c ) HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEItANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VI. ItlDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., TJIUKSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1870. NO. 27. wife m m Lore's Argument, Oh, lieait be glad ! In sunshine's grace I met uiy Invor faoe to faoe ; We but "changed c.yo" and by that sign My heart was bis, and bis was mine. Dreaming, I waited till be spoke, Tben onto life and love awoke ; I had no donbts, I had do fears That moment was the sum of ye rs. " Ab, no ! it is not bo," I eay "Trne love it groweth day by day, In warmed by smiles, and wet by tears, Girdled witii changing hopes aud fears. " At drat 'tis but a childwb joy, The smiling of a girl and boy, At d roiiBt both time and sorrow know Hi Torr. it to full stature grow." 8o w!ho, sweet friend, and yot you fail ; l'on have not been within the veil, Or you had teou wit'i open eyes This mighty, godlike love ariuo. Nj foolish bo with roving wings, Tl at bone yed darts at random flings ; For pulsion, pride and wealth a tool, Put out to nurse, and sent to school. 5ut a divinity that speaks: " Awake, Hwielhtart !" and straightway breaks A lordlier Jibt than sunshine's glow, A sweeter life than mortals know. I bow me to his fund command, Tako life's groat glory from bis hand Crowned in one moment's sweet surprise, When I and somebody " changed eyes." The Landlady of the Golden Sheaf. It is just forty -five years siuce my education was finished at Mrs. Middle ton's seminary for young ladies, tho most genteel school in our part of Hampshire. I was seventeen, and the eldest of ten children. My father's firm wan but a small one, held on lease f.'om our rich neighbor Dickson, the principal man in onr parish after the 'tiquire. Ho had tw farms leased from him besides my father's nnd a large one whii-ft lie tilled himself, kept a retinue of men nud maids, did tho best plowing, turned out the finest cattle, and made n vast deal of money by his duiry. His wife had died before I was born, Rnd his house was kept in prirao ordei by the youngest of Ins aunts, Miss Mill wood, ne had neither sou nor daugh ter but Master Hurry, whom everybody thought a s-nsiblo and very handsome young man, and not half so purse proud as his father. Beiug our landlord and next door neighbor, Faimer Dickson took a great deal of interest in us. He said tho family was too large for ruj father nhd mother to mauagu without advioo ; tint providing for them was his chief difficulty, and hearing that a dis tant relation of his, Mrs. Williams, laud lady of the Golden Sheaf, wuuted a well-brought-np gill, not as a servant, but to help in the housekeeping, thej thought it might be a good situation for me. To tell the whole truth, there was an other reason for my going. Before 1 left school. Hairy Dickson began to pay mo attention. Not that I encouraged him much, but he would come after me, and it did not please Lis father. The old man thought his son should look higher thau a poor farmer's daughter, and my parents having a good bit of pride, were jiist as angry when they came to know it. My father said he hoped no daughter of his would tempt a young man to disobey his father. My mother said she hoped-I had more spirit than to wish to marry into a family who did not think us good enough for them. Of course my father and mother were right. I gave Harry back his ring, but it was after a good deal of crying. He swore ho would never marry another, though his father should disinherit him ; aud to let Farmer Dickson and the whole country see that we were not set on trap ping his son, it was pe tied that I should go to Mrs. Williams. My father went one day to consult her, and, when all was agreeable, ho too' me and my trunk respectably in tho Condon coach, which then passed through Chatford, our village, and stopped at the Golden Sheaf. For a country inn, the house was large and handsome. It had every convenience of yard and stabliug, a good garden, a lino 01 chard, and some hundred acres of com and meadow laud. It was situated on tho highroad where Surry and Hamp shire meet. The ground was high; i nd from tho inn's upper windows ouo could see many a mile along the road and over the country. Stage coaches and carrier's wagons stopped there; so did the country hunts and the traveling gen try, corn and cattle deulers on their way to London, farmers to and from tho market town; aud all who came or went spoko well of the good housekeeping, tho fair dealing, and tho general civility of Mrs. Williams. She was a tall, thin woman, upright, active, and still handsome, bordering on sixty. Her black hair was but thinly sprinkled with gray. She had a good deal of the gentlewomen in her manner; always wore a black tabnet gown, a tambourd apron, and a cap of Notting ham laee, which was fine enough in those times. But there was something in her look so stern and rigid that made one o reful of one's doings before her. Her story, which we had heard in pri vate from Farmer Dickson, was both sad and singular. She had been brought up in one of the most respect able inns in tho county of Cornwall, and married a rich farmer. He left her early a widow, with an only daughtt-r. She managed