Wear 7 vc ifiili HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher- NILi DESPERANDDM. Two Dollars oar Annum. VOL. X. RIDGKWAY,, ELK COUNTY, FA., THURSDAY, AFEIL 1, 1880. - NO. 6. 91 Si r Buried Gems. How many genu ol thought beneath The dust ol toil lie buried; How many o'er the bridge ol sighs To silent tombs are carried, And never Bee the light ol day Tho' tliLir'a is matchless beauty; For hands that hold the richest gifts, Must closest cling to duly. llow mnny hands ne'er dare to pluck From lile (he wayside flowers; How many loet mutt bleed and ache In tMs bright world ot ours; VVhilo others sing the gayest songs, And pluck the brightest roses; For thorn the opening of each hour, Some new lound ioy discloses. How mnny sweet songs well to lips That may not pause to sing them ; And sweet bells chime in many a heart, Hut there's no ono to ring them, (iod pity such whose round ad years Are rilled with enre and trials, Whose daily lile is constantly Mn Jo up ol sell-denials. For those who toil in faith and hope There must be rest at last ; For those who weep there must be joy, When all these tears are past. And there'll bo gems for those who bear Aloft tho cross ol duty Whore tho unlettered tongue shall sing 'Mid love, nnd joy, and beauty. Mrs. M. J. Smith. QUIET RUTH. She wns very quiet, ray friend Ruth Earle. Repose was in every line of her graceful form nnd every feature of her pretty face. The soft waving hair, brown in the shadow and decked with pale golden gleams when the shone upon it; the solemn blue eyes, the straight brow all very quiet to in tensity. She never blushed, or trem bled, or. went into ecstacies of admira tion or fear or fun ; her smile rose on her face and lit it. as the full moon does the sky on a still summer night, and every tone of her voice was low and musical, ome called her cold, but I, who knew her so well, would have laughed at them. In one sentence she could embody the sentiments another girl would have spent an hour in delin eating. In one glrnce she could reveal a temnest of joy or love or scorn; but the glances were rare nnd words rarer; but "Ruth's heart was usually a sealed casket to all about her. A quiet interest and sympathy in others' weal and woe, a peauelul sort of happiness only those were on the surface, and the torrent of c ii tion roiled on silently beneath. Why, of all the men on earth, Ruth should have given her heart to my cousin, Chnrley Cauiph?ll, I could not guess. How he lieryand emotional to a degree, acting on impulse altogether, loving everything that dashed and glit tered and made a noise, adoring martial ruuie and passionate poetry, and always smitten by talkative, black-haired, waltzing, coquetting belles ever tell in love with quiet Ruth Earle, was still a stranger problem. When one fine Au gust evening he bounced into our par lor, where I was sitting alone, and in formed me, without parley or preface, that ha was engaged to Ruth, I, in my astonishment, exclaimed: "I should as soon have imagined a mad bull engaged to a ring-dove!" and was very sorry afterward, it was such a foolish, singu lar speech. Still, it did describe my feelings exactly. Every one wondered. Young girls "wondered what he could see in such a 3uiet girl;" young gentlemen "won ered how she could like such a wild scapegrace." But when, at last, she came to me one day, with b th hands in mine, and said: "Mary, you do not know how dear he is tome he is my life," I wondered no longer, for I knew that Ruth had given him one of those irresistible, unconscious glances of hers, and shot him through the heart. I think they were very happy all that bright autumn, and wnen the winter came the quiet contentment of Ruth's face deepened, and every evening he was at her side, reading-, or singing or talk ing to her in soft, loving whispers. Was she taming down my wild cousin? Could mortal woman do such a seem ingly impossible thing? Were all the wild oats sown all the scrapesoverP It seemed so. The careless boy was maturing into the high-brea man, passionate and lnipul sivc still, but with higher aims and higher principles. The winter rolled away, the bright spring came, and when the fragrant apple blossoms were upon the trees Ruth told me that the day was fixed for her bridal, and we rode out together one morning to purchase satin and lace and muslin for the bride's attire. Go'ng Jiome logetner witn tue parcels stowed away in the bottom of the vehicle, we met Cousin (JharJey, his cheeks aglow and his eves dancin r with suppressed merriment. lie waved his hand to us and we paused. "Take me in won't youP" lie said, pleadingly. "I have been to call upon you, and of course found you not at Home. You have a seat for me, know." I signified my approval, and he jumped in and seated himself beside Kuth. "The Petral carae in to-day," he said, as we drove along. " Did you he r the funs? She is a fiue vessel, just from ndia, with a set of the yellowest na- sengers you ever saw. Liver complaint is as common among them as among French geese, and pepper is the chief article ol their diet, buch tempers as they have, too! It would puzzle Ruth herself to keen auiet among tliem." " How do vou know so much about them?" I inquired. "Oh, I've been to breakfast with one of their number." replied Charley ; " an old nabob who is as rich as he is ugly, and who has the handsomest wife , By the way, an old schoolmate of yours, Mary." "Who is she?" I