HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Edltcyr ancT Publisher.- ! NIL. DE&PEllANDUM.T Two Dollars per Annum. i VOL. VI. RIDGWAY. KLK COUNTY. PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1870. NO. 34. Wly She Sighs. 'Neth the sprea ting trees in the forest glade . Where the harebells nod in the oheokered eh.de, On a bracken couch there she pouts and lies, And smiles as she lazily droops her eyes ; A (he rook, the brook, and the dragon fly Ccmbfne in the sweetest lnllaby . In oalm July. R'te sleeps and her figure you'll just discern 'Mid the tangled grass and the nodding fern , A ilelicate form and a fair young face, LlfH parted in etqnieite girlish grace A n ore perfect pictiue you'd ne'er decory 'Neath the rustling leaves and thesummer sky In bright July ! Slie sighs as she dreams in her ros'lc ntet,. With hor dimpled hand to uc-r red lips prest i With her gulden hair o'er the fern leaves spread Like an aureola around her bead Ah ! pray who on tell me the reason why This heaiteous maiden in dreams should sigh In sweet July? BI 4.K0THEB 4CTHOR. Mo qultor b and bugs and earwigs swarm, Ni;. atts are erasing up her white arm, Twj monstrous spiders are rnuning a race Aoroes the bloom of her fair young face ; An 1 nil are drinking h:r rich young blood, Delighted to light on a feast so good. Ah ! this is doubtless the reason why The Wutcous maid in her dreams should sigh Insect July! . MRS. DELAFIELD'S VOW. Culonel and Mrs. Delafield had hardly been throe months married, when they arrived iu Washington ami settled them selves for the session of Congress at i'r.ovn's Hotel, accompanied by Mr. ElliH, Mrs. D la field 'a father, who was in the Senate, and her slater, Miss Louise, who, though very sweet aud in teivstiuK', wus wanting in that vivacity nud auimiitiou which had made Mrs. Delafield, when Marjr Ellis, the reigning bi-J'.o of the previous 'season; and caused niaumy Kate, who accompanied them as .waiting maid, to predict that "Jor dan was a hard road to travel for them as Lad to be'ar company with Miss Mary." Colon. 1 Delalield delighted in his wife's popularity and felt an exulting Mi!ise:f victory over other competitors wiiim he saw her surrounded by he last year's admirers; aud her coquettish airs, and occrional demure assumption of a married woman's dignity in her iuter eourho with them, gave him as much pleasure as the sense of still being ad mired aud sought after imparted to her. Ouly on oue question whs the colonel iufru"tn,le--U could not bear to see her wil;z; aud, with a little sich of Baurik-e, the promised to give it up, or ouiy waiiz vu;i tier bister and lady friends. " It s very silly nf him," sho Raid to Louise, "but then he is such a dear old goose about mo that ho makes it up. and after all it's nut much to give up." Louise tboiiKht dilTeieiitly, but pru dently held h r tongue; not so mammy Kate, who kni w Miss Murv loved " thcDj twirling dances," nud was not apt t dqny herself any pleasure for which she longed. "The Lord grant you gra le to keen your promise, Miss Maiy, honey," she etovouuy ejaculated, with tn freedom of au old servant ; " but don't you dance them waltzes at all. net even with Miss Louise, for I tell you if you once giis a-going you won I stop and the first thing you know you'll be a spinning arounJwith the gentlemen; you know you always said that there was no fun in dancing them witb another lady, 'cause your skirts was in her way, and her skirts was in your way." Mrs. Delafield laughed at Kate's earnestness, and throwing' herself on a louDge eaid to her sister : I guess mammy is half right, sis, for I always feel when waltzing with a woman that it's eating soup without any salt, and I wish Colonel Delafield knew how to waits, but it's hopeless he wou't even try vo leani." For several weeks Mrs. Delafield duti fully declared to all her old partners that her waltzing days were- over, but hor feet would keep time to the music and it was hard work to sit still, par ticularly when an ancient rival, like her Sf If now a bride, arrived from New Or leans. Mrs. L irimo was. a crooje, and waltzed as ehfl breathed, without a thought of any impropriety in doing so. " You had better kick over the traces at ouco, my friend," she said ono even ing to Mrs. Delatleld. I fell you it does not do for us to let these husbands think they can lay down laws for us; if Colonel Delatleld forbids you to waltz, forbid him to smoke, and seo whether he will obey." "You are mistaken in supposing Col onel Delafield 'forbid' me t6 waltz," replied Mrs. Delafield, with a haughty lifting of her head. He never forbids me or orders me; he simply requested me; I am at. perfect liberty to waltz; or do anything else I please." " Oh, yes, we all understand that, these marital orders always come in the way of a request; but if it's only a re quest, why can't you take pity on Mr. BjII and yourself and take just one turn your old blunderbuss, as you call him, is at the Capitol, and ho need never know it." "Yes, Mrs. Delafield," urged Mr. Bell, who had joined