; (N , - HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL. DEfiPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL, VII. ' MDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1877. NO. 3 it I : - j. r At the Itar. "Who speaks for tins man?" From the groat whito throne, Veiled in its rasoato clouds tho voice came forth ; Before it stood a parted soul alono, And rolling east, and west, and south, and north, The mighty accents summoned quick and dead: "Who speaks for this man, ere his doom be said ?" Shivering lie listened, for his earthly life Had passed in dull unnoted calm away ; IIo brought no glory to its daily strife, No wreath of famo, or genius' fiery ray ; Woak, lone, ungifted, quiet and obscure, Born in the shadow, dying 'mid the poor. Lo, from the solemn concourse hushed and dim, The widow's prayer, the orphan's blossing rose ; The Btrugglcr told of trouble shared by him, The lonely of cheered hours and softened woes ; And like a chorus spoke the crushed and sad, " lie gave us all he could, and whet he hnd ;" And littlo words of loving kindness said, And tender thoughts, and help in time of need, Sprang up, like leaves by soft spring showers fed, In some waste corner, sown by ehnnce flung seed i In grateful wonder heard the modest soul, Such trifles gathered to so blest a whole. Oh yo, by circumstances' strong fetters bound, The store so little, and the hand so frail, Pe but the best ye can for all around ; Let sympathy be trnc, nor courage fail : Winning among j our neighbors poor and weak Some witness at your trial hour to speak. Maggie Warren's Dowr l'r. J It wns a cool and roomy mansion, and stood gleaming white and diRtanfjthrongh the bonding orchard trees around. The old Warren homestead was a pro-revolutionary building, and its owners had ever been noted lor the persistence with which they added broad stretches of meadow and woodland t their already largo farm. At the time our story opens the Warren farm was the pride of the district, and boasted that it could coaut its acres by the thousands. The present owner was an old lady, called by the people who served her, uud by the neighbors, Mistress Warren. One grandchild, the daughter of her iir.ly son, lived with her, and made the old mansion full of light and music, for Maggie Warren was as sunny and beauti ful a a bright June morning. Mistress Warren had been tho mother of two daughters, though where thev were was a mystery in Durham, and as she never referred to thein, no one alluded to them when she was near. She held un disputed sway over the estate, and could will it to whom she pleased, so that it was to one of the Warren blood; and as Maggie was lier only companion, and was watched by her with a love that sought to make life one long dream of joy, the supposition was that she would be the next mistress of the noble farm that ran over hill and dale, and circled the old homesteud with a domain indeed palatini. Of course this made her the object of pointed attentions, and even when a schoolgirl, her friends were many, and tho suitors for her childish smiles and favors not a few. She was a wise, clear-headed little thing, and show did not dazzle her. Her sweet disposition kept her from making enemies, and so her childhood flowed smoothly on, and merged into a brighter womanhood. In the choice of her companions she was left entirely free. " You are the one to be with them, Maggie," her grandmother snid, "and so they are clean and honest, I care not from what family they come. " So Maggie gave a party and invited all of her old schoolmates, and by every act that she could, conveyed to them the knowledge thut she was their friend still. Having entered society, suitors began to flock around her, and one by one withdrew, ns they saw thut- she could give them friendship only. Two alone remained. Haring Durham, the son of the rich banker, whose father was the founder of the place, and whose estate ranked in value above the Warren farm, though the latter possessed the most land; and Paul Green, son of old Peleg Green, the village cobbler. Everybody said that Haring was just the man for Maggie. He was stylish and good-looking, and had been through college. Ho held a position in his father's bank, and had all the money and horses and time that he wished, and laid assidu ous siege to Maggie's heart. As he could spend as much timain bestowing his at tentions as he chose, he had the advan tage of Paul, who was busy learning a trade in tho large machine shop t.mt had grown to be the great enterprise of Durham. Paul was a ready worker, one vlio be stowed both labor und study on his toil, aud left no effort to advance untried. He was advancing, for uu earnest spirit always will do this, aud month by month showed that he would leave his mark on bisprofession. He was good-lnimored and flue-looking. Both Haring Durham and lie had been schoolmates of Maggie's when they were great boys, and she a toddling little thing. They had been friend then, and were so now, though they knew that they were rivals. "There is no use in your hanging round Maggie Warren," lua fellow work men would say; "young Durham has the money and will win." But Paul would only laugh, and in the