t-r- , t t J 1 ! ' ' ). : - t r 1 M t ."V ..VA. , ' HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEItANDTJM. Two Dollars per. Annum. U.lT VOL. V. EIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1875. NO. 24. Til . " ' "KX f 1111 i i Br-t -v & v j ri . n i I ' ,- V;, 1 "' .' Ho Giveth Ills Beloved Sleep. A little child refits cn a bed of pain. With an aching hind mid a f Ur- b .iiig bram A feverish flush on tho soft check lies, And a wistful look in the sweet liluo eyes, As the sick child moans i " IIow the tlow hours croop ! Will HQ the Loid sond to His iittlo oue sloop?" And tho moMior smoothed from tho child's brow fitir The clnntoring locks of her golden hair, Aud murmured : " My darling, we cannot tell Cut wo know that tho Father doth all things well ; And ws know that never a creature in pain Addressed a prayer to His mercy in vain. Time has no line that His hand may not smooth ) Life has no grief that Ilia love cannot soothe ; And the fevered brow shall have rest at last, Iu tho healing shade from the death-cross cart, Look up, my precious one why shouldst thou weop ? Tho Lord givoth aye to His loved ones sloop." And tho little one gazed with a glad surprise Iu tho loving depths of tnoso patiout eyes, Thou lifted her lips for oue long embrace, And turned with a smile on her weary face. Aud the mother smiled as the early mom Marked tho doop peace on tho childish form, And criod aloud in her thankfulness deep : " Tho dear Lord be praisod, who hath given her sleep !" Ay, mother she sleeps, is that charmed re pose That shall waken no more to earth's pains aud woe, For tho Savior bath gathorcd His lamb to His breast, Whero novcr life's storms shall her peace mo lest. FH dear love willed not that time should trace One sorrowful line on that innocent face j Others, less favored, might suffer their share Of the midnight toil and the ii'omitide glare i Others minht, lnbu; othere might weep, L'ut " the Lnri giveth ayo 16 His loved ones sleep." HUTU'S STEPFATHER. A curious trade to take to, but then it Las grown to bo profitable. Tilings were nt a low ebb with me whon I took it up. I was at my wits' end for some thing to do, and sat nibbling my nails one day, and grumbling horribly. "Don't goon like that, Tom," says my wife ; ''things might be worse." "How?" I said. " Why, wo might have Luke at homo, aud he is doing well." Luke's our boy, yon know, and we hud got him into a merchant's office, M-lioio lie rieelUOll Illielv to otay. " Things cau t be worse," I said, an grily ; when there was a knock at the door. " Come in," I said, and a fellow lodger A I'll pun in ms ncuu. "Are yon good at works, Mr. Smith?" lie Raul. " Middling," I said, for I was fond of pulling clocks to pieces, and trying to invent. " I wish you'd como and look at this sewing maehiue of mine, for I can't get it to go. I got up to look at it, and after' about an hour's fiddling about, I began to see a bit the reason why. I had my bit of dinner and tea witu those people, and they forced half a crown upon me as well, aud I went back feeling liko a now man, so refreshing had been that bit of work, iho very nest day tho folks from the next houso wanted mo to look at theirs, and then the news spreading, as news will spread, that there was some body who could cobble and tinker ma chinery, without putting people to the expense that makers would, . the jobs cmiie in fast, so that I was obliged to get files and drills and a vice regular set of tools by degrees ; and at last I was as busy a a bee from morning to night, and whttling over my work as happy as a king. Next we got to supplying shuttles and needles and machine cotton. Soon after I bpught a maehiue of a man who was tired ot it. JNext week I sold it at a good profit ; bought another and another, and ' Bold them ; then got to taking them and 'money in exchange for new ones, and one way an .1 tho other became a regulat ing dealer, as you see. I've got at lea.it three hundred on tho premises, whilo if anybody had told mo fifteen years ago that I should be doing this, I should have laughed at him. That pretty girl showing and explain ing the machine to a customer ? That's Ruth, that is. No, not my daughter yet, but she soon will be. Poor girl, I always think of her and of bread thrown upon the waters at the same time. "Curious idea, that," you will say, but I'll tell you why. In our trade we have strange people, to deal with. Most of cm are pour, and can't buy a machine right oil", but are ready aud willing to pay so much a week. That suits them, ami it suits me, if they'll only keep the payments up to the end. The way I've been bitten by some folks has made me that case-hardened that sometimes I'vo wondered whether I'd got any heart left, and the wife's had to interfere, telling mo I've been ppoiled with prosperity, and grown un feeling. It was she made me give way about l!uth, for one day, after having had my bristles all set up by finding out that three sound machines, by best makers, had gone nobody knew where, who should come into the shop but a ladylike-looking woman