HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEEANDUM. Two Dollars per Annual. VOL. IV. ItfDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1874. NO. 35. Longfellow's New Tocm, Tli Hnngliig ot the Crime remlre la cremailler, to hang the crane, in the French expression for a house-warming, or the first party givon in a new house. The lights are out, and gone are all the guests That Mironging came with merriment and jests To celebrate the hanging of the crane In the now house into the night are gone ; But still tho fire upon the hearth bums on, And I alone remain. O fortunato, 0 happy day 1 . When a new household finds its place Among the myriad homes of earth, , Like a now star just cprung to birth And rolled on its harmonious way Into tho boundless realms of space ! So said the guests in speech and eong, As iu tho chimney, burning bright, Vo hung the iron crane to-night, And merry was the feast and long. And now I sit and nnipe on what may be, And in my vision sto, or seem to see, Through floating vnpors interfused with Shapes indeterminate, that gloam and fade, As nhadowB parsing into deeper shade Sink ami elude the sight. For two alone, there in the hall, la spread the tablo round and small ; Upon the polished silver shine The evening lamps, but more divine Tho light of love shines over all ; Of love that says not mine and thine But ours, for ours is thine and mine. They want no guests to come between , Their teinlor glances liho a screen, And tell Ihotu tales of land and sea, And whatsoever may bctido The great forgotten world outsido ; They want no gneiss ; they needs must be Each other's, own best company. Tho picture fades ; as at a village fair A showman's views dissolve into the air, To reappear transfigured on the screen, 80 in my fancy tbi-s ; and now once more In part transfigured, through tho open door Appears (ho self-same econo. Seated I f eo the two again, But not alono ; they entertain A little angel unaware, With f aco as round as is the moon A royal guest with flaxen hair, Who, throned upon his lofty chair, Druuib on the tablo with his spoon, Then drops it carolccS on tho floor, To gra'p at things unseen beforo. Are tlieso celestial manrcrs? These Ti-io ways that win, the arts that please ? Ah, yes ; consider well tho guest, And whatsoe'er he docs seems best ; lie rule'h by tho right divine Of helplessness, so lately born In purple chambers of the morn, As sovereign over thee and thine. Ho speakoth not, and yet their lies A conversation in his eyes ; The golden silence of the Greek, The gravest wisdom of the wise, Kot spoken in languages, but in looks More legible than printed books, As if ho cjuld but would not speak. And now, Ojuonaruh absolute, Thy power is put to proof; for lo ! It"8tlt!i-s, fathomless and slow, Tho nurse cornea rustling like the sea, And pushes back thy chair and thee, And eo good night to King Canute. As one who walking in tho forest sees A lovely laudecapo through the pnrtod trees, Then sees it not for boughs that intervene, Or as we r.ee the moon sometimes rovoaled Throuf-'n drifting clouds, and thon again con cealed, So I beheld the scene. Thero are two guests at tablo now: The king, deposed, and older grown, No longer occupies tho throne The crown is on his sister's brov , A princess from tho Fairy Tales, The very pattern girl of girls, All covered and embowered in ourls, Hose tinted from the Me of Flowers, And sailing with soft silken sails From far oir Dreamland into ours. Above their bowls with rims of blno Four azure eyes of deeper hue Are looking, dreamy with delight j Limpid as plauetu that omergo Above tho ocean's rounded verge, Soft shilling through the summer night. Steadfast they gaze, yet nothing see Beyond tho horizon of their bowU, Nor care they for tho world that rolls With its freight of troubled souls Ii'to the days that are to bo. Again tho tossing boughs shut out the scono, Again the drifting vapors intervene, And the moon's Jpallid disk is hidden quite ; And now I seo the table wider grown, As round a pebble into water thrown Dilates a ring of light. tee the table wider grown, I see it garlaudcd with guests, As if fail Ariadne's crown Out of the sky had fallen down ; Maidens within whose tender breasts A thousand restless hopes and fears, Forth reaching to tho coming years, Flutter awhile, then quiet lie, Like timid birds that fain would fly, lint do not dare to leave their nests ; And yonths, who iu their strength elate Challenge the van and front of fate, Eager as champions to be In the divine knight-errantry Of youth, that travels sea and land Seeking adventures, or pursues Through cities aud through solitudes Frequented by the lyrio Muse, The phantom with the beckoning hand, That still allures and still eludes. 