JU ' ) " ' HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VII. EIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUESD AY, SEPTEMBER "2lT, 1877. NO. 32. (p A Silly Old Man. 'Mid all the nasty things that come to make our tempers smart, , It's very nice in middlo age to have a ohildish heart, To feel although .yon've got a house, and taxes coming due The little Joys of early life possess a charm for you. My boys and girls are growing up ; I'm fifty in a day ) And all the hair that Time has left has turned a double gray ; And yet I Jump and skip about and sing a song of glee, Because we're off to spend a month beside the sounding sea, Where I shall wear my Holland clothes, and tuck them up and wade, And buy myself an air-balloon, a bucket, and a spado. I've packed my box and corded it, and seen my boys to bed, And now I'm in the drawing-room and stand ing on my head ; I really can't contain myself, I shout and rub my hands Oh, won't I built a castle with a moat upon the sands 1 I know this week I've lost a lot of money upon 'Change, I know the kitchen boiler's burst and spoiled the kitchen range, I know my wife declares she wants another hundred pounds ; And I should weep and tear my hair bocanse I've ample grounds ; But visions of to-morrow's bliss bid all my sorrows fade There's comfort hi an air-balloon, a buckot, aud a spade. I ought to be a solemn chap, aud dress in black, and frown, And do as other fathers do when going out ef town j And swear that nil the packing up will send me nearly wild ; And when I reach the lovely sea I ought to take a sent, . Or w.ilk About a mile a day'and grumble at the hent ; But oli, I can't contain myself, I'm off my head wi;h joy, Anl won't I my trousers wet and be a naughty boy, For I thnll wear my Holland clothes, and tuck them up and wade, And buy myself ft:i uir-'ml'oon, a bucket, and a spadp. Moses Williams's "Boy." The other uiglit when the dark clouds rolled nj) in the West and the mutter of distant thunder warned pedestrians to seek shelter, a man sat on his bed of straw and rags in the basement of an old house on Franklin street. His wife was buried four weeks before dead from kicks, cufb, starvation and a broken heart, and the four children who had come to his kueo had each lived long enough to realize that they had a wild beast for ft father, and had then been starved out of the world. The wife was, perhaps, glad to die. Heaven and the children were beyond the grave, she hoped, whilo life was simply a dark mi l night. The husband lay drunk in the house when she died, nnd he had not one word ot sorrow or regret. As the body was being takeu out of the house for burial a voice called out : " Moses Williams won't live three mouths, aud when he goes his death will bo an awful thing to see !" " You lie I'll live fifty years yet !" he growled as he looked around to see who had dared speak thus plainly to such a burly big brute as he was. He marked the speaker. It was a boy some ton years old, having great blue eyes and an old-manish dignity. He saw tliat boy before him as plainly as you see tnese wonts, and yet no boy was there I No one else saw him, and when Big Mose advanced to grasp the youth he shut his lingers on nothing but air. The boy was in plain sight of Mose, and yet he could not grasp him nor kick him nor hit him with missiles. " The 'tremors' are coming on him !" whispered one to another, aud they began to draw away out of his sight. "in come and jsit by you in your dyiug hour !" said "the white-faced boy to iiig JUose, and the half-drunken giant was observed to run across the street and strike at the air with savage ven geance. Jiclirium tremens did not come, as predicted. The man was still stout and strong, and perhaps be drank less for a few days. He crept in and out of his den with halting step and red eyes, and the family above moved out one day for fear he might become insane and murder them. Some days he slept the heavy sleep of a drunkard, and then again he leaned over thswbar of some low dive and hoarsely said : ' Give mo something stronger some thing that will burn like a red-hot iron as it gurgles down the throat 1" And the rumbling of the thunder the other night broke a sleep which had lasted for thirty hours such a sleep as wild beasts indulge in during the weary weeks of winter. He sat up and lis tened, and as the flashes of lightning lit up his face they found it deathly pale. His ej es were wild and bloodshot, his chin quivered, and he peered this way and that through the gloom of the base ment and felt afraid. " I have come to sit with you," whis pered a voice beside him, and Big Mose almost screamed out in his sudden sur- Erise, There was no light in the room, ut the man knew that his visitor was the strange boy who had warned him weeks before. " We are awful poor, but we must have a light on this night 1" continued the boy, as he moved about the room. The light he placed on a rickety old table was a piece of candle stuck into an empty whisky bottle. The grease had run down over the the bottle, and