t HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. YOL. III. 1UDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA THURSDAY. AUGUST 28, 1873. NO. 2G. A Rational Song for Canaan, The Toronto Globe thinks Canada needs some simple potriotio lyrio to identify -with her progress and aspira tions, and that iu the new andiinproved version of the song, "This Canada of Ours," this want is supplied. It soys : " The words are by Mr. J. D. Edgar, M. P., and the music is adapted and ar ranged by Miss E. II. Kidout, based upon the air of the famous Netherlands Students' song. The woids carried off the prize offered in Montreal, in 18C8, for the best Canadian national song, and possesses both the vigor and simplicity that are essential to permanent popu larity. The air, too, is inspiriting and simple, and in the chorus swells into a strain of heart-stirring music." This is the song : Let other tongues, In older lands, Loud vauut their claims to glory, And chant in triumph of the past, Content to live in story t Tho' boasting no baronial halls, Nor ivy-cvested towers, What past can match thy glorious youth, Fair Canada of Ours ? Fair Canada, Doar Canada,. This Canada of Ours ! We love those far oft Ocean Isles, Where Britain's monarch reigns, We'll ne'er forget the good old blood That courses through our veins ; Troud Scotia's fame, old Erin's name, And haughty Albion's powers Reflect their matchless luster on This Canada of Ours. Fair Canada, Dear Canada, This Canada of Ours. May our Dominion flourish then, A goodly land and free, Where Celt and Saxon, hand in hand, Hold sway from Sea to Sea j Strong arms shall guard our cheriscd homo When darkest danger lowers, And with our life-blood we'll defend This Canada of Ours ! Fair Canada, Dear Canada, This Canada of Ours! THE FUCHSIA'S HISTORY. Soft midsummer air cheery with sun shine and perfumed with all the scents that it had robbed out of his nursery garden, crept in through the monthly roses at the porch and the half-open cot tage door, to make itself at homo in George Swayne's room. It busied it self there, sweeping and rustling about as if it had as much right to the place, and was as much the tenant of it, as the gardener himself. It had also a sort of feminine and wifely claim on George ; who, having been spending half an hour over a short letter written upon n large sheet, was invited by the midsummer air to look after his garden. The best efforts were being made by his gentle friend to tear the paper from his hand. A bee had come into the room George kept bees and had been hovering about the letter ; so drunk, possibly, with honey that he had mistaken it for a great lily. Certainly he did at hist set tle upon it. The lily was a legal docu ment to this effect: " Sir: We are instructed hereby to give you notice of the death of Mr. Thomas Qneeks, of Edmonton, the last of the three lives for which your lease was granted, and to inform you that you may obtain a renewal of the same on payment of one hundred guineas to the undersigned. We are, sir, " Your (here tho bee sat on the obedi ent servants), Flint and Geidston. " Mr. Swayne granted himself a rule to consider in his own mind what tho law yers meant by th-jiruncertam phraseolo gy. It did not mean, he concluded, that Messrs. F. and G. were willing, for one hundred" guineas, to renew the life of Mr. Queeks, of Edmonton ; but it did mean that he must turn out of the house and grounds (which had been Swayne's Nursery Garden for three generations past) unless he would pay a large fine for the renewal of his lease. He. was but a young fellow of five-and-twenty ; who, until recently, had been at work for the support of an old father and mother. His mother had been dead a twelvemonth last midsummer day ; and his father, who had been well while his dame was with him, sickened after she was gone, and died before the apple gathering was over. The cottage and the garden were more precious to George as a home than as a place of business. There were theughts of part ing like thoughts of ouother loss by death, or of all past losses again to be Buffered freshly and together which so clouded the eyes of Mr. Swayne, that at last he could hardly tell when he looked at the letter, whether the bee was or was not a portion of the writing. An old woman came, with a midsum mer cough, Bounding as hollow as an empty coffin. She was a poor old crone who came to do for George small ser vices as a domestio for an hour or two every day; for he lighted his own fires, and served up to himself, in the first style of cottage cookery, his own fat bacon and potatoes. "I shall be out for three hours Milly," said George, and he put on his best clothes and went into the sunshine. "I can do nothing better," he thought, "than go and see the lawyers." ' They lived in the city; George lived at the east end, in a part now covered with very dirty streets; but then covered with copse ana field, and by Swayne's old-fashioned nusery-ground ; then crowded with stocks and wallflowers, lupins, sweet peas, pinks, lavender, heartsease, boy's love, old-man, and oth er old-fashioned plants; for it contained nothing so tremendous as Sehizanthu BU8, Escholzias, or