1 fir .P.R r- Hi I HENRY A. PARSONS, ' Jr., Editor and Publisher. NlH, DEPERANDTJM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IX. Z, EIDGWAT, ELK COUNTY PA., THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1870. NO. 13. I llll 111 : -. , . i . . . . J i- I' Farm Songs, i. Oh list to the Bong ot the farmer As he plys the faithlul fluil, 1 . Vow b hum of song, then a strain bright and glnd When the sultry nir grows warmer. In'citics we fly o'er the sturdy steel rail, Great ocean's outdone by the mart and the sail ' But onr songs and our measures Are not half the treasures That the farmer doth sing when' his heart would grow sad. Gently as sweetly, the ballad so Irce Steals o'er the meadow to gladden the lea ' For the milk maiden's ecstasies seek the wide sen, ' " Doth my loved one waloh and drenm but ol me ?" Yes, maiden more lair Than your song on the air, Your sailor so proud in his dreams doth behold Your song at the door, and your hair bright as gold, And sadly lie wakes -for he's still far from thee But whnt is the song ol the housewife so gnr As she sits and she knits when the day wears away? In lutiu-o's bright cloud She sceth no shroud, But riches and power and wisdom combined Awaits her true sons, O how light is her mind 7 For Science waits Will ! And Latin seeks Phil J So light is her heart as she loncs tor that day Albert K. Wheeler, in Albany .Irgut. MAXWELL'S IDEA. The village of Weston consists of one main street, where stand the churches, the town hull, postollice, and sundry feeble-minded stores. There are noble . elms, a wide road, and a few pretty houses. The better class of dwelling are 011 the hillside beyond the railroad, or to the north, on the meadows. By day a sleepy place; at night every house is tilled Willi city people sound asleep. The people live here, but their hearts are in the town. Every boy looks for ward to the time when he shall join tin pilgrims to the city nnd a store. To pi into an olliee or store in Boston is tin only thin; -for a young man to do. lit must have business in town or los. caste. Tom Mavwell had the misfortune to be born in Weston, and early imbibed it peculiar notions concerning life and tin tiling to do. For instance, no young gentleman must work witli his hands: ho must not fro into a retail store; hi must dress well, lie able to take part in the Lyceum debates, and he must not on any account stay in the village during the day. Unless he could do all this, hi had lietter remove to New York or Chicago, and dwell among the enlight ened in outer darkness. Tom had secured a place as accountant in a wholesale grocery house, and was considered a lucky fellow. He had a small property of' his own, and lie had fallen in love. The Object had even said she would some day wear his name. She wore his diamond ring already. Suddenly Tom Maxwell appeared at the village station at eleven o'clock in the morning, and in nn hour it was known of all Women that the wholesale grocery concern had failed. The Object knew i'; first, and straightway all knew it. Of course the engagement would come to an immediate end. There was not the least fuss about it. Weston prides itself on its dignified serenity under trials. It stopped, and that was the end of it. The next day Tom had a diamond ring on storage at his rooms. Thereupon the young man sat down to consider the situation, lie was now twenty-two, had a good general educa tion, anil didn't know anything very well. His hands .were soft; lie knew how to dance: he could sing tolerably and paint a little; he couid not dig, neither could he steal. Ho was, in fact, a f;iir sample, of the AVeston young gen tleman. He also considered the situation from a lover's jxiint of view. Here we have no right to intrude, and we must learn his thoughts from his actions. For several days he wandered around in the open air, casting about to see what he might do, but really curing his heart wound in silent contemplation of nature. Herein was he doubly wise. In a moment of inspiration he thought of emigrating to New York. Other fellows had gone there, and had made money; why not he? He even investigated tfie expense of the journey; but Something stood iu the way. lie loved the Object still. One day be happened to pass through the main street at high noon. There was not a soul to be seen in all the drowsy place. Some stray hens gathered round the overflowing water-trough be fore the chief store, and a solitary cow cropped the grass along the sidewalk. He was a trine hungry, and went up the decayed and broken steps of the store to purchase a lunch. The door was locked, end he peered in at the dirty windows. Was it here the housekeepers of Weston bought their sugars and molasses, their teas nnd spices? He felt glad he had not known it before. What a horrible place! Hark, dingy, confused with half opened boxes ami barrels, a broken scale oil the counter, rows of fly-specked bot tles on the shelves, confusion and dis order everywhere. Just then a man in shirtsleeves nnd frowzy hair appeared nnd opened the door. Tom asked for bread nnd cheese. He paid for something, took it away in a newspaper, and charitably bestowed the whole of it upon the ancient hens in the Street. It. was a good investment. With the purchase he gained an idea. Ideas are money to the wise, nnd Tom Maxwell was wise above his generation. He looked up nnd down the sleepy street, and contemplated the three establish mcnts that supported the village needs: