r t HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IX. EIDGWAY, ' ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY, , 24, 1879. NO. 22. I i I Go to Bed. Whon I have loot nit faith in man, Or Inilect to consummate some planj When womon Inir nre cold, unkind, And things Record not with my inind, I do not rashly seize mjj pen And in a flurry there and then Dcclnre this gladsome world to be One endless round of vanity ( Ah! no, for this were mockery 1 go to bed. ' When through my head there darts a pain And life seems an more-Ming bane, When triends their patronage withhold, And creditors become too bold, I do not in seclusion mourn, And curse the hour when 1 was born I go to bed. When some D. D. doserts his creed, And quacks their many victims bleed ; When editors write sharp replies, And moneyed men keep back supplies, I do not then, in prose and verse, Implore the gods mankind to enrse I go to bed. When couples marry in great haste, And servants pilfer, tret and waste; When general oourts their terms prolong, In short, when things get somewhat wrong, I do not bite my lips and scowl, And at the children snap and growl I go to bed. I go to bod and soundly sleep, While friendly angels vigils keepi Hut it, however, I awake Before my ailments me forsake, I do not of my life complain, Bat try the remedy again And bock to bed. Tc who have griefs (and who has not?) Let past prescriptions be forgot, My panacea for old and young Is given in the Knglisli tongue, It hath to untold millions wrought Sweetest relief, nor cost them aught j And now if you, like those, would bo From every pain and trouble free, Light a small lump and come with me I go to bed. The Wreck of the " Pioneer." Ralph Keystone was one of those mrn who combine a talent for practical things with nn active imagination. He was :it t'ie same time a most unpractical man in affairs of business. Like all im aginative men. he early found a woman whom l:e could clothe in ideal charms, and then fell in love with her. Jane llcsatit was the only daughter of Farmer Bes.int, who owned and operated an im mense wheat farm not far from the vil las;" of Muskalontie. To Farmer Besant went Kalpli in the lirst flush of his love for Jane. ' You wish to marry Jane?" The young man replied. " Not immedi ately," for just at the time he was out of employment. ' That's just it, Keystone," said the farmer; "you are out of work for the fourth time since you came from the East. How can you marry on bo un certain a prospect? You are too un stable j you do not stick to anything." Ralph admitted he had been unfortu nate in his ventures; hut lie still hail a little money left, and lie would now go into some in iimfaetunng business. " Manufacturing, indeed! There's nothing but farms within fifty miles. Wheat is the only thing that pays hen', unless it be lumber, and there isn't a sawmill within a hundred miles." " Then 1 migjit start one," said Ralph, eatchiiigfat this straw, for he felt him self sinking. He could make no head way against this hard, practical man, who knew nothing byond wheat. "Start a sawmill! Where's your power? And, if you had it, how could you compete with the mills up the river? Ixjok here, Ralph, I doD't want to be hard on you. I see you love Jane and Jane loves you at least she seems to think so." " That's the truth." said Ralph. " We love each other dearly." " Now I'll make a bargain with you, If you will go into some business, and make it a success, you shall have Jane that is, if she wants you." " Thank you, sir," said the young man. " I'll start the sawmill at once." The road to the village followed the river for some distance through Farmer Besant's land, and then turned east through the woods toward the village. Ilalnh walked along in a dazed fashion. mentally numb with his refusal, his body walkinir automatically, just as it will when the mind is absorbed in contem plation. A t the turn of the road his feet took the right direction lor home, but after going a few steps he stopped abruptly, and turned back to the river. Tho Muskalontie is a wide, shallow stream, winding sluggishly through the country, its banks being hereabouts heavily fringed with woods. The young man left the road and fol lowed the shore down stream, walking nnicklv. ns it loosing lor something Like all imaginative people, he had been riven to wandering about the country. and was familiar with the land for miles around Muskalontie. He remembered bavins seen falling into the river, be. tween two low lulls, a slender brook, half lost in the woods. Just as no nan supposed, it was a living stream, still running, though it was August, lie looked at the tiny run for a moment, and then started briskly up its winding channel, carefully noting the slope ana character 01 uie ground. After walking a short distance he found the little valley narrowed, and then spread out into a slough, a marsh, where the stream was lost in pools and sedges. Like a prospector searching for pre cious metals when he finds a vein, he threw ud his hat with a cheer. " I've won her! I fancy the old gen tleman will let us marrv now." Just then there came through the woods the sound of a passing steamer on the river, ana tne young man smiled. " I'll beat those fellows yet. They take all this trade up the river, and leave this farming region to stagnate. We must have manufactures here, and they gnau oegin witn a sawmill. Keystone sat up all night over his drawing-paper