1 Y c-C ( iflfi HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and ..Publisher. NIL DESPERANDTJM. Two Dollars per Annum. ' " " ' ' . , , , ., .... , -, ., ,, -- - .. . 1.,. ii i m 1 1. i, 1 ! i m. .- -w - m ' 1 ; ; 1 11 " VOL. VI. MDGAVAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 187G. NO. 18. 1 i Dying In Harness. i Only a fallen bone stretched out there on the road, Stretched in the broken shafts, and crashed by the heavy load j Ouly a fallen horse, and a eirole of wonderiDg eyes Watching the 'frighted teamster goading the beast to Hue. old ! for his toil is over no more labor for bim i See the poor neck outstretched and the patient eyes grow dim ; Bee on the friendly stones how peacefully rests his head Thinking, if dumb beasts think, how good it is to be dead ; After the burdened journey, how restful it is to lie With tbo broken shafts and the cruel load, waiting ouly to die. Watchers, he died in harness, died in the shafts and Btraps, Fell, and the great load killed him ; one of the ' day's miehapt, One of tbo passing wonders marking the city road, A toiler dying in harness, heedless of call or goad. Fdssors, crowding the pathway, staying your steps awhile, What is the (symbol ? "Only death? Why should we cease to smile At death for a beast of burden f ' On ; through the busvBtreot That is ever and ever echoing the tread of the hurrying feotl Wiiat was the sign ? A symbol to touch the tireless will Does lie who taught in pa' ablos speak in para ble still? The soed on the rock is wasted, on hecdloss hearts ( f men, That ga her and sow, and grap and lose, labor and sleep, acd thou Then for the piize ! A crowd in the street of ever-echoing trtad, Tho toiler, crushed by thelioavy load, in there in bin haruess, dead! A GREAT MISTAKE. When pre tty little Nollie May married Frank Chester, she really believed that fclie was entering upon iv mo of uncloud ed happiness an unlimited extension, iu fact, of lit r toKkn courtship days, whorein discords would be altogether impossible. Loving her husband sincerely, the lit tle wife wits far too loyal to admit even to herself the greatness oi her disap pointment, yet the melancholy truth was plain. A cloud had darkened the do mestic horizon a cloud of such size and blackness that it had well nigh shaded the honeymoon, aud had threatened dire storms and tempests ever since. And this cloud, to drop metaphor, was noth ing less than Frauk Chester's mother t. hiiii, the embodiment of wisdom, the fonutaiu-i:ead of knowledge; to his wife, a constantly quoted, and therefore disagreeable, purugon, who threatened to develop into the destroyer of her hap piness. Whatever Nellie did whether she arranged her house or meditated some new decoration of walls or rooms, whether she superintended hia favorite dish or made his after dinner coffee with her own hands the result was al ways the same. " Ah, that isn't the way my mother used to do," or, "I ouly wish mother was here ; she could show you a bettor wuy," was Frank's in variable comment, until Nellie began to fear that she should learn to hate her mother-in-law, and to look forward with dism;iy to the visit which Mrs. Chester senior talked of paying them, but which had beou fortunately delayed thus far. At the end of this first month of house keeping Frank expressed himself in no measured terms when poor Nellie timid ly announced that she had not money enough to pay all the bills. Not money enough? Why, Nellie, you must have been very extravagant or very wastful, or both. Why, my mother always kept house on just half of the allowanco I make you; and she had Ave children at home, while here we have only ourselves 1 Really, my dear, you must look after things a little better than this, or you will ruin me. All that money spent on two people, and the bills only half paid 1" But, Frank," urged Nellie, trying hard to be cool, and forcing back the tears.that would spring to her eyes "but, Frauk, you know your mother has only one servant you have often eaid so and we have three. Of course that makes a difference. And then you have , had a great many dinner parties, and you have no idea how many extra things a dinner involves." Nonsense, Nellie ; you need not lay the blame on our having dined half a dozen people during the month, for I don't believe that makes an atom of difference in the long run. No, the fault is in your inexperience. You must look after those servants of yours more closely. I only wish yon had mother here for a couplo of months ; she would find the leaks, I know, and stop them too I But thou, of course, you have never had the advantage of such thorough training as mother has given her daugh ters. Why, she has made Jane as capa ble as herself." " And I am very glad I haven't had such a training ' as you speak of," said Nellie, hotly. My own dear mother was always prudent, and taught her chil dren to be the same ; but she used to to say that when people had ample means, economy was too often another name for stiugiuess, and I believe she was right." Mother was not stingy," said