: L ' i HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDTJM. , Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. III. . . lUDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1874. NO. 40. . M If. By Hie Seaside. . , t'hy do I linger so late alone ? ' There's a charm for it in you wavo-wash'd stone. - Long years ago, when my life was young, In the golden time that poots have sung, Together wo eat on that stone so tret ; How sharp it was I rememhor yet 1 I aok'd her, " Lucy, you'll be my wife t Darling, I love yon far more than life." And then sho tmswer'd, " I am so vox'd, But I'm to lie married, this month or next." "I Ehould have told yon" "Always a friend" I'd no Idea-, "--80 on to the end, Soon were you married, my love, my dear j And soon yonr husband found out, I hear, That you had a tompcr ; and ho ah, well, How much you try him no words can tell. No wonder I love, by the sounding sea, The place where Lncy said " Xo" to me. FOtt DEAR LIFE. Winter again, and the land is once more wrapped in the same spotlces mantle, locked in the same icy fetters, as it was that memorable -winter bo long ago when Erie and I had that fierce wild struggle "for dear life." At this season of the year the never quite dor mant recollection revives, and I feel all the horror of that midnight scene rise and come back upon me, like a ghost from the confines of the past. It chills me with its dread presence, until, shivering in nerve and limb, I rise and draw nearer to the blazing hearth, heap on some more pine logs, and strive in the region of light and warmth to bid it defiance. In vain.. Through the whir of my spinning wheel comes the long-drawn moan of the wind, whilst without the jenow falls as heavily as ever, adding Jolation to the already drear and lbro landscape. Eric has gone to the fold-yard, as beseems a thrifty - husbandman, to eee aftar the well-being of our kine. Would that he were back to laugh oft' my fears, and exorcise the phantoms which rise thus unbidden from, the days that are now no more. His hearty presence and joyous voice are in themselves as potent against dis traught fancies as the "sprig of rowan" which the faithful wear for safeguard against witchcraft aud the evil eye. ' Meanwhile, as I sit waiting with the supper ready, and all things bright and tidy, I must e'en yield to the spell of the place aud hour, and listen to the tale suggested by tho wandering fancies of old. Nvw Ycnr'o ova Homo thiitv vears airo 'aud, we were keeping it right merrily nt the old manor-house of Stor Aswan, the home of my childhood, as it had been that of my forefathers for inauy generations. The pleasantest spot in nil tho world, I thought, and still think, that quaint Norwegian homestead, with its bull' walls and birch-bark roof, which succeeding summers had rendered ver dant with an evergreen thatch of moss and lichens. Just now, however, this was not visible, for snow lay thickly upon it, as it had laiu for weeks past, not only there, but upon all tho coun try round. We were in the midst of a white sea, whose billows were the par tially submerged hedgos, that daily grew less noticeable as the snow drifted in and piled above them. The fir-trees alone stood forth bravely, as if defying this insidious foe, vet even their statelv branches trailed earthwards, and their- strong arms creaked aud strained under the ever-increasing load. It was tho hardest winter there had been for fifty years so the old folks said and they foretold its continuance for somo weeks longer. Other signs were uot wanting which more plainly than aught else denoted the unusual severity of the season. The flocks of wild fowl, usually so shy and difficult of approach, came down from the. up per meres, their accustomed haunts, and strove with tie- tamo denizens of our own farm -yard for a share in their midday meal. Hares and rabbits, im pelled by hunger, forgot their nature, and stole up to our very doors, beg ging with their large black eyes in a piteous dumb fashion for relief. Herds of reindeer also came south from Lap land, seeking more genial pastures ; and it was rumored that less pleasant visi tors had recently been seen and heard. Tho black pine forests of Salten had agnin sent forth the grim, blood-thirsty pre1, of legionaries who for ages had d . 1 It unmolested in its dark fastness, i cud the cry of "wolf" was no longer, as keretofore, an empty sound. All thix, however, did not affect any of our party, who were all Norsemen nnd mu'dens born, used to the cold, full of health and spirits. I, Ella Bioorn, daughter of the house, was the wildest of that mad circle who had assembled Jit Stor Aswan that Cbrissmas-tido to do nonor to tny betrothal to Erio Jarl, the lover of my youth, ere long to be my husband. As soon as the birch-trees put forth their first green tassels in the early springtime, I was to leave my old home for a new one ; so now, surround ed by kinsfold and neighbors, we were keeping this last anniversary of my spiusterhood in goodly fashion. We revived many a bygone pastime, and the vast hall at Stor Aswan reechoed once again to the shouts that greeted the in coming of a mighty yule-log, and rang with joyous