- ; ; : : 7 " : ' ' HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEEANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VIII. EIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1878. NO. 34. The Old Grist Mill. By Willow brook, beneath the hill, Stands quaint and gray the old grist mill, Spring moiees on its steep roof grow Where broad thotr shade the willows throw. The pond near by is dear and deep, And ronnd its brink the alders sweep i The lily pads spread gay and green The lilies white and gold between ) While grinds the mill with rambling sound, The water-wheel turns ronnd and round. Among the reeds the muBk-rat dives ; And swift " the swallow homeward flies i" The robin sits In cedars near Where Willow brook runs swift and clear ; The children by the school-house play, Where slumberous shadows softly stray, And warm and low the summer breeze Is whispering thro' the willow leaves j While grinds the mill with rumbling sound, The water-wheel turns round and round. The crows now wing their southern way ) The squirrels in the nut trees play j With merry shouts the school boys run i The mountains blush 'neath autumn's sun j Their grain they bring adown the hill, The farmers, to the old grist mill ; And faint from far o'er hill and dale Falls on the ear the thresher's flail ; While grinds the mill with rumbling sound, The water-wheel turns round and ronnd. Long years have come and passed away The mill with age is gaunt and gray j The roof gaps wide to rain and sun ; With cobwibs thick the walls are hung. The pond is overgrown with weedB j The mursh-wrcu Uii ds among the reeds ( The night ttinds-thro' the willows moan j The school-house gone, the children grown 5 The farmers Bleep where wild flowers grow, Who brought tber grain so long ago, When groend the mill with tumbling sound, And the water-wheel turned round and round HANDSOME JACK. All was commotion this evening in Sandy Flat ; the excitement was great est, though, in the "Nugget," the gener al rendezvous of the miners. In fact, the conversation became ho interesting that some of the moi-t reliable and regular players puxbed their chairs back near to the stove, and, assuming a comforta ble position, determined to discuss the subject thoroughly and have it settled at once. There was a silence of a few moments after a while, each face wearing a thoughtful expression, as though each man was at his very wits' ends what next to say. The silence was broken by Jim Mar shall, whose face was barely discernible behind the dense cloud of smoke that floated before him, and which spoke volumes " in proof of the profound thought in which he had been absorbed. "Boys," said he, "they're a mighty fine-lookin' pair, anyhow, 'specially the little 'un." This remark had. been made no less than a dozen times by Jim since the ar rival of the two ladies by the evening stage, and every time he reiterated it he added more Btress to " 'specially the lit tle nn." " The big 'un isn't to bo sneezed at, neither," added Bill Turner. Bill Turner's name fitted him exactly, for he was ready at all times to " go into " every new thing heard of or that happened to come his way. First in starting off to any new diggings that were heard of, and first to return with a big disgust y first to get into a row, and first to beat a disgraceful retreat. Bo to-night he was, as ever, ready to take part in the discussion ; and, in fact, he took a most lively interest in- it, for he had cast more than a friendly eye on the ' little 'un " as she alighted from the stage, and, true to his fickle nature, he was immediately a captive to her charms ; for indeed she was very pretty, as in fact was the larger one. The cause of his remark in reference to this latter was that made by Jim MurshalL Bill had a wholesome dread of James ; and well he might, for their natures were as unlike as the stately pine and the scrubby chaparral, which difference had often been proved to Bill's shame ; so when ho heard Jim Marshall express such a decided preference for the small er of the two ladies, he, true to his name and nature, immediately trans ferred his affections to the larger one ; still he felt a little nettled, and ventured a deprecatory remark : " But, boys, you know she looks a little well " catching the eye of Jim. " Well, now, how does she look ? Out with it," said Jim. " That's what I was goin' to say she's a mighty fine lookin gal," added Bill. But Jim knew that was not what he had intended to say; sti 1 he remained silent, and as the night was pretty far spent and adjournment in order, the con vention disbanded. There was a little scene that night, however, not witnessed by any of the miners, which took place outside of the Nugget. The actors were two, namely Jim Marshall and Bill Turner. " Now, Bill, I want you io tell me what you was goin' to say about that little un," said Jim. "I wasn't goin' to say anything, I swear I wasn't," gasped Bill, for by the fierce visage of the man before him he know that he was wholly m earnest. " Now, see here, Bill, if ever you say a word agin them unpertected gals " Bill