the farm well, however, and was a prosperous woman. Her daughter grew up a beautiful girl, and tho mother's heart was wrapped up in her; but the son and heir of a neighbor ing squire induced her to elope with him, and marriage into bis high family was not to be thought of. Mrs. Wil liams was a woman of high spirit, strict aud proud. It is said the poor girl never dared let it be known where she lived, for fear of her mother; she sold her house and farm, left that part of the country, bought the Golden Sheaf, and set herself up where nobody knew of her family or history ; she had been doing well for many a year. Stern as she looked, Mrs. Williams was kind to me, and I did my best to please her. There was a good deal cf novelty and life to be seen about tho iun. I soon got over the parting with my mother and sisters, and was trying hard to think no more of Hnriy, though 1 had made np my mind minds are easily made np at seventeen to live un married, for his sake. Thus the summer wore away, the harvest passed, and the dull das of November came on. I had got accustomed to the ways of the house. Though good it was an old one. There was the best parlor and the best kitchen opening from it; numbers of pantries, closets and cupboards, and a stair behind the old dresser, leading right up to Mrs. Williams' own room, it was over the porch, and had windows on three sides, which gave her a view of all who came or went. Her accounts were kept there in an old fashioned ash desk, so were her choice recipes, and she had them for making everything. There was a cupboard set in the thick walls, its doors not to be distinguished from the rest of the wainscot, in which Mrs. Williams kept the most rare ond curious of her stores. I was once per mitted to seo them as a great privilege, for she never trusted the key to any hand but her own. There were spices aud essences, costly at the time of my story, but not common yet, old Chiua which had been brought in by the first of the East India Company's ships; mix tures for taking out stains, powders for destroying moths, and a poison for rats invented long ago by some of the Cor nish people, and of a terrible nature. So Mrs. Williams told me, and I can re member now that the poison resembled nothing 1 ever saw but red pepper, an eipensive luxury at that time, aud kept in the cupboard also. It may be believed that I was in great favor, for not only were her treasures shown to mo, but I had tea witli Mrs. Williams iu the porch room every even ing. Sho took kindly to me from tho first, because I exerted myself to learn housekeeping, which my mother said wis the principal thing for a young woman ex -eeting to have a home of her own, and still more becauso I kept quiet and Eober, and had no looks of levity. Nothing of that kind would have been allowed at the Golden Sheaf, inn though it was, the house being kept with the greatest propriety. There were no jokes, and very little gossiping, plenty of work, for almost everything wasniade at home, and a great ileal of scorning and going. Our quietest time was about tho middlo of November, just before the winter fairly begun. Then Mrs. Wil liams got her cattle killed, and her meat sultid, and most of tho ft mints were busy about the work in tho yard and buttery. One close, cloudy day, finch aa come so often at the Martinn.os time, I was sitting iu the best kitchen, close by tho window, doing some needle work, and Mrs. Williams was in her own room set tling tho accounts, for it was in the afternoon. The sound of a horse's hoof upon the road made me look out, and there was a gentleman handsomely mounted, w.th a servant after him, as gentlemen did in those d;tys. They looked as if they had traveled far, auel were coming to rest at tho inn. When the gentleman alighted, I saw he was tall aud handsome, fiomewhero about thirty-five, aud had a jovial, good natured look, liko one who was well pleased with himself and everything about him. Ho walked in not "at all strange like, and asked me iu tho most civil and courteous manner if Mrs. Wil liams lived here, and if he OLd sarvant oould have dinner. Tho first question was in a low tone, the second iu a ljuder key ; and before I could answer it Mrp. Williams came down. Judging from her look he was quite a new comer, I thought the gentleman glanced curiously at her first, and then, seeming satisfied that ad was right, repeated his question about the dinner, saying that ho was a stranger in that part of the country, bnt that he hud heard so much of the Golden Sheaf that he wi'hed to stop and dine at the house. I never saw Mr. Williams receive any gentleman with more respect and cere mony. She eourtesied him into her beat parlor, callod her hostlers to help Lis servant with the horses, took his orders for his dinner, and set abont cooking it herself, for tho rook was hard at work in the buttery. My first notion was that she had discovered him to be some great person traveling iu disguise, and I half expected to be told of it. Mrs. Wil liams used to talk to mo a good deal when we were alone in quiet afternoons; bnt now she weuton cooking and making things without saying a work, and there was a queer, fixed looked in her faoe which I could not understand, but it kept mo from