HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher Nil DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. NO. 10. VOL. HI. HIDG WAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUKSDAY,. JUNE 19, 1873. THE FACTORY GIRL. . It was just Ruch a villnge as you seo in pictures. A background of superb bold mountain, nil clothed in blue green cedars, with a torrent thundering down a deep.gorge, and falling in bil lows of foam ; a river reflecting the nznre of the sky ; and a knot of houses, with a church spire at one end, and a thicket of factory chimneys at the other, whose black smoke wrote" ever-changing hieroglyphics against the brilliancy of the sky. This was Dapplevale. And in the rosy sunset of this blossomy June clay, the girls were all pouring out of the broad- door-way, while Gerard Blake, the foreman, sat behind his desk, ft pen behind his ear, and his small beady black ,eyes drawn back, as it were, 4n the shelter of a precipice of shaggy eyebrow. Due by one the girls stopped and re teiveYT 'their pay for the week's work, for this was Saturday night. One by one they filed out, with fretful, dis contented faces, until the last one passed in front of the high-railed desk. She was slight and tall, with largo velvety blue eyes, a complexion as deli cately grained and transparent as rose colored wax, and an abundance of glossy hair of so dark a brown that the casual observer would have pronounced it black ; and there was something in the way" the blue ribbon at her throat was tied, and the manner in which the sim ple details of her dress were arranged, that bespoke her of foreign birth. W ell, Mademoiselle Annette," said Mr. Blake, jocosely nodding, "and how uu you line iactory me r " It is not disagreeable." she ans- wered, a slight accent clinging to her luues, una iragrance to a flower, as sue extended her hand for the money the foreman was counting out. " You have given me but four dol lars," she said. " It was to bo eight by the contract." Mr. Blake shrugged his shoulders disagreeably. "Humph!" cruntcd he: " vou ain't much accustomed to our way of doing things, are you, Mademoiselle ? Eight 01 course: but we deduct two for fee" "A fee! For what?" Mademoiselle Annette demanded, with flushed cheeks tind sparkling eyes. "For getting you the situation, Mademoiselle, to be sure." said Mr. Blake, in a superior sort of way. ns if lie ratner pitied her lack of information. " Such places don't grow on every bush. And folks naturally expect to pay some -thing for the privilege." "I did not!" flashed out Annette Puvelle. "Oh well all rirrlit Tiecnnsn. vrm know, you ain't obliged to stay unless you choose. There's plenty of girls would be glad of the chance of getting into the .Dapplevale Calico Works. "Do you mean," hesitated Annette, "that if 1 do not pay you this money "lou can t expect to stay in the works," said Mr. Blake, easily hitching up his collar. "ies: thats about the plain English of it, Mademoiselle." " But the other two dollars ?" "Oh," said Mr. Blake, "that's a par- centage the girls all pay. " But what is it for ?" Mr. Blake laughed. "Well, it kind o' helps mt salary along. Of course, you know, the girls all expect to pay something every week for keeping their situations in a place where there's so many anxious to get in. lou may consider yourself very fortunate, Mademoiselle Annette, to se cure so desirable a post." All this Mr. Blake uttered, in a slow deliberate way, through his nose. An nette Dnville looked scornfully at him, "And Mr. Elderslie?" " Oh, Mr. Elderslio," repeated Blake. " He hu n t nothing to do with it. run this little machine of the Dapple- . vale (jalico Works. "Mr. Elderslio owns it, I believe?" "Well, yes, he owns it. But I man age everything. Mr. Eldcrslie reposes the utmost confidence in my capacity, ability and and responsibility. Mr. Elderslio is a good business man. He understands his own interest. And now, Mademoiselle, if you've any more questions to ask " , "I have none," said Annette wistful ly. "But I need this money myself. 1 work hard for it. I earn it righteous ly. I cannot afford, any more than the others among these poor laboring girls, to pay it to your greed " "Eh!" ejaculated Mr. Blake, jump ing from his seat as if some noxious in ' sect had stung him. "And I will not pay it," calmly con cluded Mademoiselle Annette. " Very well very well. Just as you can afford, Mademoiselle, "cried the fore man, turning red in the face. " Only if you won't conform to the rules of the Dapplevale Works " "Are these the rules t" scornfully demanded Annette. " Pray consider your name crossed off the books," went on Mr. Blake. " You are no longer in my employ. (7oort-evening, Mademoiselle Whatever-you-may-call-yourself . " And Mr. Blake slammed down the cover of his desk as if it were a patent guillotine, and poor Annette Duvelle's nock were under it. Two or three of the factory girls, who had hovered around the open door to hear the discussion, looked with awe stricken faces at Annette, as she came out with the four dollars which she had received from the cashier in her hand. " You've lost your