Clarkia pulchellas, which are weedy little atomies, though they sound big enough to rival any tree on lebanon. George was an out-lash' ioned gardener in an old-fashioned time; for we have here to do with events which occurred in the middle of the reign of George the third. George, then I mean George Swayne, not Georgius Hex marched on to see the lawyers, who lived in a dark court in the city. He found their clerk in the front office, with a. marie-old in one of his button holes; but there was nothing else that looked like summer in the place. It smelt like a moldv. shut-up tool-house; ud tier was parchment enough in it to make scarecrows for all the gardens in Kent, Middlesex and Surrey. George saw the junior partner, Mr. Grinston, who told him, when he heard his business, that it was in Mr. Flint's department. When he was shown into Mr. Flint's loom, Mr. Flint could only repeat, he said, the instructions of ' the landlord. "You see, my lad," he said, "these holdings that have been let hitherto for thirty pounds per annum, and now worth fifty. Yet my client, Mr. Crote, is ready to renew the lease for three more lives at tho very slight fine we have named to you. What would you have more reasonable ?" " Sir, I make no complaint," George answered; " only I want to abide by the ground, and I have not so much money as you require. I owe nobody a penny; and to pay my way and lay by enough money for next year's seeds and roots has been the most that I can manage. I have saved fifteen pounds. Here it is, sir; take it, if it will help me in this business." " Well," Mr. Flint suggested, " what de yon say to this ? I make no promise, but 1 think 1 can persuade Air. Crote to let you retain possession of your land, lor snail we say 7 two years, at tne rent of fifty pounds; and, at the expira tion of that term, you may perhaps be able to pay the fine and to renew your lease." . -.- "I will accept that offer, sir." A homespun man clings to the walls of home. Swavne's nursery would not support so high a rental; but let the future take thought for itself to post pone for two years the doom to quit the roof-tree under which his mother suckled him was gain enough for George. So ho turned homeward nnd went cheerfully upon his way, by a short cut through narrow streets and lanes that bordered on the Thames. His garden er's eye discovered all the lonely little pots of mignonnette in the upper win dows of the tottering old houses; and, in the trimmer streets, where there were rows of little houses in all shades of whitewash, some quite fresh looking, inhabited by people who had kept their windows clean, he sometimes saw as many as four flower-pots upon a win dow sill. Then, there were the squares of turf, put in weekly installments of six inches, to the credit of caged larkt, for the slow liquidation of the debt of green fields duo to them. There were also parrots; for a large number of the houses in those river streets were ten anted by sailors who brought birds from abroad. There were also all sorts of grotesque shells; and one house that receded from its neighbors had a smnll garden iu front which was sown over with shells instead of flowers. The walks were bordered with shells instead of box, and there were couchs upon the wall instead of wall-flowers. Tho summer-house was 11 grotto; but the great center ornament was a large figure head, at the foot of which there was a bench erected, so that the owner sat under its shadow. It represented a mnu with a grei.t beard, holding over his shoulder a large, three-pronged fork, which George believed to be meant for Neptune. That was a poor garden, thought George, for it never waved nor rustled, and dul not by one change of figure except that it grew dirtier show itself conscious of tho passage of the hours and days and months and seasons. It interested George a good deal more to notice here and there the dirty leaf of new kinds of plants, which, brought home by some among the sailors, strug gled to grow from seed or root. Through the window of one house that was very poor, but very neat and clean, he saw put upon a table to catch the rays of a summer sun, a strange plant in blos som. It had a reddish stalk, small, pointed leaves ; and, from every cluster of leaves hung elegant red flower-bells with purple tongues. J. he plant ex cited him greatly ; and when he stop ped to look in at it, he felt some such emotions as might stir an artist who might see a work by Rubens hung up in a pawn-broker's shop-window. He knocked at the green door, and a pale girl opened it, holding in one hand a piece of unfinished needlework. Her paleness left her for a minute when she saw that it was a stranger who hail knocked. Her blue eyes made George glance away from them before he had finished his respectful inquiry. "I beg your pardon," he said, " but may I ask the name of the flower in the win dow, and where it came from !" " Will you walk in if you please, sir," said the girl, " mother will tell you all she knows about it." With two steps, the young gardener strode into the small front room where a sick and feeble woman sat in an arm chair. The room was clean and little furnished. There was only