NIL DESPEEANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. KIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1878. NO. 36. VOL. VIII. HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. is -- . IJoldcn-Rod. When fortune waves her wand of gold O'er oitiei by the tea, The wild sea-shore take fashion'! mould, ' And blooms in gayety. There pleasure brings her iris throng To fret the dark cliff's way, And mook with airy danoe and song The ooean',1 somber sway. All summer long the cream-white sail Laughs at the sea-gull's toil i And brazen hoofs like qnlok -dropped hail Beat the surf-haunted soil And lightest fall where grandest meet The trysting land and sea Bweet tows of love, formed hut to greet The hps of revelry. To hide the heart's pent woes that wake, Ob restless sea, with thee, Whose billows set to rhythms that ache A reckless melody ; To hide the soul's linked -deep unrest, With thee, Oh dreaming sea,! Whose kiss Is on the horizon's breast, Where heaven stoops to thee. Is life, then, such and idle fete, A wild swift danoe and free, With ravished draught of wine poured late In dream-lands by the sea? Ah, gayety 'tis but the mask, Subtle as sorrow's own, To bide wan prayers that vainly ask And tears that Bmiles disown. KATE DALTON'S DUTY. "Aye, sir, it all happened in one night. Do you ask if any one was kill ed? Yes, sir j jet thar might o' been a great many more, bat for the Bense and pluck o one young gal. " You look surprised, sir, but if yer'U Bit down for a bit in the shadow of this old breaker, I'll tell yer all about it, provided yer'U let an old man spin his yam in his own fashion. " Wal, sir, yer see this valley is an ex hausted coal mine. The coal had been taken out o' the workin's beneath the spot whar this care-in occurred a long while ago. " Indued, sir, thar'd been three stories or veins worked out and abandoned ; bnt in number three they were diggin' yet, and a good many families were still livin' in those houses yer see below us. That creek didn't tun so close then, and they were not quite so broken, thon&h they were werry old and out of repair. Many of the miners feared a cave-in, and those that were able moved away. " But thar's allers a reckless drinkin' sej 'bout these old collieries who stay on, or haven't means to leave. Joe Dal ton (the father o' Kate, the young gal I'm going to tell yer 'bout) was one o' the wuss specimens. They lived in the cabin nearest the creek, whar only the walls are standin'. " His wife died when Kate was just twenty, and left to her keer a baby gal, two little boys and Mary, who was 'most twelve. I tell yer, sir, Kate allers had a hard life ; for when Joe was fired with liquor he was a perfect brute, and mony's the time we neighbors were afeered that he'd kill her. "The Jittle uns allers flew to her for protection, and ehe'd take all the blows if she could save them. " Joe spent what he earned for liquor, and to support the family, Kate used to walk two miles every morning to Mr. Lawson's (one o' the company, sir), to do their washin'; then come home and toil till midnight over her own tasks. Mrs. MyerB, a kind old soul who lived next door, took keer o' the baby during the day, and Mary looked arter the boys. " You may think this isn't tellin' 'bont the accident, but I'm coram' to it, sir. You say you want to hear all abont Kate ? Wal, sir, she was a werry on common gill, though thar was nothin in her looks to make yer notice her. She was a thin, tall creetur, with a pale face, but she had great black eyes, that looked so sad if anybody grieved her, it allers made 'im feel sorry, And it's few would o' dared to ill-treat her save her father, for she had a sweetheart who was allers ready to protect her. " He was a great brawny feller, called John Pearson. He'd been keepin' oom- Eany with her for a good many years, ut he hadn't enough ahead to marry till arter her mother died; then she'd allers refuse to leave the children, no matter how hard he'd coax. "Joe Dalton took a great dislike to this follow, and declared he'd punish him if he came to the house, or even if he caught Kate with him, "About three years ago, one cold afternoon in Maroh, as I was np on that mountain opposite arter brush to bnrn, I saw Kate, with an old shawl pulled over her head, comin up the path, and I knew fbe was goin' to meet John in a little resting-place by the way; do I crept to a bowery spot close by. I know what yon think o' that, sir; but it wasn't on pnrpose to hear what they said, but give 'em warnin' if I saw her father, for I know'd he'd be as good as his word. "Wal, sir, I could hear what they eaid, and I must tell ye, so you'll under stand ber doin's arterwards. John was in werry good sperrits, and takin' both her If e tie worn hands in his great fists, exclaimed: " O Kate, I've sich good news for yer ! Mr. Jones has offered me a posi- ' tion as fire engineer of the Diamond mines, and I'm goin' to quit this Mon- day, and what's more, take yon with me. Yer needn't shake yer head. Mary's old enough to look arter the boys. I'll let yer keep the baby; thar's no use askin' yer to leave that behind. I shall be able to give you a nice little home, Kate. Next Monday night, when yer father goes inter the:mines with the night shift, you jine me on the other side o' the oreek; I'll have a wagon thar, and we'll drive off and be married. Come now, Kate darlin', think how long I've waited.' " O John, I can't, I cau't !' shecried, tryin' to draw away her hands. "But the foolish feller thought he'd scare her into goin' with him, bo he aid. ' I tell yer, Kate, it isn't safe for us to stay. That'll be a terrible cave-in here soon, and the houses will all go down together. The quicker we're out o' this hole the better.' " At this she drew away with a Bhiver and replied, in a trembling voice.