f 7 -7 T a. L c HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM, Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IV. MDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., - THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1874. NO. 39. I- j a I When tho'Baby Died. When the body dioa we said, With a sudden, secret dread, " Death, be merciful and p&B8 1 JLetTe the other." But, alas. TWhile we watched he waited there, Ono foot on the golden stair, One hand beckoning at the gate, Till the home was desolate. Friends say, It is better so, Clothed in innocence to go s Say, to ease your.' parting pain, That your loss is but thoir gain. Ah, the par.entB think of this, But remo aibcr more the kiea From t)e little rone-rod lips ! And t'je print of finger-tips Ie'.t upon a broken toy Vf ill remind them bow the bay And his sister charmed the days With their pretty winsome ways. Only time can give relief J To the weary, lonesome grief; God's sweet minister of pain Then shall sing of loss and gain. HOW JERKY CAME HOME. Tlit. fire at tbe Maples did some f&fain besides ranking talk for tbe whole viliacre and scorching up a few rods of old Mis. Ohitts's scattering timber. It gave tbe old gentlewoman, who bad long been hovering doubtfully on the borders of two worlds, a very good rea son for departing at last, and leaving along-waited-for estate to innumerable hungry heirs and lawyers. "Too much for the old lady, that scare," .neighborly people said, ' though the fire didn't amount to any. thing ; but, bless your life, she'd hung on so loner I" implying that the bieeze which bad shaken her off at last was jl m the way or rrovidence. X'je tiuth 38, people had begun to leel 'jiat Jveath, With hiR hands full nmong nieuner peo ple and poorer people., nad quite over looked rich old Mrs. Chitts in her snug old place at the Maples. There is a certain sense ot justice in these things, and threescore years and ten is a gen eroun allowance for a lifetime, after all; to go beyond it looks covetous, espe cially if you have heirs. There were no red eyja at the old gentlewoman's funeral, jf you except those of Deborah, the o'id lady's humble companion and .housekeeper. " She made a fool of Deb, though ; 'but, for the matter of ttmt, Deb's always being made a fool of," said Mrs. Thorn pin, chatting to a neighbor over her gate, with a brood of barefoot children behind her. Mrs. Thornpiu was Deb orah's half-sister a shrewd and nota ble woman, with a faded wisp of hair done up in a scantling twist behind, and skewered vixenishly back from Sorehead and ears. ' Yes, she's made a tool of Deb left without paying her iast qnarter'n wages, and gnve her the sweepings of her property just to set the whole place talking about us and our poverty. And after the struggle I've had to keep my head above water, to have Deb coroe back to me like that, with that rigged bit of sea-shore and that wheezy old bnrn of a house bebjnd her, and all of hazing after that boy of hers, who'll never come back, Vc's my belief. If lie's decently iead and bn'ri-ad, it's all the harm I wish him." For it seems that Deborah had had lor romance too, years ngo. It came 4,o her in the shape of a stray sailor drifting up the shore one day a slouching follow, wii'i a pair of gypsy black eyes and a foreign look, which the good people of the village, not being able to translute accurately, took to mean evil altogether, shaking their heads ominously when he "made up" to Deb, and finally married her. So when he led Deb a hard life, drank up all his earnings at the village inn, and finally cut himself adrift again, going off without warning into that unkown 'somewhere whence he canio, and leav ing her with the care of a three-year-old boy, and not a cent to support her self, everybody looked at everybody else, and sold, " What could you ex pect?" And there would have been nothing 'M- Dob but to go back to her half-sip ter's, making one of a scantily fed a'jcl overpopulated household, if this old gentlewoman at the Maples hac'.n't turned up and wanted her for a housekeeper. But Deborah's boy hadn't turned out Well ; he grew up a pranksome, wild young fellow, whom no one saw any good in ; the pest of the neighborhood, the destroyer of melon patches, an impish youngster with no end of mis ehief. So when one fine morning the lad was up and off like his father before liiin, uioody was sorry or surprised but his mother. A fine summer morning long ago that was. Many mists had settled on the sea-shore and many anows had whitened the hill-tops since .Jerry went away, but his mother had 'been "looking for him back" ever since. Every summer among the far flitting sails she fancied Jerry's ship was sailing in, for Jerry had gone for a Bailor, of course what else ? He would come back some day in a blue braided jacket and a floating ribbon as proud and bright as the best of them. That was Deb's religion, her one unshaken faith ; and even her half-sister, acous tomed to whet the sharp edge of her temper on Deb's short-oomings, was lain to keep shy of this vagary. It is astonishing, after