjar-tree nowhere flourishes better, and nowhere produces fruit of better quality. None of the trees, however, of any gort are older than tho date of this remarka blo colony, the history of which begins in 1801. It is now full of neat houses and productive gardons, bordering broad avenues and streets, planted with shade trees which grow rapidly in the loose soil, and every year it Bends its grapes by tons to the markets of Philadelphia and New York. New Yorl Paper A Novel Duel. Amongst the reminiscences told of the Franco-Prussian war is the account ot a curious duel between two subordinate officers of -the French army. " You intend to fight a duel, eh r" asked the commandant. "Yes, Colonel. Words have passed which can only bo wiped out with blood. We don't want to pass for cowards." " Very well, you shall fight, but it must be in this way : Take your car bines, place yourselves on a line facing tho mansion where the enemy is. You will march upon their garrison with equal step. When sufficiently near their post you will hre upon them. the Prussians will reply. You continue to advance and firo. Wheu one falls the other may turn upon his heels, and his retreat shall bo covered by one' of my companies. In this way," concluded the commandant, " the blood you both de mand will be spilled with profit and glory, aud he who comes back will do so without regret, without the remorse of having killed or wounded, with his own hands, a Frenchman, at a time when France needs all her defenders and all her children. If you both full, who shall say that you are cowards '( 1 may also add that I thug give you an excellent opportunity for putting a couple of tier uiang out of the way a service that will procure for you a good recommendation tor reward and promotion. The matter wag arranged as tho com mandant had dictated. At twenty paces from the walls of Malraaison, one ot the adversaries was wounded, staggered and fell. The other ran to him, raised him up, and carried him away on his shoul ders amid a regular hailstorm of balls both were thenceforth entitled to the greatest honor and respect from the wholo regiment. From the proceedings in the Bolfabt roace Court, it appears tkat about 1,01)0 occupants of Louaes were compelled to change their residences during the late riots. The Superstitions of Sailors. On that eventful night when the five hundred men composing the ship's com pany of the ill-fated steamer Central America were struggling for life with darkness and the billows, an old-time superstition of the sea turned toward them the prow ot the .Norwegian oarit Allen, whose brave crew succeeded m res cuing the survivors of those despairing swimmers. The circumstanceg of the rescue are too fresh in the public mind to need recital at our hands. We will simply quote the wordg of the Norwegian Uaptain, ag to the cause ot his so fortun ate presence upon the scene of disaster and death : " Some time before I saw or hoard you (so he spoke to one of the rescued), the wind hauled and I altered my course a little--thug standing away from the then unknown scene of wreck. Immediately after altering my courgo, a gmall bird flew across the ship twice, and then dart ed at my faco. I took little notice of the circumstance. Again the bird flew around the ship, and again it darted in my face. Thig time I began to regard it as something extraordinary, and while pondering upon the matter, and hesita ting whether to pay attention to the feathered monitor, it appeared for the third time and repeated its extraordinary actions. I immediately put the ship 8 head back to the course we had been or iginally steering, and shortly after we heard noises in the water about us;" which proved to be the shouts of the shipwrecked. The vessel was in their midst. Had she been continued upon her altered course, it is certain that the cries of tho swim meg would have failed to reach the berk, and they would have been in all proba bility lost. Chinese Arithmetic. The Chinese have a most ingenious mode of reckoning by the aid of the fing ers, performing all the operations of ad dition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, with numbers from one up to a hundred thousand. Every finger of tho left hand represents nine figures, as fol lows : The little finger represents units, the ring finger tons, tho middle finger hundreds, tho forefinger thousands, the thumb, tens of thousands. When tho three joints of each finger are touched from tho palm toward the hip.they count one, two, and three of each of the denom inations as above named. Four, five, and six are counted on the back of the finger joints in the same way; seven, eight, and nine are counted on the right side of tho joints, from the palm to the tip. The forefinger of the right hand is used as a pointer. Thus, one thousand two hun dred and thirty-four would be indicated by first touching the joint ot the toro- nnger ; next the hand on the inside ; next the middle joint of the middle fing er on the inside ; next the end joint of tbe rinsr finger on the inside, and finally, the joint of the little finger next the hand on th outside. The reader will be oblo to make further examples for himself. The Liok's Voice. One of tho most triking things connected with the lion is his voice, which is extremely grand and peculiarly striking. It consists at times of a low, deep moaning, repeated hve or six times, ending in taintly aud ible sighs ; at other times he startles tho forest with loud, deep-toned, solemn roars, repeated five or six times in quick succession, each increasing in loudness to the third or fourth, when his voice dies away in five or six low, muffled sounds, very much resembling distant thunder. At times, and not untrequently, a troop may be heard roaring in concert, one assuming the lead, and two, three, or four more regularly taking up their parts, like persons singing a catch. Like our Scottish stags at the rutting season, tuey roar loudest in cold, frosty nights ; but on no occasions are their voices to be heard in Buch perfection, or so intensely powerful, as when two or three Btrango troops of lions approach a fountain to drink at the same time. When this oc curs, every member of each troop sounds a bold roar ot denance at tne opposite parties; and when one roars, all roar together, and each seems to vie with his comrades in the inteusity and power of his voice. DEATH BY Fiue. One. of the most dreadful and appalling deaths is by fire; ond hence the autos da fe of the Inquisi tion still shine with baleful glare amid the numberless atrocities of tho middla es. Still the destruction ot human life by burning is far less terrible in fact than it is to the fancy, ai.d condemna tion to the stake is a rhetorical horror not answered by careful examination. Excruciating and lingering as such a death Beems, it is really brief, aud com paratively exempt from bodily anguish. He who is exposed to fire necessarily in hales the flame, putting an end to sensi bility and the principle ot vitality at once. Persons rescued from burning buildings have been found lifeless, though their bodies had barely been singed ; proving that the slow consuming of flesh, which appears to us so awful and bo agonizing, takes place too late to produce pain. The victim we imagine to be writhing in untold torture, is at that moment beyond tho reach of physi cal harm, beyond the capacity to suffer further. What he Wanted. An exchange tells a very interesting story of a little boy. He wag climbing au apple tree, and when upon the topmost limb he slipped and fell to the ground. He wag picked up aud carried to the house in an insensible condition. After watching by his bedside through many weary hours, big mother perceived signs of returning consciousness. Leaning over him she asked if there wag anything Bhe could do for him, now that he began to feel bet ter 'i Should Bhe bathe liig forehead, or change his pillow, or fan him 'i Was there anything he wanted ? Opening his eyes languidly, and looking at her, the little sufferer gaid : " Yes ; I want a pair of pants with a pocket behind." He got them.