place, Ma'amselle," whispered Jenny Purple, a pale, dark eyed little .thing, who supported a crip- Eled mother and two little sisters out of er mulcted earnings. " And he'll never let you in again," added Mary Rice. "He's as vindic tive as as the old Evil One himself." "It matters not," said Annettee. "He is a rogue, and rogues sometimes out general themselves." " But you can't starve," said Jenny. "Look here, ma'amselle, come home with me. It's a poor place, but we'll make you welcome till till you can write to your friends." Annette turned and impulsively kissed Jenny on her lips. ' " I thank you," she said ; "but I do not need your kindness. My friends are . nearer than you think." And Annette Du veils went back to the little red brick cottage, all thatched with the growth of woodbine and truin-pet-creeper, where she lodged with the wife of the man who tended the engines in the Dapplevale Works. "Does he cheat you too of your money ?" she asked, when Simon Pet tengill came home, smoke-stained and grimy, to cat his supper. "One-sixth 1 pays to mm, said Simon, with an involuntary groan, as he looked at the five little ones around his board. " Yes, Miss, he's a villain, but the world is full o' sich. And I finds it a pretty middlin' hard world to get nlong with. Mr. Eldcrslie never comes here, or may be things would be bit different. Mr. lildcrslio lives in Paris, they say." . " He is in this country now," said Annette. " I intend to write to him." Simon Pettengill shrugged his shoul ders. " T won't do no good, Miss, said he. " Yes, it will," said Annette, quietly. The petals of the June roses had fallen, a pink enrpet all along the edge of the woods, and the long July days had come, epics of sunshine, jewelled at either end by dew and moonlight. And the Dapplevale Works wore their holiday guise, even down to Simon Pettengill's newly-brightened steam engine, for Mr. Eldcrslie and his bride were to visit the works on their wedding tour. " It's a pity Ma'amselle Annette went away so soon," said Simon to his assist ant ; " 'cause they say the master's kind hearted in the main, and she might ha' spoke up for herself. " Mr. Gerald Blake, in his best broad cloth suit, and mustache newly dyed, stood smiling in the broad doorway, as the carriage drove up to the door, and Mr. Eldcrslie, a handsome blonde browed man, sprung out, and assisted a young lady, in a dove-colored traveling suit, to alight. "Blake, how are you ?" he said, with the careleFsneF of conscious superiori ty. " Annette, my love, this is Blake, my foremau." " Mademoiselle Annette !" And Mr. Gerald Blake found himself cringing before theslight French girl he had turned from the factory door a mouth before. " I must beg to look at the books, Blake," said Eldcrslie, authoritatively. " My wife tells me some strange stories about the way things are managed here, It became so notorious that the rumors reachedher evenatBlythesdale Springs, and she chose to come and see for her self. Annette, my darling, the best wedding gift we can make to these poor working girls is a new foreman. Blake, you may consider yourself dis missed." " But. sir" " Not another word," cried Elderslie, with lowering brow ; and Mr. Gerald Bioko crept away, with an uncomforta ble consciousness of Annette's scornful blue eyes following him. Elderslie turned to his wife. " You were right, my love," said he. " The man's face is sufficient evidence against him." And a new reign began for poor Jenny Purple and the working girls, as well as for Simon 1'ettengill. And Annette never regretted her week's apprenticeship in the Dapplevale (Jalico Works. .cagcr. " Catching on Behind." " Catching on behind " is the crown iug enjoyment now for boys. Johnny comes home at night surfeited with fun ; he has had a good time, but he is tired. His nose is split open at one end, and one of his teeth is gone, and ho has lumps on the back of his head but he has had a good time, and he has come home to hear his mother read about Joseph and his brethren, and rub him with liniment. There is huge fun in catching on be hind, but it requires a great deal of adroitness and decision. The success ful lad is he who is never looking for a ride. He stands with his hands in his pockets, actively devouring the scenery with one eye, while the other is prowl ing around under oover on the lookout for a good chance. And when it comes ho pounces down on the cornice of the sleigh in such a manner as to cover the most tender parts of himself in case he has fallen on a Philistine. The solici tude wit h which a boy shields his tender parts will bring tears to the eyes of tax collector. But he always gets on the sleigh, and gets off, too, when urged by a long whip-lash j and when he gets off he rolls liimseif in a lump and mere- ly lets go, and the fate that always pro tects boys sees that he bounds into safety. Wood sleighs, with long, strong stakes to eaten hold of, are Uodsends. but a box sleigh, with a place for two to sit on and make faces at rivals, who are breaking down their legs and lungs in a vain attempt to catch up, is not to be despised. Laughing Children. Give me (says a writer) the