; " ; fit il I I HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL PESPERANDTJM. - Two Dollars per Annum. v YOL. VII. BIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1877. NoTil. v ft ft J 1: The Former's Sceptre. BY JOEL BENTON A giantess, when pagan folk Held all the world In sway, , Looked from a hill one sunny morn Acios the fields of May. The song of birds was in the air The winds with balm were sweet Her daughter, rosy-cheeked and fair, Was playing at her feet. Boon runs with glee the little one From slope to slope away ; She holds the summor In her arms, - The streams and fields of May. The child could step from hill to vale, And as she wildly ran She saw beneath her towering stride The busy husbandman. His oxen, plow, and him she took Within her apron's space, And, baxtenlng with the portent queer, She sought her mother's face. " Oh mother ! thou hast told me much I did not understand, Now tell me what this beetle is Which wriggles through the sand." " O, child," the giautess replied, " Go, put it back again ( These are the stern forerunners of The patient race of men. " In other realms, my little one, Our home henceforth must stand, For these who come in lit' lenews Have come to rule the land." A Scandinavian legend. How tie Weathercoct fas Oilei. " I'm game to do it," says Billy John son, " any time you like." "Not yon," Bays Joey Ranee. "It ain't in yon." Ain't it?" Krt- a Billv. And ns ho spoke lie took a pull at his strap, aud Parson says "My good man I couldn't think of allowing it." You see, this is how it was. We'd got a 'weathercock a-top of our church spire tit High Bcechy; and it was a cock in real earnest, just like the great Dorking in Farmer Granger's yard ; only the one on the spire was gilt, and shone in the enn quite beautiful. There was another difference, though. Fanner Granger's Dorking used to crow in the morn, and sometimes on a moon light night; but the gilt one a-top of the Bteeple, after going on swinging round, and round, to show quifctly which win the wind blew, took it into its bend to stick fast in cnlin went her, while in a rough wind oh, lor' a' mercy I the way it would screech and groan was enough to alarm the neighborhood, and alarm the neighborhood it did. . I wouldn't believe an it was the weathercock at firnt, but quite took to old Mother Bonnett's notion as it was signs of the times, and a kind of warn ing to Zligh Beechy of something terri blo to come to pass. But, there, when you stood aud saw it turning slowly round in the broad day light, and heard it squeal, why, you couldn't help yourself, but were bonud to believe. Just about that time a chap as called himself Steeple Jack not the real Steeple Jack, you know, but an impostor sort of fellow, who, we heard afterwards, had been going about and getting sover cigns to climb the spires, and oil the weathercock, aud do a bit of repairs, and then going off without doing anything at all well; this fellow came to High Beechy, and saw Parson, and offered to go up, clean and sorape the weathercock oil it and all, without scaffolding, for a five pound note. Parson said it was too much, nud con sulted churchwarden Bound, who said "ditto," and so Steeplejack did not get the job even when he had come down to three pound, and then to a sovereign ; for, bless yon, we were too sharp for him at High Beechy, and suspected that all he wanted was the money, when, you know, we couldn't have made him go up, it being a risky job. The weather cock went on squeaking then awfully, till one afternoon when we were out ou the green with the crick eting tackle for practice, Parson being with us, for we were going to play 11 mi boro' Town next week, aud Parson v;s our best bowler. He was a thorough gentleniau was Parson, and ho used to say he loved a i gumc ul ujiciLi tin jliui'u eta ever, uiui an to making ono of our eleven, he used to do that, ho said, because he was then sure no one would swear, or take more than was good for him. Speaking of our lot, I'm sure it made us all respect Parsou the more ; nul I tell you one thing it did beside, it seemed to make him our friend to go to in all kinds of trouble, and what's more, it fetched all our lot in the cricket club to church, when I'm afraid if it hadn't been out of respect to Parson, we should have stopped away. Why, you may laugh at mo, but we all of us loved our Parson, and he could turn us all this way or that way with his little finger. Well, we were out on the green, as I said, and the talk turned about oiling the weather cook, and about how we'd beard as Steeple Jack, as he called him self, had undertaken to do Upper thorpe steeple, as is thirty feet lower than ours, and had got the money aud gone off. "I thought he was a rogue," said Billy Johnston. " He looked like it ; drink ing sort of fellow. Tell you what, I'm game to do it any time you like. "Not you," said Joey Ranee. "It ain't in you." " Ain't it." says Billy, tightening his belt, and then " My good mau ." says Parsou. " I couldn't think of allowing