) iiiili HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., ttiltor and Publisher. :- - NIL . DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IV. ItlDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1874. NO. 19. l (3 7 " Too Low, and let Too High t I. He came in velvet and In gold ; He wooed her with a careless grace ) A conBdonce too rashly bold Breathed in his language and his face. While she a simple maid replied i " No more of love 'twixt thee and me ! Those tricks of passion I deride, Nor trust thy boasted verity. Thy Butt, with artful smile and sigh, Resign, resign : No mate am I for thee or thine, , lioing too low, and yet too high !" n. His spirit changed ; his heart grew warm With genuine passion ; morn by morn More psrfect seemod the virgin charm Thai crowned her 'mid the ripening corn. And now he wooed with fervent mien, With soul intonse, and words of fire, But reverence-fraught, as if a queen Were hearkening to his heart's desire. She brightly blushed, she gently sighed, Yet still the villago maid replied (Though in tad accents, wearily) : " Thy suit resign. Resign, resign ! Lcurl Hugh, I never can be thine : Too low am I, and yet too high !" JOHN AX1) I. " Come, John," said I, cheerfully, "it really is time to go ; if you stay any longer I shall be afraidto come down and lock the door after you." My visitor rose a proceeding that always reminded me of the genius emerging from the copper vessel, as he measured six feet three and stood looking-reproachfully down upon me. " Yott are in a great hurry to get rid of me," lie replied. Now I didn't agree with him, for he had made iiis usual call of two hours and a half ; having, in country phrase, taken to " sitting up '' with me so liter ally that I was frequently at my wit's end to suppress the yawn that I knew would bring a troop rushing af ier it. He was a tine, manly-lookiug fellow, his John Crauford, old for his age which was the rather boyish period of twenty-two and every way worthy of being loved. But I didn't love him. I was seven years Lis senior ; and when, instead of lotting the worm of concealment prey on his damask cheek, he ventured to tell his love for my ma ture self, I remorselessly seized an English Prayer-book, and pointed sternly to the clause, " A man may not marry his grandmother." That was three years ago ; and I added, en couragingly, "Besides, John, you are a child, uud don't know your own mind." " If a man of nineteen doesn't know his owu mind," remonstrated my lover, " I would like, to know who should. But I will wait for you seven years, if vou say so fourteen, as Jacob did for Rachel." " You forget," I replied, laughing at his way of mending matters, " that a woman does not, like wine, improve with age. But seriously, John, this is absurd ; you are a nice boy, and I like you but my feelings toward jou are more like those of a mother than a wife." Tho boy's eyes flashed indignantly ; and before I could divine his intention he had lifted me from the spot where I stood, and carried me, infant fashion, to the sofa at the other end of the room. "I could almost find it in my heart to shake yon!" he muttered, as he set le down witn emptiasis. This was rather like the courtship of VJT.Uiaui of Normandy, and matters proiinWd to be quite exciting. 'D$(tt do th -.t again," said I, with dignity, rhen I had recovered my breath. ' "Will you mnrry me ?" asked John, somewhat threateningly. " Not just at present," I replied. " The great, handsome fellow," I thought, as he paced the floor restlessly, why couldn't he fall in love with some pirl of fifteen, instead of setting his affections on un old maid like me ? I don't want-the boy on my hands, and I won't have hiral" " As to your being twenty-six," pur sued John, in answer to my thoughts, ' you say it's down in the family Bible, and 1 suppose it must be so"; but no one would believe it ; and don't care if you're fort,. You look like a girl of sixteen, and you are the only woman I shall ever love." Oh, John, John! at least five mil lions of men have said that same thing before in every known language. Never theless, when you fairly break down and cry, 1 relent for I am disgrace fnliy soft-hearted and weakly promise then and there that I will either keep my own Dame or take yours. For love is a very dog in the manger, and John looked radiant at this concession. It was a comfort to know that if he could not gather the flower himself, no one else would. A sort of family shipwreck had wafted John to my threshold Our own house hold was sadly broken up, and I found mvsell comparatively young in years. with a half-invalid father, a large house and very little money. What more natural than to take boarders? And among the first were Mr. Cranford, and his son, and sister, who had just been wrecked themselves by the death of the wife and mother in a foreign land one of those sudden, unexpected deaths that h'avo the Burvivors in a dazed con dition, because it is so diffloult to imagine the gay worldling who has been called henoe in another state of being. Mr. Cranford was one of my admira tions from the first. Tall, pale, with