Frank, with an angry flush. " I don't see how she lived on such a paltry sum and supported so 'large a family without giving her whole mind to petty savings, which oould have left her no time for better and brighter things. She must have given up reading and musio and all that, and to what end I Just to add a few more dollars to your already large income. Now I think that is the worst kind of stinginess, since it defrauds the mind and soul to no pur pose whatever." " And I think it is a wife's duty to please her husband," Frauk xolaiia more annoyed than his wife could guess, for her random thrust had come close to the truth. " Mother devoted her life to her family, and if it had not been for the economy yon despise, might not have had so much money for wasting now." But poor Nellie, much too fond of her husband to find quarreling anything but misery, was fairly vanquished by this time,"and retired in tears, leaving the inglorious victor to draw checks for the bills, and to soothe his disturbed con Bcionco by resolving to buy his wife a new pair of bracelets that very day. So the thing had been going on, some times better, sometimes worse Nellie fairly disheartened at the malign influ ence that her mother-in-law, though so ror distant, seemed to exercise over her life; Frank utterly perplexod by the storm that followed every allusion to his mother's ways, every quotation of her mnxims. He never dreamed of the pain he was inflicting, or of the injustice of his con stant comparisons; and so, never imag ining that he could be to blame, he at tributed all the dissensions that were fust imbitteriug their lives to Nellie's temper. "Strango, she always seemed so ami able and gentle at home, that she should Erove so capricious and irritable now," e said to himself on more than one oc casion; and he was fast settling into the belief that he was a model husband, with a most perversely tempered wife, when a fortunate accident showed him the truth fo forcibly that he was fain to accept the lesson. The first anniversary of their mar riage was close at hand, and Nellie had planned a pleasant surprise for her hus band iu Iho shape of a dinner party composed of six of his most particular friends. Everything was succeeding finely. The invitations were all accepted and the guests pledged to secrecy, the menu was of the daintiest, and her now dinner dress, reserved for this occasion, un usually becoming, when, on the very morning of the eventful day, Frank pulled a letter out of his overcoat pocket as he was leaving the house, saying at the same time: " There, Nollie, I forgot to tell you las t night, bnt mother wrote yesterday to say that you may expect her this af ternoon. The fact is, I invited her to spend our wodding anniversary with us; but I wouldn't tell you before, thinking to givo you a pleasant surprise. Now yon can have a room in readiness, as she will arrive about four o'clock, and I will meet her at tho boat and bring her up here. Good-bye, little womm;" and Frank departed, serenely unconscious of tho vexation and dismay he left be hind. Poor Nellie thrust the unwelcome let ter into her pocket without reading it, nd then hunying to her bedroom, locked tho door and sat down to have a good cry. Nellie had never seen Mrs. Chester until her wedding day, and even then -iho bad found little to please her iu the tall, angular, prim maunered woman who offered such a decided contrast to b.or handsome, lively son, with his genial temper and ready wit. Frank had done his best on that occa sion to be cordial for both, but, though he was much too happy to see it, the two ladies had been as frigid as their re lationship allowed them to be, Bud the year that had passed had not brought them nearer together. All this and more passed through poor Nellie's mind before she wiped away hertears aud begun to think of nil that yet remained to bo done, aud of the impossibility of appearing at her dinner table with red eyes. "At least," she said to herself, I will not lot this day be marred by any ill temper. I will try, for Frank's sake, to welcomo his mother, and no mutter how she mw criticise, I will be ami able." But another and a far gruver sorrow awaited the poor little woman, for just as she rose from the table a telegram wai placed iu hor hand, and, with a tud deu presage of ill, she tore opeu the envelope. Iler fears were continued J the dispatch was from her father, to an nounce the sudden and perhaps fatal ill ness of her mother, and urging her to lose no time if the would see her once more. With finking hands and sinking heart, Nellio made her preparations for immediate departure. Her husband, who had received a similar message, was speedily at home, and made every arrangement for her comfort, soothing her as far as possible with hopc-f ul words, and so loving and sympathetic withal that Nellie felt it doubly hard to leave him. " If I could possibly leave my busi ness on finch short notice, you should not go alone, little wifey ; but you may depend on seeing me in a day or two, and meanwhile you must