c. 7 ;) t. ' J y HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDTJM. Two Dollars per Annum. , . - . '" 1 " ' 1 VOL. IV. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1874. . NO. 20. V Forewell Farewell to the liorao where in youth's giddy honr I revoll'd and laughed 'neath it's Ivy-topp'd roof; ' Where I grew in life's dawn, like a bright, nmiling flower," And thought rot of trouble, and knew not of reproof. O ! swot were the dreams then that came to my pillow, When I rested at night In my ioft tiny bed ; But now changed are those dreams ts a trou-ble-toss'd billow, And painful the visions that, flit thro' my head. v Farewell to that hearth, where my dear mother N taught me To pray to that Being, who gnardoth the weak, Where triHing presents my friondB of ton brought me, And whisper'd the path that was proper to seek i No more shall I gaze on their sweet, beaming faces, Tliat smil'd on the laughing and venturesome boy, No more sliill I feel their heart-warm'd em braces, That ma le me each meeting so doirly enjoy. Farewell to the room where the nun's early rising, Oft I gazed on with pleasure and youthful deirght, To tho stream's dashing waters, to me then surprising, A tear for thee starts as thy beauties 1 write ; The old crumblod bower where oft in my gam bols, I climb'd on each gable decaying with years, No more shall I see theo, nor talk of those rambles That have flll'd my fond mother with doubl ings and fears. Farewell! 0, farewell, no more shull I view thoe, Dear scenes of my childhood, 1 bid thee adieu, E'en friends are all fled, who once, glndly knew mo, Alas ! that their friendship should prove so untrue. Farewell ! ne'er again shall I gazo on thy towers, " Thon home of my fathers, art gone to decay ; No more shall I taste of those sweet, happy hours Fve spout 'neath thy roof 'mid tho festive and gay. THE BOARD FENCE. " Shoo, shoo, get home, you plaguy critters I" cried Air. Babcock, waving his arms as he chased a dozen sheep aud lambs through a gap in tho fence. It was a wooden fence, and when he had succeeded in driving the animals tho other side of it, he lifted it from its reeliuing position, and propped it up with states. This wns an operation he had fouud himself obliged to repeat many times in the course of the season, aud not only of that season, but of sev eral previous seasons. Yet Mr. Babcock was neither slnck nor thriftless ; iu fact, he rather prided himself on the orderly appearance of his farm, and not without reason. How then shall we account for his negli gence in this particular instance? The truth was that this fence formed the boundary line between his estate and that of Mr. Small ; and three gen erations of inen who owned these es- had been unable to decide to it belonged to rebuild and keep it iuOeP'ur. If tho owners had chanced to Le cn of peaceable dispositions, they hadNmpromised the matter and avoided a juarrol ; but if, on the con trary, theyl belonged to that much larger class Ifho would sooner sacrifice their own eonifort and convenience than their so-called rights, this fence had been a source of unending bicker ings and strife. And of this class were the present owners. Again and again they had consulted tueir respective lawyers on the subject, and dragged from their hiding-plaoos musty old deeds and re cords, but always with the same result. . "I say it belongs to you to keep it iu repair ; that's as plain as a pike-staff," Mr. Babcock would say. " And I suy it belongs to yon, any fool might see that," Mr. Small would reply, and then high words would fol io w, and they would part in anger, more determined and obstinate than before. The lawyer's fees and the loss by damages from each others' cattle had already amounted to a sum suffl- ' cient to have built a fence round their : entire estates, but what was that com pared to the satisfaction of having their own way ? There was not wanting in the neigh- borhood peace-makers who would gladly ' have settled the affair by arbitration ; but to this neither of the belligerents would listen for a moment. At last, one day, Miss Letitia Gill, a ' woman much respected in the village, ' and of some weight as a land-owner and tax-payer, sent for Mr. Babcock to come and see her on business ; a summons which he made haste to obey, as how could l e do otherwise where a lady wns concerned. Miss Letitia sat at her window sew ing up a seam, but she dropped her work and took off her spectacles when Mr. Babcock made his appearance. f " So you got my message ; thank you for coming, I'm sure. Sit down, do. I suppose my man Isaao told you I wanted to consult you on a matter of business, a matter of equity, I may say. i It can't be expected that we women folks should be the best judges about such thiugs, you know ; there's Isaac, to be sure, but then he lives on the place, and maybe he wouldn't be exactly impartial in his judgment about our anairs. " Jes' so," said Mr. Baboock. " Well, the state of the case is this : When Isaao came up from the