boy or girl who smiles as soon as the first rays of the morning sun glance in through the window, gay, happy, and kind. Such a boy will be fit to "make up'! into a man at least when contrasted with a sullen, morose, crabbed fellow, who snaps and snarls like a surly cur or growls and grunts like an untamed hyena, from the moment he opens his angry eyes till he is " confronted " by his breakfast. Such a girl, other things being favorable, will be good material to aid in gladdening some comfortable home, or to refine, civilize, tame, and humanize a rude brother, making him gentle, affectionate, and lovable. It is a feast to even look at such a joy-inspiring girl, such a woman girl, and see the smiles flowing, so to speak, from the parted lipes, displaying a set of clean well-brushed teeth, looking almost the personification of beauty and goodness, singing, and as merry as the birds the wide awake birds that commenced their morning concert long before the lazy boys dreamed that the sun was ap proaching, and about to pour a whole flood of light and warmth upon the earth. Such a girl is like a gentle shower to the parched earth, bestowing kind words, sweet smiles, and acts of mercy to all around her the joy and light of the household. Women in Florida make from $18 to $23 a week braiding palmetto hats. A Varied Career. I man died in Worcester, Mass., a few days ago, a Springfield paper says, whose career is a strange illustration of the power of strong drink to ruin man hood. Twelve years ago he was a law yer in Connecticut, then twenty-four years old, of marked ability anil fine promise. Entering the army, he served with distinction, rising to the command of his regiment. Becoming addicted to the use of intoxicants, he sank to the level of a common drunkard, and in 18G5 was allowed to resign to escape disgrace. While intoxicated in one of the low dens of New York, one night, he was "shanghaed" aboard of a China bark, which sailed the next morning for Bombay. The vessel was wrecked in St. Helena Bay, on the west coast of Africa, and all but nine of the crew lost. The remainder made their way to Cape Town, where the ex-soldier commenced a prolonged debauch. He was finally arrested, imprisoned, and at last hired by the authorities to a Dutch farmer, by whom, in company with several Hot tentots, he was employed in tending cattle. After a brief experience of this kind of life, he escaped and shipped on small vessel bound through, the Straits of Madagascar on a tradiug voy age. Becoming dissatisfied, however, he again deserted, and penetrating to the interior of the island, lived some timo among the natives. He was allowed to become a settler, had half a dozen wives, and was for a time considered as one of the people ; but finally becoming unpopular, and hearing that he was to be murdered, he secretly departed at night. After almost incredible suffer ings, he reached the coast and put to sea in an open boat, intending to reach the main-land. He was picked up by a vessel bound lor uape xown ana carrieu back. There he shipped for Singapore, and, after wandering in China and Japan for several years, hnally reached ban Francisco. All this time his habit of drinking had maintained its ascenden cy, and had sufficed to counteract the stimulus which liis adventures might otherwise have given a bold, daring spirit. He was physically and mentally broken down, and incapable of further effort. He remained in San Francisco virtually a beggar until about a year ago, when he appeared in Jiilizabeth, JN J., as bar-tender at a drinking saloon of the lowest class. A few months since, a relative, hearing that he had fallen sick, and was without friends or means of support, went to New Jersey and brought him to Worcester, where he passed his last days. Wringing Jokes from a Broken Heart "Mamma begs you to bo funny," was, says the Jjondon Jcio, a sum ciently uncomfortable message for a gentleman to receive at an evening par ty, after having dined luxuriously on his dozen courses at the mamma s house, But to be obliged to be " funny" on an empty stomach, to be " comic for the entertainment of a public house audi ence, when in a state of starvation, is one of the cruelest ironies of Fate of which we have ever heard. A poor fel low named David Haslara, aged fifty- two, has expired at Sal ford under the trial, and the verdict of the coroner s jury is " Death from natural causes, ac celerated by want of medical attendance and of the proper necessaries of life. The man's son and three younger mem bers of the family, all " unfit to work,' lived together in a poor room, for which they paid 3s. 2d. a week, and, as usual, there is a history of an appeal to the Infirmary, and no notice taken till " the deceased became worse on Thursday, and died on Saturday afternoon." For three weeks he had failed to earn' any thing by his grim efforts to bo " comic which usually brought him a magnifi cent income of from 2s. to 3s. a week and then he took to his bed for a fort night, and with a little sage and tea brought by a charitable neighbor, passed quietly down the last slope and out at the door, which