write and tele graph constantly," he said. "And if (as I hardly dare to hope) mother should be better, you need not come until next week ; bnt be sure to write to me every day, for I shall find so ranch comfort in your letters," said Nel lie, eagerly. The promise was given, and then she suddenly remembered the dinner party, which could no longer be kept secret, so her intended surprise was unfolded to her husband. " I did not mean to let yon know about it until you came home to-night," she said, smiling faintly at his thanks for this proof of her loving thoughtfulness. " And what a sad ending to your pleas ant little scheme I" he added, "and what am I to do without you, darling ? Do you think I could let them know in time not to come ?" Nellie shook her head. "Impossible, Frank; it is nearly five now, and they were invited for six o'clock. Besides, you will have barely time to meet your motner now; you will have to drive fast, after leaving me at the cars, if you want to meet the boat." " That's true," said Frank, "looking at his watch as they drove toward the depot "Why, do you know, Nellie, I had quite forgotten that mother was coming, for this trouble of yours has driven everything else out of my mind." It tooK some time to explain matters to that lady's entire satisfaction; that her daughter-in-law should have left her house on snoh short notice, and left it entirely to tho control ef her servants, was to her mind a very damaging fact, wnicn she commented npon very freely. " It seems to me, Frank, that your wife must be a very careless house keeper, to start off in such a hurry, and never even wait to see if I was coming. Why, suppose I had not arrived this afternoon, there would have been abso lutely no head to the house." " But Nellie was anxious to get to her mother as soon as possible, you know," said Frank, not altogether pleased. "Of course, that's all very proper, but still a married woman has much to consider, aud her first and pnramount duty is always to her husband and her homo. And a true wife will be careful to avoid unnecessary expenses." Her son winced a little at this appli cation o. the very maxim which he had so often quoted to poor Nellie as his mother's guiding principle, but he made no reply. She went on : " I suppose it is about your dinner hour, isn't it, Frank ? The fact is, I am rather hungry, for I wouldn't spend a dollar for dinner on the boat, and I had only a sandwich and an apple in my traveling bag, but I shall enjoy your dinner all the more." "That remiuds me, mother," said Frank, as he helped her out of the car riage at his own door, "that we are to have a dinner party to-night, six of our most intimate friends, whom Nellie in vited to celebrate the day." "But things won't be ready, now she has gone so suddenly." "Oh, our servant j will attend to all that," said Frauk; but his mother inter rupted him with a gesture of dismay. "Just as I expected li' she exclaimed; "just as I expected I My poor boy, you are living at a ruinous wasteful rate, and I must try my best to reform your wife's domestic management and show you how to get along. Why, Frank, yon must remember how differently I managed my household when you were a boy at home, and how I looked after everything myself. Do you happen to know if Nellio goes into her kitchen immediately after breakfast every day, us a careful housewife should ?" ' Why, the fuct is," said Frank, fairly stammering as he explained, " that I have had a fancy that Nellie in short, she has boen in the habit of taking a walk every morning, and she has gener ally walked down with me part of the way her health, you know " And here he broke down entirely, for his mother's eyes were fixed full upon him with a look of such astonishment and disap proval that he fairly wilted. I suppose she spends the afternoon in domestio duties." " In the afternoon she generally goes out to pay visits or attend receptions or matinees, or things of that sort. You know, mother, Nellie has a large circle of friends, and her social duties must not be neglected." "And when does she ever find time for making your shirts or her own dross es, or even for making cake and pies and preserves ?" was the next question. Frank almost laughed as he replied: "The fact is, mother, things are man nged very differently in the city, and as we have three servants, Nellie does not iind it necessary to spend her time in sewing or cooking. Besides, I want her to keep up her music, and she practices several hours each day." " You don't meuu to tell me that you, two in a family, keep three girls to wait upon you ? Oh, Frank 1 Frank 1 how you have changed t I only wish I had come here when you begun housekeep ing, and I might have taught your wife economy; but now I am afraid it is too late." In due time the guests arrived. Many were the regrets over Nellie's absence, which, in truth, cast an undeniable cloud over the entertainment, and much cym pathy was expressed by all ; but the din ner was an entire success in a gastrono mic point of view, and the host was well pleased