HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. III. MDGWAY. ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1873. NO. 37. The Children. Wheu the lessons and tanks are all ouded. And the school for the day is dismissed, And the little Mies gather around me To bid ma good-night and be kissed : Oh, the little white amis that encircle My neck in a tender embrace ! Oil, the smiles that ore halos of heaven, Bhedding sunshine of love on my face! And when they are gone I sit dreaming Of my childhood too lovely to last : Of love that my heart will romember, I Wheu it wakes to the pulse of the pant, Ero the world and its wickedness made mo A partner of sorrow and sin, When the glory of Ood was about me, And the glory of gladness within. Oh, my heart growB as weak as a woman's, And the fountains of feeling will flow, When I think of the paths, steep and stony. Where the feet of the dear ones must go ; Of the mountains of sin hanging o'er them ; Of the tempest of fute blowing wild : Oh ! there's nothing on earth half so holy As tlw innocent heart of a child ! They are idols of hearts and of lmnsoholds ; They are angels of God in disguise ; And his sunlight still sleeps in their tresses. And his glory still gleams in their eyes. Oh ! tlioso truants from homo and from heaven, Xhey have made me more manly and mild ! And I know hew our Saviour could liken The kingdom of Clod to a child. I ask not life for the dear ones, All radiant, as others have done. But that life may have just enough shadow To temper tho glare of the sun : I would pray Ood to guard them from evil, But my prayer would bound back to myself : Ah ! a seraph may pray for a sinnev, lint a sinner must pray for himself. The twig is so easily bended, I have banisdiod the rule and tho rod : I have taught them the goodness of know ledge, They have tuught me the goodness of God ; My heart is a dungeon of darkness. Where I shut them from breaking n rule ; My frown is siirtieiont correction ; My love is the law of the school. I shall leave tho old house in Hie autumn. To traverse tho threshold no more; Ah ! how shall I sigh for the dear ones. That meet me each morn at tho door ; iBhall miss the ''good nights" and the kisses. And the gush of their innocent glee. The group on the green, and tho (loners That are brought every morning to me. I shall miss them at morn and at evening. Their song in the school and the street : I shall miss the low hum of their voice. And the tup of their delicate feet. When the lesson and tasks arc all ended. And death snys ''the school is dismissed!" May the little ones gather around mo, To bid me good-night and be kissed! THE LONG PACK. " Auntie, tell me n story," I said, as I sat with my maiden relative in a huge tapestried apartment in a rambling, old-fashioned house in the country, " What kind of a story do you want, Harry?" she asked. "Grave or gay, true or untrue, pleasant or sad? For my life has been long, and my experi ences many," she added, as she gazed dreamily and thoughtfully into the fire that blazed on the hearth before us. " O, something harrowing and thrill ing, fearful and shocking, and, above all, true there's a dear auntie !" Jex claimed, as I drew closer to her side, and gazed shuddcringly around the large gloomy room. A little pause ensued, while auntie gazed meditatively into the fire, and I watched her face in eager hope of the exciting: tale that was coming. I was about sixteen (Aunt Betsey be gan at last), when I was invited to go and stay with some relatives in Sussex, whom I had never seen. My life in this old house where I was born and have lived all my days was somewhat monotonous. I was a lievly girl then, and, wild with delight at the prospect of a change of scene, I looked anxious ly for my parents' permission to acc-pt the invitation. After some deliberation, the desired permission was given ; so, early one morning, accompanied by my father, I set out in high spirits for my destina tion, arriving there in the pleasant twilight of an autumn evening. Our friends gave us a cordial recep tion. "Squire and Mrs. Oldham were staid, pood tempered, rather elderly people, and their two daughters girls of eighteen and twenty as merry and as wild I could desire. Their names were Mildred and Janet. The house, standing on its own grounds, and surrounded by lofty trees, was old and spacious, with many long corridors and passages, and plenty of rooms of all sizes and descriptions. I can recall so well the great entrance hall. It was of immense size and gloomy, and from it ascended a wide staircase, which led to an open gallery above. Many merry evenings I had spent in that old hall. During my stay with my Sussex friends, Mr. and Mrs. Oldham went to spend a few days at a gentleman's house a few miles distant from their own, and it was while they were absent that the alarming occurrence I am about to relate to you took place. The household consisted of the but ler and four maid-servants. The coach man, who lived in a cottage on the grounds about a quarter of a mile dis