NIL. DESPERANDITM. Two Dollars per 'Annum. VOL. IV. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., . .THURSDAY, MAECH 26, 1874. NO. 4. HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher The Reaper. Orira Death, the reaper, camealoug With sickle bright and keen, " I'll reap to-day and bind," he said, lere least they think, I ween." An old man heard with tottering steps Ho walked to meet the foe Four Bconrog of years have bent tny form, I'm roaily now to go." " Old man," quoth Death, " I'll call for you Some day not far away, I now must reap among the oaks. Their chief must fall this day !" A little child whose tender frame, Was stamped with quick dcay, Exclaimed, "O, Death, please take me now, The chief, O, let him r,tay !" "Tho chief I'll ha-6 Ulis day Baid Death, " nis form el!lU ,e mine own t This child w'j breathe a fleeting breath And gl-lly Beek uig ilomo. " -'le strong must know that I am king And foel my conquering power ; I strike them down like tender plants They wither in an hour." " The wee child's eyes were wet with tears j The old wan groaned and sighed ; Death emote ie strong man as he slept, And strcngth-.vid beauty died. Quoth Death, "I IVjmetimcs pass the old, And sometimes spre the weak ; For when I cravo a vyAory, Tho strongest then I seek." DEATH 6t MARRIAGE. The ancient clock in Deacon Shermer's old-fashioned kitchen was slowly chim ing tho Lour of nine. It was no smart toy, no trifle of bronze or alabaster, but a jfekll, square, solid relio of the last r6ntury, looking not unlike a coflin case set on end, in tho corner a clock ' that had lasted through four genera tions, and, judging from appearances, was quite likely to last through several more. Deacon Shermer cherished the old heirloom with a sort of pride which ho himself would have scarcely con fessed to. There was a great, ruddy fire of chest nut logs in the red brick fire place ; and the candles in the brightly-polished brass sticks were winking merrily from the. high wooded mantel, where they shared tho post of honor with a curious sea-shell and a couple of vases, each containing a fresh osage orange, from the hedge that skirted the clover-field behind tho barn. At the window, a curtain of gaudy chintz shut out the tens of thousands of fitars that were shining brightly on that autumnal night, and on the cozy rug of parti colored rppa a fat tortoise shell cot pur red away the slowly lapsing minutes. But the tortoise shell cat was net the only inhabitant of the farm-house kitchen. " Timothy I" said Mary Shermer, de cidedly, "if you don't behave yourself, I'll -" What hho would do, Mary did not sny ; the sentence was teiminated by a laugh that set the dimples arcund her mouth in motion, just as a beam of June sunshine plays across a cluster of red ripe cherries. Mary Shermer was just seventeen a plump, rosy girl, with jet black hair, brushed back from a low forehead, and perfectly arched eyebrows, that gave a bewitching expression of surprise to n pair of melting hazel eyes. ' She was rather dark ; but the severest critic would not have found fault with the peach-like bloom upon her cheeks, and the dewy red of her full, daintily rurved lips. Evidently Mr. Timothy Marshall was quite satisfied with Mary's peculiar style of beauty. " Come, Mary !" sa'id Tim, moving Lis chair win-re he could best watch the flush of the firelight upon her face, and picking up the thread of the con versation where he had dropped it, when, it became necessary for Mary to bid him. "bohuve himself" "you might promise. It's nine o'clock and your father will soon be home." " Promise what, Tina ?" said Mary, demurely, fitting a square of red in her patchwork, and intently observing the effect. " Nonsense, Mary ! ...You know what very well. Promise to marry me before Christmas ! I tell you what, Mary, it's all very well for you to keep putting a follow off, but I can't stand it. What with yuiir father's forbidding me the house, and that romantic Tom Stan ley's coming here every Sunday night Mary gave her pretty head a toss. " As if Mr. Stanley's coming here made any difference in my feelings, Tim !" " No ; but, Mary, it isn't pleasant, you know. I'm as good a man as Tom Stanley, if I don't own railroad shares and keep an account at the Hamilton ville Bank ; and I love you, Mary, from the very bottom of my heart I Now this matter lies between you and me only ; no other person in the world has a right to interfere between us. Come promise me !" He held both her hands in his, and looked earnestly into the liquid hazel eyes. " Do you love me, Mary ?" " You kuow I love you, Tim." "Then we may just as well Hush, what's that ?" "There was a portentous sound of drawing bolts, and rattling latches, in the porch-room beyond a scraping of heavy boots along the floor. Mary rose to her feet with sudden scarlet-suffusing brow and cheeks. ' Oh, Tim, it's father 1" " Suppose it is ?" " But he musn't find you here, Tim 1 Ilide vourself somewhere, do 1" " What nonesense, Mary