with the commendations it called forth. Still he could not help see ing that his mother was disapproving, and as one course succeeded another, her dismay and astonishment became more evident. As soon as possible he managed an adjournment to the par!or, where his mother, despite his entreating look, de clined to follow, and after some pleasant chat his friends departed. As the door closed on the last one, Frank, hearing loud voices in the dining-room, returned thither to find his mother and Mary engaged in angry dis cussion as to the proper method of dis posing of the relics of the feast. Much as Frank was annoyed by the instant appeal which both parties made to him as he entered the room, he was yet too dutiful a son to hesitate. While your mistress is absent, Mry," he said to the excited waitress, ' I shall expect you to obey my mother; but, of course, Mrs. Chester will return in a day or two, and then she will take everything into her own hands again. Until then my mother is the head of the house." "Frank, I never dreamed of such wastefulness as I've seen to-night. Why, there was enough left of that dinner to feed you all for a week to come, and that girl was determined to pnt it all down stairs, where, I dare say, it would all have been given away by to-morrow night. But I was determined to stop that, so I made her bring the things all here to me, and I've got them under lock and key. With proper economy " But Frank, sick of the very word, had taken his departure, and so the lecture ended, Mrs. Chester going to her room to plan reforms, Frank indulging in a cigar, while he wondered how Nellie was getting on, and wished most earnestly that she was at home again. " For," said he, dolefully, to him self, ' I'm afraid 1 shall have to break up housekeeping if she stays more than three clays." If Nellie could have heard him I Morning brought a telegram from Nellie to say that her mother, though very ill, was out of danger, and an nouncing her own intention of staying with the invalid for come time. Later in the day a letter confirmed the tele gram. "I am sure you will get along nicely without me, dear Frank, since you nave your mother," wrote Nellie; " and as I am really very much needed here, I know you will not object if I prolong my stay to a fortnight." " .V fortnight I" groaned Frank; " why oouldn't she have said a year I It would have been about as reasonable. But I know what I'll do; I will go after her when the week is out, and bring her home." When Frank reached his home that evening he was surprised to find that everything was datk. The hall gas was not lit; neither was the fire whose cheer ful radiance had always made his pleas ant library doubly pleasant. Stumbling throngh the dark room, he finally suc ceeded in getting a match and striking it, but when he would have applied tho flame to the drop light, why, that was nowhere to be seen. Hastily lighting a side burner, he rang the bell for Mary, but before she could answer his sum mons his mother appeared. Opening the door which connected tho library with the dining-room, she said : " Oh, Frank, is that you f Come right in here and get warm, for it is a cold night, I know." " But where is Mary ? And what does she mean by neglecting to light the fire ? And Hallo I who pul the drop light in here t Why, mother, don't you know that belongs in the library?" And Frank was about to rfag another bell and call Mary to strict account, when his mother stopped him. "I told ner not to make a fire there, Frank, for as long as you and I are alone, we might just na well sit in here and save fuel and light.', So I made her bring in the drop lighf and your easy chair, and I've been sitting here all day myself, to save fire up siairs." "This is all nonsense, mother," ex claimed Frank, vehemently. " Nellie and I never thought of sitting in this room, and besides, I don't like furnace heat ot all, as yon may remember. I al ways have a fire in the library when the weather in cold enough, and I couldn't read my paper anywhere else. So, with your permission, I will have these things restored to their righb plaoes, and then we'll have our dinner.'' At this moment, ba'ore Mrs. Chester could say anything core, Mary made her appearance, but shawled and bon neted, with a large traveling bag in her hand. Standing near L,he door, she said, wrathfully : "If you please, Mr. Chester, ( would like my wages, for I'm going to leave to-night. Things are very different from what they was when our Mrs. Chester was at home, and as I can't give satisfaction, I'd better be going. I'll send for my trnik in the morning, unless the old lady," with a defiant glance at Mrs. Chester, " would like to search it first." " Nonsense, Mary," said Frank, real izing in a moment his own present dis comfort and his wile's dismay if Mary were suffered to depart "nonsense; you lire not going at all. Why, what would your mistress say . Then sbe re turned ? Now just go up stairs and take off your hat, aud then come down and wait on the table like a good girl." And dextrously leading