asked. He replied by another question : " Do you remember Kate Glvnn?" m "Kate GiynuP Yes. Is she tho na nob b wileP" " Of course she is. I met her coming on me Doat this morninar. She knew me at once. We had a desperate flirta tion long ago. She is one of the mad cap girls I used to like before I met my snov, bird here, and mv face remained in her memory. She introduced me to h r biitband. and he invited me to breakfast. J revenged myself for the spices which burned my tongue by burning the old fellow's heart with jeaf- ousy, and talking mysteriously of old times. Ho did not invite me to tall again; but she did, and I am going." " Charles Campbell, I am ashamed of you," I said " Oh, it's all nonsense, Mary," said Charley. " Here is my safeguard," and his arm stoie nbout Ruth's shoulder so decidedly that I was obliged to change places with him immediately on ac count of the publicity of the street. Throughout that ride he seemed to overflow with merriment. He imitated the old man's manner, his conversation and his frown ; told extravagant stories of the lady's smiles and attentions, and made us laugh by a description of the saucer eyes of the nabob's black serv ant who waited behind his chair. Ruth smiled placidly upon him all the while, and seemed perfectly contented with his account of the flirtation. "What shall I do when you elope with the nabob's ladyP" she said, as we alighted. "Follow me and shoot me througli the head with a revolver," answered Chaney. " It would be easier to elope myself with the nabob," returned Ruth, quietly. "You would not be worth shooting." "Well spoke, Ruth," laughed her lover. " You would never break your heart over me, snowbird." And, some how, a sort of dissatisfied tone was in his voice as ho uttered the words at least, I imagined there was, but it was gone before lie had handi d us out of the carriage. We we re working on the bridal outfit slowly. Day by day the dainty gar ments grew beneath our fingers. We sat together in a quiet little room, look ing greenward, which Ruth called her own. The window opened inward, and a red rosebush without fluttered its leaves and fragrance in vpon us. Soft lace was looped about it and about the bed. The floor wns covered with white matting. There was a great "sleepy hollow " of a chair in one corner, nnd a marble stand against the wall. Over the mantel hung the picture of a sleep ing child. It was a quiet room, just fit for quiet Ruth, and as she sat in the solt shadow of the fine branches, sending the needle in nnd out of the snowy muslin and humming a low, plaintive tune, I used to think that I never saw any one eo beautiful. Charley ea.iie every evening, and as I watched the two sauntering arm-in-arm by the river side, or sitting by the piano singing together or listening to each other, I used to please myself with fan cying the happy married life which lay before them. And still the wedding day drew nearer, and the orange flowers winch were to deck Ruth's hair were budding in the conservatory. Chariey's old uncle, a wealthy bache lor, who had adopted him in his boy hood, was often with us. He seemed "to take an almost fatherly pride in Ruth's gentle beauty and purity. And I know of a rich trousseau which was in prepa ration for the coming day. How peace- miiy nappy we nil were! i nave olten wondered since that there were no oiuen3 in the sky, no whispers in the air, no black clous anywhere, to warn us of the coming storm. I stood on the veranda one night look ing at tue moon. Charley had bidden dieu to Rulh, nnd was going away own the path. At the gate he paused for me. Wrapping my shawl about me I went down and stood beside him. Xever in my life had I seen sorrow seated beside Charley Campbell, but she was with in m now. His eyes were heavy, his cheeks flushed, his head bowed upon his bosom. I looked at mm m terror without the power ol uttering a word. He spoke first. " Mary." he said, " do vou believe that Ruth loves me?" As her life," I answered. " I am sure of it." He shook h's head. "I am not." said he. " When a woman loves she blushes and trembles; she can never wear so cold and placid a lace, so unperturbed a mien; she is quickly jealous quickly moved to tears. The passionate love of warm-hearted woman passes all things. Mary, I do not believe that Ruth ever loved me, or will ever love any one." "Have you had a quarrel?" I asked, breathlessly. "A quarrel? Xo! I wish we had. A quarrel would show some feeling to bo touched. Ruth is a beautiful, lovable creature, too good for a wild fellow like me; but a man might ns well worship a marble statue. She is freezing. She chills me." You are speaking blusnhemv!" I gasped. "Buth is an ange l." "Well, no matter. I'm a fool, perhaps. Good-bye, Mary. Whether Ruth loves me or not, 1 have loved her. I suppose that should content me.11 He was gone anions the shrubherv. and I went back to Rulh with a deadly norror at my neart. w nen he came again lie was the same as before, aud seemed to have forgotten the conversa tion utterly. I had not called on the nabob s lady. nor she on me. We never suited each other. But I caught a glance of her carriage otten, and three times had 1 seen Charley s face looking out of the window as it rolled by. And, at last, a faint breath of scandal reached my ears, and I heard the name of that bold. handsome woman mingled with Charley Campbell's in a way I did not like. Ruth heard nothing of it, however, and