fill HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NILi DESPEEANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. X. RLDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUKSDAY, MAECH 11, 1880. NO. 3. Two Lovers, i. I love my lover j on tbo heights atme me Ho mocks my poor attainments with a irown ; I, looking np as he is looking down, By his displeasure guess he still doth love me j For his ambitious love would ever provo me More excellent thnn I as yet am shown; So straining for some good ungrasped, un known, I vainly would bocomo his image oi me, And, reaching through the dreadful gulls that sever Our souls, I strive with darkness night and days Till my perfected work toward him I raise, Who laughs thereat and scorns me more than over; Yet his upbraiding is beyond all praise. This lover that I love I call Endeavor, li. I have another lover loving me. Himself beloved ot all men, loir aud true. He would not have me change although I gi-ew Fertect as light, because more tenderly He loves myself than lovea what I might be. Low at my feet he sings lue winter through, And never won I love to hear him woo, For in my heaven both sun and moou is he, To my bare life a fruitful-flooding r ile, His voice like April airs that in our isle Wake sap in trees that slept since autumn wept; His words are all caresses, and his smile The relic ol some Eden ravishment ; And he that loves me so I call Content. Mary F. Robimon. MUSK AND PENNYROYAL. Miss Margaret Willis slapped her maid in the face 'one morning as the girl was dressing her hair. " How often must I tell you not to draw the hair so tightly back from my fore head?" siie exclaimed. "It must be quite loose, though firmly held. You make me a fright!" It was a. soft hand, yet it could give a stinging blow, as Agnesia had learned during the last few weeks, for such blows were new in her experience with Miss Wiilis, who till lately had been the sweetest of mistresses. She said nothing, however, but made haste to loosen tne Drown hair over mat snowy forehead till Margaret's sham " Cosi told her that the right point had been reached. Miss Willis was already dressed, for she had adopted the custom of the Em press Eiuenio of having her hair ar ranged last. When it was finished she rose, lotting slip the large cambric man tle that covered her, and went to take a carelul survey of herself in a long mir ror that stood between the two win dows. The result could not have been otherwise than pleasing. She wore a long tunic oi lnce and muslin in stripes over a lavender silk, and rose-colored bows on the half-open sleeves aud under her lovely chin. "Kan ccmale,n she owned; and, drawing toward her a vase of large pink-nnd-white fuchsias, she fastened a bunch of them in the braid that sur rounded her head like a coronet, and, taking the pearl rings from her ears, hung fuchsias in their places. " I am going for a walk below the belvedere," she said then to her maid. " Say nothing about it to any one, and keep people away if you can. If any of those dreadful tourists come here to see the grounds, tell the gardener to come to the terrace and whistle." Miss Willis went down the grand stairs. Not a soul was in sight. At this hour it had just struck eleven from the clock in the grand fountain all the ladies and gentlemen in the villa except.perhaps, the master of it, the Marquis oi San Giorgio, were in their rooms, and would leave them only at the sound of the breakfast bell, which rang precisely at noon. If the marquis. . was out, he would be at the potteries in the very farthest corner of the villa. He almost invariably devotM the hour or two before breakfast to his corre spondence. Following a little path that wound among the shrubs and trees, Margaret descended to the level, where, from the windows above, she might have showed like a large flower in the midst of the rich green. She did not wish to be seen from the windows, however, but to es cape all observation for a time, and to study for an hour her position, with the airs of heaven blowing about her. So she went nearer the belvedere, and when she saw its dark balustrade stand out against the blue sky began to walk slowly to and fro in its shadow. Here was her position. She was' a young, beautiful and accomplished New England girl, rich for her native city, but not rich for one of the grand cities either of the old or the new world. A wealthy and ambitious aunt, who had spent the greater part of her life in Eu rope, had brought her here, intending to lind a ereat match for her. Margaret hid gladly come abroad, but had not committed . herself to the matrimonial scheme had, indeed, been very cool about the candidate who immediately presented himself. The marquis was agreeable, elegant, rich and of very high lineage, and he was not very old. She had no serious objection to make, but she had not yet been able to consent, though daily urged by her aunt and by tho lover himself. She could say neither jes nor no. She was too indifferent to accept, and the proposition was too bril liant to refuse. She had seen enough of society in London, Paris and Rome to be weary of taking a subordinate place. With a coronet in her gelden brown hair she could become a social cower. H er bright, disdainful eyes had searched out all the wheels and cranks of the so cial machine, and with time and famil iarity