laughter at the tricks and antics of morris-dancers and mummers. So, in dancing, feasting, and merry making, the week sped, until a few hours more would see us all scattered in various directions, to meet again we knew not when or where. For the last day, therefore, we had reserved the chief pleasure, the crowning point of all our enjoyment a sleighing and skating party to Stor Aswan, a mountain-encircled, lake some ten miles further north, the same from which our home stead derived its quaint Runio name. This was to be our vail or greeting to. the New Year our welcome to the in coming guest. Brightly dawned the eventful morn ing, clear and fair as heart could desire. Blue was the sky as a sapphire, whilst the freshly-fallen snow sparkled and shone as though strewn with living ferns. AH nature seemed rejoicing like ourselves at the advent of another year, and one already so full of promise. Without, the snow-bells tinkled and chimed meily, making the frosty air ring again as the gaily-caparisoned horses pawed and shook their heads, impatient as their owners to be off. At length we started, Erio and I as hosts being the last of the party, for of course he was my charioteer. I well remem ber my father standing at the door to see us go, and as he tucked the bear skin rug more closely around me, bid ding us " return early, and beware of the Salten hounds." We laughed at the warning then, but had awful cause to remember it afterwards. Of that day I shall not speak ; we were all young and in wild Bpirits, and some of us in love. Need I say more ? Atiidst the many fair faces and lithe forms that glided so gracefully over the frozen mere, tireless through these long hours, I was the fairest. I, blue-eyed, goldon-haired Ell 4 Bieorn, was the ac knowledged belle and queen of the party, and Eric, my lover, the most stalwart youth of the country-side. But all things, even the pleasantest, must come to au eud. So when the shades of evening began to fall heavily, merg ing earth, sky, and water into one grny leaden cloud, we began our " journey homewards. Tired out with my exer tions, as soon as wo started I nestled down amongst the soft furs in the sleigh, and, rocked by its easy motion, soon fell fast asleep. How long I slept, I knew not ; but when I awoke it was snowing fast, and the darkness so in tense that we could not see a hand's breadth before us. I called to Eric, who was driving, and asked if all was well. To which the answer came back, half deadened by the thick atmosphere, "All well, but for God's sake try to keep awake." So I aroused myself aud sat ud, know ing that sleep in that bitter night air might moan death. Of any other fear I had no th.ught, for my driver was skillful whilst Thor and Odin, our two sturdy little mountain ponies, knew their way home almost unguided. Sud denly, as I listened vainly for the echo of our companiens' bells, I heard an other sound come up with the wind a long-drawn hollow moan. Twice or thrice it came at intivals, this weird noise, each time nearer and more distinct- The third time the ponies also heard it, for tbey sprang forward with an impetus that almost shook me out of the carriage. Frightened, I said to Eric, " What, O, what is that V" And the answer came back, short aud stern, " The Salten hounds !" Then began that terrible chase " for dear life" which, though we should both live for twice our allotted span, we never could forget. Swiftly we sped along, our steeds impelled by a terror ns great as our own, until they appeared olmost to tly. Breathlessly we barkened, hoping even yet to leave the enemy be hind. But uo ; they traveled with u, gained upon us, nearer and yet nearer their cry growing perooptibly from an uncertain vague voice of the darkness into the unmistakably wolf-like note. We knew from the" direction from whence it came that they were tracking by scent ; so now our last poor chance lay in the darkness of the night and our nearness to Stor Aswan. Eric still held the reins, and I cowered down at the bottom of the sleigh and prayed more earnestly, than I had ever yet done in my life " fwr an increase of the snow drift, or aught, even a miracle, if it might only save us." On, and on, for a time that seemed interminable, yet in truth might have been but a few moments. Then the starm ceased, tho moon emergeu from her shelter, and we saw half a mile in our rear a dark lino coming swiftly and steadily down upon us. In the middle of a white plain, with no nook or corner visible wherein we could take refuge, and still nearly a league from home, our case looked hopeless enough. So our pursuers seemed to think, as they now caught sight of us for the first time, aud lifting their black muzzles-) from the ground gave veut to a howl of savage exultation. I could have screamed too when I heard it, forfright was driving mo half wild ; it was so unutterably horrible to perish thus. But a glance at Eric, so calm and stead fast, gave me new courage. I felt that, come what might, we should at least die together. Faster and faster we flew, like hunted animals, death behind us coming on apace. A few yards more and he would claim us for his own. Already I could