V s . j. -. J HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr. Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. " Two Dollars per Annum. r-r . ,, ; , . . , ; ... , , -. ' VOL. VI. KIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUA11Y 8,-1877. N0. 51 The Wormmt Font of Type. I'm sitting t my desk, Turn. Before tnc on the floor There lion a wormmt font of tyie, Villi twenty thounnil Hcore And many month lmve pnfmod, Tom, Since they were hriyht nud new, And ninny me tiie tali'H they've lold The fulxe, the ut range, the true. Whnt titles of horror they have told. Of tenipet nud of wreck j Of murder in the midnight hour, Of wiir full ninny n " ireel; !" Of ships Hint lest, nwuy lit Hen. Wi nt down ref. i tl r Must j Of Ktitted elii'H ( f nf.ni y, As life'8 lust im inn-lit h jnocied. Of enrtliqniiLpK nml of Miicidi -i, Of bank defaulterx, l.inken limit. And hnnkin syntonis rotten ; Of hoilerKburstiug, nlemneiK MiR(.'i;tHl, Of riots, duelK fought, Of rublur with their prey craped. Of thieves their booty eatifdit. Of flood and lire and acrident Tlioxc wornont type lmve told, And how the pestilence ha nwept The youthful and the oii. Of m:u riagOB. of births und JchIIii. Of things to please or vox uh, Of one man's jumping overboard. Another gone to Texas. They've told Ms how wcet summer days Have faded from our view, How autumn's chilling winds have swept The leaf crowned forest through. How winter's snow hath come and gone, Hark reign of storm and strife And how the smiling spring hath warmed The pale fl(verH back to life. I can't pretend to mention half My inky friends have told, Mnce shining bright and beautiful They issued from the mold How unto some they joy have brought. To others grief and tears, Vet faithfully the record kept Of fast receding years. BRIAN TAAFE'S WILL. by ciiahlks BEADK. In a certain part of Ireland, a loi g t me ngo, lived a wealthy old farmer w 10.se liittne was Brian Taafe. His three sj:is, Guillaum, Shamus and Garret, w.H'ked on the farm." The old man had n g.'eat e flection for them all; and finding lrmself grown unlit for work, he resolved to hand his farm over to them, aud fit quiet by the liicfidc. But as that was not a tiling to be done lightly, he thought ho would just put them to their trial. He would take the measure of their in telligence, aud then of their' affection. Proceeding in this order, he gave them each a hundred pounds, aud quietly watched, to nee whul they did with it. Well, Guillaum nud Shamus put their hundred pounds out to interest, every penny; but when the old men qneistiond Garret where his hundred pounds wiw, th? young man fiu'd: "I spent it, father." " Speht it ?" said the old niiui, aghast. " Ts it the whole hundred wounds ?" Sure 1 thought, you told us we might ' lay it out as we pleased." 1 '"Is that a raison ye'd waste the whole : of it iii a year, ve orodiiral?" cried the' old man; and he trembled at the idea of his substance falling into such hands. Some months alter this he applied the second test. lie convened his sons und addressed them solemnly : " I'm an old man, my children; my hair is white 011 my head, nud it's time I was giving over trade and making my sowl." The two elder over flowed with sympathy. He then gave the dairy farm and the lull to Shnmns, and the meadows to Guillaum. Thereupon these two vied with each other iu expres- imta (if Ltve nn.l m'lifitmlo lint (larrM haul never a word: and this, coupled wall his behavior about the hundred I er, he did not beg; he uned to disappear, ihese things about; and sure it is know pounds, so maddened tho old man that 1 often for an hour lit a time, but always ing ones I have to do with, especially the he gave Garret's portion, namely, the ' returned, and often with a rabbit ir even women." home and the home farm, to- hi elder j a hare in his mouth. Sometimes the i Xext day the fanner lent luni 11 good brothers to hold in common. Garret he : friends exchanged them for it gallon of j suit and drove him to a quiet corner disinherited on the spot and in due form. ' meal, sometimes they roasted tliem in 1 scarce a hundred yards from his old That is to Bay, he did not overlook him j the woods; Lurcher was a civilized dog, I abode. The old farmer got down and nor pass hiiii by; but even us spiteful and did not like them raw. ,' left him. Lurcher walked at his mns- testntors used to leave the disinherited Wandering hither and thither, Brian j ter's heels. It was noon and the sun me a shilling, that he might not bo able to say he had been inadvertently omitted, and it was all a mistake, old Brian Taafe solemnly presented young Garret Taafe with a' hazel staff and a Tsnndl bag. Poor Garret knew very well what thut meant. He shouldered the bag, and went forth into the wide world .villi n uml henrt but a silent toncrue. His dog, Lurcher, was for following him, but he drove him back with a stone. On the strength of the new arrange- ment, Guillaum and Shamus married di- rectlv, and brought their wives home, for it as a large house, and room for all. But the old farmer was not contented to be quite a cipher, and he kept finding fault with this andthut. xue young men became more and moie imputient of his interference, and their wives fanned the flame with