- ' " ' I know thar's danger, but father won't heed it, so I've given up my plaoe, and stay at home to watch and try to save the children if it comes. You're very good to say I might keep the baby, but I promised mother I'd take keer o them alL Thar'll be nothin' left if yer go, but no smart young feller oughter stay here, and it's no use o' yer waitin' any longer for me.' "But John put his arms 'bout her, and began talkin' so low I couldn't hear, yet I knew he was tryin' to coax her to give in and go Monday. I could see her face grow whiter and whiter yet she allers shook her head, till at last he lost his temper, and pnshin' her roughly from him, said, in an angry voice, ' I believe you've been fooliir me and real ly mean to marry that drinkin' Tom Taylor, as soon as my back is turned I' " She denied it ; but he replied, that Taylor was allers visitin' their house, her father boasted of his marryin' her, and the only way she could prove she hadn't been playin' him false was to go with him Monday, or he wouldn't an swer for the consequences.' "My blood was gettin' up, but I waited to see what she'd do. She stood perfectly still, and stared at him with a scared look in those great sorrowful eyes, then sprang away and ran with all her might back to her own home. I kept out o' sight till after dark, then went to her window and looked in. ' " She had the young uns all seated at supper, with the baby asleep on her lap. Thar wasn't much to eat, and they soon cleared the plates, and none noticed that she didn't take her share. Her father was cursin' and swearin' at her, and the children all quarrelin' together; but she didn't seem to hear any of 'em, and I'll never forget, sir, the look of pain in her eyes. "I could hardly keep from goin' in and silencin' her father. I w s nigh as mad at John Pearson, for his cruel threats 'most broke her heart, though they couldn't make her break her prom ise. But I know'd I'd only make mat ters wuss, 6o I went home and relieved my mind, talkin' it all over with my old woman. "'Bout twelve o'clock that night, arter Kate had finished her work, she went to the door to look out. It was werry dark and cold, and as she stood thar the ground seemed to quake be neath her. "She started with fright, for she knew what those signs meant .work in's', the miners call 'em. She turned to light a lantern and wake the children, when she heerd a dull heavy thud, and then a low distant rnmblin. "She instantly ran next door, gave a loud knock, and colled to Bill Myers (who lived thar) to get . tip at once and give the alarm -jr she was sure thar was goin' to be . cave-in. " He oame to the window half asleep, and told her she'd been dreamin' ; but his ear, too, caught that rumblin' noise, and at once knowin' the danger, he woke up his wife, and they dressed and ran out. And they were none too soon, sir, for the whole surface suddenly drop ped down from five to seven feet, takin' the houses with it. " Of course those who were in 'em were terribly frightened, and rushed out, men, women and children, just sb they woke up, screamin' and fiyin' in all directions. "Bill Myers' first thought was for Kate and the young uns, for the roof of their house had instantly crashed in. But she had 'em all in a group outside, clingin' to her, the baby in her arms, and a lighted lantern at her feet. Bill caught up the two boys and said to Kate : " We must hurry out o' this quick as we can ; but which way shall we go ?' " ' The path up the mountain ! I'll hold the lantern ; all follow I ' she cried, running ahead, while a crowd rushed arter her. "Suddenly she stopped and gave a loud cry, for throwin'her lantern for ward, she saw a wide seam, into which we would all have fallen but for her light. Every one pushed to the edge and looked into the blaok pit, whioh, I believe, opened to the lowest vein, three hundred end fifty feet. "The faces were white with terror that the lantern shone on, but Kate turned quickly and said : " Follow me ; I know another way.' " Yet we soon found that this was not the only seam, but many more were opening, as if made by an earthquake, and down one of these Goal creek poured its whole stream into the mines beneath, and it was fearful to hear it hiss and roar through the fissures of the disturbed rocks. "Some of the people were so scart they became perfectly crazy, and would