1 iJtwcifc - HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VI. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1870. NO, 5. Willfulness. I offorod band and heart and self To somebody a willful elf Who beard me through, then turned away, And answers! but a scornful " Nay 1" In vain I strove to plead my eaee ; No gentle pity touched ber face j But listening with polite surprise, Blioturnotl from mine her careless eyes. Love driven back within my breast, Pride volunteered to do the rest. I oeasad to argue and implore, And vowed to trouble her no more. Then, lo 1 the maiden's cheeks grew red, And downward bent the haughty bead i The sweet lips loit their careless Bmile, And quivorod as I paused the while. A snddon hope within me grow i I dare 1 to think her heart was true. E'en though her lips, for miaohief a sake, Had tried mv proffered heart to break. Jut what I whisporod, never mind 1 But she she answered : "Men are bliud : When will they learn a woman's nay By dint of ooaxing means bnt yea ?" A TURQUOIS RING. Hattio Thorpe, the nursery governess, sat playing at building block houses with her two little chargos, Artie, aged nine, and Louis, aged seven. She was only eighteen herself a tiny girl for that ago, with a sweet face, and evident ly so much of a child that it seemed perfectly natural to see her withyoanger children, and as much interested in their childish games as themselves. A most efficient nursery governess Mrs. Langley found her, as she gave the chil dren their reading and spelling lessons daily, and played with them at addition and subtraction in a way to make the horrors of arithmetic quite fascinating. She slept in their room at night, dressed them in the mornings, and romped with them all day, us well as kept a gentle surveillance over them at the table, wheie she always eat with the family, except on grand company occasions, when she disappeared with them into a small temporary salon, where the three dined together, enjoying these meals most of any. As Nelly Langley told her cousin Ed ward, with a laugh, sho was not even called upon to play the part of elder sis ter except when sho was in the humor. It was a perfect comfort to have a girl like Hattio. She took all responsibility abont the children off one's mind. Mr. Edward Montague was a wealthy young man, and, indeed, the great catch of the set in which Miss Langley was a bright, particular star; and that ambi tious young lady left nothing undone to captivate the heir of the family; be sides which she greatly admired her cousin, and was as deeply in love with him as any society young lady permits herself to be before marriage or a posi tive engagement warrants an extrava gant amount of feeling. The cousins smiled at each other as their eyes met, after a minute's survey of the three children playing block houses. Nelly put out her hand as if inspired to assist at the game; and then, catching sight of her slender forefinger, sho uttered an exclamation. " Oh, my ring ! my lovely ring, Cousin Edward, that you gave me 1" ' Have you lost it '" the gentleman inquired, languidly. " I hope not this time. It has been mislaid so often, and turned up again. But I shall lose it some time, 1 know. I'm unfortunate about it. You see, on account of the pearls, I take it off every time I wash my hands, and then I forg. t to put it on again." "Pooh! It isn't lost, Nelly. Send Miss Thorpe to see if you have left it on your dressing table." Miss Thorpe didn't wait to bo seut, but ran away at once to look for the missing trinket. It was a lovely ring, and many a time little Hattio had looked on it with almost covetous glances, longing for Mich a ring to wear oh her own pretty finger. She returned from her quest in a few minutes, looking dis appointed, and saying sho couldn't find it anywhere. " You couldn't have half looked," the young lady declared, impatiently, " be cause I know I left it on the dressing table. I remember quite well now, and so must you, riattie. It was just before dinner, and you were there, because you dressed my hah'. Go again, Hat tio, and look on the window sill ; it's just possible I might have laid it there." Hattie went, and was gone a long time ; but she came bank looking more disappointed than before. She had looked on the dressing table, on tho buroau, behind the bureau, on the floor, on the window sill everywhere ; but not a vestige of the turquois ring oould she find. " How provoking I Was the window open, did you uotioe ?" "Yes, Miss Helen, the window was open." Then it must have fallen out. Come with me, Edward, aud we will look ;" and the pair went out together, while Hattie and the boys resumed their em ployment. Mr. Montague and Miss Langley sauntered round the house, and looked in the gross under her window, but without success ; and then they plucked roses, and playfully pelted each other with them, and very soon forgot all about what they came out for, and pro ceeded to flirt and make love in a non committal but delightful style, after the most approved fashion made and pro vided for suoh cases. The new moon was glittering like a silver sickle in the sky before