hei to the door, ho whispered: " Just do the best you can, Mary, and I'll give you five dollars extra, and the others too. My wife will bo home in a week, and then all will be right again." Turning back to the dining-room, con siderably ruffled, Frank refused to hear anything about Mary, txtravogance in goneral, and his own extravagance in particular, and pretended to be deep in his newspaper until ('.inner was served. But even this ordiutrily agreeable meal was to be' an annoyance to-night, for it was made up entirely of the rem riants of tho last night's feast, and Fiank grumbled audibly, mnch to his mother's surprise. " I'm sure I don't kaow what has come over you, Frank," she said, se verely. " Last night you iiad ten times as much on the table as you needed, and to-night you object to eating those things, when it's the only way to keep them from being wasted. " I know very well that I have been a fool, but I am quite cured of my folly now; and so Nellio will find when she gets back," said Frank. A week passed. The servants grum bled, rebelled, and were only saved from open mutiny by constant remonstrances aud entreaties on the part of their mas ter, backed with more substantial argu ments occasionally. Frank said little if anything to his mother, but like the famous owl, he kept up an incessant thinking. His daily letters to Nellie were almost piti ful in their description of his forlorn condition, and brought quick loving an swers from his little wife. At the end of that week Mrs. Chester was suddenly summoned home, and Frank had .no sooner seen her safely embarked on the boat then he hastened to his office, arranged for a few days of absence, and took the first train to Glen wood, where he surprised and delighted his wife by his unexpected presence. In the days that followed the reunion Frank confessed his change of views with great candor and many self-accusations. Nellie was too well pleased to be unforgiving, and the element of discord was hushed. When tho husband and wife returned to their home, nothing was said about Mrs. Chester's ways an3 methods, and from that time onward Frank was content to let Nellie expend such proportion of his ample inoome as their social position demanded, without grumbling at necessary outlays. Indeed, he was heard to say in after years, that the man who attempted to make of his wife a Eecond edition of his mother, was only making a very great mistake. New Hampshire's Finances. The message of the governor of New Hampshire contains the following state ment of the State finances : Revenue for 1876 receipts from State tax, $400, 000 ; receipts from other sources, $103, 328.19 total revenue, $503,328.19. Current expenses for 1876 ordinary, $39,461.87 ; extraordinary, $29,395.05 ; interest on State debt, $222,629.81 total expenses, $391,536.23 showing an excess of revenue of $111,791.96, which is the amount of the reduotion of the State debt during the year. The lia bilities of the State are $3,629,638.49. Sixty-eight savings banks are in opera tion, with deposits of $31,188,064.16, an increase of $989,578,45. Bank invest ments show a decided improvement. Loans on real estate havo increased $1,000,000. Varieties in Fashions. Gold embroidery on linen cuffs and collars is a striking novelty that will probably fail to be popular. Long white scarfs of crepe lisse tuck ed iu each end are worn as neckties and cravat bows in mourning. Three cor nered neckerchiefs of black net fringed with crimped tape fringe are also used in mourning. Wide silk galloon, richly embroidered, is tho new trimming for evening dresses of light colored silks, It comes in pale green, cream, blue and rose colored grounds, wrought with vines, flowers, bees and butterflies in natural colors. Single branches of thickly clustered small flowers are placed down the mid dle of bonnet crowns between the trim ming scarfs of soft silk. Among these, dwarfed roses, pink or yellow, the flow ering almond and buttercups are favorite flowers. A single long loop of ribbon or of the dress trimming is sewed on the demi trained skirt of costumes, and the skirt is raised to a proper walking length by Eassing the hand through the loop and olding up the demi train. Long trains of evening dresses are raised in the same way. Gold braid is more used for handsome dresses than it promised to be when first introduced. It is carefully used in threads and dots of gold on black gal loon for trimming black grenadine dress es. Silvered braid is the trimming seen on the most elegant costumes of gray camel's hair. Black brocaded silk parasols, with steeple tops, rings, and edged with cream colored lace, are considered the first choice this season. Those of black silk covered with black guipure lace are also much admired. A coral set for a white lace and silk parasol now consists of the carved coral handle, the carved stick for the pagoda top, a coral ring to pass over the parasol and olose it, with seven or eight tiny hands of coral to finish the end of each gore of the canopy and attach the lace to the silk. The coral