1 . . ...... - i - i - . . - .ISNRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NILi DESPERANDTIM. Two Oollars oar Annum. UIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA.', THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1879. NO. JL .. .1 , , -.- - I - w H ti? . f5.rit,macuriir Uh the rsuvi Tr the musio '. Christmas.. , merry rhymed, chimM. tailing, 4 $y memories recaM' tfct ourWOdhood' Chrietmas tin A.r. Wools W.y" mpos old rim .uihoodbeftctt to r" i'". ,Us out tvHD"H,0,omo measares. Jfolo, (riorums dawning- Ifroaoe jUuabfrod-in to men.!'!";.. T .. ' M y a' blessing, A A Vttdh IJOIllnftatnrr 1 ho cnoice. r'i- the f (irSil-Uvf JJglnss" one. J ve buforc tl; I In the basdi .3 . 1 1 i 1 1 ! I. tzi was on me poini 01 uunnn hit bo ilien that cruel machinery grasped his arm. But I must give her up now, Susie, lie said to ine we had no secrets from each other" though I love her more than ever. ,T would have been no matcli in a worldy sense, for her before a printer with only whnt he earned from week to week, and a pretty young widow, owning houses and lands suflicient to eive her nn income of a thousand a year. But now it is simply impossible. Dis abled for life. I must make up my mind to be a burden on you, and see her mnrry " " You'll do no such thing, Nathaniel," cried I. " What lias come over you? It stems to mc that the people who are the jolliest wlien tliev are jolly are the bluest when they are blue. One would think you'd lost both arms and legs to hear you talk. . Do you forget your favorite motto, 'Nil despernndum,' to say noth ing of Up, guards, and at 'cm?' " But Nat continued very low in his spirits, all I could do or say. And this 1 now auaiwtooa ip our noum; 1110 .liristuiRS eAriefore that Christmas lo 1 Hi: call iVCWyrw.-mtfAil- nenl-uws innitoTwue. en of Wrs:tH(to'w1ih their dolls V 1alelJJ PwevEral weeks, nav Wfirst tfjunto death, and their A2'fthcr was hovering about fulness anu-.joy, amen a otiil : .Tl across u. every - now mm vrn' rfir thought of tbfi. debts con- r.j.jiv.s,. ...... ,,.vr, 1 ivtthe present moment Mr. Kose 'A)een out oj WQt Kjor tnree long i,-F,Ue. had but the faintest hope ,fc boine able to r.ay. - J he first floor ilrs. MoChjlly old. ate and well, to speTHTplainly SMi-p. Mc-jhilly spectacles on Jld tod held close to the lamp, llribkinsr over for the fiftieth tune bondswilled her by her brother. o h-.d iatelv died in San JtYryncisco , aiW rcteived by her a few dafyje. s makihfii l'.er already in comfottable, very FJ- .' rn....1!n ..fi.iiitiLtnn(rB whflt 111 j ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 li 1 v v.. I.'.....' w - ...'uniixrn nf life would be considered rin. HcrgirlishMooking granddaugh ter, by marriage", "was dinning the old lady's stocking and. thinking of the Aw. niprrv. . voune brother-in-law, Vianislird from his liome .half a year ago a home which had never been so sun- shiny since because lie Had nareu 10 fall fn love without his grandmother's consent, and the DoviMuiWiing 111s Vn.irl nf f linrrrnnddTi IiiaiTlUge, was writinir tffAfukWlcctionijie letter tot ho ohnfthed one, under cover " of the daily account-book. ' nn th spmnd floor nrettv. crav-eyed. ,Mj-. vavnanT was nusn- 1 3 V 'J is how ' ' V'Tisti tl nnv. th(T kettle had just began to boil next mornigr'and I had just called out, "Akr5y (aEJnias" to Nat, hearing him ptirifr liis own room, wlien Widow Wintcrpippin's- blue-eyed little maid knocked at the door, with a "Merry Christmas," a giggle, and a note from Her mistress. The note read : m 'VjAuVed Winter pippin sends her TOfcusie and Nathaniel Bracket.and bciMthut they will, as a great tavor, give her their. com pt)y in her rooms this evening ateven o'clock." k ki A nit T'tt irnfc n nntn fnr pvnrvbodv JTbAIiouso, and there's to be a supper, 'jtfv-fiSo don't cook no dinner.jniss," saJtSie little maid, laughing on Vigil t. (luis litUe maid ws jilnost always lAuL'hiniAi-wht'ii respect she much I rese'n.ihu'r iler black-eyed mistress. r Mro'll nnnmirilll nlnnfini'iO. 'Vjinnip." rfai'd I. " Yes, miss," and away she flew. And at seven precisely the invited guests were assembled in the widow s pretty pnv lor. Dear me! How pretty it was. Christmas greens were festooned all around the walls, and anchor Jp(l. wreaths, and hearts, ana crosses were lung wherever they could, be nunc, nnd above the mantel, ' Merry Cliristmas," in large dark preen letters, brieiiteued bv crimson berries greeted us as we en tered the door. And there were stands filled wilW 1or!y geraniums and be-o-nnifi.4. find liliutun each window, nnd a splendid lire in the rate and the most charming or an mere was inu wuiow lu'i-cnir in n neurl-erav silk with scarlet ribbons at her throat and scarlet flowers in her hair. When Nathaniel poor fellow, now his empty sleeve annoyed him and I arrived, Mrs. McChilly and. her grand children were already more me. oiu lady in the easiest chair in the room nearest the lire, with a glass oi lemonade of which Hhe was very fond (how did Vt.lnw W iiilerninDiii niannee to nnd out even-body's little weaknesses in the" way of eating and drinking?) on a small round table bv her side, and the grand son and his wife looking over the photo graph allmm in a cosy corner. Mr. and Mrs Kose and t:ic three