the wedding day was close at hand. It came at ast. the guests were there. Music and flower perfume filled the house. In her own room Ruth Karle, dressed in her floating robes and veil, waited for the bridegroom's com ing. 1 heard, as 1 sat by the window, the quick roll ol a furiously-driven car riage. It paused at the gate. Some one leaped out, and rushed along the path and up the stairs, The door was dashed wildly open and Charley's uncle stood among us. lie held a written papet in his hand, and bis eyes started from his head with passion. " He is gone!" he shouted "Gone with that wicked woman. He has dared to write and tell me so. I have disin heiite him, and I curse him with every curse that can light on man. May be I eg his bread from door to door! May oh, God!" The wild voice broke, and he fell with blood starting from his lips, full length upon the floor. When we raised him he was dead. In the letter clutched by his uncle's stiffened fingers we read the words: " When you read this I shall be far away. I fly to-night with the only woman who ever loved me. For me the has left home and honor, aa I have for her. Tell Ruth poor Rutb ! whom I have used to ill that I ntver deceived her. I loved her truly, but her cold love froze out mv affection, pure, as I knew it was ; while this erring, passion ate heart with which I flv is mine en tirely. She will soon be happy with an other I know happier than I shall ever be a-.d wi'l forget, ere long, that there ever breathed one so unwortny ot ner thoughts as I. Charles Campbell." There were screams and tears and ter ror in the house : but there, upon the iui in tuc ijuioc, uuv Micic, uuun buo floor, set Ruth, pale and motionless, her bride's veil dabbled in the dead man's blood, and her eyes closed as though she wished never to open tnem. People said she bore it bravely, when they saw her, in a littlo while, quietly and busy as before. When the wi 11 was opened, and it was found that Charley Campbell had been disinherited, and all the property was left to Ruth, they spoke of it as an act of justice, and thought that all was over; but I, and I only, knew of the canker worm eating at the young heart night and day. Six months passed by, and we heard nothingof the false lover. We never spoke of him to Ruth, or among our selves, and all the love I ever felt for him had turned to scorn. At last one day a letter reached me. It was postmarked C , and was from a comparative stranger, who had writ- en to me as Charley's only relative, UUI what a tale was recorded in those lines. I can only give the substance. The two had fled to Europe at first j thence, when dread ot pursuit was over. they had returned to this country. 1 hen tor the first time tney had heard of the loss of Charley's fortune, and poverty seemed staring them fully in the face. Their debts accumulated, and the change in circumstances brought chance ot affection. Ihey quarreled madly, each reproaching the other, and the white hand of the woman was often raised against the man she once pro fessed to love. Sin-branded, beggared. poor Charley Campbell paid the penalty of his crime, and worse was yet to come. They were in a carriage one day, driving toward a dwelling place, for debt had turned them from the old one. They were quarreling in suppressed voices, and looking hot hate into each other's eyes, when a sight arose before them that struck them dumb with hor ror. There, m the middle of the road. stood the woman's injured husband. with a pistol in his hand, aiming straight at them. Whether he meant to fire at her was never kn.-wn; but the ball en tered her heart, and she fell forward with a scream. The explosion of the pistol frightened the horse ; he became unmanageable, and dashed forward down a hill, crushing the driver be neath the wheels, and stamping on nnd mangling him. " We think him dying now, ' the writer continued. " liis ight arm has been amputated, and he prostraied by pain and loss of blood. He has need if the friends whom- he ias so much ouended; yill you forgive liin and come to him?" The letter fell from my trembling fingers. Ruth had stolen to my side un seen, and had read it also. Down at my feet she knelt, and buried her face in my lap as might a grieving child. Neither of us shed a tear, but we sat thus for an lour in utter silence. At last she spoke. ' I have a favor to ask, Marv. Promise me that you vill grant it." "Anything, darling, 1 replied. " Let me go with ycu,"she murmured. Let us nurse him it he is suQ'ering. nnd be with him to the last if he should die. He was almost my husband once my dear. Oil, take me with you!" "Do you remember how he has wronged you, Rulh? ' I asked. Mary," she answered, rising to her feet. " do not misunderstand me. I would not let him know of my presence: l no not seek to nnng myseii to his remembrance. I will go with you as a maid or nurse ; a coarse dress, a servant's c:ip, nnd the curtained Jightof a sick room will ueep me irom his Knowledge, It lie recovers he shall never know that I have been near him. I only seek to see him once again, and do him what little good I can. for I loved him dearly." Who could withstand hcrP We were oft" next morning by the first conveyance. Ruth already wearing the servant's dress. and hidden further still beneath a close bonnet and veil. I had thought that nothing could have softened my heart to Charley Campbell, but I was mistaken when I saw him lying before