one variety place, where nails, needles and dried fish found a home; one butcher's shflp a horrid den, full of unspeakable abominations; and the dis mal grocery. .. . The iuea grew upon him rapidly. lie considered it two days, and then re- ' solved to try it. Little did ho imagine ' the immense social changes his decision would involve. IIoV could he foresee the slights, the sneers and insulting con descension that would be bestoweaupon him? He saw nothing, not even the outcome of his love experience that would spring from his new idea. The following week the village car penter, received nn order to turn the lower story of the old Allen mansion into something new what, he could not exactly comprehend, mere were to he two immense windows, with a wide door opening into a parlor. Behind this were to be two large rooms, and in front there was to be a wide piazza, with ample canopy ana broad steps, nnd with spaces for flower borders on either side. The news spread quickly through the village. Everybody knew that Tom Maxwell had embarked in some insane scheme, nnd was tearing the Allen man. sion to pieces. -Poor boy! his sad love experience had injured his mind. He wns throwing his money away. His friends should interfere nnd save him from ruin. At night the returning nier- cliants paused uelore the dismantled mansion, and wondered what new folly had broken loose in the town. ' 1 Maxwell heard of these things, nnd the next morning a high -board fence shut the work from view. This only excited the greater curiosity. Every female tongue wagged fast over Tom's consummate folly. What did he intend to do? Was it a house, theatre, shop or studio? Weeks passed. There was much ham mering behind the high fence. Then eaine the shent painters; and lastly one night two huge wagons unloaded sundry boxes nnd barrels at the door. The same evening every family in the village, and in all the villages round about, re ceived a polite invitation to inspect, on the following night, the new establish ment. The next afternoon at half past six the carpenters pulled down t lie high fence, and displayed well, it could not be called anything. Nothing like it had ever been seen in thp world at least so they said ; but then AVeston sight never extends beyond Boston. There was in front a neat garden with a graveled walk. At one side the road passed close to the steps, so that carriages came directly to the piazza. Two im mense plate-glass windows and a double door filled the entire front of the lower part of the building. Over the door wns a simple sign, or card: "Thomas Max well." Through the windows could be .xeen tables spread with white covers, and laid with dishes of the mostdclieateclried fruit, golden butter, bread, cake, every thing that could delight the heart of the housekeeper. The door opened upon a parlor, carpetedjj;and furnished with numerous chairs and small tables. Near ly every table had some choice display "fillings desirable in a gastronomic sense. A tea-urn graced one corner, and beside it stood a coffee-urn, while on the table before it were cups, sugar and spoons. Two door at the back led to large rooms onipletely filled with tables loaded with foreign and domestic groceries. No counters, no shelves, not a thing tosug gest a store. English neatness, Parisian elegance in nrrangenieut, American con venience everywhere. A pretty girl (from Boston) sat by the door to receive the guests. Two stout young fellows (from Maine) were read v in the rear room, and Maxwell himself sat by the tea-urn. By seven o'clock they began to come. At eight o'clock there were twenty carriages at the door. At half-past eight there were more than a hundred, and the place was packed. The whole affair was a surprise. AA'es ton did not know what to do, whether to applaud or laugh or cry. It was not a lunch, for not a thing was offered; it was not a parts, for there were neither cards nor dancing; nor a reception, for nobody received. Maxwell welcomed everybody politely, and bade them ex amine freely. They did. They did more: they com mented with most refreshing freedom. Some said it was a joke; nay, it is an occasion for grave remonstrance. The poor young man had lost his mind. A few older heads said it might be a good speculation, but not one said a single word of approval, or even encourage ment. At ten o'clock Tom Maxwell closed up the place and went home. He could not exactly describe it, but he felt it an in definable something, a shadow, as it he had passed under a cloud. The next day it was clear enough. He had stepped into a social cold bath. In ruder civilizations peoples showed their disapproval by uictly burning off the offending party, or they tore down his house or exiled him, or, in the modern English fashion, they broke his windows. Nothing of this happened to Maxwell. None the less sharp and effectual were the arms used against the social offender. They spoke to him when they must, but No need to describe it in detail. He had totally lost position. Days and nights passed. There was a reception on AValnut street; he was not invited. There was a German on the hill; he re ceived no card. At church they nodded distantly; no more. He sat in his pew, pale, with eompressedlips, and an un spoken prayer on his tongue. The preacher said, " Forgive your enemies," and he resolved he would. Hay by day it grew worse. Acquaint ances became strangers ; friends became acquaintances. The Object passed him in the way as one