Two Dollars per Annum. HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher.! ft Nlli DESPERANDUM. VOL. IX. 1 llIDGrWAY; &LK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, - MAY 1, 1879. NO. 11. I 4 I " In the Long: Run." The old-fashioned saying, 8q lightly expressed, And so tirelessly uttered, Is One ol the best. Oh, ponder, young triflor, i With young lile begun, 'ilia deep, earnest meaning Of " id the long ran." For " in tlie long run," boys, Tho seed will spring up That was sown in the gnrdoa Or dropped in the cup. And, remember ! no roses Will spring from the weed, And no bonutiful iruit From unworthy seed. How maay a stripling In trouble to-day, By riotous living With comrades too gny ; With charaoter shipwrecked And duties undone, Will be sorrows harvesting " In the long run." And " in the long run," will The toiler fare bent Who performs honest lnbot And takes honest rest. Who, contented and happy, Hastes not, in a day, Or a year, to heap riches That will pass away ! The good and the evil That bide on tho earth, Tho joy aud the sorrow, The pain and the mirth. The battles undeodod, Tho victories won, Will yield what was sown, lads, " In tho long run." Yonkeri Statetman. AUNT HILLARY'S LEGACY. "Oh. dear, dear!" said Aunt Hillary, in a tone of despair; "oh, dear, dear, whatever shall I do with him?" She was looking at something which the expressman had just deposited on the floor of tlio back ptirch a stout wooden cape, within which appeared a bright eyed, )ii nk-faced monkey. " W by, he'll murder us, I shouldn't wonder," continued Aunt Hillary, draw ing back as the' monkey stretched forth his little black paw, "or set tlie house on iire, or something else dreadful. What tun 1 to do willi him?" she concluded, in a tone of (listless. "Give him away, aunt, or sell him," suggested, poking my school-umbrella between the bars of the eate. "No, no; I couldn't think of that. JIs was such a favorite with poor Janet. And she left him to me because she was sure, she said, that I would treat him kindly; but how to manage him 1 am sure I don't know. 'What do monkeys rat, Hose?" "Oh, coeoanuts, and bananas, and oranges, and cake, and sugar, and such things," I replied, confidently. " Pivtty dear boarding," said old Ephraim, limping up from the garden, hoe in hand. " S'posc now, Miss Hil lary, ou try him with a piece o' bread. It's plain, but healthy." The monkey eagerly grabbed the light roll which Aunt Hillary presented on the end of a fork, and devoured it with gusto, lie also accepted some milk which Ephraim courageously put be tween the bars; and then he crouched down in a cifrner and looked so quiet and wistful that Aunt Hillary quite pitied him. " He does look innocent and lonesome, poor little thing." she said. " I dare say fie misses his old home and his kind mis tress: but he shall have at least plenty to it and drink hero. " Only," she added, hesitatingly, "I do rather wish that Janet Waters had chosen anything but a monkey for a pet." When, two or three days after this, 1 stopped on my way from school to see Aunt HillaryI found her in great dis tress. Jackey (that was the monkey's name) had turned out a perfect little demon, and was giving no end of trouble. He wouldn't stay in his narrow cage in fact, he wasn't used to a cage, except in traveling; and when she, with Ephra im's assistance, let him out and tied him to the bedpost, he had ripped open the pillows and investigated their contents, which he afterward strewed liberally about the floor. He had then been con fined in tho back porch, where he wrapped himself in a roller-towel and I mlled Tabby's tail, and upset a can of teroseneoil on Puff, Aunt Hillary's little white poodle. Thereupon Kphraim had tied him in the garden, while he pruned tlie currant bushes, and after a while re turned to find oil the young radishes pulled up and Jackey industriously searching out the garden pens which had been sown on the previous day. finally a tall pole was erected in the midst of tin grass-plot, and to this Jackey was secured with a rope long enough to admit of his running up and down and around in a limited circle; but, alas! even this expedient failed, for in two hours he had pulled up half the grass and scratched innumerable dust holes. What was to be done with the monkey f " I don't know which is the worst," naid Aunt Hillary, with tears dimming her usual bright brown eye "the boys or Jackey." ., There was an om scuooinouse on tne big lot adjoining Aunt Hillary's pretty cottage at tlie end of the village street. The teacher was a tall, thin, grave-looking man of middle age "very neat and threadbare, and with the manners of a perfect gentleman," as Aunt Hillary ad miringly observed. But the boys! tlie whooping, yelling crew, who made twelve o'clock hideous with unearthly noises, and who climbed AuTit Hillary's garden-palings, and snow balled Puff nnd.fabby in winter and stole her choice plums and cherries in summer, and at all seasons enriched her garden with old shoes, tin cans and discarded hoopskirts! An, what pathos there was in that simple remark of Aunt Hillary's : " I don't know which i9 the worst the bovs or Jackey!" She was the most patient and good humored person in the world, and the last whom any but a schoolboy would have taken pleasure in worrying. A neat, trim little woman about thirty-five, with bright, kindly eyes, a fresh complex