it." You see, ours was a splendid spire, standing altogether a hundred and seventy feet six inches high; and as it says in the old history, was a landmark and a beacon to the couutry for miles round. There was a square tower seventy feet high, and out of this sprang tiie spire, tapering up a hundred feet, and certainly fine of the finest jij tl) country, "Oh, I'd let him go, sir," said Joey; " he can climb like a squirrel." " Or a tom-cat," says another. "More like a monkey," says Sam Rowley, our wicket-keeper. " Never mind whit I can climb like," says Billy. " I'm game to do it; so here goes." "But if you do get up," said Parson, "yon will want tools to take off and oil the weather oock, and yon can't carry them." Just then a message oame from the rectory that Parson was wanted, and went away in a hurry; and no sooner had he gone than there was no end of chaff about Billy, which ended in his pulling up his belt another hole, and saying: "I'm going." " And what are you going to do when you get up there ? ' " Nothing," he says, " but tie the rope up to the top of the spire, and leave it for some of you clever chaps to do." " What rope shall you use," I said. "The new well rope," says Billy. " Its over two hundred feet long." Cricketing was set aside for that day, for Joey Ranee went off and got the rope, coming back with it coiled over his arm, throwing it down before Billy in a defiant sort of way, as much as to say " There, now, let's see you do it." Without a word, Billy picked up the coil of rope oud went m at the belfry door, to come out soon after on the top of the tower, and then, with one end of the rope made into a loop and thrown over his shoulders, ho went to oue edge of the eight-sided spire and began to climb up from crochet to crochet, which were about a yard apart, and look ing like so many ornamental knobs sticking out from the spire. We gave him a cheer as he bean to go up, and then sat on the grass wonder ing like to see how active and clever the fellow was us he went up yard after yard, climbing rapidly, aud seeming as if he'd soon be at the top. The whole of the village turned out in a state of excitement, aud we had hard work to keep two brave fellows from going up to try at other corners of the spire. "He'll do it he'll do it 1" was the cry over and over again. And it seemed as if he would, for he went on rapidly till he was within some thirty feet of the top ; when all of a sudden he seemed to lose his hold, and come sliding rapidly down between two rows of erockets faster and faster, till he disappeared behind the parapet of the tower. We held our breath, one and all, as we saw him fall, and a cold chill of hor ror came upon ns. It was not until he had reached the top of the tower that we roused ourselves to run to the belfry door and began to go up the spiral staircase to get the poor fellow, whom we expected to find half dead. " Hallo I" cried Billy's voice, as we got half-way down the cork-screw. "I'm coming down." " Ain't you hurt, then ?" cried Joey Ranee. " No, not much," said Billy, as we reached him by one of the loop-holes in the stone widl." " Got some skin oil and a bitbruised." " Why, we thought you were half killed," we said. " Not I," he replied gruffly; "the rope caught over one of the crockets, audtha1; broke my fall." " Going to try again ?" said Joey, with a sneer. "No, I ain't going to try agaiu, neither," said Bill, gruffly. " I left the rope up at the top there, thinking you were so clever you'd like to go." "Oh, I could doit if I liked," said Joey. " Only you daren't," said Bill, rub bing his elbows, and putting his lips to his bleeding knuckles. " Daren't I ?" said Joey. And without another word he pushed by Billy, and went on steadily up toward the top of the tower. "Ihopehe'Jl like it,"saidBilly, chuck ling. "It ain't so easy as bethinks. Let's go down. I'm a good bit shook." Poor fellow, he looked rather white as he got down, and to our surprise on looking up on hearings cheer, there was Joey hard at work with the rope over his shoulder, climbing awoy, the lads cheering him again aud agaiu as he climbed higher and higher, till he at last reached the great copper support of the weathercock, aud then, he clung there motionless for a few minutes, and we began to think he had lost his nerve and was afraid to move. But that wasn't it he was only gath ering breath ; and we gave a cheer in which Billy Johnson heartily joined ; as np there looking as small as a crow, the plucky fellow gave the weathercock a spin round afterwards holding on by his legs, clasped round the copper support, while he took the rope from his shoul ders, undid the loop, and then tied it securely to the great strong support. All this time be had had his straw hat on ; and now, taking it off, he gave it a skim away from him ; and away it went, right out into space, to fall at last far irom the loot of the tower. Joey now began to come down very slowly and carefully, as if the coming down was worse than the going up, and more than once