evening seek the Warren homestead and have a nice chat with Maggie. Thus matters went on for a year, aud then Mistress Warren was laid to sleep with her husband, and Maggie followed her to the grave the only Warren mourner there. Curiosity to know the old farm's own ership ran high, but Maggie had the reading of the will delayed until her grief had been softened by time: then the old lawyer, who transacted business for Mistress Warren, was asked to bring a few witnesses ana read the will. One of the people he brought wasjthe banker Durham, and when the party had been seated long enough to grow quiet, the will was produced, and wiping his spectacles, Mr. Perkins, the old law yer, read tho usual preamble, and then came to the bequests. "I give to my granddaughter, the daughter of my son, the Warren home stend, the-orchard that lies around it, and which is inclosed in the high paling fence and all that is in the house or on the ground mentioned; the same to beat her disposal and hers alone. "The remainder of the Warren farm aud the stock and the implements be longing thereto I give to my grandsons, Hobart Ward and Parke Manning, the only children of my daughters Sarah and Margery, to be equally divided between them."- This was all tho will said, and as it was known that the Warrens had bought all the land they could, and had always paid for it, it was not thought that there was any more to dispose of. " Bather hard on Maggie," said the banker, as he walked away from the old house. "Well, Haring is bound by no promise, and therefore he is all right." And Haring was all right. Of course- the news of how Mistress Warren had disposed of her property was soon known and many were the condolences sent out to Moggie from souls that had tested her kindness, and these seemed to be with her aud comfort her. Paul Green called to see her that eve ning. Ho was free now, and his knowl edge made him the recipient of good wages, so that he had no fear of the future He spoke bravely and hopefully to her, and his manner showed very plainly that she was the same to him now as she had always been. The nest day Haring Durham came and stayed a little time, but he appenred ill it ease, and talked as though he was performing a necessary, but disagreeable duty. Many people had thought that now he would immediately marry Maggie, and take her home, but Haring never called again. Maggie had too much true wo manliness to regret his absence. His last call, with its mournful and embar rassed words, had left anything but a pleasant memory, and she was glad to see the hopeful and smiling face of Paul Green when she answered a rap at the door tho next Sunday evening. He was a frequent caller after that, and when three months had elapsed from the burial of her grandmother, asked what she intended to do. . "I have hardly made a decision, but I shall keep the old place just as it was given mo. Dear, old grandma. People say she treated me wrong, but she did not. John says the fruit and poultry I can raise here will bring me in nearly Ave hundred dollars a year clear of ex pense, ...id that is plenty to support me. "Yes, that ia quite a foi-tnmand Maggie, I'm going to ask you to share it with me." " What ?" said she, wouderingly, look ing at him. He smiled and went on: "Whv. I wish to share your income. To put it more plainly, I love you, Maggie, aud have loved you for a long time, but was not situated so that I could tell you this. Now, however, I am ; I have learned a good trade, and my income is large enough to afford mo a wife, so I ask you to be this, for I have ever held you deorest and best. " Maggie's eyes grew moist as she lis tened to these words, playfully spoken, out thrilling witli a strength of love that made them eloquent. For a little time she sat silent, then she took his hand and said : " I can only give you the answer you wish, for I love you, and shall always love you." It had been a very quiet love making, for they were people of strong feeling, but now that they belonged to each other, the floodgates of their hearts opened, and a holy ecstasy filled them and made them eloquent. Maggie's cousins had come on and taken possession of their property. They each tried to purchase the old homestead, but she refused to sell it, and six months after Mrs. Warren had gone to sleep there was a quiet wedding in the quaint Earlor, aud Paul Green clasped to his eart as sweet and true a wife as ever a man could have. They did not go od on a wedding tour, as Haring Durham and his bride did, but settled down into aquiet life, Paul working steadily at his trade, and as steadily going ou up ward, and tho old home was a bright and happy homo to them. Some months weut by. Haring Dur ham had brought his bride home, and settled into a partner in the bank, Paul Green was working patiently and brave ly in the machiue shop, aud Maggie went singing through the whole house. There were many quaint apartments in the house that were seldom entered. Ihere was no need for them, as Paul and Maggie could be content with little. Paul had made a work shop of a long wood room next to the kitchen, which formed a straggling offshoot to the house, and here worked on some model he was