the wick burned with a dull glare when lighted. "Boy 1 I'll kill you!" muttered Big Mose, as he recovered from his first sur prise. "That wouldn't be your first mur der!" coolly answered the child, as ho drew the only chair in the room up to the bed and eat down. The drunkard raised his fist and struck with all his might, but the boy gat there ust the same , a sad look upon his face and a grieved expression to be read in his big blue eyes. " Don't you remember little Daisy?" asked the boy in a solt voice, " don't you remember how she was tossed upon your knee, clasped in your arms and kissed with a true father's love ? You remember her, don't you ? And you re member that when she was a babe you had a house of your own, a store, lands, and friends bythe hundred ?" Daisy ? Daisy ? Daisy f yes, I re member her," mused the drunkard. " And you remember how you came home drunk one night, fell over her cradle in the darkness, and your heavy knee crashed the life out of her little body 1 You called it an accident, -but your wife knew the truth. Almost from that hour you began to go down hill. " "I will kill you I will kill you 1" hissed Big Mose, as he rose to his feet and made a grasp at the boy. The child did not move au inch, and yet no blow could fall upon him. " You remember the twin boys, Charlie and Chester, don't you?" continued the boy, in the same pleading tones. " Your wife was grieving herself toward the grave over your conduct, and your store had been taken from you wlien they came. Ah 1 they were rosy aud bright, and color came again to the mother's cheek as she taught them how to kiss. How did they die, Mose Williams ? Don't you remember how one night you were fished out of the gutter, beastly drunk, carried home by friends and left on the steps f Your wife helped you into the house, saying never a word, but her eyes full of tears. Her forbearance angered yon, and you seized the lamp and hurled it at her head. It passed beyond, struck the bed on jvhich the children lay,and the flames which leaped up and consumed half your house burned those little bodies to a crisp 1 Answer me, Moses Williams, do you remember that awful night ? do the terrible cries of the children and the fearful shrieks of your poor wife como to your ears as the sun goes down and the night creeps on?" " I I yon lie I'll get my knife and kill yon!" shouted the excited man. His face was white as chalk, his eyes fairly blazed, and the truthful words of the strange visitor were knives in his heart. I'll slash your throat across !" he hissed, as he rose from the bed and started to cross the room. He made one step, baited, and then with a wild scream he sprang on the bed and crowded back close to the wall. "Snakes? Yes, they are here," re marked the boy; as he turned his head toward the other end of the room. " See them creep and twist ! Hear them snap and hiss 1 There'll be more along pres ently, aud it will be an awful sight to look down upon them ! But let me finish my story: The awful death of your children had no effect on you. The tears and prayers of your wife were un heeded. The entreaties and arguments of friends did not turn you oue hair's breadth from your downward career. The day came when you had nothing, and the day came when a fourth child wailed at your dreary hearthstone. Your wife was in rags, your cupbonrd bare, and through the broken panes the snow flakes of December softly crept to chill the poor child's soul ! Do you remem ber those days, Moses Williams ? Days when you even pawned the Bible from the house, and robbed your wife of her rags, that your beastly appetite might be gratified for the moment ! Look at me whilo I ask vou if you remember how that child died !" " Snakes ! More snakes !" whispered Mose, pointing into the darkness. "Yes, I see. How their eyes glitter in the darkness! How their tongues dart out and in like threads of fire ! But do you remember that awful night in midwinter when you slept on a tavern bench, leaving wife and child without food, fire or light? How the wind screamed and howled that night ! How the cold crept into the houses and mode people shiver in their warm beds ! What did you find when yon tumbled home next day not with food or fuel, but to beat and abuse" your patient wife aud go back to your hell again ? The child was dead, frozen to death, and your wife had but little life left. She had burned the straw in the bed to keep the icy hand of death away, and had then wrapped the babe in the tick. You murdered that babe, Moses Williams ! Ah ( your hands are red with blood the blood of the innocent, the suffering, the patient and kind 1" " I'll throttle you I'll tear you limb from limb !" howled Mose, as he sprang from the bid. The boy's great blue eyes looked into his with pitying expression. The drunk ard grasped at his throat, struck at his faoe, and screamed in wild rage as his hands touched nothing but thin air. A sharp hiss at his feet mode him cry out in terror, and as he sought refige on the bed again the boy went on : " Look around this