he slipped ; but he had a tight hold of the rope with one hand and that saved him, so that he only rested, and then continued to come down. You seo the spire sloped so that he did not hang away from it, but against the stone sides ; and so we went on watching him till he was about half way down, when he stopped to rest, and, pulling up the rope a bit as he held on to the rope, so as to rest his legs. We gave him another cheer.and so did Parson, who just then came np, when Joey waved his hand. As he did this, something occurred which took away my breath ; for, poor i-- . i . ,. i . . . ienow, no BBciut-u w sup, ana, Deiore he could utter a cry, he turned over and hung head downward, falling, with his leg slipping through the loop, till his foot caught, and he hung by it, fighting hard for a few moments to get back, but in vain ; aud as we watched him his strug gles grew weaker, bo that be did not turn himself up so fur in trying to reach the loop where his ankle was caught ; and at last he hung there, swinging gently to and fro, only moving his hands. By this time Parson, I, and two more had got to the belfry door, and we ran panting up the dark staircase till we got upon the leads. " Hold on, Joey," I shouted. " I'm coming." " Make haste," he cried back. " I'm about done." By this time I was about ten feet up, aud climbing as hard as I could, for getting all the danger in the excitement; for I don't think I should have dared to go up on another occasion. " Look sharp," said poor Joey. " It seems as if ali my blood was rushing into my head." I leaned over and got hold of the rope close to his ankle, but do anything more I could not. I had all the will in the world to help the poor fellow, but it took all my strength to keep myself from falling, aud as to raising my old com panion, I neither had the strength nor the idea as to how it could be doue. The only way out of the difficulty seemed to be to take out my knife and cut the rope and thcu the poor fellow would be killed. "Come down 1" cried a voice below me. And looking toward the leads, there was Parson stripped to the shirt and trowsers, and with a coil of rope over his shoulder for the new well rope had proved to be long enough to let him cut off some five and thirty feet. " Don't leave me," groaned Joey, who was half fainting. " I feel as if I should fall any minute. I say, lad, this is very awful' "Here is Parson coming up," I said. And so it was, for he went to the row of crochets on the other side of Joey, who now hung looking blue in the face, and with his eyes closed. " Ho must make haste make haste," he moaned softly. I stopped holding on, while Parson climbed up quicker than either of us had done it, drawing himself up by his arms iu a wonderful way until he was abreast of us two me holding on and Joey hanging on by one foot. As soon as Parson reached us, he said a few words of encouragement to Joey who did not s.iy a word, and then climb ing 'higher, tied the short rope he car ried, to the long rope just above the loop knot which held Joey's ankle. Then, coming down a little, he tied his rope tightly around Joey just under the arm pits. " That will bear yon, my lad. But catch fast hold of it with your hands, while I cut your foot free." Climbing up higher once more, he pull ed out his knife, opened it with bis teeth, and then began to saw through strands of the loops that held Joey's aukle, until there was a snap, a jerk, and a heavy swinging to and fro, for the poor fellow had fallen two or three feet, and was now hanging by the rope round his breast, right way upwards. He did not make any effort for a few minutes, as cheer after cheer eame to ns from below, he swung there, with us holding ou for dear life. " Can you climb down now, Ranee," said Parson, " if I cut you free ?" " No, sir," ho said hoarsely. " I've no use iu my arms or loga they're all pins and needles." "Then we must lower you down," said Parson, calmly. And getting hold of the long piece of rope, he climbed up once more, as coolly as if ho was on an apple tree iu his own orchard, aud saw that the knots were fast; then, coming down, he passed the long rope through the one round Joey's breast, and tied it again round him. " Now," he said, " Fincher and I will hold ou by this rope, you can let him work it over his head," and then, with Parson striding across from the crochets at one angle to those on the other, and me holding on the rope as well, we let him down sliding, with his back to the stone till his feet touched the leads, when he fell down all of a heap. " Untie the rope," said Parson, "aud get him down." He spoke very hoarsely, shouting to them below; and a cheer came up. " Now, Fincher," said Parson, "we've got to get down." As he spoke, he made a running nxse iu the rope with the end he held in his hand, let it run up to the big noose, and pulled it tight. Then he mode an effort to get his legs together on one angle; bat the distance he had been bending was too great, and he couldn't recover himself, swung away