making whenever he had leisure. The kitchen and a little sitting-room with a cool and airy chamber formed space enough for them, and in these they passed many happy hours. One bright October day the machine shop was forced to rest that the engine might be repaired, and so Paul could stay home, and .he worked some time in his special sanctum and then came into the kitchen where Maggie was just finishing her morning's work. "I would like to take a look into the library, Maggie," he said, "we have never explored it yet. " "Sure enough, and there are the par lors and garrets to rummage, and the large chambers." "We will go through the library first," and they passed into the large hall that ran through the main building. A few steps brought them to the library, a great, square room, with heavy cases of walnut. Maggie opened the broad windows, and the mellow light streamed in, and lit up the backs of many volumes, some somber with ages of darkness, others bright with gilding, and rich with color. A noble store," said Paul, who was a good student, as he ran his eyes along the titles of the dookb. Maggie was deep in the midst of a cabinet of curiosities, and widking on, Paul came to a large secretary. It was shut, but the key was in the lock, and turning this, he opened the long-closed writing-desk. The drawers and com partments were full- of papers ; the largest drawer had a lock with the key in it, and he opened this, and took up a paper. As he ran his eyes hastily over it, he was surprised to find that it was a large share in a thriving manufacturing company. He picked up another paper, and another, and found that they were all of equal or greater value. "Why, Maggie," he cried, "do yon know what this desk contains ?" " No, what is it ?" she answered, look ing at him with surprise, his voice was 8o excited. ' What is it ? Why,- a fortune 1 See here," and as she came and stood beside him he showed her the papers and ex plained their value. " Whose are they?" she asked. "Yours, I think." "We had best send for Mr. Perkins and ask him. " Yes, that will be best; I will replace the papers and send John for him." John was Mistress Warren's old gardner, who had begged to remain with Maggie, and who made himself use ful in many ways. In a short time Mr. Perkina arrived, and on being told of the discovery, rubbed his hands violently together, and nodded his head so fast that Maggie felt sure that it would come off. " Stocks, eh ? I always thought it was strange she should only leave Maggie the house and contents, and the orchard, but I understand now. Whose are these stocks? why, yours, and I'm glad you found them. Come, we had best see how much you are worth," and he fol lowed them to the library. A complete examination of the desk and drawers of the library revealed not only stocks of great valuej but bonds and mortgages, bank bills, jewelry and coin, and when it was computed, Maggie Green found that she was indeed an heiress. Mr. Perkins was intrusted with the mangement of the stocks and papers, and soon was ou his way back to the vil lage, for he said the transfer must be at tended to, and the premiums collected; and while the two young people were planning what their new lives should be, Mr. Perkins, who had overheard Mr. Durham's remark concerning Haring's not being promised to Maggie, dropped into that gentleman's office, where fath er and sou were seated, and told his news. "The lowest computation makes it over half a million," ho said, chuckling, as he rose to leave, "and when the premiums and interest are counted in, why it goes way bevond that. I always thought Mistress Varreu dabbled in stocks, but she Juever told me," and he went slowly out , - "TUitfcjaiion ! Kuld Iht! elder Dur ham, when his astonishment let him speak. " And I only obtained one hundred thousand with Miss Lanuoy," said the younger, biting his lip. And while Mr. Perkins was goiug on to his office, Maggie said: "Now you can finish your models, and buy the shop, Paul, for I know you would never remain content unless employed." "Yon are right, Maggie," and so it was settled; and when Mr. Perkins told Maggie that there was seventy thousand dollars subject to her check in Mr. Dur ham's bank, she gave it to Paul: Their money did not keep Paul Green and his wife from being useful. In fact.it made them more so than before, and Maggie's dowry has brought joy and comfort to many homes that needed such. A Man Who Never Told a Lie. Yesterday afternoon an old oil man wi.h crude petroleum dripping from his clothes and legs inclosed in high boots, entered the Derrick office and said: " Want an item ?". " I've got the biggest item you ever heard tell on. I struck an ile well on my lease Monday, an' she flowed a stream o'f ile one hundred feet high straight up for half an hour. Then she kinder died down one of my drillers was standing over the hole, when she suddenly spurted up again, and if it didn't take that driller right up with it. The stream was a powerful one, you see, an' he went up a hundred feet. You've seen those little balls as dance about on the top of those little spurting fountains such as they have in the cities ? Yes, waal that's the way this ere thing