hear the rapid breathing of our foes, see their fierce eyes and white teeth glittering and gleaming in the moon light. Prompted by Eric, I threw out the bear-skin rug which protected me from the cold. For a moment they paused, smelt at it, then on with fresh fury after their old prey. One by one, cushions, wraps, all went over to the hungry pack, each gaining us an in stant's priceless delay. As the last fell from my hand, the foremost wolf bounded forward, just missing my arm, whilst his strong, cruel jaws met with a painfully audible snap. Then Erio turned and looked at me a long, loving glance and began knot ting the reins to the iron side of the driving-seat. Instinctively divining his purpose of giving his life to save mine, I sprang forward, and clinging to him frantically, whispered : " Dearest, remember, we stand or fall together." A sudden thought, justified by our dire extremity, Hashed through my brain it was a best a forlorn hope. Quickly I bent over Eric, snatched the hunting-knife from his belt, and cut loose the nearest pony. With an al most human cry of pain the poor ani mal galloped off, with the ravenous pack after it. A few strides ouly and it was surronnded, overpowered, down ; and the last sounds we heard ere the wel come lights of Stor Aswan came in sight were our ballled enemies growling and fighting over the remains of my gallant little steed. ' It was a cruel sac rifice ; but. necessity knows no law, and by it we Were saved. "in years after, as we sat round the fire at New Year's Eve, with the storm beating wildly, as now, against the casement, and the wintry twilight closing in, our children would ask to hear, " once more," the oft-told tale of the "Salten hounds," or our flight "for dear life." ' The Formation of Clouds. Muhry has lately presented, in a very impressive manner, the conclusions de ducible from some observations pub lished by Meissner, in 1863, on the for mation of vapor vesicles and of clouds. The researches of Meissner were mainly directed to the relations of ozone ana antozone, and it was only as one of the incidental results of his work that ho announced that, without the presence of oxygen in the air, there could be no clouds. In regard to this important point Meissner's researches have appar ently not attracted the attention that is due them, and Muhry urges that me teorologists and physicists are not yet to consider that the question of the ex istence of vesicles of vapor has been settled in the negative. Basing his conclusions on Meissner's researches, Muhry says that tho condensation and precipitation of aqueous vapor would take place immediately, in the form of small drops, if it were not for the pres ence of oxygen in tho air ; that this gas itself brings about the transition stage the vapor vesicle. The experiments of Meissner consisted in confining with in the receiver of an air-pump a mix ture of aqueous vapor and the gas to be experimented on. By a rapid stroke of the piston the mixture is then quite suddenly expanded, and the oooling due to expansion produces a precipita tion of a portion of the inclosed vapor. The faint cloud that is seen by close ob servation within the receiver continues but a few minutes, and was first ob served with special care by Saussure. in 1783. Meissner, however, has shown that when other gases replace the air within the receiver, the condensation in general takes place not in the form of a cloud, but of fine light drops that fall directly to the bottom, the cloud being produied only when oxygen is present, either pure or mixed with other gases. These experiments have been repeat edly and very carefully made by Meiss ner with air, nitrogen, hydrogen, car bonic acid gas, and in pure aqueous vapor alone, and in various mixtures of these gasses. Meissner further meas ured the exact degree of expansion needed to produce these vaper clouds, aud found that saturated air at 30.0 inches deposited its vapor when the pressure is suddenly reduced to 21.4 inches ; by a second step ne passed from saturated air at 21.4 inches to 10.1 inches, when a somewhat fainter cloud was formed ; the third cloud was formed on passing from 10. 1 to 13.8 inches, the fourth on passing from 13.8 to 10.7, and a fifth on passing from 10.7 to 8.5 inches. These barometrie pressures correspond respectively to altitudes nbove the sea of about e.UiH), 15,000, 10.000. 23.000, and 27,000 feet, and the clouds successively formed were of di minishing grodes of delicacy, those formed in the rarest medium being ex tremely delicato and evanesceut. For all further degrees of expansion Meiss ner was unable to perceive any cloud vesicles, although minute transparent drops were present. These results would be directly applicable to our atmosphere had ALeissuer been able to reduce the temperature of his receiver to that experienced in the upper re gions of the atmosphere. Farm Life. The glory of the farmer is that in the division of labor it is his part to create. All the trades rest at last on his prim itive authority. He stands close to na ture ; he obtains from tho earth the bread ; and the fsod, which was not, he causes to be. The first farmer was the first