and pencils. Two days after saw three woodman felling trees by the little brook. The land belonged to Farmer Besant, and he had consented that a dam should be erected thereon. If Keystone was fool enough to sink his money in improving the bit of water Dower he thought he had found v. at liborty to do so, provided he gave half! the work when finished to the landowner, with half the lumber cut on the land. If lie failed, then all the lumber was to remain on tlio land. Pretty hard terms, but Ralph accepted them on the spot. Axe in hand lie headed the woodmen, directing the fall of each tree, so as to save labor in hauling tho log. When about a hundred trees were down lie or ganized his force into ehoppers.and began to get out logs of every size. A pair of oxen were hired, and things began to assume shape. Heavy logs laid end to end in a double row stretched across the little vailey, and marked the foundation of the dam" Stout stakes were driven on the low side, and shorter logs laid up stream, witli the ends resting on the heavy timbers, raised the dam about one foot. The news quickly spread through the country round about. Young Keystone had found water power in other words, wealth in the little brook. Within three weeks the dam had been raieed three feet, and the water began to back up behind it, spreading out over the marsh in a slowly widening pond. Then the people began to laugh. Keystone was a fool, after all. What could lie do with only three feet fall of water? The next day a small army of labor ers appeared in the woods, and by night they had dug a long ditch or canal from the river up the bed of the brook. Two days after it reached the foot of the dam, and brought the river water close up to the logs. At the upper end it was five feet deep. Five and three make eight. Eight feet fall in the clear. Here's power in abundance. Thereupon the on-lookers said the young man was a smart fellow, a good engineer, etc., etc. Within a week the village carpenter had constructed a water-wheel from Ralph's designs. Within two weeks saws and gearing arrived, a shed was put up, nnd the sawmill was opened for business. The first iob was for a lot of two-inch plank for Farmer Besant. He claimed that lie was half owner of the mill by their agreement, and would only pay half the bill. Keystone took the job, and soon had it finished, and even ran through a lot of logs and piled ud the nlanks on sale. Sundry small jobs enme in, and it began to look as if lie had started a good business. One morning a stranger nr- ived, and introduced himself as a lumber ealer from a town fifty miles down the lver. He was in search of a lot of small tuff, licht scantling two inches wide nnd an inch nnd a half thick, in lengths of twelve feet nnd upward. He wanted a million feet, and he offered a good price, and gave his name and references. The otter was tempting, and Ralph took it, and agreed to have the stuff ready in two weeks, j-.ncourngeu by Ins success, he ired more help, nnd started on the new order. In ten days he wrote to the party to say that the scantling was nearly all eady, ana could he put on a raft and oated down the river, reply came. :ind he wrote again, and in a few days re- eived a notification ot the failure of the lumber dealer, and an account ot the winding up of his affairs. Discouraged nnd sick at heart, he wandered down bv the river and sat down on a fallen tree alone. Everything was lost, lie could never marry Jane. A large part of his lumber had been cut up into a useless nnd unsalable shape, nd ho was in debt to bis men. In fool- -hlv trusting tho word of a stranger lie lad made a wreck of everything. When the mind is ill at ease a trilling eircum- tance will often absorb the whole atten- lon, nnd as lie sat gloomily brooding over the ruin of hopes, he saw a steam boat rounding the bend ot the river ibolit a mile up stream. She was steer- tig dangerously near a half-sunken and in the middle ot the river, lie watched her with a vague curiosity as be came swiftly onward. Suddenly she urned. anil with apparent purpose ran lirectly across the upper end of the and, struck, and grounded, lie could see the wheels reversed, and in a mo ment after saw the wildest confusion nmong the passengers on board. Spring- ng u-p, he ran at lull speed along the ank till lie came opposite the stranded oat. It was a freight and passenger steamer the Pioneer" by name. She blew her whistle loudly, and a moment nftcr lie saw a boat lowered. For an instant here was some confusion on the steamer is if the people were demoralized, but a all lellow interlered. nnd order was re stored. The boat came slowly ashore. nnd bv the time it reached the bank all i . f 11 I l 4 1 r us nun nanus ami several tanning pi'u- ile had arrived in an excited crowd on the bank. In the boat came the captain of the steamer. As he sprang ashore he said to Ralph: - Are there any boats or barges about here?" Nothing but a punt or two. Can t you bring your passengers ashore in your own noatsr "Bother the passengers! I enn land them easy enough. It's the cargo. The steamer will never come oil. The tiller rope broke, and she ran nose on at full speed. The old Pioneer had laid down her hones torever. roor old tub! l pity her." I'll take your cargo ashore, or down stream ' to any point you say, in three days, for five hundred dollars." 