all, how small a portion of one's self is really owned by one's self. Especially in a village. There's the neighborhood, and there's the family, and there's that vague, im palpable thing called the world, whioh sometimes means the meeting-houBe one, two, three-fourths the shriveled portion of Eelfhood remaining is hardly worth counting upon as stock in trade. And Deb had lived in the village till she was almost one cf its traditions. Hadn't they known her from a child, and weren t her whims and oddities a port of town property, like the salt-air B.nd the r. hell-fish ? When, therefore, the village learned that Deborah was not coming back to burden her half-sister, but was fairly set to move into tnat ricKety, rneu matio old house bequeathed to her by her eooentrio mistress, with its bare or two fraying out in meadow land sedge to t tide-rising, the village lifted its hands in depreoation, and de clared it was a tempting of Providenoe. So said Mm. Thornpin, who, having wrought her courage up to the pitch of drilling and scolding Deb for years to come, felt in some way defrauded. Mrs. Thorn pin declared the house was damp, a dismal, mouldy old plaoe, shaking with sea-ague, and sure to be down some night on the head of who ever was in it. Whatever possessed old Mrs. Chitts she didn't know. Deb had quips and crank? enough of her own all along, and would be harder to manage now than ever. And indeed it seemed she was not far from right, for it appeared Deborah was quite satisfied to " move " with a cat, a red shawl and a flower-pot. "I shall have plenty of everything when Jerry comes back," she said, smiling. "Better wait till he does come," was the grim reply. " Oh, you know, I want to have everything ready for him." . Whereat Mrs. Thornpin laughed to herself ; for Deb, as she said, was capable of " living right along," with the sunlight shining on that gray shanty, and a patch of rag carpet on tbe floor, waiting for Jerry forever. So Deb went her way in her sun bonnet and old gray gown, with m snatch of clove-pink in her hair, and took refuge in the an.oient shingle-front house. All that brigh, breezy day of Deb's move she was very busy, after her own fashion, washing uown and cleaning up the big bare raftered kitchen, with many pauses to look out of the wide shambling windows at the gray brim ming cean, the white foam line, and the 'wind-blown sand and sedge. For Deborah, as her sister said, was " lazy f.s a born lady " a lady who thought herself well dressed in a patched gray gown and a rose bud. " When Jerry comes back I'll have f Dlks enough running here," said the infatuated Deb to those who condoled tith her on her sea-shore solitude. But there came a change over the uiet of Kushtown. There were whis pers in the air of an approaching in- ision. A big speculator, in a big gold i lain, with a big voice, and a big com ; any at his back, had found his way r long the sea-shore. There was talk of villa sites and villa plots and ocean v iews, and there were naming placards i p at the village inn, and there was a l.ig tent down along the sands, with a fray streamer atop of it, and crowds of busy, beer-drinking people about it, invading the ocean quiet, and vulgar ising the place, as Mrs. Lymph de clared. And finally, it appeared, the wily auctioneer threw a covetous eye on that slighted two-acre lot whioh was gener ally sniffed at by the village as " Deb's property." And the speculative Mr. Jones courted Deb and coaxed Deb, and endeavored to bring her to reason and to making a sale at his own price a good price for a few bushels of sand, as he observed, worth nothing, except that they stood in his way. But Deb was shrewd for once, for the sake of Jerry. When Jerry came back it would not do to nave cheated him out of what was justly his due. So she bargained and put off and haggled with the elo quent auctioneer, for Jerry's sake, until finally, as you never can bring a woman to reason, he was fain to give her her price. And he touched his hat re spectfully when they closed the bar gain, for he respected money, did Mr. Jones, and Deb was a far richer woman than when he first met her, and had proved to be sharper than he was, after all. - , . ' v : v That was a proud day for Deb when she deposited the proceeds of that one business transaction of her life in the snug little bank of a neighboring town. She still owned the shaky old house and a bit of land about it, and she had a bank-book besides 1 There was a small sum coming to her yet, and, happy as a prinoess, sho walked along the sands, in her sun-bonnet, to meet the gallant auctioneer at the big tent, for. seeing that Deb was a landed pro prietor, and mistress of a small fortune, that gentleman had invited her down to the great clam-bake and sale, to see, as he said, " how tne thing was done," and to settle up. It was all a wonder ful scene to poor simple Deborah the feasting, the crowded tables, the rush ing, jostling, good-humored people who bid high prices and drank beer, and hankered to get out by the ocean. In her interest and excitement she lingered with the rest