in very shabby widow's weeds. She wanted a machine for herself and daughter to learn, and said she had heard I would take the money by installments. Now just half an hour before, by our old shop clock, I had made a vow that I'd give up all that iiart of the trade, and I was rough with ler just as I am wheu I'm cross and said, "No." " But you will if the lady gives se curity," says my wife, hastily. The poor woman gave such a woe begone look at us that it made me more out of temper than ever, for I could feel that if I stopped I should have o let her have one at her owu terms. Aud bo it was ; for I let her have a first-class ma ehiue, as good as new, she only paying seven and six down, and undertaking to pay nalf-a-crown a week, and no more security than nothing I , To make it worse, too, I sent the thing home without chorge, Luke going with it, for he was back at homo now keeping my books, being grown into a fine young follow of flve-and-twenty, and I sat down and growled the whole of the rest of tho day, colling myself all the weak-minded idiots tinder the sun, and telling tho wife that business was going to tho dogs, and I should bo ruined. " You ought to be ashamed of your self, Tom," she said. " So I om," says I. "I didn't think I could be such a fool." "Such a fool as' to do a good, kind action to ono who was evidently a lady born, and come down in tho world." "Yes," I says, "to live in Bennett's place, where I've sunk no less than ton machines in nvtt years. "Yes," says the wife, "and cleared hundreds of pounds. Tom," X'nf ashflincd of you you a man with twenty workmen busy up stairs, a couple of thousand pounds worth of stock, and ' in the bank a " Hold your tongue, will you ?" I said. roughly, and went out into the shop to try and work it ail oil. Luke came back soon after, looking very strange, and 1 went to him directly. " Where's tho seven an' six?" I says, angrily. He didn't answer, but put three half- crowns down on the desk, took out the book, made his entries date of delivery. first payment, when the other's duo, and all the rest of it and was then going in to tho house. " Mind," I says, sharply, " those pay ments are to be kept up to the day, aud to-morrow you go to tho Holly's, who live nearly opposite to em, and tell em to keep an eye on the widow, or we shall lose auotlier machine. " You needn't be afraid, father," he said, coldly; "they're honest enough, only poor. j I was just in that humor that I wanted to quarrel with somebody, and that did it. " When I ask vou for your oninion. young man, you give it to jne, aud when 1 tell you to do a thing, you. do it," says, in as savage a way as ever I spoke to tho lad. ' ' You go over to-morrow and tell KoHy s to keep a strict lookout on those peopfe do you hear? "Father," he says, looking mo full in the face, "I couldn't insult them by do ing such a thing," when, without another word, he walked quietly out of the shop, leaving me worse than ever, It was about eight o'clock that I was sitting by the parlor fire, with tho wife working and very quiet, when Luke came iu from the workshop with a book under his arm, for ho had been toting up tho men's piecework, and what was duo to them, and the sight of him made mo feel as if 1 must quarrel He saw it, too, but he said nothing, only I'm tKo aoooiintn ivway and liognn t.n read. The wife saw tho storm brewing, and sue Knew now put out X was, lor 1 had not yet lit my pipe, nor yet nad my evening nap, which I always have after tea. So she did what she knew so well how to do filled my pipe, forced it into my hand, and just as I was going to dash it to pieces in the ashes, elie gave me one of her old looks, kissed me on tho fore- head, as with one hand she pressed me back into my chair, aud then with the other she lit a splint and held it to my tobacco. I was done. She always gets over me like that, and after smoking in silence for half an hour, 1 was lying back, with my eyes closed, dropping off to sleep, when the wife said (what had gone boforo I hadn't heard) : " Yes, he's asleep now." That woke me up, of course, and if I didn't lie there shamming and heard all they said in a whisper I " How came you to make him more vexod than he was, Luke?" says tho wife, and he told her. " I couldn't do it, mother," ho said, excitedly. "It was heart-breakiug. She's living iu a wretched room there with hor daughter, and, mother, -when I saw her I felt as if thero 1 I can't tell you." " Go on, Luke," sho said. " They're half starved," ho said, in a husky way. " Oh ! mother, it's horri ble. Such a sweet, beautiful girl, and the poor woman herself dying almost with some terriblo disease" The wife sighed. " They told me," he went on, " how hard they had tried to livo by ordinary needlework, and failed, and that as a last resource they had tried to get tho maehiue." " Poor things I" said tho wife ; " but ore you sure tho mother was a lady ?" A clergyman s widow, said Lmke, hastily ; " There isn't a doubt about it. Poor girl 1 and they've got to learu to use it before it will be of any use." Joor girl, linker says