them; "do let us have one waltz. The house won't ad journ till late, and you can make it all right with the colonel." " Oh, no, sho does not dare disobey her lord and r&aster," laughed Mrs. La riae, as sha whirled off with her part ner. " You are surely not going to stand that," said Mr. Bell. Indeed, I am not," replied the lady, rising as she spoke. " I will just take one turu to show her her mistake." " But the one turn " waa that "pre mier pas." Nothing could stop Mrs. Delafield, onoe under the influence of the musio and the motion. In vain Louise urged her to loave off, telling her Colonel Delafield had return .'d. "Yes, run along ana make your peaoe." said Mrs. La rime, maliciously. "I have no peaoe to make." Yes, you have; for if ever I saw au angry man, your husband is one. Ha has been looking like a black thunder cloud over there in the corner for the last ten minutes." "As well be killed for a sheep as a lamb, Mrs. Delafield," said Mr. Bell; " po let's have one more turn." More to escape Mrs. Larime than anything else, Mrs. Delafield allowed herself to be drawn into the waltz, aud when it was over Colonel Delafield had left the room. " He might have waited for me if ho wanted me," she said, defiantly, to Lou ise, who again urged her to retire. So waltz succeeded waltz, as her old beaux flocked around her, and it was two o'clock before the ladies left the room for their parlor. " I think I'll stop here, and not go on with yon, sis," said Mrs. Delafield, as she reached her own room door, which was in the same corridor with her sis ter's. She tried the door as she spoke, and found it locked, " Let me rouse the colonel," said Mr. Bell, who was with them. But - that "instantaneous instinct," whioh Gompte says is the only intellect of a woman, warned Mrs. Delafield of the truth, and sent a shiver of cold anger over her ten times worse than her hottest flashes of passion. " Not for the world," she said, in the blandest tone. " Poor fellow, I am sure ho in tired out." " But perhaps, after all, he may not be in there. Let me climb up and look through the transom; I can easily do so by standing on this table," and as he spoke Mi. Bell lifted a small stand in front of the door. " Let you look into my room when I am sure it is in disorder ! No, indeed, you can't do that, Mr. Bell; but I'll look myself if you will get that chair for me." "Don't, sister; pray don't," said Lou ise. " Either let Mr. Bell wake Colonel Delafield, or come in my room and sleep with me to-night. Indeed, that will be the best plan, after all," she added, for she knew her sister, and distrusted that smiling face and low, set tone. " Yes, I'll go with you, but I must first be sure that Colonel Delafield is asleep. He may be anxious, you know, if he comes later and finds me not hero." " Come along, Miss Mary, honey. I'se got a nice cup of tea for you and Mws Louise. The colonel's all right. kin wake him whilo you's drinking your tea," said Kate, who knew the temper both husband and wife weie iu, and was anxious to get rid of the gentle men who escorted the ladies, and gev " Miss Maiy kinder quieted down " be fore she came iu contact with Colonel Delafield. But they might as well have tried to turn tho Mississippi river, as to divert Mrs. Delafield from her purpose. Moui.t that table and look through the transom over the door she would; aud so, whilo one gentleman held it steady, the other assisted her, first to a chair and then to the table. Peeping through, she haw just what she had expected to seo : her husband, with a face, as Mrs. Larime truly said, like a thunder cloud, sitting bolt upright in a chair before th-j !re. "Yes, here he ii, fast aslesp; and I wouldn't wake him for the world, be does look so peaceful and happy. I wish you could see him. Now I am perfectly satisfied, and hope he will have as good a night's rest as I shall," and she de fended from the table as she spoke, first to the chair, then to the floor-, smil ing so sweetly that Mr. Bed was com pletely deceived, aud mammy relieved, believing that a good night's rest before they met would clear the atmosphere, andJMiss Mary,"too tired for a tantrum, to-night," would be in good humor by morning. Louise knew better; but even she was surprised when, after sweetly bidding the gentlemen good-night, and ttaudiug quiet vhile mammy locked the i oor, her sistor, with a wave of her hand, dashed the cup of tea to the floor which Kate presented to hor, and sitting down in a large armchair as she spoke, Raid, as she set her pretty foot on the broken oup: " Colonel Delafield shall go down on his knees and kiss my foot before I for give him for this insult." " Sakes alive, Miss Mary ! What is the kernel done to you ? You didn't ex pect him to sit up for you, did you f " " Hush your mouth, and don't dare to mention his name to me; he was sit ting before th-3 fire all the time and wouldn't open tho door. What do you think of that?" she asked, turning to her sister. " I knew it all the time, for I saw J lis shadow on the ceiling just as you mount ed the table; I