'Oh. vou ve a barce or two. Wh didn't vou say so?" I'll hire 'em of vou. " I have no barge, but I'll make one in twenty-four hours for cash. I have a sawmill mst back of here." 1 11 give you hvo hundred dollars if vou 11 put the cargo on a Hat within three days. I can't ge,t a steamer up here in less than two days, and it will cost nlmost as much, though I don't see how vou re going to make a flat in that time." " That's my look-out. I'll have a barge 'longside before to-morrow night." "It will take two barges. Heavy cargo this trip." " ir Heave a single barrel behind, I'll forfeit a hundred dollars. You can take the passengers to the village. Some of the folks, will give them lodging till the ooats come up on Mondav." xiiecnpuiiu ngreeu 10 tne nnrgain, ana put off to bring his passengers ashore. "Johnson," said Ralph to one of the young men, "go to the painter's, and nn . .. i . -i i . tell him to send me threo men nnd a lot of white-lead paint. Then get two kegs of sixpenny nails and bring them to Uie mill. Take my horse. Pick up all the men you can una. i want all the car penters in the place to work day and night on a good job." Ten minutes later a dozen men, with carpenters' tools, stood ready in the mill yard waiting for orders, " I was born next door to a Massachu setts shipyard," said Ralph, "and know something about boat-building. am going to make a barge big enough ior a steamboat, jet every man do ex actly as I tell him. and we will have her launched before to-morrow niiiht. Everv man shall have double pay wh ile at work on uie ooai. The men gave a cheer, and saTd they were ready lor anything. It seemed as if it might bo true, for in a moment after they were carrying long two-inch planks down to the river bank. Here a space was cleared next the water, and four lines of timber " ways," or slides, were laid down heading into the water, se curely fastened together, and then liber ally spread with grease and oil. Then, under Ralph's directions, two-inch plnnks were laid side by side on the ways till a platform was made one hundred and eighty feet long and about twenty feet wide in tho center. More men negan to arrive, and every one who could drive nails was promptly engaged, and within an hour forty men were at work on the new boat. With chalk and line Ralph struck a line throueh the center of the platform, and from this struck out a curved lino on each side, and then bade the men aw oft tho planks to the curved lino. This gave a long slender platform, ten feet wide at the upper end, or stern, twenty feet wido near the center, and running off to a long slender point at tho lower end, or bows, of the future boat. Then upon this platform was laid much coat of paint, a dozen men plv- ine the brushes at once, and then came more plnnks, laid lengthwise. The two platforms were cut to the same form, and were quickly spiked together. The men suggested that such a long and slender raft would never hold to- ithor. " Wait and see." said Ralph. " Now for the scantling wo have been getting out at tho mill. Bring it down by the cart-load. Now, men, have your bits eadv for boring nau-lioles in the stuff. Make the holes a foot apart the whole length of the strips." In a moment or two several pieces of scantling yere ready, and taking one in hand Ralph laid it along the edge of the raft and nailed it down, then another, till a strip had been laid entirely round the rait. As tne strips were long ann flexible, thev were easily bent to ht the curved lines of the platfoim. At the upper end the cross-pieces were nailed together, and at the bow end the strips were brought to a point and littedtoan pnght piece set up at the end of the platform. Then through the center of the plattorm was laid another strip -from nd to end, wlulu at intervals ot about live feet cross-pieces were laid from side to side. " Now. men. vou see mv idea. Lav strip over strip, and nail them firmly one to the other through the noies, tin the sides are six feet high : break the joints of the strips and nail-holes; lay on the paint freely as you go, and we shall soon have a steamboat without ribs. The cross-pieces will brace her, and she'll carry a big cargo, even if the isn't very pretty. The men. unaccustomed to marine architecture, greeted this novel system if bojit-buililing with pleasant surprise, mil went to work with a will. More nu n arrived, and the clatter of twenty lanimers going on at once made the woods ring. the sun went down, arid torches nnd bonfires were lighted. A boy was sent round lor the men s suppers that there might be no delay. The pas sengers of the wrecked steamer were be stowed in sundry farmhouses, farmer Besant taking his share at two dollars ach. llie news of the boat-huiiding pread quickly, and the people flocked own to the mill-yard to see the work, ml with them came all the passengers. Among them came Farmer Besant and the captain of the Pioneer. The farmer walked about the curious structure now rapidly rising, and seeing the enormous onsuniption of scantling, he remon strated in no pleasant mood. ' hut right have you to use up your ustomor's stuff in this way?" " He's failed," said Keystone, without opping his work. "How do yon know? He may claim t, and vou are spoiling thousands of feet ot good stutl on a piece of folly." "Jion t know about that." said a bie fellow near bv. " It's about the smart est idee I ever seen. Guess you belong East, young man?" Massachusetts. J ve seen manv a x:it built without ribs, though none quite so big. Mie 11 carry your