tant, was now absent with his master and mistress. The butler was a pomp ous, stately, middle-aged man, given somewhat to patronizing, though always respectful in his manners to us young people ; he evidently considered the safety of the house as his peculiar charge, and was very particular in the extinguishing of fires and in looking after the safety of the fastenings of doors and windows. We had heard of one or two robberies being committed in the neighborhood ; but we did not feel nervous, and my cousins placed great dependence on a huge black dog which always slept at night in the hull. One evening I believe it was the third after Mr. and Mrs. Oldham's de parture my cousins and I were sitting chatting merrily round the nre in a large room which opened from tlie ball I think it was about seven o'clock when there came a pull at the front door bell, and, after a short delay, the butler answered it. Presently, hearing a somewhat prolonged parley outside, we opened our room door, and peeped out. Two men, apparently much exhaust ed, stood at the lower end of the- hall, while on the ground at their feet lay a large, long package. Opposite to them stood the bntler and one of the maid servants, and a stormy discussion Feemod going on between them. Mil dred, my elder cousin, after a few mo ments' pause, walked forward and re quested an explanation. One of the men, rather a respectable-looking indi vidual, I thought, advanced toward her, nnd making a low bow, began to speak. "Madam," said he, "we have brought this bale of goods to your house by mistake ; we were to take it to Mr. Needham's," mentioning a gen tlememnn's house about five miles dis tant, " but have carried it here instead. We are much exhausted, for we have walked far, and the night is tempestu ous, and we feel that we can take it no further. ill you kindly allow us to leave it here till morning ?" Mildred looked at the butler inquir ingly before she answered. The old servant shook his head, with a doubtful and suspicions air, whereupon the man who had just spoken observed, hastily : " We do not ask for a lodging for ourselves, madam ; we shall make our way to the nearest public house. It is only the pack that we wish to leave, It is very heavy, and we will call for it in good time to-morrow. We throw ourselves upon your compassion." " Let the poor men leave their large package, 31ildred, said Janet, my younger cousin, and nave it put away in the ante-room until to-morrow. Mildred assented, and in disregard of the frowus and ominous looks of the butler, ordered the pack to be carried into a little room near the entrance. This was done ; and glad and thank fnl was I to see the door bolted and barred behind the formidable strangers. it seemed to me a dangerous risk, in our thinly-peopled household, to admit two strangers at that time of the even ing. I had noticed, too, that they glanced about the hall in a surreptitious manner, ami especially eyed the dog, which stood with us in the hall, and had at first begun to bark, but had been quickly silenced by a low command from Mildred. I saw that the maid servant, who still stood by, shared my uncomfortable feelings, and she assist ed very readily, after the departure of tle men, m barring the door, and see ing to the safety of the window-fastenings. Later in the evening I met her ou the stairs, aud she stopped me. " I do not like the look of that bun dle at all, miss," she said ; " it looks to me alive, and twice I have fancied I saw it move once when it was lying on the hall floor, and again now, for I have been in to look at it. I smiled, and, telling Harriet " not to be whimsical," passed on, and, re joining my cousins, I told them what Harriet had said to me, and proposed going to take a look at the mysterious package. Taking a lamp with us, we proceeded to the Itttle apartment wherein it was placed. It lay on a wooden settle which stood on one side of the room. It was enveloped in a browu wrapper, was very long, and thicker at the middle than at the two extremities. Somehow I did not like the looks of it at all ; but my tears were of such a vague nature that I did not like to express them. As we crossed the hall on our return to the sitting-room we encountered Harriet, who was hovering about with a very uneasy and mysterious expression on her face. "What is the matter, Harriet ?" ask ed Mildred. "O, miss, I am so frightened about that pack. I cannot rest, and I am sure that I cannot go to bed while it is In the house." "You are very ridiculous, Harriet,' replied Janet. "I am sure the men were very respectable-looking individu als only two shopmen. We have just been looking at the pack, and it did not move, though I gave it a good squeeze, I am sure there is nothing in it to alarm vou. Harriet looked very pale, aud shook her head very warniugly. Ten o clock came, and my cousins and I were thinking of betuking our selves to our sleeping apartments, when we heard a door in the hall violently shut aud locked. Immediately after wards Harriet rushed in upon us, and sank on