ion, and a face still so comely and'exprei sive of gen tle aad womanly feeling that I often wondered why she should be an old maid. Once, when lex-pressed tohrrthis won der, she colored like a girl, smiled, and answered frankly that no one had ever asked hot to marry except Sam Lane, and he, poor fellow, though good enough in other respects, had been too dissipated for anv sensible woman to think of. For the rest, she might have married, maybe, if she had been more forward and pushing; but men don't generally anoy bnahfulgirls, so she andpoor Janet Wa ters had been left in the lurch, while all their young friends got married ; and see ing how badly some of them had turned out, why maybe it was all for the best that she had remained single. She hail her own house, and money nouh to live comfortably ; and, if she did feel lonesome at times mostly in the winter evenings why, there were the neighbors, and Tab by and Puff, and, in short, she complain ed of nothing, except the boys and Jackey. Ephrain who lived ncross the road, and came over every day to do the out door work had undertaken the manage ment of Jackey, sbut the experiment proved a failure. The monkey had taken a special dis like to him; and when, at length, the old man declared that judicious chastisement was as necessary to monkeys as to boys, and attempted to carry that theory into prnctioe, Jackey fairly turned the tables upon him, forced him to an ignominious retreat, and remained victor of the field that is, of the grass-plot, to whosecentral pole he was still attached. " I'll go right over," said Aunt Hillary, desperately "right over to Squire San ders, and ask him what I hart best do with that monkey. If I only knew how to manacc him, I wouldn't part with" him for gold, on account of Janet; but lie's worrying the life out of us nil, and something must be done." When, on her return from Squire Sunders', Bhe came in sight of her own house, she knew that the climax of her wow was reached. All the boys lust dismissed from school were collected in a crowd in front of the cottage, whoop ing and yelling, while on the roof in full view sat Jackey, attired in Aunt Hil lary's very best Sunday bonnet an ancient Ieg'horn, of rather obsolete pat tern, which she had that morning care fully trimmed for its third summer's term of service, Jackey, it appeared', had watched her proceedings as she stood trying on her bonnet at the open window, and on her departure had gnawed asunder his fet ters, appropriated' the bonnet, and mounted with it to the roof, where he could examine his prize at leisure. Poor Aunt Hillary! It was not so much the injury to her bonnet which now troubled her, as the greater mis chief which tho boys were doing. On pretence of capturing or driving down the monkey, they were climbing her nice white front palings, trampling her choice flower-beds, and throwing mis silts, which had already smashed more than one pane in the upper-room win dows. In vain she implored theru to desist. In vain she represented to them that she did not care for the bonnet, and that if Jackey were only left alone he would come down of himself. They were too much delighted with the fun to listen to her, as she stood, with flushed face nnd tears in her eyes, on her rose-covered porch, while her tormentors howled and screeched, and threw wet clay and mud balls against the hitherto immaculate ute walls of her cottage. Suddenly a hush fell upon the crowd. The little front-gate opened, and the boys fell back, as along the walk came the tall form of Mr. McLean, the school master. The pale, thin man spoko to them quietly, but with an air of com mand, and they silently trooped out of the gate into the street, where they stood awaiting further proceedings. 'I hen he advanced to Aunt Hillary, and lifted his hat. " I perceive, madam, that you are in some trouble. Can I assist you in nny way ! ' Ah. sir." said Aunt Hillary, her eyes brimming over with tears, " if you could only send away the boys, and and get the monkey down!'' " The boys will not trouble you again, madam, and " he looked doubtfully up at the roof "I think 1 may possibly se cure vour pet. I will try." Kpliraim came limping up with the garden-ladder, and on this Mr. McLean mounted, advancing cautiously to the edge of the roof, near which Jackey was now seated, deeply absorbed in picking to nieces the yellow rose which hall adorned his mistress' bonnet. He took no notice of the schoolmaster until the latter quietly stretched forth his hand, artfully displaying a spectacle case, when he started up, seemingly in doubt whether to retreat or to seize the tempting lure. " You can ketch him now, sir, easy!" bawled Ephraim, from the foot of the ladder. "Grab hold of him at once, or he'll be right off like greased lightning. It s a trick o' lus n. Alas, in his eagerness, Ephraim forgot that his duty was to hold the ladder steady. He let go his hold of it and step ped back to see the results of his advice. The schoolmaster, with a quick mo tion, seized the monkey by his long arm. as it was outstretched to snatch at the spectacle-case. The impetus threw him ofl'his balance the ladder slipped slowly along the edge of the roof and before Aunt Hillary s horror-stricken shriek had fairly ceased, Mr. McLean lay, very still and white, on the bed of violets beneath the parlor window. He was not dead though we all thought so at