disdain was rapidly losing itself in ambition. It was a game, and a brilliant and exciting one it seemed to her. She was beginning to find that her beauty was. a weapon to use, not merely a pretty flower. It might pro cure her other advantages besides a coronet. But just as her imagination was about taking lire and she thought: "I will tarry in a half-open rose and give it to him before them all. and give him a smile with it which be shall under Btar.d," some other second thought set asida her half-formed decision. Walking thus pre-occupied, almost tormented, she became conscious pres ently of some sensible touch that reached her heart, yet so delicately that the was not aware by what sense it en tered. It persisted softly, withdrawing for an instant to make its presence more clearly felt on returning, and at every return the emotion it caused became perceptible. Her attention at length arrested by this soft importunity, Margaret Willis paused and looked around to see what it was that had set her heart murmur ing inarticulately like a mother over the cradle of her sleeping child. It was no sight or sound, though the birds were singing their noon lullabies. It was a perfume, strong, penetrating and familiar how more familiar than anything else there even while unrecog nized 1 She stood and breathed it a mo ment, then bent and looked searchingly in the grass. It was gay with flowers of every hue, and set thickly nmong them, and looking over their heads, were stalks of pennyroyal, the dear old New England nerb, studded all along the branching stems with tiny blue blos soms. Picture after picture started up. The r- . v ....... -"li' ...i.ii.iiuii iiviiiiv., with its pleasant verandas, its fields and gardens and wosds, appeared, a'l its twittering swallows circling round ; the boiling spring bubbling up under a birch tree in the field ; the wtll. with its curb, pole and bucket, mossy and dank, in the midst of the chip-strewn back yard ; shining tin milk cans drying on a sunny bench outside the back door; lace curtains waving in the drawing room windows, and transparent muslin curtains fluttering and puffing out from the chambers above. A blue smoke curled up from the chimney of the kitchen, where the floor was so white, and the bird's-eye maple ir wring table turned back on hinges and left a great chair for all but ironing days. The town, but a mile distant, looked over, an intervening hill, and the primeval forest hung dark as a thundercloud close at the other hand. It was the best of the city with the best of the country. She had gone into the woods with her brother Jamie. She had coaxed him to take her, and Jamie never refused her anything. How good he was to her that day, lifting her over the wet places, giving her all the little yellow violets he found, holding her up to look into a bird's nest while the mother bird chirBed distressfully from a near tree, and "telling her Buch -wonderful things of birds and trees and flowers that he had learned from books. Picture followed picture some bright, others mournful, many of them inter woven with the simple herb which she held clasped to her breast with uncon scious hands. There wns John. With a dreamy smile on her lips and her unseeing eyes fixed, her fancy saw him grow up through all her remembrances of him : first, Jamie's dearest friend and play fellow; later, friend too and forever her friend. An earnest, good boy, and an earnest, good man as firm as a rock in principles and character, and with some thing that might remind one of the rock in his form and face, in the square, broad shoulders, the wide forehead, and the firm mouth that was never too ready to smile and never had too much to say. He was gentle, too. From the time when, in lier seventh vear. he lilted her, all wet and trembling, out of the brook into which she had fallen, and carried her tiome in his arms, to their last interview, when she had laughingly turned aside the declaration of love that for the hundredth time he had attempted to make, and left him with that hurt yet patient look which she had so often caused his face to assume, in all that time not a hasty or unkind word had he spoken to her, and never once had he neglected a wish of hers or seemed to resent, even in his own heart, her care less coquetry. This love had begun on the day when, halt drowned and wholly terrified, she had clung round his neck and sobbed out her gratitude to him: " Oh, John! how I do love you for com ing up just now! The water was chok ing me. I wish you would always stay close to me just a3 long as I live." And John had responded, with his cheek blushing warm against her chilly wet one: "I'll never fail you when you want me, Pansy." And he never iiad failed her. A bell rang. Was it the bell of the school-house hidden behind the trees, or of one of the many churches in town beyond the hill!" It rang so loudly and sounded so near that it broke through her reverie. Her mind came back to her eyes, and looked about, re ceiving a shock that almost blinded her. toi all the landscape seemed in a whirl, and her visions reeled and fell like a city over an earthquake. The slim birch trees thickened to dense chestnuts; the branches of the pines ran up the trunks as an umbrella runs up in opening, and Ben themselves in a tuit liigli in the air; the wooden house with its long veran das