,0 ,7 ffllll HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEBANDUM. . Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. .VII. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, TA., THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1877. . NO. 14. ' : : j I The Lady's Song. How do yon make your songs ? My lndy Baid to mo. Take pen, and lot me see now much to art belongs How much to nature. Well ? You really cannot tell ? Do you go seek your thought? Or does it come to you ? What is it like when caught? What in the first to do ? How can I help you, pray? t For my life I cannot see But kissing my hands is not the way To capture thought or me ! Vnu wait till the melodies come That sing in your inner ear? But how if you do not hear? How if your heart in dumb ? Compel it to speak? You may, But not my heart to-day ! If yon lmd made a song Tcrhaps you might, who knows ? Perhaps I may ore long Believe I am the rose You bleed for, nightingale ; But you with all are smitten, l'on't si;,'h and look so pule, But read what you have written Only my words to yuu, And in ihyuie, toe, I declare ! Be still, yon rumple my hair. Let go my hand I do ! The Magic Slippers. If any one had wanted to find Eva Arnold, they would have had to look behind a shady and fragrant hedge of wild roses and grape vines. There sat tho witeh; as her brother Allen called her, with a book in her hand, and, wonderful to relate, a grave look upon her face. "I do wonder if that tradition about onr family is true. I will ask grandmother all about it when I see her." ' I do wonder if that tradition is true," said little Eva, again, Just as she was about to sink to sleep. " Jf it is true, and the shoes are yet in existence, I will borrow or steal them, and that as soon as possible." A great cloud of dust, and a great rattle of whei-ls heralded the approach of tho coach. And in that ;uach was Eva's long looked for schoolmate, Gertrude Wayland. At the gate of Farmer Arnold's substantial mansion stood Eva, wi lting eagerly to catch the first glimpse of her friend. Her brother Allen, hidden in a secure nook, was also looking out with no little ciuiosit v to nee the red-haired divinity, so much vaunted by his siter. " After ill," said he to himself, as he walked toward the brook with his fishing apparatus un der his arm, ' I did not dislike the looks of her as nnii'li as I thought t should, but that is no reason that I shonlil fall in love with her." And Allen, who had no small share of vanity, laugh ed alond. ' Now, Allen, I've caught yon at last," cried Kva, triumphantly, as she discovered her nrotner reading under the favorite hedge. " Now stand up and let me introduce you to my friend Gerty, the best of schoolmates!" Allen arose and greeted the divinity in the graciftil and self-possessed manner natural to him. For t ic lirst time he had a full view of her faee by tho mrrning light. It was not a Iwantilul face, not even a pleasing face at first sip lit, end Allen was a keen admi er of beauty ; but it was a peculiar face, such a one as makes iui impression upon fine's mind not easily for gotten. Eva's faee was Hushed with her morn ing wa'k, but G jrti'iide's was remarkably pale ; there was, too. a soberness and dignity about her, which was entirely a stranger to Eva's character. Allen, as he entered with much po liteness though ith little zeal into a conversa tiou in which Eva took the principal share, se ere ly wondered how two such dissimilar char acters could have f' irnied such a close friend ship. But he concluded that there was no accounting for women's whims. " You must drive us over to grandmother's to-day, Allen," said Eva. "I positively must go there to-day." 'Well, then, if that is the case, I will drive you over, and as women never can keep a secret, in the course of time yours will come out, and then I shall have my laugh." " Agreed," said Eva, "only drive us over." It was a pleasant drive of five or six miles, yet Allen, who usually took the principal part in a conversation, wus remarkably quiet, listen ing to the chat of the two girls without at tempting to interrupt it. Her ha ir was not red after all, it was really a pale, golden color, and floated around the white face, as ho had seen it in some pictures. After all, sho was unlike any one else he had J ever known, and she had the sweetest voice lie iiau ever heard. But tho idea of falling in lovo with her was really too absurd to contem plate. "Grandniothor," said Eva, after a long silence, which she employed in contemplating the movements of a very pretty little foot, which tupped nervously upon the floor, ' Grandmother, I wish you would tell us the legend of the magic slipiiers, which I beard onco when I was a very little uirl. It's a tradi tion about our family, isn't it '" " Why, child, it's only a silly story about a pair of slipper. No one believes it now-a-days." "But the story, grandmother, if you please," ''Well," said tlie old lady, as she adjusted her spectacles, " they say that an ancestor of ours was once climbing a steep and rugged hill and found near the top a poor man, covered with wounds and nearly dead with cold and loss of blood. Onr ancestor curried him home in his arms and tended him carefully until he was recovered. When the stranger grew strong and well, they discovered that ho was a very hand some man, with eves remarkable for tlieir bril liancy. When he was going away he gave to the wife of our ancestor a pair of slippers. There was nothing remarkable about the slip pers themselves, but as the story runs, they