have run right into it but for Kate's coolness and Bill Myers' threats if they didn't obey orders. They two went ahead with the lantern, and found that the seams all opened from east to west, so by movin' south, they brought the whole party safely out o' the sunken portion to the high land opposite us. " I can tell yer, sir, it was good to feel the solid rooks beneath yer feet, and know there was no deep pits that might at any moment yawn open and swallow yer up. "All this happened in a werry little while, though it 'peared like a lifetime Binoe I'd been on that mountain before. " We were a cold, miserable Bet that crowded into a little vacant hut Some of the men built a rousin' fire outside, and when we talked the matter over, Bill Myers and two other chaps set off by a round-about path to reach this breaker ; for yei see, sir, we feared that thirty men were shut up in the mines, for none could tell how great the crush was inside, and we knew the stream was rapidly floodin' the different tunnels. " You want to know if these men es caped. Wal, I'll tell yer how some of 'em got out, for Kate Dalton's work wasn't done yet Indeed, sir, it was then she showed the most pluok, for both her father and sweetheart were down in the mines. "It eeenis, sir, that the men had been in the mines several hours, when the boss, goin' from the shaft to whar they were diggin', noticed some well-known signs o' trouble, and ordered all to leave at once. He told Joe Dalton to go warn three of the men who were workin' abreast in a distant part of the tunnel ; then he, with the rest of the miners, iv ere drawnup the shaft. "They'd hardly reached the surface when the first crash came. They wait ed in dreadful suspense to hear the sig nal for the others to come np ; but time passed and the gong didn't sound, while the heavy thuds o' f allin' earth and crashin' o' rocks warned them that terri ble work was goin' on beneath, and it was probable the other men had been killed at onoe by the powerful con cussion. ' "While they were talkin' it over, some discovered the cave-in on the sur face, and alarmed "bout their families, took lanterns and went in saroh o' them. When Bill Myers reached the breaker, the crush in the mines seemed to have gone as far as it would, and the few men left round the sHaft were disoussin' as to whether the imprisoned men Were alive yet, and if it could be possible to save 'em. " Most all but Bill Myers was of the opinion that they were already dead. " While he was arguing with an experi enced miner, who should suddenly ap pear but Kate Dalton, still holdin her lantern, but with a face as white as a ghost, and her eyes wild-lookin' and big ger than ever, " She ran to the boss and cried, " Did John Pearson come np ?" " But she instantly saw by our faces he hadn't, and rushing to the engine room, she begged the engineer to let her down on the elevator ; but Bill Myers held her back, while the boss told her that the tunnels were all filled with fal len rooks between the shaft and whar they were at work. "' Can they still be living ?' she asked. " 'Possibly,' he replied ; 'but thar's no way to reach 'em.' " She sank back heavily in Bill Myers' arms, and all thought she was goin' to faint, and, sir, those rough fellers' vis ion was werry dim just then, for their hearts ached for poor Kate. But with a shudder she rose up, and sorter gath erin' her strength, as for a struggle, she asked question after question, till she knew the exact spot whar they were at work, for she'd often been in the mines. " Arter thinkin' desperately for a few minutes, she sprang forward and cried : " Thar's the drift at number four. The tunnel from that opening crosses the one whar they are. I'm goin' to save 'em. Who will help me ? ' " Several offered, sayin' they'd forgot all about that way; but the boss shook his head and said : " It's two miles in whar they were at work. If they could have come out, they'd 'a' been here now. All who go in may be caught in another crush, or drowned by the rising water.' But more to herself than the men she re plied, wildly: " 'John said I didn't care for him, but I love him too much to let him die down there. I must save him I ' And at that she started off and ran for the drift, Bill Myers alone followin. "It was a good bit off, and she did not notice that he was comin' till she reached the broad wooden doors in the side of the hill. She only thanked him with her eyes, but stopped a moment and looked back at the mountain whar she'd left the children. " The mornin' sun was just risin' over it, and the clouds above were all crimson aud gold. Liftin' her hands towards 'em, shecried, beseechingly : "Mother, mother, I wouldn't 'a' left tbem to be happy, but he's perishin' in the dark 1 I must find him or die I ' Then she ran down the tunnel so fast Bill had to hurry to catch np with her. "Thar wasn't more water than usual on the sides for a mile and a half. As they went on, Bill shouted the names of the men ; but all was still as death, till they began to hear the swash of a stream forcing its way through narrow