would a total stranger, lie had become what? In the bitter ness of his heart he cried out that all men were cruel, all women selfish and hard of heart. He bit His lips to repress the minded tears and mortification. AVhat had he done? AVas he not a man doing a man's work? AVork! Ah! that was the thing. He would work, and forget these creatures. The first day the store was open the entire sales amounted to one dollar and a half. A carriage from Foltham had stopped at the door. Two ladies had entered the store strangers and ladies. They were lost in admiration. It is a better Regent street, an improved Broad way, a very Palais Royal. They emptied their pocketbooks on the counter Such excellent goods, and reasonable prices ! They would call again and bring all their friends. Not a single resident of the village en tered the place all day. The following day was Saturday. It mined hard, ana in the afternoon three people came in for sundry goods. One lady made out quite an order, and asked that it be put on the books. Maxwell respectfully de clined. His dealings were for cash alone. The lady otherwise person gave him a withering look, and declared she had never been so insulted in her life, and marclied out. leaving the eoods behind lier. The others paid cash, and went away more than pleased at the prices ..,.1.,..! Tl... I... ,1 , . nKt.iniul cui.h prices before. Ths next day fourteen carriages came I from Poltham. Two came from Roburn I dale, and one from Newville. The cash business done amounted to $275.50 tor the week. The next week it doubled. 1 he week nfter it doubled again. The fourth week Mnxwell hnd to consider the purchase of a new team to deliver the goods . Six months passed, nnd the business of the store exceeded the business of nil the other stores combined. One of them had fniledt nnd the other hnd actually been scrubbed and painted. Such is the force of example. And still the wonder grew. AVeston lias a thrifty mind. It can see a cent in a bargain with IIol- landish clearness. The Maxwell system was accepted fully. It was delightful to visit a drawing-room, to have a pret ty girl make a cup of tea for you. Ay, twenty cups it you wished ; and having tasted, you could buy with knowledge. Did you wish olives, figs, sugars, cheese, or bread? Sit down and try them. This is so much, that so much. These are the samples. Eat, test, pondpr, and select. You cannot Bee the goods ; food in the mass is essentially vulgar. Select and pay . The goods will be delivered according to sample No one was ever permitted to pass beyond the parlor. Within the interior rooms the packers filled the orders with neatness, dispatch and silence. Did the purchnser wish flour? The pretty jjirl brought a tray full of sam ples, with plates and water. One could make a dough, and even try it in a gas oven, if desired. Oil was shown burn ing in lamps; this light is bo much a gallon, that so much, and so on from lamp to lamp. The store was a reception-room, shop ping a social tea-tasting, with a gentle man to preside. Maxwell took the or ders, welcomed the arriving guests, took the cash, and bade good-speed to part ing friends. They came as buyers, and departed feeling themselves guests. At home, everything turned out ex actly nccording to snmple, in more than liberal measure, nnd in the most ex quisite order, the very team being care fully covered with white cloths. No un couth youth begged for orders at the door; no collector rang a dunning bell. The heathen builds a temple to his gods in princely splendor, and it is said he pays for the work thereon. The Christian's church is often in debt. So it was at AA'eston. The First Church was about to be closed on account of the un paid interest on its debt. It was a mat ter of great grief to the handful of peo ple who attended there, and they met at the church in solemn and unhappy mood one stormy Saturday night to deliberate over the impossible. In the midst of the dismal proceedings a small girl timidly opened the door and looked in. She hail a letter for the clerk of the society. Some body took it, nnd she disappeared. The. clerk opened the letter, nnd there fell out n piece of paper, crisp nnd rustling. The clerk glanced at the note, and, picking up the paper,, thrust it quickly into his pocket. Curiosity was aroused, and some one asked wliat it meant. A cheek. Oh, marvelous! A check for the overdue interest $493.03. Whose cheek? The clei;k sail) tlic jnntrex jyas q .ljc ennti- iii mnii. aiiu niei-uug iiluivc up mjujiui mood. The church was safe for the present. That night the clerk's wife knew it. On the Sabbath everybody knew it. The check was signed "Thomas Maxwell." Did it make any difference? Not at all. lie was still "the groeervman." Beings of a fine mold could receive his gift, but could not receive him. They even re sented it as a piece of presumption, lie had only half of a hired pew in the back row, were he sat every Sunday with the sexton's daughters. They did send a vote of thanks, but it came by mail. Not a soul spoke to him about it save the old minister. Some said it was a bid for trade. Shortly after this the fire-engine house took fire, in derision, and ingloriously burned down. The next morning the village carpenter was hard nt work haul ing lumber to the ruins. The lire com pany, a volunteer association, composed chiefly of working-men and young me chanics, said, " AA'herefore do ye this?" And straightway he said, in the language of the period, "Maxwell