talking. I laid down my work and rose to make the eel soup ; it was one of the things for which the house was famous a Cornwall dish, I believe ; and I had been trusted with the miking cf it of late to my great ex ultation, but now shestopped me. ' No, Mary ; finish your sewing ; thoso linens will be wanted. I'll make the soup my self." I sewed away, wondering who the gen tleman could bo, aud what hai got over Mrs. Williams, till, happening to look np, I missed her out of tho kitchen. She hi d gone up to her own room, but she came back in a minute with a paper in her hand which she shook into the soup, and then threw it into the fire. "That's the red pepper; it will do now," said she, takiug up a spoonful, and ronkiug believe to tasto, but she did not. I stitched on for a minute or two, though my blood was running cold, and the boiling of ihe soup in the large, quiet kitchen sounds through my head even now. Mrs. Williams was standing at tho window with, her back to mo. I never knew what made me do it; but it was as if somebody had bidden me; and, without a word or thought but that it must be done, I ran to the fire, gave tho saucepan a poke, and sent the soup a blazing np the chimney. As it fizzled up, the thought of her anger came over me; 1 knew rot what I did; but, uttering a wild cry of fear, I rushed to the near est door, and it was the best parlor. The. next thing I remember is crouching be hind the gentleman who had started up and stood iu the door, as Mrs. Williams came forward with two knives, which had been lying on the window sill, in her hand. "Pooh I never mind the spilling of the roup," said he, understanding at once what I had dono, which, indeed, was easily seen. "Yon would not be angry with the child for that; she could not help it, I dare say. I can dine without it. You don't know me, Mrs. Wil liams," he continued, coming a step nearer where she stood, still looking at me with a deadly glitter in her eyes. " Don't I f " said she, nnd I think she wis trying which one of the knives was tne sharpest. "Well," said the gentleman, "you m know me to bo Edward Winstauely, but you don't know that I married your daughter, and brought her home a lady. I never meant to act the villain with her. Wo were privately mariied, but while the old gentleman lived it had to be kept se cret, and we knew yon would not keep it. This is why I come to-day to surprise you; but you will oome to Winstanely Park to give us your blessing; you are not going to faint t" She had staggered back against the wall, her white lips set, rnd her eyes growing glassy. Ho and I, and half a dozen of the servants, whom my scream had brought in, to help; but she pushed us away with a desperate effort, darted up stairs, and we heard her lock herself in her own room. The whole house was terribly frightened. What Mr. Wiu stnnely thought, I do not know, but he asked me no questions, and never seemed to suspect anything abont the spilled eonp. He left a note for Mrs. Williams, and went off with a servant a little before sunset. We all went about our business, for work never slacked in that houso on any acoount, aud the eve ning's coach was expected. Just be fore it came, Mrs. Williams' bell rang, and tho housemaid said she wanted me. When I came into the room she was sit ting at the desk, looking like herself again, but her face was still white, and sho had her long knitted purse full of guineas in her hand. " Mary," said she, "you aro a good girl take this and go home I'll take care that you get no blame." "I want no money, madam," said I, " but I'll go home if you will let me, and never say a word except to my father and mother." She held out tho purse once moro, nnd thon pointed to the door, but could say nothing; it must have been a hard pull for her proud spirit. I got out of tho room as quick as I could, threw on my hat and cloak, and got into the coach as noon as it came up, leaving trunk aud all behind me. My father and mother were mightily surprised when it set mo down at their door in Chatford, jnst as the clock struck twelve they wero still more as tonished when I told them what had brought me home. My father first called mo a brave, good girl, and then advised me not to be proud about it, because it was tho work of Providence, and we were bound on all hands to keep niioh a Btry qaiol abont Farjuo Diok- st n's relation." The story was kept be tween mo and them; but my home com ing got wind, and Farmer Dickson came in a great hurry to know why Mary had left her good situation. My mother would not havo reflections cast on her child, so sho told him in the parlor, nnd what he said I don't know, because the door was fast shut; but he came out rubbing his hands and clapped me on the back, saying : "You are a fine girl, Mary, and if Harry don't finish that business, 1 11 make you to be Mrs. Dickson myself." I think I have not much moro to tell. Harry did fiuish the business. There were some people iu our village that uover got over the wonder of it; but I am proud to say the Dickson family did not lose by me, for, ten years after Mrs. Williams died in her inn, and left property in equal shares between me arid her daughter, Lady Winstanley. Sho had never gone to the park but once, and then she