room ! Bare walls, broken floors, torn paper, great spiders swinging from their webs in t1 e dark corners ! To this den your crippled, heartbroken wife followed you. Only one in a million would have thus clung to a fiend like you. All the kicks and blows and cruel words and suffering of a score of years had not been enough to harden her heart against you. In this dark and noisome den she hungered for food and felt afraid of the dark shadows. You crept down here timo after time and beat her with your fists, and cursed her, and sought to murder her. Do you re member her death, Moses Williams? Does it not come up to you bike letters of fire how you staggered down here one midnight and dragged her off her dying bed and left her on the floor 1 1 breathe her last ! Her last words were of her children and of you ! You have lived on, glad that she was dead, but now your hour has come I" " Great God I but see there !" hoarse ly whispered Big Mose as he pointed across the room. " I see them," calmly replied tlie boy. " They weave to and fro ! They crawl over each other ! Their eyes are growing brighter ! The serpents delight in suoli old dens as this 1 They hiss at the fat spiders crawling along the walls they doi t their red tongues at the strips of mouldy paper swaying in the night wind." " I see devils !" shrieked the man as be hid his face ia bis bands. "Yes, they have come. They nre the friends of the serpents. Both have followed you for fifteen long years, knowing that they would find you in such a place as this at last. Do you see their eyes dance with delight as they come nearer? Do you see them wave their bony . arms above their heads, as they long to grasp you?" "Keep them away don't let them clutch me !" screamed Big Mose as he drew the ragged quilt over his head and nestled in the musty straw. " It is terrible to die this way," mused the strange boy as he looked around him "The angels would hesitate to come into such a place to bear away the soul of an innocent babe. But this is your end. You have murdered wife and children ; you have turned the hap piness of life into gloom of midnight. You have been a curse to the world when you might have been followed to the grave by tears of sorrow that a good man had passed from earth forever. More devils are trooping in to gloat over your miserable death more ser pents are- writhing across the floor to utter their hisses in your ear 1" Big Mose flung the quilt away and sat up and looked around him. Such terror such awful horror never came to human face before. The white froth gathered on his lips his eyes glared and as a writhing, hissing snake raised its head above the bed the man spratig to the floor with the scream of a wild beast and dashed up the broken stairs. The river was only a few hundred feet away. Down the wet and deserted street a shadow swiftly passed, halted for a moment on the dark wharf, and then a wild scream and a heavy splash startled the watchman on a lone vessel anchored near by. The echo of the wild shriek floated back to the strange boy in the basement. He waved his hand, and the serpents glided away. He rose up, and the gob lins hurried over the broken floors and were lost to sight. "It is the end," whispered the boy, and the candle flickered, blazed up for an instant, and then midnight darkness swept into the old den and hushed every sound embraced everything in its ghost ly clutch. Detroit Free Press. Curious Facts. It is a very singular fact that the shark is always preceded by a pilot fish, which actnally performs the part his name in dicates. This is a well-established fact, tested again and again by sea capwins. These fish attend the shark everywhere and carefully direct his motions. An artesian well in Ventura county, Cal., spouts up fish. In a meeting of the San Francisco Academy of Sciences, specimens of the fish, supposed to be trout, were presented. The well was bored in 1871, and every year since has thrown out immense quantities of freshly spawned fish in April and May. In the course of his rescarchas into the habits of insects, it was found by Lubbock that an ant, which has a large number of larvfc to cany from one place to another, goes and fetches several other ants to help in the work, while, if there are only a small number of larva, but a few helpers are called. Recent excavations at Big Boone county, Ky., have brought to light au immense number of animal remains. Among them are immense teeth, tusks, jaws with teeth in them, ribs, spinal col umns in fact there are bones from nearly every part of the mastodon, be sides many that nre not like any ever before found at that place. The Banyan tree of India is sometimes found to spread out as to show with one parent trunk three hundred and fifty stems descending, and again taking root in the ground, each stem equalling a large oak tree, while there are thousands of smallar ones. This tree is bo expand ed as to form a small forest of itself, wherein 7,000 persons could stand. Kentucky's claim to the title " dark and bloody ground " is attested by