passages. " It's no use, Kate,' cried BUI; they can't be livin.' We'U be drowned if we go further. Think o' the young uns; what would they do without you ? For their sakes come out o' this I' "But she looked at him like one dazed, then said, pitifully, Come down here a little way and give one more loud call.' v " To satisfy her he did, and to his great surprise and joy, distant voices I'dpUtni. Kate was crazy to rush forward and find 'em, but BiU fiaid they might miss each other if they moved ; so both kept hallooin' and the answers came nearer and nearer, till two men ap proaohed from a side tunnel, and Kate sprang forward and fonnd Pearson's hand clasped in her own. " It seems when her father brought the warnin', he and Mick Coon insisted on tryin' to reach the shaft arter they heered the first crash, and o! coarse were killed . Pearson and WeUs had sense enough to stay whar they were; bnt the drift entrance had not been used in a long time, and they, too, had for gotten it If Kate hadn't insisted on goin' arter them, they'd soon have been drowned. "You ask if Kate married him arter this? Wal, gals is curns ; she wouldn't consent tiU BiU Myers and his wife in sisted on takin' the boys, and as they also wen t to the Diamond mines ana became next-door neighbors again, Kate felt as if she might be happy at last and stUl keep her promise. " And, sir, them boys are growin' up wonderful smart chaps. I tell Mrs. Myers I'm as proud of 'em as if they were our own, and not a drop o' old Dalton's blood in their veins. But but I forgot ; I didn't mean toteU yer that I was Bill Myers." Youth's Companion. In the Tyrol, almanacs are still pub lished with pictures instead of reading matter, after the ancient fashion, before types had been invented. They are very beneficial to those ignorant even of the alphabet who understand that the figure of a saint means a holiday ; a plow, the time to break the soU ; a clover-leaf, the season for seeding ; an ax, the time to chop wood. A hand denotes cold; a . . . . .1 : 1 la moutn wina ; a puouer, wu, uu ui warm weather. There are 72,000 wares devoted to hops in England. To cultivate these lands costs yearly about $2,600,000, and the .1 f tha nmdnot for the last thirty years has been about $15,000,000 yearly. FARM. GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD Take Care ef the Orchard. -Whatever on the farm does not rise to a certain dignity in the estimation of the farmer, is nsuaUy sadlynegleoted, if not otherwise abused. While every farm has its orchard, on a great many it is considered of very little account, being used only for supplying home wants. We have heard farmers go so far as to say that it was cheaper to buy fruit than to raise it This opinion, however, does not find general favor, we are happy to say ; but whUe it is usual ly thought desirable to have an orchard, it is frequently the last thing cared for, if it is ever cared for. We have seen trees in cultivated orchards shamefully abused, and that it was permitted by the owner could not be acoounted for, for if a tree was worth planting, it would seem that the owner would realize that it was worth preserving. Not only does the owner himself sometimes show an astonishing disregard of the interests of the apple trees by plowing through the roots, and breaking the trees with the whiffletrees, but he looks compla cently on while the hired man does the same thing. Sometimes a man wiU be careless of bis own, bo far as his own conduct is oonoerned, bnt when another does what he does, he is aroused to see the nature of his own misdemeanor, as weU as one who is doing likewise, and remonstrate. Bnt some farmers appear to be utterly indifferent as to who abuses the trees of the orohard, or how it is done. They will suffer the cran ing to be done not alone in a slovenly way, dui in an injurious way. rne man is sent into the tree with rough, heaw boots, and he rubs off the bark at every step, and does more damage than any respectable pruning would compen sate for ; but the pruning is often not respectable. It is simply butchering. If the limbs get off, however, the owner seems satisfied. Then, perhaps, some beautiful look ing apple attracts his eye, or the eye of some one eise, ana ne nnris a club among the branches or suffers some one else to do it One would be led to sup pose that he thought the tree the rock of Gibraltar. It is no wonder that a tree treated in any such manner fails to give its owner satisfaction. A tree is endowed with life, and the machinery of life. It has a circulation, lungs and skin, and these are suscepti ble of injury, and when, injured mtst decrease the vitality of the tree, as the Zjtality of the human body is decreased by disease. While the farmer in maiy instances no doubt thinks that our pomologists are extravagant in their ideas of the needs of the orchard in the time they devote to it, it is not true, and very muoh benefit might be derived by all of us if we would strive to imitate them. There are difficulties in growing an "orchard whioh are often discourag ing. The varieties selected are