by his hands. "I can't help it, Fincher I must go first" he cried. And he was already sliding down the rope as he spoke; but I was so unnerved and giddy now that I dared not look down. I believe I quite lost my head then for .a few moments; for I was clinging there for life a hundred and twenty feet above the ground, aud the wind seemed to be trying to push me from my hold. I was brought to myself, though, just as the landscape about me seemed to be spinning round, by feeling the rope touch my side; aud I clasped it convul sively with both bauds, and then, wind ing my legs round it, slid rapidly dowu. the rope seeming to turn to fire as it passed through my bands. A few moments later, and I was safe on the tower leads, trying like the rest to smile at the danger we bad passed through : but it was a faint, sickly kind of a smile, and we were all very glad to get down to the green, aud cared nothing for the cheers of the peo ple. The rope was left hanging there, and stayed till it rotted away ; but somehow before a week was out that weather cock stopped squeaking, as if some one had been up to oil it, and, though noth ing was said about it, I've always felt as sure that Parson weut up himself and did it early one morning before any one was up. He was cool-headed enough to do it, for ha nertainlv saved Joe Ranee 8 lile, snd I know no one in the village would have done it without bragging after. At all events, the weatheroook was oiled, and as I said over and over again to Joeyt "If Parson didn't oil flint Weathercock, who did j TAMING WILD AKISIALS. How I.lona anil Tlarcin are Tamed-The Mecrets of a Dangerous Profession. A New York Herald reporter has in terviewed a tamer of wild animals with the following interesting result; Ac cording to the best beast trainers, no wild beast can ever be trusted, not even the so-called "noble" lion. They are all treacherous, the females generally being more deceitful and dangerous than the males. The lioness is more difficult to manage than the lion, the tigress than the tiger. Kindness that is anything but ordinary kindness or M civility " is absolutely thrown away upon a wild beast. It has occasionally some little effect upon a lion, but really very sel dom, the lion being really a surly and treacherous brute, all lion stories and talk to the contrary notwithstanding. But with a tiger, and especially a ti gress, all affection is literally wasted. A tigress is as likely to eat you up after six years of attention on her as after six days, if she only fancies she is safe in so doing. In all professional intercourse with wild animals you must depend on fear only absolute fear, i Let the beasts know that you can and will beat them when they deserve it and they will not hurt you. Never trust them for a moment. Keep your eye on them all the time not that your eye alone will have any effect upon them. All these stories in books about "eyeing animals "into submission and the power of the human eye over the brute creation are sheer fabrications. An I as a rule the whip is the most effi cacious of instruments iu trainiug or subduing a wild beast. It can be used quickly and at once, and it hurts every time. So the beasts learn to dread it even more than a gun more than any thing save a red hot bar of iron or a fire. " I depend more on my whip when I go iu among my tigers," Baid the reporter's informant, "than upon .myself. If I were to drop my whip the beas'-s would fancy I had lost all my power, and would pounce first npon the whip, then upon me. I would consider the drop ping of my whip while in the cage with my animals as almost a fatal calamity. '" To train a wild animal," said Mr. Still, "you must first make his or her ncquitintance from the. outside, doing chores around the cage and getting the animals acquainted with your face and, above all, with your voice. They re member voices more acutely than they do faces; they are governed more by sound than by sight. Once I had a beast in my cage that had not seen me in my red suit that I wear when per forming. When I entered with it on the brnte did not recognize me .and would undoubtedly have Bpmng on me aud torn me to pieces had I uot shouted to her in. my ordinary tone of voice. She remembered me at once and slunk down submissive. "The trainer feeds his beast and gives them water. These acts give him no hold ou their gratitude, but they serve to render his face, form and voice familiar. They serve as an introduction to tiger society. , But you must always watch your beasts well, whether outside or inside the cage. In fact, I think," said Mr. Still, " that you are most iu danger when on the' outside. You do not realize their proximity and they do not realize yours they have not quite the same fear of your whip when separ ated from you by the bars, and so they are ready to go tor you at any moment. The four tigresses here at the circus have bitten repeatedly people who came too near their cages. Une young man, doing chores around the cage not long ago, was seized by the