did not wait to hear the rest, but " You can jest chaw me up, if I do," he put in. With an approving nod, Jim walked away toward his cabin, and Bill toward hi". Away down among the chaparral there glimmered a faint light that sent its timid rays out through the little window. which were soon lost in the surrounding darkness of the wooded mountains. If we take a look into the cabin through the window, what do we see ? Two ladies, evidently tisters, but not the least alike in oppenrance. One tall and rather dark, with long dark hair, that hangs careless ly down her back as she sits gazing affectionately at the sweet face before her that of the one who had been christened by the miners the "little uu." She, the smaller one, is fair "-set-faced and ohild-like: her face as mooth and soft as the velvety wing of putterflyj and now, oyer the met, deep blue eyes the lids unconsciously fell, and her nodding head slowly drops and is caught by the hand of her sister, who lays it gently on her breast; and there, like an innocent babe, she lies sleeping, with the arms of her sister encircling her, while two dark eyes look down with a love akin to pity upon the face of the unconscious girl. But why did they come here? The question might well puzzle the brain of the most thoughtful miner. Here in this isolated oabin, far np in the Sierras, miles away from any of their kind why did they come here, and what do they intend to do ? These questions were again passed upon the next night at the Nugget, with the same result as the night before, al though Bill Turner had called at the cabin that day " Jest to see if they want ed anything, bein' strangers." His ac clamations were loud in praise of the new-comers; but his ourioBitv was as great as before, his call not having elicit ed anything whatever that would give a clue to their mysterious presence in this rough mining camp. The next evening Jim Marshall had disappeared from the Nugget, and re appeared (to but few) in his best clothes, scaling the rocks around the edge of the camp, trying to avoid the gaze of his companions ; for well he knew that if ho was seen making his way toward the little cabin down iu the chaparral his peace of mmd would suffer utter ruin. So, unobserved as he thought, he reached the door of the cabin, and, in answer to his knock, the door was opened by the " little 'un," who invited him in and spoke in the kindest and, as he thought, sweetest manner he had ever heard ; and she offered her sister's excuses for not being present, she plead ing illness. During the conversation which followed he plied questions, but in no way did he make himself offensive ; but, adroit bb were his questions, he elicited little more information than Bill Turner bad. He was ashamed to let the fair creature before him know that he bad not yet learned her name the fact being that no one in the camp had so he coutiously ventured : " Hem, mum, how you spell your name ?" A Blight twinkle was visible around her eyes as the slowly Bpelled " S-m-i-t-h." " Thankee, mum, thankee," he said, very much confused ; " rather a pe culiar name ;" and his tanned face grew almost blue with what would have been a blush had it been of a fairer hue. Jim whs sorry he had put that question, for, as he expressed it several weeks after in the Nugget, he " had held his own " till then. What added more to his confu sion was lust the slightest ripple of laughter from the adjoining room where the ill lady was. He soon, however, pleaded the lateness of the hour, and, after a kind invitation to " call again," departed toward his own cabin, where j he divested himself of his present clothes and put on more comfortable ones, ap pearing in his accustomed place in the Nugget, looking as innocent as a lamb, only an hour late. That night every miner iu town knew what the name of the two young ladies was, which information Jim Marshall had the honor and indis cretion to impart. " But how did you find it out?" asked one. " Oh, I got it from the stage driver this evening," he replied, and resumed his pipe. " Why, I asked him last evening, and he said he didn't know nothin' about 'em," was the bombshell that Bill Tur ner dropped on Jim Marshall's head. There was a short silence ; tbem Jim added, slowly : "Well, mebbe he forgot." But it would not do. There were a few winks passed around, and then Sam Noyes put in, significantly : " Say, Jim, where was you goin' to night with your store clothes on when I see you crossin' the little canon ?" Jim arose and made quick time for the door, to escape the roar which he knew was approaching, but which caught him before he reached the door. For a week after this disastrous night Jim Marshall was not seen at the Nug get,' and did not care to talk with any one whom he met; but one thing was noticed, that he no longer made his visits to the cabin chaparral a secret; and these visits grew more frequent, as did also those of Bill Turner. Jim soon re turned to the Nugget, and, after suffer ing a little from the sport of the " the boys," settled back into his original con dition of comfort. So the weeks