the wife. softly; and I saw through my eyelashes that she laid a hand upon his arm, aud was looking curiously at hnn, when if he ;lnln t cover his lace witli his hands, rest his elbows on the table, and give a low groan I Then the old woman got up, stood behind his chair like the foolish old mother would. " Mother," he says, suddenly, " will you go and see them?" , yi She didn't answer for a minute? orily stood looking down at him, and, 'then said, softly: " They paid you the first money ?" "No," he says, hotly. "I hadn't the heart to take it." . "Then that yours, Luke?" money you paid was " Yes, mother," he says, simply; and those two stopped looking one at the other, till the wife bent down and kissed him, holding his head afterward, for a few moments, between her hands; for she always did worship that chap, our only one ; and then I closed my eyes tight, and went on breatliing heavy and thinking. For something like a now revelation had come upon me. I knew Luke was five-and-twenty, and that I was fifty-four, but he always seemed liko a boy to me, and here was I waking up to the fact that he was a grown man, and that he was thinking aud feeling as I first thought and felt when I saw his mother, uigh upon eight-aud-twenty years ago. I lay back, thinking and telling myself I was very savage with him for deceiving me, aud that I wouldn't have him aud his mother laying plots together again t me, aud that I wouldn't stand by and see him make a fool of himself with the first protty girl he set eyes on, when he might marry Maria Turner, the engi neer's daughter, aud have a nice bit of money with her, to put into tho business, and then be my partner. "No," I says ; " if you plot together, I'll plot all alone," and then I pretended to wake up, took no notice, and had my supper. I kept rather gruff the next morning, and made myself very busy about the place, and I dare say I spoke more sharply than usual, but the wife and Luke wero as quiet as could be ; and about twelve I went out, with a little oil-eau and two or three tools in my pocket. It was not far to Bennett's place, and on getting to the right house I asked for Mrs. Murray, and was directed to tho second floor, where, as I reoched the iloo, if-'could Tiear the clicking of my sewing machine, and whoever wai there was so busy over it that she did not hear me knock ; so I opened the door softly, and looked in upon as sad a scone as I shall ever, I dare say, see. There in the bare room sat, asleep iu her chair, tho widow lady who came about tho machine, and I could Bee that iu her face which told plainly enough that the pain and suffering she must have beeu going through for years would soon be over ; and, situated as she was, it give me a kind of turn. " It's no business of yours," I said to myself, roughly ; and I turned then to look at who it was bending over my ma chine. I could see no face, only a slight figure in rusty black ; and a pair of busy white hands were trying very hard to govern the thing, aud to learn how to use it well. "So that's the gal, is it?" I said to myself. " Ah ! Luke, my boy, you've got to tho silly calf age, and I dare say" I :got no further, for at that moment the girl started, turned round, aud turn ed upon me a timid, woudermg face, that made my heart give a queer throb, nnd I couldn t take my eyes otl her. ' ;" Hush !" sho said softly, holding up her hand ; and I saw it was as thin and transparent as if she had been ill. "My name's Smith," I said, taking out a screwdriver. " My machine ; how does it go ? Thought 1 d come and see, Her face lit up a moment, and she came forward eogerly. " I'm so glad you ve come, ".she said, " I can t quite manage this. She pointed to the tliread regulator. and the next minute I was showing her that it was too tight, and somehow, in gentle, timid way, tho little witch quite got over mo, aud I stopped there two hours helping her, till her eyes sparkled with delight, as sho found out how easily sho could now make tuo needle dart m and out of hard material. . "Do you think you m do it now?" I said. " Oh, yes, I think so; I am so glad you camo. " So am I," says I, gruffly; " it will make it all tho easier for you to earn tho money, and pay for it. "And I will work so hard," she said, earnestly. "That vou will, my dear." I snvs. in spite of myself, for I felt sure it wasn't mo speaking, but something in me. " Sue been ill long?" I said, nodding to ward her mother. "Months," sho said, with the tears starting iu her pretty eyes; "but," sho added, brightly, " I shall have enough with this to get her good medicines and things she can fancy;" and as I looked at her, something in me said : " God bless you, my dear I I hope you will;" and the next minute! was going down stairs, calling myself a fool. They thought I didn't know at home. but I did; there was tho wifo going over aud over again to lieunett s place; and all sorts of nice things wero mado and taken there. 