me. scarred and maimed, the shadow of his handsome self. Mv tears fell fast, and I gave him my hand as in the old times, when I trusted in his honor and virtue. He was thankful for my presence, nnd whispered a faint word ot welcome, but Detore night Jell lie was delirious, and knew no one about him Oh, the long days that followed! I shall never forget them. And through all Ruth never left his pillow. When all the rest shrank from the wild ravings and the upraised arm o delirium, she never wavered ; no tol , no vigil did she spare; and when, at last,. he lay quiet and weak upon his pillow, her hand brought the invigorating draught and lifted up the weary, helpless hand. And this was the heart he had deemed cold! One day we sat together, Ruth and I, beside the window, ana Charley seemed to sleep. Suddenly he stirred and called to me. I bent over him in an instant. " Mary," he said, " I have something to say to you something which lies very heavily at my heart. If I should die without uttering it, my soul would never rest. Mary, you remember when I left Ruth, x ou know how I felt then. I believed her cold. I thought that in the hot passion of the woman I fled with I had found true love. I must have been mad, I think, for oh, how bitterly I have rued that belief. Mary, when vou see Ruth Ear.e tell her this, and tell her, too, that long, long since I have discovered that she was my only love that in throwing away her pure womanly afl'ction I lost the richest iewel iii my life." The words were uttered sottly, but Ruth's ear had caught them she stood in the shadow, where he could not see her. ana listened. "Through all my fever I have thought of her," he went on, "and at times I have thought she stood beside me. Then I would strive to ask her forgiveness, but the sweet vision always faded, and a strange nurse wa- there instead. Mary. do you think that Ruth hates me? She should, for 1 deserve it." Oh! the mute appeal of those clasped hands and streaming eyes on the other side oi the couch. I knew their mean ing, and I answered as they bade me " No. Charley. I know that Ruth has lorgiven you." "Forgive me I vet: lor she is an an eel Dut never, never can she love me aeain never shall the link my own hand has broken be reunited. A mutilated beg gar, scarred in face and heart, even were the past blotted out, she never could be mine. on. Ruth I my injured, pntient. loving Ruth, I would give all the world beside to hold you for one moment to my breast to press your soft lips to mine but once again." She had stolen from the shadows shn crept toward the bed ; she outstretched doiu arms toward him. as a mother might seek to clasp once more her lost child; and still something held her iiiiiu , uiiu BLiu auuieiuing nem ner back from the bosom where she longed to nestle. Again he spoke, and this time be ut tered her name "Ruth, Ruth, Ruth!" Dut not tears were in his eyes, and they broke the spell which keDt her from him. The coarse cap lay on the ground, tue kviucu linn iuii uvei iiei wuibt? lore- head in heavy elittering masses, and with a low. tremulous crv she cast her arms about him, pillowed his thin cheek on her bosom, and gave back to Charlev Campbell the quiet heart he had so well deserved to love forever. He has it still, and it is very dear to him, so dear that I believe no words would tell its value. Since the hour when the words were spoken which united them forever, each has trusted in the other to the uttermost, and there are no happier people in the whole length and breadth of the land than Charley and his " Quiet Rutb." A Wasp of Brains. Ever since I was a little bov I have frequently noticed that th9 nests of mud wasps when broken in upon, would shell out a lot of dissected spiders and other like insects in smaller proportion. I had always supposed that even so formidable an insect as a wasp would hardly want anything to do with a good, full-grown spider, for I knew enough of the combativeness of the latter to presume that he would not meekly submit to the sacrifice ol his progeny to satisfy the appetite of a wasp. But one day I saw a little de monstration which made the whole thing very clear to me. You know of the careful manner in which the spider builds and incloses the nest in which his young are brought fortli and reared ? Well, I was observing one ot these nests one morning, when 1 saw a mud wasp come buzzing along and alight within an inch or two ot it, on the side op posite the opening. After all was quiet he proceeded with his little game of strategy. Creeping noiselessly around toward the opening or entrance to the nest, he stopped a little short of it, and for a moment remained perfectly quiet. Then reacHing out one of his antennas, he wriggled it before the opening and withdrew it. This overture had the desired effect, for the boss of the nest, as large as one ordinarily sees, came out to see what was wrong and to set it to rishts. No sooner had the spider emerged to that point when he was at the worst disadvantage than the wasp. with a movement quicker than a wink, swung The rear portion of his body around and thrust his sting through the body of his foe, killing him easily and almost instantly. The ex periment was repeated on the part ot the wasp, and when there was no re sponse from the inside ho became satis- lied, probably, that he heid the fort. At all events, he proceeded to enter the nest and slaughter the young spiders, which were afterward lugged off one at a time. You see this accounts fully for the spider linings which we always see in the nests of mud wasps, and makes it all as clear as if that particular wasp had told me beiorehand just what he proposed by his strategy to p.ceomplish Now it is just such demonstrations as this which must convince us ot the in telligence of the lower animals, differ ing onlv in degree nnd development from the intelligence of man. Of course, much of this goes beyond my comprehension, but 1 understand more about it now than ever before, for I have taken pleasure in observing and studying not only the habits of fish, but ot many other creatures interior to man, which are popularly supposed to be gov ernrd in their actions by instinet.