gim me the order, cash on the nail." Thereupon they went with one accord to the grocery store nnd gave three cheers for the pro prietor. Persons of fine mold said, "Another bid for trade." Maxwell heard thereof, and thought it over. Every man of the fire company was already a customer. Moreover, nine tenths of his trade came from other towns and villages. Time went on, and the new idea in the grocery line flourished mightily. It was the wonder of the trade, anil dealers came from afar to see how the thing was done. Sensible fathers from the city 'came with requests that their sons be taught the new business. It was a new business, for the grocery-man ol the period knew none of these tilings. Peo ple patronized him because they must Jl'hey came to Maxwell's because it was a pleasure. They fame, and saw, and bought much, for the business was founded on a recognized law of human nature. Meanwhile the Object lived on and on, apparently indifferent, but really keenly alive to all. She attended parties and re ceptions, and heard people speak of Max well only in slight and contempt, and she heard i'. all in cowardly silence. At last her eyes were opened. She was put on some charity committee in the church to visit the poor, and, to the surprise of all, she really did so, which was unusual for a committee-woman. Everywhere before her had gone another. He had thought his ways unkno wn, but the widow and fatherless were garrulous in his praise. She came back awiserand hnnnier woman. That night there was a reception at one of the most fashionable houses. The nnvlor was full when she entered, and she made her way slowly to the side of the hostess. Just as she stood ny me hostess, at the head of the room, a young male person, in the wholesale millinery line, remarked that some person's doings wn niiitfi on a level with Maxwell's. " AVI 1 at do mean by that?" said aclear soprano beside him. A midden bush fell on the room. " I mean that a man who would do that is not fit to enter society. He is us as low down as Maxwell the grocery man, and fcueh cattle." Thereupon there was a general laugh through the room. AVhy the people should laugh was not clear. It pro duced, however, a surprising mm. "Mr. Maxwell is a gentleman whom you can well afford to pattern. At once there was another laugh, but 1 .. ,1 ; IV,. win f t 'V 111 I ' i ' v - . - flunk VOU. miSS. .1 Iicvi-i vuuuurr such creatures." -. i rw wwei-ln vou if you did. Mr Maxwell is a Christian gentleman and a ,.nwii,i iiuid the interest on the churoh debt; who rebuilt the engice- hoUse; whogavo the new books to the library; who helped the widow Valen tine; who helped the Frost family in their distress; who saved the .Claries from positivo starvation; who hnsbeen a friend to to the helpless; who laid out the lit tle park nt the corner" " AVho keeps a grocery store," put in the mnle person. At this some laughed, but there wns a well-defined murmur of dissent, and the laugh died away. ' AA'ho taught you to keep a store hon estly ; who has borne slights and insults because he chose to do a man's work in the world ; who" She was only a woman. She did not finish the sentence, for she actually fainted away, nnd would have fallen had not the male person caught her. Never had there been a greater sensation in AArcston. The ladies gathered near, with salts and words of sympathy. The men stood npnrt in silence, for they were nsliamed. A very small female person, who had been known to cast greedy eyes in a cer tain direction, said spitefully, "Oh yes; it's well enough now he is rich." The Object revived just in time to hear this, and said to the small creature, "I have been a fool like the rest." Here wns a tine state of affairs. Max well rich, nnd publicly defended by one of the most fashionable girls in the town. He must be cultivated. Within a week he received a dozen invitations to teas, dances, kettledrums nnd receptions. lie smiled to himself at each, nnd refused them nil with thanks. The news of the Object's bold defence came to him quickly. AVns she the Ob ject still? Of that there was no doubt. Did she enre for him? It might be, anil yet what could ho do? He canvassed the whole ground, nnd wisely resolved to do nothing. Events gallop 111 these dnvs. There came one to the village who seemed a man of the world. He asked for Max well's store, and was shown the parlors on Alain street, lie stood before the place and gazed and gazed. Then he went iu. nnd asked permission to sit, a while and observe 1 1. e trade. He sat there three hours. Then, in a lull in the business, he . rose and said to Maxwell, oung man, this will not do.. 1 011 are hiding your ideas under a bushel. Come out into the world where you will be recognized. I'm not a man of words, but if half a million will help you to open a dozen stores of this kind in Chi cago, Milwaukee, Columbus, Louisville, Omaha, San Francisco, or where else you wish, I'm your man. AVill you go?" les, sir. If everything is correct. " Everything is correct. There are my card references. I'll call to-morrow with my lawyer and the papers." Thereupon he presented his card, and withdrew. The next day the store had changed hands, for there were parties already waiting to buy it. The evening train that connects with the AVestern ex press stopped at the little station and took up a young lady and gentleman. The few people who stood near smiled in that friendly way bestowed on people about to be married, and llien