sand upon the floor ; and, on the table with some more of the girl's work, was part of a stale loaf flanked with two mugs that contained some exceedingly blue and limpid milk. George apologized for his intrusion ; but said what his calling was, and pleaded in excuse the great beauty and novelty of the plant that had attracted him. " Ay, ay, but I prize it for more than that," said Mrs. Ellis, " it was brought to me by my son. ' He took it as a cut ting, and he brought it a long way, the dear fellow, all the way from the West Indies, nursing it for me. Often he let his own lips parch, sir, on the voyage that he might give water enough to the flower that he took home for his mother. He is a tender-hearted boy, my Harry." " He is young, then?" ' Well, he is not exactly a boy, sir ; but they are all bovs on board ship, you understand. He could carry off the house upon his back, Harry could, he is bo wonderfully broad-chested. He's just gone on a long voyage, sir, and I am feared I shall be 'gone longer before he comes back ; and he said, when he went, Take care of th e plant, mother, it'll have hundreds of bells to ring when I come back to you next year.' He is always full of his fun, sir, is my narry. " Then, ma'am," George stammered. " it's a plant you wouldn't like to part with." ' . The poor woman looked angry for a moment ; and then, after a pause, ans- wered gently, " No, sir, not until my time comes." The young gardener who ought to have gone away still bent over tho flower. The plant was very beautiful, and evidently stood the climate well, and it was of ft kind to propagate by slips. George did not well know what to Bay or do. The girl who hod been nimbly stitching, ceased from work and looked up wonderingly at the stranger, who had nothing more to say, and yet remained with them. At last, tho youag man, with the color of the flower on his cheeks, said, I'm a poor man, ma'am, and not much tought. If I am going to say anything unbecoming, I hope yoft will forgive it ; but, if you could bring your heart to part with this plant, I would give you ten guineas for it, and the first good cutting I raise shall be yours." Tlio girl looked up in the greatest as tonishment. "Ten guineas!" Bhe cried, "why, mother, ten guineas would make you comfortable for the whole winter, ilow glad Harry will be I" The poor old woman trembled nerv ously. " Harry told me to keep it for his sake," she whispered to her daughter, who bent fondly over her. " Does Harry love a flower better than your health and comfort ?" pleaded Harry's sister. A long debate was carried on in low tones, while George Swayne endeavored to look as though he were a hundred miles off, listening to nothing. But the loving accents of the girl debating with her mother tenderlycaused Mr. Swayne, a stout and-true-hearted young fellow of twenty-five, to feel that there were certainly some new thoughts and sensa tions working in him. He considered it important to discover from her mother's manner of addressing her that the name of the young woman was Susan. When the old lady at last consented with a sigh to George's offer, he placed ten guineas on the table beside the needle work, and only stole one glance at Susan as he bade good-by and took the flower pot away, promising again earnestly that he would bring back to them the first good cutting that took root. George Swayne, then, having the lawyers almost put out of his head, carried the plant home and duly busied himself in his greenhouse over the mul tiplication of his treasure. Months went by, during which the young gar dener worked hard and ate sparely. He had left to himself but five pounds for the general maintenance of his garden ; more was needed, and that he had to pinch, as far as he dared, out of his humble food anil other necessaries ot existence. He had, however, nothing to regret. The cuttings of the flower bells throve, and the thought of Susan was better to him than roast beef. He did not again visit the widow's house. He had no right to go there, until he went to redeem his promise. A year wont by : and when the next July came George Swayne's garden and greenhouse were in the best condition. Iho new plant had multiplied by slips, and had thriven more readily than he could have ventured to expect. The best plant was to set by until it should have reached the utmcst perfection of blossom, to be carried in redemption of the promise made to Widow Ellis. In some vague way, too, Mr. Swayne now and then pondered whether the bells was to set ringing after Harry had re turned might not be after all the bells of Stepney parish church. And Susan swayne did sound well, that was cer tain. Not that he thought of marying the pale girl, whose blue eyes he had only seen, and whose soft voice ho had only heard once ; but he was a young fellow, and he thought about her, anil young fellows have their fancies which do now and then shoot out iu ui countable directions. A desired event happened one morn ing. The best customer of Swayne's misery ground, thewiteot a city knight, Lady Salter, who had a fine seat in the neighborhood, alighted irom her car riage at the garden gate. She bail, come to buy flowers for the