first. Aunt Hillary ran for water, and blackberry wine, and knelt down and bathed his lace and rubbed his hands, while her own face was as color less as that of the injured man. Meanwhile tlie boys had rushed ofl some tor the doctor and tlie' rest to spread the news that the schoolmaster had broken his neck, back and skull, in consequence of which the yard and street were soon lined witn an eager crowd. The doctor and Squire Sanders con veyed the unconscious man into Aunt Hillary's parlor, and laid him upon her uroaa ciuntz soia, wnere, witn proper restoratives, he was soon revived. And then, after an examination, it was offici ally announced by Ephraim to the anxi ous puunc witnout that mere was nothing'more serious the matter than a broken leg. . "Hoorav!" pried Rill Davis tnosinir nn his cap "booray, boys! there won't be any school to-morrow!" Upon which Aunt Hillary hastened to the front gate, with more indignation in her eyes than I had ever before Keen there. " uoyg, ain't you ashamed ol your selves!" said she, severely. "If you have no more feeling for your good teacher, at least eo awav from here and don't disturb him with your unchristian noise. It is a wonder to me." she added, as she went back to the house " a wonder to me that, considering the badness of boys, there should ever be any good men in this world." After a while, I saw her in earnest consultation with the doctor, who had just set the broken limb. "He is uneasy lest he should bo a trouble to you," 1 heard the doctor say, "and is anxious to be taken to his lodg ings, but tomoveiini is simply impossi ble as yet." "Of course," said Aunt Hillary, promptly, " I don't dream of his being a trouble, poor man; and am sure ho is welcome- to whatever-1 can do for him. It is fortunate that he is. in my house, as I have no family to take up my time, and so shall be able to pay him proper attention. Just tell me what I can do for him. doctor." "At present," said the doctor, in a low, grave voice, " he needs only quiet and nourishing food," . . . Aunt Hillary did not take In tho full significance of these words until a few hours later, when Ephraim returned from Mr. Mclean's lodgings, whither ho had voluntarily gone for certain articles of clothing, and to see the schoolmaster's effects properly secured during his absence. And then he told Aunt Hillary a pathetic story of bare walls and a straw bed, chair and table; the latter with tho schoolmaster's dinner set out upon it. " Pea-soup nnd corn-bread, as I live," said Ephraim, "with brown sugar and coffee in a cupboard, and no butter. And the shoemaker's wife, who lets him the room, says he cooks his own victuals and don't cat enough to physic a snipe, and mends his own clothes occasional;'' Aunt Hillary burst into tears. She knew, as did everybody in the place, that the schoolmaster was very poor; but she had not dreamed of poverty such as this. And then he was a stranger, with no friends near to do him a kindness, or to loolv-after him in his illness. What wonder that her tender heart was touched ? . . ; Thereafter, despite his helpless eondi tion, I considered Mr. McLean a fortunate man. I never entered the house, without finding in Aunt Hillary's kitchen (a per fect model of a kitchen, by-the-bye), vari ous dainty' dishes, -the - very -sight of which caused my schoolgirl iuouth to water. Such fragrant tea and delicate waffles, served on the French china that had been a wedding-present to her mother. Such Savory beef-tea, and fresh straw berries and translucent jellies ! Such omelets such broiled steaks such white, feathery rolls; and all so tempt ingly arranged on the large japanned trav, ready to be carried to the invalid's bedside, where stood a round table al wnyg adorned with the very choicest of Aunt Hillary's ilowers not in a big bouquet, but simply a blossom or two, fresh and sweet, in a little Dresden-china vase that had been longer in the family h-tn Aunt Hillary herself, And then, how neat and cool and plcofant was the room in which tho in valid lay. Kind neighbors -supplied him with papers and books, nnd Aunt Hil lary sometimes read to him ; and I more Until once heard her singing in the twi light in a low voice, much as n mother might sing to her tired baby. As he grew better nnd could sit up in bed, Mr. Mclx'nn began to make himself ot use to Ins Hostess, lie retouched a fatled crayon portrait of her fatker; he repaired and renovated a much-prized workbox ; he instructed her how to clean gilt picture-frames; how to fix colors in carpets nnd dress goods bv chemical combination, and, best of all, he took charge of Jackey the cause of this un expected change in Miss Hillary's house hold and, subjecting him to a course of careful training, transformed him into a tractable, intelligent and well-behaved member of the household. It was wonderful, Ephraim declared, bow changed the beast had become, and how implicitly he obeyed the leaxt word or sign from the schoolmaster, who was the only person for whom he ever mani fested the least respect. Aunt Hillary did her best, by means of feeding and netting, to win his regard. but he appeared to look upon her with a certain contemptuous indifference, some times expressed in his conduct, except wlicn sternly rebuKou by Mr. jucjenn. And so the sweet flowery June passed ; ami one day, Mr. Mclean, with the assistance of a crutch nnd Squire Sanders' arm, limped