man, and all historic nobility rests on the possession and use of land. Men do not like hard work, but every man has an exceptional respect for tillage, and feels that this is the original call ing of his race, that ho himself is only excused from it by some circumstance which made him delegate it for a time to other hands. If ho had not some kkill which recommends him to the farmer, some product for which the farmer gives corn, he must himself return into his due place among the planters. And the profes sion has in all eyes its ancient charms, as standing nearest to Qod, the first cause. Then the beauty of nature, the tranquility and innocence of the coun try, his independence ' and pleasing nirs, the care of bees, poultry, sheep, hogs, the dairy, the care of hay, of fruits, of orchards and forests, and the reaction of the workingman in giving hini strength and plain dignity, like the face and manner of nature all men acknowledge. All men keep the farm in reserve as an asylum, in case of a mischance, to hide their poverty, or as a solitude in case they do not succeed in society. And who knows how many glances of remorse are turned this way from the bankrupts of trade, mortified pleaders in courts or senates, or from the victims of idleness anil pleasure. Honey from Ants. Henry Edwards, in the American Naturalist, gives au interesting account of the honey-making ant of New Mex ico. It appears that the communities consist of three distinct kinds of ants the guards, the nurses or feeders, and tho honey-makers. The site of a nest is usually in sandy soil, and from four to five feet square. The surface of the ground is not disturbed, and if it were not for the presence of the ants the po sition of the nest would not be suspect ed. The black workers surround the nest as guards or sentinels, and are al ways in a state of great activity. They form two lines of defence, moving dif ferent ways, their march always being along three sides of a square, one col umn moving from the southeast to the southwest corner of the fortification, whiie the ot her proceeds in the opposite direction; In most of the nests exam ined, the eastern, western and southern side w as left undefended. If any enemy approached the line, he was at once, ferociously attacked. A portion of the soldiers bought flowers and aromatic leaves and deposited them in the centre of tho square, whence they were taken by the nurses and carried into the nest. The honey-makers never leave their cells, their abdomen being too much swollen by the honey they contain. It is supposed, but has not been proved, that all the ants use the honey aa food. Enoch Ardcn Improved. A Hartford paper is responsible for the following story, which concerns persons said to reside at the present time in the town of Cheshire : " Some twenty-five years ago a young gentleman and lady of families of high standing were united in the holy bonds of matrimony. The birth of a son in duo time blessed their union, and yet the father was not happy. From no domestic nnpleastness, "however, nor from any lack of earthly bleesings, as far as can bo ascertained, but apparently from a more desire to travel, the husband suddenly annouced his in tention of going abroad. He parted from his wife affectionately, with the understanding that he should spend but a siugle season abroad. He sailed, however, without leaving word as to his destination. Years past by without news from the absent one, and the mourning wife at last, with tho advice of friends, decided that she was a widow, and, in accordance with the manner of nearly all . pretty young widows, took unto herself another father to her son. A year or two after her second marriage a sailor, who had known both parties, happened in one of his voyages to stop at Melbourne, in Australia. Walking the principal streets of the city one day he met a person whom he recognized as the sup posed dead husband. Greeting him, he was recognized in turn. In the mutual interchange of information he let drop the announcement that the wife, supposing him dead, had re married. And here, contrary to the poetic idea of what is the proper thing for a husband to do in such a case, this one gave no indication of being shocked or grieved in any way, but quitely re marked that the news afforded relief, as he had himself been for some time de sirous of entering into a connection which, until thou, his conscientious scruples had prevented him from doing. The fact that his wife had remarried, he felt, removed all the obligations of a husband. The sailor in course of time returned home and told his story, but it was universally disbelieved and treat ed as a canard. Facts afterwards transpired, however, which afforded the fullest proof of its truth. .