cargo, aptam. "Oh. she will when she's decked. I say, young feljer, don't you want to sell lcr iust as sue stands." ' " No. She is to be a steamboat." Farmer Besant felt confirmed in his views ot young Keystone, lie was a born fool come from the very home of lunatics and visionaries. " I'll give you three hundred dollars tor her just as she stands, and finish her myself." "The Jane is not for sale." " Jane for sale? Don't insult the girl. Mr. Ralph." A little more paint lay it on thick!" Then lie turned away to drive more nails. Farmer Resnnt went home, intending to tell .1 ane of the insult she had received. He would never speak to Keystone again, neither should Jane. Luckily Jane I mil ione to bed when he returned nnd knew nothing of the building of the boat. Morning came and saw the sides of the boat well advanced. Some men left for home and rest, and others took their places, j-vven some ot the passengers volunteered as painters ana nail-drivers. There was no thought of the Sabbath. The excitement of the wreck, the arrival of so many strangers and the boat build ins brought everybody out of doors. and the yard was filled with people watching the progress of the work. Among them came one with shinine eyes and a rosy blusli upon her face. The name of her lover was on everv toncue. The marked approval of the captain of the steamer, and the enthusiasm ot his engineer, won the confidence of the rural population. Keystone had always been considered an eccentric sort oi lellow but now, after all, there might be some thine in him. These things she heard and treasured in her heart. She kept out of sight in the crowd, but saw every tiiincr and heard everything with the greatest interest and pleasure. There was a man painting letters in blue on the stern of the new boat. lie had made a J, nn A and an N, and was at work on Another letter. Ah. Jane her name! There was quite a company of people watering the man, nnd when the name was finished there was a little shout of annroval. " I allers said he was dreffle sweet on Squire Besant s darter.' " Sho! That's a pretty idee, anyway She blushed scarlet, and slipped awn .ml went. ii n to the deserted sawmill nd mt down on a lo2 by the little water fall. Suddenly some one stood beside '""Oh. Jane! It's all over. I have f..ilod nnd to-morrow your father wi take the mill. That lumber dealer has failed, and that brings me down." "Can't vou sell the lumber?" said Jane, with ready common sense. I have used a part ot it in making the barge. If I get the money for sav ing the cargo. L snail nave just enough to pay every bill, but with nothing left." She stood up, and placing a hand on each shoulderealmly kissed him. "Thank you, love, for the compli ment." " I heard the engineer say the tho Jane would make a good freinlit steamer if she were engined." "Did her That's not a bad idea. I had t hought sho would make some kind f a craft. Oh! Perhaps I could hnv the engines out of the steamer. They will sell them cheap. I thought you had failed and lost everything." "No. I can't fan while I have you." What further sentiment ho would have indulged in ennnot be known, for some one called them. She's 'bout ready to slide." said tho big captain. Seeing Jane, he took oft his hat nnd said, politely, "Will the young lady name the boat?" "The boat is named the Jane Besant. Let me present my friend Miss Besant, captain." " Glad to meet vou. miss. I called mv boat the Nancy K., after my wife. It brings luck." The built-up sulos of tho boat nnd the interior cross-work that braced her and held the hull together in everv direction had been raised six feet hioli. Boards were laid down on top to form a deck. and she was ready to be put afloat. The captain and the engineer, Ralph nnd about a dozen men armed with long poles, mounted the deck. The word was given, the blocks were knocked awav! and own she slid swiftly into the water amid the cheers of the people. She set tled down in the water with a slight list to one side, and the rural population gave a little cry of alarm. ' "The cargo" will ballast her," said Ralph. "Get out your poles, men, and push her along the shore till we come to tho steamer.' The Jane Besant was quickly brought ound, and went up stream, followed bv an enthusiastic multitude on the shore. Shortly after, the barge was secured alongside the wreck, nnd the men began to put the cargo on bonrd. Mie did not leak a drop, and appeared to be as stiff nnd strong as the best ribbed boat afloat. She was very buoyant, and readily minded the rude rudder that had been hung at tho stern. ' I shall be glad to consider your pro posal, sir, to-moiTow!" "Unmc in mv cabin l guess it isn t wholly wrecked. Come, Bates, I want ou too." The young man followed the captain and his engineer into the cabin nnd sat down, while the captain ordered some viine nnd lunch- When the lunch came. the captain began to bo txpansive. "She only wants a little moro sheer. and a deck and house and engines. She'll not bo a 'fust boat, but she'll go in shallower water than anything on the iver.. She'll be runninir reirular trips when the, biglbottts nre laid up for low water. Tell Jou what I'll do, young man, I'll put engines in her, nnd make her a stern-wheeli r. Mebbe you can aise enough to put a house on her. I'lf halves with you in the business. We can haul her ashore nnd sheathe her bottom to make it smooth, nnd make n good thing of it. What d' you say ? Is t a bargain. 