rose buds, as vc called the children, .wee, darling, auburn-haired girls, came in at the same, time we did, and Mr. and Mrs. Summer, be looking worn and uaggaru, and she with traces of tears around her beautiful eyes and the baby made their nppeavyec a few moments later. "And wSf th-it we are almost all here " s; Widow Wlnterpippin we wonder' irho else was to come-" we'll have & IrTuceto begin with. You will nlavjrlrt- Summer? Nannie can hold thctaby." But Mrs. Summer blubhed and said she "never played, now." ... " But vou can," insisted the widow in ilier genial way. ? '.' ou surely have not forgotten, '-miuo urar juu pinjuiK so mucl and so well when you first 1 .i i.fd n-! filr. Summer sans ihpn Sim. ' Many a happy hour have 1 And they began to arrive m the clock struck seven. First came Mr. and Mrs. Rose and the rosebuds, looking so smil ing and happy that I said at once, ' You have good news to tell me.1 - " ' Mrs. McChilly dear, kind Mrs. McChilly (Mrs. McChilly sat bolt up right in her chair and closed her lips firmly as her name was mentioned), has paid the doctor's bill,' Mrs. Rose began, 1 And promised, she having so many business acquaintances, to look out for a situation lor me,' said Mr. nose. Ann she is going to love us nnd be our friend always as kSnit as we arc good- said the children, beginning to sing the Sweet By-and-Bye so loudly that we did sot hear Mr. Aubrey come in : but there he was, his face glowing nnd his eyes spark ling (Mr. Aubrey was the grandson with whom Mrs. McChilly had quarreled); and he cried out, 'God bless her! my mothers mother. 1 knew sue couion t stay mad long. She's forgiven me nnd kissed Alice.' (Alice was the young eirl with whom lie had fallen in love without the old lady's permission.) " And all ot a sudden there was Mrs. McChillv amone them, being welcomed iviili lnv'inir words and huirs and smiles the eldest rosebud had a glass of lemonade readv for her and savin ' Dear, dear, what is a little money to gratitude and affection like this?' "'Nothing,' answered Mr. Summer, who was there all of a eudden, too, with his wife and baby, looking iv handsome as he did wlien I first p-w him nearly two years ago, and s for Mrs. Summer, her eyos were '.ke stars and her cheeks like roses, an she stole softly to my side, while he was tossing the baby and singing a mc.Ty song to it, nd whispered : A pronise lias been my Christmas gift, a pronise worth all thB irnlil.niir'.iATwiJriit Hie world. And then Susie Bracket danced in and slyly held up a letter from somebody jar away, that I might see and rejoice with her. And Nathaniel what a ridiculous part of the dream that nbout Nathaniel Bracket was. Renlly, I don't think I can tell it." " Oil. but you must, I cried. " Indeed vou must." thev all cried. "Well, it I 'must, I must," snid the widow, with a sweet, little nervous nugh. " I thought Nathaniel followed WrSntothe drnine-room, where I had gone to take n last look nt the supper table oh, it's too ridiculous.".' ' Nothing of the sort," said Mr. Sum mer. " I don't beliMve it. I've no doubt it was the most sensible thing Nathaniel ever did in a dieam." Ami nlense uo on."-be22ed his wife " And he took my hand," the widow went on, "and said oh! 1 can't tell you all I dreamed he said, but he ended by Riivinir: 'And so. of course, I must think of you no longer a poor, crip pled fellow like me." And I said" uie baby to sleep, and dronriiy.! se(j jiijt(min,, t0 you both." And tears on its little, golden Mr. Summer, with a conscious contrite Wl, WIJ it'll Xlh TVClJf uutn, niiu ft"u. L' lfusbiind who lay snoring on me ...a lxivrinor if-n. a convivial inariv . that afternoon to. stagger home, as md done many tiuies durirrgthe last kaPDV year, wiv wujiiR'm-iw uu bty pockets. )n the third: floor joljf, plump, black- d, rosy-checkeo, generous vout ui not mil p nf a thousorjv year she gave av at least one-eijronr) Widow Win ' . 1 ... 1 .InAn.niT In lini UiPPm WiW VJtlLUlJ Dlt-3IIUA. ... . 1 thnmiifftiiv iireo our ov a iiuru v's work, ani Nannie, her little maid, th the eat In her lap, was dozing in snasniodio iwnner in a rocking-chair tiio kitchenlire. And on the furlli fl mil and 1 uso 1 ha Wr tban vks clerk, it I'JErtlOYL'l w day week (i extra pay) I' there never c r brother no,- a a late supper )lieed to remain 13 store where 1 custom of our servicoall holi- kout. however thinking it n&cessary iojequitesuch services with ere urn i hevn. Jf Lft cvluli dear Nat than whom Id be a kinder brother f , -. 