passed on into months; still the same impenetrable mystery hung around the occupants of the iso lated little cabin. At the end of three months it was pretty well settled that Jim Marshall and the " little un were engaged, and Bill Turner frankly ad mitted that he and the larger one were. One evening Jim called at the cabin, and as it was no unusual occurrence, found that Bill Turner had preceded him; and, as was always the case when ever Jim called, the adored of William pleaded illness, excused herself and dis appeared. This seemed singular to Jim as well as to Bill, but still it was never spoken of; and on such occasions the latter would don his hat and also disap pear; but this evening he saw fit to re main, and, aa bis chief topics of conver sation were narrations of wild and ro mantio adventures, he started in with some of the most startling and blood curdling, of which he generally was the hero. Jim took no interest in these re citals of imaginary adventures, and only wished he could have administered his boot to this loquacious gentleman and retained the good graces of the fair one before him. So he smothered bis wrath, and forced himself to listen to Bill's stories until he heard him mention the name of a person who had been suspect ed of the murder of the sheriff in the adjoining county; this man's name was Jack Redman, but better known as " Handsome Jack." Bill said he knew that Jack was guilty because he saw the murder. Both of the men were a little confused when they looked at the girl in front of them, Her face was deathly pale. "Did yon say yon saw him kill the sheriff t said Miss Smith, timidly. "Yes, 'urn; saw him shoot him," re plied Bill. " Say, Bill," put in Jim, what kind of a lookin' man was Handsome Jack ?" ' Well," lie answered, Jie fti bput six feet, had a heavy beard, and was a pretty fine-looking feller." "Did he have his thumb and fore finger on his left hand cut off?" asked Jim. a. "Yes. ySf: come to think of it," be replied. Jim thirsted for blood; so, seeing his chanoe, he bore down upon his enemy. "Beggin your pardon, mum," said he, this feller has been lyin' all this evening. Now you see I know Hand some Jack " " Do you !" broke in Miss Smith, quickly. " Yes 'am-do you" "O. no. no," she replied, "but I've beard of him." " Yes ,'um: I know him." he went on, "and he was one of the best-lookin' fel lers I ever see," " Yes," said she. " Yes, 'um, he's about five foot six." Then turning to Bill. " And he ain't got his thumb and forefinger cut off." After a pause, he continued: "YeB. 'um, and I'll jest tell you all about it. He was 'spected of killin' the sheriff; they caught him, and he had his trial; everything looked purty blue for bim; the jury went out, and when they came back the next morning they was kept locked np ail nignt they brought a verdict of,' Not guilty.'" The fair face before the speaker grew still whiter as he spoke those words which have made so many hearts lean for joy, and then she si-obo and looked him in the face, and with trembling lips she asked: " And he was saved ?" " That's more'n I can tell." said ho: "'cause when we was let out in the morning the bird had flew." " When who were let out? she said, quickly. " Why. the jury. I was foreman of the jury that acquitted him," he re plied. "Thank God," she said. The rair head fell back, and Bhe would have fallen had not the strong arms of Jim Marshall caught her. At the same time there was a sound from the adjoining room, like a sigh of relief; then the inanimate form which Jim held in his arms began to revive, and soon the 'ids rose from the blue eyes, a smile flitted across the sweet face, and Jim, much agitated, and for getting the presence of any one else, kissed tho white brow of the lovely girl. She soon revived sufficiently to sit, and Jim, after putting some water to her hps, excused himself, and, followed by Bill at a distance, moved away from tho cabin. Strange were the thoughts that passed through the minds of the two men that night and the next day. They felt that the mystery of these two per sons was daily increasing, growing deeper and more insoluble. How do they live? Why do they live here? W hafa il 1 (1 tl-inv mmA fivm 9 inrl monv other questions, equaliXmystifying, ar rayed themselves denantiy before tneir minds. The next evening, at the Nugget, the incidents of the previous evening were fully detailed, for, sure enough, Bill Turner had told the whole thing, inclnd- lug the kiss, and it was with much trepidation and misgiving that Jim Marshall ventured to face the frequent ers of this rendezvous ; but when he entered, the excitement in the immedi ate vicinity of Bill Turner was so great that he slipped into his place almost un noticed. In a few moments, Sam Noyeso nme running out of the Hack room, Into which he had just stepped, and cried : " Where's Jim Marshall ? " Seeing him at the same instant, he beckoned him into the room which he had just left, and the men waited breath lessly for his return ; and, in fact, some of the more curious followed him, and then they saw a sight that made the blood of at