HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIIj DESPEH ANDTJM. - " f "a Dollar, per Annum. - 1 VJt ' ' VOL. X. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA.yTHUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1880. NO. 10. " 11 . . . . . , i I, , i . M - ' .i ... . . i - 1 11 I ' -V. Work in the Time Now. The world is strong with a mighty hope Of a good time yet to be, And earelully cn9ts the horoioopa Ol her future destiny; And poet and prophet, and priest and sage, Are watching with anxious eyes, To see the light of that promised age On the waiting world arise. Oh, weary and long seems that time to some Who under lite's burdenj bow, For while they wait tor that time to oome They torget tis a good time now. Tes, a good lime now for we eannot say What the morrow will bring to view ; But we're always sure oi the time to-day, And the course we must pursue; And no better time is ever sought By a brave heart under the Bun Than the present hour, with its noblest thought, And the duties to be done; Tis enough ior tbe earliest soul to see There is work to be done, and how, For he knows that the good time yet to he Depends on the good time now. There is never a broken link in the chain, And never a careless fltw, For cause and effect, and loss and gain, Are troo to a changele3s law. Now is the time to sow the seed For the harvest ot future years; Now is the time lor a noble deed, While the need ot the work appears. You must earn the bread of your liberty By the toil and sweat ol your brow, And hasten the good time yet to be By improving the good time now. 'l is as bright a sun that shines to-day As will shine in the coming time; And truth has as weighty a word to say Through her, oracles sublime. There are voices In earth, and air ai d aky, That tell - the go xl time here, And visions that come to faith's clear eye, The weary in heait to cheer. The glorious fruit on lile's goodly tree xs ripening on every uough, And the wise ill spirit rejoice to see The light ol the good time now. Then up ! nor wait ior the promised hour, For the good time now is the Jest, And the soul that uses its gilt of power Shall be in tbe present blest. Whatever the luttire limy have in store, Willi a will there is ever a way ; And none need burden the soul with more Than the duties ot to-day. Then up ! with a spirit brave and tree, And put the h m J to the plow, Nor wait lor I lie good time yet to be. Bat ft oik iu he good lime now. Kate's Leap-Year Party. "No place for me!" muttered Dr. Elwell. " In a barren, plodding ex istence like mine there is no room for even a glimpse of eucb. gay butterfly lift as this." The young man stood in a corner with folded arms and forbidding aspect, making himselt unnecessarily miser able. Unnecessarily, because he ought, with his good looks, good health and youth, to have been able to cast aside the tares of his daily life, and take whatever of pleasureor happiness came in his way. To bo sure, he had some excuse for thinking that he was singled out to be different ironi ot.ier men, and that his twenty-five years sliou d carry the wisdom and soberness of fifty; for " he was the only Bon ot his mother, and she was a widow." Morover, that mother had been left poor and with threw little gir s to bring up and educate the eldest of litem many years the junior f their brother whom they idol ized. Yes, William Elwell was a hero to four loving hearts that watched his self-made carter as he worked himsell through college, teaching and doing all kinds of work that he could get to do in one term, in order that he might spend the next in his beloved study, through vacation and holidays bending efforts toward earning a little lor those who loved him, working with eager baste and desperate energy, the sooner to grasp the knowledge he sought and nnish the course. He had finished at last with honors; but honors are empty and unremunerative. lie had found a country village where marvel to relate ! there were not already more physi cians than patients, had established himself there in the plainest manner which wouid possibly answer for a newly-fledged M. D., and waited. And ail through the self-denial and hardship, through the uncertainty and waiting, he baa carried a light heart, a sunny temper and a fi m trust in Provi dence. At last his waiting mother and sisters had received a jubilant letter; he had a patient, Suture Burleigh, the wealthiest man in H . The old physician was away on a professional visit to the country. Squire Burleigh was attacked with a soveie cold which aggravated his chronic bronchitis, he, "Dr. Elwell," was called, was lucky, gave ttie old gentleman the advantage of tsome ol his advanced views, and, thank heaven! he had placed himself under treatment" and taken the young doctor up in a wonderful friendly style. And just at this point, when his for tune seemed to be made, immediately alter his rejoicing and triumphant letter to the dear ones at home, he had sud denly becon e morose and sullen, his letters were gloomy