would neither eat, drink nor sleep in the house, but saw her daughter and her grandson, now heir to the estate, nnd then wont straight back to tho Golden Sheaf. She never took another girl to stay with her, a-id what she said about my leaving, I never heard. The maids had a story among them, and they always stuck to it, that I went on account of something that came down the chimney, and frightened Mrs. Williams out of her senses. They said one thing, which I am inclined to think might be true that she never liked to make eel soup after, nor cared to look at red pepper. Crime In Ireland. The London Times speoks bitterly of tho revival of agrarian crime in Ireland, "which might almost make tho firmest believers iu the healing influences of justieo and equal laws despair of their labors iu the cause of peace and good will." The occasion of this indignation was tin murder of a Mr. Bridge, tho agent of an English gentleman who owns largo estates in the county of Cork. Sorno time ago Mr. Bridge was fired at by one Ryan, who escaped, in conse quence of which the agent obtained the protection of a detachment of the police, two of whom accompanied him on his business journeys. On the thirtieth of March last Mr. Bridge was traveling on a jaunting car with two armed police men, a baliff, and the driver. A blunderbuss, loaded with slugs, was fired at the party from behind a hedge, killing the driver and wounding the agent, who kept one Thomas Crower in sight until tho police seized him. His confederate escaped. A conviction of Grower as a participator in the crime was only obtained by the extreme ex pedient of challenging fifty-two names upon the panel on the part of the crown. The people around the scene of crime unanimously closed their eyes and ears ; some witnesses thought magpies had been fired at ; others thought the firing was music." Two women refused to take charce of the driver's corpse ; and a third who did so lost her place a week after, and was refused ' lodgings in Mitchelstown. " We had hoped," soys the Times, " that if the land aot of 1870 had failed to appease a discontent which had become chronic, it bad at least sup pressed the provocations and the out breaks of agrarian vindictiveness which were so long a disgrace both to the peo ple and to the rulers of Ireland." A recent fancy makes earrings of black velvet and watered ribbon, held in place by small buckles. LOCKED IN A FLOATING TOMB. An Invention thnt Klllrd ftfnny Alligators nud Topped 00 with the Inventvr. " I see by this morning's Sun," said Mr. Magnffln, " that Mrs. O'Klantikop is married again. Her last husband, Major O'Klantikop, tised to board here. He spent his winters in Florida hunting alligators, and a more devoted sports man I never saw; but he never was sat isfied with the old method of shooting with a rifle. There was great waste in the bullets that glanced off the reptiles' backs, and frequently ouo would get away before he could hit it in a vital spot. So the major went up to Charles ton one winter and bought a oondemned columbiad thnt had been nsod in the siege of Fort Snmler, and hnd it mounted nt a bend in the St. John's river, nnd troined to oommaud the water adjacent to the point round which nil the alligators must oome; and hav ing loaded with a ten-inch shell, he waited. " The, very next day there came np stream an alligator that seemed tickled with something that pleased his fancy very much; when he swung his upper jaw back to laugh the major thought it was a floating derriok; but when the aui mal came within clear range, O'Klanti kop saw that it was a monster nlligator, and ho pulled the lanyard. The aim was beautiful. The sholl struck just in side the tip of the lower jaw, and as it rolled along townWhis throat, the change in tho alligator's expression was remarkable; ho shut his mouth with a clip that was heard ten miles away, and fairly humped himself as the bomb rolled down the interior. Abont midway of tho body the shell exploded. The explosion could not bring back the happy alligator's last gleeful fancy, but it more thau restored his openness cf counte nance. The major said subsequently, however, that while this method of de stroying alligators was undoubtedly ef fective, it broke 'em up too fine; nnd so he left the big gnn to rust on the bank of the river, and invented a new plan. " His outfit this time was a fishing rod, a feather, and a piece of scantling about eight feet in length. Having fastened the fenthcr to tho end of the rod, the major would walk to the edgo of the river, reach over the bunk, and delicately tickle an alligator's jaws with the feather, and when he closed his eyes aud opened his mouth to enjoy tho un usual titillatiou, the major would quietly step up with the scantling, and have the jaw braced back before the alligator knew what was the matter. Then O'Klantikop would calmly put a bullet down his gullet, and take his prize ashore. In this way ho captured Bixty seven alligators inour months. " Ouo day the 'pilot of the steamer thnt runs up f"i St." John's saw an ob struction which was not down on the charts, and which had not even boen visible wren the boat made her previous trip. Backing his engine, the pilot was still more surprised to see the obstruc