Sfe Iflli filiate. 1 HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher NILi DE8PERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IX. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1880. NO. 51. rooms of the Week. SUNDAY. Lio still and rest, in that serene repose That on tliis holy morning come to those Who have been buried with the cares that make Tho sad heart weary and the tired heart ache. Lie still and rest God's day ot all is boat. MONDAY Awake! arise! Cast off thy drowsy dreams! Red in the east, behold the morning gleams. " As Monday goes, so goes the week," dames say. Kflroshed, relieved, use woll the initial day; And see! thy neighbor Already seeks his labor. nfflUATi Another morning's banners are unfurled Another day looks smiling on the world; It beholds new laurels lor thy soul to win; Mar not its grace by slotlimlnoes or sin, Nor sad, away Send it to yesterday. WEDNESDAY, Hall-way untothe end the week's high noon. The tnorning hours do speed away so soon ! And when tho noon is reached, however bright, Instinctively we look toward the night. The glow is loBt Once the meridian crost. Till IISDAT. So well the week has sped, hast thou a friend Go spend an hour in converse. It will lend Now beauty to thy labors and thy lile To pause a little sometimes in the strife. Toil soon seems rude That has no interlude. FRIDAY. From feasts abstain; be temperate, and pray; Kast if thou wilt; and yet, throughout tho day, Noglcot no labor and no duty shirk ; Not many hours ate lelt tlieo for thy work And it were meet Tnut all should be complete. SATL'llDAY. Now with tho almost finished tusk make haste; So ncur the night, thou host no time to waste. IVst up accouuts, nnrt let thy soul's eyes look For flaws and errors in lile's ledger-book. When lib.irs cease, How sweet the sense ol peace! Ella U heeler, in Chicago Tribune. A NIGHT IN AN AVALANCHE Contrary to all arrangements and ex pectai ions of the dear old uncle who hart reared' me, I had not got further .linns in life than to a third-class clerk ship in the State department at Wash ington, ami this only because I could write :i tine hand, and mnkc fancy eupi tals said my disappointed uncle. I believe uncle wag thoroughly ashamed of my getting into the depart ment at all. He would a hundred times over have preferred that I had been a farmer. Hut, when the hard times came, and when the hard times got harder, and the old farm, going under a mort gage, was only rescued by my sn vines as a third-class clerk, uncle sank his shame in Ins gratitude, and my fancy writing wis ridiculed no longer. Still, it was weary work, reading and copying endless dispatches of the chief clerk to our consuls in Europe, and all that without any apparent hope oi ever becoming chief clerk myself. One day I was copying adispatch of the secretary to the consul at Z . It was to the effect that from that day on he would, in accordance with his request, be al lowed $1,000 a year for clerk hire. "He will want a clerk, then, of course," I said to myself, " and if I could secure the situation, I might be happy Btill." I didn't want promotion so much as I wanted a change. That evening the dispatch of the department, copied in my best hand, left for Europe, accom panied by a private note of my own to the consul. As a specimen of my writ ing, I referred to the inclosed dispatch, and informed the learned consul that I could speak the German language, hav ing learned it evenings during my stay in Washington. Perhaps the last re mark, and not niy tine writing, settled the business. Clerks who can speak foreign languages are in demand with our consuls. In six weeks from that day I had peeped into the great cities of London, Paris and Brussels, and was now stand ing at the clerk's desk of the American consulate at Z . The business was not burdensome. With the office open but five hours a day, we were happy. I had beautiful times so did the consul. Among the Washington letters last winter was one from our worthy com missionerof pensions, asking the consul to investigate and furnish evidence that certain widows and minor daughters of United Stales pensioners living in his district had not married, and thus for feited their claim to further aid from the government. All the certiticates, except 1,004, were indorsed, and ready to be returned. 'This pensioner," said the consul to Ins chief clerk one morning, "is proba bly either dead or married, and I am determined to hnd out which. It is not so wonderfully far from hero to tho vil lage of Bleiberg, and if you have an in clination you may take the next train and go there. Come back by Saturday and, of course, make the expenses as trilling as you can." I had long wished for a stroll ot some sort into the magnificent valleys of the Carinthian Alps, and here seemed my opportunity. I was twenty-five miles still from Bleiberg when I transferred my hand vaiise and myself from a second-class railway car into a first-class mountain diligence. It was a wonderfully beautiful valley I was to asf end to Bleiberg. There are no finer mountain prospects anywhere. It seems to me sometimes that all the ornamental work ot the creation has been expended on Switzerland and the Tyrol. Usually, when in the mountains, J ride outside with the driver, or up in the imperial, perched like a