1 often used to soo them talkiug about it, but I took no notico; and that artful scoundrel, my boy Luke, used to pay the half-crown every week out of his owu pocket, aftor going to fetch it from the widow e. And all tho time I told myself I didn't like it, for 1 could see that Luko was changed, and always thinking of that girl a girl not half good enough for him. I remembered beinsr poor mvself. aud I hated poverty, and I used to speak harshly to Luko and tho wifo, and feel very bitter. At lost came an afternoon when I knew there was sometliiug wrong. The wife" had gone out directly after dinner. saying sho was going to see a sick woman I knew who it was, bless you ! and Luke was fidgeting about, not himself ; aud at last he took his hat and went out. " They might have confided in me." I said, bitterly; but all tho time I knew that I wouldn't let them. " Thev'll be spending money throwing it away. I know they've spent pounds on them al ready." At last I got in such a way that I call ed down our foreman, left him in charge, and took my hat and went after them. Everything was very quiet in Ben nett's place, for a couplo of dirty, dejected-looking women, one of whom was in arrears to me, had sent tho children that played iu the court right away be cause of the noise, and were keeping guard so that they- should not come back. I went up the stairs softly, and all was very still, only as I got nearer to the room I could hear a bitter, wailing cry, and then I opened the door gently and went in. Luke was there, standing with his head bent by tho sewing machine : the wife sat in a chair, aud on her knees, with her faco buried in the wife's lap, was the poor girl, crying as if her little heart would break ; while ou the bed, with all tho look of paiu gone out of her face, lay the widow gone to meet her husband, where paiu and sorrow are no more. I couldn't see very plainly, for there was a mist like before my eyes ; but I know Luke flushed up as ho took a step forward, as if to protect the girl, and the wifo looked at mo in a frightened way. But thero was no need, for something that wasn't me spoke, and that iu a very gentle way, as I stepped forward, raised the girl up, and kissed her pretty face before laying her little helpless head upon my shoulder, and smoothing her soft brown hair. " Mother," saya that something from within me, " I think there's room in the nest at home for this poor, forsaken little bird. Luke, my boy, will you go and fetch a cab ? Mother will see to what wants doing here." My bny gave a sob as ho caught my hand in his, and the next moment he did what ha had not done for years kissed me on the cheek before running ont of tho room, leaving me .with my darling nestling in my breast. I said "my darling," for she has been the sunshine of our homo ever since a pale, wintry sunshine whil the sorrow was fresh, but spring and summer now. Why, bless her t look at her. I've felt ashamed sometimes to think that sho, ft lady by birth, should corrre down to such a life, making me well, no, it's us now, for Luke's partner no end of money by her clever ways. But agio's happy, think ing her husband that is to be the finest follow under the sun ; and let mo tell you there is n any a gentleman not so well off as my boy will be, even if the money has all come out of a queer trade. A Story for the Girls. Sit down on the porch, children, and lot me tell you about Aunt Bachel, and tho story she onx told me. One day, when I was about twelve years old, I had planned to go after strawberries, but Aunt Bachel said to me : "A girl of your age should begiu to learn how to do housework. Take off your hat, roll up your sleeves, and help me do the baking." I pouted and sighed and shed tears, but was encouraged by the promise that I might go after the baking. Under good Aunt Rachel's direction I mixed a big loaf of bread, placed it on a tin as bright as a new dollar, and was rubbing tho flour off my hands when sho called out : "This will never, never do, child you haven't scraped your bread-bowl clean." I shall never forget the picture she made standing there, her eyes regarding me sternly, one hand resting on her hip, while in the other she held the untidy bowl. " It will never do, child," she went on ; " it is not only untidy, but it makes too much waste ; to be a good house keeper you must learn to be economical. You have heard the story of the 'young man who wanted an economical wife ?" " No," I answered, and I might have added that I didn't wish to hear it either. "Well," she continued, "he was a very likely young man, and he wanted a careful wife, so ho thought of a way he could find out. One morning he went to call upon tho different girls of his ac quaintance, aud asked them each for the scrapings of their bread-bowls to feed his horses. You see they all wanted him, so they got all they could fr him. Finally he found a girl who hadii't any, so he askod her to be his wife, because he thought she must bo economical. Now," said Aunt Bachel, triumphantly, " suppose a young man should ask you for tho scrapings of your bread-bowl, what could you say?" "What could I say?" I repeated, scornfully, ' ' why, I'd tell him if ho couldn't afford to