0 sweet illusions of the braiu ! O sudden thrills of fire and frost ! The world is bright while ye remain, And dark and dead when ye are lost ! TI. The meadow brook, that seemeth to stand still, Quickens its current as it nears the mill ; And so the stream of Time, that lingereth Xa level places, and so dull appsars, Rung with a swifter current as It nears The gloomy mills of Heath. And now, like the magician's scroll, That in the owner's keeping shrinks With every wish he speaks or thinks, Till the last wish consumes tho whole, The table dwindles, and again I see the two alone romain. The crown of stars is broken in parts ; Its jewelB, bi ighter than the day. Have one by one been stolen away To Bhine in other homes and hearts. One is a wanderer now afar ' Iu Ceylon or in Zanzibar, Or sunny regions of Cathay ; And one is in the boisterous camp, 'Mid clank of arms and horse's tramp, And battle's terrible array. I see the patient mother read, With aching heart, of wrecks that float Disabled on those seas remote, Or of some great, heroic deed On battle field, whore thousands bleed To lift 0110 hero into fame. Anxious she bends her graceful head Above those chronicles of pain, Aud trembles with a secret dread, Lest there among the drowned or slain She find the ono beloved namo. After a day of cloud and wind aud rain Sometimes the sotting sun breaks out again And touching all tho darksome woods with light, Smiles on tho fields, until thoy laugh and sing, Then like a ruby from the horizon's ring Drops down into the night. What see I now ? The night is fair. The storm of grief, the clouds of caro, The wind, the rain, have passed away; The lamps are lit, tho fires burn bright, The house is full of life and light It is the Golden Wedding day. The guests come thronging in once more, Quick footsteps sound along the floor, The trooping children crowd the stair, And in and out and everywhere Flashes along tho corridor The sunshine of thoir goldeu hair. On the round tablo in the hall Another Ariadne's Crown Out of the sky hath fallen down ; More thau one Monarch of the Moon Is drumming with his silver spoon ; The light of lovo shines over all. O fortunato, O happy day ! Tho peoplo sing, tho people say. Tho ancient bridegroom and the bride, Serenely smiling on tho scene, Behold well-pleated on every sido Their forms an! features multiplied, As tho reflection of a light. AX UNTIMELY VISIT. Half a century ago two brothers. barefoot and sometimes ragged, were growing up to big boyhood among clams, eels and boats, in a poor little usherman a hanilet on the shores of Cape Cod. The eldest, whom his sentimental mother had named Clarence Ethelbert, was full of enterprise and ambition. tlis brother, whom the solemn father had named Gideon, was nn amiable, kind fellow, content to do anybody's bidding as long as he had enough to eat and nobody to scold him. llio lirst weut into a ship-chandler s store, in Boston, having walked ninety miles to reach that city, and found n place. Tho other remained at home, perfectly satisfied, digging quohaugs, spearing eels, aud carting seaweed. When t key reached middle life the eldest was living in an elegant mansion near Central Park, in New York, with his fashionable family, keeping a span of horses, and a retimio of servants : and Gideon, married to a well-meaning, but course and illiterate woman, was in tho poor cottage-home of his father, so shy that he was almost afraid of his kind brother who came yearly to visit and aid him. E. C. Bakerly, the rich Bhip-chaudler, was no snob. Me acknowledged his poor relatives, and helped them, and had often invited bin brother end sister- in-law to visit him. Gideon wanted to go to New York, but couldn't get up courage. Ho had heard of assassins coming up behind peaceable citizens and stubbing theiu iu the street, and about hackmen driving strangers to dungeons aud then robbing them ; so he thought, in hia innocent heart, that his brother was almost the only good man in the great city. But tho time camo when the ambi tious Betsy resolved to go to New York and seo for herself. So she told her brother-in-law, while on his annual visit, that sho "had decided, at last, to buy herself a new black alpacy and a dress- cap, bob his family would ut ba ashamed of her, aud go on iu real New York style about the hrst of Novem ber." " The folks there may stare at me, or laugh at me, but they won't eat me, that s sartin, she added. When the gentleman anuounced this at home, the daughters laughed, and resolved to make her visit as agreeable as possible, sending her a black silk, to replace "that abominable alpaca the court dress of Yankee women ! Tho last week iu October, when the house was in the hands of a caterer and a decorutor, the following astounding letter was received by the lady : " Clam Harbor. Oct. 24. " Dear Sister Cakwne. Gideon and me has about changed our mines about tho time of goin' to New York. We have got ready sooner than we expected. owiu to Miss Cap'iu Dilkins turnin' and a