- Two or three years sinco the missing husband re turned to this conntry, -and, brought with him a new wifo and a 'couple of children. No local action for-divorce has been taken by either party, and the husband, having returned to his pater nal estate, both, with their respective families, now reside in the same village and mingle in the same society," , ' ; . Texas Cattle. ' ' A Mampede among Texas cattle, says a writer in 'oribner's, is something which baftles description. ; ' you must witness'- it. ; It -is ' a - tempest of horns and tails, a thunder of hoofs, a light uiug of wild eyes ; I can describe it no better. Merely to see a man on foot is sometimes sufficient to set the average Texan cattle into a frenzy of fear, and a speedy stampede ; for the great ma jority of them have never been ap proached save by men on horseback. The gathering up of stock is no small task, as a herd of seventy-five thousand cattle will range over an area fifty miles wide by a hundred miles long. Large stock-raisers are always increasing their stock by buying herds adjacent to their ranges. Many persons made fortunes by simply gathering up and branding tho cattle which tho rightful owners have neglected to brand ; and cattle found unbranded, and a year old are kuown as " Mavericks." The origin of the name is very funny. Col. Mavericn, an old and wealthy citizen of San Antonio, once placed a small herd of cattle on an island in Matagorda Bay, and having too many other things to think of, soon forgot all about them. After a lapse of several years, 6ome fishermen sent tho Colonel word that his cattle had increased alarmingly, aud that there was not grass enough on the island to maintain thorn. So he sent men to bring them off. There is probably nothing more sublimely awful in the wholo history of cattle-raising than the Btory of those beasts, from the time they were driven from the island until they had scattered to the four corners of Western Texas. Among these Matagordian cattle which had run wild for years were eight hun dred notable and ferocious bulls ; and wherever they went they found the country vacant before them. It was as if a me'nagerie of lions had broken loose in a village. Mr. Maverick never suc ceeded in keeping any of the herd to gether ; they all ran madly whenever a man came 111 sight ; and for many a day after, whenever auy unbranded and unusually wild cattle were seen about the ranges, they were called "Maver icks." The bulls were finally dispersed among the ranges ; but they were long the terror of the land. The Fashion, A correspondent asks us to utter a blast against the fashion of ladies wear ing long trailing dresses in the streets. We might as well whistle jigs to mile stone, with the expectation of its start ing into a dance, as to hope to change a fashion, however absurd, by any force of argument or ridicule, when the utter futility of both has been so often shown. Men have talked of the awful extravagance of fretting nnd fraying costly silks by dragging them over side walks, street-crossings and pavements ; and the wise and witty Dr. Holmes has insisted that women who parade, the the streets with elongated skirts gath ering dust and dirt nnd defilement are, not to put too fine .1 pfiint, dirty and sluttish. It is not a comely or cleanly sight, that of an eh gant silk dress, or indeed one of any fabric, sweeping the streets, grimmed by the dirt and col lecting in its progress varions vegetable debris. But it is tho fashion. No Cards No Reception No Any thing. via isiuiry ytsat 1 iont see why you two eloped. There was no ob jection ; and a regular marriage, with bridesmaids, cake, and all that sort of thing, is so much more respectable." Young Husband" Ah, yes ; but the elopement was so much .heaper, don't you see I" The Life of a Spanish Feasant. Ill-fed, ill-housed; ill-clothed, ill taught, or rather untaught, and un cared for ; a hopeless, objectless being, feeling no responsibility for tho present or the future. Such is the peasant of tho interior, be he farm-laborer, black smith, fruit-seller, water-carrier, gipsy, horse-dealer, or whr.t he n.ay. He seems to be unable to read, or write, or think, or love, or hope, or pray, or plan. With him there is no light. Into darkness, social, moral, and intellectual, he is born as his heritage; in that dark ness he spends, and in that darkness he is content to eud his days. Come with me for a stroll into the campo, or wild country, and visit the hut of a poor fruit-seller. His little shanty stands alone near his dry, half-tilled garden ; and you look in vain for a smiling vil lage, or a substantial farm or country house. His hut let us call it "shanty" stands alone amid the thistles, its poverty its best protection. It is form ed of three walls of rude, unfashioned, unhewn stone, boun together with no mortar. You must stoop low to enter it ; it is roofed with reeds from the Guadalquivir, or with brushwood and rushes from the neighboring bosque (coppice.) There is one rough settle in the dark room. The floor is the earth and dust. Here is the mistress, a knife stuck in her girdle. You must not look for beauty or tidiness in her wooden, mahogany-colored face, and you wonder at her stride, like a man's, and her muscled arms and rough voice. Yet, remember, she has to work very hard, and the Spanish old woman of the lower class is always masculine looking. She has no chair, but courte ously apologises for its absence, and throws down a " nianta " 011 the floor for you to sit on. Suddenly, you hear at your ear the cackling of hens, the crowing of a cock ; she sees, with