out of Aunt Hil lary's rose-wreathed porch to a carringe which was waiting before the door, saw him turn to Aunt Hillary and take hex hand, and say something in a low voice about her goodness nnd his grati tude; und I thought his eyes were moist nnd his voice somewhat faltering. And when he was gone (not to his old lodging, but to Squire banders' hospi table home). Aunt Hillary went back into the house and wandered about in a lost kind of way. nnd linitjjy sat down in Mr. ! McLean's armchair, and then, without ! I a word, began to cry. 1 When I asked what ailed her. she I wiped her eyes and laughed, and said I that she felt at a loss, as if her oeeupa- j tion was gone and she must get an- i other patient to attend to or go into a hospital as nurse. Alter tins l usea to occasionally see Mr. McLean seated in Aunt Hillary's front porch, or leaning on her gate, "as she gathered a rosebud for him. Once 1 heard mm taiKing about ins little girl, Lillio he was a widower at school somewhere away in the South, and of his longing to see lier; and then I knew that it was for this child to dress her nicely and give her a good education that the schoolmaster had saved his little earnings, to the sacrifice ol his own com- lort. He did not go bnk to his little school. Through Squire Sanders' influence he obtained the position of principal of (; Academy, with a good salary; nml now be began to dress well and look so handsome that the single ladies of G began to take quite an interest in . . ... . . ..j luro. liiey inviicu nun iu om icij meet ings and quilting suppers; but it was vi.rv aolilnm that lie accented an invita tion, and it came to be understood that he was not a marrying man, as they ex itreispri It. ' . One day. on ray return home from school, my mother desired me to dress mvself vei v nicely. a9 she wisliod to take me out with her. We went first to Aunt Hillm-v's. whom we found attired in a rerv net erav vonote dress and a brand new bonnet, with white trimmings, in place of the one which Jackey had de ImvaA Khe looked strangely nervous, trouhleor hauuiuess I could not decide, as she was alternately smi ling aud wiping the tears from her eyes. 1 lieu Sciuire Sauderi jvme ifi and gave her his arm. and we all went together to church. i I conjectured that there was to be a service, though it was a week day; but, on entering, I saw Mrs. Sanders and her sister and daughters, with Mr. McLean the latter also dressed in new clothes and wearing a rosebud In his buttonhole, i ' t The clergyman ndvanced to meet us, and Mr. McLean, offering his arm to Aunt Hillary, the two stoot before him, and there, to my utter astonishment, the fiair were married Squire Sanders giv nsj away the bride. This wns two yenrs ngo : and I think that in all my circle of friends, I don't know a more quietly happy and con tented couple than Mr. McLean and his wife. Lillie, of course, came to live with them a sweet, lovely girl of about my own age, of whose place In Aunt Hil lary's affections I might be jealous, but the fact that she is my own particular bosom-friend. '"'timely "topics." New York city has nearly 500 churches and chape'ls, costing f 40,000,000 to build, and $5,000,000 more per annum to keep them going. It has htty-nine hospitals nnd asylums for the sick, aged, blind, deaf and dumh, lunatics, inebriates, orphans nnd soldiers, which have cost $v!0,000,000 to build, and require $5,000, 000 a year to sustnin. The public school edifices have cost $6,000,000, and $1,000, 000 a year to operate. A French chemist last year exposed a quantity of flour to a hydraulic pressure of 300 tons, which reduced it to a fourth of its original bulk:, witnout impairing the quality. He packed a portion of it in tin boxes and sealed them up, doing the same . with the unpressed flour. When opened in three months, the former was in better preservation than the latter. When baked into bread, the pressed article was decidedly superior. Alter tlie inpse oi a year omer cans were opened, and tne unpresseu nour had become spoiled, while, the pressed remained sweet, and was excellent when bnked. A dress woven from the webs of the larire Bidders common in South America has been presented to Queen Victoria by the Emnress of Brazil. It exceeds in fin&i nese any manufactured silk known, and is very handsome,- Spaniards, nearly two hundred years ago, endeavored to make cloves, stockines end other articles of spiders' webs, but they yielded so little profit, nnd necessitated so much trouble, that the manufacture was aban doned. In 1710 the calculation was made that the webs of iOO.OOO spiders would be required for about forty yards of silk. Such dresses are occasionally seen in South America. There is a man with a cako doing a thriving business in Michigan. Tlie papers throughout tne Mate are expos ing biiu, nnd in a short time, no doubt, he will lie compelled to seek pastures new. lie comes in town to start a bak- crv, and brings a sample ol ms worli along in the shape of a large and elegantly-frosted cake. Somo hitch takes ice about tlie lease oi uie naKe snop, and he concludes to raffle off the cake. The raffle takes place: the splendid cake is won nnd perhaps kept on exhibition for a day or two. Then it is cut up, or :i party i arranged to assist in its con sumption, when they attempt to cut up the cake, then comes tiie fun. I hey find it is made of wood, tastefully