leather bon net on the top of the vehicle. I deter mined fully to do so at this time. How capricious is the mind of man, I reflected, on entering the little station, and seeing a young lady in a velvet jacket and gray kids buy inside coupe No 1 for Bleiberg. In a minute and a half I had changed my mind, and was the owner of coupe ticket No. 8. I helped my traveling companion to her scat, fixed my own precious baggage into the box behind, and then pro ceeded, naturally enough, to occupy in side seat No. 3. There was but one passenger besides myself. In twenty minutes the two occupants ot that mountain diligence were tolerably ac quainted. We spoke, of course, in German. What struck us both ns very singular, however, was the great similarity of our German pronunciation. Miss Shel ton Miss Margot Shelton, to bo more explicit for I had seen her name on the ticket ns I passed it to the conductor was perfectly certain I was not a Swiss, much less an Austrian, and I was equally confident my fair companion was not it native to the Alps. Her Ger man bore too strong an accent for that. I afterward learned she had thought my own a little curious. Once, just for the sport of the thing, I shouted something to the driver in English. How aston ished I was to hear Miss Shelton add to it a phrase as English as my own 1 We held breath to explain, and in almost no time at all discovered that we were both Americans. Strange discoveries fol lowed they always do. Miss Shelton 's father had been a volunteer captain in our army, and I myself had been within a rifle-shot of him when he fell at Vicks burg. Her mother, a native of Bleiberg, took t'jis only daughter and returned to her old home, stopping at the solicitations of friends, first for months, and now it had been yenrs. In a moment I recalled what had been puzzling me for an hour. I had seen the name Shelton before somewhere. Who was pensioner 1004 but Elsie Shelton why had I not thought of that? wile of Captcin Shelton. killed at Viekshurg in June, 1863. How ex tremely singulart we both exclaimed. Mrs. Elsie Shelton. I was soon informed, whs not remarried. The object of my journey was accom- flishcd. I might return home at once, did not, however. Besides, Miss Shel ton insisted that I should go on and visit pretty Bleiberg, her mother and herself. I was easily persuaded. Why had the consul's letters not been answered ? I asked, as we made a turn in the road. "Oh," said Miss Shelton, "mother and I were both coming next week to Z , to visit a relative there, and so she proposed answering in per son. Besides she is not so poor that she cures dreadfully whether Uncle Sam stops the ten dollars or so a month or not." By noon the church steeple of Blei burg was in sight, and in an hour the driver blew a shrill note or so on his horn, the villagers hastened to the win dows of the houses as our four panting ponies passed on a rallop, and the little old postmaster lifted his blue cap, nnd cave us a salute all round. Mrs. Shel ton was living with a friend, then ab sent, in a substantial two-story stone house not far from the post. " Tl is is Mr. ," said Miss Shelton, laughing, as she presented me to her mother, "a real American; and, just think, he has come to ask, mamma, if you are married." The good-lookin" embarrassed little widow soon un raveled the nonsense with which Miss Margot was seeking to overwhelm us. and I was welcomed not only as nn American, but as one who had been at Vicksburg. When the dinner was over I strolled out through one of the loveliest situated villages of the Alps. The view down the valley we hnd just ascended was en chanting. Behind the pretty town, and edged by a green meadow sloping up ward, was a forest of tall dark firs and above this an alp, angling up the side of a steep mountain, known to all tour ists as the Rigi of the Kernthal. It was only the 25th ot February, but the sun seemed as warm as in midsum mer. The grass, so wonderfully green, was high enough for pasture, nnd violets and daises peeped out every where. It was "dangerously worm, in fact." muttered the little postmaster in the blue cap, as I handed him a letter to post to the consul at Z , saying every thing was well, but I couldn't possibly be back on Saturday " dangerously warm, because there had not been so much snow on the mountains in fifty years as now, and already people began to hear of avalanches falling out of season." Bleiberg, however, is safe enoueh, I thought to myself, as I glanced up the sides of the old peak where, sure enough, there were oceans of snow and ice glis tening in the sunshine. But it was a mile away, and between pretty Bleiberit and it swept, like a dark veil, the forest of tall fir trees. " I don't like it it's too warm and there's no telling," continued my would be pessimist of a postmaster. " I haven't lived in those regions well nigh to fifty years for nothing. Snowing all winter, and hot sun und daisies in February, aren't natural. It means avalanches to somebody somewhere." I had almost forgotten that, as I left the house of my fair entertainers, I was informed that it was carnival-day in the village, and that at three o'clock I must be on h.md to see the procession. It was already after three, and I hurried back to be offered a good place to see from, at the upper chamber window