they thought of returning to the house; and they were brought back to tho contem plation of such an idea by Helen re marking that the dew was falling, and she dare not remain out any longer. " And I haven't found my ring I They call turquois a lucky stone; I'm sure I've had the wrong kind of luck with that one. Who could have taken it ? I know I left it on the dressing table. Home one has stolen it" " Oh, nonsense, Nell; and never mind, anyway. I'll get you another, and a prettier one, without pearls on it, and then you won't have to remove it all the time." Once or twice that evening, and again the next day, Miss Langley spoke of her missing ring; the servants were in terrogated; mamma was complained to; Artie and Louis were Ordered to divulge its hiding place, if, in the spirit of prac tical joking which those young gentle men often indulged in, they had secreted it; bnt questions, complaints, threats, were all in vain; the turquois was gone. Something over a weok had passed awny, and Edward Montague, in order to redeem his promise to his cousin, had ruu up to town, and wns returning in tho late evening, carrying in his breast pocket a small velvet case, inside of which reposed a lovely turquois ring, having on it Helen's initial in tiny dia monds. It was such a lovely ring that the salesman had smiled and given Ed ward a knowing look, 8 if to intimate that he knew it was intended as an en gagement ring; and Edward, smiling t himself as he walked up the garden path rouud by the summer house and toward the sido door, half determined to ask his cousin, as he slipped it on her fiuger, to wear it there in token of a promise to give him not only that fiu ger, but her whole hand and heart. As he passed by the summer house tho sound of smothered weeping fiom with in smote painfully on his ear. Could it be Helen I He rushed in, and nearly stumbled over a little black bundle of something that crouched on the floor, with his head bent over its arms, crying aud sobbing in a perfect tempest of tears. Edward nearly fell, aud did, in fact, stumble, so that he caught the crouching bundle of black, and as he steadied him self he also picked it up aud set it on its feet. And then, with the moonlight shining on ita little flushed, tear-wet face, and its luxuriant brown hair all hanging about its shoulders, it proved to be little Hattie Thorpe. " Miss Thorpe I Why, I'm so sorry 1 Is any thing the matter?" Edward asked, gently, fearing some misfortune to the girl, or that she had lost some relative ; for he waB not aware that the little governess was fatherless and moth erless, and without a blood relation in the wide world. Hattie'g tears and sobs redoubled ; she placed her two hands before her face, and sunk down on a seat in an at titude of nhamo and despair. "Do tell me what is the trouble," ho said, kindly. " Oh, Mr. Edward," sobbed the poor child, " how can I say it ? Miss Helen thinks 1 have stolen her turquois riug." " Impossible I" exclaimed Edward, shocked. " Oh, yei, sir. Thank you, sir. It is impossible, but she thinks so." "Helen can't think anything so cruel. I'm sure you must be mistaken." " I'm not mistaken, sir. She said so, plain, two or three times that I stole her ring because you gave it to her, Mr. Edward, and that I wonld like to steal yon too." iMlward laughed, but a warm blush stole over his cheek. The silence be came a trifle awkward, and too break it he said : "That's worse nonsense than the other. You wouldn't steal me either, would you!" 'I wouldn't steal anything, Mr. Ed ward, of course ; and betides" "I'm not worth stealing," Edward interrupted. " You are worth anything," cried lit tle Hattie, with unnecessary fervor. "But still you wouldn't steal me," said Edward, laughing. "I couldn't, you know;" and the large innocent eyes were raised appeal iugly. "I'm not so sure of that," thought Edward, unconsciously pressing the soft little hands he still held between his own. He bent over hpr in a gentle, protecting way, and whispered : " lou are a dear little thing, aud 1 m sure you could do nothing in the world but what is good and sweet like your self." And then, what with the moon light, which made the girl more child like than ever, and the wet eyelashes and pretty quivering mouth that trembled like a baby's, and the two faces being so close together, Edward kissed little Hattie, and bade her not cry any more, aud he would see her put right in every way. Hattie wasn't angry. He was just like a nice big brother ; but she thrilled aud trembled under his kiss, and she dreamed all night of n lair young prince with a beautiful torquois ring, and he could find no finger that fitted it till he tried it on hers just like Cinderella and the little glass slipper. Edward was as good as his word, and spoke to Helen very seriously about the accusation she had made against Miss Thorpe ; but that didn't mend matters, for Helen really believed that llattie bad stolen the ring. aud was very indignant with her cousin for asserting the contrary. A lovers' quarrel was the result, and Edward kept the new ring in hU pocket, aud de layed the important question he had in