hair of the head by one ot the beasts and nearly scalped. Another had his arm broken bv a wrench. Having got accustomed to your beasts and your beasts acoustomed to you, your next step is to train them to do their tricks. These tricks are very simple, but they require a good deal ot time and a good deal of whipping to ac complish. " The lions are the smartest of the wild beasts. You can train a lion to do the ordinary tricks iu trade jumping through hoops and over gates, standing on hind legs, and so on in about five weeks' constant work. In this time-table of wild beasts you can estimate that it would take a lioness about a week longer, and a leopard, which comes next in intelligence to a lion, about six weeks to learn the same feats. The tiger would take about seven or eight weeks, a tigress about eight or nine weeks. while you can keen on beating and teaching a hyena for about four months betore yon con do much with him. " The most difficult feat of all to teach a wild beast is to teach him how to let vou lie ou him without his eatinsr von. I do this every night with one of the ti gresses, but she don t like it a bit, though she keeps quiet enough, for it aggravates her inwardly. "The great secret of tiger taming and all wild beast taming," continued the ti ger tamer, "lies in the whipping of the animals knowing just when to whip them and inst how much. You must keep them well whipped, but if you whip them either too little or too much, or whip them without cause, it may be fatal. As for positively taming a wild beast you can t do it especially a tiger. One or two men may have more or less influence over an animal, but no one is absolutely safe with them, and no wild beast was ever absolutely tamed. Food makes but little difference with any wild beast as to its natural ferocity, and with a tiger it makes none at all My ani mals would tear a man limb from limb after a full meal just for the fun of the thing. On the other bond I would lust as lief enter their cage before a meal as after it; in fact, I do enter it to perform just betore feeding time in the afternoon, Once I was obliged to keep them with out food for four days, crossing from England to France, and yet I performed them before I fed, them on the fourth day. On Sunday we do not feed the ti gresses at all. so as to keen them from sour stomach aud indigestion; yet on Monday before feeding time I perform them. The mere amount of food has very little to do with their behavior, Thirst excites them more than huncei- Each of my tigers drinks about a pail of water a day and consumes about ten pounds of meat." "There is this difference between a tiger and. a lion," soul our euoyolop4ia of wild beast lore. "A Hon will tear you out of spite and temper occasionally, but a tiger attacks you only for sheer love of blood. A tiger's olawB, too, are even sharper than a lion s. The leo- Eard's claws are less sharp, while a yena's foot is like a dog's, clawless, the hyena's strong point being, like a scold ing woman's, in the jaw." Having now pretty well exhausted the subject of wild beast taming and train ing a concluding word may here be said as to the pay of the professional wild beast tamers. This is much smaller than is generally supposed, ranging from $160. to $100 a month. Consider ing the risks of life and limb these men doily take and the fact that there are not fifty of them altogether in the world, this would seem scanty compensation. But the men themselves seem satisfied, and there appears to be a wild bizarre fascinatiou about this wild beast life, which, like the love of ait in a fine artist, is its own, even if it is often, its only reward. BUFFALO PEMMICAX. How Hie Indians Manufacture Ill's Article or Food. A correspondent of the Chicago Times, writing from Winnipeg, thus describes the manufacture of pemmican by the half breed hunters of Manitoba : Buffalo pemmican is essentially a British American provision; for, not withstanding the vast annual slaughter of the herds in the United States terri tories, no pemmican is made. The ar ticle furnished the English Arctic ex peditions under the name of pemmican, differs from the true provision in being made of beef, and preserved by means of spices and salt. JiuHalo pemmican con tains no salt, and is mode from the dried flesh of the animal. It is the product of the summer hunt, though a consider able amount is bIbo made iu the early part of the fall hunt, before the cold is sufficient to keep the green meat from tainting. To manulacturo it, the meat is nrst cut into thin slices, then dried either by hro or iu the sun, alter which it is pounded or beaten out into a thick, flaky substance by means of wooden flails and poles. In this state it is placed in a bag made from the raw hide of the animal, about the size and shape of a half-barrel flour sack. A quantity of Buffalo fat or tallow having been boiled iu a caldron, is now poured while hot over the dry pulp in the bag, and the whole stirred together until thoroughly mixed. The quantity of .fat