- Seth Qre.cn,, in the Rnc.hcji'cr Democrat. A Brave Indian Scout. There has been received at General Sheridan's headquarters a communica tion frtm Colonel E. B. Beaumont, ma jor in the Fourth cavalry, dated Fort Reno, Indian Territory, asking that a pension or some other suitable reward be given to an Arapahoe Indian scout bv the name of " Ch ilk." who displayed distinguished gallantry in a fight which the troops had in Indian territory in 1878. with the recalcitrant Northern Cheyennes, led by Dull Knife, Little Wolf and Hog, then on their flight through Kansas. Lieutenant D. N. Mc Donald, ot the t oun u cavalry, whose re port of the affair is enclosed, says that when the command started in pursuit there were some fifteen scouts with the expedition, but after traveling some twenty miles or so, nnd tearing ambus cade, they commenced " feeling sick," and one after another dropped out of sight and returned- to the agency, with the exception oi two, " Chalk " and Sitting Bear." These two Indians be haved splendidly, and were excellent scouts and trailers. On the morning of September 13, 17B, these Indians, who were in advance, discovered the hostile Cheyennes in position awaiting the com mand, and it soon became evident that in point of numbers they were greatly superior to the pursuing troops, -who were soon surrounded. A small knoll in rear of the position occupied by the troops which was held by a squad oi one sergeant and three men, was vigor ously attacked by a party of Indians. J. he sergeant ana his sou ad were in dan ger of being overpowered.when "Chalk," borrowing a revolver from the white scout who accompanied the command, and jumping upon one ot the cavalry horses, made a desperate charge into the midst of the hostiles. creating such a diversion as enabled re-enforcements to reach the beleaguered party, and the enemy was repulsed and driven back. In this charge " Chalk " received a danger ous wound in a very tender part of the body. The next day, as the command were away from water and beleaguered, it became necessary to make a retreat. and to do this the command had to cut its way through the lines of the hostiles. " Chalk." who was being carried on a litter, seeing the dangerous position of the soldiers, torn the men who were carrying him to " go and tight," and get ting off the litter, managed by crawling upon his back to keep up with the re treating soldiers until camp was reached. The result w that he is a cripple lor me General Pope commanding the depart ment of the Missouri, in forwarding the report, earnestly recommends favorable action in the case of this faithful and deserving Indian. THE SALVATION ARMY. IU OrlRln-Ita Method of Work-What It Has none. Persons who have had access to the English journals during the past two or three years, have been frequently struck with the graphic descriptions given of the doings and progress of a queer religious organization known as the "Salvation Army." Now that a detachment of the army has come into our midst, with ways and methods ot work so sharply in contrast with our own modes of evangelical work, and as they are likely to bo an object of in creasing interest for at least some time to come, it may not be amiss to give the readers of the Evening Mail a brief his tory of the origin of this singular organ ization, with some account of what it bat i a ready done, and w JJJtpP; ui uo in counecuuii nu iib visit iu mm country. J lie lounder ot the organization ana the present head of it, or generalissimo, is Rev. William Booth, an ex-Wesleyan Methodist clergyman, of London, Eng land. He is a man of rare tenderness and sensibility of heart, and was deeply moved for the degraded and criminal classes which crowd some parts of the city, and whom it seemed impossible to reach through any of the ordinary methods of the church. So deep was his interest in these wretched classes, and such his de termination to do something for their salvation, that lie requested the confer ence to make this a special work, and assign him to the charge of it. This, however, the conference declined to do, and assigned him instead to a country charge. With his whole soul absorbed with this one idea the result may be easily anticipated. He withdrew from the conference, and, alone and unaided, took up the work upon which his heart was set. He went nmong the lowest slums, he visited freely the vilest dens, and to the most wretched and degraded refuse of humanity so steeped in vice and crime that all semblance of hu manity seemed to have faded out of them lie freely offered the salvation of Christ to all who would accept it. Ihe vile, the criminal, the besotted in sin and wretched, the refuse