long meadow to dinner, they're mowing the meadow to-day, and u uncommonly good yield there is, when he came up to dinner, he found that certain stray oo ws had broken into the vegetable gardmt." He did, bey f" u "Yoa etutmaj tat riot they made, I declare, Isaao w almost ready to use profane language. I'm not sure that he didn't say deuce,' and I'm not certain he did say 'darn;' and after all, I couldn't feel to reproach him very severely, for the pains h has taken with that garden is somethingamazing; working in it, Mr. Babcock, early and late, weeding and digging, and water ing, and now to see it all torn and trampled so that you wouldn't know which was beets and which was cuoum bers, it's enough to lpuse anybody's temper. "It is so," said mr. Babcock. " And that isn't all, for by the looks of things they must have been rampag ing a full hour in the orchard and clover-field before they had got into the garden. Just you come and see ;" and putting on her sun-bonnet, Miss Letitia showed Mr. Baboock over the damaged precinct. "You don't happen to know those animals did the mischief?" said Mr. Babcock. Well, I didn't observe them in par ticular, myself, but Isaao said there was one with a particular white mark ; something like a cross, on her haunch." "Why, that's S mail's old Brindle," cried Mr. Baboock. "I know the mark as well as I know the tose on my face. She had balls on her horns, didn't she?" " Yes, so Isaao Sfiid." " And a kind of hump on her bach ?" "A perfect dromedary," said Miss Letitia. " I noticed that myself." " They were Small's cows, no doubt about it at all," said Mr. Babcock, rub bing his hands. " No sheep with them ; hey?" " Well, now I think of it, there were sheep, they ran away as soon as they saw Isaac. Yes, c rtainly there were sheep," said Miss Ljtitia. " I knew it, they always go with the cows ; and what yon wish of me " "Is to fix the damages," said Miss Letitia, "As I said before, women folks are no judges about such mat ters." Mr. Babcock meditated a moment, and then said, " Well, I wouldn't take a cent less than seventy-five dollars, if I were you, not a cent." " Seventy-five dollars ! Isn't that a good deal, Mr. Babcock ? You know I don't wish to be hard on the poor man, all I want is a fair compensation for the mischief done." "Seventy-five dollars is fair, ma'am, in fact, I may say it's low ; I wouldn't have a herd of cattle and she p tramp ing through my premises in that way for a hundred." " There's one thing I forgot to state, the orchard gate was open or they couldn't have got in ; that may mane a difference." "Not a bit, not a bit. You'd a right to have your gate open, but Small's cows had no right to run Iooho. I hope Isaao drove 'era all to the pound, didn't ho ?" "I heard him say he'd shut 'em up somewhere, and didn't mean to let 'em out till tho owner calls for 'em. But, Mr. Babcock, what if he should refuse to pay the damages ? I should hate to go to law about it." " He won't refuse ; if he does, keep the critters till ho will pay. As to law, I guess he's had about enough of that." " I'm sure I thank you for your ad vice," said Miss Letitia, " and I mean to act upon it to the very letter." Aud Mr. Babcock took his leave with a very happy expression of counte nance. Scarcely was he out of sight when Mies Letitia sent a- summoiiB for Mr. Small, which he obeyed as promptly as his neighbor had done. She made to him precisely the same statement fIio hud made to Mr. Bab cock, showed him the injured property, and asked him to fix damages. It was remarkable that before ho did this, he should ask the same question Mr. Babcock had askod, namely, whether she had any suspicion to whom the animals belonged. " Well, one of them I observed had a terribly crooked horn." " Precisely it's Babeock's heifer. I should know her among a thousand. She was black and white, wasn't she ?" " Well, now I think of it, she was ; one seldom sees so clear a black and white on a cow." " To be sure, they're Babcock's ani mals fast enough. Well, let roe see what you want is just about a fair esti mate, I suppose ? ' " Certainly." " Well, I should nay ninety dollars was as low as ho ought to bo allowed to get off with." " O, but I fear that will seem as if I meant to tuke advantage. Suppose we call it say seventy-five ?" " Just as you please, of course ; but haugod if I'd let him off for less than a hundred, if 'twas my case." ' And if he refuses to pay ?" " Why, keep his animals till becomes round, that's all." " But there's one thing T. neglected to mention: our gate was standing open ; that may alter the case." "Not at all, there's no law against your keeping your gate open ; there is against stray animals." " Very well, thank you for your ad vioe," said Miss Letitia; and Mr. Small departed with as smiling a countenance as Mr. Babcock had worn. But at milking time that night he made a strange discovery old Brindle was missing I At about the same hour Mr. Babcock made a similar disoovery the black and white heifer was