going into the bag about equals in weight that of the pulp, generally fifty pounds, the bags averag ing one hundred pounds each. When a particularly nice article is desired about ten pounds of sugar and June or service berries are added. As soon as the con tents of the bag cools it becomes very hard, the whole composition forming the most solid description of food that man can make. The bag is then sewed up and laid in store, or ready for immediate use. It is calculated that, on an average, the carcass of one buffalo in fair condi tion will yield enough fat and dried meat to fill one bag with pemmican. As a traveling provision it is simply in valuable. There is no risk of spoiling it, if ordinary care be taken to keep it free from mould; there is no assignable limit to the time pemmican will keep. As to its taste, I never met any two men who entertained exactly the same opin ion. I should feel inclined to say, if asked the question, that it tasted like pemmican, there being nothing else in the world that bears to it the slightest resemblance. There have been people who were candid enough to say they found a resemblanco in sawdust mixed with melted tallow candles, others, again, who suggested the close approxi mation of chips and boarding house but ter, with plenty of hair thrown in to hold the compound firm. I am willing to acknowledge that much of the pem mican made would be the better of a comb, but after years of experience in the use of it, i am not able to pronounce upon i!s flavor. Nevertheless, there is no iorin ot food that possesses anything like its sufficing quality. A dog that will eat from four to six pounds of fish per day, when at work in harness, will eat but two pounds of pemmican if fed only upou that food. Pemmican may be prepared iu many ways for the table, but it is a matter of individual taste as to which method is the least objection able. There is rubaboo and richot, and pemmican plain and pemmican raw tins last being the form most in vogue among the voyayeura. The richot, how. ever, will be found the most palatable. Mixed with a little flour or potatoes and onions, aud fried in a pan, pemmican in this form cau be eaten ; that is, provided the appetite is good and there is nothing else to be had. A Corset Liver." The Cincinnati Commercial says Some medical students in one of the col leges of this city, dissecting a female subject a few days ago, found what is called in doctors' parlance a "corset liver." When tight lacing has been practiced through several years, a per. manent dent or hollow is produced in the liver, which may be seen very plainly after the woman is dead and her Liver dissected out. This kind of liver ocenrs so frequently in women that physicians nave given it the name of " corset liver. Iu the subject mentioned the hollow in the liver was large enough for the wrist of a grown man to be laid in it. Youner ladies who don't want their Livers put into the newspapers and made an awful example of after they are dead, would better take warning. He Didn't Know the Difference. " See here, Parker, what's the differ ence between a ripe watermelon and rotten cabbage ?" asked one letter carrier of another the other day. " You've got me there. I don't know," he returned with a look more puzzled than an illiterate man at a cross roads guide-board. " Then you'd bf a mighty nice man to send after- a watermolon, you would," remarked the quizzer as he moved on. Cincinnati Jireakfast Table. " Call me pet names something typi oui oi swoei sounds, ne murmured, un sl) said he was a gay lute, FARM, (JAR DEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Recipe. A Good Plain Pie Crust. Sift one quart of flour into a bowl ; chop into the flour (using a chopping-knife) one-half pound of good firm lard ; chop until very fine ; pour in enough ice-water to make a stiff dough, and work it with your hands ; flour your hands ; work your dough into shape ; handle it quick ly and as little as possible ; flour your pastry-board, and roll out your dough very thin ; always roll from you ; have ready one-half pound of good butter that has been washed in two or three cold waters to rid it of salt ; spread the dough with butter; fold it up, then roll it out thin again ; spread again with butter ; fold again, and repeat the operation until the butter is all UBed up. To Roast Coffee. If you desire to have extra fine flavored coffee, buy the green coffee pure Java. Pick it over, wash it well, drain it and spread it out on pie pans ; roast it in a moderate oven, or on top of the range : stir it often to keep it from burning, and roast it until it is a good brown ; then drop a small piece of butter in each pau and mix it up just enough to make the coffee shine ; grind it fresh every morning. The flavor will then equal, if not excel the " Vienna" coffee. Calves' Feet. Boil them until tender ; cut them in two, taking out the larger bones. Season with pepper aud salt and sweet marjoram, and dredge well with flour; fry a light brown in lard and butter