till nearly sunset. " You had better be careful or mat money," said the auctioneer, kindly, as she put the purse in her pocket when they had "settled up." "There are ill-looking fellows hanging about here. Its bad for a lone woman to have much money about her." " I shan't always be a lone woman," said Deb. in the fullness of her heart, thinking of the time when Jerry would be back, as big and brave and fearless as anybody. That night there came a new moon over the water ; the wide dim stretch of lifting waves was faintly silvered, the wraith-like mist lying Deyona glim mered like a milky-way. But Deb was not lingering out-doors to-night, dream ing and brooding, as was her wont at this hour. She satin the great shadow haunted kitohen, her sun-bonnet still on her head, a candle flaring beside her a candle which flickered unsteadily over a tumbled heap of bills, inter spersed with a few odd pieces of silver, the hoardings of years. Deb was counting her treasure, gloat ing over it like a miser. Window and door were open ; the sea-breeze oame floating in. Eager, happy, intent, she heard nothing, feared nothing. The wind was always making a racket at the disjointed old plaoe, and Deb had got used to it. It sounded like a sinis ter footfall now on the threshold, but Deb never looked up. She did not see a dark face bending over her shoulder ; Bhe did not see the shadow of a brawny hand crawling stealthily over the heap she was counting. It might be one of the grim shadows haunting the rafters had got down to play a prank with her, so nnoonsoious sits the woman, ab sorbed in her unaccustomed mathemat ics, till the brawny hand comes down with a sudden swoop, clutching her treasure a living, sinewy hand, with a sailor's anchor pricked in faded bine on the baok. But Deb was quick $ she Caught at the closed fist sharply, holding it in a vigorous grip, treasure and all, as she turned npon the robber a woman with flashing eyes, full of nerve and strength, not to be lightly quelled, transformed by sudden peril into heroism. But as she turned a cry broke from her lips a wild, strange cry, uttering all the passion and loneliness of her lifetime. " Jerry 1" she cried. "O God, it was all for you !" Was it so indeed that Jerry had come home T Was it Jerry who shrank from her extended arms, and falling abjectly on the floor, groveled at her feet ? Jerry I her knight, her returning hero, for whom she had coveted all things, for whom her world was all too small to afford largess for his welcome I A divine mother-light shone in Debo rah's eyes. All things were for him ; first of all, forgiveness. Disgraced, degraded, Jeriy ; fallen upon evil ways, J erry ; so much the more will the great mother-heart com fort and welcome thee 1 " I never meant it, mother," he cried; " no, I never meant this I I've been bad enough and wretched enough and starved enough, but I never meant this. It was the money he gave you down at the long tent that done it. I never see your ftice, not once, oh, not once, mother, only the jingling, hateful purse that lured me on like a devil I Let me away out o' this," he cried, breaking from her grasp, " and I'll never trouble you more. 1 swear it never 1" But his mother set her back against the door; sho drew with trembling fingers the great rusty bolt. " Listen to the lad 1' she said smiling, as she smoothed his rough hair with her ten der hand. " Does he think that after waiting all these years he's going to get quit of his old mother in this fashion ? Nay, nay, my lad, it was all that there sun-bonnet o' mine 1" " Well," said Mrs. Thornpin to her husband, as she cleared the dinner table next day, "I give Deb up after this. There's no use trying to reason with Deb. She won't take no kind of s-dvioe. There she's got that great bulky lad back to eat her out of house and home, with his furrin ways and his monkey face. But bless me 1 Deb never would take things to heart like other folk. She grows sleek on what would fair wear me to skin and bone. Thornpin, mark my words" But Thornpin had lit his after-dinner pipe and escaped. Certainly Jerry had not improved in appearance ; that was quite true. His swarthy face and small, glittering eyes, black and restless, constantly suggested that obnoxious foreign origin which the neighbors never could get over. But Jerry, shy as some wild creature, troubled the neighbors but little ; only onoe in a while they caught glimpses of him setting out shoreward with his fishing-line, or late of an even ing strolling along the sands with Deb, who never wore the old sun-bonnet now, having replaced it with a broad brimmed gypsy, always gay with a knot of crimson flowers. " She could afford it now," she said, "since Jerry had come home." And never could any one bring Deb to see anything amiss with her boy. To all cavilers she pointed with pride to her trim garden, resoued from sand and weeds, where occasionally of an afternoon you might catch a glimpse of the ragged straw hat and turned-up trowsers in whioh the long-waited-for prince did duty in the potato patch or weeded the cucumber bed. "There