I" said the young man. resolutely standing his ground. " I haven't come to steal his spoons. " Why should I oreape away like a detected burglar ?" For my sake, Tim. Oh, Tim, if you ever loved me, do as I say I Not in that closet ; it is close to his bed-room ; not thrcugh that window ; . it is nailed down tight He is coming ! he's com ing ! Here, Tim, quick " Ad iu the drawing of a breath, she had pubbed Timothy Marshall into the . square pendulum case of the tali old clock, and turned the key upon- him. It is not a pleasant place of refuge, in asmuch as his shoulders were squeezed on either side, and his head flattened against springs and wheels above, and the air was unpleasnntly closo ; but Tim made the best of matters, and shook with suppressed laughter in his solitary prison cell. "Weill a jolly scrape to be in," thought Tim, " and no knowing when I'll be out of it. Mnry's a shrewd little puss, however, and I can't do better than to leave matters in her hands." "So you haven't gone to bed yet, Mary ?" said Deacon Shermer, slowly unwinding the two yards of woolen scarf with which he generally encased his throat'of an evening. " Not yet, father," said Mary, pick ing up tho scattered bits of patch-work with a glowing cheek. " Did jou have ft pleasant meeting ?" " Well, yes," quoth the deacon, re flectively, sitting down before the fire, greatly to Mary's consternation she had hoped he would have gone to bed at once, according to his usual custom " it was tol'bly pleasant. Elder Huskier was there, and Elder Hopkins, and well, all the church folks pretty much. Why, how red your cheeks are, Mary 1 Tired, ain't yon 1 Well, you needn't sit up for me, my dear ; it must be getting late." The deacon glanced mechanically round at the clock. Mary felt the blood grow cold in her veins. " Twenty min utes past nine why,it must be latur than that 1 Why, hind o' Canaan ! the old clock's stopped 1" The old clock had stopped ; nor was it wonderful, under the circumstances. " I wound it up this mornin', I'm sartin," said the deacon, very much disturbed. " It never sarved me such a trick afore, all the years it stood there. Your aunt Jane used to say it was a sign of a death or a marriage in the family be fore the year was out." There was a suppressed sound like a chuckle behind the clock-case as Deacon Shermer fumbled on the shelf for the clock key. "These springs must be out of order somehow," said tho deacon, derisively. "How scared you look, child I There ain't no cause for being scared, don't put no faith in your Aunt Jane's old-time supersti tion. Where, in the name of all pos sessed, is that key I I could ha' de clared I left it in the case." " Isn't it on the shelf, father ?" asked Mary, guiltily, conscious that it was snugly reposing in the pocket of her checked gingham dress. " No, nor 'taint in my pocket neither. And dowu went the deacon, stiffly enough, on his knees to examine the floor, lest perchance the missing key might have fallen there. " "Well, I never Snowed anything so strange in all my life," said the deacon. "It is strange," faltered hypocritical Mary. "I'll have a regular search to-morrow," said Deacon Shermer. "It must be somewhere around." " Yes, it must," said Mary, tremu lously. " Only," the deacon went on slowly, resuming his place before the fire, "kind o' don't like to have the old clock utand still a single night. When I wake up, you know, it seems like it was sort o' talking to me in thp still ness. The deacon looked thoughtfully at the fiery back log. Mary fidgeted uneasily about the room, straightening table covers, setting back chairs, and thinking oh, if he only would go to bod t As he sat there, his eyelids began to droop, and his head to nod somno lently. Mary's eyes lighted up with a sparkle of hope. " Child," he said, suddenly straight ening himself up in the stiff-backed chair, "you'd better go to bed. I'll sit up awhile longer till the logs burn out." " But, father, I'm not sleepy." " Go to bed, my child I" reiterated the deacon, with good humored author ity that brooked no opposition; and Mary crept out of the room, ready to cry with anxiety and mortification. '" If Tim will only keep quiet a little while longer," she thought, sitting on the stairs where the newly-risen moen streamed in chilly splendor. " Father sleeps 60 soundly and he is sure to go to sleep iu his chair. I could just steal in and release him as quietly as pos sible." She sat there, her plump fingers 'in terlaced, and her eves: fixed dreamily on the floor, while all the time her ears were strained to the utmost capacity ta catch every sound in the kitchen be yond. Hark 1 was that the wail of tho wind ? or was it something to her liter ally "nearer and dearer." Yes; she could not be mistaken now; it was actu ally a snore." Mary rose softly to her feet with re newed hope. Surely now was the ac cepted time. Noiselessly as the float ing shadow, she crossed the hall, opened the kitchen door, and stole across the creaking boards of the