helping of Desire Holmes with my gouus. She bound all the ruffles and fumididles, and so forth. So we can come to-morrow just as well as not, Gideon is iinpashiont to get home agin on acoount of killing the hogs, so, less providence forbids, you 11 see us to morrow to tea. " Exouse me writing with ptncil, as Miss Cap'in Dilkins has borrowed our pen aud ink to write to the Cap in. He s to Bmyrny now. " So no more at present, From your afectionate sister, Betsy. " P. S. Desire had to bind the flounces on my new silk with magenty braid as there was no ribbon here." The girls scolded, and the sensible mother appeased them by saying that their father would meet their uncle and aunt at the cars and keep them at a hotel till the party was over. But the cars came In ten minutes be fore thei time, and when Mr. Bakerly reached the depot the passengers had all disappeared. He rushed home, hoping to meet them before they en tered the house. But they had not ap peared ; and the conclusion was that they had missed the tram, and would not arrive iu the city till the next day. In this, however, the family were mis taken. In a few minutes there came a loud ring of the door-bell, and then their ears were assailed by tho sharp notes of an angry voice aimed at a hack man, "I never heerd sich a swindle ! Don't pay him a dollar and a half, Gidyon, for fetchin us half a mile. Wo could a' walked just as well; aud tho men- folks could 'a' lugged up the trunk it ain't a mite heavy 1 I'll have you took up for robbery, sir, if you do keep a carriage and two horses !" As children and butcher-boys were collecting on the sidewalk, tho lady of the house slipped down stairs, put tho money iu the hackman's hand and smuggled her friends up stairs. As there were men at work in the kitchen, their supper was given them quietly in a little side-room, and tho tired travelers were sent early to bed, without any remonstrances " on their part. Tho pair were put into au attio room which was rarely slept in. This was done not from disrespect, but because the usual sleeping rooms for visitors must be used until late in the night, by the ladies who were among the guests of the evening. Gideon and his wife, however, were glad of any resting place. They complained to each other that " it was dreadful hot for the last of October," blew out the gas-light, and were soon lost to their new situation, but not nutil Aunt Betsy had exclaimed iu dreamy drawl : ' JNew lork s the nastiest smeilin town I ever was in, and I wish I was to home. The guests had gathered and there was a hum of merriment below, which was suddenlv hushed by the appear ance of two strange apparitions on the stairs. ' Tableaux, tableaux!" cried an inno cent youth, and in a moment everybody was making lor the hall ana laughing and exclaiming, "Darby and Joan," John Anderson, my Jo, John." and like interpretations of the scene. The geutlemau 01 the house elbowed his way through the crowd just in time to see his half-clad brother escape from the gazo of his guests. But Aunt Betsy stood her ground bravely, looking like a fury ust risen from her grave, with dishevelled locks, white robes and a kerchief bound around her head. " fin 1111 to vour room. I'm ashamed of you," said her brother-in-law, in a low tone. "You haint no need to bo ashamed of us, nor anybody else, of your own folks here the poor woman was seized with a terrifio lit of coughing and strangling ; but regaining her breath, she con tinued : " We're your own flesh and blood, if we haint rich ; and some of the richest saloon-keepers and flsh- dealers in this town or Boston, either, has sprung from Cape " Cough ing again silenced her angry boasts. " What ails yon r asked the agitated brother, as terrible sounds of stran gling aud groaning were heard from Uncle Gideon above. "She's crazy, sir, and that old man was trying to catch her," said one of those officious men who think they see at once the solution of every difficulty. " Send for a policeman and have her taken off, sir." At this Aunt Betsv, who had now seated herself, gave loose reins to her tongue, and cried, amid her coughing aud choking, " Gidyon and me has caught some awful disease a ready in this nasty teown, else we was pizened with our supper I .1. don t be b Ueve we'll ever see Clam Harbor og'in ! But don't you dare to bury us here, where these vjllanous ma renry doctors digs up dead folks aud hanks 'em to pieces 1 O dear, dear 1 The distressed host now changed his tactics, remembering his brother's words that " Betsy was one of them women that could never be driv," and led her gentry up 3tairs, his wife following them. No sooner had they opened the cham ber door than they all joined in the chorus of coughing. Tho gas had been blown out 1 And the register, be ing open, the heat, which had been shut off from all the other rooms, had made this one like a fiery furnace 1 But even this