did not know it was until ho moved. What on earth tempted you to get up there, sister, and talk as you did I" " I did it just to vex him; I was not going to have it said that Colonel Dela field had lookod his wife out of hor room fir, waltzing just think how delighted Mrs. Larime would . be to get hold of such a story. No; ho shall go dowu on his knees and kiss my foot before I go back into that room; nee if be don t. Got me another cud of tea. and don't stand staring there; but make baste and comb my hair, Kate. " Kate obeyed without a word, for she saw Miss Mary, as she expressed it, was not to ue fooled witn. Too loftily indignant to shed a tear. Mrs. Delafield retired, meditating in what terms she should snub her husband next day, when he came, as she meant he should, to sue for pardon. At first she thought she would not appear at breakfast at all, but second thought convinced her this would be bad policy, as she would be supposed to be peni tent and waiting for forgiveness her self. Neither would she let Kate go next morning to her room for a morn ing di ess that would look as if she was inconvenienced by the colonel's act; so, arraying herself in one of her sister's prettiest wrappers, she descended, pre pared lor conquest and lull of wrath that grew hotter the longer it was smothered. But Colonel Delafield, her father told her when she entered the parlor, had taken his breakfast two hours before and gone to the Capitol This delay was a disappointment, for, like all impetuous women, she longed to " have it out with her foe ; but din ner time would do as well she could wait. Ho, in a most ravishing toilet, she sailed into the parlor after a morn ing's shopping looking her very best, to find her hnsband and father in an ani mated discussion on some political I oiut. Without speaking, Colonel Dela fielJ roso and planed a chair for his wife, while her father, ignorant that thin was the first time they had met since the previous evt ning, saw nothing out of the way in his manner, but supposed him only engrossed in the argument they were carrying on. Swelling with indignaliou at the cool politeness of her husband's manner, the little lady sat for a few moments silent, not daring to trust herself to speak, for the last thing she desired was that her father should be cognizant of the state of affairs. Bofore the dessert was removed, Colonel Delafield excused himself on the plea of an engagement, and with a comprehensive " Good bye to you all," to which his wifo did not respond, he left the room. He, too, was anxious to "have it out" with his wife, but he meant to take his own time, and supposed that time would be when they were alone in their own room ; but, in order to show his inde pendence, he made it unusually late be fore ho returned, fully expecting to find his wife iu bed and ready to submit to his rebuke and be forgiven her offense. He was already sorry for the part he had played, the night before he had not intended to go so far, but meant to open the door after the gentlemen had left, till his anger was raised to white heat by his wife's remarks when looking through the transom. Qreat was his surprise and indigna tion to find the room empty on his re turn, and no preparations for his wife's toilet before retiring. The little slippers that Kate elways set temptingly on the footstool were missing, so was the dress ing gown that was generally thrown over tho back of a chair, while further search revealed the fact that her tooth brush, comb and brush, and other accessories of the toilot had been removed. " She can stay away as long as she likes," he said, as he threw himself on the Vied. "I shall not ask her to come back." Mrs. Delafield just at that moment was saving to her sister : " I'll not go back, I tell you, till he goes down on his knees and kisses my foot." Day after day passed and both held stoutly to their determination; they had been i'orcedfor appearance sake to speak at the table, but nothing beyond the shortest and coldest remarks passed be tween them. Both were miserable, and both determined not to be the first to speak. Mammy Kate meanwhile moaned and sighed, goiug about with a funeral face, and laying all the blame on " old Mr. Ball's son John," who had no business to como Lome, "looking like ho had stuck one of his par's blacking brushes over his mouth for a mustaeher." If it had not been for him Miss Mary would never have waltzed; or if she had, would neve r have got on , the table aud peeped through at the colonel. She had sense enough to see that any remonstrance with her mistress would be but adding fuel to tho ilrnie, and sho did not dare to speak to tho colonel. Matters had gone on so for nearly a week, aud Mrs. Delafield, though she kept a bravo face outwardly, was hearti ly tireel of the quarrel. She never waltzed; but then she might as well have done so, for her husband never entered the publio parlor, where the effort to appear in good spirits was becoming daily greuter, until she was glad to avail herself of the excuse given by slipping