1 hen it would be a bargain if it wasn t Sunday. All right. e 11 go ashore this evening nnd hear the parson." 1 wo months later the purser ol the new freight and passenger boat Jane Be- mt opened uie books of the boat for business. There wnsalineof passcnirors. headed by one of tho boat's servants, al- cady waiting at the ticket-window. " Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keystone oh, es all right free passes. Give them he bridal-room, John; here's the key. Next "Harper's Bazar. Peculiar People. Odd folks here nnd there nre described n tho newspapers. Uoxburv. Mass.. lias an eccentric tramp who lives in a ave during the winter and spends tho summer in making begging excursions to the neighboring towns. He never says a word, and his dress consists en tirely of old bootlegs fastened together with leather strings. A small wagon, drawn by two goats, and containing a helpless, shrivlod man, attracted atten tion in Ilagerstown, Md. He said that lie had traveled in that manner for many years, and called himself" tho American tourist." lie is entirely helpless, l lis wife and lour children accompany him nnd attend to his wants, gettinc their living by the sale ot a temperance song nnd other small articles. Jefferson Stevens, who lives near Sulphur Springs, Ky., concludes that he is gifted with peculiar powers, of which he lately gave a street exhibition, lie hold a forked dogwood switch, like those used by wizards, m ins mouth, and told tho crowd to ask any questions they pleased. a pair oi tramps turned uu at lies Moines, Iowa Peter Carlisle and wife who were on their way to Leadville from the .Pennsylvania cohl reirions. They had pushed a handcart all the way, containing their babv girl nnd few household utensils. Carson Chit, of Moodie, Oil., will on no account walk a step, but always runs, no matter if tho distance is only a few feet; while Mrs. Main, of Chicago, will neither walk nor run, although physically nblo to do either, because she thinks her legs will drop oft it Mie stirs them. How to Swim. The editor of tho London Truth, nfter observing that probably not one in twenty of the persons who indulge in boating on a holiday can swim, proceeds to tell his readers how to acquire this !!..! . lT.il I.- accompiiHiiiuvnt. iioiuing, no savs, is more easy. Whenlthe ?air is out of a body its owner sinks; when the air is in the body its owner floats. Let any one slowly draw in his breath as ho draws back his legs and pushes forward his arms, retain it while he is preparing for the stroke which is to propel him, and skiwly allow it to go through his lips as his arms are passed back from before his head to his sides and his legs are stretched out. The action of the stroke should not be quite horizontal, but should ho made on a slight incline downward. The real reason why people take weeks to learn how to swim is because swim ming professors cither do not know ordo not choose to teach the philosophy of breathing so as to render the body buoy ant I would engaye to make anyjono a tolerable swimmer in an hour, unless he be a congenital idiot. At this time ofyeara dish of ice-cream in the hand is worth two in the freezer. TIMELY TOriCS. New England has over 230 farmers' clubs, with 72,000 active members and library books to the number of 21,000, and in the United States there are nearly 2,000 agricultural societies, 58,000 volumes in their libraries, and with ac cess to 360 different agricultural publi cations, all exerting a direct influence on the intelligence and future prospects ol the tillers of the soil. The California ranchman or farmer is to a certain extent demoralized by the climate, which allows him to perform outdoor work tho year round. Unlike t ho Eastern farmer, therefore, he is in clined to let things go by tho board. There is a lack of thoroughness in build ing, in planting and in the care for ani mals. There is little concern for ap pesranccs; the soil of many years re mains undisturbed upon the wagon wheels ; no flower garden is well cared for; they mend tho harnesses with bits of rope, and they trust little or nothing to the vanity of paint. Twenty- nine years ago two boys.about a dozen years of age, were playing " tag " in Lewiston, Me. They were merry and active lads, and were frolick ing with schoolboy enthusiasm nnd carelessness. One lad caught tho other, struck his heels and playfully tipped him over. His whole weight came down upon his failing playmate, whose spine was seriously injured in consequence. He was conveyed home, and it was found that he was a physical wreck. For two years he was ablo to walk around a verj little, and then, as the results of his injuries gradually grew more serious. he was obliged to be carried from one place to another. entirlv losing the use ot his lower limbs. At length his whole body beenme rigid, nnd he wns power- ess, tor twenty-three venrs Matliew Rankins has sat fixed in his chair ns in a vise night and day. The New York Herald thus describes horse-power: "This question is fre quently asked : What is understood bv a horse-power, and why came thit way it reckoning to lie adopted and brought n to general use.' uetore ttie power of steam was generally known and applied to mechanical purposes, horses were used to raise coal and other iieavy . Mr. Moots, in his experiments. carefully compared the relative power oi the oilierent breeds ol horses, and found its average equal to raising 33,000 pounds one foot per