least one of their number boil. But what was it? Through the win dow of the cabin down in the chaparral they saw the sweet little Mis 8 Smith, with her bead lying affectionately upon the breast of a man, bis arms encircling her waist, while be imprinted kisses upon her upturned lips. It was too much for Jim ; ho ruBhed out through the saloon, and down toward the cabin,' with pistol in hand. "Foller him, boys, foller him," cried Sam Noyes, fearful lest the infuriated man should commit a rash deed. The saloon poured forth its occupants, Bill Turner heading the crowd, and who reached the cabin at almost the same instant that Jim did, and in a moment the cabin was full of breathless, pant ing men. Standing at one end was a fine-looking young man, supporting the trembling form of the frightened girL In his hand be held a pistol, ready to shoot the first man who made a move. No one seemed to know the stranger. His eyes were fixed on Jim Marshall, who in return glared at the intruder like a panther, and was the first to speak. " Handsome Jack I " said he. "Jim Marshall I " was the reply. Who is she ? " gasped J im, pointing. " My wife 1 " came in a firm, manly voice. The next morning there were two de serted claims over in the canon; the cabins that the day previous had cover ed the heads of Jim Marshall and Bill Turner were now untenanted, and at night, when Sam Noyes looked out of his back- window toward the little oabin down in the chaparrel, all was darkness. The Suirits He Smelltd, At a recent trial of a liquor case the witness on the stand was under examina tion as to what be had seen in the defend ant's domicile, which he said he had visited " a number of times." " Did you ever see any spirits there, or anything you regarded as spirits ?" asked the presiding justice. " Why, yes I don't know but have " was the renlv of the witness. " Do you know what kind of spirits ?" " xes." " How do you know ?" T binder smelt it." " Well, now," said the judge, straight ening himself lor tne onnviumiB Lwr, nriiinh he snrmosed would be given, " will you please tell me what kind of spirits it was i it Hninti n' tnrnentine I As soon as the roars of laughter that resulted had subsided, the witness was at once discharged, the opinion being that his testimony wa D0 " tu PoitJt! Gen. Jnckson Takes the Responsibility. The following anecdote is from a pos thumous paper by Robert Dale Owen, in Soribner's Magazine: It is well known that Jackson, on bis accession as president, appointed Martin Van Bureu secretary of State, and that Mr. Van Buren, in April, 1831, resigned that ofiloe. Thereupon Jackson appoint ed him minister to England, and it be came neoessary to supply his plaoe in the cabinet. At that time there was in the United States Senate, from Louisiana, Edward Livingston, a gentleman who had al ready won an enviable reputation as author of the code which still bears his name a work which has had its in fluence on the jurisprudence of succeed ing times. Livingston at that time stood very high, not only as jurist, but as statesman; his name had eome up, along with many others, and he had been spoken of ai one eminently fitted for secretary of State. It so happened, also, that the Senate was then nearly equally divided between the two existing parties, Whig and Democratic; it need hardly be added that the president had been elected by th latter party. Now, when rumors became rife that Livingston might be finally selected by Jackson as cabinet officer, a small depu tation of the Detnooratio leaders and personal friends of the president, unwill ing to face the general directly, called on Mr. Tristto talk the matter over with him. They began by adverting to the fact that barely a Democratic majority of two could at that time be safely count ed on in the Senate; that if Livingston, an influential Democrat, was appointed secretary of State, one of these votes would be lost; and that if (as was prob able in the then state of parties in Louisiana) a Whig was appointed to take his plaoe, it would result in a tie. They represented that such a contingency would very seriously embarrass the presi dent, perhaps in the way of thwarting his policy, more certainly by endanger ing the confirmation of his appoint ments. And they finally begged Mr. Trist to take an early opportunity of expressing to the general their earnest desire, both for his own sake and that of the party, that he would give to such considerations their due weight before calling Livingston from his place in the Senate. Mr. Trist at first demurred to the un dertaking of this task, alleging his belief that it would be fruitless; but was finally persuaded to reconsider his tefusal. Ac cordingly one evening when Jackson, after a hard day's work, was seated in his arm-chair, his head sunk on his breast and his attitude betokening repose and reflection, Trist with great reluctance, however, and after suitable apology kid before him the fears and wishes of Mb friends. At thu first broaching of the subject (so Trist informed me), the old man drew hiwwilf bolt upright, so cording to his military