did not account for the fright ful inflammation which the kind sister-in-law saw on the limbs of her agonized visitors. Uncle Gideon was jumping about with remarkable vigor for one of his years, swinging his hands and tryiug to suppress his groans, as soon as all the windows in both attics were thrown open, Aunt Betsy gave vent to her woes thus : " We coughed and choked terrible : but at last we got into bed. But all of a suddent I was took with such a paiu that I hollered out that somebody had stuck an eel-spear into my leg, and was stranglin' me beside. He begun to 1 pooh at me, when he was took with the agony himself, and hollored as bad as myself. We started to go down and hunt you up, to get a doctor, and guess we stirred up an awful mess among them are high-dressed butter flies I" A sudden thought struck the lady of tue house, ana throwing open the bed. she discovered au unusual sight for the city housekeeper a nest 01 wasps that had taken possession of one corner of the unused bedstead, a savage squat ter sovereignty that had opened fire on the poor strangers. As they could have no other room till the guests were gone. Aunt Betsv do clared that they would sit up till then, ratuer than risk this one again "Why," she exclaimed, "heow do know but the fiery sarpints that bit the children of Ezr'el may be hid up in that bed? I've heard before to-day that city folks wasn't over particular what got into their beds, but I didn't know they harbored wasps there I" The rough old pair slept one night under damask drapery, and then they set off for home. No argument, no persuasion could induce them to pass another night in such an awful city I The kind-hearted brother soothed their spirits by the gift of flvo hundred dollars to his brother, and the watch his wife had just laid aside to Aunt Betsy. So the honest pair set off on a triumphal march capoward. Thoir treasures set them up on a pinnaclo of glory at Clam Harbor, where gold watches and ready money were scarce. The thing passed off at Clam Harbor as a remarkable instance of the love of home, or rather of the power of home sickness ; and in the circled gay friends in New York as the breaking loose of a derauged relative, who was tho next day quietly returned to the asylum I Thus does fortune often play cruel pranks in separating those who in childhood played beneath the same green tree. Youth's Companion, How They Make Ice in India. In the warm countries of Europe ice is manufactured by the use" of ether, but this would be a very costly process in India, and would place it entirely out of the reach of the mass of the peo ple. Their own method for manufac turing ice, although a slow one, is very simple, and costs nothing. They have discovered by observation what we are taught in natural philoso phy, that during the day the earth ab sorbs heat, and during the night it gives it out or, to speak more proper ly, radiates heat. This is much more noticeable in trop ical than in temperate countries. They know also by experience that, in order to enjoy the coolness of night, they must avoid the shade of trees, and lie out in the open places. The reason of this, perhaps, they do not know, which is that the branches of the trees inter fere with this radiation. Without rea soning on these facts, tho East In dian acts upon them, and uses his knowledge of them in manufacturing ice. Iu an open space, where there arc no trees, parallel ditches are dug in the ground three or four feet deep. These are half filled with straw, aud nets are stretched over them. On these nets are placed small saucers, holding about a wiuo-glass of water. Thero is nothing more to be done but to wait for a clear, starry, and perfectly calm night. When such a night arrives, the little saucers are filled with water in the even ing, which water by 4 o'clock in the morning is found to be covered with a thin coating of ice I These cakes of ice are very small, it, is true, but when they are all thrown together into the ice-houses under tho ground, thoy form themselves into masses of quite a respectable size. Iu these primitive ice-houses the ice keeps lor ssiine time. Th straw is placed in the ditches be cause it is a bad conductor of heat, and by its means the sancers of water are separated from the ground, and receive little or no heat from it. The water, therefore, gives out more heat than it receives, so that its temperature is continually lowered until it reaches the freezing point, when it, 01 course, be comes ice. The ice is more or less mixed with bits of straw and with dust. It cannot be used to put into liquids, but placed around them makes them delightfully cool and refreshing, and we can weJi imagine what a luxury it must be in this torrid region. Another Bohemian Girl. Tho watering season at Newport closes with a sensation, which may serve as the basis of such another opera as " Tho Bohemian Girl." A