never was such a boy for work," says his mother, watching him dreamily from the porch ; and if he had come home a millionaire or a merchant prince, you cauld see no difference in the light of the mother-eye beaming upon him. Paper Barrels. Among the numerous novel uses to which paper is nowadays put, is the manufacture of barrels for the carriage of such materials as flour, sugar, etc. These barrels are made of successive layers of paper-board cemented togeth er, and subjeoted to enormous pres sure, the result of which is a compact substance with great resisting power. The paper is made of straw, thus utiliz ing and converting into a merchantable article what in most sections of the country is regarded as refuse. The bar rels are perfectly cylindrical in form, which gives them an advantage of 25 per cent, in storage over wooden bar rels. Their weight is about half that of a wooden barrel, so that in a car load a saving of nearly 1,000 pounds in freight is made. It is calculated that they will stand four times the pressure that a wooden barrel will. The inven tion was patented about six months ago, and two factories are now engaged in the manufacture one at Winona, Wisoonsin, and one at Decorah, Iowa. At the latter factory, 1,600 bar rels per day are turned out, with a con sumption of five tons of paper. It is claimed for them that they can be made 20 per cent, cheaper than wooden bar rels. They may be rendered absolute ly air-tight, and it is claimed that they will resist moisture longer than they are likely ever to be exposed to it. They are made in quarter, half, and f nil sizes. The inventor is sanguine that they are destined entirely to su persede the wooden barrel. Undecided. A well-dressed man in Chicago at tracted considerable attention the other day by sitting upon the edge of the sidewalk for some time, with his head between his hands, as if in deep medi tation. At last a sympathetio stranger approached him and said : " Friend, you seem to be in trouble ; can I assist you in any way ?" The man sprang to his feet, and taking off his hat, parted his hair carefully, and said : " Stran ger, do you see this cut ? My wife did it this morainer with a flat iron, and then sent me down town to buy her a new bonnet, and I have been sitting here for an hour trying to deoide whether I will buy it or not, and blame me, stranger, if X haven t almost de- uiueu vo get it. English Servant Fees, In many of the prominent hotels and restaurants of England, says the Dan bury man, the " boots," or the head waiter, not only receives no salary at all, but pays a premium for his plaoe, and trusts to the fees for a living, and never fails of success. The same guests pay the landlord for attendance. An English landlord would think it the height of absurdity if he should find in his grocery or draper bill an item for the clerk s attendance upon his purchases. And yet the draper or grocer could as sensibly do this as he does. But feeing is not entirely confined to the annoyanoe of the traveling public. It permeates every walk of life, and ex hibits itself in ways unique and start ling to the stranger. A gentleman showed me over his extensive works in Scotland. In one branch of them he committed me to the more intelligent care of the foreman. Closing the ob servation, I was puzzled to know whether to offer the foreman a fee. I did not wish to appear " small" in his eyes by not doing it, and yet dreaded to run the risk of offending him by making the offer. In desperation I ex tended the silver. It was covered with a promptness that surprised me. I vis ited an industrial school. I had a let ter of introd notion to the manager. He showed me the workings of the institu tion. When he bowed me out I showed silver. One of the inmates stood near us. The manager turned his back on him, made a feint of shaking hands with mo, and "soooped" in the fee. These cases are not exaggerations. It doesn't pay to exaggerate when you are constantly traveling, and liable at any time to a fatal accident. It may be asked why I offered the manager of the industrial sohool a fee. It is just like some people to put such a question, and never think of asking why the manager did not refuse it. I wqb riding on an omnibus through the Strand, one evening, sitting on the box-seat alongside of the driver. He saw that I was an American, and opened a conversation with me, during which he pointed out several objects of inter est. When we got up into Haymarket, where the 'bus route ended, he said to me : "I should like to drink your health this pleasant evening, sir." " I should like to have you," I said, pleasantly. " You'll have to give me the change to do it with, sir," he suggested. It is even customary to fee the ser vants of the friends you visit ; so much the custom, in foot, that a lady writer in one of the London papers attempts to establish the amounts which should be given. It is not said how much this demand on the guest improves the tone of the hospitality he receives. Perhaps ic cannot be estimated. If such an order of things prevailed in America, I fancy there