the numerous fortifications and warlike imple ments to be found on her soil. Cast-metal balls, from the size of a walnut to four and six-pounders, have frequently been unearthed, and under such circumstances as to indicate that they were used by a civilization long anteiior to our own. The sea mouse is one of the prettiest creatures that lives under water. It sparkles like a diamond and is radiant with all the colors of the rainbow, al though it lives in the mud at the bottom of the ocean. It should not be called a mouse, for it is larger than a big rat. It is covered with scales that move up and down as it breathes, and glitter like gold shining through a fleecy down, from which fine, silky bristles wave, that con stantly change from one brilliant tint to another. Sum Weller's Engagement. "Now, in regard to the matter on which I, with the concurrence of these gentleman, sent for you," said Mr. Pick wick " i list's the pint, sir," interposed Sam : " out with it, as the father said to the i hild, ven he swallowed the far den -" " We want to know in the first place," said Mr. Pickwick, " whether you have any reason to be discontented with your present situation." " Afore I answers that 'ere question, gen'l'men." replied Mr. Weller, "I should like to know, in the first place, vether you're a-goig' to purwide me with a better." A sunbeam of benevolence played on Mr. Pickwick's features as he said r " I have made up my mind to engage you myself." "Have you, though?" inquired Sain. Mr. Pickwick nodded in the affirma tive. "Wages ?" said Sam. " Twelve pounds a year," replied Mr. Pickwick. " Clothes ?" "Two suits." "Work?" " To attend upon me ; and to travel around with me and these gentlemen bere." " Take the bill down," said Sam em phatically. "I'm let to a single gentle man, and the terms is agreed upou." " You accept the situation ?" inquired Mr. Pickwick. "Cerfnly." replied Sam. "If the clothes fits me half as well as the place, bey '11 do." Words of Wisdom. Duty cannot be plain in two diverging paths. Unreasonable haste is the direct road to error. Obly the astrologer and the empyrio never fail Poverty makes some bumble but more malignant. There is nothing more frightful than bustling ignorance. A tedious writer is one who nses many words to little purpose. All religion and all ethics are sum moned np in " Justice." The magic of the tongue is the most dangerous of all spells. Active natures are rarely melancholy. Activity nnd melancholy are incompati ble. Show a haughty man that you do not look up to him, and he will not feel that he can look down.upon you. The character of any particular people may be looked for with best success in their national works of talent. Talk of fame and romance all the glory and adventure in the world, are not worth one hour of domestic bliss. One can never by chance hear the rat tling of dice that it doesn't sound to him like the funeral bell of a whole family. An avaricious man is like a sandy desert, that sucks in all the rain, but yields no fruitful herbs to the inhabi tants. Value the friendship of him who stands by you in the storm ; swarms of insects will surround you in the sun shine. Amongst men of the world comfort merely signifies a great consideration for themselves, and a perfect indifference about others. Of governments, that of the mob is most sanguinary, that of soldiers the most expensive, and that of civilians the most vexatious. There is not oue among us that would not be worse than kings, if so continually corrupted as tney are wiin a son oi ver miu called flatterers. Nothing doth so fool a man as extreme passion. This doth make them fools which otherwise are not, and show them to be fools that are bo. There is nothing so ravishing to the proud and the great (with all their re sources for enjoyment) as to be thought nappy Dy wieir interiors. Education is a better safeguard of lib erty than a standing army. XI we re trench the wages of the schoolmaster we must raise those of the recruiting ser geant. A proper and judicious system of read' ing is of the highest importance. Two things are necessary in perusing the mental labors of others : namely, not to read too much, and to pay attention to the nature of what you do read. Many persons peruse books for the expressed aud avowed purpose of consuming time; and this ciass of readers forms by far the majority of what are termed the " reading public." Others, again, read with the laudable anxiety of being made wiser ; and when this object is not ot tained the disappointment may generally be attributed, either to the habit of read ing too much, or of paying insufficient attention to what falls upon their notice, The sweetest, the most clinging affec tion is often shaken by the slightest breath of unkind ness, as the delicate rings and tendrils of the vine agitated by the finest air that blows in summer. An unkind word from one beloved often draws blood from many a heart which would defy the battle-ax of hatred or the keenest edge of vindictive satire. Nay. the shade, the gloom of the face