wore endowed with a rare gift by the stranger. Any woman in his belief aclress' family, whose feet these slipper would tit, provided also that she were a true hearted woman, while she wore tho magio slippers, would have all the wishes made at that time realized. But there are but few of our family whose feet the shoes would fit ; from those who have worn tliem, however, there have come wonderful stories of their great virtue. But as for me, Eva, I have an idea that the story is all nonsense. The slippers would never begin to fit my feet, and I never had any faith in them, so that no wishes of mine ever were realized in that way." "But have you really got the slippers, grand mother ?" said Eva, eagerly. ' " I did have them, when I was young ; per haps they are in the attio somewhere now. But, bless my heart, child, you're not going to hunt after them V" "Yes, grandmother, I really think they would tit me, and I should like to try them." Buch a looking, and such a devastation never was heard of before. Grandmother would have been struck dumb if she could have seen her attie during the progress of the hunt Gerty set herself to putting to rights what Eva left in disorder, but it was no easy Job. Sud denly Eva uttered a cry of delight. " I've found them," cried Eva, triumphantly; now I wonder if they'll fit." Ani-away ran the madcap, covered with dust and a nest of bewildered spiders. "I declare," said grandmother, "if they don't fit you exactly ; one would think thev were made for you." And sure enough they fitted exactlv. Eva took them off very soou, and folded them up in their wrapper, remembering that grand mother had said that she who wore them must be a true hearted woman. Hhe wanted time to think whether she were true hearted or not It so happened that Eva had no more oppor tunities for trying on the slippers while the visit lasted. Bo she carried them home with her. Allen did not make his appearance to drive them home, but in his stead one of the farm laborers. . "Oh, Gerly," cried Eva, as the farmhouse came in sight, "I am so clad we aro at home; now I shall try mv magic shoes." But Eva'i usually quiet home was in a great state, of excitement. Something unusual s'-cmed to have happened, which affected all the household, though in different ways. " What has happened?" asked Eva, 'anxious ly, of Allen, when she found him alone upon that evening, " Why, the trouble Is, that we are in danger of losing onr old homestead. Borne one has set up a claim to it, the falsity of which cannot be proved, because that an ail-important paper has beon lost. We have searched the house through, but our search has been useless. One hope still remains, that the paper may be at grandmother's ; it might have been carried there among other papers. To-morrow I will drive over, as I am very anxious about the affair. The Iosb of this farm, after so many yeafti of hard labor bestowed npon it, will al most kill father." The next day was an anxious one to Eva, and in sympathy with her, Gerty was an iojs also. Bhe talked of going home, but Eva would not allow it. The little lady had no idea of having her schemes spoiled by such a move ment. Tho long afternoon wore away slowly, as the girls watched the return of Allen from his search. Afternoon changed into evening, and the evening wore into the night. The faniily concluded that Allen was not coming that night, and accordingly they separated with no hope of seeing him till morning. But Eva felt con fident that Allen wonld return that very night, so sho sat up waiting for him. walking' to and fro restlessly, and listening for the sound of his wheels. Hhe fancied Gerty was asleep upon a sofa where she bad persuaded her to lie down a few momenta before. No one in the house was stirring. " Now I shall try mv magic shoes," said Eva, alond, to herself. " 1 do hope and pray that I am true hearted." One slipper was a little rebellious and would not go on easily, but Eva managed at last to get her foot into it. Then as Gerty seemed sound asleep, and could not hear, she ven tured to speak her w ishes alond. " First andforemost," saidEva, "sinceithas been the greatest hope of my heart for a long time, r do wish that my brother Allen would fall in love with and marry Gertudo Wayland. Secondly, I wish that t'le paper which proves onr right to this house of my childhood may be speedily found, and that my father may be as happy in the possession of that which his cheerful labor has endeared to him, as it is possible to be." There was indeed the sound of wheels out side, and Eva ran down to meet Allen, without ever thinking of her slippers or wishes, rihe met him at the door, and at the first glance his an- ious face told her that his search had been useless. " No hope left, Eva," were his first words. " Sooner or later we are likely to lose our homo. Grandmother has searched her house from cellar to attic, and there is no sign of the paper." Wearied and depressed, Allen cast his eyes downward, and they rested upon Eva's em broidered slippers. " What a fanciful pair of slippers, Eva," said Allen, suddenly roused from his weariness. " Did you embroider those, little sister V" ' No," said Eva, a little embarrassed ; " they are not mine." Wondering a little at Eva's evident confu sion, Allen was about to relapse into his former anxious mood, when his sister took off one of l he slippers, with the remark that it was much tighter than the other, she wondered why it didu't fit. Allen took up the slipper mechani cally, and commenced examining it. There seemed to be something