wont, fixed his thoroughly awakened eyes full on the sneaker, and. as the latter went on with fus report, the flash from those stern eyes sufficiently indicated in advance to one so familiar with his manner as his secretary was the probable result. He listened patiently, however, until the conclusion. Then, after a pause, all he said, in his usual brief and unflinch ing manner, was: "Mr. Trist, my friends ought to know that no considera tions of that kind can influence my choice of a secretary of State. It is my duty to select for that important office the man best fitted to fill it, and to leave the rest to Qod. Tell these gentlemen " Aud the very next day Livingston was appointed to the vacant chair in the cabinet. Waking np the Baby. Just at dust the other dismal day r the children, the oldest of whom did not seem over ten years old, were hud dled together on the rickety steps of an old bouse on Beaubien street. A pedes trian peeped over their heads to read tne numuer on tne aoor, ana me cnii dren looken so frightened that he asked : " Children, where are your father and mother r "Father's been gone way off for ever so long, and mother goes out to wash and hasn't got borne yet," answered the eldest, a girl. " And you are all alone ? "Yes, sir, but baby is on the bed. He's been asleep an awful long time, and we can't wake him up. If we could we'd play hide and seek and let bim find us." " Is the baby sick," inquired the man. "We don't know, sir, but we can't wake him up ; I touched him and touch, ed him, and Charlie he tickled his feet but little Sandy never moved onoe. I guess he is awful sleepy. Don't you think you could wake him up ?" "I'll try," replied the man as he went in, and when the girl had lighted the lamp he followed her into a bed room in which there was neither carpet nor furniture. Fashed back against the broken wall was a poor old straw tiok and a single quilt. He bent over to look at the child, and the first glance showed him that little Sandy was dead. On the window sill were some pieces of bread and a cup of milk which the ohildren intended to feed bim. The dead child's hand clasped a rag doll made of an old calico apron, and its thin little feet and pale face were evidences that it had known sickness and hunger throughout its brief life. While the children waited for him to open his eyes and romp with them and drive the gloom out of the house, the angels had whispered to him and bis eyes bad unclosed to behold the splendors of heaven. " Won't he wake up ?" asked one of the children, standing baok in the shadow. "Children, you must hot come in here until your mother oomes I" he said as he left the room. " Won't he be afraid to wake up in the dark, they asked. He will sleep a long time yet 1" be whispered, not daring to tell them the truth, and as he went out they put the light in on the bedroom floor, that little Sandy might not find darkness around him when his sleep had ended. Poor things They knew not and they could not see the crown of glory on the dead child's brow a orown whose light all the shadows of earth ean never darken in tha least, -ved rreit, BELL1NU THE RAT. How R Fnmooi St. l.onl. Rat-Vatcher Capture, the Rodent, Tom Oostello, of St. Louis, Mo,, is famed as a human rat-catcher. He captures and removes these animals alive from hotels and houses where they are an annoyance and a pest. They are thena taken to the rat-pit to become .martyrs to the superior ability of the well-bred black-and-tans. Oostello catches rodents by means of a " belled rat." A reporter accompanied him' on an expedition to a wretched and worm-eaten hotel, fairly alive with the vermin, and gives the following account of his experience : The arrival was made after midnight Silently and cautiously the rookery was examined until the circuit run by the rats was determined. Rats in a building are as the inhabi tants of a city or the inmates of a large building. Certain boles in floors and wainscoting, drain-pipes, dark-nans, passages in the walls, etc., are to rats what streets in the oity are to pedes trians, and hallways in buildings to the inmates. Just as one avenue, by reason of superior width or light, is raised by people to the dignity of a promenade, or as some alley-way, by reason of being a hort cut between two points, is made a thoroughfare, is a drain-pipe, a noisome hallway, or a hole in the floor put in constant and general use by the rats. well, on the occasion referred to, uos tello looked around and found that a dumb waiter, or band elevator, leading rom the basement of the building up ward, was the boulevard, the main street, as it were, of this rat colony. He laid for a rat and caught mm. A small bell was tied about the captive's neck by means of a ribbon, and then the rodent was released. It was off like flash. Minutes passed by without results. At last the skurrying of. rats through the walls and upper pascages of the house was heard. It gradually increased. The principle the rat-catcher worked on was that the bell would scarce the rat. His terror would com municate to his fellows, and they in turn would