tended to put when presenting it. Mis3 Langley had a scene with mam ma, and iusisted that the little chit of a governess, with her make-believe child like ways, and her deceit and hypocrisy, should be turned out of doors; but mamma chose to take time to think about that she knew she had a treasure, and she wasn't going to throw it away for the sake of a mere suspicion, possi bly unfounded. Besides, she had con scientious scruples about discharging Miss Thorpe without a character, and perhaps ruining her prospects in life. Mrs. Langley very soon saw that Helen was right, and that-Ed ward was quite too much interested iu the little governess; and Hattie received her dis charge on the following day, being per mitted to finish her week, to allow her the opportunity of finding another roof to shelter her poor, homeless head. But we all know the fate of " vaulting ambition," and even the cleverest mam mas do at times o'erleap discretion, and suffer in a similar way; and it happened so on this occasion. If, as Mrs. Langley and Helen declared, Hattie was playing a deep game, these ladies threw her a trump card aud played it for her. Ed ward found the little governess crying again: and this time her despair was complete, for she was thrown on the world with blemished reputation and the suspicion of theft attached to her. The young man overflowed with pity and in dignation, and having been gradually falling in love with the childish little creature, her present misery brought his feelings to a climax. He took posses sion of her, bade her consider herself Lis promised wife, and with many ten der assurances and several kisses on the trembling lips, vowed she should never know care or trouble again. Then he put the new turquois ring on her finger, and ns tho diamond initial was H, little Hattio did not know it had been first in tended to signify Helen. Edward was no hypocrite, but he was angry with his aunt and cousin, and so ho went away to town and did not con fide to these ladies the news of his en gagement; and Hattie had little induce ment for confidence on her part. Mrs. Langley believed Edward to be really attached to Helen, and so he had been, and was still to a certain extent; sho made no effort to keep him, there fore, feeling sure that he wonld soon re turn of his own accord, and she was quite as well pleased to have him away from the house during Hattie's last days there, for she felt convinced his only danger from that quarter was in constant association. Hattie was a dan gerous girl to have iu the same house with a young man of Edward's dispo sition she was such a sweet, pretty looking, babylike thiug, and he was so good and kind aud generous. As for the little governoRs, her behavior was perfect, nut Mrs. Langley's heart smote her often, and she determined to do her best for Miss Thorpe, who took her dis missal so well, and went about her duties sadly and quietly, with such sweetness and gentleness toward her young pupils. "Whatever I can do, Miss Thorpe, you must command me," said Mrs. Langley, on the morning she paid the young girl's wages. "If yon should need a reference, you know " " I would send to you, madam, and you would say I was a thief," Hattie interrupted, bitterly. " I would do nothing of the sort, Miss Thorpe," and a faint blush tinged the lady's pale cheek; " but if you choose to bo impertinent " " I have no such intention, madam; aud for your favor I thank you, but I don't think I shall require it. The color on Mrs, Langley's cheek deepened to an angry red; she bade her little governess "Goo'd morning" stiffly enough, feeling justly aggrieved ; and so soon as they were aloue she re marked to Miss Langley that such were a lady's thanks for trying to be kind to " that sort of person." Hattie said, "Good morning, Miss Helen," kissed Artie and Louis, who set up an ear-piercing wail at losing her, and then walked quietly away, leaving her modest little box to be Bent after her. At the New York terminus she was met by Mr. Edward Montague, and the two got into a close carriage, were speedily driven to the house of a cleri cal friend, aud in ten minutes more were pronounced man and wife. Edward had now been absent from his aunt's for nearly a week, and the good lady was getting anxious for his speedy return. Sho was consulting with Mr. Langley on the expedieucy of sending him word to come back and finish his visit, when a letter was placed in her hands. The envelope was very elegant and betrayed the natnro of its contents at once. Mother and daughter smiled, and Mrs. Langley said, breakiug tho seal : "I wonder what two turtle doves have paired now t" A couple of cards dropped out that solved the question at once, and not to Mrs. Langley's satisfaction, for she be came very pale. She sileutly passed the cards to Miss Langley. "I told you so, mamma the cnu ning, deceitful little minx I" and the young lady flung aside the harmless bits of pasteboard as if they had burned her. "Nelly! Nelly! here's your ring!" and Artie and Louis burst into the room with shouts of triumph. " Where do you think we found it f Why, Grip, the crow, stole it, and we found it in