HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IX. 1UDGWAY, ELK COUNTY; PA., THUKSD AY, AUGUST 28, 1870. NO. 27. V Watering the Hills. "Hn waterclli the hill from flla chambers. "P.i. civ., Oh ! tliu rippling and the loaming, Fulling not lrom dawn till gloaming, Whore the rapids uro descending, as for ages they lmve done) On each downward pliitlorra Inking Just n moment's rest, then breaking Intopweet cuchiinting litnghtor at the gloefid triumph won; AH the latent echoes waking With the lun ! Sweeping lrom ffleir rocky portal, Relied ut once in light immortal, Bringing inllnito levoalings from tho silences prolound; , How tho little eddies whiten, And tho longer teaches brighten, As tho showers of brilliant dowilrops on their slivery slopes rcloiind; Fulling into gems that lighten All around. When the sunbeams come unbidden To behold the marvel hidden, All tho waters tako them captive, to adorn their raiment white; Hut the rainbow tells the wonder Ol tho radiance lying under, And tho sun in regal beauty stoops to claim Ilia own by right, Till tho ripples fall asunder Lost in light ! On the brink the morses glisten, And the grasses stop to listen To the never-ending music ol tho waters flushing by; Overhead the elm-trees stately, In tlrtir hearts rejoicing greatly At the springs ol welcome coolness that be neath their strongholds lie, " Spread their myriad leaves sedately lo the sky. When at night the stnrs,ucmblo In the far blue heavens, and tremble At their own reflected splendor, onthc tot rant borne uw.iy, Then ttie laughing waves discover flow ti.e moon earth's timid lover Wa'ches If:- the petiect mirror they have broken in 1 li' ir p'py ; tVntc-tics with Ihu stars above her 'lili the day. Through all teutons' varied phrases, S'ill tho waters speak their praises Ol tlio JMwer that sweeps them ontwurd, in their fuihics to the dee'; All their rush and tumult guiding, For tu h drop a ptlh dividing, Till in lat-oif breadths ot ocean each its des tined pl.ii-c shall keep, A ii.l ml:'..t, in c del subsiding, F.ill B:-l.w;p. Mary Hairier, in Svn ln'j .Magazine. JACK'S GREAT PERIL. I never sow such a change in a man in my lir.-! When we last met, Jack well,! must not give his real name, con sidering what I am going to rel.U so I'll call him Jack Pallant- -was, as he had ever heen. since I knew hiin, one of the lightest-hearted, cheeriest fellows in the world, full of fun Hnd up to every thing, and ns gentle ami tender as a woman, with the courage of a lion. And now, what did I llr.il him? Even though Imt three month had elapod, ho had become a grave, dejected, saddened man in a word, hardly recognizable, either mentally or physically. I was shocked, ami of course he saw that I was. He came to see me, indeed, the moment he heard I was in town, that I might learn from his own mouth what had happened, instead of at S'fond-hand. Jack had always been more or less a spoiled boy only sons are always more or less spoiled and Laving lost his mother when quite a child, it was not wonderful that his poor old dad made much of him, Rut lie had taken tlie spoiling kind. y, and beyond making liiiu perhaps a little idle and thoughtless, it liad done him no harm. There was no harm in the fdiow; he spent more money than he should, but many young soldiers do that without coming "to much grief in the long run. and his father, a soldier before him, regarded tiio failing lenient lv, paid his bills and looked plea-ant. Be yond adding that lie was a rather short, , dapper little fellow, I need not say much more about htm ; I have only to "try and put into coherent shape the strange and tragical business which had so fearfully altered him. He was coming to town one autumn evening for a few days1 leave from Oun neishoit, where lie was quartered. I can see him as plainly as if I had been there, springing into the first carriage that offered room, without regard to who was , in it; for he was tho least fastidious of men, without the slightest particle of "hawhaw" pride and nonsense, or that stand-orY-Hiness of manner, too usual with men in las position ; ready to make himself happy wherever he was, or in whatever company. Hut it so happened, it appears, on this occasion that lie got into an empty car riage; at least he thought so, for it was twilight, and he did not observe for the first moment the figure of a woman, seated in a further corner, dressed in dark clothes and thickly veiled. The sudden discovery that he M as not atone rather startled him for a moment, and it may be, as he said, that the eve ning before having been a guest night at mess,' his nerves were not quite up to their usual tone. He was not the lad, however, to be long in such a situation without making some remark to his fellow-traveler, though in this case an un usual hesitation to do so came over him, owing to her mysterious appearance and extreme stillness. The between-lights of the carriage lamp and the evening sky prevented him from discerning details; but there she sat, perfectly rigid, and with not a vestige of her face visible, through the thick blnrk vail. " Ahem ! ahem !" he said at last, shift ing one seat nearer to her and nearlv on. posite; "I hope I have not intruded on you; I thought the carriage was empty. I may be disturbing you, I fear." lie would say anything, in a random sort ol way, 10 meat me ice, as he called it. No answer. A lonar nanse. vrv singular," he