floer. The candles were burned out but the shifting lustre of the firelight revealed her father nodding before the fire, with closed - eyes, and hands hanging at his sides. With a heart that beat quick and fast, like the strokes of a miniature hammer, drew the key from her dress pocket, ond proceeded in spite of the nervous trembling of her fingers, to fit it into the lock. So absorbed was she in her task, that she never noticed the sudden cessation of the heavy breath ingnever saw the deacon stait sud denly into wakefulness, and look around him. Love is blind, and it is equally true it is deaf. ' The deacon rose quiet ly np with a shrewd twinkle in his eyes, and Mary gave a little frightened shriek as a hand fell softly on her arm, possessing itself quietly of the key. " Let me help you !" said Deacon Shermer. " Father, I I found the key," falter ed Mary. " Found the key, eh ?" returned the deacon. " Well, that's lucky ; and now we can find out what's the matter with the clock.'! - Mary's heart, throbbing o wildly a moment or two agoseemed to. stand absolutely still as - Deacon Shermer turned the key and opened the tall door of the elook case. r ' ; ' " i ''Hal lol"jaenlalea Deaoon Sher; mer as Mr. Timothy Marshall tumbled laughingly into the room. ' " So you was the matter with the old clock, eh?" " Yes sir," said Tim, composedly, "I hope I haven't seriously interfered with the works of the clock." " You've seriously interfered with me I" said the deacon, waxing indig nant. "Whut do you mean, sir, by hiding in my house like a tliici." "Indeed! indeed I father," cried Mary, bursting into tears, "it wasn't his fault. He didn't want to hide, but I put him there." " You did, eh 1 And may I ask what for I" " Father," faltered Mary, rather irrel evantly," I love him, and he loves me !" " Is that any reason why he should hide in the clock-case, miss ?" "No but father I I can never mar ry Mr. Stanley. He is so soft, and I " Mary's tears "finished the .sentence for her. The deacon looked down (not un kindly) on her bowed head and the tender arm that supported it. Appar ently, "theconrseof true love," rough ly though it ran, was overwhelming all his own worldly-wise arrangements in its tide. " And so you two young folks really think you love each other!" said the deacon, meditatively. " I love her with all my heart and soul, said Tim Marshall, earnestly. " I'm not rich, I know, but I can work for her." "And I can work for myself too, father," interposed Mary," with tears that shone like softened stars. "And you said yourself, sir," went on Tim, "that the stopping of the clock meant either 'a marriage or a death.' Of course we don't want any deaths ; so don't you think the most sensible thing we can do is to help on a marriage as soon as possible ?" The deacon laughed in spite of him self. "It's late," he said, "Come around to-morrow morning, and we'll talk about it. No, Mary, I'm not angry with you child. I s'pose young folks will be young folks, and there's no use tryin' to stop them !" And the deacon rehung the pendu lum, and set the iron tongue of the old clock talking again. Tim Marshall paused on the front doorstep to whis per to Mary : "What shall it be Mary ? a death or a marriage I And she in return whispered : "a marriage, I hope." " My darling 1" said Tim, "it's worth passing a lifetime behind the clock cuse to feel as I do now 1" How .to Live at a Hotel. . A hotel thief who was arrested in London, had this memorandum on his person : " Receipt how to live on 6ix shillings a week. In the first pjace you must be possesses oi a good suit oi clothes. Secondly,you must have confidence in yourself, otherwise calle'd ? plenty of cheek.' Thirdly, you must provide yourself with a leather bag about two Fiuiiings, well stufled .with paper. When you arrive at any place where you wish to stay a few days, walk into a hotel and ask if they have a bed at liberty for a few nights. If ' yes ' is tne answer, make vourself at home. walk into the room and order dinner ; ask to be shown into your bedroom, as you want to wash : come down a cam. leaving your bag upstairs, taking care to Keep it locked np, that they shall not see what it contains. Take dinner roast beef, fowl, fish, pastrv. cheese. etc., taking care to order half a pint of sherry ; then they will think you know your way about and have plenty of money. Alter dinner call for whisky hot and cigar, which is verv nice. Sit for an hour or two, and then go out on uusiness or a walk, as tne case may be, Order tea for half-past five, with toast. After tea sit a while, then ring lor branny not. Then take a walk, weatner permitting. uome in again about nine, call for whisky hot, cigars and slippers. Pull off your boots and make yourseir comfortable bv the fire. Have another whiskv hot. Ring the bell for your candle and inquire num ber of your room. Retire to bed about eleven o'clock, taking care to order breakfast for nine, with ham or eggs. or a nice chop, etc. After breakfast take a walk, and