would be less visiting by affectionate city people to dear country cousins in the summer months. Jack In the Box, Some rears aero there lived a nnrsnn- age well-known to the London police under the sobriquet of " Jack in the Box." He had perfeoted a most in genious system of theft, which he worked with great pecuniary profit, through in the result disastrously. He had a box so constructed that he could himself lie in it easily and obtain the air necessary for respiration. He would have this luggage booked from one sta tion to another, and labeled, " To be left till called for." He took care to send it by a train that wonid arrive at its destination in the middle of the night, so that all the luggage, including his box which included himself would be stored till the next morning. Then, in the middle of the night, when all the luggage had been safely locked up, he would get out of his own box, and deliberately, and at his leisure, open all the trunks which he found around him. He would have plenty of time for this purpose, and he had about him duplicates of all the keys employ ed by trunk-makers, so that he could open whatever he liked. Me never took too much out of any one box, or robbed from more than one box of the same party, but went impartially col lecting whatever was most valuable and least likely to be traced. These he paoked into his own box and retired with them, duly locking himself up. In the morning he would be called for and handed over by the nnoonsoious railway porters to his confederates in the scheme. All a Mystery. The following story, told by a Cali fornia paper of Mr. O. H. Burnham, of Oakland, illustrates one of those strange mental phenomena which have so long pnzzled the scholars of the world : One morning, a few weeks ago, Mr. Burn ham visited San Francisoo, crossing over in the 9 a. m. train, and returning at noon, n or tne rest oi tne day he was actively engaged in business, and at 6 p. m. , during the prevalence of a thunder, lightning and rain storm, he drove to the depot to meet some ladies. As they did not arrive he returned to the station at half-past six, at whioh time his horse took fright, and he was dasned against a tree and rendered senseless. Now comes the singular part of the story. On returning to consciousness, it was found that not only was he unaware of the accident, but that he had no recollection of any thing whioh had occurred after 0 o'clock A. m. He remembered starting for San Francisco and being on board the boat nothing more. He knew nothing of returning : nothing of trans acting business in Oakland during the afternoon ; nothing of going to meet the ladies ; and had no knowledge whatever of the occurrence oi the tre mendous thunderstorm. Loss of con sciousness had antedated the acoident about nine hours. A Pathetic Appeal. " Mamma. shall you let me go to the Wilkinsons' ball, if they give one, this winter ?" " No, darling." A pause. " You've been to a great many balls, haven't you, mamma?" "Yes, darling, and I've seen the follv of them all." An other pause. " Mightn't I just see the folly of one, mamma?" A very long pause. The Clerk's Wire and Baby. . There is a ludiorous aspect sometimes to tbe department clerk's life, says a Washington letter. He actually has the audaoity sometimes to fall in love and perpetrate matrimony with some girl no better off than himself. She, too, has been in the department, and she grows so weary of the monoto ny of her life, and there is something so sweet in the whisperings of love that she forgets prndence, and, after pinoh ing herself for months, Bhe saves enough of her salary for a silk dress and a few bits of finery, and has the eclat of a wedding. Time flies very rapidly, and you can scarcely realize that it is a year since the event when you met the once j aunty girl now a rather sickly looking wo- mad who, with tne now laded sue skirt and napless velvet sleeveless jacket, is trundling a baby carriage along the street. The baby is a dar ling, and the poor, young mother has utilized many of those garments that she spent so many hours of the night making, for herself, when she was to be married, for the baby's use. A dainty blue Afghan covers the little cherub; and this is the only way that mother and child can get an airing, for a nurse is out of the question with their small salary. That poor little mother finds life very hard, for what can be harder than to have the sole care of an infant both day and nipht? There is no one to offer, even for an hour or two, to relieve the poor, tired mother. And then they must be content with such poor com mon lodgings, suoh insuthcient food and such uncongenial society. She now looks with envy upon her late com panions as they wend their way to the departments; the work there now seems so light and pleasant. How nioe it was to have money of her own; no mat ter how little it was, yet it was her own. and she managed to dress and look nicely all the time. Then, too, she occasionally had an invitation to some place of amusement ; but now, even though she were asked, she could not leave baby. Does