1. jl.TiK Via liActrail6n)illtli7PV 11 1 was iiiuit: w jimrec eat sun per I ahd pour 01 much better used to say '., Nathaniel been a tine, rellowjfjintil il'?' C .ttemb'sFwhe fit Wli M . it-9 KtL'iebt .ri MS ! it, ! Since the . r lief, ntiil cm more. W . juoney sa t the tea. " It .tastes so am your hand, sis," he fas a printer, and had iwart, singing, whistling int dreadful day in Sep ic met with (he terrible 1 resulted in the loss of a liiul been on the invalid and whistled and joked no had, fortunately, some when this misfortune Aunn nnmJiia. but it was now ainiosi ii..,t,i I a ,1 Kt heiran to worry about tlmtnmong other things ; but I never Wheart. Why. should I? I had youtl. health and strength and twelve dJlars a week. ' And we could manage nit to starve or freeze ou twelve dollars afveek. and Nat's overcoat and my cloak'could both be turned, and 8omebodyUva9 coming home noon. !.' Widow Winterpippin-Ood bless her i'i-prvedan angel of goodness du mi g i. our trouDie. coining m o. " - T jyL jeJfwlien his arm was at tie worst ; I rf . . . fr ilm first few naa 10 go 10 nyr." ',: , j days, or the salary wobhw ""v"-'i though thev did, for a wondeivgive me har imiir at, nnon when 1 went home to lunch sending Nannie to wait on him when lie whs getting better, an4 .making all sorts of nice dishes to tempt bis appetite, ana lending nuu n me nicest books and keeping the room bright witli beautiful tloweiB. But it wasn't this kindness which made Nat fall in love with her. Oh, no! lor he bad fallen jn Jove with her long before, look in his face, put hisnrm around his wife and led her to the piano. Then Nathaniel took the widow, and Mr. Summer Mrs. MsCliilly's grand daughter by marriage, and Mrs. McChilly's grandson Mrs. Rose, and Mr. Rose me. and we had an old-fash-iotved quadrille dance in the old-fashioned way and a jig to end with. And Mrs. McOliilly declared it made her feel like dancing herself, and she would have danced, too, i believe, if it hadn't been for hir rheumatic foot. As it was, she beat time to the jig tune with her cane until her arm was so tired she couldn't beat anv longer, and Nannie and the Kflhv trif.k it. nnd heat awav. utterly re. rrurrl lew nf time, until all the ladies had made their linal courtesies to thiir nafhlftt l- After the dance we had a lovely bal lad from Mr. Sumwer. who had a fine iunnr voice, nnd a comic sons from Mr, Itnsp. who had a voice suited to it. The comic song had a silly, rollicking chorus in which the company all joined with as much earnestness .18 though their lives depended upon their doing so. " Tiii-la-la-tra-la In Tm-la-li anil llmt will do." And then supper. Such a supper rin.-mt turkev. uranberrv sauce, mince nip rristi eclerv. home-made bread. pickles, tongue, stewed oysters, candies and wax' dolls (the dolls beside the chil dren's plates.) And when we wire all through nnd back to tlte parlor again silting iua half-ciicle around the grate. (ire. ii cuii of fnierrant tea or cotlce in every hand, Widow Winterpippin, who s:tt in the center of the half-circle, said: ' "'And now. if no one has anvobieetion Tl would like to tell you a wonderful dream I had last nisrht." "Anv objection !" "No, indeed!" "Deliirhted to hear it!" from all sides And, while the Summer baby crowded itself to sleep in its mother's arms, and the Rosebuds, on the floor at then- father's feet each with a new doll clasped to their breast drooped their sinning heads until mey sanK upon me pillows Nannie had thoughtfully placed near tly'in, the chairs in the half-circle were drawn closer and all eyes wen fsis toned on the Widow Winterpippin'i sunny lace, " 1 went to bed last night," began the widow in a low voice, " very tired "I sliould think so," said every woman listener "What did vou sav?" cried Nathaniel, springing to his feet and looking eagerly toward her, totally forgetful of the rest of the company. ' Nathaniel Bracket, you are an idiot!" ' ' . .".Just sis I expected," murmured poor Nat., sinkine into hiscbair again. "'If you have lost 3 our arm your right arm, ' me wiuow caimiy pro ceeded, " ' you haven't lost your head, and that head, as I happen to know, con tained the usual, perhaps little more than the usual, amount of brains, ahd if, as I hear, a thousand or two will give -' ..-. .. . !h 'I A linn's: I.iijIii.ilju yuu an iiiit'iviii, iu xuu. a wi3.ii-.t, why what is to prevent me, mtvum a 111 tie money nt my command and no one to take care of but myself, lending it to . . x f you for the sake 01 your sister, 01 whom I am very fond ? Or if you won't look at it in that way, why can't I be come a partner, a very suent one anu ou manaee for me, taking a fairequiva- ent for your services:"' And that s the end " . . " Never! shouted Nat, springing from his chair once more and taking a few steps toward her, " 1 he dream .never ended in that way, Nathaniel maoesome further remark, I'm sure he did." I believe lfn did," said the widow, knitting her pretty brows, though in thought, while a rosy blush overspread her face, " but dreams grow so shadowy at the last and this becamo so very in distinct after I had spoken of going into the printing business myself that I can scarcely remember " "ThatJNat isracKet said. " prompted Nathaniel, " ' Ood bless you for a darl ing! and I'll accept the ottered load on eendition that you'll ndd to it a Christ mas gift a gift above all price your precious self.' " "Well, well, how did you ever know?" exclaimed the widow in pre tended surprise. "Can't imagine," said is at, jus eyes sparkling with fun for a moment, and then, as she rose lrom ncr seat, ne came and stood before her and said, entreat- inirlv. " But I don't know what answer you dreamed you made." " JSor 1." laugneo tne wiuow. "But I do." said Mrs. McChilly. with an emphatic rap of her cane;" I do- Mrs. Nathaniel Bracket. And we all shouted and clapped our hands like a parcel ot children, and then we all (not one of us,. I 111 sure, could have told why) cried a little arid were quietly feeling for our handker chiefs