tion making toward him. It looked something liko a spar buoy adrift, and when it came still nearer it was made out to be a piece of stout scantling sticking i.p through the upper jaw of a gigantic alligator. The pilot was amazed; but when the story reached Jacksonville, the fate of Major O'Klantikop, who had been missing for thrco or four weeks, was no longer a mystery; everybody who was familiar with the major's style of hunting knew that tho strangely planted piece of scantling-which the pilot had seen was Major O'Klantikop's tomb stone, and that the major was buried about seven feet back of it. Tho gen erally accepted theory was that O'Klan tikop, mado reckless by uninterrupted success, had mi calculated in placing tho top end of the scantling, nnd the rafters in the roof of the alligator's mouth hadgivou way, letting tho mighty jaws together, and locking up tho major in a sarcophagus which iu novt lty of design and high qualities of absoition, completely laid over anythiug in tiiat way ever constructed by the Ureeks. Security Against Smallpox. Some striking evidence of the impor tance of revacciuation as affording se curity against smallpox is given in a let' ter from the medical officer of Salford, England, which was read at the meet ing of the board of guardians of that union. Referring to the admission of smallpox patients into the hospital, there being seventy-six inmates of tho insti tution affected by that disease, the re port states that there havo been very few cases indeed where persons anected had been revaccinated. There isuo denying the fact that a considerable number of cases of smallpox, in which the primary operation has been more or less perfectly performed, havo been admitted into the infectuous wards of the workhouse. On the other hand aud this is the point to which attention is specially drawn among the total number of cases of smallpox admitted into the workhouse, now reaching 400, tho medical officer is not aware of a single case which has been fairly revaociuated that is, when the operation of revacciuation had been repeated in or after adolescence. One man, however, has been admitted who had been revaccinated, but only a day or two before he camo under observa tion, and when he was actually under effect of the poison of smallpox. In the discussion which followod it was men tioned that the medical officer Lad re vaccinated upward of 1,000 persons, and had not heard of one of them takiug smallpox afterward. What they Found. Two daring Icelanders have excited the admiration of their oouutrymen by exploring the volcanio region of tho Dyugyur Jeldew, and descending the crater of the volauuio Askya. At a depth of three hundred feet they came to a lake of seething hot water, which was apparently of great depth. Near the southern extremity of tho lake the ground was broken up by fissures and pools, which prevented further progress, and north of tho great crater the ex plorers found an opening about six hun dred feet wide, which appeared to bo of equal depth, and from which issued d nse musses of sulphurous smoke, ac companied by loud and deafening ! founds, An Amateur's Experience. Says the Springfield (III.) Register: A singular accident, which nearly resulted in the death of a young man by the name of Al. Kennedy, occurred in a sa loon iu the eastern part of the city. For the amusement of a crowd at the saloon in question, a man named Dow, a pro fessor of the elegant art of sword swal lowing, was giving an exhibition. With the most charming graoe, and to the in finite delight of those present, no passed the sword, a small steel instrument about eighteen inches in length, down his throat and into his stomach. Ken nedy was so charmed by the exhibition that he solicited the loan of the sword for tho purpose of experimenting i J the same direction. It was handed to him, nud, with an air of intense satisfaction, and with perfect confidence, ho opened wnio hid mouth, passed in tuo steel, nnd attempted to place himself outside, of it nt a single "gulp." Bnt tho result proved tho ambitious youth an ignorant bungler. The sword came iu contact with the hyoid bono (at the base of tho tongue) and displaced it. Tho sword was iustautly withdrawn, nnd Kennedy attempted to walk out of the house, but before reaching tho door he fell to tne floor, and very soon seemed to be almost iu a dying coudition. His eyes closed, his whole frame convulsed, tho power of respiration well nigh ceased, and ho seemed to bo totally unconcions. The hyoid bono, as all well informed journal ists know, is located at the boso of the tcnguend is a moveable, osseous arch, cocvex before, aud suspended in the substance of the softer parts of tho neck. With this explanation tho gen eral public will appreciate the young man s condition fully. In view of tne gravity of the case, a messenger was at onco dispatched for a physiciau, nnd soon returned with Dr. Gaffuey. The doctor, upon learning the nature of tho case, inserted his finger in tho mouth of the young man nnd re placed tho bone. Belief came quickly too quickly, indeed, for the doctor. The fellow's rigid muscles relaxed, and he closed his teeth, on tuo nuger 0 ins savmr witli telling enect, .lacerating tho flesh on each side of tho