often unfit for the locality, and other things come up to dishearten, but it wiU pay to deal with them all, and by pa tience and perseverence to have a good orohard on the farm, and to take good care of it when it is grown as well as while ib is growing. Exchange, Heclpea. . Quick Pudding. One pint milk, one pint flour, three eggs and a little salt Buckwheat Cakes. Mix one gill of wheat flour with one quart of buckwheat nour, add one large teaspoonful of tait, then add gradually a scant quart of warm water mixed with one gill of yeast Let it rise all night, and in the morning add a quarter teaspoon of carbosate of soda, and bake immediately. Mince Pie. One cupful lard, two cupfuls flour, one-half cupful joe-water, a pinch of salt; use a knife to cut the lard through the flour until fine; then odd the water and mix with the knife untU no flour remains in the bowl. Boll in a sheet and place small bits of butter over; dust weU, fold np, and re peat the process twice, using half a cup ful of butter. Boll the crust thin; have a quick oven; it wiU rise in flakes. Laub. When a loin or any other joint of lamb has been under-dressed, it is a good plan to divide it into cutlets of a neat shape, and fnUy three-quarters of an inch in thickness, to dip these in Deaten eggs, strew over nicely-flavored breadcrumbs, and fry or broil them un til lightly browned on both sides. As there is a danger that the meat will dry when it is dressed the second time, care should be taken not only to cook the outlets over a good fire, but alBO to dip them in clarified butter before serving them. Apple Dumplings. Take one cup of sour cream to two cups of buttermilk. half a teaspoonful of soda, a pinch of salt, mane witn these a nice light dougb, roll and cnt it as for large-sized biscuit. then roll the biscuit as for pie-crust; nave your apples quartered ana steamed until tender, plaoe them on the dougb. sugar and spice, then gather the edge together and press and tuck in firmly; roll in the hand to shape them a little long, lay them smooth Bide up on a bake pan, moisten over the top with sweet cream or melted batter, bake to a nice brown and eat with cream and sugar navorea witn lemon. Keeplnu Grail. Through. Wluter. NnnAlrmAii wfin tmk. larorA mionfifiaa oeUars packed in damp moss; but farm ers and others who wish tn nrflunA lew lor spring grafting, may not have simple and perfect mode is to bury them ut urj piaoe out oi aoors, in an in- vflrtfwl nnpn Kot Pill fVio L av1 f uU with them, nail two or three strips across to Keep tnem in place, and then Place the box in a hnlA rill IT Inr iYia rvnv- pose, with the open Bide down, and burr them half a foot or so in depth. They ao not come in contact witn the earth, an1 mm oi n vmfaf.l aj 11. moisture of the earth keeps them plump and fresh without any danger of their becoming water-soaked. Grafts which have become shrivelled by exposure are thus restored and wiU grow. It ii often advantageous to cut grafts ii aiitiimn. as Uim is than nn ,1nnn.. , - " ' v. UUUg.I ui their vitality being lessened by exposure in uiivudo uuiu, nuu is ubou more con venient to out them or procure them irom a distance ai uua time. In mark in 17 in a i a nai a wicn m iaoi ... member that if the wood is wet before writing, the names wiU last ten times as long as if written dry. Colman't Sural World. The Secret of Snake Charming, The Iiondon Dailv Telegraph says : In India the favorite snake for exhibition is the oobra, partly because of its more striking appearance, and partly because, itB deadly character being so weU known, any trifling with it appears to the un initiated publio the more wonderful. Nor, indeed, do the performances of the Hindoo snake charmer lose, on better ac quaintance, all their marvelousness, for courage of a high order, arising partly from the confidence acquired by long Eractioe, is manifested in seising and agging the dreadful ophidian. In most oases tne cnarmer rentiers mo reptiles harmless by drawing their poi son fangs, and the exhibition becomes then merely one of the snake's highly trained condition. On the other hand, it often happens that the basket contains the veritable death dealer; and a oobra with his fangs undrawn is nearly always forthcoming if the temptation in money be sufficiently Strong. Bnt in the han dling ofthe creature when once esposed there is no hesitation, for hesitation means death, and in the swift seizure and sudden release there is daring of an exceptional kind. A oobra strikes, when it has really made up its mind to striKe, with lightning rapidity, and to dodge lightning successfully, requires consid erable agility. The snake charmers, however, when put on their mettle, will grasp the erect cobra with impunity, owing; solely to the superior speed of their movements, for by a feint they provoke the reptUe to strike, and before it can recover its attitude seize it below the jaws. In the same way the ichneumon or mongoose seoures in contest with venomous snakes a comparative immunity. It was for a long time an artiole of faith with writers of popular works on natural