thought ; and he moved to a seat exactly opposite to the figure, uinm Miutucr t-ownjon place observa tion. ro response, or nv mn,,ont "Asleep I suppose," he said to him self; ana he sat quietlv watbin while the train rattled on for a mile or two. a iaiion was reached and a stop page made, with the usual accompani es nts of screech and whistling and slam- ming of doors, but without producing any change in the posture of the occu pant of the opposite corner. The train again moved on. "Can't bn asleep," he muttered. " What's the matter witli herP" Tho window was shut close; hn let it down with a tremendous clatter and bang, remarking that " he hoped, as tho evening was fine, the weather warm and the carriage close" (for lie declared to me there was a peculiar odor hanging about which struck him from the first; "she would not object to a little air." Still no reply. Then ho said "he feared she was not well. Would she like him to pull tho bell for the guard and have the train stopped again f" Hut nothing he could say or do elicited any sign of life from her. Jack now became seriously uncom fortable and alarmed on her account. He thought she could not be asleep, hut had fainted. Suddenly it crossed his mind that she was dead. Night had now closed in, but as the last tingn of twilight faded from the sky the carriage lamp gained its full power and revealed every object more plainly than hitherto. Jack leaned toward the motionless form. A long black veil, falling from a close-fitting hab-likc bonnet, enveloped nearly the whole upper part of her figure; indeed, on close inspection, it hardly looked like an ordinary veil, but more "like a large thin, black silk hand kerchief. Her dress was of common black stuff, much worn nnd frayed, from amid the folds of which appeared the ends of a piece of rope that must have been fastened round lier waist j and one hand, encased in an old, ill-lilting black glove, lay placidly on her lap. Full of uncomfortable sensations, Jack was about to lift tho veil, when, for tho first time, the figure moved ; its hand stole slowly from underneath the folds of the dress, and the vefl was gradually lifted and thrown up over the head. Involuntarily my friend shrank back into tho corner of his scat, for a face was revealed to him which no one could have looked upon without a sense of awe. It was that of a woman somewhat past middle age, thin, haggard and pale "to a degree which only death could parallel. The features, finely chiseled and propor tioned, showed that at one time there must have been supremo beauty, while, i hough tho iron-gray hair looked a little disheveled and unkempt, the glance of the eye was steady, calm and determined. In this glance lay. childly, tho awe in spiring expression of the face, for, in ad dition to the penetrating look, there was a persistencey in it, and at the same time a . fascination, quite terrible. It fixed itself upon Jack from the first moment that eye met eye, and for s.-veral minutes not a word was spoken n either side. I'resently, however, he tried to pull him self together, and to assume his usual light-hearted manner, which had thus for a minute been so strangely and unusu ally disturbed, and he said, briskly : " I beg your pardon ; I wasifraid you were ill." She slightly bent her head, but spoki not a word, nor withdrew her glance. Mo felt more and more that it was costing him an effort to be himself. Her slow, stealthy, albeit lady-like demeanor, idded greatly to the effect already pro duced, and a curious sensation was grad ually creeping over him, that impossi ble a? it might seem that face was not strange to him. Little as he, with his temperament, was given to speculation or introspection, he found himself striv ing to look back for some event or cir cumstance in his life which might give hun a (dew. Had he ever dreamed of such a face, or had he seen it in child hood? lie was puzzled, affected, quite put out. And still the deep, penetrating eyes were fixed on his, piercing as it were ir.to his very sou). And tlioMiands! what were they doing? Taking off the gloves as with a set, deliberate purpose; and tlio, long, white, thin, almost claw like fingers worked strangely and ner vously, slowly closing and opening upon the palm, as if preparing to grasp some thing. Again he strove to throw off the un pleasant, unusual sensation which had crept ove r him. "I can't stand this." he thought; "I was r.ever so uncomfortable in all my life! I must do something, or say some thing to put a stop to this, to make her take her eyes off me!" lie moved abruptly to the further corner of the carriage, and to the same side on which the woman sat. " I'll try and dodge her in that way," he said to himself: "she shall not sit and glare at me in this fashion!" Hut she too immediately shifted her place, and, rising to her full height, which was very great, went over to the seat exactly opposite to him, never fur one single second dropping her eyes from his. He looked out of the window with a vague notion of getting out of the car riage; when suddenly, passing a little station which he recognized, l.ut at which the train did not stop, an idea struck him an idea after his own heart a comic idea! lie availed himself of it on the instant, and assuming an ease which doubtless sat ill upon him, and which he ntna f.ii f,-!,i f.mltnrr lm rfiirtaA -!!. I.!