nowhere to be found ! A horrible suspicion seized them both, a suspicion which they would not have made known to each other for the world. They waited till it was dark, and then Mr. Babcock stole round to Miss Letitia's, and meekly asked leave to look at the animals which had commit ted the trespass. He would have done it without -asking leave, only that thrifty Miss Letitia always locked her barn doors at night. While he stood looking over into the pen where the cows were oonftned, and trying to negotiate with Miss Letitia for the release of the heifer, along came Mr. Small, iu quest of Brindle. The two men stared at each other for an instant in blank dismay, and then hung their heads in confusion. It was Useless to assert that the dam ages were too high, for had they not fixed them themselves ? It was useless to plead that Miss Letitia was in A manner responsible for what had hap pened, on account of the open gato, for had they not assured her that circum stance did not affect the caso ? It was nseless to say that she had no right to keep the cows in custodv, for had they not counseled her to do so? As to going to law about it, would they not thus become the sport of the whole town? " 1 He that diggeth a pit, he himself shall fall into it,' " said Miss Letitia, who read what was passing in their minds as well as if they had spoken, for the light of Isaac's lantern fell full on their faces. "However, I don't wish to be hard upon you, and on one con dition I will free the cows and forgive yon the debt." " What is that ?" Both looked the question, but did not ask it. " The condition is that you promise to put a good new fence in place of the old one that separates your estates, dividing the costs between you, and that henceforth you will live peaoeable together as far as in you lies. Do you promise?" "Yes," muttered both, in a voice scarcely audible. " Shake hands upon it, then," said Miss Letitia. They did" so. " Now let the cows out, Isaao ; it's time they were milked," said she. And the two men went away driving their animals before them, with a shame faced air greatly in contrast to the look of triumph with which they had last quitted her presence. The fence was built, and the strife ceased when the cause was removed. but it was long before Miss Letitia's part of the affair came to the public ear; for she herself maintained a strict si lence concerning it, and enjoined the same upon her man-servant Isaao. Youth's Companion. Pulpit Pranks. . We are sometimes amused that will be better than to say anything severe at the posture of some preachers. They seem not to know what to do with their legs. They were, doubtless, made to stand on, to give the body a firm and commanding bearing, and impressive dignity. They stand on one leg and crook the other round it like a cork screw, and keep up a perpetual twist ing as if they were winding themselves up. Then they shift and wind up the other side, and it seems all the time as if what they were saying was worked below. Of course such on unnatural and ungraceful posture as this de tracts very much from the effect of their preaching, because it excites your sym path or something else unpleasant, for they seem to be in pain all the time. In this position every gesture is awk ward, for the hands are needed to tup port the body. Then what a part the pocket-handkerchief plays with some preachers. One spreads it lengthwise in the Bible as if it were accessory or a help to his sermon. He makes it a kind of Elisha's mantle with which to divide the waters, to make a passage for his ardent spirit, and he seems to rely on it for that purpose. Another rolls it up as a compact argument, and gripes it and looks at it and talks to it, as much as to say, "Now I've got you." An other makes it into a ball, and seem ingly hurls it at some stronghold he is bent on demolishing ; and still another makes a ram's horn of it, not the " little horn " which Professor Stearns so learn edly describes, but such as Joshua used against Jericho, only he puts it to his nose when he blows the demolishing blast. We cannot explain it, but there are some things done by Bmall men that would excite mirthfulness, which in a large man would produce no such effect. And we do not wonder, when a a very sm all man rose to preach as a candidate in a certain place, whose head could scarcely be seen above the pulpit, and gave out his text, " It is I, be not afraid," that the whole congre gation 'were moved to laughter. A Thrilling Situation. The following story, which is given as a fact, can hardly be surpassed even by the imaginary situations that mark many specimens of the modern drama : Near the city of Detroit, a man by the name of McArthur was crossing the railroad track in the night time, when his foot caught fast in a "frog," and his efforts to extricate it were of no avail. His boot fitted so closely that he could not draw his foot out, and at length he could hardly move his leg from pain. He found that he must either be run over