familiar and dear, awakens grief and pam. Those ore the little thorns which, though men of a rougher form may make their way through them without feeling much, ex tremely incommode persons of a more refined turn in their journey through life, and make their traveling irksome and unpleasant. Quaint Methods of Punishment. Mr. H. E. Scudder tells some quaint things in Harper's Magazine concern ing Mr. Gardner, the late master of the Boston Latin school. His modes of punishment were as various as the of fences. One class had behaved, as he thought, in a Billy, childish fashion. He sent out for some muslin and con fectionery, and drawing out the " house wife," which he kept in a drawer of his desk, made up little bags of candy. which he presented to each boy. One urchin in the first class, who had been tormented by his neighbor in recitation a teaming fellow finally lost his tem per as his hair was twitched rather hard er than before, and slapped his persecu tor's face. It was at that moment only that Mr. Gardner looked up. " There I there!" said he, "Let's have a publio exhibition. We must all see this per formance. Boys, go up on the plat form ;" and up they went to the great stage at the end of the room. " Now, W , you puU H 's hair," and the first offender enjoyed a second twitch. "AndH , you slap W 'a face," which was done, when the boys were allowed to come back, crimsoned with mortification. RevHccinatlon. The vexed question as to bow often vaccination is needful is again discussed by the London Lancet, the best English medical authority, which distinctly dep recates the frequent repetition of re vaccination as being useless and tend ing to unsettle the minds of people in regard to its preservative power. It states that revaccination, once sufficient ly performed at or after puberty, yeed never be repeated. The nurses and other servants of the London Small-pox Hospital, when they enter the service, are invariably submitted to vaccination, which in their case is generally revaccina tion, and is never afterward repeated ; and so perfect is the protection that, though the nurses live in the closest and most constant attendance on small. pox patients, and though also the other servants are in various ways exposed ti speciul chanoes of infection, the res-, dent surgeon of the hospital, during hi forty-one years of office there, has never known small-pox to affect any of these nurses or servants. FARM, UARDE3 AND HOUSEHOLD. A few Ninble Uinta. ; Thore are very many horses which are made to suffer unnecessarily, or for a prolonged period, through the want of knowledge or neglect of the owner. During the work season what numbers of farm horses do we see with galled shoulders, Vhich keep getting worse till the bod condition of the collar and sad dle galls makes it necessary to stop work until they heal If a horse has proper care, no galls will be made by collar or saddle. The horse must be well and regulaidy cleaned each day, and the careful farm baud will give an extra rubbing off, especially during warm weather, noon and night. Before commencing work the harness and collar should be mode to fit properly ; if it is found that the animal shows signs of becoming galled, bathe the affected parts two or three times a day, but not while the animal is hot from work. And right here we would say that we have found that bathing the : shoulders of work horses with water during the season of hard work, hardens the skin, and prevents any liability to become chafed or galled. Prevention is always preferable to cure. A galled back, on account of the saddle being more opt to chafe, is more difficult to remedy, espec ially in driving horses. When a driving horse gets a sore back under the carriage saddle, do not pad it heavily with rags, loosen up the bellybands, etc., expect ing a cure that way, as some do, but dis card the use of the saddle entirely till the animal is entirely well, which can be readily done by taking off the saddle, bringingthe back strap np to the top of the harness, where it is fastened. For '-'tugs" or straps to hold up the shafts, use small straps with loops in them for the ends of the shafts, fastening the opposite ends of the straps to the eyes in the harness through which the lines go. Put on a choke strap, use a surcingle for a belly band to keep the shafts from sliding up, and you have your rig complete. Wash the effected ports of the horse well every morning with a soft sponge and good castile sonp, after which apply a mix ture of suet, fresh lard, and lower of sulphifr until the sore heals. If the ani mals blood is impure which is readily seen by the condition or- appearance of the sores give a tablespoonful of the flower of sulphur about two or three doses in as many different days in a cut mess, taking oare to . prevent the horse from taking cold by driving fast and then neglecting to cover, for the sulphur effects a purification of the blood through the pores of the skin. For bruises and sprains on horses, the best and simplest remedy we have found is crude coal