they wevo gone. The train pulled slowly out of the town, and a young lady, fair to see, lean ed out of the window and said : " Cood-by, little village. I love you, because you are nn excellent place to cmigiate from." Then she turned to her companion and said, " I am glad, Tom, we are going out into the great world." " So nm 1. for it is God's world wher ever we go." The new man ran the store just six months, and failed. He was only a groeeryman, with a grocery man's nar row views. His failure was perfectly logical. Harper's Jfazar. Meteoric Dust. A writer in the 'London Tunis Ims been investigating the amount of matter added to the earth iy the meteors which are constantly fal ling upon it. The total downfall, he sins, would not at its present rate, or eton at the present rate increased a thousandfold, cause the earth's crust to grov appreciably in the lapse 01 ages uwiersiaiuung ly ages thousands of years. It has been shown by Professor Alexander Herschel that the average weigkt of shooting stars visible to the eyei must be estimated rather by grains thn by ounces, and the telescopic shooting-stars which form nine-tenths of the total, according to Professor Newtoi.'s (of New Haven) estimate, are, of course, far smaller, lint assigning even to each meteor a weight of one pound nn utter v mad- missable estimate let Us consider at what rate the earth s crust would crow. The earth has a surface of 200.000,000 squaie miles, and about 400,000,000 meteors felt upon it per annum. That gives two meteors, or two pounds weight 01 matter, aoueu 10 eacn square nine m a year. There are more than 3,000,000 square yards in a mile, so that 1,500,000 years would be required at the present, rate of meteo'rie downfall to add one pound of meteoric matter to each square yard of the earth's surface. Such added matter, uniformly spread over the sur face, would be utterly inappreciable so lar as tno tmcKness 01 tne earth's crust is concerned. In a thousand millions of years, nt that rate, which far exceeds tne real rate, tne crust ot the earth would not be increased in thickness by a sinitle foot. The excess of increase in the Northern hemisphere would not be one foot in a billion ot years. Novel Use of a Locomotive. Every day proves the truth of the old adage; "Necessity is the mother of in vention." Our attention has just been called to a new way of utilizing tho power of a locomotive. Some years ago Porter, Bell & Co,, of Pittsburg, sent one of their small locomotives to the famous Dutch Flat in California. It was used for hauling logs from a timber tract to the saw mill. But as much o the timber was in a deep canyon and the mill was on the hill top, the ingenious owner desired to make it do another kind of duty as well as its own. They arranged an incline tra.'k placing a car on it. to which they lash the timber, and by a wire rope draw it to the top. The rope passes over a drum at the top of the hill and the power is supplied by the little locomotive. The modus oper audi -is toiun the engine on to a side track alongside the drum on to friction wheels, through which the power is communicated, and her like a dog in a churn wheel or a horse in a tread mill, the engine revolves its drivers without the engine advancing and lifts its load 600 feet in height in 1,800 feet of track, the engine thus becoming practically a stationary engine. Iron Aye. "Greatly t his credit " posit, A bank dc AVeb Engineering. On going round the garden this morn inn, snvs a writer in Land and Water. I perceived what seemed a small piece of cneeso nppnremiy iioaiing in me an straight before me. On coming up to it, 1 found that it was suspended from a spider's web, which was spun right across the path. One's first hasty thought was that this spider had found a piece of cheese below, and, takingafancy to it, was then drawing it up into its web to eat it. Further exninination, however, showed that the substance was not cheese, but a small pebble much resem bling that edible, evidently taken from the gravel walk beneath. There wns nothing for the spider to nttach his web to on the walk, so he had selected n suitable stone to balance his web, which, indeed, it did ndmirably, the web being attached to trees on either side of the walk, nnd weighted belowl)y the stone, so ns to be in nearly a perpendicular position. The stone was connected with the web by a threefold cord, the strands of which were attached to different parts of the stone. 1 visited the web two or three hours after the spider had finished it, and found that his ingenuity h:fd heen rewarded, as the web contained, besides a largo fly, off which he was dining, more small flies than I haveever before seen in a web. Neither myself, nor those of my friends to whom I showed the web, have ever seen anything of the kind before. Perhaps your readers will be interested in such nn example of high instinct in a spider, and those who are more versed in natural history than myself may be nblo to remember other examples of the same kind. That the stability of the web depended upon the weight of the stone was shown when 1 put my hand under the latter. The result was that as I raised my hand the iower part of the web gradually col lapsed, but when the stone was suffered again to fall gently the web resumed its proper shape. The web wns about five leet from the ground . Spider engineering is a most interest ins subject, nnd one that I have snent hours in studying. I have worked out most of