hand just below the kuuckle. Kennedy improved steadilv from that moment, and at last accounts was iu a fair way to wholly re cover, it is quite probable that he will not care to repeat the experiment of sword swallowing in a hurry. A Marriage in tho Surf. Last winter, says the Providence Journal, an elderly Baltimore gentle man, proud of his wealth, discovered that his daughter had dared to lovo a young man far below her in the estima tion of eooiety. A week later the Balti more mansion was closed for the season, aud tho names of tho father and daugh ter soon after appeared on the register of one of the hotels at Narragausett Fier. Tuero was with them a companion, outwardly treated as an equal, but in reality a paid spy over the young lady's actions and correspondence. But bofore a fortnight had elapsed, the young lover at Baltimore received one morning a big envelope containing a dainty little note which tilled him with joy unspeakable. He had a friend who was a clergyman, and before the sun had set that night the two had a long conference, which result ed next morning in the departure of the twain for Narragausett Pier. Tho old eentleman was forbidden by his physician to bathe in the surf, aud tho spy hated the sea. Tho young lady enjoyed her bath exceedingly, and, as the most infatuated lover is apv to bo temporarily disenchanted by the appear ance of his ideal in a bathing dress, the father aud tho spy concluded that no possible harm could come to the " dear child " in tho water, and so the spy only sat on the bank and watched. The lover and the minister reached Providence in duo time, and speedily won a young lawyer over to their cause. The lover then went to the Pier, and, keeping out of the way of tho spy, suddenly ap peared before the happy girl in the water. A few minutes sufficed for him to propose that they be married tho next day in the water, nnd the lady promptly consented. Back flew the enraptured lover to Providence, legal formalities were quietly arranged, the lawyer in' vited a confidential friend as a witness, and the next day when the water was full of people a party of five might have been seen a little apart from the other bathers. The marriage ceremony had to bo suspended every few seoouds on account of the breakers. Then the foam leaped to claim the firnt kiss from the lips of the bride, but the rest of the little company relinquished their priv ilego on account of the attention such a proceeding might attract. Unfiled Treasure Hunters. The San Francisco Post says: The schooner J. H. Roecoe, with its cargo of treasure seekers, avrived here from Cocoa island. A largo number of peoplo gathered to greet tho gold hunters, to borrow money of them, or at least to feast their eyes upon the heaps of gold iu the hold, and the basketiuls of ma monds and jewels in tho cabin. Great was tho disappointment, however, for the only metal found on tho islaud was iron, in the shape of an old fashioned rusty cutlass. The expedition was got ten un oy one Williams, to whom the secret and location of the treasure of baud of pirates upon Cosos island had been revealed. As is usual in such ca :es tho man who told Williams was the solo survivor, the rest of the crew having shot and stabbed each other, and been burned to death in their vessel, or been eaten up by sharks. The Roscoe started on the twenty-third of April last, and enjoyed a pleasant run down to the island, the trip taking thirty-one days. The vessel lay off the island for seven teen days, one man being in charge, and the others numbering seven, digging un der the direction of Mr. Williams for the treasure. Traces of man's previous preseuce on the spot were discovered in the shape of the sword mentioned, and some fragments of bottles. Laborious saroh, however, revealed no Mexican dollars, flasks of quicksilver or royal jewels, and the party camo to the con clusion that a land slide had covered the spot, and returned to this city with the intention of getting up a larger party auu more iubus to try tneir luck again, A New Theory of Hay Fever. In 1872 Dr. Morrell Wyman, of Cam bridge, Mass., published a treatise on hay iover in which he recogmeid two distinct forms, namely a " rose coiu or "June cold, occurring in may or June and corresponding to the hay asthma of England and the continent, and a later form beginning in August and lasting several weeks into the tall, to which he gave the name of "autum nal catarrh." Subsequently Dr. Black- ley, of Manchester, England, pnisued ft serious of ingenious researches to sup port n theory thnt hay fever is caused mainly if not exclusively by the pollen of grass. The studies of Helmholtz, Wymnn, and Blackley we refer to be causo, in point of time, they arc among ihe latest, and for tho reason that they have each boen regarded as important steps toward the thorough cornprohen sion of the mnlady. A new work on tho subject has now just left the press, in which nil previous theories are re viewed, and the results of probnbly tho most extended investigation ever mnde into the causes nnd nature of the disease i placed before the public. The author is Dr. George Mr. Beard of New York city, and tho method in which the inquiry has been conducted, together with the facts