a nest of his, with lots of other things. Ain't you glad to get it f " Miss Helen dropped the ring at her feet, and stamped viciously on it. "I wish to Heaven I had never seen it!" she said. " Luoky, indeed ? But for that miserable turquois ring I would have been his wife now." The System of Awards. The system of awards adopted by the Centennial'commission of Philadelphia is original, and appears to be one that will give satisfaction. Two hundred judges, one half of whom will be for eigners and the other half citizens of the United States, are being selected for known good character and qualification, and each will receive $1,000 for his ser vices during the exposition. The awards will be based upon merit, and will be made by the United States com missiou upon written ieports signed by the awarding judges. They will con sist of a diploma and a bronze medal, accompanied by a special report of the judges, which exhibitors will have the right to reproduce and publish. Over forty foreign nations and their colonies will exhibit in the main building; most of them also occupy space in the other Erincipal buildings, and many of them ave special structures. Thirteen of them are over five thousand miles dis tant from Philadelphia; seven over seven, and two over ten thousand, the latter being about as far as one country can be separated from another. Offices for the foreign commissions are to be placed along the side aisles of the main building, in close proximity to the exhibits of their respective countries. The following special events are to occur during the exposition: Opening cere monial, May 10; grand ceremonies of the fourth of July; harvesting display Bucks oounty, in June and July; trials of steam plows and tillage implements, in (ne aame place, in September and October; exhibition of horses, mules and asses, September 1 to 15; exhibition of horned cattle, September 20 to Octo ber 5; exhibition of sheep, swine, goats and dogs, October 10 to 25, and the ex hibition of pomltry, October 28 to No vember 10. The main exhibition will close on the tenth of November, and all exhibits must be removed by the thirty-first of December. The Savage Prisoner Tamed. He was sent to Sing Sing, branded not only for immediate orime, bnt as a desperate character, who would be cer tain to tax the constant vigilance of the authorities, and give them trouble. In prison he beoame known as one who knew well how to seize secret op portunities, and would stop at nothing to aid his escape back to his old sinful life. Ouce he actually did escape, and carried out his plan so shrewdly that he arrived in New York, nailed up in a shoe box, on board one of the Hudson sloops. Some time after his capture and return to his old quarters, new officers were ap pointed ovor the prison, aud the severity of its discipline greatly increased. This convict, being already a marked man, seemed to bo singled out as a special subject for punishment, and sometimes received the lash without mercy for dis orders or offenses against prison rules which others had oommitted. Any fault or provocation which the keepers could not trace they laid to him, and made him suffer accordingly. Bad as he was, this persecution made him worse. All the demon in him awoke. When they tried to break his rebellious spirit by harsher inflictions, he only grew more ferocious, and, at last, when, one day, a squad of keepers, armed with implements of punishment, approached the forgo where he was at work, he attacked them with his red-hot iron, wounded two, and drove the rest away. By the help of several fellow convicts he was finally overpowered and secured, and then followed the inevitable lash. He was whipped nntilhe could not stand, and then confined till he should recover, only to be taken out and whipped again. But before this sentence could be carried out, the prison inspectors in quired iuto the caso, and found that the blame had been misplaced. The result was another change in the prison govern mnnt, and keepers who treated the old olTonder with fairness and mercy. Under this management he improved so much that, from being the oontinual object of dread and suspicion, and al most a wild beast in ferocity, ho became a favorite with all, gentle, tractable, quiet and obedient. As a reward for his good behavior, the warden promoted him, gave him a little garden to cultivate in the prison yard, aud allowed him to raise chickens. The chaplain warmly befriended him, and erelong had the pleasure of seeing him deeply interested in religious things. Before the term of his sentence ex pired he became a decided Christian, and asked for baptism. Within the walls of Sing Sing a new life opened to the hard ened transgressor, who had grown up from a neglected street boy, and had never known, till he- became a oonvict, the teachings of the Gospel. The gentleness which that Gospel in spires first softened his heart, and made him listen to truths that saved his soul. The above is, in brief, the story of "Jim, the desperado," first published in the columns of the Outlook, a religi ous paper of New York. Jim was re leased, aud became a preacher of right