leads let. us trust to a world where there is no need to be "comic." Of all the ghastly touches which enter into the picture of our civ ilization, we know few s blood-chilling as the presentment of a figure singing vulgar, hilarious ditties at the door of a gin palace, iust a few days off from ac tually dying for want of the necessaries of lite ! Hindoo Social Law. A very important case has been de cided by a full bench of the High Court, at Calcutta. The question whether a Hindoo widow, who succeeds to her husband's estate, forfeits the property by subsequent unchastity, has long formed a subject of controversy, it complicated in India by the prohibition of widow - remarriago, and it really amounts to whether a Hindoo widow shall or shall not be condemned to life of celibacy, on pain of deprivation of her estate. The cause came on before Christmas, and after a protracted in quiry, with five days' argument before all the judges, seven of them, including the Chief Justice, held that unchastily does not involve forfeiture, while three of them, including the Hindoo Judge o: the High Court, held that it did. The decision is in accord with the views of the rising generation in Bengal ; but the point lorms only one of a group of social questions in native life which sooner or later must come before the Legislature. The British Government has pledged itself to be guided in such matters by Hindoo law and custom but the 'ancient law and customs of India are ceasing to represent the faots of native society in Bengal. Treating, A teetotal orator recently delivered himseir as follows: ".Now, boys, if you want to be generous and treat each other, why not select some other place beside the liquor shop Sunnose. as vou cro past the post-office you Bay, I say, my dear fellow, come in and take some stamps.' The stamps will cost you no more than drinks all round. Or go to the haberdasher's and say, ' Boys, come in and take a box of collars. ' Walk up to a grocer's, free and generous, and say, What kind of coffee will you have ?' Why not treat to gro ceries by the pound, as well as liquor by the glass? Or take your comrades to a cutler's, and say, ' I'll stand a good pocket-kail e all round. Beccher's Notable Sermon. Henry Ward Beeeher Svrnrlaes hit Con. ftregatlon "Y a sermon out or the Church Tenets. n1!, (fllnTOJurt 4a ft flvnortnia of t.liA - ' , " I sermon of Henry Ward Beeeher, in his Brooklyn church, and which created so profound a sensation : "For the former things are passed away." Rev. xxi. 4. This was the summation, Mr. Beeeher said ; the particulars were given before. He would read from the first verse to the text. It was as though the voice had said, " In this world men experi ence sorrow and trial. Their hopes are disappointments, their aspirations fail-, ures. But there comes a world in the future in which all this the former things shall have passed away forever. " This beautiful day was a good day to talk about heaven. There was no stir the air, no storm on the water. All things were beautiful and Btill. The air was full of odors, distilled from the white alembics of the flowers. It re minded one of the rest that remained for the people of God. liet them consider tue transition oy which they should rise into that other state of existence. Did souls pass im mediately into blessedness after they quitted this state ? Or did they lie, as the Jews believed, in a vast receptacle awaiting the last day ? The New Testa ment was not clear on the subject, but by implication its teaching was that they rose at once into the divine pres ence. No allusion was made by Paul to an interval or dormant state, and yet he made constant reference to the con dition of men after death. He never intimated that the soul took a sort of unconscious vacation, awaiting a general nieatherinfir to the spiritual sphere, Nor did such an idea address itself to any human instinct which desired it to bo true. Paul's doctrine was, "Absent from the body, present with the Lord. Out of this, into that, mere was a spriner of immediateism in his doctrine. If there was a great slumberous interval after death, why was there no hint of it in the Word of God ? Mr. Beeeher did not affirm with arrogant positiveness that this doctrine was true and none other, but he thought that scripture warranted the presumption that they had a rieht to believe so. This doctrine, Mr. needier said, did not exclude the idea of progress. They had the testimony of Christ in Matthew's gospel. Among the Jews, in order that a woman's right of property might not go out of the tribe, it was possible for her to marry all the men of a household (jurist was asKeu wnose who sucn an one should be in the next world. Christ said. " Ye do err. not knowing the scriptures, nor the power of God. For in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God." Men in the next world were to bo as the angels. There was progress. They were not to propa gate, not to frame themselves into little companies as on earth. The family re lation there was to be different. The passions which continue the race, hun ger and thirst which prompt to bodily