by the next train or make known his situation. He shouted himself hoarse, but no one came. After having been prisoner for upward of an hour he heard the whistle. He had a match-box in his pocket, papers in his bundle, and the idea came to him to signal the train. Tearing the paper off his bundle, and getting at some letters, be rolled them into a heap, and for fear that the flames would die out too sud denly he added his clothes. The bun dle was then made fast to the end of his walking stick, and he waited until the headlight of the locomotive should ap pear. It finally greeted his vision and he struck his match, but a gust of wind blew it out. Another match was struck, and in an instant he waved bis signal back and forth, and just when he thought death was certain be heard the whistle for brakes. He was saved, but the engine had only thirty feet more to go to crush him. In Prison. YouMg Walworth, who is now in the Auburn prison, is of no use to the con tractors. He has developed epileptio symptoms and is employed in the hos pital to wait on patients. Inger6oll, the Tammany Ring swindler, has from the first been a well-behaved, tractable and willing prisoner. He is employed in a shop wheie rush horse collars are made. At first he was assigned the ordinary tasks, but the contractor soon found that be was more valuable as an over seer or general clerk, and he now fills that position in the shop, though be is required to maroh and eat with bis gang, and occupies a cell at sight the suae at all prisoners, In a Gambling Pen. The San Franclsflo Bulletin relates th following : " The demolition of the Mead House, at the corner of Montgomery and Pine streets, has developed some facts of startling interest. The Mead House was a rendezvous for the gamblir.g frater nity from early in 1865 to December, 1871, when the police raided upon it and disturbed operations. Until this raid the game of faro was conducted in the building in a quiet and . orderly manner and with profit, the net earn ings reaching $65,000 for a single year. This was in reality a workingman's bank. Here the working classes de posited large sums of money and were not troubled with bank books. A few days ago, while the workmen were tak ing down the walls a number of sus picions characters were observed hang ing about the spot and watching the proceedings with great interest. While knocking away the wall of one of tho lower rooms the workmen were some what puzzled by the manner of the strangers. Three of them suddenly walked up to the spot and watched every blow of the ax with the keenest scrutiny. Suddenly a gap was made in the wall, and the next blow of the ax caused a peculiar sound as if a musical instrument had been struck. On ex amination it was discovered that three wires were running up through the wall from floor to ceiling. In a few minutes no less than half a dozen were about the place examining the wire, thethree strangers looking at each other signifi cantly. An investigation of the walls of the whole house was now commenced, and the revelations were' indeed, of the most startling character. In one of the rooms on the upper floor was an ar rangement which enabled a player to know exactly what his opponent held. Directly over the table in the centre of the room was a small hole in the ceiling, through which the confederate watched the game. Wires ran along the ceiling to the floor, and terminated in levers beneath the carpet, upon which the cheating gambler placed bis foot; as these wires were pulled, the number of taps telegraphed the course of action to pursue. The faro room was the most ingonionsly contrived thing in tho house. In the first place, wires ran froi the door so that a signal was given when it opened, and in an instant every thing was in rendmess. tor the drop. This was accomplished by two levers and a space beneath let into the floor. In a second the gamblers withdrew from the table, each man of course grabbing his checks and money, and by a motion ofthe levers the yawning floor opened, and down went the whole. ' lav out.' The carpet was then drawn over the spot, and when the officers hove in sight there was nothing in the shape of gamblers' implements to be seen. In the house there were taken out no less than 150 wires and several contrivances for suddenly hiding gambling imple mcnts. After the discovery an endeavor was made by the three strangers to hush the matter up, but the affair had become noised abroad, and already a good many f tranpers were about the place, drawn thither by curiosity. The developments are creating some stir with the gambling fraternity, but the leading sports of the city denied all knowledge of .the exist ence of the peculiar arrangements by which the unwary were fleeced. Plucky Girls, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Decovey, of Akron, O., being absent from home, their two elder daughters, Gertrude, sixteen, and Eva, fourteen years of age, keep their house and have the care of three young children. On