the problems in connection with it, but the weight dodge I have not as yet been able to explain.' Some spiders will use ties; but others, of exactly the same species, will use a weight although the .circumstances under which both built nunarentlv are similar. But bow does the spider raise the weight? This I could never explain to my satisfaction, ns some of the weights are so large that it is scarcely possible they could lift them y a "dead lilt." tiesides, they will put on one, two or more weights in a few hours before wind, to fix their structures. The industry nnd ingenuity or the spider passes belief to all those who have seen them at work, but no more profitable day can be spent by .n young engineer than a day after a storm m a path through the gorse wntehinir ipidcr reeon struct i 11 2 its web. This is the legitimate wnv of seeina the work done, but there are other dodges, such as breaking down the web, nnd watching the poor insects reconstruct them. A Small Buy on Cats. Cats are about the most interestinL'e.st nuiuial there is. You can have more fun with a eat in half nn hour, if vou have a good tree handy and an enterpris ing dog, than you can wi'.h a whole traveling menagerie. Cats nnd fire ackers are mortal enemies Yuu tie a bunch to a cat's tail and set 'em off. and they will go down the street like a firry comet. N. B., wire is better than string to fasten them on with as sirinflr is iable to burn off. It isn very pleasant pastime to see two cats light. Their tails may be tied firmly together, and for fear they might tear un thinss in the Har den it is a good plan to hang them across a clothes-line. They can be heard miles. 1 hnu1 often seen them. Some folks re gnrdThis sport as cruel, we call such folks chicken livered. Did you ever see a shaved cat.J ihev are verv singular eat tires it may be done with a razor if you know where your father keens his'n. You tie up the cniiia in ..ij nnttuiw while you are doing it. Some fnlks don t think K lmrdly pays and I shall never be guilty of doing it though J do think a rattier is rather mean who whales his boy all over when his finger is cut half oJVand his face scratched all over nil ready. Kittens nre very pretty. There nre more than forty of them 111 the water under the mi 11 bridge. They nearly all of thein have stones tied to their necks. It is a very unfeeling thing to drown a kitten. They are in nercent harmless creatures. Cats are great singers. The Chinese eat cats. A7hat can you expect of the heathen ? Some people hang dead cats as May baskets it is only a joke but the folks that get 'em never seem to appreciate it. There is a great many other things about cats but I think I have given you a plenty of ideas already, so will close. StMOX Sl.Ol'E. Courageous Captain Lnee. tall, gray-haired man with clear A blue eyes, gray mustache ana sparse whiskers under his chin, was the fc'i'ny first witness called in a will case in New York. It was Captain James C. Luce of the steamship Arctic, which was run into and sunk on the 24th of September, 1851. The Arctic had 233 passengers. and there were 150 in the crew. Only ninety-seven persons were saved and not one woman. A part of the crew behaved very badly. They filled the boats and when they were about to abandon the sinking sliip a place in one of the boats was ottered to Captain L,uec, who stood with his little boy by his side where ho had been using his utmost exeritons to rule ins crew. He spurned the otter, and when those in the boat offered to take his son, he rejected that offer also with indignation. He went down with his shin hand and hand with his son. They were drawn down nbout thirty feet into the vertex. Then they rose to the sur face. A moment afterward a part of a paddle box floated up to them. Its mo mentum was so great that it killed the boy. The father climbed upon it with nine others. He and George Allen and a German were on it from AA ednesday, the day of the accident, until Saturday after noonT Only four of the ten outlived the first night aiter the. accident. On the morning of the day on which the captain was saved there was a heavy tog. bud denly it parted and formed a great arch beneath which was clear air. Under this arch was the Cambria of Quebec She picked up Captain Luce and his two fellow sunerers. A Manchester (England) paper men tions the case of a man eighty years old who is now 'cutting his second set of teeth. They are uniform and Vegular, top ana 00110m 01 me mouui, TIMELY TOriUS. Making waistcoats at fourteen cents each, cheviot shirts nt four cents apiece, heavy overalls at fifty cents per dozen and woolen trousers at ten cents a pair are some facts gleaned. by a society of ladies who are investigating the condi tion of the sewing women of Cleveland, Ohio. Although the existence of petroleum in several of the provinces of Japan is said to have been known for 1.5200 years, the Japanese did not know how to relino it till about six years ngo. Now, how ever, refining establishments are spring ing up rapidly, and its manufacture is becoming nn important industry. Taking the entire length of the New York Elevated railroad, on both the east nnd west side lines, and multiplying it by the number of trains run during the twenty-four hours, and again by the number of loconitives and cars, it is found that the distance traveled in one day is 30,352 miles, or nearly one and a half times around the world ; the pro portion of miles traveled on the west side, ns