oil, just as it came from the well with a small quanity of oil of spike mixed with it. Vigorous rubbing should accompany the application. In regard to blistering and bleeding, we must enter a protest, for we have never yet found a necessity for doing either, and have seen evil results follow both practices. There may be necessi ties for both, though we have never found it with our horse stock. J). Z. Evans Jr. in Practical Farmer. Iteclpea. Corned Beef and Cabiiaoe. Select a good-sized piece of pretty fat aud tender corned beef (the rump is the best), wash it in hot water and pnt in a stew pan of adequate size with fresh water to. its height ; set to boil, skim thoroughly and cover; then simmer slowly for about two hours, according to size; remove the grei nest leaves; quarter aud core two cabbages, parboil five minutes, drain. add to the beef and simmer about an hour louger; drain and dith up the beef, drain also tho cabbage, arrange them around, and serve. PRESERVED CuRKANTS FOR TaKTS. Get your currants when they are dry, and pick them; to every pound and a quarter of currants put a pound of sugar iuto a preserving pan with as much juice of currants as will dissolve it; when it boils skim it. and nut in vour currants. and boil them till they are clear; put tuem into a jar, lay paper over, tie them uown, onu Keep mem in a ury piace. Mangoes. Take green muskmelons. and squash peppers before they become red; take out tiie seeds and put them in salt and water over night; then fill tliem with onions chopped fine, horseradish scraped fine, mustard seed and cloves; sew them up, and put them into vinegar, Tomato Figs. Take six pounds of sugar to one peck (or sixteen pounds) of the fruit; scald and remove the skin-f the fruit in the usual way; cook them over a nre, their own mice being sufficient with out the addition of water, until the sugar penetrates and they are clarified; they are then taken out, spread on dishes. flattened, and dried in the sun; a small quantity of the syrup should be occasion ally sprinkled over them while drying; after which, pack them down in boxes, treating each layer with powdered sugar; the Byrup is afterward concentrated and bottled -for use; they keep well lrom year to year, and retain surprisingly their flavor, which is nearly that of the best quality of fresh figs; the pear-shaped or single tomatoes answer the purpose best; ordinary brown sugar may be used, a large portion of which is retained in syrup. Waffles. One pound of butter melt ed in a quart of milk, and ten eggs beaten light; thicken the milk and butter with sifted flour, and add the eggs and a little salt; should be of consistency of pound cake batter; add enough yeast to make it rise, the quantity to be regulated by the quality of the yeast. Set it to rise in a warm place. To be eaten in the eveniug, the waffles should be mixed early in the morning in winter, and in summer at midday. ' A Miser's Present. A noted miser who felt obliged to make a present to a lady entered a crockery store for the purpose of making a purchase. Seeing a statuette broken into a dozen pieces, he asked the price, The salesman said it was worthless, but he could have it for the cost of packing in a box. He rent it to the lady with his card, congratulating himself ' that she would imagine that it had been ruined while on its way home. He dropped in to see the effect. The tradesman bod carefully wrapped each piece m a separate bit of paper. Faith it necessary to victory. THE DEATH OF CRAZY HORSE. How na Indian Chief lledBrenkln Through Bayonets nnd then Mortally Wounded with Ilia Own Knlfe-Hcenes Alter Dentil. A correspondent at the Bed Cloud Agency in Nebraska describes the cap ture and subsequent death of Crazy Horse, a redoubtable Sioux chief, at Camp Robinson. The correspondent w- .. . At Damp liobniBon, uoi. iiradiey, commanding the District of tho Black Hills, ordered the prisoners cmnfined in the post guard house, and Capt. Ken nington, the officer of the day, was charged with its execution. The inter preters seemed to anticipate trouble, and noticeably- absented themselves. Taking Crazy Horse by the hand, Capt. Jienmngton led nun unresistingly lrom the adjutant's office into the guard house, followed by Little Big Man, now become his chief's worBt enemy. The door of the prison room was reached in safety, when, discovering his fate in the barred grating of the high windows, the liberty loving savage suddenly planted his hands against the upright casing, and with great force thrust himself back among the guards, whose gleaming bayonets in stantly turned against him. With great dexterity he drew a concealed knife from the folds of his blanket, and snatched another from the bolt of Little Big Man, turning with them upon Capt. Kenning ton, who drew his sword and would have run him through but for another In dian, who interposed. Many of them were dismounted and were crowding around the guard house door, some protesting vehemently against his confinement, while others coolly insisted upon non-interference. Jrazv