the nearest chair in violent hysterics. She was speedily followed bv the butler, looking pompous and still as ever, but with a certain express- ion ot unquiet on his fat, grave face, hat is the matter, Jones I asked Mildred, starting to her feet "Tell us quickly. Do try to be quiet, Harriet." II II nnnlr .a nl.VTA n Olatfail I I .1 riot. " Hush, Harriet," said Mildred, calm ly ; let Jones tell us. I heard you lock a door. It was that of the ante-room in which this unfortunate pack is placed I suppose ? "It was, miss," replied Jones, sen tentiously ; " and the dog is in the hall." ho added. "So far good," said Mildred, conv posedly. "And how, pray, do you know that the pack is alive t " You see. miss." replied Jones, "ever since that pack has been left here, Harriet has been in a distracted state of mind frightened out of her senses, in fact." " I saw the thing move when it was laid in the hall," sobbed Harriet. " Go on, Jones," interposed Janet, Jones continued: " So before we rent to bed, Miss Harriet persuaded me to coma and take another look at the package. You know I did not at all approve of its being left, miss, he added. " Never mind that," said Mildred "tell us what you have seen." " Well. miss. I thought it great ron sense, but I went. We took hold of the bundle, and turned it about a little, but could make nothing of it. Presently Harriet found a small hole in the wrap per. She pulled the rent rather more open, and looked in. I saw her face change, She turned and drew me out of the room, pulled the door to, and locked it. That is all I know at present, ladies," and here Jones bowed to us politely. Harriet had become quieter, so Mii- dred inquired: " What did yon see, Harriet?" The girl shivered, and covered her face with her hands. " Come, Harriet, speak, said Mil- redj becoming a little pale. " Yes, tell us, and instantly 1 cried Janet. Harriet took her hands from her face, and looked up. " It was an eye, miss, she said, in horror-stricken tones. " such an awful- looking eye, and it glared at me 1" she added, with a repressed shriek. We looked at each other m mute con sternation. " Was it a living eye, do you think, Harriet ?" I asked. Yes. it was alive, miss, I am sure, she sobbed. " O, what shall we do ? It looked so malignant and terrible 1" We looked at eacli other lor a lew moments, and then Mildred spoke. I can scarcely believe, that you are right, Harriet," sho said ; " I fancy that your imagination must have been making a goose of you. " Still, Mildred, I ventured to say, ' Harriet may be right, and it would be well to do something at once. This may be a plan to rob the house when we are all in bed." And murder us all !" shrieked Harriet. Janet began to cry. and meanwhile the butler had left the room. " Where is Jones ?" inquired Mildred, suddenly observing his absence. " Let us go nnd him, and see what is best to be done." She passed into the hall, and we fol lowed. Jones was rummaging in a large closet, the door of which stood open ; he had a lamp in his hand. The other servants stood by, and we to gether waited for him to emerge. He was rather a long time, so Mildred went close to the door and whispered : " What are you doing there, Jones? Jones made no reply, but came out. armed with an old rusty-looking dagger and two pieces of strong rope. " ion are not going to kill him r lin plored Janet. "JNever fear, miss, replied Jones; a little prick, however, will do no hurt. I must take cave of my master's house. " We will come with you," whispered Mildred. " Very good, miss," he answered, ' Please bring tho dog to the door, and keep him there till 1 want him. So oli went Jones with his lamp, his dagger, and his ropes, we and the ser- vnnts following closely behind with the dog, who seemed to possess a strong consciousness of something being amiss. Jones opened the door of the little room quietly, and went in and placed his lamp on a small side-table which stood near. Then at once, dagger and ropes in hand, he walked towards the pack, which still lay ou the settee; but I now observed that there were one or two openings in the wrapper. ihere was a deep silence among us for a moment or two, interrupted only by the low growlings of the dog, who became manifestly more and more un easy, and was with great difficulty re strained from rushing into the room, Then there cume a scene of noise aud confusion. Jones reached the pack, and throwing the ropes over his arm. and still clutching the dagger, stooped to inspect the slit in the wrapper where Harriet had asserted she had seen an eye. At that moment one of the most fearful and terrible yells I had ever heard broke from between the folds of the wrapper. The pack struggled vio lently , then rolled over and fell heavi- ly to the ground, while a choked voice begged for mercy; at the same time knife was seen endeavoring to effect an opening. The screams of the servants, the hysterical sobs of Janet, and the loud howhngs and winnings of the dog. who was still restrained by Mildred from rushing frantically iuto the room, made