in the toe, which oc cupied considerable space. Listlessly Allen pulled out that with which the toe was stuffed, and was only a little surprised when he dis i mired a neatly folded paper. He opened I he paper much in the same way as he had taken it from the slipper, and then suddenly l.va was struck with unmingled wonder, to see l.er lately sad brother jumping around the room in a way that savored much of insanitv, I've found tho recious paper, Eva," said Allen, at length, overtm i.ing a table and all its contents, in his great joy. Suddenly the affair became clear to Eva. home mischievous person at grandmother's must have stuffed the paper into the slipper, without ever dreaming that he was doing mis chief. One by one the family came trooping down stairs aroused by the great noise of the overturned table. But none felt that they had paid too dear for their trouble, when they heard the rood news. " Gerty, I'm a thin believer in traditions, and especially that of the magic slippers," said Eva, one day. " Because both your wishes were realized," said Gerty ; " especially the first, which seemed very improbable." ' You're a traitor," cried Eva. " Not at all," was Gerty's reply. " I couldn't help hearing your wishes' that night, for I was not asleep, as you supposed." In the process of time Allen and Gertv were married, and Uttle Eva, trusting and true liearted, went on her way with a hnn belief in the magic slippers. Fashion Notes. ivory combs are worn in tho Yellow back hnir, The Breton glove h:is a .row of buttons around the top of the wrist. A new lawn game, "Vexillo," is said to be a great improvement on croquet. White lace (shades with monograms in the center lire among the novelties for window curtains. The " bangle " or porte bouheur bracelet in silver still holds its sway over the afi'ectiouB of young Indies. We have had bells and stars and coins, and now the last is a handsome kerchief holder, attached by a slight chain, and tho shoji jiu; bangle which has a pencil depend ing from it, fastened to a long chain. whi:h can be gracefully looped np when not in use. Small handkerchiefs, trimmed with lace, or silk ones wilh borders, have taken the place of luce scarfs, and will be used with spring mantles on the re moval of furs. When trimmed with lace they are not square, but are more than half square, the upper edge being turned over to form a straight collar, which is bordered, like the lower corner, with lce Valenciennes, duchess, clnuy or cashmere. Horses Ealing Meat. The hunters' horses, on the plains of Colorado, have been known, not only to eat meat, but to become quite fond of it. At night they are often tied to the wagons, and four of them have frequent ly been known, during Very cold weath er, to eat one hundred pounds of buffalo meat before morning. As the meat is plentiful and cheap, the hunters do not object. A party of hunters on the South Platte had a fine stallion, that had been captured from a" band of wild horses, but by kindness had become very gentle and tame. Its love for meat came near causing his death. The hun ters had been out placing strychnine baits to poisou wolves. A small amount of this dreadful poison is concealed in a piece of meat, and the meat stuck upon a stick. As the hunters placed bait after bait, they noticed that several were missing, and at length discovered that the horse was eating them. Death would certainly have ensued had not the men quickly administered an excellent antidote, in the shape of several pounds of melted grease and butter. j A FEW STORIES. Same of I he Jnkrn They Tell In New Ilmnpshlre Town. The i lust cm Journal prints a letter from Hopkington, N. H.,in which the following old-tune incidents are des cribed: Years ago there lived in this town two individuals noted for their ha bitual indolence. Publio opinion was undecided which was the lazier. One day a wag annouueed that the doubtful point had been settled, an effective test having been applied. In response to particular inquiries he stated that the two men had been made to stand under a dripping roof, their heads tipped back so they would receive the rain directly in their eyes. The plan attested the fact that one of the doubtful individuals would wink when the descending ele ment impinged upon his naked eyeballs, while the other wouldn't budge tho breadth of an eyelash. Wo presume r11 cavil ceased in the face of this remark able explanation. There used to be well known here a brace of judges of prominence in the eailier history of the State. They were Judge H. and Judge S. Judge II. was gotten up after the pattern of a broonv handle, and Judge S. bore a corporosity of decided corpulence. One day, when spending a leisure hour together, the conversation of the two gentlemen turn ed upon the subject of transmigration of souls. Judge S., who was a most incor rigible joker, remarked: "Judge H. do you want me to tell you my opin ion of what will become of yon if that doctrine is true ?" "I should be very glad to hear your opiniou," replied Judge H. "Well. I think you will do one or the other of two things; you will either go into a verv small humming bird or else into a devil's darning-needle," suggested Judge S. "Since you have been so good as to give me your opinion of my future chances," said Judge II., "Iam going to make free to give you my opinion of yours. "Go on," said Judge S. "I think," observed Judge H., "yon will go into one of these big squash bellied garden toads, and won't have to change much either." We give another one from Judge S. Oue of the churches