changed to a palace with sculptured stone balconies and crowned with the airy arches of a grand loggia ; and where a moment before the savage woods had climbed the hillside, a white flood of water came falling down in foamy plunges, sprinkling the leaning flowers and the masks and the cupids as it fell. She saw the splendor of it all, and re membered a century old temptation so clearly that it seemed to be newly whis pered in her ear: "All this will I give thee if, falling down, thou wilt worship me." One bright, sweeping glance over the whole; then, gathering up her long skirts, she went swiftly toward the house. The first breakfast bell had ceased ringing, and the other would ring in fifteen minutes. Reaching the house, she was told that a gentleman was wait ing in the salon for her. "What an hour for a visit!" she thought, discontentedly, as she went trailing through the empty rooms to the last, where a tall, broad-shouldered man stood at a window looking out. At sight of him the blood rushed to her forehead. " I am bewitched to-day I am certainly bewitched!" she thought, and walked slowlv toward him. not so aroused from tier former dream as to have laid aside or thrown away the Duncb of pennyroyal she had clasped to her bosom. He turned at the light rustle of her garments. His face was pale, but his manner quite calm. ' How do vou do. Margaret?" he said, as if he had seen her the week before. " I hope I am not in trudingP" How it happened she knew not, bat at sight of him all the old mischief and malice woke in her heart. Tno intense blue eyes which were drinking in her face, the slight tremor in the deep voice all the signs which told that he was to her just what he had ever been mads of her again the laughing tyrant. Yet she laughed with joy, and was trium phant at seeing how handsome he was. Her educated eyes found him finer look ing then he bad looked to her ignorant ken. " You do intrude awfully, John," she said, giving him her hand ; " there are two persons in the house who will be enraged at your coming." " One is your aunt," he said, coldly. " And the other is who P" " Never mind, come and get some breakfast. The bell is ringing and I am hungry. Oh, you needn't hesitate about the invitation; we all ask whom we please. I have had one or Iwo persons to breakfast. They will already have laid a place for you." She was turning away, half waiting for him, when he took her hand : " If you are going to marry him I will not sit at his table. Tell me the truth ; don't play with me, Margaret." She had never heard his voice so passionate; it was almost commanding. 1 " What is your advice about the mat ter?" she asked, innocently, turning once more toward him and dropping her eyes. " I advise you to marry him if you want to," he replied, almost angrily. She looked into his face with her sweetest smile. " And if I do not want to, John? If I hate to and won't?" " In that case we had better not keep brenktast wailing," he replied, quietly. They went out into the tent-hung breakfast-room, where the company were assembled, and Miss Willis was edified to see how very cordial her aunt's greeting of the new-comer was after the first involuntary scowl of recognition. A for the marquis, he was so truly and gracefully courteous that Margaret added a few explanatory words t her introduction. "Mr. Norton was a schoolfellow of my brother's," she Eaid. " I have known him all my life." Sho compared the two while they talked. The marquis was tall, slender and pale, and his beautiful face had that look of mildness which is the re sult of pride and culture rather than of a mild disposition. One might have said of this man that his lace was calm and unruflled. not because his passions were not strong, but because of their strength, which carried all before it. It is obstructed passion which graves the face. Whatever the Marquis of San Giorgio had wished to, do, that he had done, and whatever he had wished to possess had never been long denied him. The two gentlemen talked a little on political subjects. John was now a senator. His ideas were quite clear, nnd were well expressed. To be sure, his French was not chopped quite fine enough; he had the English accent, and pronounced too conscientiously all the little words which he should only have brushed ; but he spoke grammati cally, and, some way, it seemed a con descension for him to speak French at all. "I must make him piactice talking with me against the time when he will be president and will have to talk with the four winds," thought Miss Willis. Sho saw with real gratitude and ad miration that the marquis, perceiving that his guest did not understand readily, spoke more slowly aud dis tlnctiy than usual, and sometimes re peated. After breakfast they all went wander iii.sr through the large, shady rooms. Mrs. Willis fastened herself upon the new-comer, and confided to him the story of Marga-'et s approaching mar riage. " Whom is she to marry?" he asked, "Why, the marquis, of course Haven't you heard ?" " Is she?" he asked, dryly. The marauis stood beside Margaret. " You ha e known this gentleman all your life?" he asked, gently, but at once. " Oh, yes." She was beginning to feel the painful embarrassment of a woman who is obliged to refuse a man whom she admires, and who fears that she should have refused him more promptly. To be sure, she had ex pressly stipulated that her consenting to spend a week at his villa should not be taken as an encouragement of his suit; still, she was now sorry for having come. " His wife is in Home with him?" the marquis pursued, watching his com panion's cast face. " Mr. Norton is not married," she re plied. There was a moment of silence ; then he exclaimed : " How long am I to wait for your answer, signorina? If you did not know before, you must know now,' emphasizing the last word nnd glancing to where John, imprisoned in a distant corner by Mrs. Willis, waa yet watching their conversation. " 1 can answer you now, marquis," she said. "And I wish that I had done so before. 