to wipe away the tears, when the old lady spoke agum, looking down on ttie Kosebuos, wno were still sleeping I will be a lnend to these little ones and their parents." she said. " a'sood friend. That part of tin.' dream shall come true. As for my grandson " " Here lie is." screamed Nannie, with hysterical lauirh. as she flung open the door that led into the dining-room. And there he was, to be sure, Willi his sweetheart on his ami, and in an in stant they were both kneeling neiorc their grandmother, witli one of her wrinkled hands in blessing on eacn bowed, young head. Mi- jsiimiTipr turned from the pretty tableau and bent and kissed his wife, and softly whispered something toner that made her " eyes like stars " indeed, assho exclaimed in a voice trenioling with joy, "My part of the wonderful dream has already come true." " And mine came true tins morning, said I, as I took the letter from my P" And mine." stammered Nat, as his only nrm stole around the widows waist, "can it come true?" . , " It can," said Widow Winterpippin. Trails of Animals. A cat was sent by express,' carefully boxed, from Dansville to Rochester, a distance fifty miles. Not many days afterward, tabby wime walking into her old home. j When a irood hoisewife of Kirkaldy went for a ham tils, had hung from the rafters, it had a fair exterior, but it was a perfect shell, skty and bone only re maining to show hi form, while the rat, after living so sumptuously, had built a nest in the centcr.'nnd was easily cap tured. 1 A narrot beloneitur to Capt. Eichel- berger, of Baltimore, was always present at family prayers. (i)ne morning, when in the garden, a hak flew down and seized the parrot, when it shrieked: "Oh, hord, save u! Uh, ixira, save usl" which so frightened the hawk that he dropped hisiprizo. At Triest's ' - '7,.ihe road from Calaveras Gi5aaJr08emito, in California, is dog who che hour before the arrival of the stse goes leisurely down the road to meet it, then bounds back to the pou.'try yard, catches chick ens, bites thnr heads off, and takes them to tliacoolf. He takes one chicken for each gerv'ieiunn in thestage, n?ver mak ing a mistake. Ai expert in antique coins in Paris is piioodle. The money being placed upon a table the dog is introduced, and after nosing among them will knock off the table all the bad pieces with his paw. After acquiring great fame it w:is found the whole thing was a trick. His mas ter took care to handle only the bogus coins, and the poodle's decisions were arrived at by faculty oi scent. A wandering " chippy " waa picked up by a St. Louis lady and placed in the cage with her canary. In the morn- ing it was reieaseo, wnen tne canary mourned as if it had lost its mate. In the evening the chippy .returned, and was allowed to nestle on the cage, wnen the canary struck up one of the liveliest notes and seemed gtatilied. This was repeated for three days. Then chippy failed to return. The canary drooped and soon died. A eoimlo of seals, tiie property of Major Urch, of Portsmouth, N. II., were kept in a tank, and were as tame us dogs. One of them died recently, nnd Major Urch concluded to give the other its liberty, it spomed to grieve so much at its loss. He took the tank to the river bank and released the seal, think ing it would swim out to sea. It swam all around the viver, but soon returned crying in distress and flapped into its old quarters on the bank, and stubbornly refused to be ejected. A monkey beloiging to a gentleman of the south of Fi ance often helps the cook. Being given a pair of partridges to pick one day, he sealed himself in an open window. A hawk flew down nnd snatched one of the birds, when the monkey tricked the hawk by secreting himself, and, waiting, soon saw him come for the other, when the monkey caught , the thief... Plucking both the haw k and the remaining partridge, lie Whnt We Mean by a " Boom." This word, now in such common use by all classes of politicians and trades peoples, and used to signify that politics are in a ferment and trade rushing, was probnbly used in the time of Noah, if not anterior to the date of that old patri arch. We do not care, however, to in vestigate Noah's record, nor to ascer tain just what words were in use about the time lie was gathering his great family into the ark, but having once got them all safely in, and the doors and windows closed, it Is quite safe to as sume that when he heard the rushing of the mighty waters, and felt the ark ris ing with the tide, he could not but, if he did not, exclaim, there was a big " boom " on somewhere! Here arc some definitions of the word which we find in Webster, Worcester and elsewhere : Boom To rush with violence, as a ship under a press of sail. Webster. She comes booming down before it. Tolten. The bittern booms it in the reeds. Cotton. And even Tennyson in one of his poems says : At even the beello boomoth Athwart the thicket lone. Our own Washington Irving, in one of his fine, descriptions, speaks of Alarm guns hoomiDg through the night air. IlillHouse, in one of his finest poems speaks of The hoarse waves booming to the ocean shove. Falconer, also, in one of his earlier poems, says :, () cr the sen-liput ship booming water, roar. When used by lumbermen, a " boom " is