and misanthropic and his views ol life cynical and bitter. How to account lor this change was a mystery. His loving mother feared that her boy was ill; but this he stoutly de nied; and tiuly, his firm, elastio step, clear eye and ruddy complexion gave no indications ol jaundice or dyspepsia. As for ne r atuu iintances, perhaps they set the doctor down as rattier too stern for so young a man; but they were obliged to wait fur further developments to find the key to his behavior, and we will do the same, taking occasion to observe tbe dift'eient personages at this brilliant gatnenng in bquire Burleigh s parlors, while Dr. Elweil chews the cud ol bitter meditation in his corner. The squire, a genial gentiemau of fifty, was . making himself agreeable to young and old for this was a "liiniily party " unu uis uaugiu r, uie brown-eyed and golden-haired Miss Edith, distributed tier tin iles and attentions with charming impartiality, drawing together those ot similar tattts, finding partners lor less attractive gins, making bashful youths lot 1 at noma, exuuauging spanning sal with gun tit-men of a witty turn, aad singing an old-fashioned song, to the great delight of a group ot old ladies and gentlemen who Jointly and severally claimed her as their special property. Only one person held aloof from all the warmth and brightness, and even he relaxed a little as the squire drew him for a few moments into conversa tion, listening to his remarks with such deference, in spite of the difference in their years, that the young man was nattered and elated. But for a short time, however; the squire culd not stop long with one, and as he moved away the solitary malcontent muttered : "All very well; he's a kind-hearted man and means well when he brings me here; but she takes care to show me that I am out of place. Ah I she is goiTig to condescend i" savagely, as Miss Burleigh approached and said, with a scarcely concealed hesitation which was not noticeable in her manner toward others : "We are discussing a question of vital Importance, Doctor Elwell, and we want your opinion." The doctor, of course, banishing his ill-humor, and offering his arm to his youthful hostess with a low bow, ac companied her across the room to where a merry half dozen or so of young people were holding a laughing dispute. 'We are considering the propriety of the gentlemen entirely withdrawing from the field, and in view of the fact that leap-year comes so seldom, giving the ladies the exclusive privilege of making a choice. What do you think, doctor P" asked Kate Ormsby, a bright brunette, as her black eyes flashed, with the. spirit of coquetry which was as natural as her breath, intensified by the somewhat disapproving glance of a blonde gentleman opposite. Doctor Elwell, not at all averse to making some one else suffer a tithe of the pangs which rent his own spirit, with a sudden intuitive recognition of the fact that he might avenge himself on the said unoffending gentleman, re plied, with animation and empressment : "I quite agree with you. Miss Ormsby ; during this year the right of selection and proposal belongs to the ladies alone, and any gentleman who is so daring as to infringe upon right should be made to pay a forfeit, consist ing of nothing less than a love of a bon net or a Pai isian fan." "Oh! and that reminds me," cried Kate, " you know it is an old custom, handed down from our forefather's time, and as a relic of antiquity, to be solemnly respected and rigidly enforced, that any gentleman who has the hardihood to refuse, must pay a foifcit of nothing less than a silk dress." "A provision which destroys all the romance," said Edith. " Rather hard on some poor fellow who couldn't raise a silk dress," re marked Mr. Wheelsr, the blonde, who, by the way, was a very well-to-do dry goodsjmerchantof proverbially generous habits.- Dr Elwell first turned faint at the thought of the silk dress, then called himself a fool and coxcomb, and finally flushed crimson at Mr. Wheeler's re mark, which he considered a direct af front. "As if any one cor-Id not buy a silk dress!" exclaimed Kate, indignantly, " but then you must know, sir, that no lady will propose to a gentleman until sne knows his state of mind. "That is what we men think with re gard to asking a lady the momentous question; but we generally find our selves completely in the dark as to their feelings for us ." "Ah! but you gentlemen displar your feelings more than ladies do," said saucy Kate. "There! they are form ing a quadrille in the next room. Let me see; have I a partner lor this dance? n no, I have not," and Dr. Elwell im mediately begged the honor, and pro ceeded to the spacious apartment which was devoted to the service of Terpsich ore, with the little brunette on his arm. My. Wheeler pulled his blonde mustache in vexation, and for a few moments seemed to have changed places with the disciple of Galen. " What a charming man Dr. Elwell is," remarked Kate Ormsby, who was to remain a day or two with Edith, as the girls