of the alleys and dens heard with astonishment, lor the first time in their miserable lives, words of sympathy and kindness. They could hardly trust their ears as this new lan guage leu upon them, iney crowaea around him by hundreds and thousands, and followed him wherever he went. Nor was it the " bread of life" alone that he gave them; like the Divine Master who, nearly nineteen hundred ears ago, went about doing good to the bodies and souls of men, so he dispensed also, when it was needed, the bread that perisnein. The result was that in a short time hun dreds were converted. It now became the great question how to secure these converts and utilize them in the further advancement of his great work. It would be of no use to bring into operation tho ordinary church machinery in their case. It would not hold them a single day. ihey were a " peculiar people," had led peculiar li ves.and had peculiar modes of thought. Their lives had been different from the lives of other men and women. Their very modes of life had made them sen sational and prone to tne extravagant, the startling and the out-of-the-way, and so it was necessary in their case that some extraordinary nnd novel method should be devised to enlist and hoidtheru. It is easy to see how to a mind and temperament like that of Mr Booth, who, in the course of his work had many a hard fight wUhthearchad versarv. and whose mind was lull of the militant figures of the Scriptures, the idea of a military organization, or a fighting Christian army should suggest itself; and so gradually the organiza tion grew into the Salvation Army with its battalions, detachments, it- processions and banners and music, its captains and companies, its orders and proclamations, nnd all the attractive et ceteras so calculated by their very novelty to draw the attention of those to whom all ordinary attractions had become blase. The success of Dr. Booth's organization is evidenced by the fact that the Salvation Army now con sists of 125 corps and stations with 179 olhcers wholly employed in its labor, while privates are numbered by tens of thousands. Its headquarters are in the east of Ijondon, in White-, ehapel street, consisting of a largo building containing a large hall for pub lie meetings and smaller halls for busi ness purposes connected with the work. Latterly the organization has rapidly extended over all the principal cities and larger towns of England, Ireland and Scotland, and it has the hearty support of many wealthy and influential perso. s both in and out of the church, who freely advance the funds necessary for the prosecution of the work. It is claimed that through the lajors of the Salvation Army the character of the whole population of South Wales has been changed for the better, that the charge sheets of police courts have been greatly reduced, the liquor trallic almost suspended, and whole counties roused to spiritual concern. The same good re sults have been claimed for it in the principal towns of Great Britain in which it has operated, and. it must bo confessed, with a considerable degree of truth. At any rate, th re is one great lesson being taught the church, and Christian philanthropists generally, in the rise and success of the Salvation Army, and that is, if the lower classes are ever reclaimed and brought to Christ, it must be by going down to them with the gospel, lhe angel must step down into the pool before the waters can be troubled. And another truth taught is, thit even the lowest and vilest can thus be reached : that they thirst for human sympathy, long for something better, and are ready eagerly to accept it when honestly offered and in the right way. New York Ecening Moil. Of the 577 British peers. 478 have seats in the house of lords. 431 bv per sonal right and 44 by election, 10 by the Jeers ot bcotiand and wi by the peers ol reland ; while the 143 peerages of which tho holders are uot legislators at present are distributed among the peeresses and peers ot Scotland and Ireland. The agricultural department estimates the increase in the value of the crops raised in the United States in 1879 over those of the previous year at $413,000, 000. The price of real estate has been enhanced during the same time about 9 1,000,000,000. If your lamp is heavy a bit of long, narrow oaoer will make alamo llahter. Marauion lnaepcnaent. TIMELY TOPICS. The enormous sums received by popu lar actors are thus stated : E. A. Sothern gets evjry year $150,000 as Lord Dun dreary, and John C. Owens plays thirty weeks annually for $90,000; Joe Jeffer son plays forty weeks as Rip Van Winkle and earns $120,000, and Margie Mitchell earns from $30,000 to $50,000. Dion Boucicault has just finished a season as "Shaughran," etc., at $3,000 a week, and his managers scold him in the pub lic prints because he would not play longer at the same price. Miss x- i 1 Aiennnn nnH IUIISOII IllltKrs uvci ip a jcu,i, while Fanny Davenport earns $1,000 a week every week she plays. The Countess Panine. lady-in-waiting 1 , I . n TMnw.r.M a( Dunn!. lina liflnn !! qneBtedtorwIim and to travel abroad. lu nf ,.,,.; f,.n en A some times received guests of whose character she was not fully aware. Among them was a young student, who, warned mat the police were about to search his rooms, fled to her house with his papers, and, being pursued to her room, hid the papers under her pillow. The police discovered them and arrested him. That