mixed. Serve with parsley sauce. Chackers. Butter, one cup ; salt, one teaspoon ; flour, two quarts. Rub thoroughly together with the hand, and wet up with cold water ; beat well, and beat iu flour to make quite brittle and hard ; then pinch off pieces and roll out each cracker by itself, if yon wish them to resemble baker's crackers. Poultry Gravy. Poultry should be picked and drawn as soon as possible ; never allow it to remain over night undrawn, for the flavor of the craw and intestines will penetrate the whole fowl ; never cook it in less than eight hours after it is killed ; after drawing a turkey rinse it out with several waters, and at the last mix iu a half tcaspoonful of pulverized borax ; the inside of the turkey is sometimes a little sour, and will flavor the dressing ; the borax will act as a corrective ; fill the turkey with this water and let it remain while you prepare your dressing ; wheu the dress ing is ready pour out the borax water, and if you wish rinse the turkey out with clear water ; in roasting, if your fire is good and turkey young and tender. allow ten or twelve minutes to a pound ; baste otten. first with melted butter and hot water, afterward with the gravy in the pan : wash the giblets well and chop them up fine ; boil in just water enough to cover, and when the turkey is done place it ou a heated dish ; add tho chopped giblets with the water in which they were boiled to the drippings in the pan ; thicken with a spoonful of flour wet, to prevent lumps ; boil up once ; pour into a gravy-boat ; serve the turkey with craubeiry sauce. In making gravy of any kind, if the meat or poultry is very fat, it must be nkim- med on before adding the hour. Medical Hints. Sour Stomach. A sufferer from want of appetite and sour stomach can be greatly benefited by leaving all medi cines alone and for a time existing en tirely on milk and lime water; a tuble spoouful of lime water to a tumbler of milk. If this disagrees iu any way, in crease the quantity of lime water. How to Get Fat. Abstain from the nee of tea, coffee aud tobacco, and acids of all kinds; take a sponge bath daily, and dry with a coarse towel, using plenty of friction to promote the general cir culation of the blood; then consumo with your meals a large bowl of oat-meal por ridge with fresh milk. How to Get Thin. Take regularly three timeB a day in a little water fifteen drops of hydrate of potassium always alter meals and a little moderation in eating will help. Relief fob Asthma. One to two tablespoonfuls of syrup of rhubarb. Neuralgia Remedy. Extract of gel- semin (yellow jessamine,) five to ten drops, in about a tablespoonful of water; three doses taken at intervals of an hour apart, not sooner, have relieved very severe attacks. Coat ot an Aero of Wheal. A correspondent of the Ohio fann er gives the following estimate of the cost of growing wheat. He Bays : We will now take a 10-acre lot and see what it costs to raise aud put a crop of wheat into market, aud what profit when thero is a yield of fifteen bushels per acre : Plowing tu acres, eight days, at four dol lars per day 1 12 00 Harrowing over twice, two inds ball day.. ID 00 1 inning wucat, oue aim a quarter aaya... , ) w Heed wheat, fifteen bushels, at (1.23 IN 7S Harveatiug, at two dollars )ei- acre 24 00 1 hraebiug, 151 buabels, at ten vents yec buthel IS CO Hulling wbeat to barn II ro Cleaning and hauling to market. tl 00 Total tU2 76 We have now a total cost for the ten- acres of $112.75, and a cost per acre of eleven dollars and twenty-seven nud one half cents. A Trap for Bank Thieves. The Scientific American thus de scribes a recent invention for catching thievos : The object of this invention is to provide for use in banks, stores, etc., a thief or robber trap, so constructed that it may be tripped by tho cashier, proprietor, clerk, or other person sta tioued behind the counter, or in any other convenient place, and therebj pre cipitate the thief or burglar into the cel lar or apartment below. The tilting sec tions constitute that part of a banking room which is iu front of the counter. On removing the support of levers from the tilting sections they will tilt and pre cipitate any one standing thereon into the cellar or apartment below. It is hence within the power of the cashier, clerk, or other person' having access to the tripper, to tilt' the sections when ever a robber has gained access to the bank or store, and thus precipitate him into a place of seouro confinement with out 'Incurring the danger of wvenual fuoonuter ana ipjm'v. Items of Interest Everything we add to our knowledge adds to our usefulness. One of the greatest wonders in this world is, what becomes of all the smart children. The under secretary for India esti mates the cost of the Indian famine at 855,000,000. Ohio has 881,000 acres of apple or chards, and raised this year 15,000,000 bushels of apples. The editor who saw a lady making for the only empty seat in a car found himself " crowded out to make room for more interesting