of Miss Margot, where, joined by her mother, we awaited the boys in striped trousers and masks, and the men with music and flags. It was a novel sight, as the long procession filed up the road and approached the house where we were waiting, ine contrast or the bright colors of the costumes and flags with the green foliage and the greener grass at the road-sides ; the comparative silence, disturbed only by the echoing ot the notes of musio from the lofty rocks; the seeming diminutiveness of everything of the men, of the thread like roads, of even the houses and trees, as seen under tiie shadow of the tower ing mounUins all added inipressive ness to the thing. There were possibly a hundred per sons in tne procession, with a score of boys following at the sides, and all the villagers looking on. Suddenly the musio ceased; there was an awful whiz zing in the air; a cry of ' Avalanehe!" "Avalanche!" and an instant roaring and cracking, as of falling forests. In ten short seconds an awful flood oi snow, mangled trees, ice and stones passed the house like the swell of a mighty sea. Everything shook. The procession disappeared as if engulfed by an earthquake. Houses, right and left, tumbled over, and were buried in one siDgle instant. The air, cooled for a moment, and again bot, wan rent with the screams of the mangled. An awful catastrophe had befallen us ; the wrath of the mountains was upon the village I For a moment we stood paralyzed speechless. My first impulse was to rush to the street, and to drag my companions with me; but there was no street. Even the garden had disappeared in a foam of snow and ice We thought of the back window at the embankment, but as we tore it open, a single glance toward the mountain told us the horror was but begun. "The forest 1" we all shouted in a breath. It was gone, all gone, as if mown by a mighty reaper, and masses of other snow seemed ready to slide. The white brow of the mountain still gleamed in the sunshine, and seemed to laugh at the desolation. Another whiz zing, a roar, and with our own eyes we saw the side of the mountain start. Instantly and together we sprang down the steps into the lower room. There was a roll of thunder, a mighty crash, and then all was darkness. We were buried alive beneath an avalanche. What my first thoughts were I am un able to recall. I only remember our fearful cries for help ; how we shouted separately, and then united on one word, crying together again and again, our only answer the silence of the grave. Every soul in the village, probably, hod been killed, or, like ourselves, had been buried beneath the snow and ice of the mountain. It was only after we had exhausted ourselves with vain cries for help that we meditated on helping ourselves. We had not been injured. Wc remembered that we were in the little sitting-room down stairs, the win dows only of which seemed broken in, and filled with snow, ice and stones. The stairway was also filled with snow nnd the debris of crushed walls. Above us all was desolation. The furniture in the room seemed all in its proper place. We could move about, but it was becoming terribly cold, and we felt the sleepy chill, that dreadful precursor of death ty freezing, overcoming us. Once we were certain we heard voices above us, and again we shouted t try to tell them we were still alive. We listened ; the voices were gone we were abandoned to our fate. For hours wo had alternately shouted and listened, until we sank down in de spair. It must have been midnight when, in our gropings about the little chamber, our hands came on a wax candle. In a few moments we had light light to die by. Hours went by. I don't know whether we were sleeping or freezing, when 1 started at hearing a voice cry, "A light! a light!" I sprang to my feet, and again the voice cried, "A lieht!" In ten min utes three . half-frozen, half-insane human beings were lifted from the grave into the gray light of the morning. A hundred noble souls had labored the long night through, seeking the buried. Every man and woman, from every village in the whole valley, had hurried to the scene, and was straining every nerve to rescue those to whom life might still be clinging. " We were among the last taken from the snow and rocKS, which had lain upon us thirty feet in depth. Did those brave rescuers wonder that we knelt to them and kissed the hems of their ragged garments? Beautiful Bleiberg is no more. Half ot those whom, we saw dancing along in the procession of the carnival, in the bright sunshine, steep among the violets on the hill-side. The snow and the ice and the black bowlders from the moun tain, ami the dark fir-trees, still lie, in this summer of 1879, in one mass in the valley. We all left as soon as we could travel. I went home to Z . My chief has resigned, and I am now acting consul in his place. Should the Senate confirm all the new appoint ments. I expect to remain as consul. Miss Shelton thinks also of remaining, and when Americans wander to Z they will find the latch string of our home at the consulate on the outside of the door. One word nnd I nm done. Mrs. Shel ton has lost a part of her pension so much of it as was allowed for a minor daughter. I have so reported it to the commissioner at Washington. Harper's Montllly, Shocking Cruelty to Children. Christian