eousness to the wicked class among whom he had once been a fellow crimi nal aud ringleader. Currents In the Living Eye. The existence of a continuous, though sluggish, current in the eye, flowing from behind forwards, has been demon strated by Dr. Max Knies. The follow ing was the method of investigation pursued : A minute quantity of a solu tion of potassic ferrocyanide was intro duced into the posterior part of the vitreous humor. After the lapse of from one to four hours the animal was decapi tated, and the eyeball soaked in a solu tion of ierrio chloride ; it was then hardened in alcohol, and subjected to microscopic examination. The distribu tion of the precipitate of Prussian blue furnished evidence of the displacement of the particles of ferrocyanide during life, and betrayed the paths along which it had traveled. The current mentioned above was found to exist in the interior of the lens as well as in the vitreous, tho fluid required to nourish the former percolating through the latter, and thus following the 6omo course as the blood in the hyaloid artery of the foetus. The aqueous humor consists partly of a tran sudation from the ciliary body, partly of liquid which has made its way through the lens and vitreous. It serves to nourish the cornea. The nntrient fluid, whether in the vitreous, in tho lens, or in the cornea, is conveyed along the intercellular substance; and the author is inolined to extend this proposition to all the tissues of tho body, regarding the intorstital substance everywhere as the channel alone which the nutrient juices are conveyed to the corpuscular elements of parenchyma or connective tissue. Confidence with Wives, In connection with the reported re remark of a gentleman, who said he didn't believe the ladies he met iu Washington street knew that the times are dull, and that their husbands are having a hard time to keep their heads above water, the Boston Journal relates the following: All husbands do not make their financial affairs a topio of conversation at home, and some better halves know less of their husbands' af fairs than they do of their neighbors'. Some weeks since a lady was first in formed of her husband's suspension by reading an announcement in a paper which she accidentally took up in a store while waiting to have an order filled. Whether it was pride or fear that prompted the secrecy cannot be stated, but what can be expected from wives in the way of true economy if they are only silent partners in the mitri monial copartnership f In 1857 a large jewelry firm sold a costly set of jewels to a lady. The firm knew that her hus band was in a failing condition, bnt the lady had been a long and profitable cus tomer. When the partner ordered his elerk not to charge the set which had been delivered, but to make a memoran dum on the blotter, he paid the lady's integrity a high compliment. When her husband failed the jewelry (&mz back with a note couched in such terms that the 'dealer only regretted that a gift of the set would be construed as an insult. IN A WKSTERX POUT. The Bxperleaee at Fart Pease where Forty Men have Spent Months Fight ln the Indian. Fort Pease, the garrison which has been relieved by the troops, is on the west side of the Yellowstone river, six miles below the mouth of the Big Horn river, and is a strong fort. It was gor risoned originally by one company of forty men. From the very first day of the occu pancy of the fort, the Indians have been around it, and have amused themselves by shooting at the inhabitants. The colonists had an old iron twelve-ponnder, and when their guns would not reach their annoying enemies the border men threw a bolt of iron at the savages, and laughed to see them run as the missile went hissing and whistling through the air. When the savages crowded and came closer,- stones, old boots, shoes and pieces of wood were fired, and kegs of tenpenny nails were made to answer the place of grape and canister. The old iron gnn did not seem to be at all par ticular about what it was loaded with, and was most accommodating in hurling all sorts of projectiles, to the evident dis comfort aud -annoyance of the enemy. How the Indians came to allow the colonists to establish Fort Pease and the colony is explained by the fact that they were away at the time the fort was built, and it wns some time before Sitting Bull heard of it. Then he came over in great wrath and ordered the fort to bo pulled down, but the colonists threw a bolt of iron at his head from the old twelve pounder, and he retired to think about it. Since that day Fort Pease has been the grief of Sittiug Bull's heart, and he oould not even get close enough to have a good look at it for that old guu which threw cord wood, stones, spikes, boots, shoes, nails and everything at him. The forty men of Fort Pease have, perhaps, had as rough an experience as ever fell to the lot of any settlers of a new country. Almost constantly since June last they have been in a state of war. At times they were entirely shut up, but occasionally rallying, they would sally out tnd attempt to drive off their assailants. In these battles they lost