acted, an' there's that air driller right up on the top of that hundred fut column of crude ile, an' he's dancin' about like chaff in a fanning mill. What do you think of that un V " How long has he been up there ?" " About four days and four nights." "He must be very hungry by this time. Doesn't he come down to get something to eat?" " Why, we 'uns lust put a plate of hash in this stream of ile, and it takes it up to him, you see. An' it's mighty handy, as he finds his victuals already greased, an' he doesn't need any butter." " But he must have frozen to death before this time. " " Why, man, we ve sent him up on the same stream, bed and bedding, a small stove an' wood, an' we're goin' to build him a small house, an' then he can live there as comfortable as a prince. His face was as innocent of deceit as a piece of tanned leuther, aud when he asked to have his name put down as a deadhead subscriber for information he had given we didn't have the heart to hurt his feelings by refusing. OU City Derrick. The Convict's Pet. A convict in the Richmond (Va.) penitentiary has a rat which he has tamed and domesticated until he will oome to him when he whistles, and follows its master about like a dog. The little animal sleeps by the prisoner's side at night, and will never be away from him longer than he can help, When the man goes to his work in the morning, it matters not what portion of the prison lot jt may be, this faithful little pet will certainly follow and re moinnear him. The animal kuows all of the prisoners, and doeb not exhibit the slightest fear when any of them ap- E roaches him, but will dart awav into is corner iu his master's cell at tho Bight of any one who ia clothed different ly from the inmates of tho prison. SOLDIER LIFE IX RUSSIA. How the Warrior Rpend Ihetr Time In Camp. The following ia an extract from a letter received by a Russian gentleman in New York from his brother, who is a volunteer soldier in the Ninth regiment of Dragoons of the Russian Danube array. The letter gives interesting de tails about Russian camp and soldier life, such as it is nt present, since tho mili tary reform of 1874, and clearly shows that the barbarous military system of former days, with all its tyranny and cruelty practiced on the soldier, has en tirely disappeared, givtog way to a rational discipline, mostly tempered by mutual confidence between officers anil Erivates. The letter is dated from tho ivouae of the regiment near Slatina, a small town on the railway between Bucharest and Krajova : " We are still here, as you see," says the correspondent, "at Slatina, and do not know how soon we are destined to move onward, or else, to say the truth, we know a great deal ; but it would be useless to write to you about it, as I am told that our letters are perused at tho post-office of the regiment, and the least allusion to future military movements in carefully suppressed. Therefore I must naturally content myself with giving you such particulars of our daily life as are sure not to be considered suspicious by our military argueses. This life of ours is, to say the least, rather dreary and monotonous. Only think that during a whole month I have not seen one single newspaper and would have had altogether nothing to read if one of our officers had not lent me a few books. Nearly every moment of the day is taken up with drill watches or some other military exercise. I now am able to understand the longing every soldier, even if he be not enthusiastically devoted to the cause he has to fight for, feels for the moment of action, despite the uncertainty and danger the latter naturally brings with it. 1 or the monotony ot campaign lite, while it is yet undisturbed by the enemy, is so great and so tedious, you feel so keenly, that every hour of day aud night is dominated by one idoa, one purpose that of getting ready for the bloody work that you finally get annoyed and impatient of the delay almost be yond endurance, and come to regard the time when the hour of battle strikes as a deliverance, as tho accomplishment of the very purpose of your existence. If such is the case iu every war, you may judge for yourself how very much more it is m the present one, which has kin died so genuine and so powerful an en thusiasm throughout the whole Russian nation. To returu, however, to our camp life. At daybreak the reveille ia sounded, and the toils of the day begin by the watering and currying ot the horses : then holfan, lion: is. given tor urciuaast, which generally consists of kasha (a sort of porridge, cooked of rye meal) and water, sometimes milk or tea. After this frugul meal we are all drawn up in squadrons, aud drill, moueu vers and military exercises .of all kinds take up the whole morning until eleven o'clock. This is the hardest part of the day on account of the dreadim heat wi have to endure. Every possible precau tion has been taken by the commanders against its effect on tho men. The heavy cloth uniform has been virtually abol ished and replaced by a light linen blouse we wear on the skin without a shirt ; the kipi . is covered with white linen and furnished with a shield of the same material falling bock on the neck, and yet scarcely a day