ready Spanish perception, that you are puz zled, and pushes aside, not the bed linen, but the brush-wood, and there, under the settle, is the " roost " full of poultry. There, too, is her little jarra of water, and the provisions, the flat cake of coarse bread, and tho melon, or the white grapes. She will tell you, with a woman's tact, "We are all 111 the rough, for the winter rains are coming, and then we gotctakea house" (she means a quarter of a room) " in the town." The little vineyard, or nielon, or vegetable-ground of this man is close to his house, and daily ho takes his prodnce to the Plaza (market-square) of the adjoining towns. Just now he is taking his siesta, rolled in his mania in this room, too indolent to move. At sundown ho trots behind his donkey, with its pauniered sides well galled with " melones " or grapes ; and we will follow him along the dusty track wo boast no roads with his bnggy canvas trousers, esparto-grass sandals, and huge knife stuck in his foja. About ten o'clock he arrives in the btreet, which, running out of the market, serves for stables for the beasts, and bedroom forthe owners of these panniers of fruit. He loosens his pannier from his donkey's back, and lets the air get to the inside of the packet of fruit ; then tethers his donkey to tho side of the street, rolls himself up in his manta, lights his ciganllo, and falls fast asleep by his fruit. It is a strange sight to pass about midnight along these streets adjoining the fruit market the rows of donkeys, the hundreds of sleeping forms, undistinguishablc from the fruit and sackiag, the fresh, sickly, damp smell of fruit hauging heavy on the air; and just beyond tho Plaza, with its every tent now lying on the ground covering the fruit, and a tiny oil lamp burning faintly to show where the stall aud the stall-keeper aud tho fruit are, all lying under the rough tent like a lot of half-empty sacks. At half past three the market opens, and at four to five it is, in truth, a lively sight. Brotherhood of Englueers, Tho headquarters of the International Division of the Brotherhood of Loco motive Engineers is located at Cleve land, Ohio. From the last report of the Grand Chief Engineer, Mr. C. Wilson, made at the Philadelphia meeting, we learn that the progress of the Order has been rapid for the past year. There are 172 divisions, with a total membership of 9,600 ; but since that timethe additions will bring the aggregate up to 10,000. The total cash on hand October 1 was 829,803, exclusive of over S6.000 as the net inc.me of the Journal, a periodical under the control of the G. C. E. There were 83 deaths during the past year, and $21,641 were dispensed to meet the wants of the families of the deceased. The late railroad strike has brought the brotherhood prominently before the people, as the public is intimately con cerned in the movements of tho rail roads. A correspondent had an inter view with Mr. Wilson, in which he stated that the recent strike was not authorized, consented to, nor encour aged by the brotherhood in any par ticular. The rules did not justify it, nor did the Order sanction it. The brotherhood, at thoir headquarters, deny all knowledge of the strike in an official charactar. A Working King. The late King of Saxony was in the habit of attending all the State institu tions to see that they were kept in working order. One day King John appeared at the telegraph office of a small station, taking the clerk by sur prise. This official had only just time to telegraph to his colleagues at the next station, " The King has just ar rived on a visit of inspection," before he was summoned to give all possible details to his sovereign with regard to the amount of traffic in the place, the number of dispatches received, the number sent out, etc. Presently a mes sage came along the wire, which the clerk read in much embarrassment. " What are the contents of that dis patch ?" inquired the king. The official Btammered out- mat tnu contents were unimportant, but, as his royal master insisted on being informed of them, the unhappy clerk was at length compelled to acknowledge that he had telegraphed to bis neighbor, " The king has pist arrived, 'and that the'answerhe Lad re ceived ran thus : " The king pokes his J-J. u, An Aged Horse A remarkable old horse called Charlie, the property of Mr. Dexter E. Wadleigh of Boston, died recently at the age of twenty-fivo. He was never sick except during the epizootic of 1872. Probably no horse was ever more attached to his master or more anxious to do his bid ding thon Charlio. He has traveled seventy miles iu one day without ex hibiting fatigue, and was as fresh as ever for the next day's work. During one year his owner drove him over three thousand miles. When pur chased Charlie was inclined to be a balky, and would stop suddenly ; but his master never struck him with a whip, choc sing rather to conquer him by kindness, in which he was success ful. He was usually driven in a chaise; and when these contrary notions would seize him his master would turn him in a large circle, working patiently and kindly with him for a few moments, when ho wculd be "all right." By this method