Sehaeffer has been sent to jail in Philadelphia for almost starving his two children. The story came out through the attempt of Josephine Chris tian, aged fourteen, to end her life by jumping into the Delaware river. She was rescued by a passing boat. Sehaeffer is a miserly, repulsive man of thirty live. He has lived for several years with his two daughters in a dilapidated little shanty in Salmon street, not far from the Bridesburg arsenal. Dirt, inches thick, carpeted the floor. The only ventilation was from a door and a window, three of whose panes were stuffed with old rags. They had no visitors or friends, for the lather allowed no intercourse whatever with the neighbors. They never went to school or to church. The man's only means of livelihood was catching stray dogs, which he would kill and boil and render the fat. He compelled his children to live on the meat of the dogs he caught. From their infancy he had taught them to use the ftit for butter, and they do not know the taste of real butter, fie made consider able money from selling the dogs' bones and skins, but never spent a cent ex cept for rags to cover his children's backs or to protect them from the cold when all three lay down at night in the one miserable bed, made of rough boards. At meal time their dog meat was poked out of an old iron boiler and they sat on boxes to eat it, The girls often contem plated suicide. They were put in the hands of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. in Astonished Frores6or. A former president of a New England college, after getting a seat in a h.Tse car, noticed one of the freshmen of his college curled up in front of him, and exhibiting obvious signs of vinous ex hilaration. A close inspection revealed the fact that the state of inebriety was not hastily put on (like a bat) but had been worn closely (like an undershirt) tor several days. For a few moments the president surveyed the under-grad-uate with an expression of mingled com miseration and disgust, and. finally he exclaimed, "Been on a drunk!" The half conscious student rallied his stray, ine senses, and with a gleam of good fellowship in his eye, somewhat un retpectedly ejaculated, "So hie have 1 1" Spring brings the blossoms. Autumn brings the truit and also eolds, etc, lor which noth ing superior to Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup has ever bean offered to the public. It always ouie. Prios U eenta. Some Interesting Figures. In an interview at Chicasro with Robert P. Potter, the well-known statis tician,who has been appointed by Census Superintendent Walker to havo charge of the collection of statistics concerning the debt, wealth, and taxation of the United States, Mr. Potter said: The facts which I have collected eive a sort of comparative view of the growth of the three sections ot the country, and bear especially on the economic changes that have taken place in the past decade in the East, West and South. In 1860 the population of the nine Eastern States (including New York and Penn sylvania) was 10,594,300; the nine W estern btates (excluding Ohio), 6,752, 368; and the thirteen Southern States, 10,359,016. By a careful estimate I find that at the close of 1879 the Donulation of the Eastern States had reached 14, 303,000; that of the Southern States, 14, 305,000, and that of the Western States, 14,655,000. Thus, while the population of the South probably increased 4,025,- 884, and that ot the Eastern States 3,808, 706, the nine Western States have in nineteen years gained 7,902,633 an in crease nearly equal to the aggregate in crease of the Eastern ana Southern States in the same period. The increase of population on the shores ot the great lakes withi l the past quarter century is without a parallel in history. I have made a series of investigations of the manufacturing populations of the West ern States (Ohio omitted), of the thir teen Southern States, and of the six New England States, including New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Having ascertained by the census figures of 1850, 1860 and 1870 the actual growth of the manufacturing population of each State, the percentage of growth for e'sch decade was easily found out: then by taking the average decennial growth between 1850 and 1870 for the increase between 1870 and 1880, 1 have arrived at the following approximation : Eatiern TVettern Southern S la tci. Statei. Slaict. Number engaged in manufactur ing in 1850 696,661 58,947 109,866 Number engaged in manulactur- inginl860 900,107 113,045 131,979 Number engaged in manulactur- inginl87i 1,273,808 360,621 186,470 Probable numeri cal increase tor decade ending 1880 461,055 633,892 71,919 Probable number engaged in man n iacturing in 1880 1,734.863 994,512 258,389 From this exhibit I find that the manufacturing population of the nine Western States increased from 58,947 in 1850 to 994.512 in 1880; in the Eastern States from 696,661 in 1850 to 1,734,863 in 1880, and in the Southern States from 109,88 to 258,389. Thirty-Four Kenrs in JailT An official record, recently published, of the leading incidents in tne nefarious career of one Mr. Anthony Matek, an Austrian thief of considerable renown in the Cislcithnn provinces ot the Dual Realm, is not uninstructive. This per severing but unfortunate pilferer has just