minute, or. what is uuivalcnt, to nose 330 pounds 160 feet. or 100 pounds 330 foot during that spnc t tinru when attached to a lever or sweep of given length. This afterward lecame the standard of measuring power r force applied to mechanical purposes. uul which is still retained in common use." . Major J. M. Walsh, who has become la .turns in the Indian country ns the offi cer of the Canadian Mounted Police, in barge of the camp of Sitting Bull nnd the V'neapapa Sioux, has contributed several columns of opinion and narrative to a (Jhicago paper lie thinks Sitting Bull is well disposed toward the United States, but adds this criticism of the In- tian policy : " lou can t make two gov- rnments one lor the Indian and one for the white man. You don't need lliem. Treat the Indian like a white man from the start. Show him that you recognize the fact that he has rights, and point out to linn what those rightsjtre. V 1. 1 . - .1.. .! ... . .1.. ii.n'u iijiu mat i lie wiiuu man s riguis uul his are identical. Then show him that he will be protected in his rights, md that he will be punished if he in fringes on the rights of others, and the business is settled." And it is by en forcing this policy, he savs. that Canada has been enabled tolive at peace with the savages for a generation. To Make Ice-Crenm. One quart of milk, the volks of four eggs, one largo spoonful of flour stirred to a smooth paste in a little of the milk, and one pound of sugar: scald until thick, taking care not to let it burn. When cold, add one quart of whipped cream and the beaten whites of four eggs ; flavor to suit tho taste, and it is ready to be irozen. To make ice-cream nicely nnd quickly, a suitable apparatus is lndisneusab e. If one has no freezer, a tin nail- with a closely fitting cover can he made to an swer, het the pail in a basket a large peach basket is good ; pack equal quan tities of coarse salt nnd finely broken ice around tho pail, nearly up to the rim; pour the prepared cream into the pail, taking care not to get any sa'.t into it; cover tho whole with flannel and leave for twenty minutes, that the cream may chill. Freeze by turning tho pail half way round and back, and every few minutes open the pail and stir the cream ; for this purpose use a smooth stick. Work fast while the pail is open an the air that reaches the cream delays the freezing process. Have a damp napkin at hand to wipe away the salt from the freeze every time that it is opened. It may be necessary to renew the ice nnd salt while shaking, ns the freezing mix ture must bo kept close to tho sides of tho pail. When the creaiu becomes solid, cover ngain with flannel, and if conve nient, let it stand for an hour before serving. Hural New Yorker. Unshod Horses. It has been before stated that nn ex perienced farrier in England was advo- eating the abolishment of horseshoeing, and now a writer in me jxinuon U imes has been trying the experiment, and thus reports: When my pony's shoes were worn out I had them removed, and gave him a month's rest at grass, with nn oc casional drive of a mile or two on the high road while his hoofs were harden ing. 1 he result nt first seemed doubtful. The hoof was a thin shell, and keot chipping away until it had worked down bevond the holes of the nails bv which tho shoes had been fastened.- After this the hoof grew thick and hard, quite un like what it had been before. I now put the pony to full work, nnd he stands it well. He is more sure-footed : his tread is almost noiseless; his hoofs are in no danger from the rough- hand of the farrier; and tho change altogether has iiecn a clear gain, without anything to set against it. My pony. I mav add. wns between four and five years old rising four, I fancy, is the correct phrase. He had been regularly shod up to the pres ent year. Tle big female African elephant of the Philadelphia Zoological Garden is dead. Investigation showed her stomach to be filled with pebbles, sticks, bones, wads of paper, etc.. that had been eiven to her by visitors and were the cause of her a.'ata. A DnnI Robbery. A physician, living at Cambridge, Dorchester county. Md.. who siens him self, " A Constant Render," sends us a graphic description of the dual robbery oi a iisn-nawK ny a bald-headed engie. He writes : "I had just left the dinner-table, to walk-across the lawn with my children, when my attention was attracted by furious screams in the upper air. A dark shadow flitted across tho grounds. Looking un, I saw a fish-hawk flying low in a Birnignt line, ana pursueu at, a Hun dred yards' distance by a bald-headed eagle. " The hawk was moving leisurely, so much so that I was struck by the little dread of capture which his flight exhi bited, and the fear that his startling cries neioKcneti. j.ne intentions ot the eagle were soon seen. A few strokes of his povwful wings brought him in close neighborhood to the hawk. The scream ing fisherman relinquished Ins prey, which quivered and gleamed in the sun light like a disc of silver as it clove the nir in its descent toward the earth. It was a small fish, apparently a perch. "We were a little surprised that tho rapacious bandit should have devoted his powers to the capture of such small game. The fish had not fallen fifty feet before the eagle, by a peculiar dip, rather thnn by the use of his wings, sank below it, and turning nlmost upon his back, clutched nnd bore it away. Ho flew in nn opposite direction to that the hawk