Mr. Wadleigh soon suc ceeded in breaking him of the habit entirely. During the twenty-five years he never struck the horse a blow that he would be unwilling to receive upon his own back. Charlie was so familiar with his master's step that ho would always turn toward him as he approach ed, and greet him with an affectionate whinny. He was never afraid of cars or anything else, day or night, and would stand without tying for hours. While on the road if anything happened to carriage or harness he would always stop to remind his master that some thing w.is wrong. For several months he was driven without breeching, hold ing back the chaise 011 descending ground by tho cross-bar. Old-Time Customs. Tho Bimgor (Me.) Whig soys that a recent visitor to tho French settlement in Notth-castern Maine visited a woman ninety-seven years old and entirely blind. He found her sitting in her rocking chair, very busily engaged in picking to pieces a piece of old yarn with a large needle. Betide her lay a small quantity of huir that had been carded from the cattle, and a small amount of wool. Her daughter sat spinning this composition into yarn to be knit into fine socks, as thoy say. Ihe method of preparing this stock for the wheel is rather amusing. After picking to pieces old yarn and woolen cloth, it is mixed with enough good wool to " galvanize " it. Then it is put in an old-fashioned dash churn, soap and water applied, and churned until it is ready for tho cards ; then it goes to the wheel the same that was used by grandmothers of old for spin ning flax. The women of Upper Aroostook are very industrious and great helpmeets, as many times they can be Eoen at work in the field, plant ing, hoeing, baying, harvesting, and as a general thing they manufacture their wool into cloth, sacks, and mit tens. Many whole families are clothed in wool of their own manufacture. Many card wool by hand, spin with the old flax wheel, and weave with the old loom that has been in uso for hundreds of years. Chnng and Eug at Home, " Chang and Eng," the Siamese twins, are settled about -forty miles west of Salem, North Carolina, and have been for p. number of years in Surry Couuty, near Mount Airy. They each have a very good farm, adjoining each other, and both have families. They stay al ternately two weeks at a time at each other's farm. Both have children, who have a flue education, and one daughter, who had some literary aspirations, died some two or three years ago. One of the twins had a daughter recently mai ried. They have good residences and out-buildings on their farms, and are considered good and successful farmers here, and very good and kind neigh bors. Being in their neighborhood, I went to see thera at the residence of Mr. Eug Bunker, and found tho broth ers there, and was treated very hospit ably by them aad the family. They have, it is thonght, a great deal of money employed in mercantile pursuits in the little village of Mount Airy, Surry Couuty, N. C., and much more, the bulk of their estate is in New York City. Drinking Hard Water. Hard water has sometimes been thought unhealthy, and people have taken great pains to build cisterns in their houses, where rain water purified might be bad for the table. But nature rarely makes mistakes, and spring water is almost uniformly hard. It is found, on extensive and careful inquiry, that hard water is more healthy than soft. The body needs some of the salts held in solution in hard water, and suffers if they are not supplied iu some way. In England, the countries where hard water abound are more healthy than those where soft water is used. The same fact appears in cities, where the mortality is least in the sections sup plied with hard water. Contrary to the general impression, soft water acts on lead pipes more powerfully thaa hard, and induces danger. Those who have built rain-water cisterns, thinking them more healthy than wells, will need to study the wiser methods of nature. Statistics of Bengal. The Christian Union says that a cen sus of Bengal latelv taken makes the population (57,000,000, instead of 40, 000,000, as was estimated. In some districts there are COO to the square mile. The number of MohammedanB is far in excess of popular estimate, which has counted them at about 15, 000,000, while they are found to be 20, 604,000. Of all who call themselves Hindoos in faith there are 42,674,000. The Buddhists are 85,000 in number, and tho '.Christians 93,000. Of the aboriginals, included in neither of these classes, there are 2,351,000. It is stated that the Mohammedans, with their armies of missionaries, their theory that all faithful races are equal before God, and their pra.tice of raising any convert at once to full social equality, are becoming so numerous that by the year 1900 they will be half the popula tion, aad ultimately will control the religions destiny of Bengal, Items of Interest. Bazaiue has left France for the Island St. Marguerite. The resignation of U. S. Minioter Sickles has been accepted. The Kentucky Senate wouldn't vol against accepting free railroad passes. A Spanish prize court setting in Ha vana condomned the Yirginius as a lawful prize. Do not ran