strolling baud of Indians were encamped upon tho beach, having in their company a little white girl named Charlotte Wyeth. Suddenly the girl disappeared, and all the oottagers who had become interested in her were surprised. The disappearance was explained tho other day, when an officer on board a bound steamer bound to .Providence recog nized the waif in charge of a lady who stated she was taking her, at the re quest of Mr. Edward Walsh, of New port, to a lady in Providence, who had promised to take care of her. The child was detained, aud Mr. Walbh was takeu into custody. He explained that in visiting the beach he had become in terosted m the child : thut he found her barbarously treated by the Indians ; and learning that she had been stolen by them and was willing and anxious to accept of his protection, he had de terminod to adopt and provide for her until he should find her natural guardians. The disinterested and hon orable motives of Walsh were so ap parent that he was discharged, but the bumptious City Marshal, thiuking doubtless that some reward would be offered for tho child, has refused to aL low her to remain in Walsh's custody, The youug man is thoroughly interested in the waif, and is enthusiastically en gaged in the endeavor to learn some thing of her parents. Pies an' Things. In New York city there is one coil' cern that does nothing but bake pies, or, as the boys call them, "pies au things." The buildings cover six aud a half city lots, and the stables have accommodations for fifty horses, Thirty-seven large wagons are employed to deliver tho pies turned out aaily, and one hundred and twenty persons are employed all the year round. It has au enormous boiler, in which some' times five hundred pumpkins per day are reduoed to jelly, by steam 01 course, Near it are two bteam mincing ma chines, capable of slicing up a fabulous auantitv of fruits. A littlo further on is a row of immense brass kettles full of steaming berries, which two men are stirring with gieat ladles. Iu the further end of the room women are seated in groups on the floor by heaps of fruit, which they are sorting and cleaning. Eighty bushels of berries a day is the average consumption, 10U barrels of flour a week are used making the pies, and they use up 8,000 pouuds of lard, 1,560 quarts of milk, and 6,000 eggs, grasshoppers ix Colorado. Method ot Their Rnrnfres-The Bill of Fare Which They Prefer. So soon as we had abundance of water, says N. C. Meeker, writing to the Tribune from Greeley, grasshoppers came again and alighted' in patches of a few millions each in our wheat fields. The bulk of tho grain was too far ad vanced to be injured, and they only ate off the blades, so that when cut the stalks were slippery. Late wheat was badly injured, and oats were in many places destroyed. They visited the whole of Colorado at the same time, but only iu groups, though in larger ones close to the mountains, and they attacked the oats at such a critical time as to make the crop everywhere short aud good seed scarce next spring. Of all the crops there is none which the grasshoppers love better than oats, nn- ss it be onions. In aijont a week they all left, when the wheat was harvested and hopes were high, but in less than ten days another gang came, and they undertook to finish the oats. Machines were put iu immediately, when they at tacked the corn, of which we had a urge breadth exceedingly promising. After working at it a few days they seemed to have received orders to start on their travels, and they all took wing, and everybody rejoiced again. But about noon one day the sight began to fade a little, and on looking up the grasshoppers vero seen some COO feet high, millions And millions, going southeast, whioh made us pity those whom they would visit ; but soon a small portion came down, and as in a twinkling they covered gardens and fields, though they were not what we called thick. The next day as many more came, and we had them good, if that is the word, or bad, if one likes it bettor. They were tired, and in need of rest, which they took ; but next morning bright and early, notwith standing it was Sunday, they went to work in earnest. I thought I had seen them thick before, and that I knew something about them, but they were a new revelation this time. They worked expeditiously all through tho valley, aud those who had cabbage patches of a few hundred head at breakfast, had none when the bell rang for church ; celery disappeared, and the currant and gooseberry bushes looked as though there had been a heavy frost. Before night much of the sweet corn was gone, aud the whole stock of the women's flowers, verbenas, gladiolas, pinks, and the like were wiped away. Still some things they did not touch, and among these were roses aud phlox. Beets in the field were riddled, and pie-plant was eaten in part by the acre, however poisonous Solon