was going. "The hawk seemed satisfied to have escaped with the loss of his nronertv. and kept tho even tenor of his way. But our attention wns again arrested by re newed screams, iook'ng at the hawk, we noticed that he was u changed bird as to conduct. Visibly agitated, he wns urging his flight with surprising energy. " A glance at the robber revealed the cause ot the change. The eagle had turned, nnd ngain was m pursuit. The hawk seemed almost frantic in its strag gles to escape. A torrent of cries, screams, maledictions, imprecntions, poured from his throat. He vainly bent the air, flying now higher, now lower, now straight forward. " The eagle came down upon him in swifter flight, causing us to wonder ns to the cause of the pursuit. In a tew moments fie came almost n contact with his fleeing victim, witli outstretched talons, and poising himself above the hawk, as it to tear linn in pieces, lie uttered n loud shrill scream Instantly we saw, leaving the claws of the hawk, a second fish, much larger than the first. The eagle did not see it until it had fallen a hundred feet. De sisting at onco from his threatened at tack, and half closing his wings, lie plunged swiftly downward below the lish. turned on his back, nnd clutching it, bore it offin triumph. "The hawk, with a wail of vexation and resentment, sullenly continued its flight. " T ho fact suggests a curious specula tion. Did the hawk part designedly with the smaller fish? If so. it exhib ited nn intelligence which we have been lecustomed to observe only in hemgs ol a much higher order." loum s i.om- pinion. A Case of Suspended Animal Ion. Emil Bausch. of Williamsburg, N. Y.. who has been suffering for some lime from heart disease, sat down to his dinner table one day recently, seemingly in his usual health. Alter partaking heartily of the viands placed before him he rose from the table, but was taken with what ho thought a fainting fit, and said he felt sick; then, throwing up his lands, ho fell on the floor. 1 he family. thoroughly startled, though they had long been expecting sueli an occurrence, hastened to his relief and bore him to a sofa, where after two or three efforts to articulate both respiration and pulsa tion apparently ceased. Tho family physician was sent for, but being absent, word was left for him to call immediate ly on his return. Meanwhile no signs of life were visible in Mr. Bausch, and the family convinced of ins death sent for nn undertaker, who came and was also convinced of the deatli of Mr Bausch. Before going back to his store for ice and box with which to preserve the body until the time fjr tho funeral he attached tho usual crape insignia of death tothe frontdoor bell Ho was none nn hour, and then when ho reached the house and prepared to remove the body to the box the jar of removal startled the supposed corpse into life. Sneezing first, lie gasped lor breath, and in a lew moments circulation that had been temporarily suspended resumed its course, and, though weak, Mr. Bausch became once moro a man among the living. The family rejoiced at the eeovery, overwhelmed him with atten- ion, anil even the undertaker felt pleas ure in the unusual termination 10 ins services and joined in the congratula tions. Ile auicklv hastened the removal oi his paraphernalia, the last tiling to take down beinsrllio oangeoi crape irom the door, which for two hours had been suspended there Leadville Gninbllng Houses A correspondent, writing from the irreat Colorado mining town, says Although there are htate laws ami city ordinances fcrbidding gambling, no flbrt is made to enforce either. The doors of these places stand wide open dav and night, and everything is done to attract l lie notice oi passers-ny.jusi as if the business were a legitimate one, protected by law. There is no pretence of elcuance in any of the gambling' houses which I visited in Leadville, as there is in those of Eastern watering Dittoes or liu'ce cities. I lie inside of plaster. The tables are plain pino ones and are surrounded bv wooden chairs, Tho floors arc covered with tobacco juice and mud, and the patrons are mostly roughly clad miners, who piay a small or a large game as money is plenty or scarce with them. In a prominent place in eatdi saloon there is a bar winch is always well patroniz.ed ; in the larger nlaces there are two bars. One-half or or one-third of each gambling-house is separated from tho remainder by a low railing and is set apart for keno. Around tho sides of the remainder nre tables upon which nre played faro, high hall noker. rouge et noir, hazard, etc. In the rear of each place a private room is partitioned off for the accommodation of persons who wish to " fight the tiger" in niivtifA In tllA nilblift TOOII! tllO lllllV is generally for comparatively small nlilm urn anhl for from ten cent s f no dilur etieli. nnd the bets rareU exceed five dollars. In the daytime the gamblingsaloori at Leadville:urc almost deserted, iut at night and on Sundays they are constantly tnrongcu Little Barbara. Pretty Barbara, ripe and red, With sweot small mouth liko tho bees abod, And full ol nectar nnd honey-dew ; So pretty a thing, I dare not swear To the art of the ribbon that ties her hair Or the buckle that binds her shoe; So like her each trinket she has to wear, It peeing just as if it grew, Like a lose in its petals and pollen duat, Hint wears its beauty because it must, And something likeBnrbara, too. As si e dips