matter." Simkins playfully remarked to his wife that he had four fools: beautifool, dntifool, youthfool, delightfool. " Poor me I" said she ; " I have but one." Dnricg his long reign the Pope has founded 130 bishoprics. In Europe there are 5ft5 prelacies ; iu America, 7!i ; in Africa, 11 ; in Asia, 10 ; and in Aus tralia, 21. An American tourist says that a San Domingo revolution consists of ' a few yells, three or four hoots, some one accidentally wounded, and come home, darling ail is forgiven." There are some seven hundred carpet making establishments iu the United States, which in prosperous times fur nish employment to between 150,000 and 200,000 operatives men, women and children. Barnum is said to have remarked, as he looked at a California artist's paint ing of a cow : ' Good gracious 1 do you mean to tell me that's from life? If there is really such a strange beast in existence, I'll have it for my show, if it costs $10,000." A band of robbers, lying in wait in Nevada for a stage in which a large amount of treasure was to be shipped, were informed of the departure ot the vehicle from Eureka by a confederate's Bignal fire on the top of a mouutaiu newly thirty miles distant. This fire also excited suspicion, and a guard was sent to protect the stage. A desperate encounter was the result, and the rob bers were all killed or captured. A sturdy vagabond, with full black beard of unusual length, was recently brought before a London magistrate, who questioned him about his past life. "If one con believe all that is laid to your charge," said the judge, solemnly, "your conscience must be as black as your bea-d." "Ah," re plied the wily rogue, "if a man's con science is to be measured by his benrd, then your lordship has no conscience at all." ADAM'S WEDDISG. Though Adam and Eve were full young to wed, They managed the matter right wolf s No arrangements were made, thero was uo vain parade, No "Jenkins" the story to tell. Their wedding was quiet as quiet could be, They cooked no provisions to waste, And to wed iu a garden among the greon trees Was surely the height of good taste. Would it not be relief to our anxious mammas If simplicity sweet could revive ? Twould be cant in the pockets ot harassed papas, And young men would be eager to wive. No costly outfit, no big frosted cake, No pare about jewel or glove ; There would bo no reception and no bridal tour There would only be Eden and love. Yiiuderbilt's Second Marriwre. At the time of Commodore Vander- bilt's second marriage, says a writer m the Buffalo Commercial Aaveruaer, a lady acquaintance gave me its history as an evidence of superiority of feminine cleverness and finesse. Years ago there lived in a Southern city a shrewd, clear headed widow with one daughter, who by the death of her husband was left in limited, though comfortable circum-. stances. A worthy youug gentleman courted and espoused the daughter, who was especially devoted to her mother. Iu fact, the devotion was bo intense that first a separation aud finally a divorce were the resultB. The mother visiting here Mrs. Vauderbilt, the commordore's first wife, who as I recollect was a dis tant relation, added so much to the hap piness of the family that she was begged to remain, which she did, and alter the death of Mrs. Vauderbilt suffered so much from lonoliues that she sent for her daughter. It was not a very loDg time afterward that the mother and daughter returned to their Southern home ; nor did many moous wax and wane before Commodore vaucieroin; jumped into a special car, with ft special engine attached, and with a trusted friend was whirled westward ot a mile a minute pace until they reached London, Oat., and after a happy meeting and a brief marriage service, he was whirled eastward again with his wife, the beau tiful daughter, who hau journeyed from the South with her mother to the tryst ing place in London. Words of Wisdom. Fortune and the sun make insects shine. Every ruin drop which unites the mountain produces its definite amount of heat. "Forgetting the things that are be hind, press forward." Excellent advice to a mule. Mediocrity, with concentration aud application, w ins oftener than great tal ent diffused about in the speculative air. The world is all ready to receive talent with open arms. Very often it does not know what to do with genius. Talent ia a docile creature. It bows its head meekly while the world slips the collars over it. It backs into the shafts like a lamb. It is with glory as with beauty ; for as a single line lineament cannot make' a handsome face, neither can a single good quality render a mau accomplished j 'vu a concurrence of many fine features bjJ good qualities makes true beauty and true nonor. All confidence which is not absolute and entire is dangerous. There are few occasions where a man ought either to sen all or conceal all, for, liow little soever yon have revt aled of your secret to a friend, yon have already said too much if you think it not wife to make Mi4 priv to, All particulars, V-