nourishment, the combative powers requisite for protection here, Vero not required in the future state ; why, then, need men possess these powers or pas sions or longings when they had left behind them the conditions which re quired them ? When we left the body, we should leave behind us many burnt out passions. In the other life, too, our minds would be disabused of many functions which it was needful for them to have here. We should not carry our earthly bodies into the other life, yet we should have spiritual bodies which would iden tify us one from the other. The souls that emerged from death into heaven would range along an extended scale There would be a system of progress, Those souls that were low in spiritual culture in this life would be low down the ssale in the next. Each soul would begin with the capital acquired in this life. Those who had one talent would be far below those who had five. Each one would possess, as it were, a specific gravity in the other, and would rest ac cordingly. But scripture justified the belief that all would be as happy as they could bear. -I hey would develop, however, with a rapidity of which we could form no conception. Children who entered the next life as children would rise and develop more swiftly than on earth. Men of low culture here would there grow with wondrous rapid ity, so that the lowest and least would speedily outgrow all this world s stand ards. Take away from man all that be longed to his lower nature, and giv him in force all that pertained to his higher nature, and then you might con ceive of the aptitude with which he would receive the lessons of the other, He would be in a society, too, where all would move with one intent the evil gone, the temptation diopped out; moved together, like the Gulf Stream, mightily, irresistibly. There would be also the direct influence of God how mighty the influence, how noble the jy I We might thus see, said Mr. Beeeher, how men who, when they died, were not very fit for heaven, and heaven might develop what earth never would have developed. Sometimes when opening up a long disused well men found a few old seeds at the bottom. They had lain there for years. There was no sign of life about them. They were brought to the light, however, and the sun shone upon them. They began to grow and sprout, and soon became healthy, vigor ous plants. One might conceive people here unfitted by force of animal pas sions for a spiritual life, who, neverthe less, when death took away what was their bane on earth, might bepin a new life in a future state. Some represented a man as taking into the next world the nature, the disposition he had in this. How could we conceive a man's taking all his sensual, rude, inchoate nature into the other life ? He did not take it with him. Men grew as straw. We could conceive a germ which when freed from the chaff and bettered, nur tured, and educated, and glowed on by' the sun of God's love would open up and grow and flourish. On earth, all through much sin and darkness it lived and grew some at times. But, with a thousand hindrances shredded off, we could understand how men whom soci ety rejects now, may get standing room in heaven, not high up, but a starting pint? e. If heaven was so rigidly pure, then death must be a great sifter. Look at the saint of years. How imperfect, how deficient, how very far down he is. What man ever walked to the gate of heaven, and had the angel lay on him that scale, and say, " Enter, because thou art pure ?" Not one, though he may have been washed by floods of tears,-and sifted by years oi trial, ana ennobled by acts of heroism. No J heaven was opened by grace by grace only, by Love. God lets in whom he would, and we didn't know his gauge. Some might say. " Is it safe to hold such views as these ?" What right had they to challenge God ? He said, " I will have mercy on whom I will. God refused to be questioned on his gener osity. If the best went not into heaven because he earned it, but because oi tne act of great love, why might not the bottomest go in too ? So long as a man possessed a atate of mind that was im provable there was a chance for him, and the preacher did not believe God would cast him away. Mr. Beeeher did not believe there was a person on the face of the earth who had heard the Gospel and in whose soul there was any thing improvable who would not find an entrance into heaven low down, it might be, but the lowest place there was infinitely better than the highest here. We sow a ragged lad in the street, unkempt, untaught, rude, grovelling. Our Christian sympathy was touched, Imitating Christ, we set to work to transform him, and in course of time we had the satisfaction to see him grow up and develop into a man of intelligence, worth, and piety. All this was done by our only imitating the spirit of Christ, And should we be able to perform more than the infinite love and tenderness of the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ? If any perished, it was the perishing of the beast destruction, Down iu the South one could see slaves seventy years of age sitting over their books learning