ornaments alone, before they are mount ed, cost $50. Parisiennes, when driving iu open carriages, use large red silk parasols of the dark shade known as Russia leather red. They also nse dark myrtle green parasols, bordered with green shaded cocks' plumes. Bazar. Animal Sagacity. The Rochester Union tells the fol lowing story concerning "a medium sized black and tan dog of unusual spirit and intelligence," owned in that city : On a recent occasion, when out with its master, a good sized woodchuck was discovered by the dog partially con cealed under a large tree, and in such a position that it could not be dislodged by ordinary means, and could not be reached by the eager terrier, who was wild at the prospect of his prey escaping him. It occurred to one of the party that by pouring water iu the burrow the groundhog would be forced to evacuate his quarters and give battle to tho dog. A creek ran near by, and, finding an old tiu pail, water was carried to the root of the tree and the 'chuck flooded out. His fate was soon decided by the dog, who is said to have shown more than ordinary satisfaction at the result, and from the after result must have taken a mental note of the means by which the burrowing animal was brought within his reach. This occurred several weeks ago, and had almost passed from the recollection of the dog's owner, when it was recalled by the following strange, if true, incident : In taking his customary "constitutional in tho woods, the gen tleman not thinking of any such thing as the destruction of a woodchuck, was astonished to see his dog stop like a well trained setter on the bank of a small creek, and sniff eagerly at something on the other side. It hesitated but a mo ment and then dashed into the water and was soon digging with a vim at tho root of an old treo and looking up anxiously toward his master, as if con scions that the assistance of the latter was absolutely necessary to the success of his design on the woodchuck which he had found. His owner, not wishing to disappoint the dog, went over to see what was up. He found the situation to be similar to that of the occasion when a deluge enabled the dog to make away with his foe. But this time there was no pail at hand, and it appeared as if the woodchuck would escape. In this emergency the dog suddenly disap peared, and it was not known where he had gone. He was absent five or ten minutes, and on making his appearance astonished bis master by his frantic ef forts to run along with an old tin pre serve can, which he was carrying in hia mouth, although it partially covered his eyes. A Slight Mistake. An individual attired in a gray suit of clothes, and presenting the appearance of a policeman, going down a San Fran cisco street, was saluted by a Celestial cigar dealer, who beckoned him into his sevsn-by-nine shop aud invited him to take a cigar. The man was astonished, but nevertheless complied and lighted the cigar which the dealer presented to him. "Whas your number?" asked the Chinaman. " Number 1 I haint got no number. ' " You no policeman?" "Policeman? Oh, no." 4 "You pay me ten centsee. I heap like pleeceman. Yon no pleeceman you pay me ten centsee. 1 heap pay license. The man refused to pay a cent, where upon the Chinaman drew a police whistle and blew lustily for a moment, but no noliceman imt in an appearance. Fin ally an elderly Celestial emerged from the intenor, and patting the citizen on the shoulder very smoothingly said "You heap good man. You pay ten centsee. You belly good man." The citizen being considerably molli fled drew out a ten-cent piece and hand ed to the Chinaman, who retired into his shop very well satisfied. " Do you love me Bt'll, John ?" wins pered a sensitive wife to her bus baud ' Of course I do the stiller the bet ter," answered the stupid husband. The Parsces and their Dead. While tho Mohammedan buries his dead, as do the Christians, in ceme teries, and rears columns and shafts above the graves J and while the Hindoo "cremates" his dead, putting them aloft on funeral pyres which are fired, and consume them, tho Parsees employ a far different method, and one that is intensely repulsive. On the summit of high hills they build a circular wall, over which, as a roof, they place an iron granting, sloping from the circum ference downward to the centor. On this grating tho bodies are laid, to be gradually consumed by birds of prey. The bones then drop into the space be neath. A writer thus describes the great Parsee cemetery at Bombay : "We came to the Parsee home of the dead. It is a hill inclosed with a very high wall. On the snmmit there is a dense grove of palm trees, in the center of which, and high above the foliage, rises the 'Tower of Silence.' The tower in closes and protects a dark, deep, open well, and across the top of the tower is a firmly-fixed grating of iron bars. The dead are laid npon this grating, the flesh to be the food of the birds of the air ; the bones, as they fall assunder from exposure and decay, to drop into the promiscuous pit below. The Parsee who