femole pertinacity. So that the house was divided, and a very home of discord. This went on getting worse and worse, till at last, one winter afternoon, Shamus defied his father openly before all the rest, and said: " I'd like to know what would plaise ye. Maybe ye'd like to turn us all out as ye did Garret." The old fanner replied, with sndden cfenitv: " If I did, I'd take no more than I Vave. " ' "What good wus your giving it?" suit! Guillaum: " we get no comfort of it while Guillaum; " we get no comfort of it while you are m the house. "Do you talk that way to me too?" said the father, deeply grieved. " If it was poor Garret I had, ne wouldn't use ine so." '"Much thanks the poor boy ever got from you," said one of the women, with venomous tongue ; then the other woman, fmding she count on male support, suggested to her father-in-law to take his stick and pack and follow his beloved Garret. "Sure he'd find him begging alxmt the oountluy." At the women's tongues the wounded parent turned to bay. " I don't wonder at anything I hear ye say. Ye never yet heard of anything good that a woman would have a hand in ! only mischief always. If ye auk who ' mode Mich a roiul, or built n bridge, or wrote n great liisthory, or lid a great ac tion, you'll never lienr it's a womnu done ' it ; but if there is a duel with swords und guns, or two boys erackiug each other's frown with shilluhihs, or a secret let out, or a diameter ruined, or a man brought to tlm gidlows, or mischief 1 made between a father and his own fleHh ' and blood, then I'll eugage you'll hear a woman had some cull to it. We needn't . have recoorsc to liisthory to know yonr loin's, 'tia nndher our "eyes ; for 'twas tin liken o' ye two burned Throy, and nude the King o' Leinsther rebel ugainst ; Brian Born." These i-hafts of eloquence struck home; the women Bet up a wrenming, and pulled their caps oil' their heads, which in that part was equivalent to gentlefolk, drawing their swords. " Oh, murther I murther 1 wax it for . this I married you, Ouillnniu Taafe?" "Och, Shamus, will ye Bit an' hear . me compared to the likes ? Would I re bel ogaiiiBt Brian Bom, .Shamus, gal ?" "Don't heed him, avouineen," Shamus; "he is an ould man." i But she would not be pacified. " Oh, i vol vo I If ever I thought the likes 'ud ' be said of me, that I'd rebel nguinst I Brian Born ! As for the other, Bhe prepared to leave 1 Hip Ihiiisp "(liiillnnni ." said she. "I ll i never etav a dav undher yonr roof with ! them as would say I'd burn Throy. I Does he forget he ever had a mother 1 himself? Ah ! 'tis a bad apple that de ! spises the tree it sprung from." All this heated Shamus, so that he told the women sternly to sit down, for I the offender should go; and upon that, ; to show they were of one mind, Guillaum ' deliberately opened the door. Lurcher , ran out, aud the wind and the ruin rush i ed iii. It was 0 stormy night. Then the old man took fright, and ! humbled himself. ' " Ah ! SI Maris, (iuillanm, achree, let I ye have it as ye will; I'm sorry for what j I said, a'ra giil. Don't turn me out on j the highroad in mv ould days, Ouillauni, and I'll engage I'll niver open my mouth against one o' ye the longest day I live. All ! Shamus, "it isn't long I have to stay wid ye, anyway. lerowa limr will lie as white a's mine yet, plaise God ! mid ye'U be thanking Him ye showed respect to mine this night." But they were all young and of one mind, anil they turned him out and barred the door. He crept away, shivering in the wind aud rain, till he got on the lee side of a stone wall, and there lie stopped and ohk ed himself whether he could live through the night. Presently something cold and suvioth poked against his hand: it was a large itog that had followed him unobserved till he stopped. By a white mark on his breiist he saw it was Lurcher, Garret's dog. "Ali !'' said the poor old wanderer, " yon ure not so wite a dog as I thought, to follow im" "When lie Bpnke to I lie dog, th' dog fo!i,l'l him. Then he burst out 'sobbing and crying: "Ah, Lurcher ! Garret was not wise either; but he would uiver have tinned me to the door this bitter night, nor even thee." And so he inonm-d and laim nted. But Lurcher pulled his coat, and by his movements conveyed to him that he should not stay mere au nigni; so men he crept on and knocked ut more than one door, but did not obtain admittance, it was so temt'estnous. At last he lay clown exhausted on some straw in me corner of an outhouse; but Lurcher lay close to him, and it is probable the warmth of the dog saved his life that night. Next day the' wind and rain abated: but this aged man had other ills to light against besides winter and rough weath er. The sense of his sons' ingratitude and Ip's own folly drove him almost mad. S-onetimes he would curse 'and thirst for vengeance, Bometimes he would shed tears that seemed to seidd his withered cheeks. He got into another couuty and i begged from door to door. As for ljurcli-! begged from door to door. As for Lurch- I Tuufe came at last within a few miles of j his own house ; but he soon had cause to wish himself further off it ; for here he met his first dowunght re - buff, and, cruel to suy, he owned it to liis hard hearted sons." One recognized him