buy oats for his horses they might starve. I wouldn't rob the pig to feed them." I suppose Aunt Bachel thought that lesson was all lost on me : but as true as you livo, I never knead the bread to this day without thinking of her lesson in economy. Detroit Free Press. A Balloon Reeoimoissniicp. Tho Count de Paris gives, in his "History of the Civil War in America, " mo luuuHuig viviu iieociiptiou oi a Dai- loon reconuoissauco: Wliilo the two hostile nvmi'ea nlianrra1 each other between Arlington and Fair- lax uoiin iiouso, a oauoou was sent up every evening to reconnoitre the sur rounding country. It was the only means oi getting signt ot the enemy. As soon as we rose above tho primeval trees which surrounded tho former rrHi,ln.n of Gen. Leo, tho view extended over an 1 . i .... uuuuianng country, covered with trees, dotted here and there by little clearings, and bordered on tho west, lw H Inner range of the Bluo Ridge, which recalls i.l. 11 J. 1? H It . T iu ursi nnes oi wie d lira. lhauks to tho bricht MoUk wlnVli il lumines the last hours of an autumn day in America, tne observer could distin cruish the sliflifest, details nf tha try. which annenred below ns like n man iu relief. But in vain does the eve seek tne apparent signs of war. Peace and tranauilitv seem to reiVn everywhere. The greatest attention is necessary to discover the recent clear ings, at the edge of which a lino of red dish earth mnrkn the new tnrt. However, as the day declines, we see to tne soutu little bluish lines of smoke rising gently above the trees. They mul tiply by groups, and form a vast semi circle. It is the Confederates eonkino- their supper. You may almost count the roll of their nrmv. for fww emla betrays the kettle of a half-section. r unner on, tne steam oi a locomotive flying towards the mountain, traces by a line drawn thronch tha forest tlia mil. road which brings the enemy their pro- . iniuiio. All til 13 DiUUU IJlUUlDUb 11 OLIillU of military musio is heard below the 1ml. loon. All the clearings, where we sought in vain to discover the Federal camp, are filled by a throng coming out of the woods that surrounds them. This throng arranges itself, aud forms in battalions. The musio passes in front of the ranks with that necnlinr march which tliflP.no. lish call the " poose-step. " Each battalion has two flnn-s. ono with the national colors, and the otl HV with its number and the nvms of ita Ktntr Theso Hags aro dipped, tho oflicers sa- lute, tun coionei mites command, and a moment after ull the soldiers disperse; for it is not ail alarm nor a prelude to march forward which has brought them thus together, but tho regular evening parade. Very Dirty. The English colliers must be a nice set of men. At a recent meeting of a local board the question of providing publio baths was raised, when one of tho mombers said he had heard of a collier who boa-sted that ho had not been washed all over for thirty yearn. An other gentleman said tho colliers avoided washiug, as they thought it weakened them ; while still another said tho men would rather pay five dollars on a dog fight than twelve cent for a bath. i Tho Harvest nnd the Prospect. For the first forty dajs of summer it was constantly dry, and the grain and hay wero starved down to . half, or, at most, three-quarters of a crop ; aud then came the rain, too late to help tho crop, but just in time to provent tho possi bility of harvesting in good condition even what there was of it. From the consequences of this departure from the happy order of nature half Europo sees before it in the near future tho calamity of dear bread ; and we ourselves have had such an experience of ' this perver sity of the elements as will impress the lesson deeply in the economical tables, though, fortunately, our experience is not that of Europe Our hay crop lias, perhaps, suffered most ; for, though thftro is a good crop on all the low meadows, the loss by thinness and poor quality at all points where rains in May and early Jane are necessary to give a good result, will reduce the yield to a fifth or sixth less than is obtained in a good year. Our farmers aro, therefore, poorer by at least one hundred million dollars, or, may be, one hundred aud fifty million dollars, on this one count. Perhaps tho first estimate is more near ly accurate, for the higher price that is of course tho immediate consequence of the short , crop will establish the equi librium against whatever is lost in excess of that sum. All the loss by grasshop pers and potato bugs will not equal the loss of hay ; but with theso losses added to that the sum represents an enormous addition to theTegular burdens of tho ag ricultural interest, though, by tho same machinery of the adaptation of prices, the burden will bo distributed more or less evenly over all classes. But though we have not altogether escaped the evil consequences of the disastrously exceptional weather of the year, we have reason to congratulate ourselves on a happy escape by compari son with what has happened in the East ern hemisphere, and on tho advantageous