a din that I never can forget. ' 1 remember that Jones alone looked very composed ami unmoved through out. Before the man in the pack had time to free himself from the wrapper, Jones had managed, despite his oppo- nent s struggles, to pass the ropes sev- eral times round and round him, aud to secure them. By the time ke had accomplished this we. had all become prettv auiet. The doer was silenced and made to lie down in the hall, while Mildred and I and two of the servants the terrified Harriet not being one went into the room. The pack presented a very ludicrous appearance. The wrapper had been slit open from the centre upwards, and displayed the figure ef a man, appar ently about thirty years of age, lying in it, the ropes wound round him. He had a long, pale face, a brown, grizzly beard, and eyes that glanced doubtfully from Jones and his dagger who knelt beside him to us, as we approached him. tie was perfectly mute, and re fused to answer any question. "See, he has got a whistle," cried one of the servants. Jones instantly seized it, and after few moments' consideration, beckoned Mildred out of the room. I followed. " xoung ladies, he said, " the man is now quite secure, and his acconi plices will certainly not attempt to en ter much before midnight. I expect the whistle was to have been the signal, Would you be afraid, if I slipped down to the coachman's house, aud got his wife to send down to the village for as sistance ? We oould then probably secure all the villains." " But you may be attacked by one of them on the. way, urged Mildred. " No fear, miss ; I can slip unseen behind the shrubs in the darkness, "Go, then, and quickly," said Mil dred. " Xou are sure that the man is miite safelv bound ?" " Quite so, niiBS ; but perhaps you would like to ask the consent of the household before I leave you." Mildred soon obtained our consent to the plan, and Jones was cautiously let out of a small side door. In about twenty minutes which had seemed like two hours to us he returned, and his low tap was instantly answered. " It is all right," lie paid ; I have seen and heard nothing of tho two men. The boy is sharp enough ; he has his directions, and is to bring a party from the village to this door by the same way that I took." More than an hour passed away : then a low tap was again heard, and six men appeared, accompanied by tho boy who had been sent to bring them. About midnight Jones opened the shutters of a casement window in the hall and blew a loud whistle ; the whis tle was responded to by another, and two men presently appeared at the open casement. Jones drew back into the darkness of the hall aud silently allowed them to enter. The moment their feet touched the hall floor they were se cured. "And wheve were you, auntie?" I said, "during this scene ?" We stood in the gallery above. The boy, who had received his direc tions, soon brought forward a lantern, and we also had lights at hand in the gallery." " were the men tried, auntie ; and what was their punishment ?" 1 Yes ; they wero conveyed to the county prison, and on their conviction were sentenced to transportation. The butler, as you may imagine, w as hand 1 .!,! Expert Uoalmen. There being no keel to the Esqui maux kayak, and its bottom nearly flat, the occupant would seem to make it top leavv. but with the practice and nerve of the kayuker, he does not hesitate to brave a middling heavy sea, riding over the waves as graeetully as a duck. Armed with his rifle, harpoon, and bird spear, all of which he very adroitly uses, he shoulders his kayak, carries it to the beach, and launches it. There is no opening in it except a round hole mid way between each end, just large enough to admit the boatman as far ns his hips. Surrounding this midship hole is a wooden rim, with a groove around the outside near the sealskin covering, over which the hunter laces the lower edge of his water-tight jacket, and thus fast ens himself in and keeps the water out. He then grasps his two-bladed oar in the middle, propels himself along by pping it in the water on each side al ternately, and off he darts at a very as tonishing rate of speed, until he reach es his hunting ground. When he sights a seal, and gete within thirty yards ot him, he throws the harpoon, and sel dom misses his mark. As soon as the seal is hit, it starts off to escape. Tho staff is then detached from the dart to which is attached a strand of raw hide, fastened at the other end to a buoy or float carried on to the deck of the kayak, eady to cast off when the line has been all run out, but kept sight of by the kayaker, who soon exhausts the strength of his victim, and then captures him. The Largest Bee Hive in the World, ' In Los Angeles county, California, on the eastern slope of the ban r er- nando range of mountains, and in the immediate vicinity of the Learning Petroleum Company's oil region, there is the most wonderful col lection of wild honey in existence. The hive is located in a rift which pene trates the rock to the depth of probably one hundred and