as the lather ot mat rogue unuuuiu Taafe, who hud cheated him in the sale of a horse, and another as the father of j that thief Shamus, who had sold linn 11 ' diseased cow thut died the week lifter, i 'So, for the first time since ho was driven j out of his home, he passed the night ! supperless, for houses did not lie close j together in that part, j Cold, hungry, houseless and distructed i with grief at what he had been aud now i was, nature gave way at last, and, uu- ! able to outlaw me weary, oilier nigui, he lost liis senses just before dawn, and lay motionless 011 the hard road. The chances were he must die ; but just at death's door his luck tinned. Lurcher put his feet over him and his chin upon her breast to guard hira, as he had often guarded Garret's coat, and that kept up a little warmth in his heart ; and at the very dawn of day the door of u farmhouse opened, and the master came out upon his business, and saw something unusual lying in the road a ' good way off. So he went toward it, aud fouud Brian Taafe in that condition. This : fanner was very well-to-do, but he had ! known trouble, and it had made him charitable. He soon hallooed to his men, and had the old man taken in ; he called to his wife top, and bade her ob serve that it was a reverend face, though he was all in tatters. They laid hira. be tween hot blankets, and, when he came to a bit, gave him warm drink," and at last a good meal. He recovered his spirits, and thanked thein with a certain diguity. When he was quite comfortable, and not before, they asked him his name. "Ah I don't ask me that," said he, piteously. "It's a bad name I have, and it used to be a good one, too. Don t ask me, or maybe you'll put me out, as the others did, for the fanlt of my own two sons. It is hard to be turned from my own dcor, alone from other honest men's doors, through the vilyins," said ho. So the " Never bellv." farmer whh kindly, and said: mind your name, till your But by-and-bye the man went out into the yard, and then the wife could not restrain her curiosity. "Why, good man," said Bhe, " sure you aro too de cent a man to be ashamed of yonr name.'' "I'm too decent not to be ashamed of it." fa!d Brian. " But you aro right; an honest n an should tell his name though I they druv him out of heaven lor it. I I am Brian laafe that was, "Not Brian Taafe.'.the strong farmer j ' ftt Cotrans?" i ! "Av, madam; I'm all that's left of i him." ' I " Have vou a soil called Garret ?" 1 I " I had, then." The woman spoke no more to him, but 1 j 11m screaming to the door : " Here, Tom ! j 1 Tom ! come here I" cried she, " Tom 1 a'raj'foin!" As Lurcher, a very sympathetic i dog, flew to the door and yelled and I said ' barked fiercely in support of this invo- j cation, the hullabaloo soon brought the ! farmer running in. " Oh. Tom, asthore," cried she, " it's Mister Taafe, the father of Garret Taafe himself." "Oh, Lord I cried the farmer, tn equal aKitatiou. and stared at him. "My blessing on the day you ever Bet foot within these doors." Then he ran to tho door and hallooed : " Hy, Murphy t Ellen 1 come here 1" Lurcher supported the call with great energy. In ran a fine little boy and girl. ' "Look at this man with all the eyes in your body 1" said he. " This is Mi'sther Taafe, father of Garret Taafe that saved us all from niin and destruc tion entirely." He then turned to Mr. Taafe, and told him, a little more calmly, " that venrs ago every haporth they had was going to be carted for the rent; but Garret Taafe came by, put his hand in his pocket, took out thirty pounds, and cleared them in a moment. It was a way he had; we were not the only ones he'saved that way, so long as he had it to give." The old man did not hear these last words: his eyes were opened, the iron entered his soul, and ho overflowed with grief and penitence. " Och, murther ! murther !" he cried. " My poor boy ! what had I to do at all to go and turn you adrift, ns I done, for 110 raison in life' !" Then, wth a piteous apologetic wail :' " I tuck the wrong for the right; that's the way the world is bliuded. Och, Garret, Garret, what will I do with tho thoughts of it ? An' tbope two vilyins that I gave it all to, and they 'turned' me out in my ould days, as I done you. Xo mntther !" and he fell into a liobbing and a trembling that nearly lulled him for the second time. But the true friends of his son Garret nursed him through that, and comforted him; mi he recovered. But, a.s he did live, he outlived those tender feelhus. whose mortal wounds had so nearly killed him. When he recovered this last blow he brooded and brooded, but never shed another tear. One dav, seeing him pretty well re- I stored, a'? he thought, the good farmer ; they gave hiin Lurcher. So he put came to hiiti with u fat bag of gold.. Lurcher into his gig, and drove away to "Sir," said he, "soon after your bou i that good farmer, sure of his welcome, helped us, luck set in our way. Mary , and praying God he might find him she had a legacy; we had a wonderful , alive. Perhaps his brothers would not irop of tlax, and with that plant 'tis kill 1 have let him go so easily had they known or cure; and then I found lead iu the hill he had made a large fortune in America, and they pay me a