durk hair and eves, he reminded me ol Dante, only that he was handsome and ha had such a ireneral air of know iDg everything worth knowing (without the least pedantry, however), that I was quite afraid of him. He was evi dently wrapped up in John, and pa tient with his sister- which was asking auite enoneh of Christian charity un der the sun, for Mrs. Shellgrove was an unmitigated nuisance. Such a talkerl babbling of her own and her brother s affuirs with an equal indiscretion, and treating the latter as though he were an incapable infant. They staid with us three years, and during that time I was fairly perseoted about John. Mrs. Shellgrove wrote me a letter on the snbjeot, In which she in formed me that the whole family were ready to receive me with open arms a prospect that I did not find at all allur ing. They seemed to have set their hearts upon me as a person peouliary fitted to train John in the way he shoud go. Every thing, I was told, depended on his getting the right kind of wife. A special interview with Mr. Cran ford, at his particular request, touched me considerably. "I hope," said hp, "that yon will not refuse my boy. Miss Edna. He has set his heart so fully upon you, and you are every thing that I could desire in a daughter. I want some one to pet. I feel sadly lonely at times, and I am sure that you would just fill the vacant niche. " I drew my hand away from his caress, and almost felt like hating John Cran ford. Life with him would one of ease and luxury ; but I decided I would rather keep boarders. Not long after this the Cranfords con cluded to go to housekeeping, and Mrs. Shellgrove was in her glory. She al ways came to luncheon now in her bon net, and gave us minute details of all that had been done and talked of about the house in the last twentv-four honrs. "It is really magnificent," said she, lengthening each syllable. "Brother lias such perfect taste ; and he is actu ally furnishing the library, Miss Edna, alter your suggestion, lou see, we look upon you quite as one of the family." " That is very good of von." I re plied, shortly ; " but I certainly have no expectation of ever belonging to it." Mrs. shellgrove laughed as though I had perpetrated an excellent joke. " loung ladies -always deny these things, of course ; but John tells a dif ferent story." 1 rattled the cups and saucers an grily ; and my thought floated off not to John, but to John's father, sitting lonely in the library furnished after my suggestion. Wasn't it, after all my duty to marry the family generally ? The house was finished nud moved into, and John spent his evenings with me. i nsed to get dreadfully tired of him. He was really too devoted to be at all interesting, and I had reached that state of feeling that, if summarily ordered to take my choico between him and the gallows, I would have prepared myself for hanging with a sort of cheer ful alacrity. I locked the door upon John on the evening in question, when I had finally got rid of him, with these feelings in lull lorce ; and 1 meditated while un dressing on some desperate move that should bring mat tern to a orisia. But the boy had become roused at last. He too had reflected in the watch es of the night ; and next day I received quite a dignined letter lrom him, telling me that business called him from the city for two or three weeks, and that possibly on his return I might appreci ate his devotion better. I felt inex pressibly relieved. It appeared to me the most sensible move that John had made in the whole course of our ac quaintance, and I began to breathe with more freedom. Time flew, however, and the three weeks lengthened to six without John's return. He wrote to me, but his letters became somewhat constrained ; and I scarcely knew what to make of him. If he would only give me up, I thought ; but I felt sure that he would hold me to that weak promise of mine, that I should either become Edna Cranford or lemain Edna Carrington. " Mr. Cranford" was announced one evening, and I entered the parlor fully prepared for an overdose of John, but found myself confronted by his father. He looked very gravo : and mstoutly I imagined all sorts of things, and re proached myself for my coldness. " John is wbll?" I gasped, finally. " Quite well," was the reply, in such kind tones that I felt sure there was something wrong. What it was I cared not, but poured forth my feelings to my astonished visi tor. " He must nut come here again !" I exclaimed. " I do not wish to see him. Tell him so, Mr. Cranford 1 tell that I had rather remain Edna Carrington, as he made me promise, than to become Edna Cranford." "Aud he made you promise this?" was the reply. "The selfish fellow I But, Edna what am I to do without the little girl I have been expecting ? I am very lonely so lonely that I do not seo how I can give her np." I glanced at him, and the room seemed swimming around everything was dreadfully unreal. I tried to sit down, and was carried tenderly to the sofa. " Shall it bo Edna Carrington or Ed na Cranford ?" he whispered. " You need not. break your promise to John." " Edna Cranford," I replied, feeling