attained the ripe age of sixty-eight, thirty-four years and eight months of his existence having been spent in one or another imperial jail, .while the monotony of his solitary confinement has been relieved at different limes by his receiving 16,600 stripes with rods and 370 blows with sticks. These latter castigations were imparted to him dur ing his term of army service. Military regulations opposed themselves, it seems, in a violent and arbitrary manner to his confirmed habitof seeking uncon sidered trifles in his comrades' pockets ; and vengeful martinets, deaf to his pla that "congenial eccentricity covers a multitude ot sins," decreed no fewer than six several times that he should "run the gauntlet." The fact that he has survived those terrible ordeals bears convincing testimony to tho vior of his constitution. The value of the articles' stolen by him is appraised in the official register of his adventures nnd mishaps as not amounting in all to 300 florins, or less than $150. His last sentence but one eight years' imprisonment with hard labor, which he had worked out only a few weeks ago was incurred for the annexation of the Austrian equiva lent to eighty cents. No sooner was he free than he publicly relieved a lady of her purse, containing sixty cents. For this imprudent feat he has just been condemned to another six years of penal servitude, making up a total ta e of torty yenrs and eight months' laborious seclu sion for the acquisition of an amount representing an income for that period of about $3.75 per annum ! The strictest honesty could hardly have paid him worse. A Depraved Small Boy. A fearful example of criminal pre cocity is afforded by a case which re cently came before the assize court of St. Peter, in Martinique.. A boy named Emilien Dema, aged eleven, was accused of deliberately murdering Paul Sarpon, a child of three and a half years. The following extracts from Dema's exami nation will show the horrifying cold bloodedness with which he admitted the commission of the crime. On being asked how he despatched his victim he answered : " I killed him intentionally. got him to come and play with me. He followed me and we played together at first, and then I led him near theedge of a cliff, and pushed him over. I next jumped down after him, beat and kicked him, bit him in the neck and finished him off with a stone." Wishing, as he said, to assure himself of having really " finished off" Sarpon, this young mon ster stated that he then dragged the body into a pool of water and effectually prevented any return of life bv placing a heavy stone on the head. The presi dent of the court inquired of Dema why he had taken the child's life, to whicb he replied : " Because I hated him for hav ing me punished by my mother." On a question being put as to whether he felt no regret or pity on seeing the murdered boy struggling in the agonies of death, the prisoner, who seemed greatly sur prised at such a query, answered decid edly, "No," and added, on being fur ther interrogated, that not even the fear of the police would have deterred bim, as his desire was to "killPauL" The child criminal, who had given his evi dence throughout most impassively, displayed no fee ling ol any kind on being sentenced to the maximum punishment of twenty years' imprisonment in a house of correction. Ualignani's Mes senger. Arizona contains 73,000,000 acres of land, 6,000,000 of which are surveyed. FOB THE FAIR SEX. Manner ot Making Monrnlns Dresses, The simplest designs used in making colored dresses are repeated in those worn as mourning. The coat basque, the round overskirt very simply draped, and the short round skirt, is the model for most costumes. For the deepest mourning a broad habit of crape is used lor trimming the basque and both skirts, dispensing with all flounce-like plaitings on the lower skirt. The cus tom of covering the entire basque with crape, also all that part of the lower skirt visible below the overdress, is confined to widows, and is not even for them so generally adopted as it formerly was. There is a tendency to lighten the unwholesome heavy mourning attire lately worn in the somber English styles, yet to retain its simplicity and nun-like plainness; thus the neck of the dress is worn very high about the throat, the sleeves are tight and with out cuffs, the Bhoulder seams are short, the bust is not draped, and the beauty of the corsage depends upon its fine fit. Crape, however, is worn but a few months, and lustreless silks are chosen for dress from the first period of mourn ing. While paniers, sashes, fussy drap ery, flounces and open throats are, of course, avoided, yet a dinner dress of mourning silk and crape is fashioned very much as a colored dress of silk and brocade would be. Thus the short basque and the front breadth are covered vith English crape, and the flowing train is of the rich silk, with perhaps some panel revers of crape down the sides, and a knife-plaiting of the same on the edge. Very rich and appropriate suits for the street are made of Henrietta cloth or of imperial ser-ge after the models in use for cloth costumes this winter; the basque is coat-shape and double-breasted, with a deep collar, cuffs and square pockets of crape. The skirt lies a full straight back breadth without drapery, and is widely bordered