of the town was destitute of a pastor. Brother A and B were speaking together about the matter of a supply. Judge S. overheard, and suggested: "I know where you can get a minister and have a deacon thrown in." Brother A, who was also something of a wag, replied : "That's nothing; if you go down to Audover, where they have n mill, they'll give you a minister and throw m two deacons." Brother B, a more serious man, dis liking to hear Brother A speak so lightly, suggested: "Don't you think, Judge S., it would be a good thing if Brother A should go down and go through the mill?" "It were no use to try," said Judge S., "he'd go out at the smut." We will tell just oue more btory. The bar-room or oflico, of a country hotel is most always a familiar resort of loungers. Tho fact was the same years ago, when a certain landlord, in the north part of the town, experienced some annoyance from winter loungers, who sometimes forgot to close tho door after tliem when they came in to enjoy tho fire. Once a wag came in, and the landlord, observiug he left the door ajar, called out instantly: "Do you know what that door was made for ?" The wag turned, surveyed the door with a most imperturbable counte nance, and answered: "Seventy-live cents or a dollar." The Toy Land of the Tyrol. Wood carving is the chief occupation of many a mountain village, both in the Tyrol and Switzerland; but in no place has it been carried to greater perfection, or been entered into more thoroughly by the inhabitants, than at St. Ulrieli. One branch of it, indeed the manufacture of wooden toys, particularly dolls may be considered almost a specialty of the district; for the httie town of St. Ulrich is tho great storehouse from which the chief toy traders of Europe we might almost say the world draw those rich and inexhaustible supplies which bright en so many nurseries and gladden the hearts of so many little ones. The art is said to have been introduced into tho valley about the beginning of the last century, since which time it has been the principal employment of the inhabitants, malo and female, old and young alike; for ancient grandfathers and grandmoth ers mny be seen steadily pursuing the vocation that has been theirs from their earliest years; as soon as the little boys and girls can bo safely trusted with knives, they begin their rude endeavors to carve the form of some animal or toy which is the peculiar line of tho family. This is one of tho odd things in connec tion with the trade, that, as the general rule, each family or group of families, has its own special department, from which thev do not deviate. Some carve. some paint, some gild; the painters often working only in one particular color; while the carvers constantly btick to the manufacture of one or two, or at the most of half a dozen animals, of certain toys or certain portions of tops and dolls, and so on through all the endless ramifi cations of their Liliputian industry. It is a most curious sight to watch them at work. They use no models, and work entirely by rule of thumb, long practice having made them so perfect that they turn out the tiny articles without the slightest hesitation, every one as pre cisely alike as if they had been cast in a mold. How the Women Voted. . Describing fin election for school tm.it.ien in Denver. Col., on the seven. teeuth inst., the Xeirt of that city says : Three hundred and twenty-three votes were cast by women, and some laughable incidents occurred during the day. The married ladies aimosi mvariuuiy gave tlu.lr lmuiiiind's initials, and one of them wanted to vote for her husband, " who couldn't come," she said. Several ladies in giving their names added very earnestly that they didn't want them to "go into the papers." Only on,e vote was challenged that of a young miss of eighteen, who knew she was old euough to marry and thought she was old enough to vote. FIRES IN CONSTANTINOPLE. Turkish Firemen and Fire Enainea Hcenea Uurins a Fire. The cry of " Yankin war " is the Turkish for " fire." It is heard less frequently now in Constantinople than in former years, when fires were an every night calamity. For sometime the building of wooden houses has been strictly forbidden; a kind of fire brigade has been organized, and the people manifest their ill -humor in some other way than that of incendiarism. Never theless a week scarcely ever passes without a flro. Scarcely is it discovered from tho watch tower on the heights of Gandilli, than it is announced by the firing of five, seven or nine shots from the battery there established; at the same time fignals indicating its precise locali ty ore made by flags during the day and lauterns during the nigbt to tho watch towers of Galata and of the Ma kent in Stamboul. Before the heavy booming of the Krnpp guns has died away, runners dressed in rod, and carry ing a short lance in tlieir hands, start in all directions to announce to the different ministers of tho porte, whose duty it is to attend at every pre, and to the police and military authorities, the situation of the fire. In former times it was also tho cus'oin for the sultans to nttend on similar occus'ons, and one of the odalisks, dressed also in red, had the special duty of announcing to the sultan, if he was in the harem, tho outbreak of a fire. Of late years this custom has died out, and only the ministers of war, marine and police are bound to be present, the grand vizer even of our days dispensing with that fatiguing duty, except in rases of great emergency. As soon as the runners are passed, the watchmen