passes without some of the soldiers dropping from their horses, faint and ill from the intense heat, which oiteu reaches 23:30 Roaumur (about 110,115 Fahrenheit). At noon wo cook our dinuer. Stchy (cabbage soup) meat and kasha are cooked in large kettles aud distributed in equal lots among each tent. After dinner our only occupation consists in lying on our backs under the tents as naked as pos sible, sheltered from the merciless rays of the Roumanian sun. Tho camp seems to die out, and you might fancy it deserted by its inmates if here and there a pair of thick, nailed boots did not pro trude from under the white covering or the tents. At five o'clock the heat be gins to abate ; each of us springs bare footed on the back of his horse and rides to the one-mile distant Aluta river, to enjoy together with the horse a refresh ing bath in the troubled waters flowing fresh and rapid from the distant Car pathian snows. Between seven and eight the officers make their rounds of inspection, examiniug each tent, horses, ammunition, etc., and inquiriug into the wishes and occasional complaints of the soldiers, and with this the work of tho day is done. Speaking of the officers, I must say that their behavior toward us is such as only could be desired full of tact and attention, maintaining the strictest, unflinching discipline, and yet never snowing us ino least trace of arrogance or assumed superiority. Every eveniug our baud plays on some open spot iu camp. ii,ven now 1 can write with difficulty ; my pen seems to swing iu cadence with the "Chorus of Conspirators" of "La Fille Angot." Officers, soldiers and peasants of the neighboring villages lounge around, forming picturesque aud lively croups. Then the band touches the first notes of the " Kaniarinskaia, the younger sol diers spring forward, and tho merry dance begins, with its usual accompani ment of whistles, singing and exciting cries. The others form a circle around it strong, stalwart, Bin burnt figures, with thoir short clay pipes between their teeth, and watch with a serious eye tho merry making of the younger generation. In another part of the camp the chorus of the regi ment assembles. (In the Russian army each regiment possesses one or several choruses composed of soldiers ; on the march they generally precede the regi ment aud enliven the ureary road with their songs). One after another our national airs, with thoir wild mirth or pathetic sadness, ring through the still evening air, and their quaint melody flows as freely over the Valachian plain as it did not long ago at home, hundreds of miles away, over the broad expanse of our own steppes. Many a Biui, serious thought of the past and the future is conjured up by these Hound, anj if ft were not for the shades of Might rapidly fulling, a tear might be e.eeu hero uud there rolling down a brown, tawny check and losing itself in th t grizzly whiskers of a veteran soldier. Then the watch fires are lighted, and the coolness of the air becoming more intense, groups as semble around them, listening to some story of an old soldier about former bat tles fought and feats of valor achieved, and dreaming aooui tue luture wmou lies m store for na beyond that river flowing through the plain before ns. One hour later and all is quiet ; only the drawling, sleepy cries, Slooshai I (hear) of the sentinels disturb from time to time the profound stillness of the night. All these are pictures and im- pressions, the remembrance of which, as I have said above, will never die out ; hardships and dangers shall be forgot ten, but that quaint, wild and pathetic poetry of soldier life will remain one of the fondest memories ot my ute. Be Something. Man was not made to rust out his life. It is expected he " ehonld act well his part." And is it not the duty of every one to assume some part as actor on the great stage of life ? Many think they can vegetate, as it were, without being anything in particular. This is a great mistake, and one very common; man has a work to perform, which it is his duty to attend to he must be somebody. It is a principle in the creed of the Moham medans that everyone should have a trade. Is a man to live upon the wealth acquired by his ancestors ? Is he to pass through life as an automaton? As a citizen of the world has he nothing to perform ? A man who does nothing, is useless to his country as an inhabitant he is a mere cipher, he does not fulfill the obligations for which he was sent into the world, and when he dies he has not finished the work that was given him to do. He is a mere blank in creation. Some are bom with riches and honors upon their heads, but does it follow that they have nothing to do in their career through life ? Bo something. There are certain duties for every oue sent on this earth. Don t live like a hermit and die un- gretted. Be something. Don't be a drone, You may rely upon your present posses sions or on your future prospects, but these riches may fly away, or other hopes may be blighted, and if you have no place Of your own, in such a case, ten to one you will nnd your patn ueset wuu many thorns. Want may come upon vou before von are aware of it. and hav ing no profession of any kind, you find