so on as before. P. S. The bag is the main point. It may serve you for a week ; it has served me for eight days ; but you must watch well the people with whom vou are with. Sometimes they will ask if it is " convenient for you to settle yourbill." it so, say ui course it is. I am iust going to the post-office for a letter. Get my bill made out and I will settle it when I come back. Of course take care not to return for your oag, ana oe caremi to put your comu ana orusn in your pocket every morning, as you cannot tell what mav happen during the day, and you want to be on in a hurry ; but, above all. keep a bold face on it. Then buy an other bag and proceed on vour lournev, You need never fear getting a night's lodging ifryou possess a bag, and if you aon t nappen to nave one. don t de spair, but go straight in and ask for a bed ; they will not refuse. Order sup per and breakfast and such like. After breakfast you should say, " Can I have the bed again to-night, as I don't think I shall be able to do my business to dav ? " t have stayed three days and nights when I haven't had a bag when I had but one half-penny in the world to bless mvself with, But then, vou will sav. what are you going to do for a bag ? Well, there are lots of bags at these hotels ; help yourself to one when you depart and you are all right again.- It is a month to-night since I had but one half-penny left and no bag, and to- night, the lGtli of January, I 'have one half-penny in my pocket and a bag to be going on with, living like a flghtinir cock and seeing almost all the towns in England. lours, etc., E. J. Ancient Califobnia. Some of the sities of modern California are on the yery sites where ancient races had their i welling places and their burialmounds. The skeletons of an unknown race have been found in San Francisco sand hills, and workmen engaged jn cutting down a street crossing at Napa recently unearthed the remains .of. nearly, one hundred persons. The skeletons ' had been partially burned before interment. Mortars, arrows, heads, knives made from obsidian, and a shell oar drop were discovered. A Race for Life. Narrow Eteape ot a Young Rocky Moun- tain 1 rapper. In the Winter of 18G5--G, a couple of Canadian voyagors, by the name of Nicholas and Jules semineau, were caught by a terrible snow-storm while taking up their traps on the head of the "Big Horn river in the Rocky Mountains. Tho storm lasted lor several days, nor was there any hope of escape until the snow should become compact enough to bewr their weight upon snow-shoes. The vovagers were yet striplings, scarcely arrived of age. Hitherto their father had acoompanied them upon their expeditions, but now he was at home at his ranche on the great Over land itonte. The fence, or lodge, of the brothers. consisted of a couple of buffalo robes stretched in front of an overhanging rock that overlooked the river. Here were stowed their furs, neatelv tied np in small bales, made np prin cipally of the skins of minks, otters and beavers, with a few pelts of the silver fox. Over these were laid robes which served them for a bed. A little fire wa3 replenished from time to time by the dry bunches ol pine and cedar, of which they fortunately had an ample supply. Thus they were enabled to pass the day pleasantly, notwithstand ing the raging or tne elements without. Up the canyon through which the river flowed, the wind sucked and roared terribly. The icy face of the stream was soon cleared of pnow, which drifted into the lateral canyons, gorging them completely. In order to pass away the time, the young men busied themselves in mak ing skates from the horns of an elk. The art of skating they learned while boys on the broad bosom of the St. Law rence. Their meat running short, Nicholas concluded to have a run on his skates up the river, with the hope of killing an elk, which were numerous on the pine-covered slopes of the mountains. Rifle in hand, he, started in high spirits, gliding by rocky cape and frowning promontory, made by the sharp bends and curves of the river. "Where tho acclivities were gentler, for ests of the yellow pine, cedar and juniper lifted their dark green heads, now burdened with a "weight of snow. The quick gtfze o( Nicholas searched in every shelter for the mightyantlers of the elk, or the blue goat of the black tailed deer, tbe best of all venison. It was.ifot Ipngt ere he syied a herd of the latter, of which, .he.' hod the good luck to kill tw.o. . -The, saddles of these he secured . together,' strapped them around his shoulders, and started on his return home, distant about four miles. . He skated leisurely along, humming a light French air, when suddenly his ears were struck by an unearthly ry, which he at once recognized as the roar of the mountain lion, and he could dis tinguish, also, that the cries proceeded from more than one. He quickened his pace his skates rang hard against the solid ice. The cries besanie clearer, and he insMnctive ly felt that he was pursued. Fear