with a band ot bias crape, while in front is a deep round apron, much wrinkled, and tailing quite low, yet disappearing in the side seams where the full straight back begins. The wrap with such a suit is a long coat-shaped garment made of the material of the dress, warmly lined, perhaps with fur, or else with wadded silk or flannel. There are also figured cloths that are used for wraps with mourning dresses, and many of those have a deep collar and wide cuffs of black fur. A border of fur is not liked for mourning cloaks, as used in that way the fur is only a showy trim ming, and not for comfort, and detracts from the severely simple look given by the deep collar and cuffs. Sealskin cloaks are now worn in the deepest mouvnins. and furriers select those of the dtirkest hue for this purpose. The large circulars of cashmere cloth with fur lining are worn ns carriage wraps by ladies in mourning. Harper's Bazar. News and Rotes for Women. Mrs. Grant says that the prettiest girl seen in all her travels was at Reno, Nev., railroad station. Allegra Eggleston, a young Brooklyn artist takes a portrait by only looking at the subject for a few minutes, and then draws a picture that every one re cognizes. Manchester. Ennland. has a soeietv of women painters, to which the other sex is not admitted, not even at the yearly exhibition. Miis M. E. Gage, daughter of the poetess, has established a ladies' ex change for mining stocks in New York. A generous Iowa lady. Mrs. Cordelia Miller, has civen 830.000 to the Garret Biblical institute, at Evanston, 111. Madame de Witt has mat comnleted her history of Fiance, which is the sequel to her father's (M. Guizot) his tory. The widow of G. P. James, tb e nov elist, is living at Eau Clare, Wis. She is now eighty years old, and is well eared for by her sons. A London correspondent writes that American nationality is accepted in England as a nrosunintion in favor of a lady singer's success. There are nine ladies on the London school board. Princess Alexandria, wife of the Prince of Wales, is somewhat deaf, and lias ordered an American audiphone. Lady Burdett-Coutts latelv eave a tea party to over two hundred London cabmen and their wives as a means to induce the cabmen to treat their horses with kindness. The ladv nrincinal of a Michiomn school lias resigned her position to com mence the study of medicine. The American Sundav school, ot New York, has been presented with $100,000 by Mrs. J. C. Green, of that ciy, the in terest only to be available. This is to be devoted to "the development of Sun-dav-school literature of a high merit." Mrs. Gladstone and Lady Roseberry attended all the Gladstone meetings at Edinburg, and sat in front of the platform listening attentively to every word and occasionally nodding assent, which sight was said to be very pretty and interesting. There was married recentlv in De troit a damsel who had been several years employed in a large manufacturing establishment. Her marriage had been for some days a subject of pleasant con gratulation by her employers and fellow employees. One day one of the pro prietors, who always wears a " bed t ick" apron in the factory, said to her, " . if you will wear this apron on your wedding-dress when you arc mar ried I will make you a present of $50." "Yes," added the foreman, "and I'll giver you $10." The girl accepted the challenge, wore the apron, and pocketed her $60. Gambetta says that " if girls are not educated ud to the level of the renubli- can ideal the republic will fall down to their notion of what it ought to be." That tho best advisors he ever had, not alone at to the conduct of his private ine, dui in pontics, were good women, whose minds were emanciDated from sacerdotal tyranny, and it was of vital importance to the commonwealth that the fullest justice should be done to the girlhood of France. The sultan has ten servants whose special duty is to unfold the carpets for liiiii wnen ne is going to pray, ten to take care oi his nipes and cigarettes. two to dress his royal bail and twenty to auena to his most noois clean shirts, There are a multitude of other attend ants about the Dulace: indeed, it la stated that boo families and about 4,000 fersons live at his majesty's expense, leisan extravagant housekeeper; the annual expenditures of the palace are mentioned as nearly $14,000,000, TIMELY TOPICS. An idea of the condition of the United States navy is given by the report of the House naval committee, which savs that of the 142 vessels of the navy forty-eight are not capable ot tiring a gun, eleven steamships are laid up for repairs and eight others are out of service, leaving only sixty-nine cnpable of doing naval duty. The navy is also short in guns, having only 850 pieces in the whole navy, of which less than forty are rifles, all the others being smooth bores, which are out of all comparison with the modern gun for effective service. It is somewhat hard to maintain a free reading-room in New York. The number of articles stolen from the Cooper Union is giving the managers a great deal of trouble. Not only are the ordinary books stolen, but it is found next to impossible to keep up the sup ply of Bibles on the desks, ns they are Ptolen as fast as distributed. The br.iss rods that keep the papers in place are constantly stolen for the