-. thumb back toward the station they had just passed, as lie said mysteriously in a hollow voice: " Do you know that place?" She seemed to answer in the affirma tive hy a slight inclination of the head as before. Ah! you do. Good! Lonzmoor." he went on; "then I don't mind telling you a secret." He paused. ("I'll frighten her,". he thought.) "Criminal lunatics," he said aloud; "I am one of them. I have just escaped from there!" He leaned forward, as if to impress her with his words; she also bent forward until her lips almost touched his ear, as she hissed into it: "So have I!" t With what had already gone before, this put the finishing touch on Jack's uneasiness of mind. It was not, as lie said, the mere preseneeof the woman, or the revelation which his joke had elic ited, whiek scared him, though the cir cumstance in itself might be unpleasant enough. "I should have faced it right'away from the first, as any man would have done, had it not been for the re markable influeneeer face and look had upon me; that, unaccountable feeling that she was no stranger to me, it was. that unnerved, and even appalled me." No sooner had she uttered the words, "So have I," than Jack sprang to the cord communicating with the guard s van, for he felt their truth, and saw in them a kev to the wholo mvsrerv. Rot f ie his hand, had 'reached" the cord, she had seized him round the waist with one arm as with the grip of a vise, and at the same instant he felt one of those ter rible hands at his throat. Every effort to release himself was lruitiess ; her strength seemed superhu man, and was as far beyond his as was her stature. Hor face glowered closo down upon his now, still with tho same fell expression. "Tho only thing I could have done," went on Jack, in describing the scene to me nnd just here, lie shall speak for himself '-' tho only means by which I might perhaps have mado her relax her hold would have been by aiming one or two tremendous blows with my right list (which was at liberty) at her face. Had it been a man's, there would have been no hesitation ; had it been indeed that of an ordinary woman, at such a riass I should not bare hesitated to strike icr, to stun her, if I could, by any means; but that face, that I seemed to know so well, yet so mysteriously, I could not raise my hand against it, and, as my arm swung up with the first im pulse to deal her a blow, it fell helpless by my siojo. Vain were my efforts to get her hand away from my throat; there was a terrible swaying to and fro for a minute or two, I felt the grip of the long fingers tightening, and myself choking. Suddenly wo fell, the whole carriage scented to be falling there was a fearful jerk or two, a strange upheaving of the floor, a tremendous rattle 'and crash I appeared to be thrown head long to some great distance, and all was darkness!" The termination of that deadly strug gle was brought about in a manner as marvelous and unlookod for as could well have been imagined. Some fifty souls, say, were traveling In that train all, save one, in apparent security. Jack's life alone was in dan ger, when, lo! by one of those marvelous coincidences which do happen at times in the supreme moments of existence, the rescue came, but at the cost of many a life, which but just before would have seemed Worth treble the price of Jack's. At the very instant that his might have depen led upon another tightening grip or two from the hand of a maniac a frightful catastrophe occurred to the train. The tire of an engine-wheel broke and half a dozen carriages were hurled down a steep embankment. The scene that succeeded is, unhappily, of too common an occurrence to need more than a word of reference here. Seven passengers were killed outright nnd double that number slightly or badly hurt, the remainder escaping, as by a niiraele, with nothing else than a severe shaking. My friend was among the shaken. He had been thrown clear of the debris on to a soft, grassy spot, half bank, half hedge; emphatically, his life was raved! Hut what followed it was that which caused the suffering that wrought the terrible change 1.1 Jack. In the darkness of that soft autumn night he strove, foremost nmong thorc who had been spared, to render such help as was jtossibletothe less fortunate When the ollicial assistance came, and tires were set blazing to give light, al most his first care was to try and seek out his dangerous fellow-traveler. In the confusion nobody was prepared, of course, to listen to Jack s account of her, even had lie been prepared then to give It. She was not, evidently, moving about nmong" the crowd he assured him self of that; but supposing her, likehim self. to have escaped injury (and lie con cluded that this was likely), might she not, with the stealth nnd cunning inci dental to her malady, be hiding,and be thus further eluding detention, become, with her homicidal mania, as dangerous to tlio community at laTge .as some fierce wild animal would be? The thought made him shudder; he must lose no time in assuring himself of her fate. As soon as an approach to order could be evolved out of that awful chaos, he had convinced himself that she was not among the in jured, Then he turned to thedead. His eye fell upon several mu tilated and motionless forms, which had been laid in an ominous row at the foot of one part of the embankment. Hers was not among them ; he could find no trace of her. At length, as a sfckly dawn was be ginning to make