position hi which we stand with regard to tho markets with our grain crops. All over Europe the weather has been bad, but worst in France. There is little precise knowledge of what has happened in the great grain districts of the Black sea countiy, but the general reports in dicate that the yield will bo less than usual and the quality poor. All the valley of the Danube has suffered by tho weather. In France more is duo to the general bad weather than to the destruc tive inundations, but the inundations themselves seriously disturb tho balance of supplies iu that country. The fact that always produced famine and pestilence in the valley of the Ga ronne down to the fifteenth century now moves the current of supplies toward that district from other parts of France. But what is the condition of tho crops in the places upon which that current must draw I in the center of France, in the southeast, in the west and the north, tho cereals are in a bad state. Though these countries are not inundated they had continued dry weather through April and May, and then for the few weeks be fore harvest heavy continuous rains, so that the crop is small through the drought and poor iu quality from the bad condition in which it was harvested. Outsido of France the first draught is upon Algeria, and there also tho crop has been exposed to tho same conditions and is iu the same state. France, there fore, must buy largely. England, as is already known, must also buy largely, and Germany and tho eastern districts will, porhaps, estcom themselves fortu nate if able to supply fully their own wants. Thus we shall be without com petitors for whatever we have to spare out of our great grain crops. Undoubt edly, tho prices to which grain will bo carried by this movement will fall some what heavily upon poor people here, whoso loaves will be the dearer for the competition of European hunger; but this small addition to tho people's ex penditure will be more than compensated by tho impulse that will be given to every branch of industry as a conse quence of the general activity that this current of supplies toward Europe will set in motion. If people get employ ment at fair wages out of an event that at tho same time adds a cent to tho prioo of every loaf they will scarcely grumble about that cent. Dumas aud his Picture. The following characteristic story is told of Alexander Dumas, the author : An artist brought him a picture and said : "I do not ask you to buy this canvas, only put it into a.lottery ; your connec tions are extensive, and you can easily dispose of the tickets." Dumas consents, and advanoes the required sum to the needy artist. Then he cuts out fifty squares of paper, adorns them with pretty numbers, take half himself and offers tho rest to his acquaintances. But that which succeeds a hundreds times fails tho hundred-and-first time. Dumas offers them in vain ; he sighs, and takes teu more numbers. " I can certainly dispose of fifteen," he says to himself. At last a visitor comes who lets himself be tempted. But six months pass without another person be ing taken in. In the mean time tho gentleman who took the single number besieges Dumas with letters, and asks him, in pressing terms : " Wheu ore you going to draw the lottery?" If ho meets him on tho street, ho calls to him from afar : " Will the lottery be drawn soon?" Tired of waitiiiR, and iu order to get rid of the .troublesome man, Dumas takes tho .other fourteen tickets. which gives him forty-nine out of the fifty. He then proceeds to draw the lottery, and, to cap tho climax, it is the gentleman with the one ticket who draws tho picture. Profiling by Grasshoppers. Minnesota citizens out of their adversity. In one of the counties of that State, where tho authori ties offered a generous prize per bushel for crrafishormers. thninlinliitnnta waatal tho insects, thereby doubling their sizo and tho reward. They also went into the neii;hboi'iiifr eonntin u-L n. m. ward was paid and imported an immense oujcb, ior wnicn, wnen duly increased by roasting, they were piuj fyoiu the funds of their own county. ' And That's the Way He Felt. The Vicksburg (Miss.) Herald tells tho following story: He had a wooden leg, three fingers were gone from the left hond,: and he had to use a crutch. In tho dusk of the evening he Bat down on a dry goods box on tho street corner, and striking tho ground with his crutch, he exclaimed : . "Woll, old pord, the war's over! Gimme your hand shake hard I" He shook the crutch with hearty good will, and coutiuued: "Thore's no more Rob no more Yank 1 We're all Americans, and stand ing shoulder to shoulder South Caro lina alongside Massachusetts wo can lick tire boots off n any nation under the sun 1" He waited awhile and then went on: " No more skirmishes no more fonts. Uncle Robert is dead, Gen. Grant wants peace, and they're melting up swords and bayonets to make cotton mill ma chinery I We're about through camping out, old pard, and wo hain't sorry not a bit!" He leaned the crutch against tho box, lifted his wooden leg, and said : "Lost a good