decorations of her annual grand summer party; and George withjmuch perturbation ushered, her into his greenhouse, which was glowing with the crimson and purple blossoms of his new plant. When Lady Salter had her admiration duly hightened by the infor- mation that tliero were no other plants in all the country like them that, in fact, Mr. Swayne's new flowers were unique, she instantly bought two slips at a guinea each and took them home in triumph. Of course the flewer-bells at tracted the attention of her guests; and of course she was very proud to draw at tention to them. The result was that the carriages of the great people of the neighborhood so clogged up the road at Swayne's nursery, day after day, that tnere was no getting by tor them, George Bold, for a guinea each, all the slips that he had potted, keeping only enough lor tne continuance ot his trade, and carefully reserving his hnest speci men. That in due time he took to Har ry s mother. The ten guineas added to the produce of Susan's labor she had not slackened it a jot had maintained tho sickly wo man through the winter; and when there came to her a letter one morning in J uly in Harry's dear scrawl posted from Portsmouth, Bhe was half restored to health. He would be with them in a day or two, he said. The two women listened in a feverish state for every Knock at the green door. N ext day knock came; but it was not Harry. Su san again opened to George Swayne. He had brought their flower-bells back and, apparently, handsomer than ever, He was very much abashed and stam mered something; and, when he came in, he could find nothing to say. The handsome china vase, which he had Bub stituted for the widow's flowerpot, said something, however, for him. The widow and her daughter greeted him with hearty smiles and thanks; but he had something else to do than to return them something of which he seemed to be exceedingly ashamed. At last he did it. "I mean no offense," he said; "but this is much more vours than mine. He laid upon the tabfe twenty guineas, They refused the money with surprise Susan with eagerness. He told them his storv: how the plant had saved him from the chance of being turned out of his home; how he was making money by ths flower, and how fairly he considered olf the profits to be due to its real own er. Thereupon tne inree became fast friends and began to quarrel. While they were quarreling there was a bounc ing knock at the door. Mother and daughter hurried to tho door, but Susan stood aside that Harry might go first nto his mother s arms. " Hero is a one chime of bells." said Harry, looking at his plant after a few minutes. "Why, it looks no handsomer in the West Indies. But where ever did you get that splendid pot ? " George was immediately introduced. The whole story was tuld, and Harry was made a referee upon the twenty guinea question. Uod bless you, JUr. Swayne, said Harry ; " keep that money if we are to bo friends. Give us your hand, my boy; and, mother, let us all have something to eat." They made a little festival that evening in the widow's .house, and George thought more than ever of the chiming of the bells, as Susan laid her needlework aside to bustle to and fro. Harry had tales to tell over his pipe ; and I ted you what. Swayne. said he, "I'm glad you are the better for ray love of rooting. If I wasn't a sailor myself, I d be a gardener. I ve a small cargo ef roots and seeds in my box that I brought home for mother to try what she can do with. My opinion is that you're the man to turn 'em to account ; and so, mate, you shall have em. If you get a lucky penny out of any one among 'em, you re welcome, font s more than we could do." How these poor folks labored" to be liberal toward each other ; how Harry amused himself on holidays before his next ship sailed, with rake and spade about his friend's nursery ; how George Swayne spent summer and autumn evenings in tho little parlor ; how there was really and truly a chime rung from Stepney steeple to give joy to a little needle woman's heart ; how Susan Swayne become much rosier than Susan Ellis had been; how luxuriously George's bees were fed upon new dainties ; how Flint and Grinston conveyed the nursery-ground to Mr. Swayne in freehold to him and his heirs forever, iu consid eration of the whole purchase-money which Swayne had accumulated : . how the old house was enlarged ; how a year or two later, little Harry Swayne dam' aged tho borders, and was ' abetted by grandmother Ellis in so doing ; how, a year or two alter that, Susan Swayne, the lesser, dug with a small wood spade side by side with giant 1 Uncle Harry, who was a man to find the center of the earth under Swayne's garden when he came home ever and anon from beyond the seas, always with roots and seeds, his home being Swayne's nursery ; and finally, how happy and how populous homo the house in Swayne's nursery grew to bo these are results connect ing pleasant thoughts with tho true storv of the earliest cultivation in this couutry of tho flower now known as the Fuchsia. He Had Had Luck. That was a very unfortunate affair that iiappened to young Millicent, of the Danbury baud. He had engaged some of his