were talking ever the events of the evening in the latter's chamber before retiring. Edith colored a little and bent to unbutton her boots as she answered : " Do you find him so? You seemed to get on very well with him, though he is so grave I have hardly known how to approach him. He is wrapped up in his profession, I suppose. Papa thinks his throat has greatly improved since he began his treatment." Edith did not see the laugh Kate stilUed at this measured speech, and the latter went on gleefully : 14 " Yes, I find him very interesting, but not entirely free from the weaknesses that mortal man befall. How con ceited these men are! 1 declare, lam dying to take them down a little, and the first of April is near at band." The dreary month of March was en livened bynumerous attractive evening entertainments, one of the chief of which was a candy party at the farmhouse of Kate's father, to which the young ladies escorted the young gentlemen of their choice, in sleighs and buggies, as the weather permitted, making rare sport of the reversed order of things. To all of these was Dr Elwell invited, and to all he promptly went, notwith standing the fact that he frequently stated to hie inner consciousness that he was the roost incomprehensible idiot in existence, and that the special festivity which was on the tapis at that particu lar time should be the last tantalizing gaiety to count him as its victim. For cne most aggravating fact re mainedalthough young ladies in and out of the village for miles around showed him honor, for which he should have been grateful, though bright eyes sparkled and dimpled cheeks glowed the more at his approach spite of the fact which continually haunted him that he was only a young physician, struggling for a place in life one damsel, for whose smiles he watched with an eager longing which noreison could subdue, remained utterly indifferent to all ap pearances, treating him with a calm civility that was maddening. Perhaps no one but nate knew what existed be. neath the calm exterior, and if she sus pected, no one was the wiser. . " It shall be the last positively the very last. To-morrow I will write to mother and girls how I have neglected them! and I will throw aside this foil v. and endeavor to keep my mind upon my duties moie thau it has been of late."" A virtuous resolution, truly I and, if virtue brings its own reward Dr. Jtlwell ought to have felt content j but the mel ancholy smile which crossed his coun tenance rather belied his efforts as he gave a last survey of his neat, but not altogether stylish toilet, sighed over the last letter from home, which he put carefully away, and then, unfolding a dainty note, re-read the conditions of the invitation, in the graceful chirog raphy of Kate Ormsby : NECK-TIE PARTf. Under auspices of the T. L. L. T. Club, at Tbe Residence of Squire Burleigh, No. 59 Main Street. April 1. 1876, eight o'clock, P. at. Gentlemen will enter immediately upon the opening ol the doors, and eaoh will select, as his partner ior the evening, the lady who wears ribbons corresponding to the color of the neck-tie accompanying this invitation, wnich he is to wear. The two who shall be last in performing this duty, are, as a torieit lor their tardiness, to be responsible ior tbe evening's entertainment, instituting games, danoes, etc., and in all respects taking the part oi Master of Ceremonies and Floor Man ager. Sqnire Burleigh, Umpire. Elderly ladies and gentlemen, chnneronea, etc, per order ot thecommitte. K'ateObmsbt, Secretary. Dr. Elwell repaired to the apartment of Mr. Wheeler, where the.other young men were assembled, among them two, who, having come down from the city on business a few days before, were duly lionized by one-half ol the youth of the community. Those worthies glancing over the simple little sheet which had cost more anxiety and study, then the? imagined, smiled indulgently at the transparent crudity of the whole affair, and then one of them remarked : "Now, see here, boys, the young la dies are putting up a job on us, don't you see? Why not circumvent them, and turn their little game upon them selves?" " But how ?" quei ied one or two, while the others listened eagerly. "Simply by changing neckties," said the first speaker. " You perceive that with the inherent love of harmony that belongs to the sex an questionable veneration for the eternal fitness of things, as it were the fair ones have sent me a brilliant flame-color, or cardi nal, I believe they call it, in deference to my ' somewhat strikingly brunette style of beauty, if I may be allowed the expression, whereas my friend Jackson here, with his florid complexion and vivid locks, which emphatically pro claim his Hibernian descent, so to speak " " Here, now, Smy the, none of that," cried Mr. Jackson, who had probably been twitted of his fair skin and auburn hair before. " Don't interrupt, Tommy. As 1 was about to say, my friend Jackson is hon ored with a lovely pale-blue, 'just too sweet for any use!' Now suppose, for