ap pear with their heavy clubs, which they strike against the pavement, shouting ut the same time at the top of their voices the cry of " Yankin war 1" adding the name of the locality where it is raging. A few minutes afterwards the " sakas," or water carriers, with their heavy leathern pouches, ore seen running to the scene of the conflagration; for there are no convenient water pipes or plugs to be opened, and the whole supply of water consists in what the " sakas " can collect from the neighboring wells or public fountains The tire engines oon appear, escorted by the " tulumbadgis," or firemen. The " engines " are mere squirts carried bv four men. To each engine are attached some thirty or forty "tulumbadgis;" with their chief, and a runner or crier. who, armed with a short lauco, precedes them mid makes way for them. If tho engines are very small they aro very numerous, and it is not uncommon to see in the space of an hour sonic forty or htty, with their escorts ol Bremen, pass through tho narrow high street of IVra. As to the tulumbadgis, they are all volunteers, and taken from tho low est dregs oi the Turkish population overgrown shoeblacks, bankrupt Inciter matches sellers, livery stable boys, and conductors of donkeys form tho great minority of these active anil promising gentlemen, who receive no pay except a suit of clothes at the Bairam, and are supposed io live upon the backsich or gratuities which they receive from the people whoso" property they have saved, and who in reality live on plunder. In consequence of this system they are most zealous in their attendance and their desiro to be the lirst on the spot; and it is a strange sight to see these rnfiiuns, half naked, rushing through the streets, changing the bearers of the en gine from time to time, without slacken ing their speed, and yelling all the time to make tho people, the dogs and the donkeys get of their way. If two com panies of these barbarians meet by chance such is their desire to be lirst on the scene of tho promised plunder that a sharp race ensues between them, and if victory is doubtful they come to blows. The engines are generally followed by companies of soldiers iu fatigue dress, carrying long hooked poles, which are used for pulling down the houses, and this is, in truth, the most effective and easy way of mastering a fire, for tho houses, being mostly built of thin planks, aro easily pulled down, and thus a waste space is made round the already burning property. At the scene of the lire, tho sight is much the same as in all countries on thoso occasions, except that the noise and confusion are increased by tho fact that the f urnituro of the houses of a whole street is being removed at the same time, the inhabitants never waiting for the conflagration to get near tliem, as it runs along among the wooden houses with fearful rapidity. These peoplo and their furniture, or at least the part of it which is not robbed in the confusion by tho firemen or the earners, are con ducted to some open space, where, under tho guard of tho police, they sit down on their property to wait with true Tur ish calm and patience to sae what fate will do. At hit the fire is mastered, or dies out of itself, according to the zeal displayed by the firemen, who if largely paid by the proprietors of the threatened house?, will sometimes do wondurs with their diminutive engiuee, or will refuse to work altogether, and then a new body of plunderers appear in the shape of numerous fellows armed with spades and long sticks with iron hooks, who, notwithstanding the efforts of the police, rush among the still smoldering cinders in search of coins, of jewels, or of iron and brass fittings, etc. Gradually the cinders cool down, and then the cats ap pear in search of their homes, and after ward the street dogs, who drive them away, and hasten to secure a nice warm hole in the cinders where to lay down, and these remain at last masters of the ruins, as they were before the masters of the bring streets. " The Society of the Love of Jesus" is the name of a new religions guild in London. Excepting the vicar, all are females between sixteen and thirty years old. No member is permitted to read any book which has not been submitted to the vicar or the lady warden; dress must be simple, modest, and not ex travagant; no improper places of amuse ment are to be visited, and no church at tended which is not in communion with the Church of England. A fashionably dressed young lady in New York stood on Broadway and had her shoes blacked by a professional artist. CHINAMEN AT THEIR MEALS. The Kinds or Food that They Eat In Han Francisco Luxury and Poverty. A San Francisco correspondent of the Cleveland 1'laindcaler writes: It is a mistaken idea that Celestials eat nothing but roast rats and rice and a few other articles of plain and cheap vegetable food. This is about the extent of the bill of fare among the laboring classes, just as corned beef or cabbage is among our unwashed element. Of course they eat roast hog all Chinamen, rich or poor, do. It is a part of their religion, mst as it is of the Jews, to eschew it. To the Chinese is accredited the dis covery of the excellence of roast hog meat. When a Chinaman dies, among other thingB placed on his grave is a sumptuous dinner or whatever he mRy call it. The chief feature of these edi bles is a whole hog roasted. The better class of Celestials luxuriate in swell din ners of canvas-back ducks, shell fish, tea costing $4 or $5 per pound, conserves, and many other unimaginable toothsome edibles