1-orgiveme " 'Enough!" he said, passionately. Then, making an effort, added with gen tle coldness, "I would spare you the pain of an explanation." " xou do spare me a pain," sue said, with tin almost pleading look in her face. " I esteem you so highly, and I should like to please you if 1 could." " You will please me in consulting your own Happiness," he said, with a proud smile. lie's got his quietus," thought John Norton, "and he takes it rather finely. I ought not to stay here any longer. I am going back to Rome now," he said somewhat abruptly to Mrs. Willis. "Good-by; I suppose I shall see vou there some time or other?" She ignored the good-by, and fol lowed him as he went toward Mar garet. ' The marquis, seeing his movement, recollected an engagement. "Please ask your friend to stay to dinner," he said, hastily. " I shall return in an hour." And he left the room. " When and where am I to see you again, Margaretr" John asked, con scious of Mrs. W ulis' angry face at his elbow; "I am going to the station now." " I'll walk down across the green with you," she said, "and we can talk i over." "But, Margaret, it is too hot to go out now," her aunt interposed, sharply. " It doesn't look well to go out at noon; no one does." "This is one oi the exceptions," the niece replied. She led him out through the flower garden, by tho path she had taken but an hour before, and, going, tola mm the storv of the pennyroyal. " I knew you couldn't do it. Pansy," he said, with a tremor in his voice. " 1 heaip in America that you were going to marry an Italian, and I started in twenty-four hours afterward. Yet I never really believed it. though I knew that your aunt would be teasing you." " You were much too sure ol me then," she replied, pathetically. " I am awfullj wicked, John, and I was becoming am bilious to shine ib society." "Why shouldn't you like to shine in society?" he asked, smiling in her beau tiful face. 'Oh. but you great honest eoosel you do not know what that sometimes implies," she replied, quite seriously. " When there is a crowd of handsome, brilliant women trying to do the same tbirg. it sometimes means all sorts of petty tricks and spites." John became serious and looked down. He had heard of such things. " And it isn't impossible that I might have accepted the marauis if it had not been for you and the pennyroyal." John's face flushed, and he looked at her sternly. "How could you accept him when you had never refused me, and knew that 1 was waiting and hop ing for you?" hedemanded. " Because you had no right to wait and hope," she replied, tranquilly. You ought to have come and taken me. I like men who cut the Gordian knot." ' Better late ths.n never." said John Norton, with the quiet, strong breath of one who has escaped a danger. " I've come for you now, and I intend to take you back with ma not later than the first of .November; we can be married in October. I'm going to name the day myself. It shall be on the seventh day of October; that will give you nearly two months to reconcile Mrs. Willis." Margaret laughed. " But you do not know now you will lie taken in if you marry me, she said. ' I have become a dreadful woman. John, don't be too much horrified, but I beat my maid!" " nonsense! ' " 1 really do. I have struck her once with the hair brush, and countless times with my hand." "Poh! your hand Wuuldn t hurt a fly." he said, and took for an instant the soft hand and gave it a little squeeze to try its ouality." " It almost makes a blister," she per sisted; "Agnesina cried. I'm a fury when I m angry." He looked at her seriously, and saw that she was serious. " It is high time that you should go home and have some one to take care of you," he said. " I'm sure that you have been tormented till you are nervous. In future don't beat any one but me, Pansy. It isn't nice you know for a servant to see her mis tress in a passion. I could understand, but she would not." That way was the way he always ex cused her when he saw that she regretted a fault. They walked silently along the golden road till they came to the great gate. That was shut, but a little one opened. and the gentleman passed through, shut it, and leaned a moment on the rail that separated them. "I can not give you anything like this," he said, rather sadly, glancing back at the viiin. ' Yon aie aaoritirfng a great deal to me, dear." "his all beautiful, but such things do not make one's happiness," she re plied. "In a very little while it be comes an old story. Only nature keeps one perpetually delighted." " 1 know what will keep me perpetu ally delighted," said the gentleman. " It hasn't begun to be an oid story to me, though ever since you