frosted. Some thieves, who manifested remark able ingenuity, have lately been caught in tlie JUnmea. I ney operated tuus: A thief was locked in an emutv trunk by ids -mates; tlie trunk was sent to the railroad depot ns the baggage of a pass enger, and put in the baggage car; one of his mates, who claimed the baggage. took passage in the same train to the next station; as soon as everything was quiet in the baggage car, the thief opened it and crawled out: he ransacked the ret of the baggage and put in his own trunk such valuable articles as were available ;'then he crawled back to the trunk and locked himself in. and on renching the next station, his mate took off the trunk as his baggage, and they proceeded to secure their plunder. The gang of Russian thieves who concocted this scheme managed to carry It on suc cessfully for some time ; but at last, on the occasion of one adventure, the thief in the trunk took in with him such an amount of stolen goods that the trunk burst onen at an unfortunate moment. The method of operation was discovered uud the thieves were brought tome bar, More than twenty years ago two young men, sitting on a rock in the gold fields of California, shook hands nnd agreed to bo partners in business. No articles of co-imrtnershin were signed. The con tract was between Dominick und Martin O'Malley, brothers. Next day Martin started for Australia, Dominick remain ing in California. Several years passed. Martin settled at Westport, Wis. A year later he was joined by Dominick. ; Each had kept a firm account nnd had drawn the wages agreed upon, paying himself from tlie firm's funds in hi own pocket. The firm's earnings were in vested in eignt nunureu acres of land. Martin married. The firm was contin ued, Dominick lost an arm. lie was sent to Paris at the firm's expense for a wootlen one. Dominick married. A houseful of children were born to both. Dominick went to the legislature. The children grew up. . Recently the broth ers saw that complications might arise unless the property should be divided belore their deatn, and tne partnership was dissolved. The vast estate was di vided iu a few hours, without a word of dispute. Young ladies In Moscow think noth ing of sliooting a man in polite society. Somo weeks ago a young nobleman named Ranaschewski was seated at home in his salon, entertaining a few in timate friends. In the midst of a hvel conversation the door suddenly onenetl and tnere entered a young lady named Praskowia Katschka, about nineteen years of age, handsome and prepossess ing, a member, moreover, of a well- known and noble lamilly in the Wilna District. Perfectly calm and self-noK. sessed. she crraoefullv saluted the visitors present in the chamber. Then, drawing a revolver from her pocket, she deliber ately shot Bairaschewski through the head, so that ho fell to the ground, dead instantaneously. So rapidly and coolly was tne deed commmea that all was over before any one in the salon at tempted to interpose. Praskowia made no attemnt to escape, and Dermitted her. self to be arrested without the slightest resistance. It is said that two dayb be fore his assassination Bairaschewski received a threatening letter from the executive committee of the Revolution. ary Society, which lie handed to the pouee. A man who takes plenty of thyme win aiways uw ui nmii. FARM, .GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD Planting at the Klakt Time. The exact date or time of year at which certain kinds of trees Bhould be trans planted or crops put in is a very difficult point to determine, except from actual local experience. Not only must the time be varied with every degree of lati tude, but the seasons also vary, necessi tating a corresponding varintion from year to year in tlie samo locality. Soils also differ In composition and texture, and some become dry and warm in spring much sooner after tlie frost has left them than others, which circumstance must be taken into account in fixing a time to use them for any particular kind of crop. Of course every farmer and gardener ought to be the best judge in regard to the right time for planting on his own land ; but there are, nevertheless, certain general rules applicable to all climates, which the novice is very likely to disre gard, owing to want of experience; and thus ho often fails when he would other wise have succeeded. If wo take two of our most common and widely-cultivated garden vegetables, peas and beans, we will find a great difference in their sen sitiveness to cold. The pea will with stand a considerable amount of freezing, and even the growth of the vine in spring is seldom injured by light frosts; while the bean is so sensitive that it soon de cays if placed in contact with wet, cold soil, and tho leaves will not withstand the least chill, or even cold winds. 