understood to meau a chain of logs, or rather a succession of logs fastened to gether by chains and used in a stream to intercept logs in their passage down. Worcester says : Boom To rush with violence, as ship under press of sail Nautically, lo boom along, means to move rapidly, etc. We think we have given sufficient number of definitions of the word to explain its full meaning, without deem ing it ne essary to inquire into its den nation. It is certainly, just at this time, an expressive word, wlien applied to business, for in every department and in all directions trade is certainly rush ing along like a torrent, like a shin under fuil sail before a stiff breeze, and its roar in this and other great com mercial cities is not unlike that of tem pestuous waves, when heard at a dis tance, us they dash against some rock bound shore. It is a very good and expressive word; will have its day ns one of common usage while the present trade boom lasts; and, ns we have Bhown its use by many distinguished poets and prose writers, we feel like saying something in its behalf. It rep resents force, strength, flow, vigor, energy, and all that, and so does trade and commerce nt this time. Let thorn boom! Coal 1'rade Journal. took them to the cook, and the change was not discovered until the game (?) was served at table. An enormous eagle in Georgia swept down upon two little girls aged three and live years, throwing them to the ground. It buried its talons in the face and arm of the eldr and attempted to carry oft" the child, hut was prevented by her struggles. Aliltie Dromer seven years of age came toiler assistance with a carving" knife, slashing the eagle's Ipjtb. when it turned uuon the bov. who was soon released by the appearance of Joe Betzler, a neighbor, upon the scene, who shot and killed the bird. It mea sured seven feet fro.n tip to tip of wing. A spider is agluttm, as was evidenced by an experiment recently made. A gentleman arose nt caybreak and sup plied a spider who had an extensive web, with a fly. This was at 5 :50 o'clock . m. The.spider was men ieeoing on an earwig, fie came lor the ny, roneo him up, and returned to his first course. At seven o'ciock, his earwig had been demolished, nnd the fly at eight o'clock. At nine o'clock he gave it a daddy-longlegs, which he ate at noon. At one he greedily seized a blue-fly, nnd during the day he-counted 120 green flys, or midgets, all dead and fast in his net. A Pyramid of Snakes. Two Pictures. Miss Blanche Murray is a very proper young lady. Last week she caught her little brother smoking. "You terrible thing," sue insseo, 1 am going to tell father on you!" " This is only corn-silk," murmured the boy patiently.. ' I don't care what it is. I am going to tell on vou, and see that you don't get iuto that beastly horrid, degrading habit; I wouldn't have anything to do with smokers." 11. It is evening. Miss Murray is sitting on the front stoop with Algernon. It is moonlight, and the redolent spirits of the honeysuckle and syringa nre waft ing bliss to their already intoxicated souls. "Would little bird object to my smoking a cigarette?" "None at all," rep'.ied Miss Murray. " I like cigarettes, they nre so fragrant and romantic, I think they are just too delicious for anything." " Then I'll light one." " Do, and blow some ol the smoke 111 my lace, it is so soothing and dreamily Paradisic." Then he lights a cigarette, nnd they tafk about the weather for two hours and a half. In the savannas of Isaeubo. in Guiana I saw the most wonderful, the most terrible spectacle that can be seen, and although it be not uncommon to the in habitants. 110 traveler has ever men tioned it. We were ten men on horse back, two of whom took the lead in order to sound the passages, while I preferred to skirt the great forests. One of the blacks who formed the van guard returned at full gallop nnd called torne: "Here, sir: come and see ser pents in a pi e!" He pointed out tome something elevated in the middle of the savanna, which appeared like a bundle of arms. One of my company then said : "This is certainly one of these assem blages of serpents which heap them selves on each other after a violent teui- ptst. I have heard of these, but have never seen any. Let us proceed cau tiously, and not go too near." When we were within twenty paces of it. the terror of our horses prevented our near approach, to which, however none of us were inclined. Suddenly the pyramidal mass became agitated ; nor ribie sounds issued from it: and thou sands of serpents rolled spirally on each other, shooting forth out of the circle their hideous heads nnd presenting their envenomed darts and herv eyes to us. own I wa-t one of the first to draw back. But when I saw that this formidable phalanx remained at its post, and np peared to be more disposed to defend itself than to nttack us, I rode round it in order to view its order of battle, which faced the enemy on every Ride. I then sought what could be the de. sign of this numerous assemblage, and I concluded that this species of serpents dreaded some colossean enemy, which might be the great serpent, or the cay man, and that, having seen this enemy they unite themselves in order to resist him a mass. Jlaron 1 un Humboldt. AN ELECTRIC