six killed and nine wounded out of their litttle band of forty souls. The battles of these men would fill a volume. The last man from the fort was Mr. Hubbell, who came with letters to the commander of Fort Ellis, from the men of Pease, asking him to come and got them out of the country. The garrison divided; thirteen men coming out with Mr. Hubbell and fourteen remaining. It was not known if any party could get throngh the Indian lines, but it was con sidered prudent to risk only half the garrison in .attempting to communicate with the settlements and military posts. A few days before Hubbell came out Mr. McCormack started to come out and bronght nine men with him to guard a wagon. They waited a week for a storm and started in the night in the midst of a blinding snowstorm. The nine men came forty miles with McCormack, whon he told them to lay by until night and then go back to the fort. They started for the fort but have not. been heard from since, and it is believed they were surrounded by Indians and all killed. Mr. McCormack and the man with him got throngh toBozeman with the wagon, laying by in the daytime and traveling by night. When the nine men who went out with McCormack did not return the men at the garrison became uneasy aud be lieved they had all been killed. Mr. Hubbell was surprised to find McCor mack and the other man had got throngh, and he now thinks the niue men may have abandoned the idea of going back to the fort and gone into tho settlements at some other point. Hubbell reports that after McCormack left the Indians beoame very bold, pushing up quite close to the walls of the fort aud confining the men entirely within the stockade. The ammunition for the twelve pounder had given out, and the besieged could drive the savages 'off but a short distance with their rifles. One man, Jesse, who saw two Indians warming at a fire, and evidently watch ing the fort, was so enraged that he crawled ont of the fort, and, creeping up, shot one of the Indians dead and wounded another, but his temerity cost him his life, for before he could Ret back into the stockade he was hoaded off by other Indians, driven into some tim ber, and there killed and scalped. The Indians next morning called to the men in the fort and said they had killed Jesse aud the body was lying over in the timber. Sutler's Posts. Au army officer, who has spent a great many years on the frontier, and who has long been familiar with the profits am ing from these traderships, furnishes tne following statement as to the num ber and profit of these posts. The capi tal necessary for a trader to start a single post is $15,000. A five company post of infantry or cavalry is called a single post. The annual profits to' a trader of a five-company cavalry post ore about SjuO.UUU, with additional profits derived from contracts for forage, The profits at a single post from the sale of croods alone amount to 84U.0UU, Three posts, as they are managed by most traders, yield from regular sales fully $150,000. The best three posts are Fort Laramie, with from six to ten companies: Fort Sill, with ten compa nies; Fort Buford, with from seven to ten companies. These yield from fifty to one hundred per cent, profit. Other posts are Fort Russell and Fort Rich ardson, eight companies; Fort Sully, six oompames; Fori union, ten companies. Treating Hydrophobia. Chinese physicians treat hydrophobia in a highly original manner. Two sand stone bottles, half filled with wine or spirits, are placed upon the fire until the liquid boils. The contents are then emptied, and the red-hot mouth of the bottle is applied to the bite and held there until it is filled with blood, when the same course is pursued with the other . bottle. A decoction of rice, in which cantharides have been boiled for an hour, and then .removed, is also given to the patient, who is required to keep perfectly quiet for eight or ten days. DRIFTING SABLY DRIFTING. Tosncd Abont on the Oeenn ol Lire. She was a fragment a bit of wreck, or seaweed, drifting about on a great ocean, which sometimes bore her calmly forward, and again roared and raved around her and took malicious pleasure in dashing her against the cruel rocks. A girl of twelve or thirteen ragged. forlorn, wicked, and drifting on and on and knowing not where, even if she cared. Sin there ; poverty there ; wretch edness and misery there. Everything there in her heart and mind but a bright hope. If she had ever seen one happy hour in her life it Was some hour when she sat in the sun without fear of the foot of a brutal fattier or the fist of a drunken mother. If she had ever thought to shade her eves and peer into the future, as some starving, drifting sailor might draw himself up and scan the glassy sea for sight of sail, she had seen nothing but darkness not one single hope that she would ever be better fed or better loved. Hearts which beat under rag some times almost cease their beating to think of the future. Eyes peer into the mist shutting down over the path shadows spring up and make the way darker, and a sigh and a curse sets the heart freo to beat again. It is awful ! It is terrible for