Horse had advanced recklessly throngh the presented steel, tho soldiers fearing to fire, and gainiug tho entrance, he made a leap to gain the open air. But he was grappled by Little Big Man. This Indian, as his name implies, is re markable both for his small stature and great strength; his double joints .would secure him distinction, as well as a com petence, in the arena. Crazy Horse, though powerful, was neid in a vise, until, freeing his right hand, he was ob served to thrust a long, keen blade into the musclar arm of his antagonist, who, avoiding the full force of the blow by a backward movement, reversed the hands which contained the dangerous weapon, and once more grasping Crazy Horse as he made a second leap for his freedom, the point accidentally pierced the quiv ering groin of the chief, who sank in a doubled-np posture upon the ground outside the door. Instantly every Indian present--and about fifty had gathered near was ob served to load aud cock his carbine; and the silence that ensued was broken only by the dark figure writhing in agony on the gravelled earth, uutil an old Indian, Crazy Horse's father, snddenly leaped from his pony, and with bow aud arrow in one hand, aud a cocked revolver in the other, advanced upon Capt. Ken nington. He was instantly burled upon his back and disarmed by the friendly Sioux, Reassured by this, the officers and guard approached Crazy Horse to convey him to tho guard room, this time for medical attendance; but again their movement was arrested by the click of cocking carbines. What could they do ? No interpreter was present, aud they did not know friend from foe. In this emer gency the Indiaus themselves motioned to the open adjutant's office they had just quit as a compromise between their contending parties, and iuto this room they were permitted to carry the pros trate chief. Some of them subsequently desired to convey him to au adjoining village, but this request Col. Bradley re fused to grant; and with the exception of a guard of enlisted Indians, Touch-the-Cloud, and Crazy Horse, Sr., the crowd dispersed. Until now it had been feared that the wily chief was only " possuming," but when his wound had beeu examined and dressed, Dr. Maegillycuddy, the assistant post surgeon, pronounced it fat:il. Touch-the-clond, the old father of the dying chief, aud several officers remained until the end, which approached slowly and painlessly under hypodermic injec tions of opium or morphine. He never rallied, and only once spoke, indistinctly about bayonets. At about three in the morning, Crazy Horse's mother, a withered old hag, who was not yet aware of his death, was challenged by the outposts and admitted to the room. Her outbursts of grief, in which she was joined by her husband, seemed uncontrollable. They tore their gray hair, and shrieked so as to alarm the garrison. Finally they became quieter, and settled in a crooning manner on their knees, bending over and caress ing the prostrate and lifelesi form, both chanting, in an indescribably weird man ner, the now famous Sioux death song. The deep guttural of the one blended wildly with the shrill treble of the other, and both wero cracked by age. No one who witnessed or beard the old couple in their savage devotion can forget the sad scene, or their strangely impressive and mournful dirge. Touch-the-Cloud several times grunted : " Washte 1' " Good !" And once, pointing to the corpse, be said: "That is'ouly the tipi (lodge); the rest bos gone to the Great Spirit in the happy bunting grounds 1" A Chapter of Horrors. The following incidents of one day's life in Baltimore, were telegraphed to the New York Herald one Suuday: An extraordinarv chauter of horrors occurred here to-day and to-night. William Herman blew his brains out on the street. Joseph McCarthv. a boy. was disem- bowled by a street car, and died .in ten minutes. Frank Beatty, a blind convict, who was serving out a ten years' sentence for attempted murder of Fanny Cole with a hatchet, attempted to murder a fellow- convict in the penitentiary and then cut his own throat, tie will probably aie. An unknown man was beheaded by a train on the Northern Central railway near the city. George It. Dumbleton fell from a third story window and was found a corpse. A boy bad bis skull fractured by a kick lrom a noise, and win aie. At midnight a man attacked another violently.and while handling a pistol ao cidentauy snot a child. -;Itcms of Interest. Indians are not at' all contagious. They are very difficult to catch. It is not supposed that the crop of Centennial anniversaries will be spoiled by the early frosts. ' The annual product of all the cotton making establishments in this country is valued at nearly 82,000,000. There is man somewhere whose mem ory in so short that it only reaches to his knees, therefore be never pays for his boots. Sharks won't bite a swimmer who keeps his legs in motion. If you con keep kicking longer than a shark can keep waiting, you'll be all right. The squirrels ore so numerous ond destructive in some portions of Kentucky that the farmers are Offering a premium for scalps. Some hunters kill fifty squir rels a day. Of the 1,835,000,000 acres of land which constitute the States and Territories of this country, 1,154,000,000 acres ore yet to be explored and surveyed. This work is progressing at the rate of 26,000,000 annually. That boy that took a hornet's nest, and undertook to carry it home, think ing he had a bag of treasures, lost the bag on his way, but succeeded in getting the hornets to accompany him to his destination. 