that I had left the world entirely, and was in another sphere of existence. If the thought crossed my mind that Mr. Cranford had rather cheerfully sup planted his son. the proceeding was fully justified during the visit which I soon received from that young gentle man. I tried to make it plain to him that I did him no wrong, as I had never professed to love him, though not at all sure that I wouldn't receive the shak ing threatened on a previous occasion, and I endeavored to be as tender as pos sible, for I really felt sorry lor him. To my great surprise, John laughed. " Well, this is jolly 1" he exclaimed. " And I'm not a villain, after all. What do vou think of her. Edna? He produced an ivorytype in a rich velvet case a pretty, little, blue-eyed simpleton ; she looked like cetal seven teen. " Rose," he continued" Rose Peri ling : the name suits her, doesn't it ? She was staying at my uncle's in Mary land that s where 1 ve been visiting, vou know and she's such a dear little confiding thing that a fellow couldn't help falling in love with her. And she thinks no end of me, you see says she s finite afraid of me, and all that. John knew that I wasn't a bit afraid of him : but I felt an elderly sister sort of interest in his happiness, and never liked him so well as at that moment. And this was the dreadlul news that his father bad come to break to me, when his narrative was nipped in the bad by my revelations, and the inter view ended in a far more satisfactory manner than either of us had antici pated. So I kept tny promise to John, after all, and as Miss Rose kept hers, he is now a steady married man, and a very agreeable son-in-law. Farming In Italy. Anna 'Brewster, writing from Rome tothe Philadelphia Bulletin, says : "A friend described to me the other even ing the type of a veritable Mercante di Campagna dell' Agro Romano, or a Campagna merchant, as they call these remarkable farmers. He took for this t pe a certain Signor Mazzoleni. This gentleman works three farms which lie on the border of the sea between Auc tium and Terraciua, These farms con tain about 50,000 acres of land. On this vast space are pastured 14,000 sheep and lambs, 3,000 oxen and cows, 700 horses and mules. Signor Maz zoleni has 9,000 acres sown with wheat, oats, corn, and beans. Yearly he gath ers in from his great fields 52,000 sacks of grain ; he sell 45,000 pounds of wool, 190,000 pounds of cheese, and furnishes to the prevision or meat markets 5,000 sheep aud lambs, 1,500 calves and 2, 000 fatted beef. This immense under taking brings him in a rental of from 450,000 to 500,000 francs. Now comes the most singular part of this veritable history. Twenty years ago Signor Mazzoleni was nothing but a petty tailor. For fifteen centuries these gigantic farming undertakings have ex isted on the Campagna of Rome, or Argo-Romuno. About 113 families have owned the whole tract, and their agents have worked the best lands. The pro prietors and their agents never live ou these farms. The only buildings are the casale, a very modest house, which is sometimes the ruins of an ancient Middle Age fortification, where the agent or master lodges at need ; some very modest out-buildings for servants, small stables and granary, or barns. There are also some straw huts for tho workmen and laborers. The cattle of all kinds live in the open air. Some of the very largest farms, such as the farms of the Campo Morto or Conca, have not as many buildings on them as as we would see on one of the smallest of our farms. The meicanti di cam- pagna are not people of the couutry, but ol the city ; they are really agricul tural merchants. Their busines con sists in establishing a vast fabric of natural products on a given piece of land ; they must unceasingly watch so as to make the produce proportionate to the demand ; watch sales, and be ready to profit by the raise, and lofie as lit-tlo as possible by the fall of prices, throughout the whole perimeter of the Mediterranean. Thus the mercante di campagna, you see, must be at once agriculturist, dealer and banker, and ship owner also ; directing at ono and the same time the ra sing of cattle, the culture of land, thousands of laborers ; small maritime expeditions, and his Roman country house. It is a perilous business, but has built many a family iu the Papal States to title as well as fortune. Colt Breaking. In Kentucky we saw a two-vear old colt broke dead broke in a half-hour, so that ke worked as amiably as a trained horse. The colt had never been bridled. He was attached to a curricle called a " break-drayv" and put turougn astonishingly quick. The break-dray is nothing more than a strong, broad-tread dray, with long shafts, the tail omitted, and a spring seat between the wheels. Tho harness was strong, and so arranged over the hips as to prevent the possibility of nign KioKing, ana tne colt was hitched so far from the druy that his heels could not possibly reach the driver. The process of hitching was, of course, very delicate, as a colt is excessively ticklish, and is apt to let his heels fly awKwaraiy. ah ueing ready, ono man held the colt