she wisn mere was no baby? Oh, no ; far from it. That baby is the most preoious object in life, and she would not part with it for a kingdom. That mother-love is the sweetest and holiest on earth, but her treasure has been bought at a great sacrifice a sacrifice no less than the total abnega tion of self. She is willing to be cold if her baby is warm ; she is willing to be hungry provided baby is nourished; she is willing to be shabby so baby has embroidery and a few pretty things, and, after all, no musio ever sounded so sweet as the baby's coo-ooo, and no play was ever so funny as the way baby jerks its hands backward when it is trying to catch something. Of ail the beautiful tilings tnat uoa nas done for His creatures there is nothing for which women should be so thankful as the strong, overpowering feeling He has implanted in her heart of love for her offspring. Aching for a Row. As a policeman was leaning against the walls of the Detroit and Milwaukee depot, at Detroit, he was approached by a man about thirty years old, whose red face was a good match for his hair. tie was a little " sprung and he felt like a teer turned into a clover field. "Mister," said he, speaking very confidentially to the officer, " I don't want to get locked up, and have my name in the papers, and be fined, but I am in from Ionia, on a little blow out, and I'd give a clean ten-dollar note to have a little scrimmage with some body." "You mean you want to fight?" asked the offioer. "That's what I mean. I'm just aching for a row. I want to stand before about three good fellows and have some one to give me the word to go in." The officer asked if he was heavy on the fight, and he answered: "Heavy? I should say I was ! Why, I'm terrible. They call me the Russian bear at home, aud the full town stand up or sit down, just as I say 1" The offioer said it was his duty to discourage disorderly con duct ; but in a case like that, where a man had come one hundred and twenty miles to get up a row. he felt it his duty to extend indirect aid. He told the Russian bear to go to the corner of Ueaubren street, enter some saloon, talk in a very loud voice, and he'd soon have his hands lull. " That s me ; much obliged I" exolaimed the man, and he walked off. In about ten min utes a boy came running down and said that a man with a chewed ear, two black eyes and a broken nose was " up there " in the ditoh. The offioer went back with the boy, and he soon came upn the Russian bear, who was lying in the gutter, one leg doubled back, blood all over him, and his coat lipped in every seam. " That's you, is it ?" asked the officer, as he pulled at the man s arm. " Well, did you nnd that row ?" " Policeman," replied the man, as he regained his feet and looked at himself, and felt of his ear, "police man, don't it seem to you as if i did?'' A New Industry In Maine, Among the latest industries estab lished in Maine is that of collecting and drying sea-moss, which is followed in the town of Kittery. This moss is collected in dories in the neighborhood of White Island and Whale s Back. Two men go in each boat, and with rakes made for the purpose tear tbe moss from the rocks at half tide. It is taken to the beaches, where large beds are constructed by taking up all the large rocks and leaving only a surfaoe of pebble stones. These beds contain from ten to three hundred barrels. If there is no rain sea water has to be thrown on tbe moss, and the sun bleaches it from the dark green color, first to a beautiful pink and then to a clear white. It has to be turned ocoa sionally, and made the same as hay. After it is thoroughly dry it is packed in barrels and shipped to Boston, where it finds a ready sale at six cents a Eound. Immense quantities are used y brewers. Dartmouth College grew out of a school established for the education of Indian children. It now. has one In dian among its . students. CRIME AND RETRIBUTION, Outrage Upon a Utile Girl by a Drunken Human Brnfe-Ile Is Lynched by In furiated Cltlxen Shortly After the Deed. The following are the particulars of a fiendish crime perpetrated near Gib son s, a small mining village in Penn sylvania, and as fiendish, however merited, a retribution following it : Martin Groves, an ignorant and dissi pated man about thirty-five years old. had lived for years on the mountain back of Gibson's. He was in the habit of making periodical visits to the vil lage, where he invariably became more or less intoxicated. Drunk or sober, he was always considered a man of brutish and unbridled passions. On one Satur day he was in Ciibson s. He was not very drunk, and about the middle of the afternoon was missed. This was something unusual, as it was his cus tom to oontinue his orgies late into the night before departing for home. As his absence was of no importance it merely excited a passing remark. About two o clock is the afternoon Mrs. Davis, the widow of a miner, had sent her daughter, about thirteen years of age, on an errand about a mile out of the village. She had not returned at four o clock and her mother began to grow uneasy about