fellow-members to join him in a serenade to an estimable young lady on Essex street, with whom he is keeping company, aud at midnight the party repaired to her residence, with their instruments and music, and a boy to hold the torch. Everything started oil well, and tho entertainment promis ed to be as gratifying as the most sau guine could have asked. During the performance of the second piece, u gem from Mozart's collection, the boy, who was leaning against a tree, was bo lnllu enoed by the harmony, and soothed by the melody, that he unconsciously drop ped off into a slumber, and a moment later the torch suddenly swerved, and descended with its blaze of camphene against the back of young Millicent's head, and in a Hash ignited the wavy masses of his hair. The others dropped their instruments, and smothered the flame in nn instant, but it had done its work. His Jiead wts entirely burned over, ana he laid to be carried home and the young lady was made so sick by the fumes of burning hair, that Bhe was obliged to keep her bed all the next day, It will be a month or more before young Millicent will ue able to appear ou tho street, which will give'the torch-boy plenty of time to arrange his earthly anairs. Swimming and Bathing. Encourage the boys and girls in learn ing to swim, as it may be the means of saving their own lives and rendering them instrumental in saving those ot others in days te come. Also impress upon their minds the great necessity of caution ere they learn how to take care of themselves in the water. The death from drowning so prevalent during the summer are among the saddest inoi- dents of the season, coming as they do so suddenly, and what renders them particularly distressing is the fact that tne great majority of them are caused by heedlessness, JJathing and swim ming are healthy and delightful sports, and when participated in with modera- tion, as all pleasures should be in order to make them enjoyable, conduce great ly to tne benent ot mind and body, It is tne excess in wis, as well as every thiug else, which produces the harm, and this should be strictly guarded ogainst. Many a bright and promising mu vllB iuhi uis uie ur unaerniineu ms health and become a sufferer bv being too venturesome in the water, or going in too often. From such items may we be spared the chronicling during the present season. A Double Allowance. This is the way au ingenious youth in this city ob tained a double allowance of ice cream. He saved up the requisite fifteen cents, and sailed grandly into a saloon where the cooling delicacy is served. Having ordered a dish, he rapidly devoured about two-thirds of it, and then dexter ously caught a fly and mixed it with the remainder. Then calling the proprie tor, he pointed out the defunct insect, and with indignation pictured in his countenance and dignified severity in his voice, remarked that he would take his flies on a separate plate. The pro prietor was overwhelmed with confusion and sorrow, and with alacrity and apolo gies brought another well-filled dish. That young man may yet be au alder man. Portsmouth Timet, 3IIiikHonsekeepIng. One sunny morning in summer, down the pathway,' still sparkling with the dewy moisture, came stealthily moving the long, lithe form of a mink. Her fur looked worn and rusty when the sunlight struck her, as she skulked be tween the tussocks of grass. Occasion ally she halted to look about her, alert for anything eye could see or enr could hear ; but hearing nothing but the sweet notes of a song-sparrow and com plaining cry of a cat-bird among the olders, she ngain moved on. As she reached the muddy edge of tho brook, she trod more daintily ; then, winding among the pickerel-weeds, swam down stream, hardly disturbing the water, only making a long, wedge-shape wake as she stole into the shadowy edge of the brook. Suddenly sho disappeared under water, but soon came up, strug gling with something that swayed and pulled her about, disturbing the quiet of the stream, nnd sending a muddiness down with the current. But she bore the almost unmanageable, wriggling eel (for this it was) to the Btone wall, and drawing herself and burden up out of the water on tho large stone, readjusted her hold, and seized tho creature by the back of the head. Then bracing herself to suck the blood, the thrashing, strug gling eel grew gradually weaker and weaker, until it looked perfectly limp and lifeless. Then she jumped from the wall, dragging this eel, longer than her self, up through the grass, taking a dif ferent and more concealed way than the one by which she came, and soon dis appeared altogether. In the thick- banked wall of a barn on the lull- side, she had her young ; and, after they grew large enough to require something more substantial than nature's first pro vision, the mother used to bring them fish of different kinds, eels, ducks, and like prey. So sly and stealthily did she keep herself that she was not seen until the young were half grown, and looked like little fawn-colored weasels, when she betrayed herself by bringing this food, which impedeiWier movements. By traveling the same way so many times, she grew bold. These minks aro very destructive