history, that this animal enjoyed a complete im munity, but scientific experiment has correoted the fallacy. A mongoose and a cobra confined together lougnt freely, and though the latter seemed to the eye to strike his antagonist, the mongoose. on being examined after it had killed the snake, was found' to be untouched. Another cobra was then brought on to the scene, and, being made to close its fangs on the mongoose's leg, the ani mal confessed its susceptibility to the poison by dving in about four minutes. It was therefore by its superior activity alone that in fair fight with the reptile it had escaped unhurt, and to the same cause the snake charmer owes the immu nity that attends his exhibition. But as in the case of the mongoose, the snake charmer when actually bitten dies as rapidly as any otner creature, and in spite of bU the powers of his charms, roots and snake stones. The Hindco spectator refuses to believe this, and en joys, therefore, by his credulity, a pleas ure denied to more intelligent audiences, for if we could only accept as truth the charmer's 'statement that he has really been bitten, and that red drops on the bitten spot were actually blood exuding from the fatal puncture, and could then believe that the root he smelt, the stone he applied to the wound, and the charms he muttered were veritably counter-acting the magio of the cobra's poison, the spectacle would be of surpassing in terest, since it would be a miracle. For the cobra's bite there is no remedy except instant amputation, and the snake charmer himself knows this well. As a means ot general security he con fides in his dexterous sleight-of-hand, but in case of accidents he carries a broad-bladed knife. The Symbol of Hope. There is a bird that mariners call the " frigate bird," of strange habits and of strange power. Men see him in all climes, but never yet has human eye seen him near the earth. With wings of mighty stretch, high borne, he sails along. Men of the far north see him moving on amid auroral nres, sailing with set wings amid those awful flames, taking the .color of the waves' light which swell and heave around him. Men in the tropics see him of hottest noon, his plumage all incarnadined by the fierce rays that smite innocuous upon him. Amid their ardent fervor he bears alon g, maj estio, tireless. ' Never was be known to stoop from his lolty line of flight, never to swerve. To many he is a myth; to all a mystery. Where is his perch? Where does he rest? Where was he bred? None know. They only know that above cloud, above the reach of tempest, above the tumult of transverse currents, the bird of heaven so let us call him on Belf-snpportiog vans that disdain to beat the air on which they rest, moves gradually on. So shall my hope be. At eitner pole oi me, aDove Tne oiouos of sorrow, superior to all tempests, on lofty and tireless wing, Booming the earth, it shall move along. Never shaU it stoop, never swerve from its sublime line of flight Men have seen it in the morning of my life; they shall Bee it in its hot noonday; and when the shadows fall, my sun having set (using your style of speech, but using mine when the shadows disappear, my sun having risen), the last they see of me shall be this hope of gain in dying, as it sails out on steady wing, and disappears amid the everlasting light Cured by the Sting of Bees. The German papers tell a storv of a woman living in the neighborhood of Prague, who suffered bo severely from gout in the arm that she could not ob tain rest or sleep, and the limb in which the disease bad settled was rendered entirely useless. Her husband having heard of a countryman who had been entirely cured of rheumatism after be ing accidentally stung by a bee. per suaded her to try this disagreeable remedy, which, as be pointed out could hardly prove bo painful as the disease. She consented, and allowed three bees to be placed on her arm, and to sting her in several places. Surpris ing results ensued ; the patient soon afterward feU into a long and deep sleep, the first real sleep she had en joyed for six months, after whioh the acute pain disappeared, and when the swelling produced by the stings had subsided the arm recovered the power of motion, and the gout has not since reap peared. DruggUti' Circular, TIMELY TOPICS. The British consul in Pekin puts the deaths from famine in China at 7,000,000. The province of Shansi alone lost 5,000, 000. Here I am for you I" were the last words of Mehemet Ali as he rushed out from the burning tower at Jachova into the midst of his assassins. He was ruthlessly cut down with 200 attendants. The latest idea in England is glass furniture. Glass can be worked into most extraordinary and lovely forms, and we receive the almost inoredible as surance that it is more durable than wood, and is exceedingly cheap. The Russian government has de termined to send a scientific exploring expedition to the lofty tableland of Cen tral Asia, known as the pamir, or root of the world. It will consist of a topogra pher and two botanists, who wUl be ac companied by an escort of