A, B, C. And in the other life we should see slaves of sin sitting in heaven learning the alphabet. Better to start at the bottom of heaven than not at all. How many persons were there, Mr, Beeeher said, who lived in perpetual sorrow, and went mourning day and night because their son a young man had died without giving evideuce of a savinsr change. "I ye lost him for ever." they sav. " I don't know how it is with you," said Mr. Beeeher, with the. tears choking his voice, " but my sun would go out and leave all dark if thought such a thing. The dropping away of a child to join that procession to enter that life of infinite misery ! Every loving parent would be willing to sav. ' Would God I were accursed from Christ to save thee, my son !' Where there is a germ of good in it, I don't be lieve a soul is going to be thrust away by that hand that was pierced. 1 don i believe that that love which was shown in Christ is going to throw away one soul with a germ of good in it. And so I hope I hope." This subiect ought to comfort those unable in this world to resist tempta tion. vet desiring to do so. There was hope for them in the future, though there seemed none now. His passions died out. Many a man calling himself a sinner had that in him worth saving, which might have given him a place not high up but still place to grow in heaven. Let us, then, go to our daily busi ness, believing that there was a germ God would not let die out unless w ruthlessly trod it under foot and put it out. Let us remember that if we bore up to the throne of God notthatwhich was perfect, but what was worth plant ing not one germ would liod throw away. Let us not think that by any mystic sorcery or secretchange we could become" heirs of heaven. There was warning for the over confident, as well as comfort for the imperfect and simple A short prayer and a hymn closed the service. Mr. Beeeher spoke with great power, and the audience were affected to tears repeatedly. At the close, a lady who had listened with deep emotion to the discourse, stood up and said aloud to the preacher with streaming eyes, " God bless you, sir, for that noble ser mon." Carried Her Point. San Francisco has witnessed a scene which has created much fun, but more profanity in every post-office in the United States. " A female argonaut of fearful vitality," we read in the San Francisco Bulletin, " a tall and ex tremely ugly female, called at the post officef, tendered ninety-nine coppers to the urbane clerk, and asked in lieu thereof three-cent stamps. The official remarked that he could only receive four coppers as a legal tender, and at the expense of a deal of precious time endeavored to convince the female that he was guided by certain rules, and had no latitude in the matter. ne waxed wroth, and remarked that when, in the course of human events, it became ap parent that United States coin was to be refused by a United States official, she tlwuight her forefathers had died in vain, and considered it her duty to bring the Government to account. Then she paced tho corridor of the post-ofiice until she had made thirty-three separate tenders of the coppers and obtained thirty-three three cent stamps. During her transactions with the clerk she gave him much unsolicited advice, and other wise contributed to the enjoyment of a little kuot of spectators. The clerk acted the gentleman throughout." Double Eogs. Tltere is a hen in Utica of a modest and lowly turn of mind. Conscious of her inability to competo with some of her sisters in different parts of the country that have been laying eggs as large of these of the ostrich, the Utica fowl has 6ought celebrity for delicate elegance by pro ducing eggs of about the size of hot house grapes. She has indeed gone a little further than this in the pursuit of novelty. Into the little eggs she puts no yolks, so that her productions are more curious than valuable. Asiatio cholera has appeared in two Tillages of West Prussia, Capturing a Bank. A darinor and remarkable robbery was perpetrated at the bank at St. Gene vieve, Mo., recently. In the morning the cashier of the bank was standing on tho steps of the building conversing, when two strangers walked briskly up the steps, passing between them, and entered the office. The cashier, sup posing that thev wished to transact some business, followed them into the room, and passinsr them near the mid dle of the counter, which he mtenoeu to step behind, was suddenly arrested by a sharp " Halt!'