Robinson's axalie acid in it may be. By Tuesday they had made such headway in cornfields that all who could cut it aud put it in stocks, and even then they kept chewing so badly that one man hauled his into the barn. Twenty or thirty grasshoppers, or as many as could get around, would attack au ear and gnaw deep among the husks. If the corn had been planted by tho middle of May it was well glazed and they could do little more damage than eat off the blades ; if in the milk they ate it is as readily as hogs would. The leaves of apple and pear trees disap peared, but those of cherries, plums, aud peaches they did not touch, nor did they interfere with strawberiea or blackberries, but raspberry bushes were made desolate. Meanwhile they delighted to get into the housc.especially luto t'ie parlor, and took a lancy to lace curtains. When night came, all who could got into the trees to roost, I have cotton woods, ash, maple and other trees, from 10 to 20 feet high, with limbs from an inch to two luches in jdiameter, in all over 100 around tho house, aud so many grasshoppers were on these trees that tho branches bent down from 10 to 15 inches. Of course, the prospects were dark, for wo expected them to stay and lay eggs which would hatch next spring, How ever, it was noticed on Wednesday that they were not quite so thick : on Thurs day there were certainly fewer, and they continued to leave gradually. I have stated what they would eat and what they would not, but our experi ence iu a former visitation was to the effect that if they stay a few weeks there is nothing green they will not devour, They will etcn get into ripe Hubbard squashes and luto watermelons and de stroy them. From Luxury to Poverty. The Loudon Saturday Jlcview, speak ing of tho proposed transformation of Soho square, London, says : " It is just 100 year since tho fortunes of Mrs. Theresa (Jornleys began to decline; and with them the glories of Soho square. Who remembers her now ? let she was once a central figure in the fashionable world of London. Her house, now a pickle shop, was crowded with princes, nobles, and fine ladies. Her ball-room, now a Romanist chapel, was the head quarters of extravagance and gorgeous appar 1. It was at one of her mas querades that the beautiful daughter of a peer wore tho costume of an In dian princess, three black girls bearing her train, a canopy held over her head by two negro boys, and her dress cov ered with jewels worth 100,000. It was at another that Adam, in flesh-colored tights aud an apron of fig-leaves, was to be seen in company with the DuuhesB of Bolton as Diana. Death, iu a white shroud, bearing his own cof fin and epitaph ; Lady Augusta Stuart as a vestal ; the Duke of Gloucester, in im old Euglish habit, with a star on his cloak : and tho Duke of Devonshire, who was very fiue, but in no particular charaoter ' all these and others passed through her rooms : yet before many years had gone by she was selling asses' milk at Kuightsbridge, and in 1797 she died ia the Kleet Prison, forming schemes to the very last for retrieving her broken fortunes. " It is a standing rule in my church," said one clergyman to another, "for the sexton to wake up any man that he may see asleep." " I think," returned in 1 the other, " that it would be much bet ter for the sexton, whenever a man goes to sleep under your preaching, to wake you up. Letter Writing, Letter-writing is no longer an accom plishment. It has even ceased to be a pastime. It has sunk of late iuto a foolish habit whioh the discovery of the lithographic processos has made abso lutely dangerous. The shrewd man keeps his thoughts to himself or reveals them only in words which cannot be photographed. In setting down his se cret feelings for the eye of one, tho writer can never be sure, nowadays, that his letter may not some day be spread with all its crooks and dashes and blots before the eyes of thousands for whom it was not intended. If it contains disclosures of guilt, how ugly they look in all their nakedness. If it gives merely tho overwrought expres sions of an excited roan, how suspicious a littlo skillful construction can make them. You write to a mutual friend that your speech the night before " set the house on firo." Years afterward he beoomes a mutual friend only on one side and prints your letter with proper omissions ; and you find yourself com pelled to prove that you never commit ted the crime of arson 1 Or perhaps you did confess some fault or sin, aud now that private letters have ceased to be private property, you do not know at what hour you may become the piey of the printers. The old politi cian, who is a tradition in the West, who would never write his namo on a card for fear of committing himself to something, and who would always rather walk a day's journey than write a note, has his like in many a lobbyist who goes to Albany or Washington at