men and women and children, each with a soul to be judged and punishod and rewarded, to float on the ocean of uncertainty to drift near to green shores to be carried by some current almost to the base of a beacon light to feel tho sandy beach under their feet, and thn bo carried to sea again, with night shutting down to hide them from rescue. Every city is such a sea. Every such sea has its bits of floating wreck and cruel rocks and reef. Matted hair, ragged garments, the playmate of the vile and an offspring of the wicked and depraved, she heard a hundred curses to one kind word. There was no one on tho green shreto cast her a line. There was no one at the beacon light to understand hor heart. There were scars where sticks and clubs had forced to obey. There was hunger and woe and wickedness, and the tiny splin ter, shivered from some great hull, was a toy for the vagrant currents androcen tric eddies and roaring whirlpools which beset the sea of vice. Her offense was not great, yet why send her back to abasement den to starve and to receive further scars ? Good food might bring her good thoughts. Better treatment might make her heart better. Imprisonment might be salvation. When the audience went out a hand had dipped down into the bubbling, seething ocean and lifted up the bit of wreck. It was tired of floating. Tho treacherous reefs and jagged rocks were bruising and reducing it. It may drift again, but it will be stronger, aud its path may be more clearly marked. lhe suu shone dimly through tho cu rious old windows, whose panes look down into the courtroom. The shadows danced across the floor and played over the wall. There were dark shadows and light shadows. By-and-bye, when the suu shone stronger and brighter, the shadows joined hands and held firmly to i . ii i- . i i iue wuii iu curious lines, a. gray naireu old man, looking up from his reverie, saw that the shadows formed words. Ho read : "If ye shall save one soul, your re ward shall be eternal !" Wasn't it strange ? A Chinaman's Project for Revenge. Ah Ping, alia Ah Sow. a Chinese thief who is under arrest for having made a murderous assault upon Officer Byraw, in San Francisco, while in prison awaiting an examination, con ceived a terrible plan to punish a fellow countryman who had on ono occasion "given him away" to the police. He requested a friend who visited him to bring him a piece of sole leather and a paper of tacks, without stating what he wished these articles for. The China- mau brought aud delivered them to Ping, who out the leather in the shane of his right hand, and then affixed a strap to it, to slip over the back of the hand and hold it in position. After that he pierced the leather, and in each hole inserted a tack, until it presented the appearance of a brush. The tacks proved too short to satisfy him, and he requested his friend to bring him a paper of oopper tacks an inoh long. At that time he explained to his friend that he intended to put the leather on his right band, with tho points of the tacks outward, so as to be able to strike his enemy across the face and put his eyes out. He also said that ho' wanted the oopper tacks because they, being pois onous, would produoe more pain. The friend thought that he would no longer be a party to such a scheme, and noti fied Ping s enemy of Ping s intention. The Cherokee Indians. The estimates of the board of United States commissioners fixes the land, farms, etc., cultivated by the Cherokee Indians in the Indian Territory, at 204, 677 acres; wheat, corn, etc., annual pro duct, 6,739,355 bushels; value of farm products, including stock, $1,663,610; number of horses, cattle, etc., 464,465; personal property, not including real estate, 816,987,818. The government holds in trust for these tribes about $8, 000, 000. Their common schools number 200, with an aggregate attendance of 6,000. The investments of the Che rokees are about $3,000,000, the annual interest of which is applied as follows: fifty per cent, to the support of the goverment, thirty-five per cent, to gen eral school purposes, and fifteen per cent, to the orphans' fund. The citizen population numbers about 19,000, of which there are 14,850 native Che rokees. They have 65,950 acres in culti vation, and own 12,185 horses, and 41, 550 cattle. They have twenty-two saw mills, twenty-two stores, sixty-five smith shops, seventy-five day schools, one orphan school, one female high sohool, and one male high school. These schools have an aggregate attendance of 2,300. The Cherokees have lived under a writ ton constitution fifty years, and have expended during the past year about $90,000 for school purposes. Items of Interest. One coHnty in Illinois sold its pep permint crop last year for 8500,000. Why should wo celebrate Washing ton's birthday more than miue I" asked a teacher. "Because he nover told a lie," shouted a little boy. Mary (questioning her little brother on the gender of nouns) "Now, Tommy, what is the feminino of beau?" Tommy "Why, arrow, of course." A doctor attending a punster who was very ill, apologized for being late one day by saying that he had to stop to see a man