one day on the stairs, and say she had hnrt her aukle and could not go down stairs at all. The colonel meantime was equally miserable, and fully as determined not to make the first advance; but when two whole days had passed, during which his wife had never left her sister's room, he became really uneasy about her, and, purposely delaying to go down to din ner on the third day till he was sure Mr. Ellis and Louise were down, he waylaid mammy on the stairs as she was taking up Mm. Delafield's tea, and inquired casually " How Miss Mary felt." Mummy was a born diplomat and rose to tho. height of her' opportunity. "Indeed, sir, I's very uneasy about Miss Mary; she is jest pining away, and she ought to see the doctor, but she won't hear of it; and Miss Louise the don't know half how bad Miss Mary is, 'catwe she keeps up before 'em all but me. 'Deed, colonel, you couldn't keep so mad witb hor, if yon knowd how sorry she was for 'fending you." "Mad with her I the shoe's on the other foot it's she who is mad with me." "Lord sakes alive! mad with youf why, sho don't do a thing but cry 'cause you don't go to see her." The colonel's heart begun to melt. " But if she wants me, Kate, why don't she send for me'" " 'Deed, sir, and so she would if she wasn't 'fraid you wouldn't oomo. In cour.se she don't . say so, but she just says, Mammy, where is he ?' and when I says, ' Lord, honey, he'd come in a minit if you'd let me call him,' she jest shakes her head and says: No, he wouldn't.' " This last was an out and out fiction of mammy's. The colonel stood irresolute, and Kate saw her opportunity and con tinued her blows. " The way she come to hurt her foot was running to ketch a look at you, 'cause Miss Louise said as how you had a bad headache and was looking pale. But, Lord bless me, the poor chile's a waiting for her tea, and she told me to be sure and fetch her some chicken salad, and I's forgot it. I must go back and get it, for she don't eat nothing, and jest has dinner brought up to fool master." And Kate, like a prudent di plomat, set the waiter down at the door anJ went down stairs, convinoed that the colonel would go in as soon as she was out of sight. "I can't leave her here sick," he mut tered, as an excuse to himself, and open ed the door quietly as he spoke. Think ing it was Kate, Mrs. Delafield, who was lying on the sofa in her wrapper, never turned her head, but looked so utterly miserable and woe-begone that the coU onel believed every word Kate had said, aud was kneeling beside her and kissing her before she knew he was in the room. With a little shriek she threw her i ruis around his neck and sobbed like a child as ho caressed her, calling her by every pet name he had ever used, and begging her not to cry. "Why didn't yciu send for me, dar ling ?" ho asked. ' " Why didn't yon come?" she re plied. " BeoansH I was a fool." "Well, I was another." And again the kirsing begun aud was curried on for some time. "And I slipped and hurt my ankle, and you never came near me. " "Poor little foot," said the colonel, stooping over as he spoke and kissing the pretty little foot in its dainty stock ing aud embroidered slipper as it lay exposed ou the lounge. Just ot this moment the door opened and Louise entered, amazed and delight ed to find the colonel there, but pru dently ignoring the foot of his previous absence, and speaking as if she expeoted to find him there. "Papa is getting uneasy about you, Mary, and has sent me up to say that if you are not better by morning he shall beg Colonel Delafield to send for the doctor to attend to your anklo." "Oh, my ankle is all right now; Col onel Delafield has juBt kissed my foot; and on his knees, too, I declare," she added, with a meaning smile at Louise, as the colonel rose from the floor. J' You spoilt child, you I do you really think I can ' kiss the place and make it well?' Hadn't we better have the doctor, after all ?" "If you do, he shall only see me through the transom," she retorted, with an arch smile. Bnt Kate thought they were getting on dangerous ground, and declared that if Miss Mary didn't eat some dinner right off she'd be sick "for true," and hurried the colonel out of the room with directions to send up a nice dinner, in stead of the tea and toast which was cooling in the passage. Closing the door after Louise and the colonel as they went out, she continued oracularly, ad dressing the shovel and tongs as she vigorously swept up the hearth: "Some horses goes very well in harness till you twitches the reins or shows them the whip, and then they cuts np like Old Harry; and I never could see the sense of fretting men when they is goingright any more than of fretting horses. The colonel's done kissed yonr foot like you said he should, but for the Lord's sake, honey, let him think he's done it of his own accord, if yon don't want another hurricane. And here's your dinner jest in time," she Baid, as she threw open the door before Mrs. Delafield could reply to her sage counsel. What Chinamen Do. As to tho business spirit of Chinatown, iu