offered yourself to mi? " " Why, John !" she exclaimed, indij? nantly, drawing back. " Ever since you offered yourself to me that day when I took you out of the brook," lie went on, " I have been por ingoverit. Good-by, dear; it is time to go. I shall see you in three days." She looked dreamil v after him. "Now I could obey John, on ly I wi 11 never tell him so,"" she mused. " But I could never obey the marquis. The only place that suits him is at my feet, going through heroics. But John" She smiled and blushed a little. She didn't say where John's place was. Lippin coil's Magazine. Experience With an Earth quake. W. A. Gorrill, ot the Pacific bridge company, San Francisco, had the good fortune to be in the port of San Salvador, Central America, so badly shaken up by the recent earthquake. Mr. Gorrill had just lighted a cigarette and was sitting without the door of nn adobe house when the first terrific shock came. He picked himself up from the ground to ask what such proceedings might mean, but instantly another shock answered the half-expressed conun drum. Mr. Gorrill then kept quiet and held on to a tree, which trembled from root to the topmost branch for many minutes. He thought the thing couldn't last long, for old mother earth, at the rate she was going on, must soon crack her ribs . And mumbling over after old King Leah : " And thou, all stinking thunder, Stiike flat the thick rotundity o' tho world; Crack nature's moulds, all germins spill at once," Mr. Gorrill waited for a cessation, lie waited a long time, however, as the shocks were continuous in the imme diate locality where he happened to bo "the Valley of the Hammock," so named because it is always swinging for two nights and one dav. The two villages between which he was did not save a hut, and 2,000 persons found themselves homeless. The earth cracked in many places ana loaming water spurted out of the ground. The huts tumbled all one way, as if mown down by an immense si kle, sulphur impreg nating the whole air. Death In the Coal Mines. The report of inspectors of anthracite coal mines in the Schuylkill region re lating to casualities in tho mines is a ghastly list. In 1878 the killed num bered eighty-seven and the injured 247. Jn 1H7U there were lid Killed and 337 injured. Of the fatal accidents, twelve deaths were caused by explosions of fire-damp, seven by blasts and other explosions of powder, fifty-five by fall ing coal, slate and rock; twenty-two by cars and mine wagons, and seventeen in miscellaneous ways, i lie ways in which some men meet death are strange indeed. Patrick Casey was caught by a rush of coal in a shute and carried with it to a point where a plank caught him by the neck and choked him to death. Griffith Watkins, a boy, left his place in the breaker and went to get a drink of water. As he was passing the boiler-house a ranaway cur crushed through the side, struck him and killed him. Charles Dreshman, a miner, aged twenty-two, who was engaged shovel ing at tho mouth of a shute, was found lying dead, with one leg down tho bhute aud a small quantity of loose earth lying on him. No iudications of what killed him could be found, but it was sup posed that hie foot slipped into the hole. I and he imagining that lie was about to (all to the "bottom, was literally fright- I ened to death. TIMELY TOPICS. An Ohio paper of a statistical bent publishes the following item descriptive of an incident which might well have taken place even if it did not: There was so much spitting of tobacco juice at his lecture in Hamilton, Ohio, that Pro fessor Proctor took notice of it and made a mathematical calculation in regard to it. " Let us suppose," continued Pro fessor Proctor, " that the moisture ex truded in this unpleasing way in Ohio in the course of a year would, if uni formly distributed, correspond to the addition of a film of moisture, no thicker than a postal card over the entire State. Then if there are but 200 postal cards to the inch there would in 1,000.000 years be formed a sea about 110 yards deep over the entire State. And as in the course of my lecture I had occasion to speak ot the earth's future during 2,500, 000,000 years, it would seem to follow (dreadful thought!) that the sea would rise over Ohio nnd neighboring States of equal salivary potentiality to a height of nearly 200 miles I Noah s flood was nothing to this." When General Grant had completed his trio through Florida, lie gave the New York Tribune's correspondent his conclusions as to the future of that State. " I think," he said, " that i londa has a bright prospect. Her productions will be a monopoly : and besides her oranges, pineepples and semi-tropical fruits and vegetables, she will in time produce the sugarfor the consumption of the entire country. Then she grows the finest long-staple cotton, the best of tobacco for cigars, and her timber is of immense value. Then, when the swamp land is cleared of the timber, there will remain the choicest kind of a rice country. The soil, while apparently barren, is suited to the climate, and there are extensive beds of material for fertilization that will not only supply the needs of the land, but will be an article of export." An English impostor of the gentler sex lias been unmasked at Chelmsford, ntter being petted and fed by the benevo lent since 1851, under the impression that she