was our guide protested that this giving up the remains of friends and kindred to the vulture, the eagle, and the raven, seemed horrible to him ; wherefore, when he was not long ago called npon to deposit the remains of a wife, then of a daughter, he protcoted them with strong metallic screens, so that the remains were left to natural de composition from the sacred heat of the sup, and were absorbed in the pure at mosphcro which ho enlightens." The Robin's Note. The other morning a bad man was be ing conveyed to prison, there to remain for long, long years. He walked the streets with irons on his wrists, and the glorious sun beaming down npon him as it kissed tho dew from the leaves of the maple and chestnut. His eyes had a sullen, vicious look, and there was some thing wicked in his very step. The offi cer halted with him a moment just where tho eye vould trace a beautiful street for a full mile, with every green tree holding its leaves up to be kissed by the warm snu. Just then a robin left its nest iu the branches above their heads and uttered its loudest, happiest notes iu praise of the glorious morning. The bad man looked up, then around him, and such a change came to his face that the officer was amazed. The bad look had left the eyes, the hard lines went away, and there was a quivering of the ohiu as he whispered : "And I have got to be shut up from all this." The robin sung again, wildly, softly, and so clear that its notes might be heard a long way off. The bad man's eyes were full of tears, and he said in a husky voice : How could I have been so wicked with such glad notes as thoso to ring in my ears and make my heart tender !" "The man of whom witnesses had said, "He has tho heart of a tiger," was broke a down in one short moment, aud he blushed that men should see the irons on his wrists and point him out as a criminal. Mystery of Dreams. It is related that a man fell asleep as the clock tolled tho first stroke of twelve. He awakened ere the echo of the twelfth stroke had died awny, havii.g, ia the in terval, dreamed that he committed a crime, was detected after five years, tried and condemned; tho shock of find ing tho halter about his neck aroused him to consciousness, when he discov ered that all these events had happened in an luhuitesimal fragment ot time, Mohammed, wishing to illustrate the wonders of sleep, tolJ how a certain man, being a shiek, found himself, for his pride, made a poor fisherman; that he lived as one for sixty years, bringing up a family and working hard; and how, upon waking up from this long dream, so short a time had ho been asleep that the narrow necked gourd bottle filled with water, which he knew he over turned as he fell asleep, had not time in which to empty itself. How fast the soul travels when the body is asleep 1 Often, when, we awake, we shrink from going back into tho dull routine of a sordid existence, regretting the pleas- anter life of dreamland. How is it that sometimes, when we go to a strange place, we fancy that we nave seen it be fore ? Is it possible that when one has been asleep the soul has floated away, seen the place, and has that memory of it which so surprises us I in a word. how far dual is the life of man, how far not? Au Asiatic Monster. A correspondent of tho Invalidc Itiwse, writing from Khokand, says that Fulat Bek (Pulad-Beg the steel prince) was held in great abhorrence by the na tives for his excessive cruelty and bru tality. His favorite pastime was slaugh tering innocent people like so many sheep. This odious monster is said to havo taken the lives of 3,700 people during his short rule in Marchilan. He was particularly relentless toward the family of iludoyar Khan, slayingnotonly the wives of his rival, but also the little children. After the capture of Marchi lan by Skobeleff this general would not allow his men to occupy the citadel- i. e. , the late residence of Pulad for it literally reeked with blood, and had be come a disgusting enamel nouse. New Trimming Laces. Among the newest white trimming laces are real hand made Spanish laces in light feathery designs that appear to be made entirely of silk, in the popu lar three-inch widths these cost $4 yaid. The Smyrna lace of pure linen that has suddenly come into fashion for trimming piques, ginghams, batistes, children's clothing, and ladies' under wear costs fifteen cents a yard for nar row widths, while that two inches wide is $1.50 a yard. If you are in love and don't know how to malie it known, go to yortr tailor, lie will press your suit tut you, Items of Interest. A very narrow aperture The crack of a whip. Many a man worth a million is utterly worth less. The Texas Senate has passed a bill excluding from jury duty all persons unable to read and write the English language. Chinamen who cut off their pigtails sell them to shopkeepers who supply the San Francisco young ladie.i with switches. A new rule on tho Central Vermont railroad requires every emyloyoe to take the total abstinence pledge, and dis missal is to follow a violation of it. A despairing