flee before him as from a pesti- enoe. He had calculated correctly. The noise became like that of the rat tling of a heavy rain. The bright-eyed vermin shrieked and squealed as they fled in their terror. The reporter and Gostello stood in a small room the elevstor ended in it. There was a rattling noise in the eleva tor. The room was darker than an Egyptian night. The noise increased and pervaded the room. Then the re porter realized that the rats were in the room in a myriad. He could hear their squealing, and at laBt observed the phos phorescent gleam of their eyes. They crawled over his feet. The perspiration stood on him in drops and his hair raised. He lost a year's growth right then. " No danger ; keep etill ; don't movo, and they won't bite you," said Oostello. The reporter groaned in terror. Oostel lo then lit a lamp. The floor was covered with the rodents. With a pair of tongs he picked np and bagged them all. There were 128 of them. When they were in the bag the reporter was very, very happy. African Spiders. Livingstone was once bitten, when half asleep, by a light-colored spider. Feeling something running across his forehead, he put up bis hand to wipe it off, when he was sharply stung on the hand and head, and the pain was very acute, but it ceased after two hours. The natives declare that there is a small black spider in the country whose bite is fatal, bnt the great traveler did not meet with an instance in which death could be traced to this insect, though he saw a very large black hairy spider an inch and a quarter long, and three quar ters of an inch broad, which had a hook at the end of its front claws similar to that at the end of the scorpion's tail. When these hooks were pressed the poison came out. There- are spiders in South Africa which seize their prey by leaping upon it from a distance of sev eral iuches. When alarmed they can spring about a foot away from the ob ject of fear. A large reddish spider obtains its food in a different manner from either by patiently waiting in am bush, or by catching it with a bound. it runs about with great velocity, m and out, behind and around, every object, searching for what it may devour, and from its size and rapid motions, excites the horror of every stranger. It does no narm to men except to make the nervous and those that hate spidi-rs very uncom fortable. This active little insect is very clever, for it imitates the mason-spider, ana manes a nest in tne earth, lined with beautiful, soft silk, covered with a nioely-fitting trap door about the size of a shilling. When this is shut, it is so closely covered with hard earth that it cannot be distinguished from the rest. in some parts of the country there are great numbers of a large, beautiful, yellow-spotted spider, the webs of whioh are about a yard across. The lines on which these webs are spun are hung from one tree to another, and are as large as coarse thread. The fibers of the web itself are so thick that it is a common thing in walking through the forest to get one's face covered by them like a lady's veil. Another kind of spider lives in society, and forms so great a collection of webs, plaoed at every angle, that the trunks of trees oannet be seen through them. A piece of hedge is often so hidden that the brandies are invisible. Another is seen on the walls inside the huts of the na tives. It is round in shape, spotted brown in color, and the body is half an inch across. The spread of the leg is about an inch and a half. It makes a smooth spot for itself on the wall, cov ered with a white, silky stuff. There it is seen standing the whole day. It has no real web but the soft, silky carpet, and is a harmless though an ugly neigh bor. Travels in Africa, This is a boy's composition on girls : " Girls are only folks that has their own way every time. Girls is of several thousands kinds, and sometimes one girl can be like several thousand girls if she wants to do anything. This is all I know about girls, and father says the less I know about them t.he hotter off FOR THE FAIR SEX, New. and Note. About Women. A Spanish woman walks in the Paris boulevards leading a dove with a ribbon. No woman can be employed in an Austrian railway office unless she is rnder twenty-five and will promise not to marry under three years. Elizabeth Cody Stanton has prepared for the coming season three new lectures: Home liife " " The Bights of una- dren " and "The Peterkin Family." M'lle Marguerite Gidel. daughter of the prinoipal of Henri IV. college in Paris, has just passed with success the first part of her examination as Bachelor of Arts at the Paris Faculty of Letters, The young lady is only sixteen years of age. All honor to that brave Wisconsin woman, Mrs. Uhorles Honievs, who leit a luxurious home in Milwaukee to nurse the sick in the yellow fever hospital at Jackson, Miss. There is more heroism in such an act than leading a cnarge amid the fear-forgetting excitement of battle. Vtica Herald. Mrs. Van Cott. the preacher, was born in New York city, and she is nearly fifty years of age. Her father was Major Newton, manager