lent him wings. He diopped a saddle, hoping, thereby, to satisfy the hunger of the lions. He found pres ently, however, that they made no halt. It was the young man they raged after, and naught but his blood would appease them. He now cast aside his remaining saddle and his rifle, and leaned forward on his skates with all the power he pos sessed. Kevertheiess the beasts gained rapidly on him. ne could hear their mighty bounds. At times he fancied he could feel their hot breath. He gazed over his shoulder, and that glance revealed the lions, their mouths wide open, and their blood-red tongues hanging over their jaws, while their cries were as frequent as the baying of a blood-hound. He was now compelled to double on his course, the weight and impetus of tho lions carrying them beyond him. Happily Nicholas preserved his pres ence of mind, and by his skill as a skater, combined with wonderful activ ity, he eluded the efforts made by tho lions to seize him, and drew slowly to ward home. Presently he saw the smoke curling from under the rocky shelf, and as he shot past his ears were greeted by the welcome crack of a rifle, and one of the lions tumbled over dead almost at his feet. The voyager again turned toward the rock. Jules had reloaded. His unerring aim stretched the remain ing lion upon the ice, and Nicholas was saved. It was some months, however, before he fully recovered from the superhuman efforts made by him in his race for lite. Tho next summer he served as guide, and it was while fishing in this same river that he related to the writer his thrilling adventure. Disgust, A sentiment worthy of analysis is the strange disgust telt by the poor for cer tain articles of food. During the famine in Ireland people would almost starve rather than eat ' Indian meal. Australian preserved meat is an abomi nation to the inmates of British poor houses. The female paupers in the Cardiff workhouse, to show their dis like to this kind of food, lately rose up in revolt and assailed the House ouici als. The visiting committee having partaken of a repast consisting as Aus traliun mutton prepared as an Irish palatable. Gamblers In Tears. " Gus" Clayton, a well-known gam- bier, of Waco, Cal., was'Tmried the other day, and his companions called upon a Presbvterian minister to preach the funeral sermon. He obeyed the summons readily, but upon following his guide to where the remains were, judge of his surprise to find himself in a gambling saloon, surrounded by men ot uia world, gamblers and others. whose ears were all unused to hear the voice of God s minister in such a place, The reverend gentleman was equal to the occasion, and preaahed a disoourse that will be long remembered by all wno n aa the good fortune to near it, Many cheeks were bathed in tears. A Memorable Day In Dayton. Forty Women Marching tn the 800 Bar lloomi. Friday will be a memorable day in the annals of Dayton. The Womens' Prayer League, in two divisions of about twenty women each, commanded by Mrs. Rev. Dr. Weakley, the wife of Presiding Elder Weakley, of the Cin cinnati Conference, and Mrs. J. Harry Thomas, a handsome young married woman, marched upon the 300 bar rooms of Dayton through a drenching rain and sloppy streets. When the columns debouched from the English Lutheran Church, after morning pray ers, the commotion in the streets was intense. The " saloonists" were in stantly notified to put their houses in order and to stand on guard. They were visibly agitated, a natural conse quence of an assault to which no physi cal or even legal resistance could be offered. Mrs. Weakley's column moved np Jefferson street to Fischer's, and marched directly to his door, which was shut in their faces. Then the women dropped on their knees in the nasty sloppiness, and began their de votions. In the meantime a consider able crowd gatheted, curiously watch ing the operations, while the women prayed and sung by turns. Some of the spectators were visibly anected, but many made coarse side remarks, al though no indignities were offered to the devotees. The spectacle was pro foundly impressive. Fischer firmly re fused to take the pledge. Moving a door or two south, the women halted at winship s "St. Charles," which was full of men drink ing. Mrs. Weakley offered him the pledge over the counter, which he de clined, and proceeded to wait on his customers, who, unabashed, took their " toddies as though nothing unusual was going on. A gentleman next door invited the ladies into his office, where they sung and prayed. A few doors below they drew up in front of Nick Clemsens's restaurant and saloon, where the door was closed in their faces. They knelt in the filth again, and after devotions -Mrs. Weak ley went to the side door to inter view Clemens. She asked. "Wont you give up the business ?" Clemens sternly replied "No," saying that his place was quiet enough until the women came, in the meantime a crowd had filled the bar room completely and drank copiously, while the women suntr and