and another took the seat and reins. The colt was then let go to plunge as he pleased. The break-dray which was so broad that upsetting seemed out of the question was pushed upon tne coit, and the colt pushed side ways until lie started. A few plunges settled mm. lie went as lie pleased. up hill, down hill, and so on, until he nuauy struck a sober trot, and was thoroughly broke. The confused aud bewilde.ed look of that colt was piti fully amusing. Mr. Bob Strader was giving directions, and upon ono of the breakers raising his hand to slap the coic to urge mm. Mr. wtrader said " Don't do that. Never strike a colt when you are breaking kim. Push him sideways, or any way. Let him go just where he will, and how he will. Let him fall down if he will, but don't strike him." When the colt was taken out of the shafts he was as wet as if he had been in water, and a child could have handled him. He had not been struck a blow. The dray, we believe, was invented by Mr. Strader. Hydrophobia. A French physioian, Mr, Buisson, of Lyons, claims to have prevented or cured hydrophobia in every one of more than eighty cases which came to his notice. His preventive was a Russian bath, at 134 and 144 degrees Fehrenheit, for seven days in euocession, before the disease declared itself. After the symptoms had developed, a single bath was sufficient. Buisson discover ed the remedy by accident, when en deavoring to suffocate himself in heated vapor,' to escape the horrors of hydro phobia, contracted in the pursuit of his profession. When his bath had reach ed au extreme high temperature, all the dread symptoms disappeared as if by magic, never to return. So dimple a remedy cau do no harm, unless the patient has organic disease of the heart, and it certainly is worthy of trial here. The Huckster. "Ia that an escu lent?" inquired Professor Hotohkiss, the other day, of a huckster who dis played in the market a mammoth and very odd-looking vegetable. The man's face assumed a scornful smile, and af ter he had studied the professor' form contemptuously for a moment, he an swered, "Esculent I thunder and light ning, no I that's a blue-nose potato." Hans Andersen. When the cable dispatch came to the effect that Hans Andersen, the Danish poet, lay dying, all literary journalists prepared to write a sketch of his life, or in some good fitting way do honor to the good old man, and a shade of gloom passed into every household in which there had been children to teach the older people to love him. How ever, the obituaries were unwritten and the tears unshed, for the next steamer brought word that the immediate dan ger was over, and the old poet, although an invalid, had, it was hoped, several years of life yet before him. Later another story was told, which we have reason to believe to be true, that Ander sen had himself stated that, in spite of the enormous sale of his books in for eign countries, these sales or his wide spread reputation had never been of ono dollar's pecuniary value to him, except in a single instance when an American publisher, unsolicited, lately sent him a copyright percentage on the sale of one edition of his works. An dersen is now an old and feeble man, and although not in want, lacks many comforts to make his few remaining years easy and pleasant. It has been proposed, that instead of waiting until the affection and homage of his friends in this country could evaporate the funeral notices aud private sighs and lamentations, they should send him some solid, practical testimony in token of gratitude for the pleasure he has given them. Andersen deserves, as no other man does, that title of the children's friend, the more because ho will never, in all probability, be dead to them. Like all joyous, child-like -natures, there is an immortal quality of life in all he says and does ; morbid, melancholic men re turn to the channel-house and mold as to their native place ; but the Danish poet and his gay, happy kinsfolk never can cease to be to us. He will go out of sight some day, but, long after he is dust, the little chap who reads the " Hardy Tin Soldier" will know quite all that the man who tells it to him is above somewhere, tel'dng stories as wonderful to other children about his knee. There is, too, a something oddly contagious, so to speak, iu Andersen's genius ana character ; to the man who once has heard his story there is a slight change in the tone and color of all the out-door world thereafter. His early years gave a strange bent to his genuisMAndersen spent his childish days in the kitchen and shoe maker s ghop where his father and mother worked. Outside were the nar row, sloping streets .of the town ot Odense, smelling strongly of leather and fish, and opening into the waters of the Skager Rack, whioh shone red in the evening sun. The boy knew nothiug of dwarfs or genu to people this scene, but his imagination was no less a potent and life-giving flame ; every paltry object about him lived lor him with a soul of its own, talked, fought, boasted, suf fered as a human being. When the lad was old enough to tell the stories of these tin soldiers or old