metal, and even the worthless rubber checks given at the door are stolen instead of being given up as the person passes out. Two years ago there were 2,000 checks, now there are but 450. Twenty-five hundred persons enter the free reading-room dai'y. Ileieafter persons desiring to use this immense reading-room will be obliged to make application for admis sion to the librarian. It is the habit in Scotland as in America to sell insurance tickets, with railroad tickets when the traveler de sires them. The cost of these insur ance tickets, good for one day, is but a penny, nnd the company agrees to pay n certain sum in case of death within the twenty-four hours, or a certain sum weekly in cose of in jury. It is rather remarkable that there should not be a single insured person on that fated Dundee train, but so the in surance companies assert. This brings up a suggestion of improvement in the method of giving tickets for this pur pose. There should be some method by which the friends of the deceased could find out whether or not he had been insured. Almost every one on tho train that went into the Tay might have been insured, yet there is no way of find ing it out. Many of the bodies have been swept out to sea nnd if they nre ever found it is doubtful whether an in surance ticket on their persons would be decipherable. The autopsy of the remains of the woman who starved herself to death in Cincinnati did not reveal any materially diseased condition of the stomach. The fact that she lived for thirty days with out usine any nourishment whatever would justify the conclusion that per sons possessed of strong will power, and having tho hallucination or delusion that they are suffering with some or ganic disease or bodily disorder, may live until the body is entirely consumed. This lady was possessed of great power ot will, and she had a delusion that she had no stomach, and therefore made up her mind that she would not take food or drink; and continued in this condi tion until there was a general exhaus tion of the nerve-centers and mental faculties, when she went quietly into a calm sleep and died without a struggle. The pathological condition of the pas sages leading to the stomach all being normal, with no obstruction, Bnd all the organs in a healthy state readv to per form their various offices, would war rant tho conclusion that this lady would have lived a great many years if she could have been induced to partake of sufficient nourishment to sustain lile. An account of a case of clear grit, physical endurance and sullering from pain, which stands without a parallel, comes from Ontonagon county, Mich. The story runs that a woodman named James Irwin left Rockland for his forest home at uvs V leux Desert.on snow t hoes over an untraveled road through the woods, which was covered with two or three feet of snow. A short. distunee out he stopped to build n fire, a id while engaged in chopping some fuel he cut one oi his feet. Failing to appreciate at mm; me i: a Li-m, 01 ins injury, ho continued on his way, and when out about twenty-fire mill's from ivocKiana ne discovered that his wound was a serious one and rennired tlia offices of a surgeon, and as there was no physician at Luc Vieux Desert, he re traced his steps toward Rockland where ho could get one. His foot rapidly e-ot worse, so that he could not bear his weight on it. Alone, on an unbroken trail or road, heavy with snow, with a crippled and painful foot, his horrible position can be imagined. It was a case of life or death with Irwin, so falling on ma Miues ne commenced crawling on " all fours " and alter thirty-six days he was found within three miles of Rock land, having crawled twenty-two miles in a most deplorable condition, nnd barely life enough left to stir. The wounded foot had to be cut off. and it was thoueht he would lose the other one, which was frozen. For sev eral days he had dothing to eat. A man wuo wou d undertake to acenmn inn what Irwin did was not turned out of a common mould. Words of Wisdom. When a man is wrong and won't ad mit it, he always gets angry. The best part of beauty is that which a picture cannot express. Art must anchor in nature, or it is the sport of every breath of folly. Conscience is the voice of the soul; the passions are the voice of the body. All other knowledge is hurtful to him who lias not honesty and food nature. A merry heart doeth got i lie a medi cine, but a broken spiri; drieth the bones. Let no man presume to give advice to others that has not given good coumel to himself. Beauty and death make each other seem purer and lovelier, like snow and moonlight. Hatred is so durable and so obstinate that reconciliation on a sick-bed is a sign of death. Somo one has said oi a fine and honor able old age, that it was the childhood of immortality. Circumstances form the character; but like petrifying matters, they harden while they form. Life is made of little things, in which smiles and kindness given habitually are what win and preserve the htait and secui t comfort. Jnst One Little Song, Love Como, sing that song I loved, love, When all life seemed one songj . For I am stricken now, love, My strong arm is not strong. Then sing the song I loved, lore, Yon know that one sweet song. Aye, sing that one sweet song, lovej Love, just that one sweet song. For lile is none too long, love Ob, love is none too long. Then just one little song, love; Love, (ust one little song. I know you love the world, lore; Nor would 1 deem yon wrong. But, when above my grave, love, Next year tho grass grows strong, Then sing that song I loved, love; Love, just one little song. No tears or sable garb, love; No sighs to break your song. But when they bid you sing, lovo, And thrill the joyous throng, Then sing the song I loved, love; Lovo, just 0110 little song. Joaquin Miller, in the Parisian. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Over 1,000 cheese factories areopcrated in New York State. The Boston Post considers a judge's position a trying one. A California paper says that it is now considered a well-settled point that the production of raisins in that State will be made profitable. English authorities state that, out ol every five loaves of bread eaten in Eng- ' land in 1860, three must come from the United States and Russia. Turkev's territorial loss is estimated by a German authority as a territory almost as large as Prussia proper, with a population of 11,000,000. A pork packer nt Indianapolis has shown great inventive genius in get ting into a scrape. He has invented machinery which will scrape 7,000 hogs a day. A new steam hammer in the establish ment of Messrs. Park Bros. & Co., Pitts burg, weighing fifteen tons, and costing $60,000, will, it is said, be the largest in the countrv. An agent of the Mormon Church has been down in Mexico looking for a good location in which to make a Mormon settlement. It is to be hoped that he will find one. Over $22,000,000 was expended in New York city last year in the erection of new buildings, which is in excess of the amount expended for new buildings any year since 1871. A few years ago, when an unprcce dentedly cold night left a litt'e skim of ioe on the pools in Jerusalem, the Arabs declared that it was a miracle by which water had been turned to glass. Henry Nelson, of New Orleans, is ninety-eight " too old to be fooled with, lie says. But some boys amused themselves by tormenting him, until he shot off the arm of one of them. Mrs. Harris was ill, at Miti-I.i A. Ind., nnd deliriously insisted on geti lug out of bed. The husbnnd tried by persuasion to keep her quiet, and then losing his patience, killed her with an axe. On a recent voyage from Honr Kong to San Francisco the captain of the ship had one son washed overboard nnd drowned nnd another born to him, so he landed with as many as lie started with. The Smithsonian institute has sent a commission to tho Pacific coast to make a complete collection ot all the fish found in the sea, lakes and rivers of California and the neighboring States und Terri tories. It is said that there is one cow for every four persons in this country, and if tho wells and springs were to fail some of us would bo put on short allow nnce of milk and crenm. Norrislown Ilcrnhl. The Suez canal receipts are reported to have decrrnsed in 1678 8323.200 from ttiose ot 1877, nnd 1879 showed a still greater falling off. A bout three-quarters f the vessels passing through are British. Mrs. Blessersole think) fire-escapes very proper tilings to Lave. She says it is well enough to give a fire a chance to escaoe from a building, if it will; if it won't, why then put it out, of course Boston Transcript. " n.ind words can never die." How bitterly does a man realize that terrible truth when hesees all the kindestwords he ever saw in his life glaring at him from his published letters in a breach of promise suit. Ilawkcye. There are about 00,000 Mennonites in America. They have 500 meeting houses. They abstain from taking the oath, do not infli t punishment, do not accept public office, and never go to law. They are nearly all farmers. M. Say, the Frenchman of leisure who. on pleasure bent, started around the world in a private yacht recently, but was driven into the Chesapeake by a storm, concluded that his yacht is too small for the undertaking, and so has ordered a $200,000 ship from a Balti more firm. According to the developments of a lawsuit in Buffalo, the business of manu facturing glucose is a very profitable one. It is alleged that the shares of the Buffalo grape sugar company, the original value f which was $100each, are now worth $20,000 each, and it is said the concern makes from $30,000 to $40,000 per week. Although to-day there nre as manv beards in the House of Commons ns in any assembly in tho world, twenty-five years ago there was but one. It be longed to Mr. Muntz, member from Birminghnm, who did tho public a ser vice by persuading the government to adopt the perforating machine in the manufacture of postage stomps. Mr. Muntz shaved until he was forty, when his brother returned from Germany with a fine beard, which the M. P. de ter nined to emulate. "H. B.," the famous caricaturist, was soon at "the nian with the beard," as every one called Muntz, and represented him in a cartoon as "a Brummagen M. P." In this por trait he carries a stout stick, which has special prominence, the reason being 1 hat an irrepressible practical joker, the Marquis 01 watenord, was supposed to have laid n wager that he would shave Muntz; iienee the cudgel to defend Mm sell fim dUbarbament. Mr. Maul died, very wealthy, in 1857.