San Francisco, a writer in Scribner's says : Everywhere there is intense ac tivity. A question as to what the Chi neso do, would not be so easily answered as that of "What don't they do?" There are 3,500 cigarmakers who flood the city with the cheap cigars; 4,000 are engaged in boot and shoe making. They have driven the French from the wash tub and the Italians from the shrimp net. They have the entire control of the pork market, every retail doaler in things porcine being compelled by the force of circumstauces to buy from John, who is inseparable from his pigtail. They dredge the bay for fish, nothing escaping their nets, whose meshes are as close as those of Sir Peter's butterfly trap, and they affright tho diligent aud humane pescatore, who learned on the shores of tho Mediterranean never to fish with a net through the interstices of which he could not put his thumb, and who, with trembling, sees bis occupation going from bin. They grade the roads that wind over our mountains, and lay the sleepers for the new railway on the lev els of Los Angelos. They work in the sunny vineyards of Sonoma, and clear the snowdrifts from the great transcon tinental highway at Emigrants' gap. They polish the prismatic abalone shell at Monterey, aud work on the dumppiles in the gold and silver mines of Nevada, They have established woodyards it. the city, and are engaged iu the contest of polo and baskets against Lorso and wagon with the Italian vegetable dealers, iu whioh tho latter are getting decidedly the worst of it. They are ubiquitous and wary. That business in which John is not engaged is unheard of, and that part of Nevada or California to whioh John has uotcome may be written down as terra incognita. Thus much generally. In particular, the bulk of tho Chinese in San Francis co may be placed under these divisional heads of labor : Bootmakers.,.. 4,000 Waahmen 2.200 Dome tics H 000 Cigarmakers 3 500 Clothiers and woul workers 2,300 Total 128,000 A Nice Boy, " Well, you are a nice boy to send on a message," said a woman to a boy who had lost a bundle with whioh she had in trusted him. The boy struck the atti tude of an orator, and replied : " Not being a common cariier, and not having entered into a contract with you to carry your parcel for aud in consideration of any sum, I have incurred no liability, and am liable to no penalty. If I had uudertaken to carry the paroel for my own particular profit, my father even would not have been responsible for it loss (see Butler agt. Basing, 2 C. & P. 614), unless indeed he paid mo smaller wages because of the opportunity thus atforded me to make small sums. On this pejint I will ouly quote Dwight agt. Brewster, 1 Pickering (Miss.) 50. But, rising from the law to tho equity of the case, I have only to say " but before he oould say it his father had yanked him from the room. Greatest Bay at Any Fair. The number of paying visitors to the Centennial Exhibition on Pennsylvania day is officially stated at 251,463, and to the live stoox exhibition at 5,828; total, 257,206. Including free admissions, the number exceeded 260,000 Th's number exceeds by more than 80,000 persons the largest single day's attendance at any international fair ever held, and the cash receipts are more than twice as great as those of any former day at this or any other fair. The Wealth of lr nil. AH intelligent travelers tiho have vis ited Brszil sppak in the most globing terms of tho country, the emperor of whioh, Dom Pedro II , has just paid a flying visit to this country. Professor Agassiz regarded it as the most produc tive and interesting country on th globe, and the one in whieh it is the easiest to obtain a livelihood. Some who have sailed up the Amazon declare that a vessel can be loaded with Brazil nuts at an expense of only a few pence per busheL These constitute a valuable ar ticle of commerce, while the oil extract ed from them is very desirable. All the tropical fruits are produced in Brazil almost without cultivation. The soil in many parts of the country will produce twenty successive crops of cotton, tobac co or sugar cane without the application of manure. No country in the world approaches the land of Dom Pedro in the variety of its forest productions. Professor Agassiz states that he saw one hundred and seventeen different kinds of valuable woods that were cut from a piece of land not hulf a mile square. They represented almost every variety of color, and many of them were capable of receiving a high polish. One tree fur nishes wax that is used for candles, an other a pith that is used for food, and still another a juice which is used in the place of intoxicating liquor. There is a single variety of palm from whioh the natives obtain food, drink, clothing, bedding, cordage, fishing tackle, medi cine, and the material they manufacture into dwellings, weapons, harpoons, and musical instruments. Doubtless the day is not far distant when the valuable woods of Brazil will bo used for various useful and ornamental purposes. The Flow of Speech. Though we all