dale ' money for ' and was going to buy quite a slice of the leave to mine there. I'm almost ashamed j county. k.o take it. T tell you all this to show : On the way he kept talking to Lurch you I can afford to pay you back that ! cr, and reminding him of certain sports thirty pounds, aud if you please I'll ' they had enjoyed together, and feats of count it out." poaching. IV rold Lurcher kept pricking " Xo !" said Mr. Taafe, " I'll not take ; his ears all the time, and cudgeled his Garret's money; but if you'll do me a fa- i memory as to the tones of the voice that vor. lend me the whole bag for a week, i was addressing him. Garret reached the for at the sight of it 1 see a way to Whisper." Then, with bated breath and in strict j confidence, he hinted to the farmer a j Behenie of vengeance. The farmer was ; not even to tell it to lus wite; "for. smd old Jinan, "ine very un as carry, , (-iiiiuug bright i The wife of Shamus Taafe came out to i hang up her man s shirt to dry, when, I hi ! scarce thirty yards from her, she saw ' 1111 old man seated counting out gold 011 j a broad stone at his feet. At first she 1 inougui u mui ue our 01 un goou ie- pie or fairies or else she must be dreaming; but no ! cocking her head 011 one side, she suw for certain the prolile ! t turret, and when lie got up to go to it, j appeared to be sealed, when their chief, of Brian Tjiafe, and he was counting a j didn't that wise old dog get up too with j giving an expressive look to the narrator, mass of gold. She ran in and screamed 1 an effort, and move stiffly toward Gar-1 drew his pistol aud shot the man nearest her news rather thuu spoke it. ' ret, anfl lick his hand ; then luy down j him through the head. He threw up his " Xonseuse, woman!" said Shamus, again all of a piec, as who should suy : arms and dropped the reins, but although roughly; "it is not in nature." j " I'm very tired of it all." "Ho knows j stone dead, sut firm in the saddle, the " Then go and see for yonrsilf, man !'' j me now at last." He was always a won-' affrighted animal carrying the corpse said she. ! derf ul wise dog. " j until a second discharge brought both to Shamus was not the only oue to take j In the morning they found Lurcher the ground. Again the pursuit was this advice. They all stole out on tiptoe . dead and stiff on the sheepskin. It was checked for a time, and the kouat ap and made a sort of semicircle of curi- a long good-night he hud bid so quietly 1 peured in view. Luckily the door was ositv. It was no dream; there were piles ' to the friend of his youth. 1 open, for it was deserted.- Men and and piles ol gold glowing in thesuu, and old Brian with a horse pistol across his knees; and even Lurcher seemed to have his eyes steadily fixed 011 the glittering booty. . When thev had thoroughly drank iu this most unexpected scene, they began to talk in agitated whispers ; but even in talking they never looked at each other t heir eves were glued on the gold. j Said Giullaum : ie aid very wrong, Shamus, to turn out the old father as you done ; see now what we lost by it. Thut s a port of the money he laid by, and we 11 Said Giullaum : "Ye did very wrong, never see a penny of it The wives whispered that was a foolish thing to say Leave it to us," said they, " and we'll have it all one day." This being agreed to, the women stole toward the old man, one on each side. Lurcher rose and snarled, and old Brian hurried his gold into his ample pockets, and stood on the defensive. " Oh, father 1 and is it you come back? Oh, the Lord be praised ! Oh, the weary day since you left us, and all our good luck wid ye!" Brian received this and similar speech es with fury and reproaches. Then they humbled themselves and wept, cursed their ill-governed tongues, and bewailed the men's folly in Listening to them. They flattered him ami cajoled him, and ordered their husbands to come forward and ask the old man a pardon, and not let him ever leave them agr.iu. The sup ple sous were all penitence and affection directly. Brian at hist consented to stay, but stipulated for ft certain chamber with a key to it. "For," said he, "I have got my strong box to take care of, as well as myself.". Tliey pricked up their ears directly at mention of the strong box, and asked where it was. " Oh ! it is not far, but. T enn't carry it. Give me two boys to fetch it." ! " Oh 1 Ouillaum and Shamus would carry it or anything to oblige a long lost lather. Mo they went with hiui to the farmer's cart, and brought in the box, which was Pretty large, and above all very full and heavy. We " king of ins own j house, and flattered and petted as he had j never been Bince he gave awny his estate. , To be sure, he fed this by mysterious ; hints that he had other lands besides : those in that part of the country, and that, indeed, the full extent of hispos- sessions wouiu never do Known until ins 1 iin icnu ; vtiui'ii win wiin rmiriv ; locked away inhis strong box with other ; Tilings. And so he passed a pleasant tune, im- j which number they killed two or three bittered only by regret, and very poig- witu ti,ejr ,m,tehloekH for the sake of mint they were, that he could hear noth- Awiv ,,., mui dispersing the rest, con ing of his son Garret, Lurcher olso was