to fish ; ond wh'. the brook is low, they can often be tracked for a long distance by the dead eels, pickerel, shiners, and sometimes trout, left lying along the bank ; tho mink only sucking tho blood and leaving the fish unmutilated. One autumn some small shiners, meant for bait in pickerel fishing through the ice, were kept in an old tub set in a spring near the brook ; and in one night all these fish were killed by a mink who left them laid in a row on the ground. They looked precisely as if some person had bo arranged them. But through the back of each fish, near the head, were four tooth-marks that told who had been there ; this being frequently the only mark the mink makes on his vic tim. Solar Heat as a Tool. During the recent building of a bridge iu Holland, one of the traverses, ibo leet long, was misplaced on the supports. It was an inch out of line, and the problem was how to use it. Experiments proved that the iron work expanded a small fraction of an ir:eh for every degree of heat received. It was noticed that the night and day tempera ture differed by about 23 degrees, and it was thought this might be made to move the bridge. In the morning the end of the plate wus bolted down se curely, and the other end left free. Iu the heat of the sun tho iron expanded, aud towards night tho iree end was bolted down, and the opposito end was loosened. The contraction then dragged the whole thing tho other way. For two days this experiment was repeated, and the desired place reached. We find no record that tho lieat of tho sun has ever been employed in this way be fore ; the contraction and expansion of iron bars by fire-heat has already been used to move heavy weights over short distauces. Broken walls and strained roofs and arches have been brought into place by simply heating iron rods till they expanded, then taking up tho slack by screws and nuts, and allowing contraction by cold to pull the wall or roof into place. k Joke by Telegraph. In Norfolk, Va., on Sunday morning, while the fires on Market square and Campbell's wharf were at their height. aud it seemed doubtful if they could be subdued, a well-known citizen sought ont a telegraph operator and besought him to go to his olhoe and telegraph to Old l'oint lor aid. The operator replied that it was use less to do bo at that early hour (3 o'clock), as no office was open then. The gentleman told him to go and try. He would, at least, be doing his duty. Thus entreated, the operator went to his office and called Old Point. As he ex pected, triere was no response. He then called in succession all of the principal stations in the country, finally receiv ing an answer from Omaha to this ef fect: " Fire a long way off, but if you can keep her going a while longer, will come to your aid, as I am an old fireman, with my lantern and ax." It is needless to. say the humor of the Omaha operator provoked a hearty laugh, notwithstand ing the greatness of the danger to which the city was exposed. Foolish Wager. One of the many capital punishments in use under the Chinese Criminal Code is that of deprivation of sleep, which generally proves fatal in about ten days. Five foolish young Belgians lately tried this experiment upon themselves with more or less disagreeable results. They laid a wager that they would remain awake for seven days. They arranged the employment of their time in the following manner: the night was spent in dancing and drinking quantities of coffee; during the day theyrode.fenced. or shot at a mark, taking coffee every half-hour. One of these young men won the wager, but lost 25 pounds in weight; two fell asleep after remaining awake IdU hours; one was seized with inflammation of the lungs; the fifth was overcome by slumber while on horse back, fell, and broke his arm, and thus ended this unnecessary ordeal. Cash vs. Credit. I go up to the village occasionally and lounge away a holf-doy talking with the storekeepers and the farmers who come in to "do their trading." Times ore different than when all trade wos barter, as in my younger days when we had to save eggs to get tea and sugar with ; when a pound of butter would scarcely pay for a yard of the cheapest calico ; when a letter from out the State cost two shillings, ond was often held by the postmaster a month because the farmer could convert none of his produce into cash enough to pay the postage. These days were not so long ago, either. . Wo used to go to market then with ox teams and in lumber wagons. There were no spring wagons then ; no three minute roadsters ; no top buggies for farmers ; no ready-made clothing. We used to wear butternut-colored suits, home-made, in winter, or tow pants in summer. I say things aro different now. But there must be a further change. It is gradually but surely coming. Occa sionally, you will find "a cash store." I wish, for all concerned, there were no others. How I shiver when I sit in the back of a store and hear a farmer who has purchased a bill of goods say to the spruce clerk, with a seH'-coufident tone and air, as he gathers up the parcels, "Charge it!" Be sure the clerk dors "charge it!" He charges it heavy. It is rarely the case, I notice, that