employ speooh, says the Popular Science Monthly, yet we differ in ease and acreeableness of utter ance. The voice is weak or powerful, as determined by tho mode of action of the respiratory organs. The timbre is shary, harsh, sweet or harmonious; this is determined by the confirmation of the resonant cavities. Whatever quality of voice we happen to have naturally, is to be preserved, though it may be improved by constant attention to the ear, by stoady observation, finally by training. S eech does not flow from its source with the same ease in all cases; here the mind is master, and mental qualities dif fer from one another to a far greater ex tent than physical aptitudes. Some persons express themselves without dif ficulty or hesitation their thinking faculty acts as a continuous force; others seem to grasp a word or a phrase here aud there their thinking faculty is fluctuating, confused, undecided. A certain feeling of constraint produces stuttering, stammering. It used to be supposed that stuttering is the result of grave defects of the vocal organs, but such is not the case at all; this infirmity has its seat in the mind, and it may be cured or mitigated by tystematio effort. It ia shown by statistics that Provence, Langtiedoo and Ouienecontaiu a greater portion of stammerers in their population than any other portions of France. This statement, when I saw it, was a surprise to me; it has always been thought that no one could possibly fal ter in his speech who was bom near the Garonne. Caught Him at It. A lady, the wife of a well known New York merchant, had occasion to ride in the oars from tho Grand Central depot. Sho was a timid lady, and had mortal dread of pickpockets. She knew she would be robbed in riding through the tunnel. The cars were crowded. There was but one vacant seat, which must be shared with a gentleman who wore a duster. As the train entered the tunnel the woman put a guard over her pocket. Oh, horrors! she caught the hand of her associate, and held on to it, resolved to bring his iniquity to light. On emergiug into the sunshine she found that she had caught hold of the gentle man's baud, but it was in his own pocket. She was intensely mortified, and mado ample apology. Tho gentle mnn who waa a well known lawyer laughed the matter oft, but the v.omau would not be appeased; she got tho ad dress of the gentlemau, and sent li-r husband to explaiu how it could have happened. In her con fusion she neglect ed to explain how she could hold the hand of a stranger for half a milo in tbe dark. Shaker Hospitality to Cats. Elder F. W. Evans, a shining light at New Lebanon, has contributed to the Shaker an articlo in which be eays: " Kill the cats 1 That was a good sug gestion in a former number. They are tbe greatest nuisances on tho premises; have to be killed now to keep them withiu bounds. Kill a few mote and it will lessen the number of oat deaths in tho future. Mother Ann Leo affirmed that cats were mediums of evil spirits. She enjoined her children not to play with or fondle cats, A good rule. They are causes of weakly children in many households. We have no dogs, why should we have cats ? The dog loves his master or. mistress. The cat loves the house, and will return if taken away by the removing owner. How shall we keep the mice and rats in check ? Lt,t some of tho readers of tho Shaker an swer. Do right, kill the cats, and "the birds of the air" will tell subscribers how to abate the lesser nuisances of rats and mioe How to Make Mother Happy. Why, mother, how bright and cheer ful you look to-night 1 What has hap pened J" I feel very happy, my dear, because my little boy has really tried to be good all day. Once, when his sister Katie teased him and he spoke quick and cross to her, he turned round a moment a ter, of his own accord, and said he was wrong, and asked her to forgive him. I believe I should grow young and never look tired or unhappy again, if, every day, my little boy and girl were as thoughtful, unselfish, and loving as they have been to-day." Here's a grand seoret for you, little ones. And now that you know how to make mother happy, may you keep her lace always iuu oi sunshine, Yoiitiff America. The central figure was a bare headed woman with a broom in her hand. She stood on the back step, and was crying : " Georgie I" There was no response, but anybody who had been on the other side of a close board fence at the foot of tbe gar den might have observed two boys in tently engaged in building a mud pie. "That's your mother hollering, Georgie," said one of the two, placing his eye to a knothole and glancing through to the stoop. " I don't care," said the other. " Ain't you going in ?" "No!" " Georgie !" came another call, short and 6harp, " do you hear me ?" There was no answer. " Where is she now ?" inquired Georgie, putting iu the filling in the pie. " On the stoop," replied the young man at the knothole. ." What's she dour?" Ain't eloin' nothin'." " George Augustus !" Still no answer. " You needn't think you can hide from mo, young man, for" I