tinned their jouruev. Shortly afterward taken great care of, and became old and I ft Grange howling noise was iieard in the Iny- I rear, which at "first sounded like the mn shocks una uo not i;ui unuermme, Before he reached threescore and ten, , Brian Taafe's night work and troubles told upon him, and he drew near his end. j fle was quite conscious of it, aud an nounced his own departure, but not in a regretful way. He had become quite a j philosopher ; and indeed there was a sort 01 chuckle about the old fellow in speak ing of his own death, which his daughters-in-law secretly denounced as unchristian, and, what was worse, unchancy. Whenever he did mention the expected event, he was sure to say ; " Aud mind, boys, my will is in that chest." " Don't speak of it, father," was the reply. When he was dying, he called for both his sons, aud said, in a feeble voice : " I was a strong farmer, and come of honest folk. Ye'll give me n good wakin', boys, I an' a gran' funeral. They promised this very heartily. So there was a graud wake, aud the virtues of the deceased and his profes sional importance were duly howled by nn old lady who excelled in this lugu brious art. Then the funeral was hur ried on, because they were in a hurry to open the chest. The funeral was joined iu the church yard by a stranger, who muffled his fa'.:e, and died the only tears that fell upon that grave. After the funeral he stayd behind all the rest audmouraed, but he joined the family at the feast which followed; aud, behold! it was 1 Garret, come a day too-.latv,-.' fTe was welcomed wun exuoeiam auecuoii, not 1 being down iu the will; but they did not tiskhim to sleep there. They wanted to he alone, and rea I the will, lie oegged j for some reminiscence of his father, and farm, and was received first with stares, then with cries of joy, and win drugged into tho house, so to speak. After the first ardor of welcome, he told them he had arrived only just in time to bury his father. " Anil this old dog," said he, is all that's left me of him. He was mine first, but when I left, he took to i father. He was always a wise dog," " We know him," said the wife; " he has been here before." And she was; going to blurt it all out, but her man j said, "Another time," and gave her a ; look as black ns thunder, which wasn't his way at ull, but he explained to her afterward. "Thev are friends, those three, over the old man's grave. We should think twice before we stir ill blood betiuie em. So wheu he stopped her. she turned it oil cleverly er.ough, ;deveiiy er.ough, j and said the dear old dog must have his supper. Supper they gave bun, and ji t in;n Bueeimhiu w 11c uu uy lot- it-ui me. : So there he lay, and seemed to doze. ! The best bed in the house was laid for Utirret shed tears over him, and said : ' " If I had ouly knowu what he meant, I I'd have sat up with him. But I never I could see far. He was a deul wiser for I a dog than I shall ever be for a man." i Meantime the family party assembled j in the bedroom of the deceased. Every truce ot leigneu regret jiad leu meir faces, and all their eyes sparkled with I joy aud curiosity. They went to open ' the eiiest. it for the key ; The women fi the bed ; the; the chest, it was locked. They Hunted : first quietly, then fussily. omul it at last, sewed up iu ey cut it out aud ftpeued the chest. The first thing they found was a lot of stones. They glared at them, and the color left their faces. What deviltry was this? Presently they found writing on oue stone: "Look below." Then there was a reaction, and a loud laugh. The old fox was afraid the money and parchments would fly away, so he kept them down." They plunged their hands in, and soon cleared out a barrowful of stones, till they came to a kind of paving stone. They lilted this carefully out, and dis covered a good new rope with a running noose, and the will. It was headed in large letters finely engrossed ; LAST WILL AND TKSTAMKNT BRIAN TAAFE." OF But the laidy of the instrument was in I the scrawl of the testator. j "I bequeath all the stones in this box j to the hearts that couhl turn their lather and benefactor out on the highway that stormy night. "I bequeath this rope for any father to hang himself with who is fool enough to give his property to his children be fore he dies. A WOLF STOUY. ' 1 1 A fori Ion of it Puny of Holillern iMilileil to Kve the Kcsl Lire In Kn-sla. ; A striking wolf story is told in a vol- j nine entitled " The Hunting Grounds of I the Old World." It was related to the ! Bthor bv an Abassian chief, and is an account of the loss of five of his tribe aud B(,me prisoners during a campaign against Russia. The Abassiau party, to which tue 4.,iPf belonged, consisted of eleven m,.u fuirlv mounted, mid armed with nmtehlock's, pistols and swords, with five prisoners four Kiissiaii soldiers and a woman. As they were traversing a vast teppe or plain, they perceived a puck of seven wolves slowly following them, of 11 inline of ma wind, hut ttiwrwarii m- Creased to such a pitch that they thought Jduinnum (the infernal regions) was turned loose, mid that the cry they had heard was the exulting laugh of "gins" and " afrits," whom they believe to m- imKit the eternal snows of Mount El- brtiz. At length