only known to the Chinese epi curean. The first-class restaurants are beautifully adorned with red paint, red paper, and other gingerbread wol-k, and at evening dozens of Chinese lanterns swing from the verandas and entrances. Most of the food used by them is brought from China, especially rice and tea. The tea used among the laboring class is even better than the article palmed off on us. They are experts at preserving fish and fowl so that they will keep almost any length of time. But it does not make much difference to John if it should become a little stale it would give an additional flavor. Tho aristocracy eat, or rather gormandize, for two or three hours, and tlieir dinners arc about as costly as our feasts of reason and flow of champagne. When distin guished guests ore entertained, the feast is enlivened with music that is, they eat of a course or two and take a recess of twenty or thirty minutes, walk into the parlor, and listen to the most enchanting strains possible to conceive, will return to the dining-room and again tackle the edibles. Tho poor class Chinamen do not live in state. For instance, you go to a Chi nese laundry about nine o'clock in the morning, and there you will see the fes tive board, without a spread, iu the mid dle of the room. Xfoik has ceased and every heathen has squared np to take a hand. In tho center of the table is a large tray full of rice. Every man has a tin plate and two chopsticks. They aro of walnut wood, of about the size and complexion of glove stretchers, a little flattened at the Aid, so that they can scoop up rice. Each Chinaman backs liis plate to the tray and piles as much rice on tho plate ns ho can heap up. They are all chattering away ut the same lime. In a short space of time the rice has disappeared. Ordinarily it would seem a. difficult feat to get the rice to his mouth by means of his two chopsticks. With him it is no trick at all. He lifts his plato up close to his mouth and then t.ives the stick a kind of a twitch, like c:amming wadding down a gun. Each Chinamau has a small teacup holding about two swallows. When the sinner at the head of the table has turned him out a cup John swallows it at one gulp, without wincing, and tho tea is smoking hot. They pour it out as they drink it. In larger cups tho tea would get cold. Chinese barber shops are even moro numerous than among the Caucasians. Every Chinaman has his head shaved at least once a week. In addition to this his neck is sjiaved, the dust is cleaned out of his almond shajied eyes, the eye brows trimmed and penciled, his nostrils are renovated and fumigated, and tho wax is probed out of his ears. Their queues aro combed and braided. This tonsorial and cleaning operation is regarded as a sacred duty, otherwise John would not incur the expense. The instrument used to shave the head is a half-moonlike concern, or rather like a scythe on a smull scale. Barber shops are invariably located in a cellar, and the customer can be soon below, sitting in a doorway, on u stool, while the artist is going round his sculp like a cooper around a barrel. At the entrance of a Chinese shaving shop, on the pavement above, is a four legged frame about a foot and a half high. The legs are painted green, and the knobs on the top of the legs are painted red. This is to the Chinaman what the striped barber pole arrange ment is to us. Insects Formed from Leaves. A plant has been newly found out in Lukhipur (Hiudostan), the leaves of which turn very much to the shape of a grasshopper in proportion as they grow old, till all the parts of the insects so formed become fully developed; and each leaf forming, a separate insect issues ojit in a very beautiful appear ance. This plant is known to grow by itself, and no second plant has yet been seen to grow from it. A gentlemiui in whoso Louse that plant was found to grow, noticed it from time to time, and carefully watched the progress of the in sects forming out of the leaves. One day seeing certain loaves in form of in sects fly out from the plant, he came to a resolution of getting hold of some of them if possible, iu order that he might show them to his- friends, who would not otherwise believe him. With this object in view he set about the task in earnest, and in a short time succeeded in producing two or three insects to the utter astonishment of his friends. Melissa Wilson's Markniauskip. Miss Melissa Wilson, of Sheridan, Oregon, has made herself famous by killing her second panther. Sho was out locking for a cow, and found where a fiunther or beor had killed a large sheep iclongiug to her father. The animal had dragged it some three hundred yards up a mouutaiu. Melissa returned home and took her small rifle and her father's dogs. She then went back to the place where the sheep hod been killed, and put the dogs on the track. They soon tie e 1 a large panther np a lofty fir tree, and Miss Wilson put a bullet right between his eyes, bringing him down dead at the first shot. Times must be improving, for the rag gatherers all agree that their business is picking np. The Wonders of Colorado. Startling developments are constantly being made in Colorado, and it would appear that wonders are never to cease in that distant State. The Mountaineer of a recent date furnishes the following account of strange discoveries mado in the southern part of that region : We have inst received a call from Mr. L. Allen, an elderly gentleman from Rochester, N. Y., who came to Colorado about a year ago. By the advice of physicians Mr. Allen was instructed to