.' and turning, found revolver almost touching ins iieaa. The ruffian who presented the weapon quickly informed him that a movement would cost him his life, and the cashier, being convinced that such was the case, prudently stood still. In the meantime tne accomplice rus li ed toward a young man present, at the same time drawing a pistol and threat ening him with instant death if he moved. The young man, seeing the intention of the scoundrels, bounded down the steps and toward the more densely populated portion of the town, with the intention of giving the alarm. He had scarcely reached the ground, however, when robber No. 2 fired at him. The bullet passed under the shoulder of young Eozier s coat, plough ing a furrow through the skin and flesh, but not injuring tho bones. The yonng man felt that he was hit, but re doubled his speed and was soon beyond pistol shot range. Robber No. 2, find ing that his intended victim had es caped, immediately rejoined his com panion, and placed his pistol at the head of tho colored porter, who at that moment appeared. The cashier was ordered at once to unlock the safe, and knowing that a refusal would result ill his immediate death, complied with the order. The robbers then hastily seized all the monev thev could find, toeether with a tin box belonging to the sheriff of the county, and containing ?1UU in gold, a number of notes and some valuable papers. The greater portion of the money in the safe was in bills of a comparatively, small denomination, and although the ruffians evidently thought they had secured a very large amount, they in reality got only about 83.500. After pocketing tho money they placed the cashier between them, and locking the porter in the bank, walked toward the outskirts of the town. When they had proceeded about two hundred and fiftv vards thev met two confed erates on liorseback who led two other horses. As they neared the two horse men, one of the led animals took fright and broke away. One of the horsemen went in pursuit, and seeing another man on horseback approaching, drew his pistol and threatened to shoot him if he did not stop the runaway. The horseman, a German living in the vi cinity, managed to head oft' and secure the runaway, and the four robbers quickly got together on the road. The cashier, who had iu the mean time been a close prisoner, was then ordered to leave as scon as his two captors were mounted, and finding him self at liberty, turned toward the town, An ominous click, click, caused him to jump quickly to one side in time to avoid a pistol ball, and, by lively dodging, he succeeded in escaping three more shots fired at him. One of the ruffians seemed inclined to pursue him on horseback, and kill him, but was dissauded by his comrades, and all four started oil at a hard gallop. In the meantime young Rozier had alarmed the town, and fifteen minutes after the gang took their departure ten or a dozen mounted men, armed with double guns, loaded with buck-shot, were in Lot pursuit. The cashier, who, while in the road had also been stripped of his gold watch, chain, and a small amount money, immediately started for St, Louis to consult with Chief McDonough He met the Chief and told him the story substantially as eriven above. The robbers were superbly mounted but their horses were somewhat jaded It is believed that they intended reach Perryville and the Arkansas line, and from there get into the mountains but if such was their intention it is al most certain that the pursuing party will overtake them. The particulars of the daring bonk robbery in Missouri will recall the striking similar burglary of the JianK of Columbia, Ky., which occurred about twelve months ago. Four or five armed desperadoes entered the bank in broad daylight, forced the cashier to open the safe, and deterred interference from citizens by shooting at every person who appeared upon the streets, and finally made their escape unmolested after murdering the cashier in cold blood. These men were never cap tured ; and the circumstance's of the at tack upon the bank at St. Genevieve, are so extraordinarily alike in every de tail except the murder to the tragedy at Columbia, as to suggest its being the work of the same desperate scoundrels. Fashionablo Dress. Says the Loudon Echo : "A corres pondent notices, among the arcaua of fashionable dress, a fact which, if duly pondered by those of its wearers whose means do not justify a large outlay to secure extreme originality of attire, may produce considerable revolution iu the mode of obtaining those exquisite toilcttca which at this moment rival the flowers of May in variety and freshness. The ready-made costumes sold in large shops frequently cost about the same sum as those made by a reasonable dressmaker, whose materials are sup plied by her customer. This circum stance recalls the anecdote of a provin cial, who, having given a famous Pari sian tailor some home-spun cloth to make up into a coat, was surprised to find that his bill came to the same amount as that of a customer whose suit had been made of the tailor's own stuff. You will observe, sir,' said the artiste in broadcloth, in reply to his remon strance, 'that nothing is charged- in this establishment for materials. Customers pay only for my name.'" An Iowa justice, with rightful claim to the title, has fined a man $5 for snatching a paper from a newsboy, Items of Interest. A boy eleven years old, in Detroit, feigns death so perfectly that only ex perts can discover signs of life, Writers of indecent matter on postal cards are subject to a fine of not less than $100, nor more than $5, 000 for each offence. ; . v.cinn Mffltnon sense now go hand-in-hand as regards feminine foot the broader the sole, the more stylish the boot. -.': A tipw fabric, made of