prayed, making considerable noise. The crowd had now largely increased outside, but the police kept a passage way clear, and respectful attention was paid to the extraordinary scene. Tne liecket House was next visited. Rieboldthe proprietor, invited them into the genth men's parlor, where they prayeu anu sung, alter wnicn Mrs. Weakley was introduced to Mr. Beber. "owner of the bar, who said he intended to continue his business until he found something better. Riebold invited the ladies to dinner, and some of them ac cepted. Hadlock, the heaviest lager neer seller in Dayton, was visited. He was curt and stern, and did not want his business interfered with. He went outside, with a pencil and paper, to take names to prosecute for damage to his business. The Bicker Brothers were visited with a similar . result, and the ladies were permitted to occupy the saloon. Tho bar was surrounded with a dense mass of men, who occupied all the attention of five bar keepers. The ladies prayed, sung, and retired. Meanwhile the column under Mrs. Thomas marched into the little saloon of Harry bmilh, on Sixth street, who had been advertising his place for sale for 20 for a month past, and, after a little, he surrendered, the women con gratulating him with feminine fervor. This was the only success of the day. Subsequently they visited the Ross Theatre, but were denied admission by all but Ross, who held a private con ference with them in his baik room. It seems that he wants to sell out. A Curious Libel Suit. In the Dublin Consolidated Cham ber, an extraordinary case came before the court on a motion for leave to plead. The action is brought by Sir William Carroll, formerly Lord Mayor of Dub lin, to recover damages laid at 500 from Michael Angelo Hayes, a well known Dublin artist, for an alleged libel. The summons and plaint set out that tho plaintiff is a duly qualified medical man, and that the defendant, while he well knew this, did, in a cari cature portrait, represent the plaintiff in tiie lorm and costume ol a olown in a circus, with a leering and ridiculous ex pression of countenance, with his left leg and foot swollen to a ridiculous manner, in allusion to plaintiff, who, shortly before the publication, had an attack of gout. It also represented his left hand awkwardly and ridiculously extended, as if for the purpose of solici tation, and with his right hand in his breeches-pocket, from which a hand kerchief or something of the kind is hanging, exhibiting thereon the word " Knighthood," with a note of admira tion after the said word, and containing immediately under the said caricature false, scandalous, malicious, and de famatory matter of and concerning the plaintiff, and as if uttered by the plain tiff, viz., the words following :-r-" Is there anything I can go for to fetch for to carry for to get a lord mayor, a col lector-general, a city marshal, an apothe- oary -general, a city treasurer, oi a town councilor, or anything, everything?" The application was for leave to plead a traverse of the publication, a plea of no libel, and a plea of fair comment. Baron Dowse said he certainly thought tne plea or fair comment was being car ned to an undue extent. , Defendant's counsel agreed to admit the publica tion, and the plea of . fair comment was allowed. - - , . n Tbtjst. There are cases in whioh a man woujd be ashamed' not ' to have been imposed' upon. , There is a con fidence necessary to human intereourse. and without which, men are often, mora injured by their own suspicion; than. tiiey could be by the peraijltyj)! Plain dealing is a jewel ; bnt they mat wear it are out of lashion. The Matches We Use. How, and ot What They are Made. The sticks of which matches are made are brought from Canada, where the making of them is a separate busi ness. They are made by machinery which drives a block of wood upon a steel die that has numerous small holes I in it. The wood is forced through these holes in. the rounded form of the match sticks. They ore twice the length of an ordinary match, and come packed in boxes. The fir3t thing to be done with the sticks is to arrange them so that large numbers can be handled at once in dipping the ends in the mixtures that cause them to light readily. If the sticks were simply tied together in bun dles, they would be too close together, and the composition would be all in one mass upon their ends, so a machine had to be invented which should make them into rolls and still keep the sticks a lit tle distance apart. This machine did its work with wouderfnl rapidity and accuracy ; the sticks were applied to the machine which made them into large rolls, and with a belt of cloth be tween the layers of sticks ; this cloth keeps the sticks just a little distance apart. When the bundle is large enough, some two feet across, it is bound securely and then taken to anoth er room. The composition upon the ends of matches does not burn long enough to set fire to the stick, and before that is applied it is necessary to prepare