sixty feet. Tho orifice is thirtv feet long and sevent'-en feet wide ; with four passages. This rift was discovered to be the abiding place of a swarm of bees, that is seen to come out in nearly a solid column, one foot in diameter. Certain parties have en deavored to descend to the immense store of honey collected by the bees, but were invariably driven back, and one man lost his life in the effort. Others have, at the expense of much labor and money, built a scaffold one hundred and twenty-five feet high, in hope of reaching a place w here they could run a drift into the rook and extract its well- hoarded sweets, but finally ceased their work. Within four years the bees have added not less than fifteen feet of depth to their treasure, as ascertained by actual measurement, and it is thought that at the present time there cannot be less than eight or ten tons of honey in the rock. A gentleman by the name of B. Brophy lives in a cabin not fur from the spot, aud obtained from the melting f the honey by the sun's heat more than enough for his family re quirements. All through that region, stores of wild honey are found in trees, in the rocks, m nearly every place where its industrious manufacturers think, (for they seem to think) that it will be secure. They consume a very small portion, as the climate enables them to" keep up operations nearly every day in the year, and flowers of some sort are always in bloom. It must be a very severe season indeed when the little fellows are not seen abroad in vast numbers, busily engaged in their mellifluous work." Inheritance of Deformities. The heredity of anomalies of organi zation, says a science monthly, has been demonstrated in 6everal instances. One of the most singular of these is the case of Edward Lambert, whose whole body, except the face, the palms of his hands, and the soles of the feet, was covered with a sort of she!!, consisting of horny excrescences. lie was the father of six children, all of whom pre sented the same anomaly at the age of six weeks. The only one of them who lived transmitted the peculiarity to all his sons, and this transmission, passing from male to male, persisted through five generations. Mention is also made of the Colburn family, where the parents for four generations transmit ted to the children what is called sex digitism, i. e., hands and feet with six digits each. Albinism, halting, haie lip, and other anomalies are in like manner reproduced in the progeny. The Cattle Trade. Kansas towns on the Texas borders thrive greatly from the immense cattle trade of the latter State. Of the 500.000 head of Texas cattle which, at $15 a head, will compose the " drive " of this year, only 115,000, it is said, will be sent to butchers and feeders in other States than Kansas. The remainder will be killed and packed in Kansas or will bo slaughtered for tueix hide and tallow. A Leper's Home. The lepers of the Sandwich Islands occupy what is known as the Plain of Kolanao. ilie plain contains about 16,000 acres, and looks like an absolute flat, bounded on three sides by the blue Pacific. It is believed to have been the bottom of a vast crater, of which the Pali formed one of the hills, tho other having sunk beneath the ocean, leaving a few traces on one side. The whole crreat nlain is composed of lava stones, and to one unfamiliar with the habits of the Sandwich Islanders, would seem to be an absolutely sterile desert. Yet here lived, not very many years ago, a considerable population, who have left the marks of an almost incredible industry in numerous fields inclosed between walls of lava rock, well laid up ; and in what is yet stran ger, long rows of stones, like the wind rows of hay in a grass field at homo, evidently piled there in order to secure room in the long, narrow beds partly cleared of lava which lay between, to plant sweet potatoes. As I rode over the trails worn in the lava by the horses of the old inhabitants, says a corre spondent, I thought this plain realized the Vermonter's saying about a piece of particularly stony ground, mat mere was not room in the field to pile up the 'ocks it contained. Yet on this appar- cutly desert space, within a quarter of a centurv. more than a thousand people lived contentedly and prosperously, The rule should be, everywhere dur after their fashion ; anil this though ine the Dart of the year when fires are fresh water is so scarce that many of them mufit have carried their drinking water at least two or even three miles. And here now live, among the lepers, or rather a little apart from them at one side of the plain, about a hundred peo ple, the remnant of the former popula tion, who were too much attached to their homes to leave them, and accepted sentence of perpetual seclusion here, ia common with the ieper, rather than exile to'another part of the island. When we had discovered the cliff, a short ride brought us to the house of a luua, or locul overseer, a native who is not a leper ; and of this house, being uneontaminated, we took possession. By a law of the