elicited, will commend the work even to those who may not be disposed to accept the theories adduced. Following tho example of Darwin and Galton, Dr. Beard prepared a series of fifty-five questions, which were designed to exhaust all sources of facts of which the majority of physicians nnd patients were capable of judging. From the an swers, critically compared and statisti cally arranged, covering the circumstan ces of two hundred cases, the author reaches tho following general conclu sions : Hay fever is essentially a neurosis, that is, a functional diseaso of the ner vous system. In order to induce an at tack there is necessary, first of all, n predisposition, frequently hereditary, to special and excessive sensibility ol the nerves supplying tho affected parts. All forms of tho disease in all couutnep, whether occurring in the spring, sum mer, or autumn, aro but manifestations of ono disease, for which tho most ap propriate name is "summer catarrh, which may bo subdivided into an early form, middlo form or July cold, and the latter form or "autumnal catarrh." As the disease is not due to any single specific cause, auimal or vegetable, as has been supposed, no specifio will ever lie found for it. The attacks may be prevented aud relieved, and sometimes remedies will act specifically on indi viduals ; but no one remedy will ever bo found to act in all cases. The lead ing indications in the prevention ana treatment of the disease are the avoid ance of light, heat, worry, dust, vegeta ble and animal irritants, and other ex citing causes, fortifying tho system by tonics before and during the attack, and relieving the symptoms by those seda tivei and anodynes, locally or generally administered, which are found by ex perience to bo best adapted for each in dividual case. These indications can be met by spending the season of tho attack at sea, or in elevated mountainous regions, or in high latitudes nt nny elevation where the air is sufficiently cool, or at tho sea shore, or, for those who cannot leave heir homes, in quiet, cool, closed, and darkoued rooms. For thoso who, in spite of theso pre cautions or from inability to take them, are attacked with tho disease, tho reme dies should be quinine, arsenic, iron, and electricity, before and during the attack ; local applications of quinine nud camphor by the atomizer ; and for palliatives, any ono or several of the great variety of remedies that experi ment shows to be most useful for each individual. A Seed That Purifies Water. In India, says a writer, whore it is often quite impossible to obtain good water, there is a kind of provision of Provideuce for the purifying of impure and muddy water which is well worthy of notice. Were it in America, it might be called an "institution," so common is its use. It is a seed which, ou being rubbed again and again on the inside of tho common earthtrn waterpots of the country, has the power of precipitating the earth and impurities, leaving the water tolerably clear and in a degree Miitablo for use. During our itineracy of two weeks we have had occasion al most constantly to use tho very repul sive looking tank water of the country thus purified. At only one of our en campments have we had well water, and then the natives much preferred the common surface or tank water to this. Habit, usage and custom are almost om nipotent in India, and many years must pass before Hindoos will learn that their purifying seed does not remove the poi sonous taint that produces fever and cholera, nnd does nothing to destroy ani mal life that brings the very common and troublesome Guinea worm, so often making lite almost or quite a burden. It is a source of satisfaction to us that this purified water is rendered harmless by boiling, and there is, f course, as much more urgent reason for the use of "the cup that cheers but does not ine briate " than can be found where one has access to "the old oaken bucket" of former times and happy memory. A Great Army Cookshop. The German government has just completed an immense establishment nt Mayence for preparing provisions for the army in time of war. The main building is more thau 1,000 feet long, with four extensive wings. A railway branch runs directly into the grounds. Two engines of 1,800 horse power are used to ruu the machinery. The water is drawn from wells fed by the Rhine, and is pumped up by steam into a reser voir which will hold about 600,000 gal lons. When the manufactory is in fall work it will be capable of boiling down and condensing 17U oxen per diem, grinding 350 tons of flour, and if mak ing 300,000 loaves of bread. It will also bo able to supply enough preserved oats for a iaj's feeding of the horses I elong ing to an army oorpsof 280,000 men. To 'srnard as muoh as possible acainst fire. the whole of the buildings, including the rooi, are ol stone ana iron. Fashion Notes. Fancy shoes are numerous. Full flowing yoke wroppers nro re vived. It is probable that the polonaiso will continue fashionable for some time. Midsummer corsets are made of whilo linen net, and aro known as " Ince cor sets. The veil now plnys a prominent part in a bonnet. .Fur thoso veils plain gauzo is most used. For negligo wear nro beautiful half slippers, made of black satin