of John Jacob Astor's estate. He became insane. Marrying and soon becoming a widow, she attend ed to her husband's business of drug broker. She was oonverted on a Fulton ferryboat while thinking about religion. Becoming a preacher, she traveled through the country, and she counts more than twenty-seven thousand con versions as the result of her labors. She weighs 225 pounds, and is now in Cali fornia. Chicago has a woman's medical col lege which has lived through some eight years of varied existence. It is called the Woman's Hospital Medical college. Dr. W. H. Byford is president of a faculty of sixteen members, and Dr. Sarah H. Stevenson is professor of physi ology. Candidates must be graduates of a high sohool, or its equivalent, or they must show a teacher s certificate from a county superintendent of sohools. In the absence of either of these tney must pass an examination before the faculty on the branches of a good common school education. Fashion Note. The old scoop bounot is revived. Trains are not so long as last year. Elbow sleeves are very fashionable. Lace pendants are attached to the fronts of wide lace collars. The latest novelty in veils is black dotted, net lined, with white illusion. Corduroy velvet will be largely used for the underskirts of winter costumes. The embroidered handkerchief caps worn over a round; mob cap of Brussels net, edged with a frill, are called "creole caps." Twelve and six button white kid gloves are shown for evening wear, with the small mother of pearl buttons in stead of gilt ones. White barege is used for inexpensive bridal dresses. Such dresses are trim mcd with white satin and garlands of orange blossoms. On some of the dresses for next sea son are to be worn accessories that is to say, plastrons, pockets aud cuffs composod entirely of feathers. Black felt bonnets in close princesse shape, trimmed with a band of cashmere feathers, or elso with an Alsaciau bow of velvet and satin ribbon, will be popular ly worn during the fall and winter. Bullet-shaped buttons come in colored pearl, in brass, in steel, and crocheted in colors and in black, for winter dresses. When two colors appear in the dress goods, the round silk button is of the lighter color, nearly covered with cro cheted netting of the darker shade. Satin, this season, bag unusual con sideration. Plain satin will be very much employed, especially black satin in combination with block silk. There are also satin-striped gros grain and lengthwise oorded silks, with satin striped, and plain moires antiques. The newest black velvet bags are em broidered in gold and in other colors in floral patterns. Wide velvet belts are wrought in the same colors to be worn with them. Plain velvet bags have gilt bands and monograms. The old-time beaded reticules are again revived. Hosiery for the fall is in hair-line stripes around the limb, and is embroi dered up each side. This is not new, but promises to be the popular design. More expensive stockings are of solid dark color, with the instep and ankle of a light shade, striped aoross with pen cilled lines of the dark color. Time Lost, Most of us fritter away a great deal of time. We are wasteful of the minutes when we are wasteful of nothing else. Nothing is easier than to fritter away time iu matters of no use to ourselves or anyone else. The habit is readily form ed. It grows upon us unawares. Keep a stnot account of every hour of your time for a single- week, setting down correctly the exact manner in which every hour is spent, and see whether, when you come to review the record, you do cot find it full of admonition and instruction. In this simple way one can readily understand the secret of his want of time. He will disoover that be has given hours to idle talk, to indolence and to inconsiderable trifles, which have yielded him neither profit nor pleasure. What is the remedy ? Arrange your wora in me oraer oi its comparative un portance. Attend first to the things which are essential to be done, and let the nnessentials take their chanoe after ward. The difference in the amount of work accomplished will be astonishing, Duty before pleasure. Those who rao- tioe this precept have plenty of time for pleasure, and enjoy lar greater satisfac tion than those who reverse this rule, For there is great satisfaction to be ob tained in the simple performance of one s auty. Old gentlemen to troublesome boy ; "uook nere, my rxy, can you tell me why you may be said to be playing at hide-and-seek?" Troublesome boy ; "No, sir." Old gentleman t "Be canso you are seeking a good hlcjing.'' The Invisible Land. There was a land that lay beyond my sight For which I vainly searched the great earth through. Thither, right often, my companions flew At daybreak, or at noontide, or at night, And never came again. I took my flight, Explored all portions of the globe, yet grew No nearer where that mighty retinue Had fled into the stately fields of light. But onoe, when evening her dusk sails bad spread, And I was sleeping, a swift dream came o'er My spirit, and in It I, rising, said i "Now is the country mine