Tuesday night, or rather Wednesday morning about one o'clock, Gertrude was awakened by a noise outside the house, and, on going to the window, dis covered a man working at the blinds of the bedroom below, occupied by Eva and the youngest child. On finding that he was discovered the fellow sprang from the window and partially concealed him self behind some objects a few feet dis tant from the house. Gertrude several times called to him that, if he did not want to get shot, he had better " clear out," but be maintained bis position. By this time Eva had become awakened, and, seizing a loaded revolver, in the use of which she had bad some practice, rushed up stairs. Gertrude again called upon the rascal to leave if he didn't want to get shot, and as he did not stir, she pointed out his where abouts to Eva, who held the pistol in the direction indicated and blazed away. The fellow fell forward on his hands and knees, and then raising himself, apparently with great diffi culty, mlde off into an adjoining field. After daylight the girls made a recon noisance of the premises and the ad loing field, and not only the tracks of the wounded fugitive were plainly traced, but one place was found where he bad evidently lain down and rolled upon the grass as if in great agony. Blue Sky and Whte Clouds. The ethereal blue color of the sky is due to minute particles of matter which float in the air. Were these particles removed the appearance of the sky would be dead black. It is a fact in optics that exceedingly fine particles of matter disperse or scatter the blue rays of light, coarser portions scatter red rays, still ooarser portions scatter all the rays, making white light. An atmosphere is full of acqneous vapor, the particles of whioh diffuse white light in all directions. When these particles are enlarged they become visible in the form of clouds. The vapor particles of the white clouds are supposed to be finer and lighter than those of the dark clouds. That the dif fusion of light in our atmosphere, the blue coloring of the sky and the colors of the clouds, are due to the presence of matter floating in the air, Las been conclusively proven by Tyndall. On passing a beam of sunlight through a glass tube the beam is rendered bril liantly visible by the reflection of light from the dust partioles floating in the air contained in the tube. But on re moving the dust particles, which is done by filtering the air by cotton wool, or causing the air to pass over a flame, the beam of light is bo longer visible ia the tube. Ben Spinner's Yaeatlon, If there is a thing which at first t thought I would be glad of and am now dreadful sorry for, it is because school is out for keeps till the next term. It is most unusually the way that when sohool don't keep there is plenty of work studied up for me to have to do. That's the way it fits me every time. It's my kind of bad luck to be raised to have industrious ways. Mv father is everlastingly telling me that idleness is the parents of vice or some of that sort of disagreeable Eng lish language that I don't want to hear, and that J. must keep busy at worK at something and not gad about with other indolent boys and race the streets from morning till night per petual. Last vaoation they put me into the garden, wneie, tuey said, l could obtain some habits which would do me some good when I became grown up into a useful citizen. Well, to have to be a useful citizen is all very fine silk, but if I could only have my own way only just once I would rather sell pea nuts on the railroad. But they have got me in the same hardships which I was into last summer, only it is rougher because there is more of it. If they think it's proper for me to have to bug the potatoes, and weed the onions, and thin out the roobarb, and raise up a lot of garden trash for to go to seed and waste, why, then, I suppose its all right if I could only seo it, but when a boy has studied diligently all winter I don't think it's exao'ly the fair thing to keep him too tenacious at work in vacation. Anyhow, that's my opinion, which I throw in. There ain't a very gr9at deal of real pleasure in digging potatoes where the bugs is about a barrel full to the acre, and when a boy has to bend his back down to try to pull up weeds which grow clean through and clinch on the other side, it's a kind of miserable occupation which I would like to get half a good chance for to .slip out of. To have to wade into the garden early in the morning when the dew is on in your bare feet, and get smart weed up your trousers leg, is a worse thing than the Erie Sipilis and the fever and ague; but when you have to do it there is no use for to try to shirk out. I went back on the job once, but I never went back on it twice, because once was enough. I was roped in and coaxed by some boys to go off on the commons to play ball for a whole day. Late in the even ing, when I came in home the back way, and desperate hungry, the governor gave me an abundance of stars and