Kingdom, it is made the duty of the Minister of the Interior, aud under him of the Board ol Health, to arrest every ene suspected of leprosy; and if a medical examination shows that he has the disease, to seclude the leper upon this part of Molokai. The disease, when it is beyond its very earliest stage, is held to be incurable. He who is sent to Molokai is therefore adjudged civilly dead. His wife, upon application to the proper ceurt, is granted a decree of absolute divorce, and may marry again ; his estate is ad mintstered upon as though he were dead. He is incapable of suing or being sued ; and his dealings with the world therefore are through and with the Board of Health alone. In order that no doubtful cases may bo sent to Molokai, there is a hospital at Kalihi, near Honolulu, where the preliminary i: .,i a n.i,A n tfAUUllllULluilB ma mm ir, uuu wjlciu i Trousseau, the physician of the Board of Health, retains people about whom ho is uncertain. Tho Esquimaux. To one ignorant of their style of dress, aud the similarity of the dress of both sexes, it would be difficult to dis tinguish the Esquimaux man from the woman. The man combs his hair straight down and over his forehead, only parting it sufficiently to enable him to see directly ahead of him, while the woman combs her hair in a long plait, forming it into a knot on the top of the head, which is elevated about four inches from the Bcalp, and tied with a strip of ribbon either of a black, blue or red color the widow being dis tinguished by a black ribbon, the wife by the blue, and the maiden by the red one. The complexion is coppery like that of the Indian, their hair black, and their nose flat, while their cheek bones are broad and prominent, nearly hiding the nasal appendage when the profile is presented. The kapetah, or jumper with hood attachment, worn by both sexes, the hood of tho women's being made larger in which to carry the young babe, is of sealskin with trimmings of dogskin. The pantaloons and boots are also worn by both sexes, those of the women being in most cases very elabo rately and artistically trimmed. The pantaloons of Jthe women reach only to the knee, while the boots made oi tineiy tanned sealskin, nicely crimped and sewed with the sinews of the deer.make them look comfortable. Railroad Cars. Pussengers frequently grumble be cause they cannot ride directly from New York to St. Louis or San Francisco without change of cars. The reason is that no car can be run uninterruptedly for a long time with perfect safety. The continual striking of the wheels on the rails disarranges tke ultimate atoms of iron, and the wheels require rest in order to preserve their strength almost as much as do horses or men. r reigut, however, is carried directly across tne continent without breaking bulk, since freight trains rnn at bo slow a rate as not to materially allect the strength ol their iron-work, and since an accident to a freight train is not usually attend ed with much loss of life. The arrival at Jersey City of forty cars laden with tea direct from San Francisco shows how Greatly the Pacific road has facil itated trade between the Atlautic States and the Pacific The Price or Milk lu Euglaud. A Klinrt: limn aara tliA milkman nf T.on, don were very indignant because the physicians had accused them of bring ing typhoid fever into the city by adul terating their milk with impure water; nevertheless the fact was very clearly proved. Since this exposure the ven ders of lacteal fluid have been rather honester iu their dealings with the pub lic, and, making a virtue ol necessity, have bragged loudly of the purity of their wares; now finding they cannot Bell pure milk and live in the style that an aristocratic milkman should live in, they have held a mass-meeting at Exe ter Hall and unanimously decided to advance the price of milk to 5d. per quart, Sleeping In a Cold Koffm. ItalVs Journal of Health says that cold bed-chambers always imperil health and invite fatal diseases. Ro bust persons may safely sleep in a temperature of forty or under, but the old, the infant and the frail, should never sleep in a room where the atmos phere is much under fifty degrees Fahrenheit. All know the danger of going direct into the cold from a very warm room. Very few rooms, churches, theatres and the like, are ever warmer than seventy degrees. If it is freezing out of doors it is thirty degrees the difference be ing forty degrees more. Persons will be chilled by such a change in ten minutes, although they may be active ly walking. But to lie still in bed, nothing to promote the circulation, and breathe for hours an atmosphere of forty and even fifty degrees, when the lungs are always at ninety-eight, is too great a change. Many persons wake up in tho morning with inflammation of the lungs who went to bed well, and are surprised that this should be the case. The cause may often bo found in sleep ing in a room.the window of which had been foolishly hoisted lor venuiauon. The water-cure journals of the country have done an incalculable