leg up at Fredericks burg wheu I was under Barksdale, and Buruside. thought he could whip old Uncle Robert and Stonewall Jackson together I Good Lord I but wasn't it hot that day, when the Yanks laid their pontoons and got up and got for us ! And when we got up nnd got for ' them, wasn't it red hot I" He stopped to ponder for a while, and his voice was softer as he said: "But I forgive 'em I I took tho chances and lost. I'm reaching out now to shake hands with tho Yank who shot me, and I'll divido my tobacco half and half with him. It was a big war. Yank and Reb stood right up aud show ed pluck, but it's timo to forgive and forget." He cut a chew off his plug, took off his battered hat and looked at it, and continued: "Didu't we all como of one blood? Hain't- we tho big American nation ? Isn't this here United States tho biggest plantation on the river, and is there a nation in the world that dares knock tho chip off our shoulder ? " Maryland, my Maryland, Michigan, my Michigan," He put down his leg, . looked at his crippled baud, aud soliloquized : . "r " Three fingers gone hand used up, but I'm satisfied. Folks who go to war expect to feel bullets. We stood up to the Yanks they stood up to us it "was a fair fight, and we got licked. Two fingers hain't as good as five, but they are good enough to shake hands with I Come up here, you Yanks, and grip mo ! We raise cotton down here you raise corn up there less trade 1" Ho lifted his crutch, struck it down hard, and went on: "Durn a family who'll fight each other I Wo've got the biggest and best country that ever laid out doors, and if any foreign despot throws a club at the American eaglo, we'll shoulder arms and shoot him into the middle of next week I" Ho sat and pondered while tho shad ows grew deeper, and by-aud-byo he said: " There's lots of graves down here there's heaps o' war orphans up North; I'm crippled up and half sick, but I'm going to get up and hit tho onery cuss who dares say a word ag'in either. Wo've got through fighting we're shak ing hands now, and durn the mau who says a word to interrupt the harmony 1 It's one family ole Undo Sam's boys and gals and babies, and we're going to livo in tho same house, eat at tho same table, and turn out bigger crops than any other ranch on the globe." lie rose up to go, rapped on the box with his crutch, and continued: "Resolved, That this glorious old family stick right together in tho old homestead for the next million years to como !" Oranges and Lemons. Orange and lemon plantations, iu the Mediterranean countries, are called gar dens, and vary in size, tho smallest con taining only a small number of trees, aud the largest many thousands. The fruit is gathered iu baskets similar to peach baskets, lined with canvas, the basket being held by a strap attached and passed around the neck or shoul ders. From the garden the fruit goes to tho repacking magazine, whero it is removed from the boxes, in which it was packed in the gardens, and repacked for shipment by experienced female pack ers, after having been carefully assorted by women, and wrapped in separate pa pers by young girls. As many as 500 persons, mostly women and children, are employed by some of tho fruit growers in their gardens and magazines, for gathering, sorting, and repacking for shipment, tho wages paid them vary ing from nine to sixteen cents a day. A full grown orange tree yields from five hundred to two thousand fruit annually, and arrives at the bearing state in three or live years, as does tho lemon tree. In sorting, every fruit that wants a stem is rejected. The boxes aro then securo ly covered, strapped, and marked with tho brand of the grower, when they are ready for shipment. Twenty years ago this trade was nothing in its commercial characteristics, or the inducements it offered to capitalists. Now it is progress ing with giant strides into prominence, and is a considerable sourco of revenue to tho government. Why 'Twasn't a lom Likeness. A certain lawyer had his portrait taken in his favorite attitude, standing with one hand iu his pocket. His friends and some of his clients went to seo it. Every bady said: " Oh, how much it is liko him ! It is tho very picture of him!" One farmer, who happened to be pres ent, thought differently: "'Taiu'tabit like him!" "'Tisn't, eh?" said half a dozen at once; " just show us wherein it is not a capital likeness." " Wa'al, 'tain't; no uso talkin', I tell you 'tain't !" "Well, why? Can't you tell us why it ain't a good likeness ';" "Yes, easy enough. Don't you see lie has got his hand in his own pocket ? 