their attention was called to a dark mass of black objects spreading over the snow like a cloud over I the horizon, mid tlie lull extent ot meir j danger broke upon them, for they knew they were pursued by a pack ot wolves. Their horses were already fatigued by a long day's journey; but terror seemed to give them wings, for they tore along as if they knew their peril, and for a while seemed to hold their own. The nearest " kouat" or hamlet was two "saat" or Beveu miles distant; and the ground was ja" mnnv places so deep with drifting snow that their horses could hardly get along. The crisis was now evidently ap proaching, for the advaueed troop were about within gunshot, howling and yell ing as only wolves can. A brief consultation was held, and it was determined to sacrifice the prisoners one by one, so as to gain time for the rest to escape. The woman met her fate first. One of them dropping behind drew his saber across the hocks of her horse, hamstringing it, and causing both o fall heavily to the ground. Her shrieks, as well as the cry of the horse, rung through their ears for a moment; then all was still. They anxiously look- led back end found that their desperate expedient had enabled mem to khiu u considerable distance on their pursuers, But it was not for long; they were soou again on their heels, when a Russian Soulier was saenticed iiy shooting his .horse. A second, a thud and a iourth soon followed, and much time was gain ed and considerable distance covered. Still the insatiable foes pressed on, appa rently 111011 ferocious than before, for their" appetite was whetted by the taste ior blood. They now commenced dis charging their firearms among them; but it was of 110 avail, for though many fell, the rest rushed on, and the course of the horde was not stayed. The horses of two of their number now gave up and fell, with shrieks that told they knew the fate that awaited them, and although 1 their riders were switt of foot they could not keep up their speed for any length of time in the deep snow. So bidding their comrades farewell, they resigned themselves to their "kismet," or des tiny, drew their yataghans, and shouting their battle crv,'died like men, fighting to the last. The survivors were now : within a couple of miles of shelter; but their horses were almost worn out, the leading wolves hardly a pistol shot be- hind, and gaining upon them rapidly, Another moment aud they expected to feel their fangs, wheu mi old man, whose two sons were ulso of the party, seeing the hopelessness of the case, bade his comrades farewell, and shouting out the "omaun" (Mohammedan creed) as a death song, felled his horse to the ground with the heavy butt of his pistol, as he could not reign up the frightened animal, . and offered himself a willintr sacrifice to save the rest. Ou tore the survivors, . now reduced to eight hi number, aud on : iouoweu meir reieniiess pursuers, now , again only half a dozen lengths behind, 1 In Bpite 'of all their efforts their doom horses rushed in, the door was closed, and a ponderous bar drawn uoioss inside, when suddenly a loud, heartrending shriek was heard from without above the howling of the wolves, and they saw through the chinks between the logs one of their comrades, whose horse had broken down and lagged behind unper ceived by the rest, sim'ounded by the horde aud fighting desperately, A moment more and he was pulled from the saddle, and man and horse de voured before their eyes. Then the wolves sun-ouuded the hut, and finding themselves balked of their prey, began to fight among themselves, . at times en deavoring to scratch away the earth under the logs or force their way through the crevices. But the hut. being substantially constructed, resisted all their efforts, and a deadly discharge of firearms was kept up from the interior, which thinned the wolfish number, and partially avenged the victims of the chase. The dead wolves were speedily devoured by the survivors, who remained liowiiug and shrieking round the hut until the night of the second day, when a violent storm arose, and they took themselves off in the dark, much to the relief of the six I survivors, who, seeing the coast clear, I made the best of their way home. ' TIIR FARM, GARDEN ASD HOUSEHOLD. Fnrmer.' C'lnh (tnrstlaiis and Answer. Why is wood better for handling but ter than any other substances? Why use a wooJeii paddle instead of a metal spoon ? There is nothing better for handling butter thau wood well noakod in water, for the Bimple reason that the pores of the wood are filled with water, which will not easily mix with oily substances ; hence the butter does not adhere as to the metnl. Why is the preference given to tinware over wooden vessels for milking pur- tones Because, unless great care is observed jn w!,BUig tll0 Mfr, which shriuk and swell whenever they are wet, milk is liable to become locked in the pores, and bo soon render the bucket unfit for use. All wooden vessels, spoons, etc., used about milk mid butter should lie thoroughly scalded with boiling water. After having first been washed in that which is only warm they should then be dried in any airy place, but not as is too often the case in lu 'J' the sun. to fall iu pieces. When I mischance