in debt to a shoemaker. It is unpleasant to be unable to say your sole is your own. An explosion in the Ferial Battery, Cartagena, killed twenty officers aud men of the besieging force. Twenty Fougbkeepsie (N. Y.) fami lies are making arrangements to emi grate to Lower California in tho spring. Five hundred children of Havre lost their fathers by the Ville du Havre dis aster; 110 widows have been made there. The Boston Publio Library has been open on Sundays, nearly a year, al though tho city solicitor, declared it illegal. The cities of Matamoros, Monterey, and Tampico are much disturbed just now by conflicts between the municipal and state forces. A woman iu Howard City, Mich., re cently gave birth to five children at one time. So, at least says the Grand Itapids Democrat. Here's an example for bores : A man in Livingston country, Ky., hangs his hat on a gate-post, and talks to it for ten hours at a time. A Terre Haute man lately ate 112 oysters at a sitting. Judge Dowling, of New York, devours from five to seven dozen oysters every day. A Dubuque man hired a policeman at $3 a night to watch his wife, and she was at the same time paying this same mon $4 per night to watch her husband. The police of New York made a de scent upon the Kentucky Lottery, ar rested all persons found on the premi ses, and seized the safes, books, money, etc. The Missouri Ilarrisonian advertises four hundred and twenty cow bells for sale, and explains that it took them from a hardware man in payment for job work. In a Boston discussion of corporal punishment by teachers it was argued that driving the spine up into the head could be nothing else than hurtful to the brain. The Third Ass. Postmaster-General of theU.S.decides that any number of indi viduals or firms may print their adver tisements on a postal card before it is deposited iu the mails. A prisoner in a western jail escaped with a leaden key which he mannfac turned. In New' York they use golden keys for that purpose. In such cases both lead and gold are base metals. When you go to Mittiueague, Mass., don't say anything about f jx-hunting!to any of those hunters who recently chased a yellow cat into a hole whence she was unearthed with much trouble. It is a matter of indisputable record that nearly half the children born in civilized communities die before they are five years old, and from 15 to 20 per cent, of them during the first year of infancy. Treasurer Spinner still keeps as a relic the torn and blook-staincd play bill with which Laura Keene attempted to stanch the wound of President Lin coln, in his box, at Ford's theatre, ou the night of the assassination. The company raised for the conquest of Cuba at Augusta, Ga., was very strongly officered. It consisted of thirteen generals, seven colonels, four captains, nineteen paymasters, twenty seven quartermasters, and one private. A Troy girl whose parents would not let her marry him wrote a letter to a convent asking for a situation as a nun, had tho letter intercepted by her mother, and a finale of white satin, lace, orago blossoms, and things followed as a matter of course. They have a queer way of suppressing rebellions in Mexico, now-a-days. The 150 revolutionists of Sonora, who promised such great things, last Sept., being short of cash, recently accepted from their enemies an offer of SI, 000 for their arms and then disbanded. A correspondent of the Waterloo 06 scrvcr tells a story of a man who went to a new town iu'the West. When ho arrived with' his wife the town was building a hotel. She being the first woman here the town stopped work, gave three cheers, and engaged her on the spot to mend their clothing for $2 a day. In the little Swiss Republic, Dr. C. Sehenck, whose election to the Presi dency was announced, receives a salary of $3,000, holds his position but one year, and will not be eligible for re election until tho expiration of another year. The Vice-President has $2,400,' and the seven members of tho Council, each of whom presides over an adminis trative department, also receive 2,400 each. A Nashville printer xeceutly had some very bad manuscript copy to set up. Every word needed closo study before its meaning could be guessed at, " but at length two or three words came in succession, which it was quito im , possible to decipher. All hands in tho office tried and failed, until at length the printer, in despair, set up "copy books ten cents each," and continued the work, afterwards sending the proof to the author for correction. The hint was taken, and the author employed an amanuensis. Change of purpose is not invariably the sign of a weak mind, and we trust that resonsiderationa of a similar im port to the following, which we find in the Rochester Democrat, will not this season be infrequent. It has reference to a contribution to the orphan asylum of that city, and is in the form of a note to the treasurer, inclosing $50, which was shown to the city editor : " Mr. Sage I subscribed $10 for the asylum lately, but when I come to write you a check for the amount, it seemed so easy to make it g50, that I can hardly re sist the pleasure of doing bo at the risk of your thinking me fickle." O