Btripes, which I have got them yet, and could show 'em if I was only in a swim ming. I found out thai it is a bad habit for a boy to get into, to leave his work without permission, and it's the best way always for to obey .orders if it almost breaks your back. But I have got awful sick of this vacation business, and if I can find a school next year which will keep in the year round, it's the one that I want to go to. That's' what kind of a boy I am. Interest on Friendship. In 1850 a young man named Osborn, who had recently arrived at the mines from the East, penniless and friendless, was taken sick. He told his condition to a fellow adventurer named Hitch cock, who was a little better off, and the lattei promised to " see him through." The promise was kept, and when, after two months of illness, Osr born arose from his bed, his friend handed him $250 to bear his expenses and to procure tools, saying to him, ' If ever you get able you can pay me back, but do not worry yourself and in jure your health in trying to make the money too quick." One year and a half from that time Osborn sent Hitch cock $1,250, with the following note : " I'll pay interest on friendship." His labors proved remunerative, and by 1873 he was worth $350,000. While in San Francisco he met and recognized his old friend. When they parted, after several days' companionship, Osborn gave Hitchcock a sealed pack age, with the injunction that it was not to be opened until he was on the cars. There HitchcocK found that it con tained a deed for one-sixth of a. rich silver mine, with a small note contain ing the words: "interest on friend hip. Hitchcock has sold his interest for $80,000. Waterspouts, When a whirlwind occurs out at sea, it agitates the waters contained within its diameter to such a degree as ire quently to cause a oolumn of spray to rise in the air. If the sky is cloudy, the upper strata of the whirlwind acts upon the lower clouds in the sameman ner in which the lower strata acts upon the surface of the water, and thus causes a column of vapor to descend immediately above the sscending one, These two columns will, if the whirling motion of the air continues for any considerable period, become length ened by the pressure of the atmos phere, and will ultimately join to. gether. What are termed waterspouts in island districts are quite a distinct phenomena. They are simply very heavy showers of rain confined within narrow limits. These showers may or mav not be accompanied with a whirl wind motion of the atmosphere, but will, of course, come nearer our idea of what a waterspout may be when it is so accompanied. Scolding. Scolding is a habit very easily formed. It is astonishing bow soon one who indulges in it at all becomes addicted to it, and confirmed in it. It is an unreasonable habit. Persons who onoe get in the way of scolding always find something to scold about. If there were nothing else, they would fall t sodding, at the mere absence of any thing to scold at. It is an extremely disagreeable habit. The constant rumbling of distant thunder, cater wauling, or a hand-organ under one's window, would be less unpleasant, The habit is contagious. Once intro duced into a family, it is pretty certain in a short time, to aneot all the mem' bers. If one of them begins finding fault about something or nothing, the others are ept very soon to take it up and very unnecessary bealsra n created, Keeping Smoked bleats In Summer. "There are various plans and devices for keeping smoked meats for summer use from the attacks of flies and beetles which infect hams, smoked beef, cti. , if left where they may have access to them. Among the more common is wrapping each piece separately in strong brown paper and then packing in barrels filled in, about the packages, with ashes or other absorbent material. Another plan is to plaoe the pieces in sacks well surrounded with cut hay, or in tight barrels, with out bay or straw closely pressed around the pieces. By this latter plan, however, the meat is apt to mold. To prevent this, it should not be entirely excluded from tne air, and where air and light can enter in sects are apt to follow. A better plan when the trouble and expense is not grudged is to wrap each piece separate ly in paper and inolose in sacks cn to fit. Sew them up and dip in thick lime-wash, and hang in an airy but cool place. Some, indeed, claim that meat moy be kept perfectly and indefinitely by simply rubbing the surface with pepper before smoking, but i t is almost no protection at all. The best, and in the end cheapest, way to preserve meat is to have a smoke house built in such a manner that, while it is tight and dark, it shall at the same time, be well ventilated. All that is necessary to secure this is a chimney on top protected by blinds so that the rays of light cannot enter, while at the bottom is a tube connect ed with the outer air. In such a smoke- i , l - 1 , i ' i 1 - iiuuse you uiiiy Keep uieub luueuuiteijf by occasionally causing a smoke during summer. If the meat has been proper- ly cured, it will keep sweet. If the in- sects cannot get access to the place where it is kont. thev cannot lav their eeff. therein and consequently there cannon De euuer snippers or Deenes or I . 