her. A few min utes after four the girl was carried into the house by two men in an almost in sensible oondition. They said they had found her lying near the road, in a piece of woods, about half a mile ont of the village. Her clothing was badly torn and her face was bleeding from a large but not dangerous cut above the left temple. When spoken to she opened her eyes and essayed to speak, but was too weak to articulate, liecog- nizing the girl, the men brought her as quickly as possible to her mother's house. It was clear that she had been violated by some fiend, who had evi dently knocked her senseless by the blow on her head. The mine surgeon was summoned, and, under his treat ment, about nine o'clock at night the girl was able to talk. Her story was that she was on her way home after doing her errand, and when she reached the pieoe of woods near Moon s creek she saw Martin Groves sitting by the side of the road. She was afraid of him, and stopped, undecided whether to go through the woods and come out in the road below him or pass right on. His head was hanging down on his breast as if he were asleep, and she concluded to go noiselessly by him in the road. When sho got about oppo site to where he sat he raised his head and then rose to his feet. He stepped in front of her and said : " Yer afraid of me, are ye ?" ' Yes. Martin." said the girl. " but please don't hurt me." He made no reply to this, but took hold of her by both shoulders and pushed her towards the woods. She screamed loudly for help, when he struck her a blow with his fist on the side of her head, and she remembers nothing until coming to her senses some time before the men found her. She knew she was lying in the woods, and her condition, but was too weak to move. When this story was made known throughout the village the greatest ex oitoment prevailed . A crowd of twenty- five men gathered and decided upon seeking out Groves and giving him summary justice. They prooeeded in a body up the mountain and captured him in the woods. They then took him down into a deep depression between two lofty hills. In that lonely vale, by the light of the moon struggling through a heavy mist, the infuriated miners exeouted the sentence they pro nounced against him, which was that he should die. His eyes were bandaged and his hands bound behind him, and then he was hanged to the limb of a chestnut tree and left there until he was dead. He was afterward buried near the hut where he had lived for years. The outrage on the Davis girl was not Groves' first crime of that nature. The commission of three similar out rages was laid at his door by general belief, which had made him a terror to all women and children. A New Plaster Bandage. A surgeon connected with the South' era Dispensary, in Brooklyn, N. Y., has recently invented a new method of applying the plaster splint, which promises to be an important improve' ment. A common merino sock is drawn upon the foot and leg. It may extend as far up as is necessary to inolude the fractured locality. A small rope is run down the back seam in the center of the leg, around the heel and over the toes, returning up the middle of the instep and front cf the leg. ix or seven pieces of flannel are then out out to fit the leg and foot, allowing for shrinkage. The ends of the bones hav ing been carefully adjusted, the stock' ing. upon whioh the rope has been at taohed as described, is drawn upon the foot and leg. The flannels are soaked in warm water and applied, the plaster of Paris paste being rubbed in with layer after layer. After the last layer has been applied, the rlaster is allowed to set. When the plaster has become hard, the splint is perfect, and the pa tient can get about, on crutches, very comfortably, if the leg swells, and it is necessary to remove the bandage, the whole thing can be done inside ef three minutes. The cord that has been run around the stocking now forms i line of division in the splint. To re move the splint, all that has to be done is to slip out the cord and slit up the stocking along the line where the cord was. Then the rplint, divided in halves, can be removed as though it had been laid noon the limb to obtain a oast. Considerable time is thus gained by using this method of apply ing the plaster splint. When the broken limb becomes inflamed, it also is ex tremely painful and very tender to the touch. The slightest jar sends a thrill of pain through the body of the pa tient, who has sometimes been obliged to be ohloroformed to enable the sur geon to remove a plaster splint applied with a bandage. By the new method, the limo need hardly De moved or touohed. Items of Interest A good advertiser practically puts his show mndows into the newspapers. Five hundred dollars was found con cealed on the person of a man in Salem, Mass., who had been taken to jail for debt. A woman sick with typhoid fever wns recently refused admission to the county hospital at Milwaukee, Wis., because at the time when she appeared it was late at night. She died shortly after ward. There is an old Indian in Kansas who has been