tlio search easier, he en deavored to discover the spot where the carriage h-i had occupied had fallen, and to retrace his steps (quite to the rear of the train, by the way)to the place where he found himself lying after the catas trntdie. Hy this time he had made known briefly to some officials that a woman was missing who had been in the carriage with him, and one or two of theni followed him in his quest. Pres ently he realized pretty well where he had been thrown;, he all but identified the spot. Then lie scrambled through the hedge, and there, on the opposite side, on the sloping bank of a ditch, he beheld, lying quite still, her dark, un mistakable form. He ran forward, nnd, bending over her and looking down upon the marble, up-turned face, saw at a glance that tliere was nothing dangerous about her now those terrible eyes were closed for ever. Except for a slight wound on one temp!e,whenee a little blood had trickled, and the distorted but now rigidly closed iiand, which had been so lately at his throat, she looked as calm and unin jured as if she were merely sleeping, while death had restored for a brief period much of that lieauty, the traces of which had struck him when her vail was first lifted. One of the surgeons here came hurry ing up, in answer 10 summons. (jood heavens: lie exclaimed; "here she is, th?n, at last! Why, she must have been in the train. How on earth did she manage it?" Who is she?" inquired Jack, earn estly, witn a strange return oi the old. inexplicable sensation. "W ho is she ? Vou appear to know her. l'ray tell me." "Oh, one of our inmates ; she got away yesterday morning ; no on i knows ho w ;" was Die answer. "You are from Longmoor. t'len. How long lias she been there? What is her name?" ' Oh. she has been there upward of twenty years, I believe; long beiore my time," "And her name? ' "I'non mv word, at this moment. can hardly," went on the doctor, me chanically passing his fingers over one of the pulseless wrists Deiore mm, ana with a calm hesitation which contrasted strongly with Jack's earnest. Impetuous manner, "I can -hardly remember. I think she was committed for the murder of her own little girl. It was a sad case. f t-nnw. Ah! her name; I have it, went on the doctor suddenly ; "her name wna Palfcint Rachel Pallant." Jack sprang from the kneeling posture ;n m-nieli was as if he had been shot. Whv. that was his own ueau luouiers. .... , But. Dshaw! what' of that? wii it w rather a startling eoinci dence; that was all. Ay, but was it all? Indeed no! , . , The nquest led to a revelation. That inquiry fully explained what had been the nature of the influence which the weird, palo face and strange presence had had upon my friend. The strong but subtle link, which no time or absence can quite sunder, exint ing between mother and son, had made itself felt the instant those two sat face to face, for tho unhappy woman was in deed none other than Jack's own mother. Ho had never been told in fact, it had been carefully kept from liltn. Why run tho risk of clouding for life that bright nnd happy temperament? He was only four years old when the dread ful business happened. Hence he had scarcely known a mother's care; she was lost to him nnd to the world as com pletely us if she had died. Nay, death would have been ft mercy by compari son, and it was generally assumed that she was dead; only ft very few intimate friends knew the truth. . Tho poor lady's mind had given wny suddenly after the birth of a child, who did not live. Within ft week, the homi cidal mania possessed her; by the meres!, chance she had been prevented from committing somo frightful outrage upon her little boy, my poor friend Jack ; and restraint not having been put upon her in time for her malady had hardly been suspected, so unlooked-for was its appearance she consummated her dead ly propensity upon her eldest child, a girl fifteen years of age killed her, in a word, as she lay asleep.' And here, altera lapse of twenty years, was the climax and end of the tragedy, as dreadful as anything that had gone be fore. The order for release, when it came, brought with it o much suffering (to all but one) as had the order for captivity. No wonder that Jack was an altered man. I have never seen a smile on his face since though I trust that time, with its healing influence, may at least soften the blow. Tlioreaa's Thoughts. When wo cease to sympathize with, atid to be personally related to men, anil begin to be universally related, then we are capable of inspiring others with the sentiment of love for us. What is peculiar in the life of a man consists not in his obedience, but his op position to his instincts; in one direction or another he strives to live a super natural life. Do you know on what hushes a little peace, faith and contentment grow? (lo a-berrying early and late after thorn. Woe to him who wants a companion, for he is unlit to be the companion even of himself. What does education often do? It makes a straight-cut ditch out of a free meandering brook. Cheap persons will stand upon cere mony, because there is no other ground ; but to the great of the earth we heed no introduction, nor do they need any to us. That virtue we appreciate is as much ours as another's. We see so much only .is we possess. . Make the wrest of your regrets; never smother your sorrow, but tend and cherish it tiil it come to have a separate and integral interest. To regret deeply is to live a fast. Hy so doing you will be astonished to find yourself restored once more to all your emoluments. There is nowhere any apology fur de spondency. Always there is life while life huts, which, rightly lived, implies a divine satisfaction. Whatever your sex or position, life is a battle in which you are to show your pluck, and woe be to the coward. Whether passed on a bed of sickness or in the tented field, it is ever the same fair flag, and admits of no distinction. Despair and postponement are cowardice and defeat, .h.