was so ill of paralysis that she could not leave her bed without help. During all this time she had subsisted on the charity of the townsfolk, and fre quently the prayers of the church have been reauested in her behalf. But all this time, too, when no one was looking on, or likely to enter her dwelling, the "paralytic" woman could deftly leap out of bed, dress herself swiftly, cook a substantial meal and eat it with a relish At last, after a quarter of a century of deceDtion. she has been found out, Some prying neighbors invaded her nnvriey at times when laey were not expected, nnd foMnd her not, only out, cf bed and dressed but malting a hearty meal. The work of the Bible revision com mittee, so far as concerns the New Testa ment is now substantially ended, and the revised text will probably be form ally and finally published during the coming summer. .No more apt occasion could be selected, for the present year is the fifth centenary of the publication of Wyeliffe's translation ol the mble, printed in 1380. The work has been go ing on simultaneously in England and this cou.itry. The appearance of the new version will be one of the summer's sensations. A change that will strike the ordinary reader is the arrangement by paragraphs, according to sense, in stead of tho chapter and verso plan of the King James translators. Work cn the Old Testament will hardly be com pleted before 1883. " Sec me buy his soul for two cenls,' was the remark of a workman at Spring- held, Mass., about a man for whom he had worked, who was esteemed a gener ous public giver, and had come into the shop to get seme work done, ihc man laid a two-cent piece on the counter nnd turned away. The visitor soon saw the coin, and, after hastily looking about the room to see that no one was looking, picked up the money and put it in his pocket. When he came to pay for his repairs lie was charged twenty-seven cents. As hi had generallj paid but twenty-five cents for the same work he inquired what the extra two cents were for, and, after some urging, he was gent ly informed that it was to pay for the two cents lie had picked up. He seemed all at once to have important business at home. Killed lu a tyninasiiHii. Alfred P. Goodell, aged twenty-five, in business with his father as a dentist in New York, was suddenly killed in Wood's gymnasium in that city. He was sitting on a horizontal bar not a trapeze, but a wooden rod held by up right posts at a height of live feet ten inches. He had been practicing in the gymnasium nearly two hours, and but a few minutes previous'y had been exer cising on the bar with the customary revolutions, hich are among the sun plest movements, and not at all danger ous. He was in the act of conversation with some friends, young pupils, with whom he was talking about the methods of performing the different feats. Sud denly ho fell back, and instead of hold ing on the bar by his knee joints, as is customary, he fell oft and struck on the mattress beneath. It was but a slight fall, and one that is often experienced without injury, but young Goodell un fortunately struck on his head so that the whole weight of his body doubled his chin upon his breast and broke his rek. John Wood, the proprietor of the gynmasium, stood beside him when he fell, and thought he was only stunned by the full, as frequently happens, and that he would recover in a few moments. But young Goodell was soon found to be speechless, and respiration was bus pended. Restoratives and stimulants were at once applied, artificial respira tion was attempted and physicians sen ior. A doctor arrived in a tew min ute), and at once pronounced the injury fatal, and within twenty minutes the unfortunate young man died. Word was sent to his father, who arrived promptly, not knowing the sinuus na ture of the injury. As Dr. Goodell ioined tho throng of athletes and others who had congregated, he supposed his son was only temporarily unconscious, and asked, "IIow long will it be before he will recover?" Some bystander, who did not know Dr. Goodell, said, " He won't recover at all; he is dead." Dr. Goodell, who is himself in delicate health, almost fainted at the dreadful shock of this unexpected bereavement. The coroner gave his permission for the body to be removed to Dr. Goodell's house. PARI, GARDES AND HOUSEHOLD. irtlllzlnsj Bones for Manures, Professor E. W. Hilgard. of the Cali fornia agricultural college, says: The simplest, "way in which a farmer who pays attention to Mini lunaainemai requisite, the manure pile, can obtain the full benefit of a moderate quantity of bones is to mix them in a hot ferment ing manure, provided the pile is kept in proper condition oi moisture. j.ne smaller and softer bones are thus re duced to a very efficient state ot com minution within a few weeks; the larger and harder ones may be but partly softened, and will in that case mostly be loft behind by the manure fork when the manure is hauled out. to bo sub jected to the process a second time. The success of this convenient process de pends materially, of course, upon a proper management of the manure pile, which must neither be kept sodden with water nor nllowed to fire-fang. Large quantities ot bones are very conveniently treated when wood ashes are abundant, by packing them in ashes (which may advantageously have been previously mixed witn about