nicknamed "Old Prob." When asked to prophesy of the com ing weather, he sagely and safely says, " Mebbe snow ; mebbe heap-hot. Bet ter wait little, you bet." The Rev. Phillips Brooks has refused a salary of $20,000 a year from Phila delphia, said to be the highest salary ever offered to an Episcopal clergy man in this country, and one of $15,- 000 from New York. He loves Boston. " Sir," said the astonished landlady to a traveler who had ent his cup for ward for the seventh time," you must be very fond of coffee." " Yes, madam, 1 am," he replied, " or I should never have drank eo much water to get a little." A number of praotioal jokers in an interior California town accused a poor Swiss of having set a fire that occurred in town. He took the matter very much to heart, wrote a pathetio fare well letter to his brothers, and killed himself. A newly married couple in Connecti cut recently started out on their wed ding tour aooompanied by a small sized two-year old infant, whioh they had hired for the purpose, deluding the publio into the belief that they were old stagers. An Alsatian woman goes to confess : 'Father, I have committed a great sin." " Well 1" " 1 dare not say it ; it is too grievous." " Come, come, courage." "I have married a Prus sian." "Keep him, my daughter. That's your penance." Rather good rifle-shooting is thus de scribed by the editor of the Troy Whip : " We have seen a man hold his rifle in his left hand and toss a chip with his right hand into the air, and then, bringing his rifle to his shoulder, put a bullet through the chip." A Washington lady, upon the mar riage of her daughter, gave nor in tended son-in-law three dollars in a sealed envelope with which to fee the minister. The enterprising youth ab stracted two-thirds of the amount and delivered the remaining one dollar to the preacher. Aooording to statistics, the following nine cities stand above New York in the matter of population : London, 3,254,260 ; Sutchan (China), 2,000,000 ; Paris, 1,851.792 ; Pekin, 1,300,0UU ; Tschantsohau-fu, 1,000,000; Hangts-chau-fu, 1,500,000; Siangtan, 1,000, 009 ; Singnan-fu, 1,000,000 ; Canton, 1,000,000. A gentleman can stand it to hear a couple of ladies discuss the fashions for three or four hours at a time, but if he tarries much longer than that he gets jet galloons and cuirass basques most horribly mixed up with shell jabots on Watteau folds, and begins to feel that if he doesn't get out into the fresh air pretty soon he'll die. A married man, hearing that the eat ing of certain kinds of animal food would aid the same tissues of the hu man body aB, for instance, calves' brains would nourish the eater's brains, or beef's liver the eater's liver imme diately gave striot orders to his butcher that no more tongue of any kind should be sold to his wife or mother-in-law. The coolest robber that Boston has seen for a long time is a man who went to the Publio Library building recently, and; borrowing tools from some work men, removed the copper lightning rods, laboring at the job several hours, and, having loaded his spoils upon a wagon, rode off. The workmen sup posed he was acting under orders from the city. It is on record that simultaneously with the outbreak of an epidemic, like the cholera, birds deserted the fated town. This phenomenon has been ob served in St. Petersburg, Riga, and in cities of Prussia, in Hanover, Galicia, and Southern Germany. Some scien tific men suppose the birds are warned by the poison in the atmosphere, and instinctively fly from it. An Eccentric. A handsome inheritance has come to some luoky heirs residing in Iowa and Nebraska. Three generations ago a wealthy and public-spirited citizen, who was Mayor of Norwich, England, died, leaving the municipality a large sum of money upon the condition that in the third generation of his family the aooumulated interest on the sum donated to the city should be paid to the heirs of the donor. The descend ants of this generous and eccentric man were well aware of the provisions of his last testament, and accordingly have kept trace of the funds. Lately the last heir of the seoond generation died, and the third generation, who are residents of the United States, have been notified to appear on the 21th of November and claim their property. The amount inherited is about $800,000, Amerioan currency, and will be divided among several people. Representatives of these heirs came East last week, and sailed for Europe from New York on Saturday Dangerous. The statement by Capt. Bieasso, of the bark Teresa, that he has rediscov ered a dangerous rook in the Atlantio ocean in the same latitade as New York, and in a straight line from west to east, five hundred miles from New York harbor, is deserving of investiga tion. The captain says that at high wa ter the rook would be completely cov ered, and at low water would not be noticed unless it were perfectly calm. The existenoe of such a danger would go far to aooount for such mysterious disasters as the loss of the City of Bos ton, the United Kingdom, and other vessels that have never been heard from.