street-lamps, the world would stop to listen, as it al ways does to a true thing. People long ago believed that mermaids and birds or faries might have adventures ; but 'at the touch of this boy the mirrors and tables in the drawing-room, the toys in the nursery, even the cook's darning- needle aud the matches in their box, began to expose their loves and hates, and private hates and squabbles. An dersen has been emphatically the En chanter of Home, and the work of his youth made childhood for most of us purer and happier. Jjet our children, then, return the gift to him iu comfort and cheer for his home during the few days left to him. The Stage Horse Kitty. The following is one of Mr. Charles Dudley Warner's spirited little picture sketches from life during one of his stage-coach journeys: May I never forget the spirited little lade, the oft-leader in tne third stage, the petted belle of the route, the ner vous, coquettish, mincing mare of Marshy Hope. A spoiled beauty she was ; you could see that as she took the road with dancing step, tossing her pretty head about, and conscious of her shining black coat, and her tail done up "in any simple knot," like the back hair of Shelley's Beatrice Cenci. How she ambled, and sidled, and plumed herself, and now and then let fly her little heels high in air, in mere excess of larkish feeling. do, oirl I so, Kitty I murmurs the driver, in the softest tones of admira tion ; " she don't mean anything by it ; she's just like a kitten." But the heels kept flying above the traces, and by-and-by the driver is obliged to "speak harsh" to the beauty. The reproof of the displeased tone is evidently felt, for she settles at once to her worn, snowing perhaps a little impatience, jerking her head up and down, and protesting by her nim ble movements against the more delib erate trot of her companion. I believe that a blow from the cruel lash would have broken her heart ; or esJe it would have made a little fiend of the spirited creature. The lash is hardly ever good for the sex. The Women for Wives. The N. Y. Star commends the advice of Chancellor Crosby to the graduates, with reference to marri'ge, to avoid the fashionable and frivolous, and seek those who will adorn their lives with domestic virtue ; and yet, says the editor, how strange it is that nine men out of ten will pick a stylish, frivolous girl for a wife if she be pretty, in pre ference to one with all the virtues and a homely visage. Men admire all the good qualities in woman, but they rare ly take one to wife if she be possessed of the spirit of an angel, if she is not also blessed with a comely visage, And the girls know this as well as we do. Catch them in the kitchen cook ing when they can find a beau and have a good time in the parlor. Hence we say there is little or no encouragement for a girl to train herself on Chancellor Crosby's pattern. It is only old gentle men who have " had their day " and wish to settle down quietly, that seem to appreciate this kind of woman. A Bashful Man. Charlie Johnson is a first-rate follow, only lie'a terribly baBhful. He called to see Miss Jones one night. He never would have been guilty of fluoh an act, had she not met him coming out of church cornered him right up by the steps where all the girls could see him aud made him promise to come round the next night before she'd let him go. So the following evening Charlie arrayed himself like a lily of the field, and started for the Jones', This hap pened last winter. He got there about eight o'clock. It was quite dark. Charlie mounted the steps ; rang the bell ; and then his e mrage failed him. He clearnd the six stepB at one leap and fled down the street. Bridget went to the door. Nobody there. Old Jones hailed Bridget and asked her who rang the bell. " Shure it's some of-of of thim lads that do be ringin' the bill ivery night, and-and thin run away bad look to thim, at arl and at aril" " Once more to the breech, dear friends," was Charlie's soliloquy, as he slowly retraced his steps. With glad and gallant tread did he re-ascend the front stoop and blithely pulled the bell. But nimbly did he again descend the steps and swiftly disappear np the street, reaching the quarter post in forty seconds. Bridget at the door ; same result as before. Bridget waxed wroth. And old Jones vowed he'd fix that infernal whelp ; so he got a piece of stont broom-cord ; tied one end of it to the iron railing on the further side of the steps, about a foot higher than the top step ; then passed it through a hole in the filigree work on the other side of the steps at the same heighth ; brought the end of the string through the blind of the bay-window, thence into the par lor ; afterwards he went out and slack ened the string so as to have it lay flat along the step where nobody would notice it in coming up but where, if it were tightened up from within the house, after one had gone up the step, one would be somewhat apt to "notice" it in going down, especially if one were in a hurry. Then Mr. Jones sat down in the parlor ; grasped the end of the string and waited for the bell to ring. Bridget not