considerable expense to say what could be less safely said by the aid of a three cent stamp. But sometimes the men with bad reputations aro as careless as those with good. Veteran Jokers. The Duke' of Wellington and Lord Brougham were utterly unlike in tem perament and tastes, and used to say sharp things to each other, though with perfect courtesy and good nature. Hero is a specimen of their method of joking : Liord .brougham, who invented the vehicle now known by his name, was met in the House of Lords by the Duke of Wellington, who, accosting him with a low bow, said " I have always been under tho im pression that your lordship would go down to posterity as the great apostle of education, tho emancipator of the negro, the restorer of abused charities, the reformer of the law. 15ut no you you will hereafter be known only as tho inventor of a carriage." To this Brougham replied by reciting those things by which he had imagined the Duke would be remembered, add ing " But no your Orace will be known as the inventor of a pair of boots." Tho Duke was defeated and made a strong remark about having forgotten the boots. A Funeral Extraordinary, Tho Pall Mall Gazette says : " A most successful funeral in which woman played an important part took placo at Padua in 1518, and, indeed, in somo respects, the arrangements ot this funeral were in all ways less depressing than the run of ordinary burials. An eminent lawyer, by name Lodovich Cartnsius, who died in July of that year, before his death strictly forbade his relations to shed any tears at his funeral, and enforced this order on his heir by a heavy penalty in case of diso bedience. He further directed that fiddlers should take the place of mourn ers on the sad occasion, and that twelve maids in green habits should carry his remains to the Church of he. Sophia, where ho was buried, the ceremony to be enlivened by songs from these ladies, who were to be recompensed for the service by a handsome sum of money allotted for their marriage portions. The monks of tho convent at Padua, who wero invited to the funeral, were on no account to wear black habits, lest they should throw a gloom over tho cheerfulness of tho procession." Waste of Men. Guns and Powder. The Ordnance Department reports the following facts as to the miserable gunnery practiced iu war : " Ol the i!7,o74 muskets picked up ou the battieheid at uettysourg ana turned into the Washington Arsenal, at least 24,000 wero loaded. About one half of this number contained two cartridges each, one-fourth contained from three to ten charges each, aud the balance one charge. The largest num ber of cartridges found iu any one piece was twenty-three. In some cases the paper of the cartridges was unbroken, and in others tho powder was upper most." It is seen that the effective fire of tho combatants was practically reduced by 18,000 men, for 18,000 muskets were useless, those who held them were of course " paralyzed." Or, to put it an other wav. 18,000 men in their confU' sion improperly loaded their muskets and thus rendered themselves almost useless as combatants, and probably many of them were shot down with out inflicting any injury on their op ponents. Something of a Mistake. The Morninri Araus. says Max Adeler, is a Democratic paper ; and the other day tho editor clipped from a Republican sheet a long story about a frightful accident somewhere, ana gave it to the foreman to put in the Argus. It so happened that the other side of the cupping contained a snorting eai torial in which the Democratic party was fiercely denounoed and Grants claim to a third term strongly insisted upon. Of course the foreman gave the clipping out with that side up, and the A, 3 1 L. a a m 3 i w 4 Via no v AM nsil uay it nppeareu iu 1 jjujjci, looking exactly as if it was an original editorial from the pen 01 me eaitor. That very afternoon the sheriff with drew his advertising and four hundred advertisers gave up the paper ; and now the editor wants to know how long capitalists are to suffer from the in fernal tyranny of labor. The foreman ean't answer, for he has fled. Items of Interest. There is a young man in Ixonia, Jef ferson county, Wisconsin, who is eighteen years old, twenty-seven inches in height, and weighs only nineteen aud one-quarter pounds when fat. His name is John M. Lewis. A young lady entered a Troy music store, recently, and, approaching tho clerk, said : " Still I Love Thee." He replied: "We haven't it." "I Can not Love Another," said she, aud re ceiving a similar answer, lolt the store. At a dinner recently given by a Rus sian lady in London, the table was en tirely covered with moss, and the only evidence of a white tablecloth was seen in that portion which hangs at the sides of tho table. Flowers were profusely introduced, and the effect was alto gether unique. Happy thought That of the fashion able school teacher who, when