-u were bom to succeed, not to fail. Nothing is more saddening than an in effectual and proud intercourse with those of whom we expect sympathy and encouragement. I repeatedly fine! my soif drawn toward certain persons but to be disappointed. No concessions which are not radical are the least sat isfaction. Hy myself I can live and thrive, but in the society of incompati ble friends I starve. To cultivate their society is to cherinh a sore which can only be heall by abandoning them. No fieldi are so barren to me as the men from whom I expect everything but get nothing. In their neighborhood I experience a painful yearning for society which cannot be satisfied, for the hate is greater than tue love. The blue sky is a distant reflection of the azure serenity that looks out from under a human brow. The Family Hammer. There is one thing no family nretends to be without. This is a hammer. And yet there is nothing that goes to make up the equipment ot a domestic estab lishment that causes one-half as much agony and profanity as a hammer. It is iways an old hamnier with a handle that is inclined to sliver, and always bound to s.'!o. The face is as round as full moon, and as smooth its glass. When it strikes a nail full and square, which it has been known to do, the act will Ije found to result from a combina tion of pure accidents. llie family hammer is one of those rare articles we never profit by. When it glides off a nail head, and mashes down a couple of fingers, we unhesitatingly de posit it in the yard, and observe that, we will never use it again. Hut the blood has hardly dried on tho rag before we are out of doors in search of that ham mer, and ready to make another trial. The result rarely varies, but we never profit by it. The awful weapon goes on knocking off our nails and mashing off joints and slipping off the handle, to the contusion ot the mantel ornaments and breaking the commandments.and cutting up an assortment of astounding and un fortunate antics without let or hin derance. And yet we put up with it, and put the handle on again, and lay it where it won't get lost, and do up our mutilated and smarting fingers, and if the outrageous tiling should happen to get lost we kick up a regular hullabaloo until it is found again. Talk about the tyrannizing influence of a bad habit! It is not to be compared to the family ham mer. Young Scientist. The editor who can cause the names of two subscribers to be written down where only one was written before, is greater than the man who invented the patent inside system. Qtuncy Modern Aryo. And the man who invented the " pitf ent inside system" enabled thous ands of editors to write down the ipinies of two subscribers " where only one was written before." You'll have to ac knowledge that fact after Dooley con sidetlng it Jdmthly Unit, TIMELY TOPICS. An article in tho New York fbin says that Holyoke, Mass., is the great center of the paper trade of this country. The town contains 520,000 inhabitants, of whom 4,000 arc employed in the seven teen large paper mills of the place. Tlio capital invested in the paper trade at Uolyoko is estimated at about $5,000,000, and there are annually produced about 30,500 tons of paper. The mills are run by water power. Henry Face killed the young man who had wronged his daughter, at Clerken well, England, nnd public sr,ntimnit favored hitn so strongly that n. fund was raised to support his family during the year and a half of imprisonment to which he was sentenced. His escape from ft worse punishment was regarded as lucky, nnd lis went to prison in good spirits. I!ut his daughter taunted him with being a murderer, and in conse quence of that he hanged himself in his cell. An association, under the name of tho " Jasper Monumental Association," has been formed at Savannah, (in., for the the purpose of erecting ft monument to Sergeant Jasper, who on the !)t h day of Octobor, 177U, fell in the attack of tin; American forces on Savannah. The sergeant's exploit in leaping over the ramparts of Fort Moultrie, Charleston harbor, during the hottest part of the Hritish attack at that iilace. and fixing anew tho flag which had been shot from its staff, will be rememlvreil as one of the most stirring episodes of the Revolu tionary ar. A Missouri farmer has been figuring on the damage done by dogs in that State. In thirty-two counties 10,(iti sheep have been killed. He estimates the number of flogs in thirty-two coun ties to be lo2,000; that a hog will thrive on the food necessary to support an able-bodied dog, and at tho end of the year weigh 200 pounds ; therefore, if the food for these 402,000 dogs was given to the hogs, it would make fh!,000,(Hi0 pounds of pork, worth at least six cents a pound, or $1,550.000 nearly twice the value of all the school-houses in the State, and more than twice the amount used by the