woven glass, has been invented for ladies' dress ma terial. It can't be stained, and is in combustible, i Mayor Stokley, of Philadelphia, has given orders that the law prohibiting the sale of oysters in that city in the months of June; July, and August be strictly enforced. It is asserted that tho body of a wo- man, wno was ourneu iu ngim.. days ago, was entirely consumed, even to the bones, but that the heart re mained intact, and was scarcely charred at all. Three hundred thousand dollars worth of the bonds stolen from the Waterford, N. Y., Bank, some.time ago, have been returned by the thieves, who have received thirty-five per cent, and immunity from punishment for their trouble. A man and his wife are reported to have died recently, near the ltoane Mountain, in Carter county, Tenn., from using milk, said to have been rendered poisonous by the cows eating grass on which vapors impregnated with arsenic had settled. An old ladv. three hundred and ninety-one years old, lately walked two hundred Iowa miles in one day, chopped ten cords of wood, dug fifty bushels of potatoes, and then danced all night. This is told in an euon to quiet mo Cleveland Herald. Several Irishmen were disputing one day about the'invincibility of their re spective persons, when one of them re marked, " Faith, I'm a brick." " And indade I'm a bricklayer," said another, giving the first speaker a blow that brought him to tho ground. Senator Scott was talking to a Penn sylvania Sunday-school, and asked tho scholars why imon was Kept in prison. One of the teachers quietly prompted a boy to say that it was for a hostage, and the youth, not quite catching the words, piped out: "lie was detameu ior post age." They have a business-like method of procedure in Kansas. In the midst of the excitement caused by the discovery of the terrible Bender murders, a smmi board was put up near one of the graves, announcing that the deserted iseiuier claim had been preempted by another Bettler. There is a young ladv on Fifth avenue, Now York, who is puzzling all her ac quaintances as to how she colors her hair. She changes its color every other day ; one day it will be auburn, another brown, another golden, another jet black. How on earth she does it we dan't know, but she does. While Zachary Kehoo was appeasing his appetite at a St. Louis restaurant, a day or two ago, the tail stooi upon which he was perched suddenly gave way, and in the fall he broke his arm. He asserts that the tiling was nxeu up to break, as a practical joke, and de mands $1,500 damages for his injuries, and his interrupted collation. The Milford (Del.) News has discov ered a new enemy to the peaches, it being a sort of weei', which, under tho glass, bears strong resemblance in color, shape, and motion to the black heart-worm of corn, though, unlike that, it can suspend itself by a web. It is thought it is hatched outside of tho bud, eats its way in, and then speedily departs. A Boston writer says that men do not kill themselves so much by overwork as by inattention to the common laws of health. They eat at improper hours, they do not exercise, they neglect tho prime essential sleep, they break down, and overwork gets tho blame. A man is like an engine ; ho will stand a certain amount of high pressure, and no more. Half the quarrels and litigations in the R-orld are caused by bad digestion ; and we think he is pretty nearly correct. How It Is Done. They tell the story of a captain of a North Biver bout, who was something of a wag in his way. A committee of the New York Legislature was on the captain's boat making a tour of inspec tion, and one of the members, who knew the captain of old, attempted to extract amusement for himseu ana ins luiiow memhers bv rallvincr the captain on his preach ing, as it was reported that he sometimes indulged in tnai exercise. " O ! said the captain, "l ve taken to the law lately." H.m,ln ' Tint, born admitted ?" Captain " Yes. regular : passed my examination in open court." . Senator" And answered all tne questions fair and square, captain ?" Captain " All out one. Senator " And what was that?" Captain " I don't like to tell ; it may hurt your feelings, and some of the gen tlemen here may be offended." All " U no ; out wua u ; wnat was it? Let's hear." Captain "Well, the judge asked me and I couldn't tell ' How can a man go to the Legislature, get three dollars a day, pay five dollars a day for his board, and lay up money ?' " The committee gave the captain a round of applause, and invited him to supper that night, which he positively declined. Nicotine ra Tobacco-Smoke. Exper iments, by Dr. Heubel, do not confirm the alleged absence of nicotine from tobacco smoke ; on the contrary, by condensing snioke from cigars, and washing it in water and alcohol, he ob tained a solution which was capable of Eroducing the effects of nicotine ; and e also detected its presence, chemical ly, in the form of the salts more perma nent at high temperatures. The effect of smoking, he concludes, must there fore be ascribed, in part at least, to the absorption of nicotine, though other substances may act vitb this poison.