asked by a pupil, " Who is the present King of Switzerland?" said, "This is not the hour, you know, when talking is per mitted. Ask me at tho next session and I will tell you," and then rushed for the bookcase. Always acknowledge all courtesies iu a kindly spirit. Throw a bouquet and a card of thanks to a sereuading party, if not prepared to invito them in. If you haven't a bouquet or a card at hand, throw a bootjack, or a brick, or anything of that sort, just to show your appreciation of tho kindness intended. Cremation does not meet with favor iu British Columbia. The Chinese have been cremating their dead at n cemetery near Victoria, and the Inspec tor of Police reported to the City Coun cil that tho nuisance had become most offensive to the residents in the neigh borhood. The Council took no action. A New Brunswick jury recently dis tinguished itself after having been charged to find the value of 20,000 bricks at $15 per 1,000 by bringing in a verdict of $294,000 for the plaintiff. After being sent back they corrected their blunder, and the Judge said that he had groat pleasure in dismissing them. A shower of whito toads took place in Larimer county, Col. The siiower embraced a strip of country half a mile wide and several miies in length. From a distance the frogs, ns they bounced along the ground, looked for all the world like hailstones. After the storm the frocs hopped fabout over the country in droves of ton thousand. Haw to swallow a pill is thus stated by a correspondent : " Put the pill un der the tongue and behind tho teeth, and let the patient immediately take a large swallow of water, and he will neither leel the put nor taste u. in. fact, he cannot tell where it has gone, and I have seen them look about the floor to seo if they had not dropped it." The Newburyport Herald says an amusing feature 01 the ciam-oane at Salisbury Beach was the spectacle of a young lady and gentleman wuo Hun gered for the snen-nsn. xua iuuy hardly wished to soil her kids, aud so while she held her mouth opentuo gen tleman put iu the clams and threw away the head after her incisors had decapi tated the fish. That Monument Again. Once more, says an exchange, by a spasmodic effort to raise money to com plete the Washington obelisk, that monumental laiiure is Drought ueiore the public attention. The whole subject was carefully discussed last spring, when a Congressional committee rec ommended that an appropriation be made to finish the work. This unhappy pile of stones has been too long a butt for the wits of the nation. The original scheme is older than the Government itself, but it was not until 1818, after a series of experiments and failures, that work was actually begun. The wasn ington Monumental Society then under took the task of raising the money aud building the monument. In about six years, when 230,000 had been spont and the pile had reacnea tue ueigui. ui 170 feet, the money gave out and tho obelish was arresred in its growth. Since that timef by dint of much beg ging and dunning, four feet have been added to the work ; and thero it stands an unfinished monument. An examin ation showed that it had suffered some what by its long neglect, and on account of the insecurity of its foundation. At ono time it looked as if ithe work must bo taken down and rebuilt, or aban doned altogether. But it is now under stood that the money aud labor already expended can be saved by somewhat changing the original plan. Why Buffalos Disappear, Somebody has revived the stories told by Jas. Bridger, who is, next to Kit Carson, the pioneer trapper of all that section of the country. Ouo of his favorito stories was, that in the year 1820 he was wintering in Salt Lake Valley, when it commenced to snow, and continued seventy successive days, till a depth of seventy feet was obtained. The country at that time abounded in bnffalo and other large game, all of which, perished inthe snow. The lakes and rivers the following spring were so full ot dead game, pieserved iu good condition in the cold, that he was able to stow np a large stock of meat for the next winter s supply, using the brine of Salt Lake for the purpose. He con cludes this tale by declaring that since that storm no buffalo had ever been seen west of the Rocky Mountains. He was. also fond of declaring that Bridgor'B Butte, a table mountain named after him, had " steered around" to the North since he saw it, and that he had told General Johnson so, who, after consulting his text books, acknowledged that he was right. Denver Col.) News, Thk Calendab. This is the way the people who live on the coast of Maine describe their weather : Dirty days hath September, April, June, aud November; From January up to May, The rain it raineth every day. All the rest have thirty-one, Without a blessed gleam of son ;1 And if any ot them had two and thirty They'd be iut as wet and twiee m dirty.