State for school purposes. The classification of a company at one of tho seaside hotels, by a child- who had not troubled herself to remember names, has a great deal of significance. To her they were " the lady who whines, as if she were going to cry;" " the lady who talks about her headache;" "the lady who scolds the children for making a noise, and who plays the piano so much herself;" "the kind lady who speaks to all the strangers ;" " the happv lady who draws pictures and lets us look over her shoulder;" "the young man who thinks he fs handsome;"'' and "th? boy who always offers to take you out in his boat when nobody else will take you." Truly, many tfiings whi'li are thought to be hid by the wise and pru dent are revealed unto babes. Even princes sometinvs starve to death. Recently, the St. Petersburg papers announced the death from sheer starvation of Prince Serge Michaelovic. i Gilitzin, employed as a censor of books, and removed by "suoreme orders" to Odessa, where ho took lodging in tho house of a carpenter, occupying a dark, damp room, of such limited t'iiSK nsiotis that his coffin could not be got into it. An inquir elicited the fact that for months he had subsisted on dry bread, with occasionally a morsel of clfcse or an apple. He left no (fleets save the rags on 1 1 m when lie died. J lis mother is a wealthy dame, resident in Moscow, where she "owns several houses, a line mansion surrounded by a park and a fashionable, nunnery. His wife for tl, unfortunate nobleman was married hastened from Moscow to attend tic funeral, but was too late. Words of Wisdom. i He that gets out of debt grows rich. Eight burdens long borne grow heavy. Open your mouth and purse cautiously. Whore the will is ready the feet are lifc'bt. Agreeable counsels are rarely useful counsels. One triumphs over calumny only in S'.-orning it. Talking comes by nature; silence by understanding. It i3 only for innocence that solitude can have any charms. No man ever yet looked on the dark side of life without finding it. Manner is one of the greatest engines of influence ever given toinan. Flattery is a false coin which has cir culation only through our vanity. Conscience is the voice of the soul; the passions are the voice of the body. Men seldom improve when they have no other models than themselves to copy after. We live to learn, but death comes to thousands ere they have mastered th" alphabet of common sense. Men spend their lives in heaping up colossal piles of treasure, which stand ut the end like the pyramids in the desert sands, holding only the dust of kings. How many useful hints are obtained by chance, and how often the mind, hur ried by her own ardor to distant views, neglects the truths that lie open before her. Pride is seldom delicate; it will please itself with very mean advantages; and envy litis not its own happiness but when it may be compared with the misery ol others. A Queer House. An eccentric Englishman has recently built a house in the (Quarter Tivoli for the residence of himself, his wife and eight children, which is the talk of all Paris. It is circular, and lias neither door nor winlow externally. The ap proach to it is from the ground floor on to the roof by means of a ladder, which is moved up and down by machinery similar to that of a drawbridge. There is only one floor, and that contains eighteen apartments, more or less small in dimension, looking into the center, which is lighted from above by a glazed cupola. One stove for all these rooms is in the middle, and in summer its place is to be occupied by an exquisite parterre of flowers. A circular balcony, open to all the apartments, surrounds this space. The motive for this oddity is. of course. only known to the author of it, but everybody can see that two points aro gained by it immunity from tlie taxn on doors and windows, and a perfect pre- ventative oi any uuempi at purg:ary. fARtf, GARDEN, AM) HOUSEHOLD. I'lntilliig nnd TrannilantlnR, Tho well-known threo requisites for the germination of seeds, says the Coun try (Ir.ntliminn, are h'tit, nir and moist ure, but not light. In n cold soil they remain dormant: if too dry, they will not sprout, and if buried deep and com pactly beyond the notion of the nir, no movement toward growth takes place. The small seeds of weeds often remain in tho soil for years when turned under deep by tho plow; when brought ngain' to tlio surtace, ttio new and copious growth which at once takes place has led superficial observers to the erroneous no lion that t hey have sprung up spontan eously. Nurserymen sometimes keep peach stones dormant a year when they happen to have a surplus, by placing them two feet under tlie soil until need ed. 1 he depth for planting must depend largely on the size of tho seed; and the general rule has been given to bury them from three to five times as deep as their diameter. This rule will vary somewhat with the nature and condition of the soil. If heavy and moist, the depth should be less than in a light, dry and porous soil. In a moist, well-pulverized soil, most seeds, whither largo or small, will grow if merely covered and kept moist ; but this condition can not bo commonly continued, as a few dry and warm days will dry tho surface of the soil and prevent the gei ruination of theeed. Hence the common practice to vary this rule with circumstances. (Join, planted early in the season when the ground is