SPRING. The Most Wondrrrnl IVaturml ICurloalty Tet Dlfio4iTerct. The beautiful Buffalo valley the mountaineer's paradise, and one of the most romantio spots in Tennessee lies along the eastern bank of that lovely mountain stream, the Caney Fork. Three or four miles from the mouth of this valley stands Jan old water-mill, whose huge iron-hound wheel, it is said, performed its last revolution somewhere ibout the year 1818. The mill in its day was no doubt a wonder in that part of the country, forjudging by its pres ent appearance, it must have been the most wonderfully constructed building of its kind ever erected in that vicinity. It is now the home of rats and owls, and the ashes of the jolly old miller, who long years ngo was the life and light of the plaw, sleep peacefully on a neigh boring hill, Under this old mill is tl e most wonderful, spring of which the world has ever heard. Among the in habitants it is known as the "Devil's Spring." No one seems to know how or when' it received this unpleasing, i n portunate nppellnlion. Few people, other than those living in the immediate neighborhood, know of its existence, and they rarely visit it, from the fact that it is believed to exert a powerful and evil influence over all who nre rash enough to venture sufficiently near its confines to allow a single drop of the bubbling, boiling fluid to fall on them or their garments. Besides, the old mill is said to be haunted, and this alone would keep those superstitious people from risking their lives bv frequenting the ac cursed place. Notwithstanding the harrowing tales related by the natives of the loss of fortune, reason, nnd finally death to those who had ventured in too close proximity to the unhallowed spot, a gentleman recently visited the mill and the spring, the latter of which he thoroughly examined, pronouncing it the most remarkable natural curiosity he had ever seen. The spring is de scribed as boiling up from the center of a solid rock, its" shape being very like that of a bushel measure and about ns large. The sides of this basin or hole are perfectly smooth, having the appear ance of having been polished by the hand of man. Its depth is not known. The people who reside in the immediate vicinity say it is without bottom. How this mav be we are not prepared to state, but true it is that an iron wedge and three hundred feet of cord failed to reach it. The water is ot a narK oiue color and boils up with great force so great that it Bpouts up several inches ibove its proper confines. Ann not oniy does it -boil up with immense force, but it wliirU around witli tremendous veloc ity, something after the fashion of a whirlwind. The gentleman who describes it says that he dipped nn ordinary tin dipper into the snrinc tor the purpose 01 pro curing some of the water for a closer ex amination of its qualities, and that the moment the dipper touched the water it was wrenched lrom his grasp as though it had been struck lrom hia hand by a stroke of lightning, and indeed, ho stales, that his arm felt very much ns if it had been suddenly paralyzed, in en deavoring to regain the dipper, whien did not sink more than six inches below the surface, but which kept whirling round and round so fast that it was almost impossible to see it, lie placed his hand into the water. He says that the sensations he experienced at the in- tant las lingers touched the water were iiiL'uhrlv strange, causing him to think that thousands of needles had pierced his body at one time. But he didn't succeed in gelling the dipper out. He tried time and "gain to wrench it from its fastenings, but the greedy waters seemed loath to give up their strange captive, to which they clung with more than a vise-like grasp. Giving up all hopes of rescuing the dipper wit 11 111s hands, the gentleman iietiiougni nimseii of an empty flask which he carried in his companion. Witli this he again at tempted to lift some water from the spring, and was rewarded with success, not, however, without a considerable effort, for it required his entire strength to prevent the angry waters ironi snatch ing the flask from his hands. Pouring a single drop of the strange fluid in the And I began to ' dream directly And everybody in this house was 11 thiit dream," the widow went on. " Yes, children and all. I thought it was Christmas night, just as it is now, and Nannie and I were waiting, just as we did to-night, for the company to arrive. Bells woro first si t up in churches as a defense against thunder and lightning. The first bell hung in Lngland was in 045 Chimes were invented in Belgium iu H&7. The eaon'i entertainments have been not. ubly tree from annoyance by oouidiing. Dr. BuU'i Cough Syrup does this. Pnee 25 cent. bottle. The Great Advance In Puper. Tho paper-makers seem to have be come crazy upon t lie subject oi prices of paper, and are rushing things in a man ner most remarkab'e. Within a period of sixty days the prices of print nnd book papers have advanced over fifty Cer cent. Paper since September has een put upon tno combination price- list nt au advance ot forty per cent, per pound. At a meeting of the Chicago division of the American Paper-Makers' Association, held in Chicago- recently, the following prices to dealers wero fixed upon. No. 1 news (3U,erceul. wo;).9o per pound Kxtia news (all ra) lHc per pound No. '1 book (.machine finishi tl) . 