these "charge it "customers take a bill of their purchoses. They have faith in the merchant who has such faith in them until settling day comes, when there are olten disputes and wrangles over the accounts. Another thing I notice: That whereas the spruce clerk is permitted to wait upon Former " Charge-it," while the merchant gossips with a lounger, like me ; the moment Farmer Pay-as-he-goes enters the store, Mr. Merchant is all affability and alertness. He leaves the lounger unceremoniously. He greets tho farmer with warm cordiality, inquiring after his family and his crops. The spruce clerk stands aside defer entially. The merchant shows the cash customer a different and better class of goods than were shown to Farmer " Charge-it." Tho price named on the same class is ten per cent, lower than is charged on the books to the other cus tomers. Pains are taken to please and satisfy. It ' does mo good to see that more discretion is used in buying. Nothing that is not needed is purchased. When the purchases are completed, out comes tho smooth, shiny leather wallet, and tho greenbacks ore carefully and caressingly handled. The farmer is sure to see that he has the worth of his money, and the merchant is equally careful not to loso a cash customer. What makes all this difference ? Tho merchant resumes his seat by the lounger who pumps tho fact from him that he had rather have one such cus tomer os Farmer Pay-aB-he-gocs thun three liko " Charge-it." With cash in ind he can buy his goods cheaper iu the city. Ho saves there. He turns his money and realizes his profits quick er. He loses no debts, and does not have to add a per cent, to his charges to cover such losses nor tho interest he has to pay ou his own thirty to sixty day bills. Ho is content with small mar gins. He has to take them because eash-paving farmer buys where he can buy the best cheapest. "And yet,' said this merchant, " I have some cus tomers who pay only once in three to six months who are profitable to me because I make them pay mo roundly for waiting. I must do so if I trade with them. They are good for their bills but, if they only knew it, really loso money every time they say Chargo it.' That is, they have to pay more man they need to for everything they buy. Of course, I had rather Bell to them cheaper for cash ; but I cannot afford to on credit and tako the risks I have to." Talking with on old friend who is a banker, he says his depositors among farmers are, nine-tenths of them at least, (aud he thinks a larger per cent.) are of the Pay-as-you-go class. I cannot see how it can be otherwise ; nor do I ever expect to. A Chapter in Cheese, 'The following story of a lost heir is told by a Tasmnnian paper, tho Corn wall Chronicle: " About seven years ago, in the city of London, a cheese monger died, leaving cash to tho tune of 100,000 to be quarreled over, fought and disputed for by the reputed heir-t-law. Advertisements were inserted at different times in the English news papers, and many a claimant a la Tich borue, was forthcoming. The lawyers, however, were not satisfied that any of tho numerous claimants were the right men, and what has just transpired has proven that they were correct in their judgment, as tho right man has turned up in the person ot the deceased cheese monger's brother, George Hutley, who arrived in this colony about lorty years ago. He was discovered byF. Stevens, a Victorian barrister, splitting up in the ranges of that colony, taken to Mel bourne, shipped on board a Bteamer and brought to Lounceston, and then taken to Hobart Town, where he was identified as the veritable George Hut- ley, who arrived at Tasmania some forty years ago. After all the necessary docu ments are procured to prove without a shadow of doubt the man's identity, he will proceed to England to claim his uiiiciitauijc. Attacked by a Rat. A few nights since an infant daughter of Martin S. Snyder, living in Lancaster township, was attacked by a large rat while lying in its cradle, fust asleep. A nurse occupied a bed in the same room, About midnight the latter was awakened by hearing the cries of the child. She arose, lit a lamp, and upon approaching the cradle she was horrified to observe a large rat leap from the cradle and Bcamuer away. The little infant was completely saturated with blood, and upon seeing it the nurse fainted. The nurse, however, awakened the father of the child, and he ran into the room when he discovered that the voracious rat had bitten tho little thing at least iu a dozen places in the arm, between the elbow and shoulder. Medical assistance was immediately procured, and the wounds dressed. Facts and Fancies. The Ohio Constitutional Convention adjourned at Columbus to meet at Cin cinnati December 2. f Professor Dan strongly asserts that " it now seems demonstrated by astron omical and physical arguments that the interior of our globe is essentially Bolid-" , , i. At Ponghkeepsie, John Wenz, ft junk lnnlnr ulirit. liia wife ond then shot himself. Both ore dead. They hod quarrel about money matters. Wenz was intoxicated. They leave seven children. A little eirl who had groat kindness of heart for tho onimol creation, saw a ipii nrenarincr to gather her chickens under her shelter, and shouted earnest ly. "Oh I don t sit down on those oeau- '... . . 