moist, will prow freely if buried only an Inch deep; but under or dinary circumstances two inches will bo better. It will find its way freely to the surface after many days wften buried six inches below. Early in auturrn. when winter wheat is sown or drilled in, the soil is usuaily much drier than in com -planting time, and for this reason, al though the seeds are smaller than grains of corn, itshould be placed at a depth of two inches. Inn dry spring corn should be planted deeper than in a wet one, and the old practice of pressing each hill with the hoe, when the work was done by hand was useful when the soil was dry. When planting is done with a machine, a roller to follow the tube would be use ful in dry weather. In a dry season, as the present has been in many places, much care Is required to in. part sufficient moisture to seeds when planted. If the particles of soil are dry. thesmall grains or lumps which com pose it will touch the seed only at a few points, and the chances for its germina tion will be small. Even if moistened by ft shower, the water will be conveyed to the seed only at the few points of con tact. It is better, therefore, to plant seed after a shower than before it. as the soil is rendered moist and yielding, and. pressing the whole surface of the seed causes germination at once. On this principle, experience has shown that un der common conditions seeds grow much better if planted after than before the rain. The exceptions are, when the soil has heen so finely pulverized that it eases the seed well on all sides while yet dry; and when the rain is so copious that it fills with water for a sufficient time the interstices which surround the seed. The Hone ItiiK I"cl. Another bug has strangely increased in numbers, in the past two years, and it promises to be more troublesome than t be enemy of the potato. The rose bug has come upon us in swarms, and it de stroys not otily our grape and poach crops, but our apples anil plums, if un checked. The best method ot chocking tlc-ni it is desirable to learn, if there be any method. We have tried hand pick-in.-;, whale oil soap, and ft variety o ag'-nts. but our efforts have been only partially successful. The white helle bore du-t is th". most effective destroyer. but it is expensive and troublesome to apply. It occurred to us this year to take our grapevines from their supports and la- 'hein close upon tlie ground when in b:osom. This course saved our crop .- fir as the experiment was tried, and v. present the plan for the benefit of ;ape growers everywhere. The insect crnuot or does not reach the blossom when the vines are in this posi tion, and no injury results to the vines during inflorescence. As soon as the fruit is formed, the danger is over, and the vines may be raised nnd secured to tho supports. This we regard as im portant information, and it should be j remembered. Our peach crop wo saved this year bypassing through the orchard and jarring the trees hy a blow with the hand once or twice a'day. The insects are detached from the fruit and fall upon the ground, and do not return to the rult until after a considerable period of time. I he better way is to place a sheet under the trees, cat' h tlie bugs and estroy them in a pan of whale oil soap suds. litston Journal of ('hemutry. iloiuehold Hint. Okiss held level under water mav be eaiiy cut with a pail ol shears or strong scissors. Cut a 11 tile at a time. Never wash raisins that are to be u.sed in sweet dishes. It will make the pud ding heavy. To clean them wipe them on a dry towel. In lioiiing eggs hard put them in loil Ing water ten minutes and then put thein in cold water; it will prevent the yolks from coloring black. To make macaroni tender, put it in cold water and tiring it to a Ixul. ii will then be much more tender Mian if put into hot water or stewed in milk. All milk vessels should, in their last rinsing-, have lxiiling water or hot super heated steam applied, as nothing short will de'.roy tin; putrefaction which is abundant in miik vessels not thoroughly cleansed. . . To take out tea stains, put the linen in -a kettle of cold water; rub thetains well with common castile soap; put the kettle on the side of the stove, to let the water get gradually warm; wasli it thoroughly in warm soap suds: then rub the stain again with soap, and boil ; then rinse. Single cream is cream that has stood on the milk twelve hours. It is best for t.a or coffee. Double cream stands on its mi k twentv-four hours, and cream for butter frequently sianus iony-eigui - . - - i r . . l . hours. Cream that is to re whipped should not be butter cream. Jest in whipping it change to butter. Small hole in white walls can be easily repaired without sending for the mason. Eciual na.ts of plaster of Paris and white sand such as is used in most r.., lilies for scouring nurnosos mixed with water to a nasto. applied immedi ately and smoothed with a knife or flat niece ol wood, will make the broken i r,n of wood, will make the jace as good as new. As the mixture ; gardens very quickly, it is best to pre j pare but a smalt quantity at a time The Owl's pinlins. Behold the Kant with-gutes njnr, Through which the morning poops. Ilnil, dawning light nnd fading alar ! Awake tho world that sleeps ! Sing heigh ho ! to whit, to whoo ! Fair I'hrnbus upward lenps. The glow-worm pubis her amorous light The fire-fly flicker. dim. Thn god of day (dints