swain, in a fit of despera tion, recently declared to his unrelenting ladylove that it was his firm determina tion to drown himself, or perish in the attempt. A clergyman said, the other day, that modern young ladies were not daugh ters of Shem and Ham, but daughters of Hem and Sham, componnds of plain sewing and make believe. It is. asserted by an eminent English physician that by the timely administra tion of the hypophosites of lime or soda, consumption can be stamped out as thoroughly as smallpox by vaccina tion. It is claimed that a true, ady never loses her temper. We never knew of one being really out of temper, though since the present style of dress came in we have seen them considerably rnffled. If ninety per cent, of the inmates of our prisons are drinkers of ardent spirits, as estimated by those in posi tions that give weight to their judg ment, the way iu which taxation may be reduced is apparant. A greenhorn arriving in town, on a first visit, heard a boy calling "Oys ters," aud asked: "What's that?" "Oh, only oysters," said his friend. " Great stars i" exclaimed tho verdant one, " do oysters howl like that?" A man with a large family was com plaiuiug of the difficulty of supporting nil of them. " Bnt," said a friend, "you havo sons big enough to earn something." The difliculty is," said the man, " they are too big to work." A captain caught a boy in the middle watch frying some pork and eggs he had stolen from the ship's stores, to whom tho captain called out: " You lubber, you I I'll havo none of that 1" "Faith, captain, I've none lor ye, repueu tne lad. Somebody cave a Texas detective a portrait of Shakespeare, and told him it was a picture ot a norse tnici lor wnose arrest there had beenai owocd offered. Tho detective has since scrutinized strauge faces close y, bnt has not arrest ed anybody, The man who is hardest to find is the one who has an " office," porticularly if he has "office hours." Whenever a wishes to conceal himself from the world, ho rents an office, hangs out sign stating his otlice hours, and then stays away forever. The direct United States cable com pany nave repeated tueir statements, aud fortified them by a. report from Pro fessor Thomson, of tllasgow, to the ellect that the recent breakages of their cable nuv-t have been the result of violenco willfully applied. On what two days iu a lifetime con a man travel the furthest, and where does ho travel on those two days? The day boforo his marriage and the day after it. me clay oeioro nis mnrnogo no is ui mo Cape of Good Hope, and tho day i.ftor it he is in the United States. Four months ago a party of divers started from San Francisco to recover treasure from tho steamer Golden Gato, which was wrecked in 1861 off tho coast of Mexico, and from which $775,000 were raised in 1803. Laud had buried tho vessel so deep that they could not reach any of the $400,000 which are supposed to be still there. A beggar recently applied for alms at the door of a partisan of the Anti-Mendicity Society in Ediuburgh. After vainly detail ng his manifold serrows, ho was peremptorily dismissed by tho inexorable gentleman. " Go away," said ho; "we cauna gie je naething." You might, at least, returned tho mendicant, with au air of great dignity and archness, " have refused me gram matically," Lawyers are sometimes very particular. The other day one was waited upon by young man, who began by saying My father died and made a will. "Is it possible? I never heard of inch a thing," answered the lawyer. I thought it happened every day, said the young man; " but if there is to be any difliculty about it I had better give ou a lee to attend to tne business. The fee was given and then the lawyer observed : " Oh 1 I think I know what you mean. You mean that your father made a will and died yes, yes; that must be it." The elephant in a traveling circus in San Francisco discovered a pocket in the back part of a girl's dress, as she was leaning against the rope and looking the other way. He reached iu his trunk and brought out an apple, which he ate. Another trial yielded a package of gum drops, and a third some peanuts. Again he essayed and got bold of a bottle of ammonia, the contents of which went the way of the apple, the candy and the peanuts. Iustantly the resentful ele phant obliterated the girl's bustle, fill ing the air with bits of cloth, newspa per and whalebone. Some distressing cases of death have occurred among the people engaged in the white lead works in England. The Ijondon Lancet suggests that the follow ing precautions should be mado compul sory in all white lead manufactories : "Clothes, gloves and caps should be provided to be worn only at the works; waterproof boots to be provided for those working with the moist white lead; respirators to be provided for those working in tho dry lead works; no one to be allowed to leave the works unwashed or in his factory dress; and that manufacturers should be empowered to make special rules which should ren der any of their workpeople amenable to ifttr for disregarding them."