1 1 Jo per pound Sized and mipcr-oidendered boot, 124o per pound These are the manufacturers' prices until the next meeting of the associa tion, at which time another advance of from one and a half to two and a ha'f cents per pound may be expected. Sunday hi Japiin. 1 ho hanks and foreign newspapei ofiices are ciosed: hankers and lourua lists are proverbially pious men. The larger hongs, owned by foreigners, ar closed also. So too, are the consulates, of course. But all the small nativeshops, even those within the foreign concession, are open. Carpenters and blacksmiths, and stono-masons, and shoemakers, and tailors, nnd tinkers are all at work its usual. Two-wheeled drays, laden with I stono did building material, and mer chandise, drawn by slalwart, hall naked men, who accompany each sicp with tho '.monotonous he-how," or half-song and half-ejaculation, are lumbering tli rough the main tliorough fares. The bar-rooms nnd billiard saloons are all open and having a line run. The puppet shows are in lull blast. The club rooms ate thronged with a gay rollicking class of middle-aged men. The hotels have their usual quarto o loungers, who come hither to exchange the local gossip ot the week. We listen to their conversation partly because we could not well avoid it if we would; partly b;;causo it is a good opportunity to study the moral and intellectual fone r.i. Jri . 1 t 1. !.!.. .. .....1 ui inu piuce. vimi.i umuii- iiiurn it iiiui' titude ot icibles. No one seems cross or in ill humor, though the un unt of "cross words" and obscenity i appal ling. There seems to he an ah:.ost uni versal laxity in monls, without the slightest care to conceal it. People live extravagantly, nnd often beyond their means ; "and when a fast man breaks down in purse, tho next thing in order is a change of residence or suicide. -Japan-ese J.ttltr. pa'm of his left hand he examined it minutely with a magnifying glass with the most satisfactory results. He statf s that the drop of water closely resem bled a flake of snow viewed with the same instrument. He examined several other drops, and, strange to say, each presented u marked difference inappear- ance. The first assumed the shape of a star, the second that of a crescent, the third a dagger, the fourth a comet, and so on. Alter concluding his examin ation, the gentleman resolved to further test tlie qualilies of the water by tasting it. Letting a drop fall on his tongue, he was surprised and delighted to find that it sparkled like the best brand of cham pagne. He then concluded to swallow a portion, which he did with the most delightful effect. He says the moment the water began descending his (hroa ho enjoyed tho most pleasant sensation of his life. It was indeed as if ho were truly sipping the nectarof the gods. The draught seemed to divide itself into a million parts the moment it passed his throat; a portion passing wim me speeu of lightning along every vein of his body. So delightful was the effect that he forgot for the time where ho was, and Uttered peal alter peal of tho wildest possible laughter. Owing to the pecu liar effects which the, water has on the human system, the gentleman before leaving the place christened the spot " The Electric Spring." He claims that this name is peculiarly appropriate, for there is no doubt but that the water is heavily charged with electricity, lie will endeavor next fiimm'T to form a company for the purpose of merging the place into a summer resort, as it is be lieved that the water of the spring will cure any and all ills that llcsh is heir lo. Nashville (Ttnn.) llianc.r Accidents in the deep shalts of Ne vada mines tre usually caused by fall ing; but there was an exception re cently. The iron cage in which men and metal are hoisted out of the Union mine is raised witli a wire rope seven inches thick by an engine of a thousand horse power. Six men started on the rise of over a quarter of a mile, and for hall the distance were lilted at the or dinary safe speed. Then the cage moved faster and faster, until it was shooting upward at a rate that took their breath away. The 1 ngineer had lost cont j ol of the machinery, which was running with frightful velocity. Ou reaching the surface the cage broke through the roof ITEMS OF INTEREST. Pleasant .uarlere- Twenty-five-cent pieces. . The Utah delegate in Congress, Mr Cannon, has six wives. , ' Truth lies When it is crushed to earth- New York News. " I liko your impudence," as a pretty irl said when her beau kissed her. A single property in California is half the size, of Rhode Island. Five children of Charles Dickens sur vive him three sons nnd two daugh ters. To take out a patent in the United States, costs about 60, of which about $25 goes to the solicitor. Mi. Mori, who was once Japanese minister nt Washington, has been sent to the cort of St. James' A salmon caught near Vancouver island, on the Pacific coast, weighed ninety-eight pounds. It is indeed a brave man who has courage enough to peer into the future nafrr ns spring house-cleaning time. Thirty-eight thousand five hundred and lorty one persons by the name of Smith draw pensions