1'eas, therefore, may be nut into the ground as soon as the frost is out, but the planting of beans should be delayed until warm, growing weather lias actually com menced. Among tho seeds which it is safe to put in early and before the earth has become warm, we may name peas, racism's, beets, cabbages, lettuce, onions (both seeds nnd sets), as well as leeks and gar lics. Tomato seed may be sown cany, but the plants will not grow until warm, weather. Among the more tender sorts which early planting will not hasten, the various kinds of squashes, melons and corn are tlie best known. The seeds of all these soon decay if placed in cold, moist or wet soil. Potatoes may go in enrlv. because the tubers are generally placed so deep that a slight freezing of the surface will not reach them, nnd if the voung growth should be cut off, new shoots soon spring up from the main stem or the tubers below. With all the dif ferent kinds of meadow, pasture and lawn grasses, early sowing is far preferable to late, because they are naturally hardy and grow in cool weather, and the young plants will be making roots even when there is but a slight growth of leaves, lint with theannual grasses, millets, sorg hums and the like tlie case is quite dif ferent, as they are all tender plants, na tives of hot climates, and their seeds soon rot in cold, wet soil; the slightest frosts will kill the young plants, so that whnt would be termed late sowing snouui al ways be practiced with these tender an nuals that is, after all danger of frost is past nnd the ground has -become warm and comparatively dry- 1'liu now pearl or Enst India millet is even more sensi tive to cold than the sorghums or com mon species and varieties of millet. The pearl millet is by fur tho most productive forage plant we possess, but does not thrive in a cool soil or grow rapidly ex cept during tlie hottest weather. Early planting of all hardy trees and shrubs is always preferable to late, no matter whether thoy be deciduous or evergreen kinds, for the simple reason that tlie eartli in spring is generally warmer and of a more even temperature than the air, and this excites the roots into growth, which may proceed for some considerable tune neiore mo weatner is warm enough to cause tho buds to swell and new shoots to push out; consequent ly when the leaves call upon the roots for a supply of sap, they arc in a condition to respond, aud the lifo of the plant is thereby insured. Having tested both early and late planting of evergreens and deciduous trees, we are fully convinced that the former is to bo preferred in all soil which becomes dry enough to' be bandied readily soon after the frost leaves it in spring; and if it remains wet nnd lumpy for any considerable time after ward, it is not suitable for trees, and should be put in good condition before used for this nurpose. It is well to make haste in getting the crops in early, but there is such a thing as overdoing the matter by putting in seeds before the land is in proper condi tion for their reception, or the weather is warm enough to insure growth ; and it would often be better to plow and har row the land twice before sowing small Feed or planting it with corn, even if a little time be lost, than to sow on land full of lumps or soaked with water. eiu iork hun, lIuuKeltold IltuU. To Remove On, Spots fuom Mat-. TINT.S, COI NTKKI'ANF.S, ETC, Ot With alcohol, rub with hard soap, then wash witli cold water. Wai.i, Paper. In selecting paper for house use, avoid all greens as far as pos sible, for this color invariably contains more or less poisonous matter, ami will inevitably poison to some extent all who use it . A HAxnr Article. J o make feather brushes to use in greasing pans, or brushing egg over tarts or pastry, boil the wing feathers of a turkey or chickens for about ten u inutes, then rinse tnem in tenid water, dry and tie up in bunches. Moths in Caupets. A good way to kill them is to take a coarse towel, and wring it out in clean water. Spread it out smoothly on the carpet, then iron it dry with a good hot iron, repeating tho operation on all suspected places, and those least used. It is not necessary to press hard, heat and steam being the agents, and they do the work effectually on the worms and tlieireggs. Moldiness. is occasioned by the fjrowth of minute vegitation. Ink, paste, father and seeds most frequently suffer by it. A clove .will preserve ink; any essential oil answers equally wen. Leather may bo kept free from mold by tho same substances. inus, jtussian leather, which is perfumed with the tar of birch, never becomes moldy. A few drops of any essential oil will keep hooks entirely free from it. For harness, oil of turpentine is recommended, Cementing Metai. to Glass. Take two parts of finely powdered litharge, and one part of fine white lead, mix im mediately, and work up with boiled lin seed oil and lac-conal to a stiff dough: one part of copal and three of oil. and enough litharge and white lead audeti to give it the consistency of putty, the side to be cemented is coyered with the putty and pressed against the glass, the excess of ceratnt is scraped off with a knife or other suitable instrument. The above will be found reliable, as it dries quickly. Health Hlnti. To Rimovi Fusa Wobiu Fbom the FACE.