a gaiion of slacked lime per barrel) either in barrels, hogsheads or, best of all, in iron tanks, and keeping the mass as wet as mnv he without leaching. In the course of from six to eight weeks most of the bones will bo found reduced to some thing much more-like putty; and this mass with the ashes makes a very effica cious phosphate fertilizer. The vice of the process is that mucn oi me Done gelatine is thus lost in the shape of am monia gas; but the bone phosphate is left in a very active lorni. In mv personal experience I have come to the conclusion that where the home preparation of the bones in either of the modes described can be done in spare time (that is, without employing additional help for the purpose oi look ing after the matter), it is very profitable to do so; whereas, if special help has to be employed, or the manure piles or ash tank3 are neglected lor want oi iime.y attention, it does not pay. . j ..F t t !i. as reearas me manuring oi lruiii vices in naiticular. not the worst mode of utilizing bones is to simply bury them iu the m-ound around the trees, wnicu gradually but surely embrace them with their rootlets and consume them com pletely. The near tree through which the bones of Roger Williaais fed his de scendants is a case in point, but it does not take n couple of hundred years under any ordinary circumstances to acconio ish the result. A tree thus ma- nured will be sure to get all the phos phates it wants -for its well being. Iteclpes. White Furir Cake. One cupful of butter, two cups white sugar, three cups Hour, one-half cup sweet milk, one tea sooontul cre;im of tartar, one-half tca- snoonful soda, whites of three eggs, one pound of raisins, and one-quarter of a pound citron, cuoppca. Poi Cobn Balls. These are easily made. To one gallon of pop corn take half a pint of molasses or sugar; put into a skillet nnd let ifc boil up once, and then pour it over the corn; grease your hands with sweet butter, and make the whole into balls of su.:h size as you please. Ldy FiNiiKiis. Fourouiices of suifar, yolks i t four eggs, mix well four ounces of flour, mix again ; if too thick ndd an other whole cge, a half teaspoon of flavoring. Beat whites to a froth and stir in. Squeeze through tt funnel niiide of writiug paper into pans lined with buttered paper. Tiic3e are used for Charlotte russo. Meat Pie. Take cold roast beef or roast meat of any kind, slice it thin, cut it lather small, lay it, wet with gravy, and sufficiently peppered and salted, in a meat pie dish. If liked, a small onion may be chopped fine and sprinkled over it. Over tho meat pour a couple of stewed tomatoes, a little more pepper, and a thick layer of mashed potatoes. Bake slowly in a moderate oven till the top is a light brown. Wmi'PEiJ Cue a m . Take one pint of very thick cream, sweeten it with very fine sugar and orange flower water; boil it. Beat the whites of ten eggs with a little crenni, strain it, and when the cream is upon the boil pour in the eggs. stirring it well till it comes to a thick curd; then take it up and strain it again through a hair sieve. Beat it well with a spoon till it is cold, then place it in a dish in which you wish to serve it. layliK lieu. Hens reuuire some care and attention. No class of animals is so susceptible to the lll-eflccts ot crowding as chickens. Hens will not lay when too much crowded, nor will they remain healthy long if too many are kept together. The hen house should be kepUueun and neat The tloor should be swept every day and be dusted over with dry earth, ashes, short straw, or litter of any kind. Tho house should have suitable roosts. Where eggs are made a specialty, only pullets should be kept for the purpose, and the earlier they ure natcned tno oet ter. Egg production is harder work for hens than many suppose. An egg Is composed of albuminous matters an'i oils or hit, together with norm, phos phorus, sulphur, iron, etc., iu small but appreciable quantities. In an eggthero is the material lor oones, iiesn. oioou, brain, nerves, feathers and all the organ of life. Any one can see, then, that egg production is lien exhaustive. Notonly this, but 1 ho lill is composed almost exclusively of carbonate of lime. Well, the hen food mut contain the materials from which she secretes tho egg. Corn may contain the elementary substance, but a hen cannot eat enough corn to afford the materials for an egg a day. In fact, there is a necessity for a variety of food. Grass, cabbage or honed vege tables of any kind should be given hens, They also require slaked lime and gravel. Hens arc good eaters, and should nst be scantilv fed In winter. They should have as much as they want to eat, and as often as they want it. They should beiupplied with 'inimul food in somo lomi ollal liieut, raca uuga, scraps', etc. Hens should be regularly cared for. They should have a rensonablo share ol attention. They should be fur nished with suitable accommodations. Too many should not he kept together. As great a variety of foo.i as possible should he furnished, and they should ke quiet. Water is as important for hens as food and should uc Kept ciean ami frehh. Sneaking of difficulties, the Modern Argo ays that a wasp or a well-organ ized hornet is the only chap on record that can lack out ol a serious difficulty at his own sweet will. Life. 8hort days flying, swift yeart rolling