aware that the old gent had set the trip, had a " little something " fixed up herself. She repaired to the kitchen ; took the boiling tea-kettle from the range; meandered np stairs with it : sat down by a window right over the front door ; and waited, too, for the bell to ring. It rang. The old man pulled the spring Bridget emptied the kettle and Char lie Well, it didn't hurt Charlie much. That is to say, he was able in ft oouple of weeks to sit up and have his bed made ; and inside of a month he could get around very nicely on a pair of crutches. To Do sure, six ol his eye teeth were never found and his left eye looked as if he'd run a knot-hole into it. But he didn't mind such a little thing ns that still, he never seemed to care to go down to Jones afterwards, as a sort of a coldness, as it were, had sprung u between them. Nowad ys when Charlio wishes to experience the estatio delight of a call on Miss Jones, he goes out and lays down in the road in front of his house and lets a hack run over him ; it's just as much fun and not near so far to go, He thinks that by the time he can let a full grown omnibus drive over tho bridge of his nose, without making him wink, he'll be able to stand another whirl down at Jones'. A Well-Merited Rebuke. For a place where the varied humors. characteristics, and moods of hnman nature are developed and exhibited commend me to a crowded horse-car in a large city. All the petty, mean, and manly traits are shown forth by men and women in theee conveyances to their lullest extent. A lew evenings ago a lady entered, and by dint of per sistent crowding, made her way through the car to the front end. Here a gen tleman arose and proffered her his seat, Just as she turned to take it, without so much as thanking him, she concen trated all the venom of a hateful dispo sition in the remark : " If there were any gentlemen in the car they would not allow a lady to go the length of it before giving her a seat." She had not time to get seated before the insolent remark escaped her, when the gentle- man who had offered ber his seat quick ly slid back into it again and quietly remarked : "1 think the ladies are an seated." The rebuke was so deserved aud withal so capitally administered that a murmur of applause escaped from nearly every one in the car, and the crestfallen woman soon rung the bell and alighted. A New Torso. The Berlin Museum is about to come into possession of a Torso, a headless and armless Torso, but one of great antique worth. It is a female figure, small, life-size. The position of the body indicates a dancer or bacchantin, even if the castinets on the right leg did not positively prove it. The char acteristic form, the fall of the light drapery, the execution of parts, partic ularly a well-preserved foot, all show the finest and most exquisite workman ship. The artist selected for his work the best, finest-grained Parian marble. If it be real Grecian work, and out of whioh period, has not been deoided. No similar statue is known to exist in any of the museums of the present day. The Torso was brought secretly in Rome and no mention of tho matter was allowed to be made until it was beyond the clutches of the Italian Gov ernment, if it proves to be, as sup posed, an original, the museum has se cured a cheap prize for the outlay of 4,000 thalers. The agents of France were treating for it at the same time. but the German agent was fortunate in not deliberating over the matter. Fate of Kings. Somebody has been summing np the late of Kings and Emperors, as follows: Out of 2,540 Emperors or Kings, over sixty-four na tions, 299 were dethroned, 64 abdicated, 20 oommitt-d suicide, eleven went mad, 100 died on the battle field, 123 were made prisoners, 25 were pronounced martyrs and saints, 151 were assassina ted, C2 were poisoned, and 108 were sentenced to death. Total, 063. The Frylng-rnn. The Anti-Frying-Pan League is the latest movement, and the need for it is in the everlasting frying ot meat, in the use of so much lard, and in the great number of doughnuts mode. Frying has only one recommendation that is, ease with which it is done. We are told by the apostles of the Anti Frying League that farmers' wives are short-lived because they fry so much, and the children are short-lived be cause so much lard injures their deli cate stomachs ; but it seems that farm ers themselves are long-lived, not be cause they eat lard, for their stomachs are strong, but it is to be presumed, because they have no frying to do. This is a little illogical, because we are told that frying is easv work, ana it so happens that it is not true that farmers live longer than their wives. Take the country through, and quite as many old women will be found as old men, and the probability is there are more extremely old women than extremely old men. Women have many cares and vexations, but they are not exposed to unfavorable influences like men. Men and women rise and fall together. The trouble is not so much in frying ns in what is fried. Fried apples and fried potatoes are unobjectionable, But fried salt pork the year in and out is un doubtedly