keep in the open air as much as possi ble, and so has traveled extensively through southern Colorado, prospecting and viewing the country. He gave ns the particulars of a strange discovery lie made on one of his tramps, but declined at present to state the exact locality; mentioning only that it was some dis tance south from Pueblo. At the place mentioned several large mounds or foot hills appear rising from the plains, and situated some distance from the moun tains. Mr. Allen visited these, and the first thing peculiar he noticed was what appeared to be a petrified cocoanut. It was much larger than tho ' ordinary fruit of this kind, but almost perfect in form ation. The three eyes of a cocoanut were plainly to be seen. On breaking open the strange stone or petrifaction the shell appeared perfect, being some half inch in thickness, and the inside was composed of white crystal quartz. Mr. .Allen continued his investigations and discovered a number of other speci mens similar to the first; also others re sembling other kinds of fruits. Some of these contained what appeared to be seeds embedded in qunrtz. Specimens of petrified wood in large quantities were also found. The mounds or hills appeared to be made up of loose, sandy soil, and shells were found of great va riety and quantity. The strangest part of the discovery, however, was yet to come. In digging into the side of the hill Mr. Allen unearthed what seemed to be a perfectly petrified sea turtle, and before closing his investigations about a dozen of these were discovered, almost perfect, and no doubt they are genuine petrifactions of sea turtles such as are found in the Paoific. From the numer ous specimens of shells that aro found nt various places on tho plains, and num bers of which can be found and are found in this vicinity, many persons are led to believe that the great plains' on which we live were at one time the bed of an immense ocean, and this discovery would tend to confirm that theory. Seventeen-Year Locusts. The seventeen-year locusts have ap peared in large numbers in certain parts of New York. They first emerge from the ground in the form of a large grub. The wiygs appear soon afterword, when tho locust settles iu the nearest tree. Tho noise made by the insects is a con stant shrill humming. They do not eat growing crops, as many suppose, nor do they in any way resemble the ravenous locusts of the West. They devote tlieir time to working in the "branches and twigs of all kinds of trees. They plow little grooves in the limbs, the tender bark next the wood. Their perforations iu the trees kill the branches and the foliage soon turns yellow. In 18G0 the locusts did not appear until June, when the trees were iu full leaf. In ttfo weeks the woods looked as though they had been sub j ected to the frosts of November. From all appearances the locusts will be as thick as they were in that year. Stories of the poisonous nature of the sting of this curious insect, which did duty in 18150, creating much alarm, have been revived, but the seventeeu-year locust is harmless to man and beast. It is an inch and a half long when full grown. It comes out of the ground tail first, and has on it head white marks forming a perfect letter W. In 1860, believers in signs and superstitions declared that tho appearance of this cabalistic sign denoted war. In that year the locusts did not entirely disappear until late in the falL People remember their appearance also in 1843. They were so thick then that the trees were thrashed with whips, and dead locusts carried away by tho bushel. They do no permanent injury, but inter fere greatly with the year's fruit crop. A Singular Tradition. St. Stephen's day, in the Isle of Man, is given over, among a great part of the population, to a cruel custom, that of hunting wrens with sticks and stones ; and, when they succeed in capturing one, it is tied to the end of a long pole, and carried around the country. The custom arises from a superstition, dating far into the past, of a fairy so beautiful that all the youths of the island went to look at her, and then she would sing such wondrous songs that they followed where sle chose to lead them, which was into the sea ; for she was cruel and wicked, and led them, one after another, to their death, until ct length scarce a young man was left, and trouble was in every man's home for the brother or son that was missing. At length there came a knight, who, vowing vengeance, laid a deep plot for the destruction of this wicked lady. He seized her by her long hair, but as he stood over her with his drawn sword, she suddenly changed into a tiny wren, flying away from under his very fingers, and so escaped with a. mocking song of triumph; but by some power greater than her own, the wicked lady fairy was compelled onco in ivery year to reappear in the island iu her ae suined form; and this is on St. Stephen's day, when the young men of the super stition island hunt after her with a vivid memory of their ancient wrongs. A Novel Hon f shoo. The Paterson Guardian states that one of the horses in a livery stable got into a funny predicament. He had wan dered into a vacant stall, where there was a lot of old trash, and among other tilings there was a teakettle, and iuto this he stepped, of course. The fit was a tight one, so that tho. kettle went on easily enough, but it would not come off, and there was the horse, holding up his foot and jumping around ou the other three legs, not knowing what to make of the new-fashioned shoe. It was with the greatest difficulty