can see you, and if you don't come in here at once, I'll come out there in a way that you will know it." Now this was an eminently natural statement, but hardly plausible, as her eyes would have had to pierce an inch board fence to see Georgie ; and even wore this possible, it would have re quired a glance in that special direction, and not over the top of a pear tree in an almost opposite way. Even the boy at the knothole could hardly repress a smile. " What's she doin' now ?" inquired Goorgie. " She stands there yet." "I won't speak to you again, George Augustus," came the voice. "Your father will be home in a few minutes, and I shall tell him all about what yon have done." Still no answer. "Ain't you afraid?" asked the con scientious young man, drawing his eye from the knothole to rest it. " No I she won't tell pa; she never does; she only sez so to scare me." Thus enlightened and reassured, the guard covered the knothole again. "Ain't you coming in here, young man?" again demanded the woman, lov do you want me to come out there to you with a stick ? I won't speak to you o; ;..i agmii, oil i "Is she comin' ?" asked the baker. "No!" " Which way is she lookin' ?" "She's lookin' over iu the other yard." " Do you hear me, I say ?" came the call again. No answer. " George Augustus ! do you hear your mother talking to you ?" Still no answer. "Oh, you just wait, young man, till your father comes home, aud he'll make you hoar, I'll warrant ye." "She is gone now," announced the faithful sentinel, withdrawing from his pest. "All right! take hold of this crust and pull it down ou that side, and that'll be another pie done," said the remorse stricken George Augustus. Indian Widows. The Indian Mail has tho following : In the marriage market an Indian civil ian u ed to be reckoned as worth 300 a year, lead or alive. The nominal value of Bombay civilians now bids fair to rise yet higher, although tho real value will remain much as it was, in view of the growing cheapness of money. Owing to the flourishing state of their widows' fund, it has been proposed that 400 in stead of 300 per annum should bo tho pension granted to all ladies who come on tho fund as widows after the first of July, 1876. This, says an Indian jour nal, will be equal to a marriage settle ment, in the ordinary manner, of 12, 000 in consuls a sum which not one man in twenty belonging to the upper middle and professional classes is able to settle on his wife when he marries. A counter proposition, which is even more liberal than the original one, is alio going round for signature, to the effect that all the widows now on the fund should also get the increased pen sion, and to this amendment there is said to be little or no opposition. As widows on the Bombay civil fund forfeit half their pension if they marry again, it fallows that each one of these ladies who takes unto herself a second husband will have 200 a year to help in keeping up her new home. That sum is equal to a settlement of 6,000 or so in con sola, and it is not every lady, whether widow or maid, who can command so useful a dowry. Thus the new regula tion will not only raise the value of Bombay civd servants as husbands, but also of the widows they leave behind them. What the Diamond Did. George IV., of England, sent the fa mous Pitt diamond as a present in a ring to the Persian ruler, Fath-Ali-Shah. The bearer of this costly ring, Sir Har ford Jones, was stopped in bis journey by a messenger from the court, and de sired not to enter the capital, where French interests were then paramount. After Sir Harford had exhausted every argument to show that he ought to be received, without making any impres sion on the Persian khan, be said: " Well, if it must be so, I shall return, but this must go with me," and he took from his pocket the beautiful diamond ring which had been sent for the shah. The sparkle of the gem produoed a magical effect; the khan no sooner be held it than he lost bis talance, and fell back from his seat quite out of breath; then, recovering himself, he shouted: "Stop, stop, Elchil May your conde scending kindness go on increasing! This alters tbe matter. I will send an express to the heavenly resembling threshold of the asylum of the world 1 I swear by your bead that you will be re ceived with all honor. Mashaliah I It is not every one that has diamonds like the Inglis." He was as good as his word; the express courier was dispatch ed, and Sir Harford Jones entered the city of Teheran by one gate, while Gen. Gardanne, the French envoy, was pack ed on py tne otner. Items of Interest, The Utah immigrants who settled in Arizona are di--satisfied with the country, and aro returning in large numbers. A Diadwood City jury, "honorably acquitted " a mnrderer who killed a man whom he mistook for the one he intend ed to kill. The cost of lager beer is computed by the Chicago Tribune at 81.80 a keg, for whioh tho brewer gets $2.50, and the re tailer about $7. The king of Dabom6y wears a swallow tail coat buttoned np at the back. That manner of dressing