the wood with something that will take fire readily and burn long enough to set fire to it. For the cheaper matches sulphur is used, but for what are called parlor matches they use paraffine, which burns without any unpleasant odor. The ma terial is melted in a large vessel, and the roll of sticks so suspended that'the ends can be evenly and slightly dipped in the melted sulphur. Both ends are dipped, and they nre then ready to re ceive the composition that takes fire when the match is rubbed. The prin cipal thing in the composition is phos phorous. The phjsphorous is mixed with dissolved glue, and whiting or some other powder to make a paste, and coloring stuff is added. The whole, after being stirred over a fire is put into a machine where it is more thor oughly mixed. It is very important that the composition be well mixed, as otherwise some matches will get more, and some less phosporous than they ought to have, and will go off too easily, or with more difficulty than they should. After it is well mixed the sticks that have had their ends covered with sul phur or paraffine are dippped iu it iu the same manner as'at the first dipping, only care is required to have but .a small quantity of the mixture' just at the very tips. The next step is to dry the matches, and they are taken to a room where they are placed upon racks; here there is a fan rapidly revolving, so as to constantly change the air ami gradually dry the composition upon the ends of the matches. Tbey are not al lowed to become so dry that they will readily take fire, as they have still to go through another machine, and if they were perfectly dry, disagreeable acci dents might happen. Thus far the matches are ill pairs, or "double-headers" twice the length of one and they have to be cut apart. For this they are put into a cutting machine, which un rolls the bundle and carries the sticks over a knife which rapidly cuts them in equal parts, and the now complete matches slide into boxes on each side of the machine. All that remains to be iione is to pack tnem in the proper boxes. How to Make Hearth Rugs. There is in every household a great quantity of worsted and flannel pieces that are of small account and can be of no service for garments, but if saved they can be rendered useful and beauti ful in the manufacture of hearth rugs or mats, to lay before bureaus, sofas, or organs. Take a piece of hemp sacking, aud draw seme pretty design in the cen tre a bouquet ot flowers, a wreath, or some animal ; mark a border with a chain or heraldry pattern; sew the can vat into a frame like quilting frames, only smaller, so as not to occupy too much room; have a hook made like a crochet hook or needle ; one can be manufactured easily by taking a para sol brace and filing the end into a prop er form; out the scraps of cloth into strips of half an inch in width if thin fabric make it wider ; pass the hook through the canvas with.the right hand, have the cloth underneath the frame in the left hand, insert a loop on the hook, and draw it to the upper side about three -fourths of an inch ; leave about two threads space and close in another loop; regard the selection of colors, so as to shade them nicely, and keep the form of your pattern it is very quiet, easy and fascinating work ; work the ngures first, and then draw in tho filling up or ground work with some dark color black, brown or drab; after it is completed, shear the whole surface evenly, but not too close, and you have a fine, substantial, durable rug, that will last a lifetime, and do more service and be prettier than any imported article that would cost any where from ten to thirty dollars ; and tne best oi all is that it is homemade, So Place for Poor Men, A Minnesota man, writing from Southern California, is sot so enthusi astic about that region as Mr. Nordboff. He says of the country around Los Augeles that there are generally no trees, and the grass is three or . four inches high in places, though on the hills it is barely high ' enough to cover the ground. There are many places on high ground entirely .-bare of -vegetation, owing to the want of water. The rains are from November to January, and scaroely cloud the whole summer and falL Everything is grown toy ira gation. . They can xaise by water not only oranges, crapes. lemons, and' all semi-tropical fruits, but wheat, bailey,' and, all kinds; pf . vegetables. A. Mr. Rose- has 135 acres of grapes, ana his .wine crop for the year waa nearly S100.000. He also has : 6,000" brari'ge trees, and "g'ets f20a tree for all that are in run bearing. Tne juinnesotan considers it a poor place lor a poor man, and that there is no money in growing anything but fruits and sheep. Items of Inlcrpst. Revenge converts a little right into a great wrong. The tongue the latch-key that lets out the mind. Books, like friends, should bo well used, not abused. The fate of the child is always tho work of its mother. Nothing more precious than time, yet nothing less valued. Plant the crab