1 1 1 " , l 1 I their larvae. The smoke-house may be used for a variety of purposes when not filled with meat. The first four feetBhould always be built of brick, both as a protection asainst fire and as affording a most con venient receptacle for ashes, in all dis tricts wnere wood is burned lor fuel. If our readers have no permanent smoke-house yet build in which'to keep their meat, we advise them to built one without delay. Where farmers depend so much, as they "necessarily must in the country in summer, on preserved meats, they should have a proper place to Keep it safe from insect enemies. A Chicago Hotel, The following is a translation of an .-t:i . t.i: n.v.ii. -;n convey an idea of the German estimates of the cominK American hotel : "The latest American progress in building will be the 'mammoth hotel,' soon to be erected in Chicago. This enormous hotel is to have a frontage of three Eng lish miles long, and a depth of six miles ; the height of seventy-seven stories will measure 3,480 feet from the ground floor to the roof. The hotel will have no stairsbut COO balloons will always be ready to take visitors up to their rooms. No ioom-waitera are to be employed, but visitors will be served by a newly patented automatic, put up in every bedroom, who will do all shav ing, shampooing, etc, to the guests by a very simple and ingenious mechanism, Supposing the guest requires hot wa ter, the automatio will be able to call down stairs : 'A bucket of water up to room number one million three thou sand one hundred and seven,' and the water will be up in seven seconds by a patented elevator. Half an hour be fore table d'hote, instead of the ringing of bells, a gun (24 pounder) will be fired on each floor to call the guests to get ready for their meals. The tables in the dining-rooms will measure four miles each, attendance to be performed by twelve waiters on horseback on either side of the table. Music during table d'hote will be played gratis by eight bauds of seventy-hve men each, i or the con venience of visitors a railroad will be built on each floor as well as telegraph offices. The price for one bedroom will be from $1 to $10. The cost of this building is estimated to be $680,000,000. The billiard room will contain 900 American, 99 French, and 1 English table, and, most of the visitors expect ed to be Americans, the billiard room will be fitted out with a ppittoou of 100 feet in circumference, A Strong Witness. Some years ago a law suit occurred out West, growing out of the destruc tion of a quantity of growing corn, be lonKinsr to a Mr. Wilson, by hogs owned by a Mr. Brown. The latter owned eight hogs, and Wilson declared that they were all in his Meld, and that, consequently, tne navoo was immense, iSrown protested that ne didn i Deiieve any of bis bogs were in Wilson's field, but if any at all, certainly not more than one or two, end therefore the damages could not have been so great as represented. Wilson had a witness on his side named Jerry Parker, not a ' very bright l... . . 1,: young man, but noted lor having a wonderful imagination, tie came in late, and had not a very distinct idea as to bow the case stood, but he had a very vague notion that it was for Wil son's interest to make the number of nogs appear as large as possible. When he took the witness-stand he was questioned by Wilson's lawyer, who asked : Jerry, did you see the bogs in Mr. Wilson s corn-field, on the day in question ?" " Yes. sir : I did." replied Jerry. "Do you know exactly bow many there were ? "No, I didn't count 'em: but I'll take mv oath there warn't less than thirtv I" The consternation of Wilson and his luwyer, at this unexpected reply, may be imagined ; and it was not lessene when Brown's lawyer arose and said " Your honor, as my client has only eight hogs, it is very evident that those which destroyed JUr. Wilson e oora be longed to some one else, and I ask judgment for the defendant" The court granted this request, and poor Wilson, by having too strong a witness, ion we ease. Items of Interest. Fee simple Giving a waiter ten cents and expecting to have a good dinner. , The elephant is said to be dying out. Perhops that's the reason why so many insist on seeing him on every occasion, The Cincinnati Gazette is curious to know what the brewers of that oity do with the tobacoo stems they purchase. Tha finhan nlanters arfl arriving at the conclusion that growing pineapples and bananas for the American market pays better than tobacco and coffee. A Californian who ties one end of a rope around his waist and lassoes a cow with the other oan generally ten, at mo end of the first half mile, whether he's got the cow or the cow's got him. No recommendation. Gushing Par ty "There's a view now I Magnificent I Surely