injurious, and it does not make much odds wnetner it is oonea or fried. Indeed, our people eat too much meat, and they would find it to their advantage to use more fruit, more sugar, and even more cake. The cry against lard is constant, but the article does not differ much from olive oil, which has been in use from the earliest ages, and the human stomach seems ab solutely to need fat in some form to carry on digestion. There are instances where pies made with extremely short crust have proved specifically medi cinal. It is tolerably refrigerating for city people and literary people who think more about their victuals tnan their manners to lecture farmers on thtir habits, while if they should come out into the country and go to work they would quickly adopt many or the habits they despise ; though it is to be granted they would retain some worthy of being retained. A Neat Revenge. Burleigh, the New York correspon dent of tho Boston Journal, writes ds follows: An amusing incident occurred the other day on one of the trains from Boston to this citv. The cars were very crowded. An elegantly dressed woman occupied an entire seat. Her bundles, bandbox, and bag were piled artisti cally. She was oblivous to the fact that passengers were rushing back and forth to obtain sittings. More than one gentleman drew himself np in front of the imperious dame, and silently plead for the vacant spot. She fanned herself leisurely, lolled in the seat, and evidently thought that things were very comfortable as they were. " Is that seat occupied, madam?" said a well dressed gentleman.very politely. " Yes, it is, was the snapping reply. The man walked on. In half au hour the door opened, and in walked a tall, rough fellow, coarse as a l'oiar dear, tiis huge beard was uncombed and stained with tobacco juice. His clothes were illy put on, and smelt of the stable. hie was ungloved, and Drawny, ana weighed full 200. He ran his eye along the car, and caught the seat on which our lady was sitting. He m tdo for it. With great deliberation he seized bun dle, bandbox, and bag, put them plump into the lap of tho lady, and sat down in the vacant spot like one who iutended to stay. If looks could have annihila ted a man there would have been a corpse in that car about that time. The man seemed very much at home. He whistled ; he spit ; he stroked his beard ; he threw round his huge arms, and chuckled inwardly at the evident rage of the woman. She left the cars at New Haven, and had hardly gone before the gentleman who was refused the seat reappeared. To some gentle men who seemed to take a great inter est in the proceedings, he said: "Did you see how that woman treated me ?" "Yes. "Did vou see how she was come up with ?" " Yes." " Well, that man is a horse doctor that sat down beside Ler. He belongs to Bull's Head. I gave him a dollar to ride with that woman as far as she went." The car roared. A Souvenir Extraordinary. Mark Twain in one of his articles speaks of the lady who treasures a pre cions slice of bread from which Dickens had taken a bite. This sounds like the "broadest burlesque, but the following anecdote, which is literally true, and illustrates many people's foolish desire for relics, shows that Twain wes hardly burlesquing in his essay : The last time that Mr. Dickens was in this country he happened one morning to breakfast at the common table of the hotel where- he was e topping. When he had eaten his egg he dropped the empty shell into his egg-cup, and after finishing his breakfast left the table. As soon as he had gone a lady who had sat next him arose, and taking np the egg-cup went to the hotel proprietor and offered to purchase it of him at any price, and the unwashed egg-cup containing the broken shell is now kept by her as a souvenir of the great novelist. Resuscitation of Drowned Persons. The Massachusetts Humane Society has issued a card with these directions for restoring persons apparently drown ed : Convey the body to the nearest house, with head raised. Strip and rnb dry. Wrap in blankets. Inflate the lungs by closing the nostrils with thumb and fingers and blowing into the mouth for cibly, and then pressing with hand on the chest. Again blow in the mouth and press on the chest, and so on for ten minutes, or until he breathes. Keen the body warm, extremities also. Continue rubbing do no give np so long as there is any chanoeof success, Prizes for the best loaves of bread, to be made bv the students, is a new and hopeful feature of several female seminaries this year. Items of Interest. An Arizona girl shot her lover, and then nursed him tenderly till he died. His last words were: "I forgive you, Mary i you did itwith an ivory handled pixtnl." Mr. Beecher has discovered a remedy for somnolency in church. It consists of sitting down at home in a rocking chair, about the time the second bell rings, and taking out a nap there. The statistics of New Zealand for 1872 show a population in 1800 of 76,- 390 ; in 1872 of 273,273. There was a fulUog off in tho value of tho gold ex ported ia 1872. In 1871 it was 2,787, 520, and in 1872 1,731,261. State Senator