'Do you ploy the piano?" he asked her. "I play that I play sometimes," she answered " but when I play I am not playing, then I play better than I play when playing. When I play play it is sorry playing, and sorry playing is a contradiction, so 1 do not play at an. A St. Louis policeman who was at tempting to arrest a man for cruelty to his mule, incautiously came in the rear of tho ill-treated animal, and the ungrate ful brute, with characteristic prompt ness, struck out from behind with his feet, and so disabled the policeman that he will be conhued to his house for a month. Three English women recently distin guished themselves in the Forest of Dean. They attacked a grocer. One of them brushed him down with a tar brush; another poured down his back the contents of a pot of tar, and the third bound him up to his neck with tarred cloth. The grocer complained and the women wero fined. In Louisiana county, Virginia, last week, a Miss Knuckles died after a painful illness. Her sister come into the room where tho body was lying and threw herself upon the bed in a paroxysm of grief, and, as wos supposed at the time, fainted. When her friends made on effort to revive her it was found that she was dead. RED CHEF.K8. Oh lovelier than the light that hreaks At morn, o'er Caahraero'seairy lake, Is the ooft hue that shames tho roses, And on my lady's cheokropopcs. That winey tint goon leaves the rose ; But on her cheek perpetual glows, Love's fiery shade. Fair little syren, She would bewitch tho heart of liyron. Upon her pearly cheeks, divine, The soul of Beauty o'er does shine, Because all silly joys forsaking, Bhe stays at homo and docs the baking. Joseph Dumond murdered a woman and two children in Merced county, Cul., and a reward of 500 was offered for his delivery to the authorities, "dead or alive." Two white men and two Indians started in pursuit. The fugitive was tracked to his hiding place, where he had made breastworks of logs. The pursners advanced incautiously, r.ud Dumond killed the Indians and one of the whites with his rifle, but he fell mortally wounded, and his body was corried away by the only survivor of the contest in order to secure the reward. Rainy Days. "Saints have been calm whon stretched upon the rack, And Montezuma smiled on burning coals ; But never did housewife notable Greet with a smile a rainy wattling day !" Nor could she ever be reconciled to the thought that this world was not made to hang clothes lines on, and that the wind " which whistleth about contiuu- . ally " is no respecter of wet linen. One rainy day nurses more amiability than half a dozen dry ones. It makes the folly of ill-humor so manifest. There is no use trying to " fret or spleen " against a rainy day, for the sky relents no more than a cope of lead, and its watery issues rather thicken than fall. A dull spectacle ! And yet it has ad vantages. Was it of ' a gadding, sun shiny day, think yon, when the world aud his wife were abroad, und all crea tures parted, that Homer " Heard tho Iliad and the Odyssey Itise to the swelling of the voicef ul sea V" No ! surely not. It is to rainy days that we owe the conception of most good and great thinkings, sayiugs and doings a day that solicits not or tickles the sense, plays no fantastic tricks with sun beams, but stands over you with the vast, gray, motionless, thought-molded aspect of au Egyptian sphinx. hat a foster-mother of studious thought 1 Give me a rainy day for close and con tinuous thought, and a rainy day for one of those quiet, almost uncouscionnble naps, when the "patter-patter" of tho " rain on the roof lures you iuto sweet. lovely dreamland, far from the busy world with its flurry ond sunshine. Scrap Book. Business on the Brain. The Virgiuia (Nev.) Chronicle is responsible for this story : Last night the wife of Justice Moses was aroused from a sound sleep by a stern voice : Are you ready for trial, 1 say ? ' " Hush ! Don't make a noise, or else you'll wake the baby," she replied, en deavoring to soothe him. " Don t talk back to this court." be vociferated. "If you've got any wit nesses, bring 'em on, but let your lawyer ao tne taming. " Why, Tom, bow you do take on ! What is the matter t" " I send you np for sixty days that's what the matter. Here, Enders, take her away. Now I'm ready for that petty larceny case. Bring up the prisoner." And, jumping out of bed, he started toward the next room to summon a jury, but fell over a rocking chair, barked his shins, woke up, and asked bis wife what was the matter, anyhow.