compared with the east side, being about one to seven. " You attempted to take the life of the king; the king gives you iife," were the words of the Italian nttorney-general, who communicated to the assassin Pas sannnte in prison King Humbert's com mutation of his sentence of death to imprisonment, for life. Passananto is said to have displayed considerable emo tion and expressed his deep gratitude. He will finish his existence with hard work in irons. The kind's popularity has been increased by this net. Mon archs, as a rule, dislike to sign thedeath warrants of their would-be assassins. Drunkenness in Sweden and Norway is cured in the following manner: The drunkard is put in prison, and his only nourishment is bread soaked in wine. During the first day the prisoner receives the bread nnd wine with much pleasure. On the second day the food is not so nc- eptable. After that he takes his food with great repugnance. In general, eight or ten days of tliis treatment suffices to produce such n disgust of liquor that the unhappy man is compelled to absolute abstinence. After leaving prison his drunkenness is radically cured, with an occasional exception, and the odor ot liquor produces an invincible repulsion. The venerable Peter Cooper has n device for propelling the cars of the ele vated railroads In Is ew Y ork by means of an endless wire or chain, and he has written a letter to show how simple, bean, noiseless and uafe his system would be. He offers to turn over the invention to the east side road lor 100, 000 in their stock, to be immediately made over to the trustees of tho Cooper Union as a fund for its support, and thinks it would be no niorethan fair that they should take it at those figures, inas- iiueh as the institute has sullered a great loiil from the nroxiniitv of the road. which has interfered witli the students and cut down the income from the room 111 the building that are rented. The great tunnel under the Detroit river will be completed within two years, and will cost about 1,500,000. Mr. Tilling- liast. the president of the Canada South ern Railway Company, says that the lo- ation chosen lor tins great undertaking s the only one when' the tunnel can be made through the rock, as it comes within twenty-two feet of the surface of tlm water at the points selected. At De troit the rock is nearly one hundred feet below the surface. Amherst burg is fourteen miles below that city. The proposed location of the tunnel 'will ac- ommodale traffic Irom both the North west nnd the Southwest. I he tunnel will be built under the supervision of E. C. Cheseborough, of Chicago, who has had experience in the construction of both road nnd river tunnels. Hereafter let nothing be said disre- SpCCUUiiy 01 lilt: muic. r .. mprisoned 111 the mine ill n l.Kesimrre, 'a., who were rescued in a lair conui ion. after being entombed tor over five days by the fallen roof, owe their lives to a member ot this inucli-aDUscii species, for they killed him and foi four days lived upon nun. Jiad tins mine ueen as positive in his character as mules are re puted to be, ho might have refused to die, in which case carving him might have proved a dangerous operation. All's well that ends well, and that must have been an exciting moment when the seven men v ho had been iu such immi nent danger of death were liberated 111 the presence of eight thousand persons, having been shut out from the blessed sunlight since the previous Tuesday morning. A cotton mill'is to be established in China. Tho prime mover in the enter prise is said to be a Chinaman, it is stated that 50,000 taels have been nl- readypaid down as bargain mouey to .1.. it. .' 1 i .1. 1 1 .1 me 111111 which lias secuicu iiiu cwiium-i. The contract is sai't to be 255,000 taels for everything delivered iu Shanghai. The mill is to be erected in Shanghai, and is to contain 800 looms. It is un derstood that China cotton will be used, and as this is a short staple, it may be assumed tliat only coarse calico wi.l be turned out, as the staple is unsuitable for the manufacture ot fine goods. Jt lias been estimated by the promotors that 6,000 bales per year, calculating the 1 .1- A: -i. . jjv i. naie as containing nuv piwtd, win turned out. This is enuivalent to a pro' duction of seven and a half pieces per fooni per week. Repartee iu Rhyme. The following anecdote on three noted North Carolinians Hillman, Dews and hwain the two former brilhaut lawyers and the latter a learned lawyer and a scholar, and from 1832 to 1835 governor of the State, and afterward president of Chapel Hill University is nearly out of Unto. At a term ot tno huprcmu couii the crentleman handed Mr. James Dodge, then clerk of the court, the following epitaph: " Here lies Jumeg Dodge, who dodged all good And never dodged an evil, And utter dodging all he oould, He could not dodge the devil!" To this Mr. Dodge returned the follow ing sharp impromptu reply : " Here lies a Hillman and a Swain, Their lot let uo man choose; They lived in sin end died in puin, And the devil Rot his dues! (Dews)" Wilmington (JV. C.) Sun, Some of these base ball professionals aro very poor "sticks." Only this morning we saw one who could hardly . . 1. iT. 1 . . r T. caicu ma uieuu. xjum.ii. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Lead ville, Colorado, is 10,400 feet above the sea. At Marseilles, France, diphtheria ex sts in fowls. Bridal tours will be short this year if he " old man " is. St. Louis claims to be the mule me tropolis of the world. Diil you ever see a pretty milkmaid in a quan dary? Lukens. A New York dealer in birds imported last year 100,000 canaries. AVater, when it becomes steam, is ex panded 1,700 times its original bulk. The length of a lady's train should never be under a foot. Boston I'ost. The elephnnt is nfrnid of baggage smashers; lie never checks his trunk. Silting Bull's favorite hair remedy is warranted to bring the hair out by the roots. It is between the nges of twenty-five nnd thirty years that most people be come insane. The military chest captured nt Isan dula (Zululand) by the Zulus contained . 100,000 in gold. " You are beneath my notice," ns the balloonist said to the receding crowd 01 gaping citizens. N. Y. News. By diligent observation, Sidney Bux ton has decided that dogs nnd horses arc the only animals sensitive to ridicule. Tobacco is largely cultivated in Bus--sin, nnd the seed used on the plantations is from the United States and from Tur key. Bismarck reads every word of ndviee to him in the Americnn newspapers, and he does just as each newspaper think best. Celluloid can be made to closely imi tate ivory, and is making great inroads in the business of the ivory manufac turers. Putnam's winged atom is the smallest of all known insects. Its body is only 1-12,000 of nn inch in length, nnd the antenna; only 1-20,000. According to Professor Trowbridge's calculation, a man witli nn average step liftB his own weight a foot from the ground in every twenty-three feet he travels. It is a curious fuel that although rice is the principal food of the Arabs, not one grain of it is grown in their country It is procured by them either from India or Italy. The San Francisco Chronicle reports a shower of several thousand herrings near 11 cemetery in that city. They were not pickled, and there is not salt enough in the stei'y to save it. ' oh, iiKii'leii sweet, with dolieute led, 'flipping tin) lair llelds over, AVlmt do yon seek hy the gurgling creek And amid tho dewy clover?" "Why, Mister," she said, " yon don't know beaux ! I'm yutheriii' yiiller dock lor green." Cincinnati Star. " You make me think," John AVilliam said, dropping upon the sofa beside the prettiest girl on North hill, last Sunday evening, "of a bank whereon the wild thyme grows." "Do I ? " she murmured. " It is so nice, but that is pa's step in the hall and unlis you can dropout of the front window before 1 get through speak ing, you'll have a little wild time with him, my own, for he loves you not." But John AVilliam didn't quite make it and now you can make him grow wild time and time again by simply asking him what makes him go lame when he walks. He knows, but he won't tell. UnrliiiiloH Ilawkeyc. Hardly any better retort is on record than one made to Professor Bonamy Price, of Oxford University on his late visit to this country. He was not re markable for his geniality, and at a din ner party, at which popular ideas of heaven happened to be under discus ion, he turned to Dr. H. AV. Bellows and said : " AVc would like to have your opinion of heaven. Dr. Bellows, as that of one who stands outside the pale of plied':" " My Idea of heaven'is'that of a great dinner party where we can have everything we want without money nnd ithout Price." All but onejoined in the laugh. Imlejiendcnt. "Something to Praise." The recent accident in one of the AVilkesbarre coal mines, nnd the fortu nate final delivery of all the imprisoned men, renders a timely word in reference to the subject o mutual lieipiuiness, as practiced there in cases of fatal casual . .1 , i,,,i ties, tor 11 long time nun-en, unm within two or three years past when death to the miner has resulted from ac cident in the mines, it seems to have been the custom among them to throw nn nil work until after the funeral and then devote a day's labor to the widow and orphans of tho deceased. For this practice a prominent oniccr oi one 01 inc companies has succeeded in substituting tho following: AVhcn a fatal accident occurs the operatives continue 11s usual until the day of the funeral, when they taken half' holiday, attend the burial and contribute fifty cents per nan and twenty-live cents per boy to the widows find orphans,, the company agreeing to double the amount, whatever it may be. This plan has thus far worked ex cellently in the cases which have come under notice. A custom so sensible and humane can not be other than beneficial in every way to employers and employed ; nnd for the same reason that the Graphic finds it necessary to oppose and denounce cor porations in a these respects in which they arc grasping ana oppressive, 11 lanes pleasure in commending them for every act of consideration and justice they ex hibit to their employes nnd customers. New York Graphic, A Cautious AVoiiiiui. little woman, with considerable anxiety in her face, was searching the Central Market yesterday for flowers and seeds, and one of the seed sellers explain ed to her: " Here arc some of the nicest climber j you ever saw. it you take them they will cover your house and make it look almost like Paradise." "They will, eh?" absently replied the woman. "Yes, they will. You don't know how they will improve the looks of your house." " But I won't take any. Just as soon so, they made the old house look any bet ter the landlord would come around and raise the rent on us. I guess I won't buy anything but sunflower seeds and a stalk or two of catnip." Detroit it Press.