Powell of Newport, R, I., returned 830, sent him in payment of services as membei of a special com mittee, with the statement that he never allowed himself to take pay for extra services as a member of the Legis lature. Kate Stanton asserts that the planets revolve around the sun by the influ ence of love, ns a child revolves about his parents. When the average youth was a boy he used to revolve round his parents a good deal, and may have been incited thereto by love, but to an unprejudiced observer it looked power fully like a trunk-strap. Conversation between an inquiring stranger and a steamboat pilot : " That is Black Mountain?" "Yes, sir ; the highest mountain above Lake George." " Any story or legend connected with that mountain ?" "Lots of 'em. Two lovers went up that mountain once and never came back again." "Indeed? Why, what beoame of them ?" " Went down on the other side." A countryman with his bride stopped at a Troy hotel the other day. At din ner, when the waiter presented a bill of fare, the young man inquired, " What's that?" "That's a bill of fare," said the waiter. The countryman took it ia his hands, looked inquiringly at his wife and then at the waiter, and finally dove down into his pocket and in quired, " How much is it ?" As for the comparative longevity of drinkers and non-drinkers, the English life insurance actuaries, whose business it was not to be mistaken in such a cal culation, have found that among 1,000 drinkers and 1,000 non-drinkers, taken at random at twenty years of age, the drinkers lived upon an average thiity five vears and six months, and the non- drinkers sixty -four years and two months. San Francisco rejoices over tho puri tp of its lacteal fluid, aud it is with cer tain nervous pride that can only be ex perienced by the upright and law-fearing, that the residents of the place pro pound the following conundrum lo all persons that have a suspicion of ver dancy atached to them : Why is a Sau Francisco milkman like Pharaoh's daughter? Because he takes a little profit out of the water. A Chicago poet, upon hearing that Nilsson was about to erect cow sheds upon her Peoria lots, has burst forth into the following verse: "Christine, Christine, thy milking do the morn and eve between, and not by tne dim re ligious light of the fitful kerosene ; for the cow may plunge, and the lamp ex plode, and the hre nend ride tne eaie, and shriek the knell of the burning town in the glow of the molten pail!" This is a bad year for Russian noble men. - One ot them in Kentucky, a count, purchased two thousand ncres of land there reoently and agreed to pay in ninety days (or as soon as his remit tances came to hand), $300,000 for the propeity. In the meantime ho borrow ed ten dollars lrom tne owner oi tne land, and, subsequently, when the Ut ter was walking out iu one of the fields to take a last farewell look at his lormer possessions, he found the count dead drunk, lying in a corner of a fence. Thomas Whartoc, one of the crew of the United States steamer Endeavor, lying at the foot of Essex street, Jersey Uity, oecame temporarily lusauo iu consequence of drinking to excess, and pulling out his pocket-dook, containing $130, tore it into pieces and threw it overboard. He then jumped overboard and swam under the dock, where for some time he eluded the efforts of those who were trying to rescue him. lie wa finally caught and taken to the station-house, where a dry suit of clothes was furnished him. Henry Ward Beeclier's Work. It is almost to be regretted that Mr. Beecher is so papular, so much loved, and so much sought after. If he could be more of a recluse, if he could live more slowly, there can hardly be a question that his work would last longer. There are so many calls on him now that he is compelled to write and speak nearly at the rate the writer scribbles when the printers are calling for more " copy." A speech, an article, an editorial, a sermon are thrown off with such rapidity that there is no time to trim the rough edges. And this man does an amazing deal of work. He edits a large religious weekly, con tributing its principal editorials, writes for the Ledger regularly, is generally at work on some book, is constantly speaking in publio, and preaches two sermons a week, which are the only ones heard in these parts worthy of regular publication. Several divines have enjoyed the Honor of punnsnea sermons, but only Henry Ward Beecher has managed to keep up the supply of matter worthy of the type-setter's at tention. A large publishing-house Uvea almost entirely on his brains. An Important Expedition. Advises received from Puerto Prin cipe from private sources are of consid erable interest, xrustwortny informa tion through insurgent sources reports the arrival 'of an expedition under Agyilera on the north ooast, with 4,000 Remington and Peabody arms, six pieces of mountain artillery, and a large quantity of ammunition. All the material was safely landed and commu nication established with the forces of Maximo Gomez. This is said to be the most important expedition gotten up by the insurgents since the first year of the war.