yourself in anything but an enviable condition. It is, therefore, important that you should be something. Don't depend upon fortune, for she is a fickle support, which otten tails when youiean upon her with the too greatest conudeuce. Trust in your own exertions. Be some thing. You certainly have a part to act, ud the honor in performing that part depends upon yourself. " Everyone is capable of learning some " art, trade or mystery, andean earn a competence for himself. Children should be taught to be something; to know how to provide for themselves in case of necessity, and to ajct well their part they will reap the honor that therein lies. Tree Poisoning. A ease of alleged poisoning by tin ailantus treo has been reported to the New Haven (Conn.) board of health. The victim is a girl of twenty, and claims to have been poisoned while lying on a lounge near an open window and lookiug at the tree, distant some four yards. The eruptions nearly closed one eye and coy ered ono side ot her face and body. This side was uppermost. The side sho was lying on was not affected. Regularly every time tho tree flowers she breaks out, and sometimes tho eruption takes place when the leaves are shooting. The odor of the tree is not stronger than usual. The patient is not feverish, and has .no increased pulsation. Her temper is not affected and she has a good appo tite. The irritation is only on the eur face, and she has no other sympton of poisoning. Professor Brewer, in the course of the discussion which followed, said that, as a rule, persons once poi soned by a plant or tree were ever atter- wuru especially sensitive io it. iie nau T .'11 !! a -i TT 1 t seen in the newspapers cases of poison ing by the ailantus tree, but had never kuown of a case in his own experience, The tree had existed in England about 130 years, and in France 120 venrs. It has existed in this country for a long time, and thirty or forty years ago was spread by the desire for a quick-growing tree to take the place of the elm, which was subject to ravages by worms. In Brooklyn an enormous number of these trees were set out, but afterward cut down. The result of the discussion was a vote directing the owner of the tree to remove it, and ordering investigations to prepare a basis of action to be taken next year before the trees bloom. Elephants in a (juicksand On the river Ganges, says a military journalist, there are many quicksands ; and during our expedition a somewhat distressing scene happened. An ele phant incautionsly came within the vor tex of one ; first one foot sank, then another ; and in endeavoring to extricate himself, matters became worse : no por tion of either of his legs was at last visi ble, and the bystanders had given up the poor ammai as lost ; being, fortu nately, unusually powerful, he three several times, with what appeared to all supernatural strength, drew a foot from the closely-clinging earth, placed it where, by sounding with his trunk, he found the most solidity ; not until the imru nine uiu me ground bear his pres- Dure, wucu un gruuuaiiy released hiin sen. curing the. whole period of his irouDiesms cues were exceedingly do! i,iU,..i, migni nave Deen heard a couple of miles : his rrnint when thw were at ull end, was equally indicative of satisfaction. The internal application of a bottle of strong spirits soon dissi pated hn trembling and restored his equanimity. Many unfortunate - ele phants are lost m these treacherous Bauds, when large quantities of grass or branches of trees ore not at hand to form Oil fiunilnltlrt ......... L r i ... ... ..uiauio oupputt jor luem. Alter a certain time the poor beast becomes powerless : und th A IkWIlUV Ann look with Borrow at the gradual disap pearunce of hi, uoblo umuial. mid lament the pecuumrv losn l. suffers, thereby for ull Imm.iii ; l futile. uey uuve been known to bt hours before outirely biukiug. twilve A RIDE IN TEXAS. The Cattle Trnde-Im Dimension nnd It Nerds. A correspondent who writes from Fort Worth, Texas, saya: My ride has been through eighteen of the western and northern countiet) the great pastoral region. The grass is long, thick and nutritious. The streams come purling in such frequency that the herds do not need to be driven to obtain water, as is the case in Kansas and Colorado. The climate is bo mild that the cattle graze the year round. A little snow falls in midwinter in the northern counties, but only enough to swell the streams after the next day s Biinsnining. xne grass dries in November, and the stranger would suppose that it had lost much, if not all of its juice. But appearances de ceive; it is as sweet and nutritious as in June, and the truth is now confessed the world over that mesquite-ted lexas beef is the finest and purest food. The cattle trade of the State is already immense, although the herds have to be driven hundreds of miles before obtain ing transportation to the North and East. The western and northern coun ties are capable. I do not doubt, of sup plying not only our own continent, but Europe, with beet, and the demand tor American meats in England is only the small beginning of what must become an immense inter-continental traffic. The only objection offered