'Twould be as good ag'in if he had it iu somebody elso'sl" A Lie. A lie which is a part of a truth, Is ever the blackest of lies. For a lie which is all a lie, May bo met and fought with outright, But a lie which 1b part of a truth, Is a harder matter to fight. Tennyson. Items of Interest. A national ode The public debt. Being threadbaro is a terrible bear , to a proud mau. The groat feature'.at seaside resorts The big bill-owes. Carlylo's recommendation was : "Mako yourself an honest mau, and then you may bo sure that there is one rascal loss in the world." A flock of hens in Fairhaven, Vt., have been fed so much on raw meat that they kill and eat all the young chickens that come among them. A woman named Adolaido Robin, fifty years of age, threw herself from an attic window in Paris not long ago, being a victim of unrequited love. William Sangborn, of Medwny, Me., is under arrest for having killed his wifo, aged sixty-one. He sets up that ho " dreamt he was fighting a bear." It is proposed to have a Stato law in New Jersey prohibiting any ono from selling a can of fruit which isn't full weight. That's tho right weigh to cure the wrong weigh. The oldest journalist on the staff of tho Cleveland Plaindcaler sums up his experience as follows: "No man can keep habitual company with a cockroach and bo cheerful." Who cau sound tho depths of a woman's love ? A " Smoky City" po liceman shot a drunken husband whilo boating his wifo, and now she is prose cuting him who perhaps saved her life. A Frenchman has discovered a method of making paper incombustible, and it will doubtless prove of great value to a nation that has her public records burn ed so often as tho ono in which he bo longs. Burglars are common in Atlanta too common. When a family man goes home at night he has to hide behind tho gate post and bawl out, "It's me, my dear est," at tho top of his voice, in order to keep from being shot. Tho superintendent of a Sunday school in Washington is an undertaker, and there is some talk of asking him to resign because he makes tho children sing " I would not livo always " re gularly every Sunday. Sixty miles north of Dnluth, Minn., an iron mountain has been discovered which rivals its namesake in Missouri. It is eight miles long, one and a half miles wide, and 1,200 feet abovo tho level of Lake Superior. A recent number of the Chicago Tri bune serves up the murder nnd robbery of one day in several columns of elabo rately headed matter, ono of the lines reading : " Several plain, unassuming murders committed out West." A certain young gentleman of Evans ton, Iud., recently accompanied a lady to a train to seo her safely started on her journey. He carried her railroad ticket in his pocket for safety, and found it there, when he reached homo, some hours after tho train loft. Scientists have at last found out what tobacco smoke is a mixture of cyanhy drio, siuphureted hydrogen, formic, ace tic, propionic, butyric, valerianic and carbolic acids, half adozen kinds of alko loids and creosote. We don't wonder tho humanitarians declare that it is killing people. A catanuoycdLouis Tollman of Mount Airy, Ohio, and ho loaded heavily a double-barreled gun, intending to shoot tho pest. He fired once, wounding the cat, and then chased it, striking with tho stock of the gun. A blow hit the floor hard enough to explode the other charge, and Yollman was lulled. In the case of King vs Fenton, whero the prisoner was tried in 1812 for tho murder of Major Hillas in a duel, old Yudge Keller thus capped his summing up to the jury : Gentleman, it is my business to lay down the law to you, and I will. The law says the killing of a man in a duel is murder ; therefore, in the discharge of my duty I tell you so ; but I tell you at the same time a fairer duel than this I never heard of in tho whole " coorso" of my life. Distance of the Sun. Prof. Daniel Kirkwood, professor of mathematics in an Indiana university, contributes the following to the Indi anapolis Journal : The earth's mean dis tance from the sun, as deduced from Eucko's discussion of the observations mado on the transits of "Venus in 17(51 and l7G9, was 95,280,000 miles. Till within a few years past the accuracy of this determination was not called in question. So lately as 1851, Dr. Lard ner, in his " Hand-book of Astronomy," affirmed that Encke's value of the dis tauco could not vary from the truth moro than its threo-hundredth part. Quito roceutly, however, astronomers have been led, by various considerations, to regard tho distance as somewhat too great, and hence the results of the ob servations in December, 1871, with fho improved instruments of modern con struction, have been looked for with a lively interest. Tho discussion of thoso observations has not yet been completed. It is known, however, that the result ing value of the sun's horizontal parallax cannot differ materially from eight sec onds and eighty-seven hundredths of a second. This corresponds to a mean distance of 91,875,000 miles. We aro, therefore, nearer to the sun by 3,423,000 miles than was believed but a few years since. Tho distances of the other planets are to be diminished iu a corre sponding ratio the reduction in tho case of Neptune, the most remote, amounting to no loss than 100,000,000 miles. Stolen Letters. A Marblehead (Mass.) correspondent of the Boston Neii'8 charges that fifteen hundred and ninety-eight letters sent to his address have been . stolen by some one iu the Boston post-office during tho past live months, and estimates his los thereby at over $2,000 a year.