the Nihilists, however, have mends in high quarters is shown, not only by the cipher document found on Deutsch, killed in the secret pres ntiair, out Dy letters found on a Russian doctor and refugee at Paris, who either threw him self or was thrown into the Seine. These documents were sewn in his trousers 1 ning and were handed over to the Russian embassy, who forwarded t . em to the St. Petersburg detectives. Mr. A J. Severance, of San Fran cisco, says that the diamond ctnii nas plaved a very important part in devel oping the mineral wealth of tho West. The first great treasure house which these drills opened up was that known as the Consolidated Virginia and the California Honanzas.which have yielded $107,000,000, ot which the stockholders have received S4.000,0(K) in dividends, One of the owners of the mines told Mr, Severance that the diamond drill had realized for him $5,000,000. All of the princii al Comstock mines, and many of the largest mining properties located in California nnd .Nevada, use these drills, They are also extensively used in Col' orado ; have pushed their way to most of the Territories; have been introduced and opf.rated in New Mexico, old Mex ico and Australia, lhe Japanese gov ernment hare also been supplied with them. A case of what may be called dual existence lias been discovered by tho Louisville Courier-Journal in the little town of Millersburg, Ky. A pretty girl about hlteen years old, who had some trouble with her spine, is the interesting object. When she is awake she acts like a sedate and modest maiden; out when she is in one of her bomnambu- lstie trivels she is a wild, romping, forward hoyden. In the former state her nerves are suner-sensitive. and even to touch her is to give her pain. In the alter stale her nerves are entirely cat lous. Naturally, she likes to read seii ous literature; abnormally sue wants nothing but Mother Gooses melodies. She writes with her right hand in the ore case and with her left in the other, That her eyes are entirely closed during tho somnambulistic Ircaks is vouched lor by several physicians, and that hers is really not another case ot hysterica deception is atlirmed by Dr. Eads, who has attended her since her chi.dhood She. ot course, does not, or pretends not, to remember what sue did in her abnorma I condition, and when told she will not believe it. Then and Now. Owing partly to the improvement in tools ami shop appliances, and partly to the system of subdivision of labor, there is no parallel by which the workingman of to-day can bo gauged or compared with the workmen of thirty orforty years ago. Then the apprentice was taught crudely, perhaps, but still taught all tho mysteries ot his ea ling, irom the preparation ot the crude material to the llniMi ot the completed result, lhe rnrpenter heweu his timber from the tree trunk or limb by means of chalk line nnd broadax. He bored, nnd mor tised, and cut tenons, trected tho frame of the building, boarded and shingled, and clap boarded and lathed, lhe black smith shod horses nnd oxen, tired wheels, made bolts and nuts, chipped and filed end drilled, forged and tem pered axes and chisels, and performed numberless jobs of a variety of forms and tor a variety ot purposes, lhe ma chinist sometimes made his, own pat terns and often his own tools, worked at the vise and the plainer, the lathe and the forge, and was ready to undertake iny job. from repairing a broken stove to building an engine. The Boston Journal of Commerce re members when the above practice was universal. JNow timber is sawed and not hewed; mortises and tenons are machine cut ; houses are built by the shinglcrs, the lathers, and the joiners, as well as by the carpenters ; and the doors, windows, window and door frames and sashes are factory built. The horseshoer does nothing else. The forger of steel seldom works in iron. The tool maker is nothing but a tool maker. The machinist is a bench man, a lathe man, a planer, a fitter, or he has a specinity in cotton machinery or woolen, or never works but on steam machinery. Beavers Coasting. One of mv friends in Iowa sends word that when ner brother now a general in the United States army was a boy, he was very fond of hunting, and a great favorite with the grown-up hunters. One of these took him on a bright moon light night in winter to see a strange Bight. The pair crept through the cold, clear air to the home of some beavers. At the dam which the beavers had built, the moon was reflected from the ice with a great glare, and. in this light, the look erf-on saw the beavers have a splendid game of coasting down a long slide, from the top of the dam to the ice covered stream below. The old beavers gave the young ones rides on their broad, flat tails; all Blid down as gravely as judges, an ' then climbed up to have another They kept it up until one ol the watch ers sneezed At Ibis, the beaver senti nels sounded the alarm, and then all was still excepting that the lookers-on went away laughing heartily at what: they bad teeB.