they have been so dried they should lie swelled back again by being filled full of cold water before coming in contact with milk or butter What is the difference between alfalfa und lucerne ? Alfalfa, lucerne and Chili clover are one and the same. In botany this plant, which is one of the oldest known to have been cultivated for fodder, is the rncdi- raro miha its leaflets are in threes like the common clover ; the flowers vary from pale blue to purple iuhue and are pea shaped ; the seeds are held iu downy pods, which are twisted into two or three twirls. Is there any effective remedy for cab bage worms ? One correspondent says that imek- wheat flour sifted through a sieve in the evening or in' the morning, when the dew is on, will eradicate them. Ine usual remedy advised is au application of hellebore. ,. How long will an asparagus bed live ? Asparagus beds will, with regular cut ting, continue from twenty to thirty years. Give some suggestions for forcing lettuce for the spring supply. Sowings of lettuce seed intended for the spring supply ore made from December to February ; twelve weeks are required for its full development in the winter months. The seed is sown thinly, broad cast in a hot-bed ; and when the plants have made two or three leaves they are pricked out to three or four inches apart 111 another portion of the bed. When two or three inches high, they are filially transplanted into yet another part of the bed at distances corresponding with the size of the variety. As the plants in crease in size, the quantity of air should be increased, and water should be given whenever the surface of the bed seems dry,. Iu severe cold weather a piec of cm jifliiig or similar, covciiuf' riliould b placed over the glass for the further pro tection of the plants. Many farmers transplant directly from the nursery bed to where the plants are to remain, but good authorities advise the first method as gaining the finest lettuce, f'liriug llniim. A Xew York farmer gives the follow- ; .... 1.: 1.. 1 n l.i ..r saltiiiir them down : For ivreserviiut beef my recipe is six gallons of water, nine j pounds of salt, three pounds of sugar, ! one gallon of molasses, three ounces tf j saltpeter and one ounce ot saleratus. 1 mix these ingrediouts and heat to a boil ing point, skimming off all the impurities. When cold I pour it on the meat. I do not rate the amount of materials accord ing to the amount of meat, but mix in the proportions given and use enough of the mixture to cover the meat 1 wish to preserve. I rind that this method cures the hums end leaves them tender and juicy. They never get hard. I leave the hams in the pickle from four to six weekr, uccording to their size. It takes longer to cure large hams than it does small ones. I always move the hums after they have been in the pickle three ! days take them out and pack them over. This is necessary, for when they are closely packed together some parts of the hnnis do not have a chance to be pene trated by the pickle. I keep beef in the sume way, except that I would boil over ' tho pickle before warm weather in the ' spring. The finest hams we ever used I were of a pig frozen with other fresh ' meat and so kept till spring, and then I .. ..:..i,f, L..J". 1. t.. " com thrtmgh " say teu or twelve 'avs vuen it was smoked and eaten. It was as sweet and tender as a chicken. Tent lor Quality uf MUk. A member of the American Farmers' club thotight it quite as important iu butter making to know the quality as the quantity ot miLK yielded by each cow. One needs to know the percentage of cream to determine the value of the cow for butter, and as the price of butter is influenced by its color and flavor (some believe the color determnies the flavor), the test should give both quidity und quantity of cream. This is easily and cheaply done by filling a glass tumbler with the milk of each cow, and setting these tumblers in a cool place for the cream to rise. The transparent gloss will show the thickness of the cream and its color. In this manner one lias the milk of the sevend cows uuder inspec tion at the same time, and can therefore make an accurate comparison. Both night's aud morning's milk should lie thus tested. 1 ins testing otten proves j that the cow giving the smallest quantity of milk makes the most butter. A few hour's time will- show the comparative quality of the milk given by each cow in a herd, and enable the farmer to select out those that give cream of a rich golden color, and make way with the re mainder, supplying their places with others it will pay better to keep. u - Horrible Infanticide. Some weeks ago a man named Crouch, Jiving near Sackett's Harbor, N. Y., de serted his wife and child, the litter eighteen months old, leaving them iu destitute circumstances. The mother and child suffered great privations, and have been supported by charity since.. A few days ago Mrs. Crouch gave birth to another child, which she burned to death in a stove. Bhe is insane. Doe the road wind up hill all the way ? Yes, to the very end. Will the day'a journey tflke the whole long day From morn till night, my friend. But Is there for the night a resting place ? A roof for when the slow, dark hours begin '! May not the darkness hide it from my face? You cannot miss that inn. 1 Shall I meet other wayfarer t night ? Those who have gone before. Then must I knock, or call when Just in sight Thoy will not keep you standing at tho door. Hhall I 6nd comfort, travel-sore aud weak 'I Of labor you shall find the sura. Will there be beds for me and all who seek ? Yea, beds for all who come. ltenis of Interest. Youkers HuscUe : A smart school boy savs it takes thirteen letters to spell cow, and proves it thus; "See O! double you." A Frenchman erot exceedingly angry w ith a waiter at au English hotel. " You rascal !" he exclaimed, " I'll blow your nose for you. A Detroit restaurant keeper hangs out a M, mi nt "frea ebons ' and wheu the ' ; 'j 1.