is not a bad one for a man who has no vest. A census of the republio of Peru just taken shows the total population to be 2,720,735, an increaee of Iobs then teu per cent, in fourteen years. Nearly every citizen here has told his wife tha't there is another man in town who closely resembles him, and who is frequently seen coming out of saloons. The Eureka (Nev.) Sentinel doubts if a shotgun could be fired up or dewn the main street ot any hour of the day or night without killing a prospective sheriff. "There!" said Jones, as he wrath fully pushed away the pie which his landlady had just served him, "the stuff isn't fit for a pig to eat, and I ain't go ing to eat it." A Nevada man, being commanded by a robber to throw up his hands, obeyed promptly, and concealed his money in them. The robber searched his clothing, but not his hands, and so got no booty. Old John Adams said, when he was ninety years of age, iu a lottor, that he had seen four wars, and that, following each of these wars, there had been a period of great financial and industrial depression. The statistio fiend has discovered that there are 929,940 horses, nearly 2,000,000 cattle, 1,000,500 hogs, 17,675 pianos, 21,608 melcdeons, 155,728 sewing ma chines, and 850,000 worth of diamonds in the State of Illinois. Two girls took arsenio in Newport, Ind., last spring, aud ono died at once, before the romance of the 6veni; had lost its interest. Now the other has just prosily died of liver complaint brought on by the poison. This is what they call farming in Georia : Many country people are sell ing their eggs and butter to buy their bacon, and using the bacon to feed the hands who make the cotton, which is mortgaged to pay for the fertilizers used iu making it. According to the revised statutes of Illinois any person who wagers money or valuables of any nature on the result of an election shall be liable to pay a fine of $1,000 and undergo imprison ment in the county jail for a period not exceeding one year. The compauy of a San Francisco va riety theater intended to take the re mains of a comrade from the hospitol in which ho had died and bury them, but they got tho wrong body, and made a touohiug publio elomonstration over a Mexican horse thief. Mons. Colombier, a merchant of Paris, reoently deceased, has left 30,000 francs to a lady ol ltouen, lor Having, iwepiy years ago, refused to marry him, " through which," says the will, "I was enabled to live i dependency and hap pily as a bachelor." Miss Middlecrib sat down at the piano aud sang "Where are the dreams of the elawn r' And ner young Droiner.com ing out of an adjoining room from an interview with his father, sobbed out the refrain "Under the bending willow." And he meant it, too. A larere cartv who visited the White House the other day, asked to be 6hown the kitchen where the President cooks. ' ' Upon being told that it was private, a slab-sided, shrill voiced female ex claimed : " I guess it belongs to the United States, don't it ?" A foolish bet has been made in Cin cinnati. If Tilden is elected a council man of that city will take a good sized bag and go from room to room in every house in ono ward and beg for some rags, which are to be sold for a charita ble purpose. If Hayes is elected the Tilden man will officiate. It was at the funeral of the head of a family. A neighbor in the yard, while the service was going on inside, was speaking of the deceased, and took ad vantage of tho opportunity to observe in a toue of subdued sympathy : " An had just got in his coal and potatoes for the winter. It is a sad case." The rrospect of the public's obtain ing much advautage from the gifts of James Lick, the rich but eccentrio Oali fornian, are not considered very encour aging at San Iraucieco. lhe jsewt Letter of that city, which calls Mr. Lick a "pinchback Peabody," sa.,8: The fact has slowly but thoroughly developed that the Lick fund is but the vehicle through which the vagaries of a childish and petulant old mau are to periodically afflict the publio. The upshot of the whole business will, doubtless, be a large crop of lawsuits after Mr. Lick s death, and the usual division of his property among heirs aud their lawyers. He Secured Rest. General Des Fallieris, just dead, dur ing the campaign in Coohin-China bad a native servant, very intelligent, very faithful, and very lazy. Alter a long day's march the general was wakened at midnight by the moaning of his servant, who. stretched on a mat at the entrance of the tent, was sighing to himself : "Water! water! water! The general calls out: "Hallo! There I Quick ! Stir yourself 1" The servant approaches, painfully. "Get me a glass of water, and be qui ok about it." The servant departs, grumbling, but returns speedily with it. "Here is the water, general." "Then drink it yourself, and let me sleep." k SuBrLcs. The surplus of women iu Massachusetts, or rather of women and girls, which was 50,000 in 1870, waa last year something more than 63,000, the whole number of males in the State being 794,888, aud of females 857,529.