Cossacks. The imperial Russian commission ap- Eointed to inquire into the army frauds ave reported. They state that the corruption and venality was widespread. Five hundred officers, including forty colonels, are accused by the commission of misappropriation of money during the late war. Throughout France gardening is practically taught in the primary and elementary schools. There are, at present, twenty-eight thousand of these schools, each of which has a garden at tached to it, and is under the care of a master capable of imparting a knowl edge of the first principles of horticul ture. An English steamer lately made a stop at Lord Howe Island, in the South Pa cific It had just twenty-five inhabi tants men, women and children who very rarely heard anything of the rest of the world. They were said to live in happy content, their only complaint being the want of a schoolmaster and of clothing. . It is said by the Chicago Inter-Ocean that Senator Jones, of Nevada, when he started for the West, in August, was, in his own estimation, broken in fortune, although five . years ago he was worth five millions. Extravagant living and reckless giving, according to the Inter Ocean, has reduced him. The recent lift in miningstock has, however, brought him in a million and a half. A curious package was retained as " unmailable " hi the searchers' depart ment at the New York postoffice not long ago. It was a small tin. case containing a very bnantifnl inseot of the spider species, it was aaaressea to Bir jonn Lubbock, the banker-entomologist, of London. The spider was nearly an inch in length. The body, head, and legs were of a glossy black color, but the pelvio sac was covered with a velvety growth of fine hair of a brilliant oiange hue. The iusect was alive, and was sup plied with provision in the Bhape of a lump of sugar fastened to the bottom of the tin case. , The Inventor of Gas Lights. The inventor of gas lights is said to have been a Frenchman, Phillippe le Bon, an engineer of roads and bridges, who, in 1,772, adopted the idea of using for the purposes of illumination the gases distilled during the combustion ot wood, ne labored for a long time in the attempt to perfect his crude inven tion, and it was not till 1799 that he con fided his discovery to the institute. In September, 1800, he took out a patent, and in 1801 he published a memorial containing the result cf his researches. Le Bon commenced by distilling wood in order to obtain from it gas, oil, pitch and pyroligneous acid ; but his work in dicated the possibility of obtaining gas by distiUation from fatty or oily sub stances. From 1799 to 1802 Le Bon made numerous experiments. He es tablished at Havre his first therolamps ; but the gas whioh he obtained, being imperfectly freed from its impurities, gave only a feeble light and evolved an insupportable odor, and the result was that but littw favor was shown to the new discovery ; the inventor eventu ally died, ruined by his experiments. The English Boon put into practice the crude idea of Le .Bon. In 1804 one Winsor patented and claimed the cred it of inventing the process of lighting Dy gas ; in lUUo several shops in Bir mingham were illuminated by gas manu factured by the process of Winsor and Murdock. Among those who first used this new light was Watts, the inventor of the steam engine. Xn 1816 the first use of gas was made in London, and it was not nntU 1818 that this invention, realle of French origin, was applied in Francy 1 , After the Horn. In 1866 a grand base-ball tournament was held in Bookford, Ills., where the first prize was a gold ball, and there were other premiums, the last being a huge tin horn, to the little end of which was tied a diminutive black porcelain baby. This trophy was designed for the worst nine. It was late in the day when the Detroit club and a team from Pecatonica, 111, entered the lists. The Pecatonica organization was the pride and joy of the Peoatonioans, who backed it warmly; one enthusiast in particular ventured, as an exact chronicler has re corded, the proceeds of the sale of three loads of hay and a yearling calf. Hav ing put his fortune to the touch, , the son of Pecatonica Bat himself down upon a fence and prepared to register by notches upon a stick the runs made by either party. His oountenanoe was at first exultant then it became bland merely, then it assumed a look of pa tient resignation commingled with wild surprise, the latter predominating. The play of his fellow-townsmen had been utterly unaccountable ; but presently his countenance brightened, and after he bad counted np sixty-two notches on the Detroit side and one (unearned) notch on the Pecatonioa Bide, he said, with a soft, low whistle of one upon whom the truth has suddenly dawned, " Why, the goshblamed fools are after the horn I Items of Interost. A well read officer General news. Butter was in use 4,000 years ago. A Vienna firm is making beautiful slippers of woven glass. There are in the United States nearly 800 pottery establishments. One million hands are engaged in rais ing and manufacturing