1 T t ft tiful b-ds, you great, ugiy oiu Ben. In a Pennsylvania graveyard may ue seen ft stone bearing mis iiiscri-i,iu . Here lieth the body of Amy Major, who departed this life March 20, 1792. Suffice it to say she was on honest woman the second noblest work oi God." The nrouosed building ot Philadel phia for the Centennial will, it is said, cover on area ol seventy-nve acres. m will make it the largest of the kind ever erected. That at Vienna, including covered courts, the machinery, fine arts, and agricultural departments, only cov ers GGi acres. The Governor of Illinois recently par doned a penitentiary convict because they said he was dying or consumption. That pardon did more ior mai young man than would havo been done by twenty dozen bottles of cod liver oil. In twenty-lour hours ins lungs -.ero as sound as if they had been mado of brass. When in Paris the Shah visited the establishment of one of the most ex tensive jewelers of that city, and pur chased for 8120,000 a cellar of pearls, and for $17,000 a diamond bracelet, for tho wife of Marshal M'Mahon. Every thing he bought was first placed on the person of tho Grand Vizier to enable the monarch to see how it looked. The Southern editor rarely ventures into his compositors' room, and when obliged to do so, orms himself to the teeth, and leaves on his desk an obituary notice of himself appropriate to mo event of sudden death. Do you ask why? His handwriting is such as to invite violence from those by the sweat of whose brows it is deciphered and set up. A terrible accident occurred on tho farm of Mr. William Preston, at Butler, Pa., by which three men were burned to death. They were boring for oil, and were in the well at the time the oil was struck. The oil scarcely reached the surface before it took fire, blazing up a hundred feet or more. The bodies of tho men who were burned were re covered. Tho power of love is shown in tho case of the Iowa girl who went three miles from home to a pastuie lot be longing to her father, and there cut tho throat of a calf, so that when tho old gentleman heard of the matter he might hasten thither aud thus give his daugh ter a courting spell with a lover, who had been warned not to appear upon tho premises. The statistics of marine disasters re ported by the Bureau Veritas for last month, gives the following, being the list of disasters Buffered by all flags : Sailing vessels totally lost, 8'J. Of these, 47 wero English, 12 French, 7 German, 7 American, 4 Italian, i Norwegian. 2 Austrian, 1 Russian, 1 Turk, 1 Danish, 1 Swedish, 1 Greek, and 1 of which the nag has not been re ported. It will be remembered that aninquiry into trades-union outrages in Sheffield ipfore a committee of the House of Commons some years ago elicited some astounding revelations, a man -named Broadhead ailmitting.alter au indemnity nd been secured him against his Btate- ments bringing him into trouble with tho law. that ho had been mainly in strumental in compassing the death of many men. A good deal of sickness has been caused in many places by eating fish. It is held that trout is unfit for food two days after it has been killed, and that there is no process by which it can be kept good. Not long since a family in Cincinnati were made seriously ill by eating smoked trout. And several per sons in Pittsburgh, Pa., were taken violently sick, recently, after partaking . of smoked white fish. Several wealthy Boston lodies have been raising a fund to be devoted to giving rides into the suburbs of the city to invalids whose limited means do not allow them to procure any such in dulgence. Various methods of ar ranging excursions for poor children, mothers with infants, and invalids are being carried out in many of our cities. The chanty is worthy the consideration of every one during this warm and sultry weather. Colonel Dunham, in Floyd county. Indiana, recently instructed the grand jury to investigate a lynching, for doing which he received several threatening letters, warning him that his life was in danger. To these he replied in a letter addressed to a local paper, iu which he says : " Tho Vigilants, so called, tell me 1 had better keep quiet. Jjet me tell them I never failed to speak my opin ions. I denounce them as murderers, as they are, and as all decent citizens know them to be. I have stood before the cannon's mouth, where not one of the masked cowards ever dared to stand." A young man in Detroit having, by careful economy, saved $200, with a natural dread of banks, deposited it, ir bills, in an old pair ot boots in one cor ner of his room. In the course of a few days his mother was struck with the untidy appearance of his chamber, and iu the era of reform which she in stituted threw the boots into a back alley. There his father bow them and forthwith put them into a manure box behind the barn til he could get time to cut the tops off. That same evening some one stole the box and its contents, and when the boy visited his room and rapidly pursued an investigation he only satisfied himself, that he was again penniless,