that the tea kettle could bo removed from the ani mal's foot. It had to be pretty well broken np before it could be got off at all. ' How's your father?" came the whisper. Bashful Ned the silence breaking t "Oh, he's nicely," Annie murmured, Smilingly the question taking. Conversation flagged a moment i Hopeless, Ned essayed another ) " Annie, I I "then coughing, And the question, " How's your mother ? " Mother 1 Oh, she's doing finely 1 ' Fleeting fast was all forbearance, When hi low, despairing accents, Came the climax, "Hows yonr paronts .' Items of Interest. Arkansas has cool winters and Hot Springs. A wedding trip Stumbling over the bride's train. Six hundred thousand acres of the best land in India are devoted to the cultiva tion of opium. . The Detroit Free rress wants some one to invent a machine to pronounce those Turco-Russian names. England has annexed the Transvaal republio in South Africa, despite the protests of the president and some of the people. A young lady being asked, upon her return from church, what the text was, unhesitatingly replied : ' ' Blessed are the dressmakers 1" The largest alligator ever seen in that portion of Georgia about Macon was killed in a small lake, and measured eight feet in length. Students of Russian history state that for severol hundred years no quarter of a century has passed without the annex ation of more or less territory to Russian dominions. The editor of the St. Louis Republi can recently insisted that poets must be brief. The next day he received the following, entitled "The ballad of tho Merchant ": Trust Bust 1 A Tennessee paper that prints a coffin over its death notices has cast a gloom over its marriage notices, in the same column, by inadvertently putting the picture over the lint of hymen's victims. An Iowa paper tells of a smart wife who helped her husband to raise seventy acres of wheat. The way she helped him was to stand in tho door and shake a broom at him when he sat down to rest. " Do you think your father is going to move out soon ?" inquired the owner of a rented house of the son of his tenant. "Reckon so," was the reply, "we'vo begun using the winder frames for fire wood." Two church members in Atlanta, Ga., quarreled over the question of the con trol of money raised to convert the lieatlwni, and came to blows in front of the church while the congregation was dispersing. Brighain Young takes all the New York dailies. He reads the articles headed: " The Doom of Mormonism," (about seven each day) and then he tele graphs to tho New York elder: " Send mo three more wives." An old woman who is crossing tho street has a narrow escape from being run over by a hearse " I am not at all superstitions," she says to her rescuer, "but it had seemed to me that it would bo unlucky to be killed by a hearse. " A school law recently adopted in Mis souri requires school boards to give the preference to colored teachers for colored schools, and prohibits the employment of a white teacher for a colored school when a competent colored ouo can bo had. Interesting triangular struggle in the Western States A Congressional com mission are gathering grasshopper data, tho farmers are gathering grasshoppers, and the grasshoppers are gathering the crops. The odds are three to one on tho grasshoppers. A youth went to a printer to ask the Erice of wedding cards, and said that he ad been introduced to a handsome girl the night before who was worth some money, and thought he would look around to see how much the wedding fixings would cost before proposing. When the first newspaper was started in Japan the editor asked a Japanese gentleman if he wished to have the paper sent regularly. " No, I thank you," ho replied, " I have a copy." The gentle man of the old school had no idea that a newspaper contained fresh matter every issue. A blacksmith recently met with a singu lar accident. He was engaged in shoe ing a colt which had never been shod, aud in driving a nail, while holding the foot against the right knee, drove the nail through the hoof fully three-fourths of an inch, the point entering his knee pan some distance into the bone. A Kentucky dentist undertook to plug one of the back teeth of a favorite mule. He bored and bored until tho drill strin.l something that seemed to lift the ani- mnl'a crnl vindif. r( Ha iinrrna iri,nln the way the coroner explained it, and since then a wild lnnle hna heon ornPnrt. ing up and down the country, seeking ior iresu worms io conquer. rPl i prn iu cnl1 i Via a v.ova 1. 1. actually existing near Berlin, which can enlar within, octagonal without. The reliefs mitftiilA Ami nfatima uUlnn 41 v vvu T UAUa IUO roof, ceiling, the Corinthian capitals are papier-macne, rendered waterproof by saturating iu vitrol, lime water, whey and white of eggs. Owls are of immense service as vermin destroyers. An English gamekeeper found an owl's nest with one young bird in it. He visited it for thirty consecu tive mornings, and in that time removed from it 105 rats, forty-nine mice, eleven ulirew mice, two robbing and one spar row. This was. and well it micht hav been, over and above what the owl's con sumption demanded. A cow stealer iu Pike county, Miss. , who had been captured by a party of men, was recently punished in a novel manner. They killed the cow, removed the viscera, placed the thief inside with only his head out, and then sewed him iu securely with a rope. He remained there'four Jays, and was then taken out almost dead, having had a difficult tusk in preventing the buzzards from picking out bis eyes.