Downward toward eternity; Ere we understand our longings Oft the open grave we see. Cares and wishes crowd together, Changing ever in the breast; With the morning coraos the knowedge, Joy fulfilled can take no rest. Schemes ot life nnd plans for Hying Fancy bids us ever try, But their sweet fulfillment oarer Brings us that for which we sigh. Young, we fancy pleasure deathless, A f ar-s'.retohing wonder-land j Soon it laden, and sorrow lollows ; On the desert waste we stand. Yes, from out the brightest morning Oil we harvest bitter pain, Joys soon past, or lightly gathered Lite so fruitless and so rain! All ! what weary hours of longing Ost occasion briags the mind ! IIow the wounded soul may languish, Never balm or heeling And ! Then when, evening closes on thee, Weep not as thine hours depart ; Only peace and holy stillness (iather close within thine heart. Then, the woes ot life forgetting, From its stain and guilt set tree, Will thy last aud lowly pillow I,:kc the tendor rose leal be. Harptr't ll crkly. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Out of season An empty pepper box. Buffaloes are growing scarce at the West. There arc 34.034,000 hogs in the United States. Pork packing ranks as the third American industry. The onlv law in Alaska is the United States revenue law. Barcelona, according to Olive Logan, is the New York of Spain. The American half dime of 1803 is deemed a bargain of $100. A tov maker of Montrose, Pa., uses 600,000 leet of basswood every year. Tilton's son Carroll is preparing for the ministry. He lives with his mother. Arizona contains 73,000,000 acres of land, 5,000,000 of which are surveyed. The negro physicians of Tennessee have orgunizecf a Siate medical associa tion. London Truth says that in the last ten ytars there have been?t,352 strikes in England. The British national debt lacks a little of being twice as large as that of the United States. The total losses by fire in Vermont during the four years ending January 1, 1880, were $3,001,100. Jefferson Davis expects to gather about 1.000 bales of cotton from his plantation in Mississippi this year. Edison has a salary of $15 (K)0 a year from the company he serves, besides royalty from all sorts of patents. If we could see others as wo see our selves, there would be more good-look ing people in the world. I'icayuHf.. To neutralize the sting ol a gnat or mosquito, rub the part aneeiea wun a little cerumen, that is, the wax of the ear. Alex. II. Stephens weighed only seventy-one pounds at the end oi inn war. At prcseni ne weigus nwu-.j-three. Sam Ward agrees in the opinion ol Ude that cookery in England is superior to that ot any otuer country in uu- world. "Ecarlate" is the name of a new re color derived from coal. It is prophe sied that cochineal has had its day and that the new color will take its place. St. Louis girls ought to lind content ment in the fact that they can hold more pins in their mouths at one time thnn any other girls can. Boston l'unt. Eight hundred and forty-three rail road accidents occurred in the United States during the year ending Septem ber 30, 1870. by which persons were killed and 732 hurt. A SEAl.F.U I'KOrOSAI.. " What are ' sealed proposals,' Tom?" Archly asked a bright-eyed miss, Whose mouth upturned, like a roso-bml sweet, Seeinod asking for a kHF. " Why, Fanny dear, 1 11 illusirate; Tis plain as a, b, c, Give mo your hand you have my heart And now 'lis euled you eeT , MiddUlnwn Trar-cript. Saved by a Spaniel. William Prince of Orange on the morning of the twelfth of September, l.ri7d. was saved from assassination nt the hands of his enemies by the action of a little do.'. The Spanish army under the command ot Alva, invading int Netherlands, and the nrruy of patriots under the command of the prince, were encamped near the city of Mons. The plan was formed lor tne surprise oi uic patriots and thecaptureor assas-itiAtion of William, and for this purpose a band of six hundred disguised men were placed under the command of Julian ko mero. The historian of the " liise of the Dutch Republic," narrates that near the hour of two o'tlock in the morning, "the boldest, led by Julian in person, made at once for the princo"j tent. Jin guards and himself were in prolound sleep, but a small spaniel, who always passed the night upon his bed, was a more faithful sentinel. The creature sprang forward, barking furiously at the sound of hostile footsteps, and scratch ing his master's face with his paws. There was but just time for the prince to mount a horse which was ready saddled and to effect his escape through the darkness before his enemies sprang into the tent. Ilis servants were cut down, his master of the horse and two of his secretaries, who gained their saddles a moment later, all lost their lives and but for the little dog s watchfulness. Wil liam of Orange, upon whose shoulders the whole weight of his country's for tunes depended, would have been led within a week to an ignominious death. To his dying day, the prince ever after ward kept a spunie! of t he same race in the bed chamber." This event occurred but a short lime after the Paris wed ding, and u short time after the St. Bartholomew tragedy. The historian and moral philosopher can more appro priately discuss the influence wbi'th the watchfulness of the little spanM had upon the destinies of the world.