from the United States government. " Day-Alter-To-Morrow " is the "name of a Cherokee Indian chief. He is the brother of Procrastination. Wa'crloo Observer. Every kind of leather of oak and sumac tannage is produced in Cincin nati, there being thirty tanning estab lishments there. As many women learn to know their husbands, they wish they had learned to "No"them when they were only sweethenrts. Sieubenville JJei aid. The Cane-Growers' association fin ished its deliberations at St. Louis yes terday. The other association for rais ing Cain is still in session nt Washing ton. Vli icago Journal. The roses of p.easure seldom last long enough to adorn the brow of him that plucks them, and they nre the only roses which do not retain their sweet ness after they have lost their beauty. IIo that embarks in the voyage of life will always wish to advance rather bv the impulse of tho mind than tho strokes of the oar, and ma.iy founder in the parage while they lie waiting for the gale. Turning for the moment from a (lairs ot State lo sporting matters, we note Jint a Cincinnati gentleman yesterday broke 9U8 glass bails out of a possible 1,000, with the but end of an army musket. Cincinnati Enquirer. A fashion letter says "pinched waists are now thought vulgar." Fashion let ters may say 'what they piease, but as long as the owners of the waiets don't make a fuss about it, young men will continue to pinch 'ein Norrislown Her aid. A walnut timber boom is going on in -Tennessee. Every water-mill nnd 11 saw-iniil is sawing it fast. Already !:i0,000 worth has been shipped lrom. I.ewisburg. There is a large demand for it in London, and Tennessee people expect great things of the European market. A man fell through one of Ihe win dows of liis boarding house on West bill the other day, and his distracted landlady speaks of him as "n panefu! roomer." But then Bhe hardly knew what she was saying, poor thing. Iiur- Uii'ton Hnwkeye. The Norrislown lieraui regards ap- i.rnvitu'lv the maintenance of the old custom o'f flinging an old slipper after a bride, but holds the practice 01 Hinging after n would-be son-in-law a heavy boot containing the foot of a girl's father as despicable. Tlu re are over 15,000 carriage manu facturers in tho United States, who' em ploy upward ot 100,000 hands, pay out from S'.'R.OOO.OOO to $31,000,000 for labor annually, and produced during the past twelve months upward ol 1,500,000 carriages, amounting in value to .15!5,000,000. The number tf paper mills in the United States have increased to 815J, em ploying 52,000 hands, nnd their aver age nnuual product is estimated at 317,387 tons of paper, vaUud ut !j7, 000,000, nnd the capital invested in them is placed at S I3,.r00,000. The position of the Chinese in Brazil is a peculiar one. The government eu cou nges their introduction witli the view of more extensive tea and silk culture, while tho people oppose Mon gols on the ground that their immigra tion will prevent that of the more de sirable Europeans. Juries sometimes give very curious verdicts. One of the most- remarkable was found by a Washoe jury in a ease of milk-steniing. The prisoner was tried on a charge of stealing milk from another man's cow. It was proved that ho had frequently milked the cow at night, thereby causing his neighbor at. vexation and annoyance. nn- jurv desired to express in meir veruici I heir sense of t he aggravated nature of. the offense. They therefore louno me I" I - A correspondent asks us: "What is your ideaol the saddest thing on earth?" Easy enough! A tailor with a good memory. Wheeling Leader. . of the sheltering house as though it had been paper, hurling the men into the air, and breaking tho great cable. No lives were lost, but thirteen bones were broken. irisoner " guilty of milking the cow in he lir-t deree." Waco (Texox) Tt It- phone. What lie Mistook for it Hog. A young man who had recently nv ivrd from ihe East was engaged at the United States lish-liatcliing establish ment on Mt Cloud river. One day last week he took a row boat and puued up the river a horl oistance, crossed to the opposite side, and prepared to go ashore. Justus he was stepping out .of the boat the young mail iooklu on on uw i over his head, and saw what he thought was a large niiWliil dog. homo 01 those Indiana have stolen him," ho thought to himself, "nnd I will take him home with me." unmning me trail with difficulty, he was soon face to face with his mastill". IIo whistled, and snapped his thumb and fingers, coax ingly, but instead of taking his advances kindly, the nnimal uttered a lew growl. and oscillating his tail lrom side to side, prepared to go for that young man. Tho latter, now terribly alarmed, started for his boat, tumbling headlong down the hill, mid just managed to get into his craft and push it into the stream as an . immense specimen of theCalifornia lion landed upon the shore. Ot course, the iou would not take to the water, so the young man was safe; but he says he shall be careful how lie makes overtures to strange dogs in a utr.inge country after this. He was entirely unarmed nt the time, and after, lie got into his boat heard tho growls of another in tho bush, showing that evidently there was a pair itf the " creatures." Portland Oreyottian.