instance, that we trade; no, no, that would shock ine senses too severely flame-coior necktie and cardinal hair. coflee-colored skin and pale-blue. Dread ful, shocking," and the gentleman shud dered with affected horror." " The others came to his rescue, how ever, witu timeiy suggestions, and a satisfactory arrangement was soon ef fected. So it came about that Mr. Wheeler was adorned with the cardinal tie, which really set off the fairness of his hair and skin pretty well. Dr. Elwell assumed the pale-b.uo, which made him look rawer darker than usual : the citv gentleman donned the violet and crim son which had been intended for them respectively, and the others made an equally suitable exchange lor pink, green, blue, black, white and variegated. au reaayr- asKed Mr. Wheeler. " time's up." "(jet your colors bv heart. bov3." said Mr. Smythe. Tbe moment arrived. The gentlemen, in the back Darlor. await in ir the rmen- ing of the double doors, which separated them from the young ladies in the front room. "Remember vour colors, bovs." whis pered Mr. Smythe, as if determined to coniuse the rest. " Shut up." was the elegant reioinder 01 Air. jacuson, in equally husky tones. " Already !" cried the genial Squire Burleigh, and the doors flew open. ihere was a grand rush, a second or two or suspense, much laughter, and, in the midst of it. Dr. Elwell felt his brain whirl and his senses forsake him. as his eye rested upon Miss Burleigh, in the loveliest of creamv silks, with sashes, bows, streamers and trimmings ad libitum, of pale blue. He managed to collect himself sufficiently to take his place by ner side, leeiing, as he did so. that he was one of the unlucky last ones, but, as he looked up, he caught sight of Messrs. Jackson and Smythe standing in the middle of the room. looking about with something less than their usual complaisance for the divini ties with the violet and crimson deco rations. The truth dawned slowly. Merry Kate, in a coquettish black dress, cov ered with cardinal bows, had a certain surprise of her own to meditate over, and so had all the ladies, therefore it was Itjlt to the gentlemen to crv " Anrtl Fool!" which tney did, all at once, as tbe tact burst upon them that there were two more of their number than in that of the- ladies, and that the exquisites t 1. , . i. 1 . J 1 IV iruui me uieiruuvua 11 au urouKUi uoon themselves the forlorn predicament of being minus partners lor the evening. These latter gentlemen were, however. equal to the emergency, and never in the history ol it., had a party gone off with so much merriment and good feeling. As for Dr. Elwell, his spirits rose till no trace remained of the surly tempe r in which he had of late indulged. In'fthe light of Edith's sunny smile he forgot his discomforts, and, at the end of a delightful waltz, he drew her toward the conservatory in a very happy irame of mind. As they went they heard subdued voices, .nd presently met Mr. Wheeler and Miss Ormsby, the former with an expression of beatitude upon his counte nance, and the latter sparkling and Hushed with haDDiness. while a tear. drop glistened in her silky black lashes "We have missed sou lrom the rooms dear, where have you been what have you been doing f " questioned iGitn, ana Kate replied : " Oh, I've been in the conservatory here, taking advantage of leap-year. Go thou and do likewise." With which saucy suggestion the little spirit danced awav. leaving her escort to follow. Now Kate's taking advantage of leap- vear. was simulv sneinfr poor Mr, Wheeler to renew the offer he Lad made at least a dozen times before, and giving a more satisfactory answer than had re warded Ins pie vlous trials, mat was a very different matter from making ad Vance toward a man whom one had only known fof about three months, and who bad held himself aloof from even friendly intimacy. It was Inconsider ate in Kate unkind, so Edith told her se'f, as she bent over n rose bush, with burning cheeks and brimming eyes. At the sight of her distress, what could Dr. Elwell do but to forget that he was poor and she an heiress. What could he say but that he loved her, and loved her ever since their first meeting, that his hopeless passion had destroyed his peace ot mind, that the future would be a blank to him without the sunshine of her presence, and "Oh, Miss Burleigh Edith give me one spark of hope, one ray to enlighten my darkness, and I will strive to become more worthy of the precious boon, to win a name, that," etc. There is no need, of course, to recount just what he said, nor what she said. nor what tne good squire said the next morning, when the doctor, with a sink ing heart, told him of the base ingrati tude of which he bad been guilty to so kind a patron and a friend. Enough that, at the double wedding. six months later, Messrs. Jackson and Smythe came down from the city to act as groomsmen, greatly distinguishing themselves in that capacity, to the secret admiration o' Dr. Emeu's pretty sis ters ; that this gentleman is progressing finely and