--Take a large-si Bed watch key, place the stem directly over tue black spot, and press firmly on it. Insomnia. To procure sleep, take bromide of potassium. Furnished by chemists. To Cvue Corns. Apply, morning and evening, one drop of solution of per chloride of iron. To Al.I.AY CllAWI.lNO OF THE FLESH on Nervousness. Put a tablcsponful of bi-earbonate of soda ordinary cook ing soda in one quart of water. Bathe tho entire person. Stinos and Bites. Carbonate of soda wet and npphed externally to the bite of a snider." or any venom jus creature. will neutralize the poisonous effect al most instantly, it acis line a cuariu in the case of snakebite. Tooth ache. For toothache.take equal narts of camnhor. sulnhurlc ether, am monia, laudanum, tincture of cayenne nnd one-eighth part of oil of cloves. Mix well together. Saturate with the liquid a small piece of cotton, and apply to the cavity oi the decayed tootn. Foil Cholera Infantum. The whites of two eggs, well beaten ; then mix with pure water, add one tea snoonful of orange-flour water and a little sugar: a tablesnoonful every hour. It. will cure the worst case of cholera infantum, tlie eggs coating the bowels Flens on Doit. A correspondent of tho Forest and Ktrcam gives a new remedy for killing fleas on dogs. If you try it, give our readers the benefit of your experience. The following is his letter : " Some years ago I learned from a druggist in New ,..!- tlint tl.A monoirnr. rt? an r,1Ttlian .win wiiiu iii i,igji . o vi .... v. asylum freed the heads, of the unfortu nate waifs from parasites by applying tincture of fishbemes to the scalp. I tried the samo thing on my setter pup for fleas, with the same success. Since then I secured another setter which was also troubled with fleas, and one applica tion cured him. I did not use in cither case more than a few drops, rubbing thorn in on tlie nape of the neck and at tlie end of the back where the dog would be in no danger of licking tho place to which the tincture had been applied. My care in this regard may have been ex cessive, but as the stuff is poisonous, I preferred to run no risks. This is a sure cure, and can be obtained from druggists anywhere for a few cents. A PANTHER FIGHT. A Life nnd In-nth Htrwjrirle in the Wilds of iVev York Stale. Colonel Scth A. Abbey, the veteran nrinter. who in 1831 issued 10,000 copies of the old English Reader, has just re turned from California. Oregon and Washington Territory. He is" full of those hunting reminiscences now so rare. and favors the Cleveland Herald with tlie following: I went to atertown, Jefferson county, New York, in January, 1819. with my printing establishment, ami commenced publishing a newspaper. Jairus Rich was a kind of half-way law yer; he had started a newspaper a year or two belore ana ianeu. lie ana ins wife then started a little tavern near tlie court house, and they did not succeed in Hint v-erv well, lie said to me one day: " I think" I can get a better living with my rifle and traps in the woods than 1 can by Hanging aiounii ncre in inu u- lage." Rich was a ermonter by birth ; a small, muscular man. the north por tion of Jefferson county, at that time was an almost unbroken wilderness, and thither Ritdi. with his wife and traps. bent his way. A number of months ebmsed before I heard anything from him. At length a rumor came that he had been killed by a panther. Near ly a month after this I got a letter from him describing his encounter with a panther; ho was hardly able to write then. His story ran thus: " 1 had fast ened one of my traps to the root of a large hemlock tree, and near by was a dense thicket of low hemlocks of about half nn acre. When I visited my trap this morning I discovered one panther fast in tho trap and another near by. I tired at tlie one outside of the trap and wounded him, and he made immediately for this thicket. I hod a little whiffet dog with me, aud I put the little dog nto the thicket where t he panther enter ed, and I ran around the thicket where I thought the panther would come out and met "him just as he came out of the thicket. I tried to shoot him, but my gun missed lire, and there we were, lace to lace, and 1 nnu to run oriignt. i threw down my rifle and drew niv hatchet from my belt and made a pass at him and he knocked my hatchet more rh'in twnntii feet from me. We then clinched in and we were up and down in every shape; he tewing away with his C;:vs and chewing my nanns. lie would sometimes have one hand in his mouth and sometimes the other. We were wrestling and tearing in this way until I was nearly done for. In one of the falls ho happened to como under, and I clanued mv Knee right in his flank, for ward of his hind leg, with my, left hand in his mouth. I then slipped my right hand into my pocket and pulled out my iack-knife and opened it with mv teeth. and made short work of it then. I lay there by the side of my victim a long. long time. My clothes were torn off from me or hung in shreds; my face and limbs a gore of blood. The nearet-t settler was two miles. I came to myself after a time, so that I killed the other panther. It took all the rest of the day to maKO tne house oi tne nearest seiner. T knew this man for many years after this encounter, and, strange to say, he still continued to hunt panthers and wolves., I saw a panther skin that was green, killed by him and just taken from tho body, thnt measured, from the noso to the end of the tail, nine feet. I would like to tell you one of Rich s wolf stories, lie diil not tell it for several years after it occurred the reason why you will probably guess at after hearing tlie story, lie said he was out among the rooks and discovered a wolf; he shot and. killed it. Upon examining it he found it to be a she wolf, and suckling young ones. He finally found her den and crawled into it, and found ten young pups. He took them to his shanty and built a log pen for them and reared them on deer meat they were too young to get the bounty on. There was then a bounty on each grown-up wolf offered by town, county and State, in