injury by the blind and indiscrininate advice of lioistinor the window at niaht. kept burning, to avoid hoisting outside windows. It is safer and better to leave the chamber door open, as also the fireplace then there is a draft up the chimney, while the room is not so likely to become cold. If there is some fire in the room all night the window may be opened an inch. It is safer to sleep in a bad air all night with a tem perature over fifty, than in a pure air with a temperature under forty. The bad air may sicken you but cannot kill you ; the cold air can and does kill very often. Woman's Mission. M. H. B., in writing to the MiMWiri Republican of the recent Woman's Con vention in New York, says : " Lucy Stone was interrupted by the entrance of one hundred and fifty girls, the para sol-makers of New York. Their leader, a modest-looking young woman, with a hectic flush on her wan face, asked per mission (through a gentleman) to state her case. Now here was a splendid chance for a stuuuiug effect. Had Mrs. Stone called that woman upon the plat form, saying the sufferings of woman and the suffrage of woman was the same thing, Bpelled differeutly, taken this working-girl by the hand, and in sisted that her story should be heard first as the greatest argument the chair had to offer, she would have made a ten-strike. . But no. Mrs. Lucy pro ceeded with hor Jioonrisp, bpsruu her collection, and paid no more attention to the suffering umbrella-maker3 than i a- ,nnr fl w-i L, it- wna to so manv flies. It was left for Mr. Hi,Ken80n to accord Miss Leonard, the umi?reiiR orfttor. the privilege of speak- ing. The poor young woman was tu multuously received, and spoke briefly and simply, and to the purpose. She, with charming naivete, said she did not vmuathize with the object of the gather ed convention, as she believed the ballot was in the hands of the strongest aud best able to takeeare of it ; that sho had been unable to cultivate her mind for speech-making on account of her work ing eighteen hours a day for bread ; but she wished to arouse some interest for the unhappiest class of creatures on the continent the working-women of New York. With a few new facts concern ing their wretched state she retired, and not a soul connected with the great sub ject of female emancipation uttered the chost of an opinion or endorsement ; but the next speaker pranced up to the front and begged to rectify a mistake. Some one had given her out as an Illi nois woman. She was a no-such-thing, aud here followed some interesting facts concerning her nativity, The Grape and Wine Crop of Ohio The Sandusky (Ohio) Register says : " The harvesting of grapes is about over and the wine companies here and at the islands are busy pressing out the new wine. Growers have been far more fortunate than they anticipated, and many of them came out or the season with nearly if not quite as large profits as in former years. On the three- Bass Islands the yield of Catawbas has, per haps, beeu the best in this region, The growers on North Bass have a good average, and at the handsome price of ten cents per pound, paid by their own wine company on the island, have reaped a good harvest. The same is true of the growers of Middle Bass, the yield in the main being half, and the price paid double that in seasons of full vields. On Put-in-Bay many growers have harvested from one and a half tons to two and over per acre, and realized ten cents a pound from the Put-in-Bay Wine Company. This company is making about 40,000 gallons of wine this season and go into the winter with 00,000 gallons of choice old. Of the crop on Kelley's Island we are not so well informed, but understand that several of the growers have had a fair yield. In this city the numerous pri vate manufacturers are busily engaged making what little their crop anords, and the wine company is pressing an amount sufficient to enable it to keep up a supply. The price ol wine con tinues firm at the advanced rates, and certainly bids fair to remain bo, if, in deed, not advance to still higher rates in view of the unprecedented prices which the companies have paid for .grapes, and the general decrease in the amount of new wine made this season, A prominent feature of the new wine -is the general superior quality of the grapes. Finer catawbas were seldom seen." What is a Journalist ? Somebody writes to us and wants us to give the definition of a journalist. We will do so with pleasure. A journalist is a man who spends some of the best days of his life in conferring reputation upon others and getting none himself. Ex changes please copy. Boston Globe, . . r-r- Illinois churches are raising money by hulled-eora-aud-milk Booiables, Facts and What penance a man will undergo for a pretty woman wuo cwvo about him I A French writer has described a young lady as a creature that ceases to kiss gentlemen at twelve and begins again at twenty, nolifnvnin. will nroduce this year, 12,- 000 gallons of wine, 2,000,000 pounds of grapes tor tame use, uuu fj"" pounds of raisins. It. is