her small tin bucket in The little fountain ot woven glass, Liko webs that tho spiders weave and spin To hang on the shining blndosof grass, A fnco as bright nnd happy as hers, In the nets of tho silken gossamers, Looks out ol the water's smooth eclipse, As it it wns happy to hold within it The Bolt verbena red of her lips, And kiss and enross her just for a minute, In the arms of the dimples, smooth and still Ere it goes nnd soberly turns the mill. For life to her in the honey-dew Is nothing yet but the wayside spring, Between the upper and under blue, That makes a fiction of everything, As perfectly liko as if it grew; And she is too hnppy to see within it The shape ol her small sweet self a minute, From the bow in the hair to the tie of her shoe, To know that th3 marvelous shadows mean Tho simple inner beauty that shows But now in the eolor ol a rose, And now like the water's smooth eclipse, In hearts that hold her picture still, As we go and soberly turn the mill. Harper't Magazine. ITEMS OF INTEREST. What women are doing Men. Earl Marble. One-third of all the coffee sold In the United States Is said to be adulterated. The Countess de Montijo, mother of the ex-Empress Eugenie, is eighty-two, and was much afflicted nt her grandson's death. The parlor matches of the winter now rest their heads together over the front gate, and tho moon makes light of it. The I'eople. A beheaded Kansas rooster still lives after sevoj-al months of decapitation. Ho is fed at tho throat, nnd is in good icalth. The head was cut off at the base of the brain without injuring the spinal :;olumn. At Kansas City, Mo., Andre Christol, "champion wrestler." wrestled with and defeated a man who had been travel ing through the country and engaging in' wrestling matches under his (Chris tol's) name. Ex-Governor Tilden's summer home it Yonkers.'N. Y., is known as "Grey- stone." 1 lie grounds cover thirty-three acres, including lawn, meadow .and forest. The mansion and grounds, which nre leased by Mr. Tilden, cost 100,000. Darwin is ns straight ns a dart nnd ns robust as nn oak. He looks hale and lieartv enough to live 100 years and more. It Is said lie now confines his ambition to the completion of two works he has begun. One is the lite ot his grandfather, who was an illustrious doc tor, and the other is a worn on vcgeiaoie life. Field bakeries form pnrt of the train of nearly every European nrniy. De spite these arrangements, it lias in recent, wars been frequently lounu liiipossimc to supply the largo armies with fresh bread from day to day, nnd it seems likelv that the attempt to do so will be abandoned, nnd biscuit issued instead of bread. A heavy rain-storm suddenly swelled a Dakota mountain stream to a torrent, and David Morton, arriving at its bnnk with his wife in a wagon, found that he could not cross. Desiring to get rid of Mrs. Morton, he threw her into the stream and drove the horse in after her, leltinir both drown. A coronv s jury was about to decide that the woman iiad been accidentally killed, when a detect ive arrived with me news uiai mere were marks of a struggle beside the stream.. This overwhelmed Morton, md he confessed the murder. The Fete of St. Fiacre. Not tho least interesting of tho many curious customs of the world is tlio fete celebrated annually in iFrance, in honor of St. Fiacre. Tho saint is the especial patron of lViwer dealers and gardeners, and the festival, which occurs in Sep tember, is celebrated throughout France, witli great honor nnd beauty; no orna ments, however, being allowed, unless composed of flowers and evergreens. On the dav of St. h mere Paris is a wilderness of flowers, every doorpost, pillar and portico being twined witli gay wreaths. The tables are loaded with bouquets, and wreaths nre about all the wino cups, nnd pendant from the ceiling of every public room. A castle, built entirely of the most fragrant flowers, enshrines the small, mean-looking statue which is his saintship, St. Fiacre. All the gardeners contribute to this grand castle, which is a wonderful piece oi architecture. ' There are pillars, pyra mids, domes, temples nnd arcades, all of the most magnificent description. All the floral beauties of the flower dealers and gardeners nre brought out to pay homage to me pan on saint. The saint does not always appear the same. Sometimes the insignincant statue is arrayed in rich apparel, and wears a . a! 1 superb crown of flowers; sometimes he is dressed as an old man, sometimes as a tonsored monk, while again he is not gdorned in nny way. Jlis name always appears in letters of brilliant flowers be neath the riche where he is enshrined, and, also, the words, "Priez pour nous!'1'' It is tho usual custom, on the first dav of the fete, to bear the flower castle and its ugly little image to the church, at the head of a grand procession . There grand mass is celebrated, and the cure blesses the imagp in his most solemn manner. I pon the nltarare hud otlerings of beau tiful flowers and rare fruits, and the church walls are festooned with flowers, while bunches of ripo nnd luscious grapes are twined about the altar rail ing. When mass is over, the castle and saint are borne from door to door, and every one is asked to contribute money. The SU111 tllUS obtained pays the ex- I pciiseg of a grand ball, to which all the I florists and gardeners have free admit- wnce, ami tins winu up uie ceienrauon of the saint's birthday. Poitland Tran script.