all amounting to about $50 frw Oftpll Wftlf TllPV WPl'fl tbft InrffP m-nv wolf, one of them nearly black. This j The prisoner finally concluded not to one, he said, he used to take out and play" forward a check at all. He sent a boy with it the same as a dog. He said he out to find hiin four good lawyers who regretted to kill this one "very much, but I would carry his case to" the Supreme $50" was too great a ' temptation-. As J Court, but the boy was gone so long that these wolves grew up, he would take the police wagon backed up and removed them into different sections, kill them, the tourist to another and more useful take their scalps off, and-get the bounty, sphere. Detroit Fret Frew. The Model irl. " Prettiest, Wittiest, Among all girls; The sweetest, The nontest, More precious than penrli " Industr'ous, Not blustrotia, Bat modest nnd kind j She's spnrcfnl, She's oarcfld, And all right in mind. " She faints not, She paints not, Like some foolish girls; She pouts not, She spouts not, Because her hair eurls. " Not childish, Not wildish, Not running here, theroj Not frettish, Coquettish, Like somo young girls are. " Not wealthy, But healthy, And alarmingly smart; A dandy Witfi enndy Cannot win hor heart." Columbvt (O.) Dtmoera ITEMS OF INTEREST. Never look a gift apple in the worm hole. Are shopping ladies liable to be called price fighters? The nresent custom of christening a ship is a very ancient practice. See small bills." ns the mother bird said when exhibiting her brood. There are fortv-eielit lighthouses and light beacons on the coast of Maine. There were 619.007.001 gallons of petro leum produced in the United States last year. Tn ordinary respiration about two- thirds of a pint of air is inhnled nt each, breath. Only one person out of every ten es capes premature iicarn, according xo statistics. They say a strong grasp of the hand denotes a strong hciu't. It also denotes a good grip. There are still some live hundred styles of arranging the hair, and only one kind of Boston brown bread. Nineteen families of Belgians, with sixty car-loads of stock and gootls, have settled near Sherburne, Aiinn. It is easier to bear tlie troubles of others than to sit right down and do your own Buffering patiently. Tim loss bv fire in Eurone is only about one-fourth what it is in tlie United States on property of equal valuation. When the lady fainted at the matinee. the usher brought her a single glass of water, nnd soon afterward brought her to. It is snfe to say that Norristown enjoys more late springs than early springs. We allude to springing out of bed in the morning. Kor. Herald. I suppose the bells are sounding nn ulnrm of lire," sneeringly said an old man as the cliurcu bells were calling the wor shippers one Sunday morning; to which a clergyman who wns passing replied : " les. my friend ; but the lire is not in this world." An unique celebration is to take place n Pomneii. Italy, in November next. Eighteen hundred years ago, on the 24th of November, the city was buried from sight by an eruption of Vesuvius. On the 24th. ot .November, lBi'J, tnere win bo a banquet and illuminations on the his toric spot. Several houses will be un covered in honor of Iho anniversary or the event of A. I). 70. " Sly life by yours enfolded is," He whispered in her ear; " I only bi-uttlio when yoti'ro about. Live only with you, dear." Suys slie, with archness on I er brow, I've taith iu what you say;" Then glunciHg at his raven locks, " You dye whou I'm awuy." Boston Transcript. HiiseJy Deceived. Hiram Oldham lives at Lockport when home, but if he doesn't appear there this summer his friends may rest assured that whut is his loss is their gain, and tlie biggest kind o' gain. He wandered this way because he heard that day- laborers in Detroit were paid six dollars per day nutl had live tickets to the opera uouse every uignw. iikiiiuushiuc wuuiu como here and earn a few thousand dol lars this summer and return to Ixickpor in the fall and buy him a residence with walnut trees in the front yard. . He arrived here on the trucks of a freight car, and "after sleeping one night iH a coal-shed he was open to engagements, lie didn't find any iobs at six dollars per day, and when lie went around to the opera house the man at the door shook a club at him and cried out : "Yes, I'll give you a kingdom for a horse oh. yes!" The police finally gathered the Lock porter in. They have a way of linking urnis with a stranger who doesn't seem loaded down with good clothes and cash. The prisoner's face wore a blank look as he stood before tho bar. lie seemed to feel that he was booked for a watering place. " You see, it doesn't look exactly right for a full-grown man to be free-lunching around nnd sleeping in dry -goods boxes," observed tae court, as ho wiped off his nen. " I want to light right out of this town," replied the prisoner. " You would only light down on some other. This is tho headquarters here, and you can be sent up far cheaper than from the interior. 1 permitted a pris oner to start for the interior a few days ago, and yesterday he came to the House of Correction from one of the western counties at a cost of $30. 1 shall book you for sixty days " " Can 1 send my poor mother a check on the bank before I go up?" asked the man. " You can. sir. Biiah will furnish vou all kinds of blank checks und pen and ink. Writd vrnp nnniA nlnlnlv "