who had fallen down a well. "Did he kick the bucket, doctor?" groaned the punster. A good cement for covering the joints of ovens, which beoomes very hard and does not crock, is made by mixing equal quantities of finelv sifted wood ashes and clay. Some solt is added and then sufficient water to form a dough. The cracks should be covered while the oven is cold. The Nagasaki RMng Sun says that the Buddhist religion is fast declining. In Yamashima Ken alone soventy-ono Buddhist temples have been abandoned since 1873, and during the past six years neorly 700 temples have been converted to other purposes than those for which they were built. A few days ago a man living a short distance from Hudson, N. Y., was in duced to test his strength by lifting a barrel of cement and placing it in a wagon. Tho feat was accomplished, but at the cost of the life of the modern Sampson, as he ruptured a blood vessel and died in a short time after reaching home. A young man in London having trod on a dog's toe, was bitten so severely that he died five days afterward. The relatives summoned the proprietor of the animal before a magistrate, who ren dered the remarkable decision that, there being no evidence that the dog was fero cious before being trod npon, ho miu-t dismiss the complaint. A certain clerk in a Western village recently made the following comment on Pocahontas. Said he: " Pocahontas was a great man ; Pocahontas was a kind-hearted man." "Hold on!" cried his companion; "Pocahontas was n woman." "She was, eh?" said ho. Well, that's just my luck. How am I expected to know ? I never read the Bible." If your next door neighbor has a littlo patch of ground which he intends to convert into a garden this spring, it is your duty, as a free-born American citi zen, to purchase ten or a dozen chickens and let them run at large after he gets all his seeds in. Nothing lends so much excitement and healthful exercise to gar den making as driving out your neigh bor's chickens. Those who buy colored hosiery are in formed that many of the brown stock ings, both worsted and cotton, are so poisonous as to endanger life. Those who wear them assume an unlovely yel low color and are taken with violent vomiting, headache, and otiier unhealthy symptoms. The poisonous color is used in brown shades, and is Known ns picric acid. It may be detected by the taste of the article, being exceedingly bitter. Its cheapness is the temptation to dishonest dyers to use it, notwith standing its unpleasant and possible fa tal effects. Persons buying brown hosiery would do well to test them be fore purchasing. Revenge i Sweet. The other day the dearly-beloved daughter of a plumber in Chicago bow ed to the daughter of a wealthy house holder on Ashland avenue, but tho haughty aristocrat, though she had formerly known the plebian at school, cut her dead, as she was walking with a young man who could bore a hole through a pine board with the end of his mustache a young man whom she did not desire to think that she had any vulgar acquaintances. The offended girl went home, wounded to the quick of her sensitive nature, and tearfully told her father. That worthy man called for the family Bible, and, raising his eyes to Heaven, took a solemn but silent oath; then, turning to his daughter, said : " My child, my own, your wrongs shall be terribly avenged." Next morn ing when he went to his establishment he called the foreman and hissed into his ear : " Next time Mr. Perkins' Eipes freeze, don't send out a man till e has seen me." Composition of the Human Body. A complete analysis of a man, recent ly made by Dr. Lancaster, of London, has been described by him in an inter esting chemical lecture. The body op erated upon weighed 158.4 pounds, and the lecturer exhibited upon the platform 23.1- pounds carbon, 2.2 pounds lime, 22.3 ounces phosphorus, and about one ounce each of sodium, iron, potassium, magnesium, and silicon. Dr. Lancaster apologized for not exhibiting 5,595 cubio feet of oxygen, weighing 121 pounds, 105,900 cubio feet of hydrogen, weighing 15.4 pounds, and fifty-two cubio feet of nitrogen, likewise obtained from the body, on account of their great bulk. All of these elements com bine into the following: 121 pounds wa ter, 16.5 pounds gelatine, 13.2 pounds fat, 8.8 pounds fibrine and albumen, 7.7 pounds phosphates of lime and other mineral substances. Something of a " Strike." Speaking of " strikes " bofore the Legislature of New York the Times says : A common trick is to get some preposterously "striking" bill intro duced, and then go to the persons or corporations it is aimed at, and tell them that Jor, a certain amount of money they can get it defeated. There is no possible chance for the bill passing, and perhaps it is never heard of after its reference to a committee ; but the ob ject of the lobbyist is gained by its in troduction. It gives him all the ground he needs to work upon, and it would certainly appear that he does not often work in vain. In fact, his occupation seems to be a profitable one, for very little money ever gets out of the hands of the professional lobbyist when once it is placed there,