tobacco. Very fine sulphur has betro discovered in great quantities at ChiUan, OhUi. A bachelor merchant's advice in select a wife : " Get hold of a piece of calico that will wash." More than one-half the population ot France depends on agriculture as a means of living. "A teaoher who will preserve order or break heads " is advertised for by a Kansas school board. . The Anglo-Saxons used what they called living money, that is to say slaves, as a medium df exchange. Some thoughtful person thinks it is easier to get up twith the lark when you go to bed without one. The youth who stubbornly says: ";I don't care," soon finds that the world has the same opinion of him.' Only two-thirds of the area of Italy, capable of production, are cultivated, whUe the balance lies waste. . The measures adopted in Prussia for the extermination of the Colorado beetle have been entirely successful. Aggravating To think up a good joke after going to bed, and not be able to recaU a word of it next morning. One style of hat for ladies is called the "huzza." That is because it is so cheerful for the husband who pays the bills. He that runs may read a great many things concerning his character, especi ally if he runs for ah office. Edenburg Herald. THREE-PLY BHYMES. The day waB waniug, when 1, nigh by A large and knotty oak, joke epoke To this effect i " I know you grow From a small sprout ont etont ; Exouae the query But now how bongh Your stately branches, as big pig twig And acorns munch ?" Then the tree de Termined not to be by fun undone, Gave a rough bark, " Hark ! dark- , Eyed maiden, I'd as loaf chief grief, Of my broad chest, rest guessed But never told. Hold ! hold , Young mortal, and ere my root shoot scoot I" Words of Wisdom. The darkest dreams of life have had beautiful awakenings. None of us is consistent, because none of us is wholly good or wholly bad. Some men, by repeating what others have said, fancy that they are growing wise. Our glorious aspirations, which give us life, grow torpid in the din of worldly bustle. Youth may sow more tares in one year than old age can ever pull up; but only old age knows it. There are many men whose tongues might govern multitudes if they could govern their tougnes. Things may be seen differently and differently shown, but actions are visible though motives are secret. Good counsels observed are chains to grace which, neglected, prove halters to strangle undutif ul children. There is no happiness in life, there is no misery, like that growing out of the dispositions which consecrate or dese crate a home. It is not wisdom, but ignorance, which teaches men presumption. Genius may be sometimes arrogant, but nothing is so diffident as knowledge. To analyze the charms of flowers is like dissecting music; it is one of those things which it is far better to enjoy than to attempt to understand. If a man be gracious to strangers, it shows that he is a citizen of the world and his heart is no island, out off from other islands, bat a continent that joins them. The pilot who is always dreading a rock or a tempest must not complain if he remain a poor fisherman. We must at times trust something to fortune, for fortune has often some share in what happens. The thoughts we have had, the pic tures we have seen, can be again called back before the mind's eye and before the imagination; but the heart is not so obliging; it does not reproduce its pleas ing emotions. You find yourself refreshed by the presence of cheerful people. Why not make earnest effort to confer that pleas -ure on others ? You will find half the battle is gained if you never aUow your self to say anything gloomy. A Wedding Story; Di Murska, the opera singer, has told her matrimonial story to a reporter of the Chicago Inter-Ocean, prefacing it with the assertion that she is of noble birth, and that her success in Europe was wonderful. A French count fol lowed her for many years but she spurned his offer of marriage, and he, in desperation, shot himself. She Bays, as to ber first hnBband : "In our troupe was a young Scotch man, Anderson, handsome, well educated and an excellent pianist I supposed that his brilliant complexion was the re sult of health, but it was only the indi cation of heart disease. I liked him very weU, but never dreamed of any thing more, though be showed me much attention. In New Zealand, one even ing, he feU from the piano stool insensi ble. . I had him carried to my apart ments, and the doctor said it was a ter rible attack of heart disease. To move him, the physicians said, would be fatal. I therefore gave up my apartments and took others, and share 1 with my maid in nursing him, I was roused from my oompassion to hear that people were saying bad things of me, because I was taking care of a sick man in my own bouse. He heard of it, and begged me to marry him, as he had only a few days to live. I was foolish enough to do so. He lingered for six weeks, and managed, in that time, to draw a large sum of my money from the bank, whioh he sent to his own family." Three months afterward, she married Mr. Hill, "Si i TT