long sought before 1" Aad one I heard lament that I was dead ) And lo I the land stretched just beside my door I ScrWner. Items of Interest Edison is neglecting the waste power of Vesuvius. A plain speaker One who is the re verse of handsome. Best things with which to open a dead lock A skeleton key. There are twenty-five different kinds of springs in Saratoga, "In speaking of a person's faults, Pray don't forget yonr owu ; Remember those with homes of glass Hnould never throw a stone." Why is a cornetist always poor ? Be cause he is continually blowing his notes away, and the report of his wealth is all in a horn. Mrs. Janville has " put up " twelve cans of peaches, nine jars of plums and a bushel of pears, while her husband has only " put up " two stoves and his gold watch. Norristown Herald. Mules are credited with being stub born. Their obstinacy, however, is no circumstance to that of the strip of card board one endeavors to coax into posi tion in an overgrown soft felt hat. New York boasts of a man who can make a straight jump of over fourteen feet. A Chicago man, however, has beaten this. He " jumped the town," and hasn't been seen since. Some of his employers' funds went with him. A young lady hesitating for a word in describing the character of a rejected suitor said: "He is not a tyrant, not exactly domineering, but" "Dogma tic," suggested her friend. " No, he has not dignity enough for that; I think pnpmatio would convey my meaning admirably." At an auction art sale, the other day, a marine view was about to be knocked down at a handsome figure, when a bluff sailor, who had happened to wan der in, exclaimed earnestly: ' My stars, if there isn't a vessel drifting on to the rocks with a strong breeze blowing off shore." The artist took his work home to rearrange the wind. Acorns from remote antiquity have been used for man and animals. The ancient Britons lived mostly on acorns ; so, says Galen, did the Arcadians. They were prepared in many shapes, boiled and roasted, dried aud ground and made into bread. At present they ore chiefly used for fattening hogs, deer and poultry, though in Norway and Sweden they are boiled and mixed with cornmeal to make bread. Dan Newman, of Sierra valley, Cal., killed 205 blackbirds by emptying only two barrels from a shotgun into a flock of them the other day. This may appear a rather improbable story, but it is vouched for by a half dozen or so reli able wituesses. The birds were huddled together in a grain field where a thresh ing machine had shortly before been in operation, when Newman fired at them, and each shot seemed to have brought down a separate victim. They were sitting on either side of tho garden seat ; silence had bossed the oc casion for several minutes, when she finally wagged her tongue thusly : "Jim, how many miles away do they say the moon is?" "Well," said be, with studious gravity, "astronomers differs ; I believe Hcliogabberlus cal kerlated it was 'bout forty-seven bil lion miles, but Dan Webster didn't think it was more'n a couple of million or so." " I wish Gab'lus was right, and I was the moon," was her sweet re joinder. And in about five minutes it would have required an awfully clever astronomer to calculate Jim's remote ness. In the years 1601 and 1603 Russia ex perienced great scarcity, aud provisions were extremely deor. The spirit of the times and the want of intelligence pre vented the application of remedies suitable to the circumstance ; but Boris Godounof, the oz ir, in this crisis showed himself the true falher of his people. He employed thousands in erecting large stone buildings, furnish ing everything that was necessary, and giving them wages corresponding to the increased price of the necessaries of life ; and he distributed 30,000 roubles daily for the relief of the poor. He at the same time compelled the boyars to let bim have the overplus of their maga zines at half-price, to give to the poor. Those who, notwithstanding his care, perished iu this dreadful calamity, were interreu at nis own expense. in Editor Who Wouldn't be Cowliided. We find thiB story in tome rominis- cencies of Justice Miller, of the United States supreme court, written up for the Cincinnati Enquirer, by George Alfred Townsend : Judge Miller related another incident of the fighting days in Kentucky, when an editor by the name, I think, of Matthewsos, was applied to by a citizen of Richmond to furnish bim with the name of the author of a personal paragraph in his paper. The editor replied that he required until the next day to see the author and get his permission. "Very well," said the caller, "you give it me to-morrow, or I will cowhide you for concealing the name of the miscreant?" Next day, at the appointed time in came the gentleman in pursuit of revenge, with a cowhide in his hand, as be had promised, Matthewson said : " I decline to give the name of the anthor. I have Been bim, and he withholds his permission." Very well," said the mun drawing his cowhide but at this instant the editor shot bim dead. No judicial proceedings followed theslittlj Keutllky privileges,