and bound across, the straps being worked with jet. Silver chatelaines are not reni-ly so heavily laden as last year ; the wateii and fans are the only articles they now carry. The most dressy shoes have all pointed toes and Louis XV. heels, but for use ful wear boots and shoes nro made with square toes. For seaside, Paris elegantes aro wear ing cardinal red silk stockings, in fact red is tho dominating color in the ac cessories of their toilet, Mrs. Gen. Geo. A. Custer always ac companied her husband iu his cam paigns, and was his companion iu tho expedition to the Indians. Tho form known as Charles IX. iu shoes i3 very popular, This has ft wido bar across the instep, fastened with a small steel buckle with diamond points. Buckles are often worn on evening shoes, particularly those mudo of Bhiuo crystal, of coral and turquoises, tho buckles being of fancy shape, and tho shoes either light colored faillo or black satin. Among the novelties are the Intent China crape shawls, which nro smaller than the old fashioned ones, and aro worn as a double point, boing fastened in front like a peasant woman's largo fichu. Stockings should match, in nny case, tho toilet worn at tho time ; stripes go ing aroi.od the 1 g aro again in favor. Spun silk and thread stockings are in vogue for day wear, silk ones beiug re served for evening occasions. Faucy gauze is preferred for the scarfs arranged as bandeaux around the hats. The most popular of all for this purposo appears to bo tho " frosted gauze;" this is somewhat thick, nnd is tufted all over with silky streaks liko snow flukes. Waistbands and sashep, made of gros grain are ngain coming iu favor ; they are always fastened with a buckle. Tho bands are very narrow, nre woru above the basque bodice, and fastened with a Louis XV. buckle in Rhino crystal. Tho Fenelon is the favorite shoo for walking ; it is cut so as to well cover the foot iu front, and is fastened with ribbons which pass in and out of eyelet holes. It covers the foot almost as much as a boot, and is less fatiguing to wear. Mrs. McGill sat in tho parlor talking to the minister. " What I do love," said she, " is to see the children enjoy themselves." And yet when, a moment after, a baseball camo singing into tho room, scattering the remains of a fifty cent glass, do you suppose sho leaned out of the window and cried: "Hero's your ball, darling ; never mind tho old glass." Not much 1 She Failed out the front door like a cyclone, and banged the head of tho boy who owned the ball against the railroad until ho thought the fourth of July had arrived two months ah.;ad of time. Asiatic Cholera. Dr. Bonnafont, in a communication upon the Asiatic cholera, read before tho academy of medicine at Paris, enunciates the following general propositions : First, this disease cannot originate spon taneously in any other country thau India, but must reach other regions by transportation or by the germs of tho diseaso, atmospheric currents, or somo other vohicle ; second, all hygienio methods to avert this plague must bo initiated aud maintained in tho country of its origin ; third, that it is not tho dead animals abandoned on the soil by caravans of pilgrims or the number of human bodies thrown into the Ganges that produced the eruptions of the Asiatic cholera, as these praitices havo prevailed for nges, while appearances of the epidemic or Asiatic cholera in Europe, Africa, or America date only from the prosent century ; fourth, other causes, therefore, must exist for tho frequent movements of this disease, nnd it is in India that these are to bo Investigated ; fifth, secondary epidemics may perhaps be developed in points already iufected, but with very rare exception they never assume tho exact features of genuine cholera, and they will generally fade out and disappear until re-enforced by a new eruption from the original starting point. Therefore, the speoial points to be con sidered ore the questions why cholera has remained for centuries in nn eudemio and stationary condition iu India, and why it has recently emerged thro gh the atmospherio conditions and the man ners and customs of the Hindoos and pilgrims apparently remain unchanged. The White HouseUs History. The White House, at Washington, D. C, was commenced in October, 17'J2. The commissioners of Washington City, a sort of board of pnblio works iu thoso days, offered a premium for competitive plans, and the award was given to Jus. iioban. The building is modeled after the palace of the Duke of Leiuster. It is 170 feet front by eighty-six feet deep. It has the appearance of beiug built of white marble, but the material is free stone, painted white, with Ionic portico, comprehending two stories, crowned with a balustrade. The interior is planned more for display than for health. It is curious to remember in this centennial year that in 1814 the British ers invaded the White House, and very seriously injured the magnificent 6tate dining-room by their rude and barbarous practices. The invaders' bands, which have bad recourse to the torch, did not hesitate to deface the columns and pan elings of the Presidential mansion with spur and bayonet. The building was repaired under the supervision of the original architect, J as. Hoban.