out the night, And lights the ocean's rim. Sing heih ho ! to whit, to whoo ! Tho world awake to him. In flaming glow hix orhil nee, High o'er the mountain treat, Drips sparkling light from out. Ihoeea And lights the owlet's nest. Sing heigh ho ! to whit, to whoo ! I lake my flight lo rest. ChrMophtr C. Merrill. ITEMS OF IXTEKEST. Hard money is that which is hard to get. Vwiyunc. The letter I) is truly an old salt h. us been following the C for years. James Eiar and Henry Slnnder nrc two of tho best citizens of Dubuque, Iowa There are said to b". only four word in the English language ending in c-i-o-n. What are they? During IH'H there were 187 miners killed and 002 injured in the Pennsyl vania coal mines. We see a great deal about "spelling reform" in our exchanges. We don t 1 1 1 ink "reform" is very hard to spel'. Aorriftotun Ilvrnld. Tliere is a man in this city so n verse to being dunned for his bills that he can't bear to see a crowd "collect" in the Btreet. Ho.iton fwrMc. The man who got into a barber-chair, pinned the newspaper round his reck and began to read the towel may justly be culled absent-minded. A housein the Avenucdo (Jiiehy, Paris, was lately struck by lightning, which first followed a water-pipe to tlio earth, and then reasoended to tlie fourth story. Iok not upon the watermelon con: when it is red. and tackle it not heartily jit-t before going to bed. A word to the wise is "nuffced." (,'rAur 1,'npiil.i '; puhlir.nn. Kansas Iris now 550 churches, 0! of which are Raptist, 5'J Congivgnti.ma'ist. 33 Lutheran, SW Episcopal. 15 .Metho dist, 'M Presbptcrian, and 15 United Presbyterian. The Jlrtilrrj'isl Gazelle says that. John Houghtaling, of Rochester, is the oidct railroad conductor in the United Stales. He has served forty-three years, and is now poor and disabled. Sh! Don't give it away. We keep a bottle with astick in it constantly on our table. And we find that it adds much to lighten our editorial labors. It paste to keep jt. Yonh.ru fUnlmmutn. The editor of the Hastings (Minn.) Sum l'.ra was attacked in his oliicc, re cently, by three masked men. but ho os-aped from their clutches and now gives notice that ho will be prepared to re.-eive company at all hours. A gentleman learned in the origin of social customs was asked the meaning of casting an old shoe after a newly-married couple as they start on the trip, lb-said, "To indicate that the chances of matrimony are very elipper-y." The small. meek-Iookin.' wife of Tom Cottiell, a Missouri horse thief, followed him we 'ping out of a St. Joseph court room, alter ins trial and conviction, in the coi ri'for she flew at the sheriff like a tigress, threw him on the floor, and thus enabled the prisoner to mount u mule and escape. Tho weather was getting coo! and the empress told Peter that he had better get an additional grate while he was down town, but with his u-ua! forgel ful'iess lie came home without it, wh"ii his wife remarked, reprouohfuiiy : " Peter, the grate," and the cognomen stuck to him ever after. GrUiixM. " Them is a plcnumi in ti e patli'esx woods," 'J liere is i wirchery in -.iiinmer'-, k:.-.s, There is a fpeil Unit charms oar teiid'rer moods When iluy brings on thn twilight's bonclk-e. There is a iiehr."s in the moraine chant l bird just wakened lrom a niglii' iepo-e, TV-re is a fcomethir.g in the oi.io : point 'f lint's uncongenial to ike evernge nose. Yonltett tJazrite. ! Tho maddest new-pnirs of the pres ent time are those which are pub!i-hed 1 in the Austrian lunatic asylums. Con tributions nrc received from uiltl.e in mates who have either hobbies or griev ances. Those who are ulllieted with any monomania whatevi r m.ty explain their delusions and support their convictions bv argument and example. Tlie logic-employed in an article of a recent issue by one gentleman to disprove tho belief of another that his beard was of heather and required constant watering, was so faultless and incisive as to have done credit to a Regius Professor of Moral Philosophy. Alas! lie himself firmly be lieved that his own nose was made of euvar. and to prevent its getting wet. aid consequently melting away, always drank through h straw. Sew York Tribune. A Russian Tragedy. A sanguinary tragedy has occurred in Russia, taking its rise from the recently inaugurated wholesale slaughtering of plague-infected cattle. All the cattle in the Czar's dominions arc subjected to a strict veterinary examination. Such as , are plague-suspected, or as exhibit ten dencies iiicciy to expose mem to danger of infection, are at once ruthlessly slaughtered. The carcasses are burned and the owners remunerated, unless they have striven to conceal the existence of the pest among their herds. , . ' w t. i t 1 une ivan imuksouivucii iihi, or is al leged to have done, this. The inspector, tiowever, discovered mat his cattle were diseased and came to slaughter them. Ivan refused to permit it unless lie was Pid. The inspector declined to sign the iniicillllliieaiioii papers. j quarrel en sued, when Ivan assailed him with one of tlie slaughtering knives and disem boweled him at the first blow. The murdered man's assistants fell on the as sassin, and in the melee which followed three of theni were very seriously in jured. Rorksomviteh was finely secured and locked up. Next morning he was found dead. He had broken a tile lrom the porcelain stove which heated his cell i and cut Lis throat with it.