to American beef on the tables of London and Liverpool is that when brought over in refrigera tors it is already slightly deteriorated and must be cooked immediately. The causes of this deterioration are not far to seek. The herds must now be driven thousands of miles over the plains, in some sections, and are weakened by tho inferior grasses aud scarcity of pure wa ter procurable on the journey. They are prodded in this exhausted state into badly ventilated cars, in which they are so crowded that they canuot breathe comfortably, or even stand at ease, aud it one falls he is trampled or homed to death, or dies of suffocation. The yards along the railroad routes are not numerous euough; cattle should be unloaded for fodder, water aud reBt at least once in eighteen hours; on the con trary, they are now kept thirty-six hours and even forty-eight hours in their poisonous and enfeebling prisons. The law whoso passage was sought with so much earnestness by the Massachusetts Humane Society, requiring the moving of cattle trains at a speed of not less than eighteen miles an hour, prescribing the intervals at which they were to be unloaded, fed and watered, and pro- habited the detention of cattle trains on side-tracks during unseasonable periods and for trivial causes, is a dead letter, just as the other statute is forbidding the inclosure of more than a certain ntwalrGi ill car if jiavfoiii dimcublOilH. Laws are very good in their way, but thev do not enforce themselves. The men who have charge of cattle in transit know very little and caro less about ani mal hygiene. Not that they intend to be brutal; they ore simply ignoraut, thoughtless aud reckless. The evils of cattlo transportation, of which we heard so much five years ago, have beeu very slightly modified, and the result of com bined carelessness, neglect and wanton brutality is the wretched condition in which the beasts reach Boston and New York. They are killed while overcome by starvation, thirst and fatigue; the already deteriorated beef is hastily packed iu refrigerators, aud, of course the meat is not ot tho very best quality when reopened, for it was not of the very best when packed. A Prairie Minuet. Charles E. Whitehead, in the course of an article in &'cribncr, says : One autumn day, watching for ducks while ensconced on a muskrat house in the great Mendocio marsh, which extends back many miles from the Mississippi river opposite Clinton, I noticed some objects moving on the summit of a knoll. By careful watching I discovered they were prairie-fowl, and, moved by curiosity, carefully approached them. Aa I drew near I discovered fifteen prairie-fowl apparently dancing a minuet. They were scattered about on the short turf, twenty yards apart, nodding their heads at oue another, and presently two would run out and perform the figure which in a country dance is known as "cross over and back to places," all the while uttering a soft noto of "coo-cooe," the last syllable being much elongated. Then would follow " salute your part ners " and " dos a dos." This scene of merriment was sustained for half an hour and until a shot from a neighboring gun caused the birds to run into the tail cover of the weeds. The bright sun shine of autumn and the conspicuous group of native birds impressed the scene vividly on the spectator a mind. A neighboring farmer to whom the circum stance was mentioned, said: " ies, them same birds skye around there mostly every day." The other varieties of praine grouse indulge in the same kind of amusement. The Instinct of Mosquitoes. An exchange savs: The mosquitoes. it has been discovered by a learned pro lessor, are possessed of great powers of observation and penetration. Down at the seaside we notice this fact ourselves, W hen a big trunk was landed from an express wagon into the entry of a hotel, the nimble insects usually made for it and crawled through the keyhole for the purpose of taking notes. Lf the clothes within betokened that a fat person was the owner, the mosquitoes would stay within ana ue cameu up to tne room, wnere they would lay for the fat person until bed time. If the garments belonged to a thin person the insects would pile through that keyhole in double-quick order. She Knew the Dodge. Thev broucht her his hat and hia fish- inar rod. and with tears in their eyes told her they d iounu tnem lying ou tue euu of the pier; they must be her husband's. She put ner arms okiiuoo over tne washboard, she did, and looked em straight in the lace. mis is me miru time that donu iieuvy u piuyeu vuw thing on me. .This means he'll be home by ten to-mgut urunn us u iwu. xioue of your sympathy here." And the com mittee beat a hasty retreat at the end of a broomstick. Items of Interest. The United States in 1830 contained 12,700,000 inhabitants. Clergymen, like railway brakemen, do a good deal of coupling. Now they tell of a drug (coca or cuca) that will cure bashf ulness. It cost about $7 to send a ton of wheat from Chicago to Liverpool. Virginia and West Virginia combined cover an area of 64,000 square miles. You can always get trusted at the telegraph office; they send messages "on tick." American shoes are now being largely sold in