is on the best of terms witu his friend Wheeler, and that Squire Bur leigh, entirely cured of his bronchitis, divides quite impartially his grand- fatherlv attentions between Kates black-eyed boy, and little golden-haired Edith Elwell. TIMELY TOPICS The sun's radiation is not without its influence on the comfort of the occupants cf a house, and the influence may be very differently felt, according to the ex-. posure ot houses, in a building nu affected by any shade, a scientist recently made a series 01 experiments to deter mine the relative amount of the sun's heat daily entering the different sides. He obtained the surprising result that more heat enters a building through; the east and west wai.s ti'an tnrougn the walls facing directly south, although the south side is exposed to the direct action of the sun s rays nearly twice as long as either of the others. A considerably greater quantity of heat is received by the east than by the west side. Two new kinds of tea having very pe culiar qualities have been discovered by Mr. E. C. Baber, while exploring the region west of Kiating-fu, China. One of the varieties was rare and appears to have been grown only bv some monks of the monastries on Mount Omi. ' An infusion of it tasted like strong congou to which brown sugar had been added liberally; but its sweetness was a nat ural property. The other tea grew spontaneously at heights of moie than 6,000 feet above the level of the sea. It is a leafy shrub with a stem about four inches thick, and it attains a height of fifteen leet. In making an infusion every part of the plant except the root is em Dioved. xne beverage produced is a strongly colored but weak tea, having a natural milky or ratuer buttery uavor. Fiflv vears ago Commodore Patter son, commander ol the naval lorces ol the United States in Louisiana, led an exDedition against Jean Lafitte. the chief of Barataria Island, attacked the 500 men found there, and captured the seven small vessels which were drawn up in miniature battle array. It has been thought in New Orleans that La- hlte was a lreenooter and pirate, and mauv sensational stories.of his adven tures have been published. The Pica yune has discovered among the dusty records of the United States dis. trict court an account of the libel pro ceediugs brought bv Daniel T. Patter son and George T. Ross, the commanders of the naval and military torccs ot the United States, containing evidence that Latitte made bis captures under the Oar thngenian flag, and was in communica tion with Carthagenia. A startling surprise, after the fashion of the storv ol Uinevra. was expert enced not long ago by a party of Styrian wood cutters in the forest of Drom mling. They began to fell a venerable oak, which they soon discovered to be quite hollow, iseing halt decayed it speedily came to the ground with crash, disclosing a skeleton in excellent preservation, .bven the boots, which came above the knee, were almost per feet. By its side was a powder horn, a porcelain pipe-bowl, and a silver watch on which was engraved the name, " 11. von Krackowitz, 1812." The teeth were perfect. It would seem to be the skeleton of a man between thirty and forty years of age. It is conjectured that, while engaged in hunting, he climbed the tree for some purpose, and slip ied incautiously into the hollow trunk, from which there was no release, and ne probably oiea 01 starvation. Suits at law ere brought nowadays tor every reason, and no reason, especially in some 01 the new states, whose in. habitants are oiten of a very litigious disposition. Recently a resident of Crete. Neb., was arrested for non-Dav ment of a bill long due for groceries while he was courting a young woman in her father's parlor. He was held to bail, and when he appeared in court to delend himselt, the judge promptly dis charged him, declaring that he had been arrested without adequate cause. He has, inconsequence, brought suit against his creditors, who had the legal process served on him, and he claims $25,000 damages, fie had, he alleges, borne good financial reputation, which Is now seriously affected ; he has been disgraced by Ins arrest in the parlor ot his sweet heart, injured socially and morally, and on account of what had happened then and there, he has never had the courage to visit his lady-love since, and considers his connubial prospects, so far as she is concerned, forever blighted. He thinks that $25,000 would be a moderate sum for the shock to his sensibilities and the harm to his good name, and avers that he will have justice, if there be justice in the land. It is possible that his arrest may have saved him from an unhappy marriage, but be flatly refuses to look at mat siue 01 tue question. We have rarely seen a more touohing little Inoident than this told by a flew Haven paper: A widow's child re. ceiyed a reward of merit in school and ran eagerly home to her mother, saying, as she entered her humble dwelling, " 1 held U up to the sky all the way uonie, mamma, so mat papaxnigui set