tree where you will, it will not bear pippins. Tho ways of women Anywhere from ninety to two hundred pounds. Those large and awkward looking fans will not be in vo?ue next summer. It is almost impossible to detect the new artificial flowers from natural ones. One of the new collars is called the Empress. It is of linen edged with lace. No less than eighteen different shades of green are shown in summer goods. A sure sign of an early spring is a cat watching a hole in the wall with her back up. Three sisters own and operate a Maine flouring mill, and they are mak ing money. A youth of Cairo, 111., killed himself because he had been found out 'in a $250 defalcation. Tight sleeves and round waist con tinue the rule for all ordinary dresses intended for house wear. The sash ends are now worn very long, and almost reach the bottom of the skirt. Bows are out of fashion. A New York bride recently startled the fashionables by dispensing with orange blossoms at the ceremony. Black silk suits trimmed on the waist with revers of black velvet and black bows down the front are handsome and stylish. The first thing a promising youth said to a dog presenting his nose at his heels, was: "Go away I Do yon think I'm a bone ?" " Now, Johnnie," says grandma, "I want yon to sit as still as a mouse." "Mouses don't sit still, grandma." Sure enough. Judge John T. Brown was so remorse fully frightened at the certainty of be ing exposed as a defaulter in Alton, that he killed himself. If you invest money in books, and never read them, it is the Fame as put ting your money into a bank but riever drawing either principal or interest. A juryman remarked, ",Moy it please yer honor,' I am deaf in one ear." '" Then leave- the box)" replied the judge, " a juror must hear both sides." Chinese laborers are reported a fail ure in Georgia. They have been em ployed in digging a canal, but havo proved inefficient and will soou bo sent off. A new style of boys' trowsers has been invented in Boston, with a copper seat, sheet-iron knees, riveted down the seams, and water-proof pockets to hold broken eggs. The late Dr. Livingstone's success as an explorer was largely due to his stern, self reliant habits, his great power of organization and detail, and, above all, to the sway which ho was able to , exer cise over the natives. A lady aged seventeen is suing for a divorce, her husband being in the regu lar habit of remarking, truthfully, but with a heartlessness rarely reached by the most of his sex.'.that she doesn't know a tea-kettle from a flat-iron. An ambitious young lady was talking very loudly about her faTorite authors, when a literary chap asked her if sho liked Lamb. With a look of ineffablo disgust, she answered that she cared very little about what she ate, compared with knowledge. A correspondent of the Scientific American states that he has learned from many years' experience in a ma chine shop, where over three hundred men are employed, that rag glued on a flesh wouuil is not only a speedy cura tive, but a great protectior. It is said that if one part of sugar is lissolved in three parts of water, and digested with one-fourth part of calcic hydrate, the resulting liquid will readi ly dissolve glue warm, and the solution will remi.m fluid on oooiing, witnout having lost any of its adhesive prover- ties. Good talkers are becoming rare now- a-days, but are occasionally to be met with. Ut one whoso conversation is very entertaining but rather discon nected, a witty lady once remarked, " Oh, yes, he s very clever, bnt he talks like a book in which there are leaves occasionally missing." Put everything in perfect repair. If you are near a blacksmith and wheel wright s shop you can probably get the work done cheaper and better than by doing it yourself. But when you have to send several miles there are many little things that can be repaired at home in less time than is required to take them to the shop. Maine proposes to authorize con ductors to arrest gamblers who work their trains. An excellent idea; but there ought to be added to it a provis ion making railroad companies respon sible for the losses of their patrons at the hands of . professional gamblers, these gamblers being well known by the employes of all trains. , - ; r A. man in Indiana' has had lots pf fun out of a valentine, in whioh he was depicted aa " mother's pet" This set him in a rage ; he got drunk, abused his mother, whipped his wife because bethought she knew something of -it, was discharged from his place n the mill, made a disturbance on the streets, was arrested, fined about $13, and sent to jail. --! , "'- t V3 ; " The St, LouU" Democrat says 'pertk nfintly, if rather bitterly. Tiie phject now seems to be to so arrange the schools, and hons&holds of the kuid that the teachur may simply 6itin judgment upon the manner in which the chUd haa been taught at home. Children, go to school, not to learn, but to show the teacher how much Ihey have been taught during the preoeding evening at home,"