&. Nicholas. There's a Gain for Every Loss. For every wound there is a balm, For every loss a gain, And waning tumult ends in calm, While rest is born ot pain. Those souls who highest pleasure teel, Sink olt in doepest woe, While grief, which eye nor lip reveal, Preys on the heart below. To those who mourn, a day of joy Begins when life shall end, And bliss, which has no base alloy, With brighter hopes shall blond. But not on earth surcease is given To sorrow, suffering, sin; And pertect peace this side of heaven Thou canst not hope to win. Lilla JV. Vuthman, in Merlden Recorder 1TXS OF INTEREST. A paper "mill "The fight between publishers and manufacturers. The main support of many a newly- started paper is a long purse. After a while it is the publisher's face that is long. The young man who wants to get up with tne sun must not sit up too late with the daughter. . Time is money, and money is always an object in a newspaper office. Long winded bores should stick a pin jusf " here. Rochester Democrat. - . One of the youngest compositors in . the country works in the otlice of the Lisle (N. Y.) Gleaner The youthful type-setter is not yet five years old. "Pr.per bricks" are spoken of as a Western article. We have 'cm here fellows that pay their subscription in ad vance. Boston Commercial Bulletin. . There is some difference Jjetween "cheek" and " brass." Cheek asks for . anything any time without the sign of a blush, urass coa.es up ana takes it without asking. Beads are again in demand as orna ments, bhouid the summer prove extra warm, beads of perspiration will be all thego when pedestrians map theirfore heads. New York News. A paper in Caldwell, Ohio, runs its Campbell press with the gearing of a' threshing machine, the power being fur nished by a horse. Its contemporaries call it a one-horse concern. A Tennessee farmer who owns a good deal of property within five miles of a railway has never seen a locomotive. And he has no idea what a steamboat is. He is eighty years old, nnd he is intelli- en.t- loung ladies who wish to have small mouths are advised to repeat this at fre quent intervals during the day : " Fanny tinch tried hvo floundering frogs for Francis Fowler's father." Andrew. Queen. Poland has fifty-four newspapers and reviews, ot which fifty are published at Warsaw. There are ten daily newspapers printed in the capital, but the number of subscribers to those does not amount to more than 50,000. " Mtiny a gem of purest ray serene Tho dark, unlathomed caves ol ocran bear" Many a harassed editor, I ween, At times will rave and utanip nnd tear his hair. .Monthly Union. "Good morning, Mr. Mercha-t, how are garden seeds this year?'' "Oh, ihey are higher; coming up every day "That's good; those I bought of you last year didn't more than half come up." Marathon Independent. Colonel Ingersoll says he doesn't sec " how it is possible for a man to die worth $5,008,000 or $10,000,000 in a city full of want." . Nor do ve. Editors should club together nnd resolve not to die worth $5,000,000 or $10,000,000. We would rather not die at all than to leave this world worth that much money. Norrinlown Herald. There is a man in our town, and he is wonelrotis wise; whenever he writes the printer man he dotttth all his i's. loiedo Cmnmereml. And when lie s dot ted all of them, with great sanglroid and ease, he punctuates each paragraph, and crosses all his t's. Meriden Recorder. Upon ono side alone he writes, and never rolls his lea'es; and from the men of ink a smile, and mark " insert " receives. Cincinnati Commercial. Flat-Bout Life on the Ohio. During the past winter there were from thirty to fifty families, comprising about one hundred persons, residing in what are known ns " family botits, at Cincinnati. These dwellings are flat boats, which, ha ring served their orig -nal design as freight-carriers, or, may hap, trading boats, have been purchased a a low price, and after being cevcred in have become the homes of a people; occasionally they are floating still, but g nerally they are t be found where the high water has left them, here and there on the river bank. A touramong these unique residences develops much that is interesting. A family boat, st its best, is by no means a comlortless d welling. At its best it is high and dry, shored up." so as to bo level, as a tight roof, and is divided into two roomf, lighted by half-windows. Of course it is warm, lor tho shore is strewn with drip. wood ; and to be the possessor of a good axe is a guarantee of comfort from a good tire. But a good boat is not the rule, and tho heavy rains, or a freshet in t he ri ver, finds them but poor substitutes for homes. There is scarcely a family without a. least three children. They are alt from either rr.rts. Several are from far up the river, one or two Irom west Virginia, a number t orn Kentucky, while several have chosen this mode ot living because it i3 economical, " no rent to pay." and in summe-r time far preferable to back rooirs in tenement houses. Sometimes a family in Pennsylvania, intending to emigrate, will purchase a boat, place in it their household goods, and start down the river. Whatever their original destination, they may " beach " the boat and stay from six months to three years at fnvac point Between rutsourg ami Louisville. Asa rule, the boats are merelv placed of residence. Occasionally a boat de-l voted to the bone business touches tin Hhmv When this is the case, it is us tiallv accompanied bv a second eralt for ihe me of thefamifv- a home amen tho bones picked up along the shores o tho river not being considered lavoiaoi ri digestion. In all these clusters of family boaU thu-ois the "Sunday-school boat " n wti i! i sermons are preached and relig ious instruction imparted on l;io S iU bath, under the auspices of some uUkiui at the placs oi woauoa. I 1