unkind to ridicule those items in the papers about centenarians. It is no easy thing to become a centenarian several have failed. A woman stated to a London mngis trato recently that during her five years of married life her husband had knock ed her down 115 times. Nels Neilson, Neils Nelson, Nelson Neilson, Neilson Nelson, nnd Ncl Neils nelson were lately fined 15 each in Dea Moines for drunkenness. George Halliday, an Edinburgh coal dealer, has been sent to prison for thirty days for fraudulently delivering eighteen 'hundred weight as one ton of coal. Minnesota boasts of having the larg est and best wheat crop ever produced by it. It offers to sell thirty million bushels besides what its own peoplo want. The history of New York under writing for the last fifty years shows . that the gross premium receipts are less than the gross losses by fires sus tained. It is pleasant to remember that not an hour passes in the increasing march of time, but that there is a half dressed man somewhere on the earth calling f or a shirt. It is estimated that the cost to Eng land of the Ashantee war will be from 1,000,000, as a minimnm, to .10,000, 000, or even 12,000,000 as a possiblo maximum. Near tho Oreana Mine, Nut Pino Valley, Nevada, aro three small lakes, in one of which no bottom has been found with any sounding line that has yet been tried in it. The woman who said the latest thing out was her husband, was answered by her neighbor, who remarked that her husband always came home early be fore any one was up. This description is from the Topeka (Kan.) Commonwealth: "Tho happy, quiet, sleepy, yellow, spider-webby days known as 'Indian summer aro here in the perfection of laziness." A female lecturer in Boston said : Get married, young men, and bo quick about it. Don't wait for the girls to become angels. You would look well beside angels, wouldn't you, you brutes ? There are rumors that the Mormons for mi pxndus from the Salt Lake region, and it is conjecture a that they will seek their next earthly paradise in the Sandwieh Islands or tho isles of the South Pacific. One of the young ladies at the Elgin watch factory, it is said, is at work upon a patent watch, which will have hands A -i -i , i i . 1 1 . so made ami aujusieu u iu nuiao uiu wearer by the coat collar every evening about ten o clock, and walk him oil home. As Bhins meet at sea, a moment to gether, when words of greeting must bo spoken, and then away upon the deep, so men meet in this world; and I think we should cross no man's path without hailing lum, and, it he needs, giving him supplies. It is hardly safe, now-a.days, to name mountain or a baby af ter a man till he is dead. He may embezzle, or tako back pay, or become a dreadful rail road autocrat, or a candidate for tho presidency ; then you 11 wish you hadn't done it. A man in San Francisco lately np- plied for a divorce on rather novel grounds. It seems that his fife's brother, whom he had not promised to love aud cherish, insisted on living with him and "was eating him out ol house and home." Bude bovs daily collect about tho horseguardsmen on duty at the entrance to the Green Park, London, and make irritating remarks, knowing that tho statue like horsemen are forbidden to speak. The fun continues until the ar- i e i: . rival oi a poiiuewau. Sometimes we come across a few words that do the business up com pletely. Here, for instance, is an ex ample : " You might as well try to shampoo an elephant witu a immuie- fnl of soap suds as to do business and ignore advertising." Tvndall. in a letter to Aalure, com bats the theory entertained by mauy, that the rainbow is reflected after tho fashion of an ordinary floating clond which emits light in all directions, aud which, by the light thus emitted, paints its image in the water. Imitation ostrich feathers appear to be quite as fashionable this autumn as the genuine. The former are very ad mirably made and almost defy detec tion. Ostrich "tips" are so reasonable in price that manufacturers say thera is no inducement to put imitation ou the market. At a weekly meeting a straight-faced and most exemplary deacon submitted a report in writing of the destitute wid ows who stood in need of assistanoo from the congregation. "Are you sure, deacon," asked another sober brother, " that you have embraced all the wid ows ?" He said he believed he had. When Wilkie Collins was about to step in front of the curtain at Syracuse, he said to Mr. Hanchett, who was to introduce him: " Don't introduce me as the greatest living novelist. I have been introduced so a number of times, and I'd rather be simply Mr. Collins. You know everybody is the greatest living something. " Extract from a private letter from Memphis: About 1,200 have died, 400 children have been made orphans, and many more will be before this pestilenoe is over. God pity them. In the infect- - ed districts I have found them Bitting 8au ana aesoiate upon the streets, and, "pon inquiry, learned that both parents had gone to the grave, and tbey had wandered from tlie place i deatli,