Germany, Switzerland null Franco. " What did you get ?" asked a wife of her husband on his return from a hunt ing excursion of several days duration. "I got back," he sententiously replied. Spicer is anxious to know if the mer chant who advertises " full lines of un derclothing " is connected with the party who walked off with last week's wash from the back yard. "Madam," said a certain nameless one to Mrs. Brown, the other day, "you are talking simple rubbish." " Yes, sir," replied the ever-crashing lady, "because I wish you to comprehend me. " Yet another warning. Joseph Bates, of Vermont, falls dead while carrying in an armful of wood. Show this para graph to your wife. Nay, cut it out and pin it to the woodshed door. "MissC ," said a gentleman, one evening, " why are ladies so fond of offioers?" "How stupid!" replied Miss C ; "is it not natural and proper that a lady should like a good offer, sir?" Before they are married she will care fully turn down his coat collar when it gets away, but after that she'll jerk it down into position as if sho was throw ing a door mat out of the window. OU City Call. Spilkins came down town with a nose gay in his buttonhole. " Hullo I" said a friend; "why, Leander, you look as if you'd just come out of a greenhouse." "No," replied Spilkins, mopping his fevered brow; "but I passed the night in a hot bed." One test of a great mind is its instanta neous availability in an emergency. The boy who can drop a paper-bag of eggs on the sidewalk, and pass on without chanorinor his crait. interrupting his whis tle, or looking at what he has dropped, has a future before him. Lightning struck a hive of bees in Kansas the other day. The painful story is soon told. The misguided lightning came out of that hive quicker than it went in and shot off into space with its tail between its legs. Moral JNever pick a quarrel when you are not acquainted with the folks. A poor tailor, dunning for an old debt the other day, wrote as follows: "Dear Jim, this littlo account has been stand ing for seven years, and I think it is high time it was paid." To which Jim re plied, on the same sheet of paper, while the boy was waiting: "Dear Sam, I don't; and may a difference of opinion never niter friendship." What a splen did diplomatist Jim would have made 1 A literary gentleman, wishing to lie undisturbed one day, instructed his Irish servant to admit no one, ond if any one inquired for him to give him an equivo cal answer. Night caine, and the gentle man proceeded to interrogate Pot as to his visitors. "Did any ono call?" "Yes, sir; wan geutlemau." "What did lie Bay?" "He axed was yer honor in." " Well, what did you tell him?" " Sure, I gave him a quivikle answer, jist." " How was that ?" " I axed him was his grandmother a monkey." TO A SEAMSTRESS. Oh ! what bosom but must yield When, like l'allas, you advaneo, With a thimble for a shield, Aud a needle for a lance ? Fairest of the stlching traiu, Ease my passion by your art ; And, in pity for my pain, Mend the hole that's iu my heart. " Ahem," sho said, " 'tis ueedles-s, sir, This question, to dis-pusset. Why seam sew earnest iu your suit? Take care my crimp don't muss it" Sound Sleep. It is wonderful how much may be done to protract existence by the habitual res- torative of sound Bleep, ljate nours un der strain are, of course, incompatible with this solacemeut. On this topic Dr. Richardson says it has beeu pamtul for him to trace the beginnings of pulmon ary consumption to late hours at "un earthly balls and overling parties," by which rest is broken aud encroachments made on the constitution. But, he adds: " If iu middle age tho habit of taking de ficient aud irregular sleep be maintained, every source of depression, every latent form of disease, is quickened and inten sified. The sleepless exhaustion allies itself with all other process of exhaus tion, or it kills imperceptibly, by a rapid introduction of premature old age, which leads directly to premature dissolution." There, at once, is an explanation why many people die earlier than they ought to do. They vioiwce tne primary pruici -i i-i.:.. 1 .,:!... T pie Ul MI&.11JH a xrguiui lliUl a lean, If they sleep it is disturbed. They dream all sorts of nonsense. - That is to say, they do not sleep soundly, or for any nsenu purpose; ior ureamiug is uuiumg more than wild, imaginative notions passing through the brain while half sleeping or dozing, in oreanung mere ia no proper or restorative rest. Florida Snakes aud Mosquitoes. They do occasionally have some mos quitoes on the St. John's river, Florida, and sometimes they are bo ravenous aa even to interfere with the religious meetings. During the late session of the presbytery at Palatka a minister, while occupying the pulpit, was so forcibly attacked by the mosquitoes that he was compelled to pronounce the benediction and dismiss the congrega tion rather hurriedly. They became bo numerous that the ladies could scarcely protect themselves wi'h their fans, and eveu the lamp chimneys were stacked with them. - . . The Sumter -Advance contains an ac count of the destruction of a rattlesnake nine feet long, and the crawling forth from her mouth of eighty-two juvenile serpents. J