- ..1. . 1,,ale" come, "ouuu au ax anu a wooupue. Among the Copts, who are the oldest Christians'in the world, a part of the marriage ceremony consists of the priest knocking the beads ot me nappy coupie together. The Story farm, on Oil creek, Pa., has produced, in the last fifteen years, 2,128,707 barrels of oil, and yielded dividends amounting in the aggregate to $3, 702, 600. Why do not printers succeed to the same extent as brewers? Because printers work for the head and brewers for the stomach; aud where twenty men have stomachs but one has brains. A young gentleman of Kilkenny, meet ing a handsome milkmaid, said : " What will you take for yourself and your milk, my dear?" The girl instantly re plied : " Yourself and a gold ring, sir." A clergyman in Boston recently aroused his sleepy audience by announc ing in the most positive manner thot, "notwithstanding the hard times, tho wages of sin have not been cut down one iota." Jewish silver shekels hove lately been found near Jerusalem, belonging to the time of Simon Maccabeus, B. C. 144. On one side they have the cup of manna, and on the other the budding rod of Aaron. Boston covers an area of thirty-one and a holf square miles, has 304 miles of streetH, and its populution is ail,wv. In 1800 the population was 178,000, the city covered fourteen and a half square miles, and had 102 miles of streets. A lawyer was noticed at a recent con cert enthusiastically applauding one of the singers. ' ' Fond of music, isn't he ?" said one acquaintance to another. " Xo," was the reply ; " it's mere professional instinct, lie is moving for a new trial." j The employees- at the government ! printiug oflice have raised a Bullicient ' sum by subscription to enable them to I distribute one hundred loves of bread a day from each of the five Btatious for the next twenty-four days, making a total of 18,000 loaves. An instance of coolness iu danger was seen at the Ashtabula disaster, when 11 1111111 cleared himself from the smashed car as soon as it stnick, found his sa chel, overcoat anil cane, and walked up the bank with a check in his hat, to calm ly inquire when the next train came aloug. The average rainfall for December in England has been from 1.50 to two inches; that for December, 187(5, was 15.48. The total raiufall for 1870 was 32.19, against 19 35 in 1874. People are consoling themselves with the reflec- . tion that there will be uo dry wells next summer. An old fiishioued minister was preach ing in a tight, unventilated church, in which by some means a window was left partly open. A good deacon during the sermon dosed it. The minister stopped, and turning to the deacon said, in sol emn tones : "If I were preaching iu u jug I believe you would put the. cork j Among the buildings recently exhumed : at Pompeii is a drinking saloon with its ! tables and other appurtenances. The I pictures frescoed upon the walls repre j sent tavern scenes. Men are drinking and gambling at tables; others are seat ! ed upon wooden beudies against the n.ullu ..niU ...A ... ; sation, i tt ii 1.0, mi,, uiiiiio nic Quiuuiiijj ui i'iit4- It cannot be disputed that the man who stops advertising for the purpose of retrenching his expenses succeeds in ac complishing his object. At the same time his receipts are largely retrenched, enabling a material saving in clerk hire. If the polioy of retrenchment is ad hered to, he will soon be able to elude the payment of rent and annoyanoes of conducting a business. The night was beautiful and they were out sleigh riding together. He asked her to sit in his lap and drive. She felt it was delicious to be loved so dearly4 and consented. As for him he was a cautious young man, and had in view the best means of protecting himself in case the horse became excited and plunged his hoofs through the dashboard. '" ' 1 A'' FaH,'-'"''- " A naval officer of her. majesty's ship Royal Adelaide had a most uncomfort able berth at Stonehouse, England, on January 8. A police sergeant end two constables saw him open a window on a third floor early in the morning, get out on the sill in bis nightdress, and then drop out of the window, holding on by his "hands. One of the officers endeavor ed to enter the house, while the others stationed themselves under the window to break- the man's fall. - He held on for three minutes and then fell, turning over in his descent and coming down headforemost oh the sergeant. There was a clash of skulls, and both men were thrown on the pavement and badly bruised. The naval efflcer was a somnambulist.