you'll admit that deserves praise I" rractical aen-maoe man. " Well, I don't know. It has made no effort to deserve it didn't moke itself 1" A teacher, who. in a fit of vexation, called her pupils a set of young adders, upon being reproved for her language, apologized by saying that she was speaking to those just commencing their arithmetic. The Chicago Times thinks the base ball club of that city can best serve Chicago by quitting their perambula tions about the country, and taking positions as hod-carriers. The number of pilgrims who visited the tomb of Mahomet at Mecca this year is said to nave Deen ou.uuu, aim owincr to the precautions adopted by uwh vv r. -- y the Egyptian Government, their health lias been unusuauy goou. According to a local journal, the rattlesnakes in the knobs of Lincoln mintir Kt.. have formed a " corner in water, and the smpplv of some famr . . . M m, 11 i 1 Isl A lies is cut on. xney gainer iu nugc numbers around the springs, and suffer no one to approach. The famous, and at the time popular, hotel, tke Danforth House, Pithole City, Pa., which cost $28,000, was sold a few days ago for a $10 note ; and the . . . Aft rtrtrt 1 1. i. furniture, which cost J&d.uw, orougus less than $90. Six months after the city was founded it had seventy-four hotels and boarding. bouses, and fifteen thousand inhabitants. Now only nine families remain. Years ago an old man and his daugh ter Diana started to cross a marsh in Lake Charles parish, Louisiana. They were never afterward heard from. A short timo since a hunter's dogs started . a wild animal in the marsh, and the huntsman was about to shoot, when he saw that it was a girl, nude and wild. He reported his discovery was told the ?T 01 wiana, anu aoting on the idea will endeavor to get a glimpse of ber again. Au Sable Chasm. The followintr stories connected with' the glen are well authenticated : Until a few years ago a bridge spanned the Chasm at the point where it is narrow est. This bridge was suffered to decay, and was finally disused. There re mained of it at last only a single squared girder. Over this a mad-cap boy would sometimes venture, ior a freak, but none was known to cross by it except such as were possessed of the insanity of youth. One dark night a clergyman on horseback approached it. He had been absent aoroaa ior several years. When he had been familiar with this section of country, the Au Sable Bridge was the usual avenue of approach to his home. He knew noth ing of its subsequent ruin. Upon drawing near it in the darkness he con fidently spurred his norse onwaru. When the horse's hoofs struck the sin gle beam which remained of the bridge, the rider sought to penetrate tne aam ness, but could not. Dropping the reins upon the neck of his brave Bteed, he abandoned bis thoughts to reverie. He was passing over tbe wild gorge of the Au Sable, with which he had been acquainted in youth and early man hood, and where he had indulged in many a perilous adventure, long oeiore the Chasm had been prepared by art for the easy access of the timorous visi tor. How many changes he might find upon bis return old faces buried, old landmarks removed, old nouses laueu into decay. Before he had concluded this waking dream the hoofs of his trusty animal no longer echoed upon the bridge, out strucK tne sonu ground upon the other side. He was safely over, without an intimation that he had risked the smallest danger. Not until he had reached his home, and was told by what route he ha4 come, did he learn of bis tremendous peril. The next morning, when he reviewed, by the light of day, the threadlike pathway over which he had gone, his Knees smote togetner, and ne uttered a prayer of thanksgiving for deliverance from a horrible death. A good-for-nothing character in the neighborhood was once caught in the act of theft, near the bridge just de scribed, in tbe days when it was the usual avenue of travel. It having been playfully suggested by some one f.J i. v... :. .1 u that his morals miKht be improved by sus pending him by the heels lor a brief season from the bridge over Au Sable Chasm, the punishment was instantly inflicted. The cure proved effectual, but the thief's morals were reformed at the expense of bis intellect, for be be came a confirmed, though inoffensive idiot. Human Testimony, Within a few months, says the Boston Traveler, a paper purporting to be a mortgage of personal property was handed a prominent legal gentleman on the witness stand in the Supreme Court, and be, under oath, stated that be saw tbe person sign the paper, and that his name was attached as witness in bis handwriting. He was closely pressed by the opposing counsel to carefully examine and see if be did see tbe person sign it, and Bpeoially if his (the witness's) name was written there-. on by himself. He examined and re plied to both in the affirmative. It afterwards appeared, in uncontradicted evidence, that the paper submitted was a oopv of tbe original mortgage fur Bilked by the City Clerk,