what a goocf girl 1 am." The Northeast Passaga, A very interesting account of the Northeast passage by the steamer Vega, which has brought su h renown to Pro fessor Nordenskjold. is given in a recent number of Blackwood's Magazine by Lieutenant Palander, who commanded the Veea. There is no doubt the Vega would have made her entrance into Behring strait the same season in which she started on her voyage, but for the exceptionally unfavorable condition of the ice. She had passed the real points of difficulty and danger, and was within 120 miles of Behring strait on the twenty-eight of September, 1878, when the ice closed in upon her, and she was unable to move until the eighteenth of the following July. The region in which she passed the winter is well- known to explorers and whalers, many of whom have passed through the same waters, encountering no ice, even as late as the first of November. Now that the Dassaee has been shown to exist, the question whether it can be made commercially useful is the next in interest. If vessels can get tnrougn in two months, as Lieutenant Palander says they may, if no unanticipated ob structions intervene, considerable com mercial use mav he made of the passage in trad in ar with the natives along near.v 1.000 miles of habitable coast. But this Jiuestion of an open passage is one that lieutenant Palander is not prepared to answer. That open water near the coast does exist during the summer and autumn months admits of no doubt in his mir.d. The difficulties to be met -with at and around the northermost cape of the Siberian coast Cape ToheL puskin and Taimyi island, are such as to make it doubtful whether ships can fet through without wintering over, 'hat a passage is to be found there once or twice Lieutenant Palander does not doubt, but it mav occur so late that winter will set in before Behring strait is reached. In summing up Lieutenant faiander says: The Northeast. Passage can not. therefore.in its entirety be made availabe tor the purpose ot commerce ; but still an annual traffic mighc easily be carried on lrom the westward to the Obi and Yenisei, and from the eastward to the Lena. Unquestionably the way now lies open to Siberia's three greatest rivers; and that land, so rich in min erals, timber and grain, whose export and import trade has hitherto been con ducted by means of caravans, ought now to obtain a practical route as a con. necting link between the old and new world." Vessels designed for this hazardous traffic will have to be specially con. structed to nush their wav tnvoueh Holds of drifting and newly-formed ice, and coaled and provisioned for an ice blockade lasting from eight to nine months. People Who Live Near the Pole. The Roman correspondent of the Phil adelphia Bulletin, speaking of the Cin- Kici, a remarkable people discovered by the Swedish explorers of the north pole region, says: The people found there were not precisely savages they were clothed (roughly, perhaps) but they were clothed in skins of rein. deer or seal. Their costume might not perhaps suit Parisian taste, but it was adaptable to their clime. It is com posed of reindeer skin stockings lined with eiderdown, reindeer or sealskin boots reaching to the knees, and u der these, again, reindeer or sealskin trous ers, over which are worn in extra cold weather other trousers lined wi'h fur. And then a tunic, coat, or blouse of the same materials reaches to the knees, and, according to the weather, several of these are worn one over the other, or t he head they wear a can to match the rest of this charming costume, and this cap is tied under the chin like a baby's cap. linally they wear ever their chests a kind of bib ot sealskins, which bib they draw over their faces, when the air threatens to bite the noses. The very fashionable people of the country fasten tails of animals to the edges of their coats.. This is to show you that they are rich, as their riches consist in reindeer, some families pos sessing as many as 100,000 ot these am nials. IDo ladies wear the same cos tume as the gentlemen, which gives them a strange awkward walk. How ever, as a little distinction, they wear their hair in two long plaits at the side ot each chee , and their neck and back are bare. It seems that the cold has less effect on them than on their lords. It is true that when they have young children they carry them on their backs, and that shelters them. Both men and women are short ol statute, hut stout and wnderiully strong, and thev can walk for miles with burdens on their backs which we Europeans could not even lift. Their faces are large and broad and they have no foreheads. In this the women would be quite the fashion in Europe, where the ladies do all they can to conceal their forehea :'s. A Treasury Clerk's Long Service, John Laub, tbe oldest clerk in the United States treasury, died recentlv in Washington after a faithful service of more than forty-three years. He was absent but five days from his desk dur ins the entire forty-three yea-s of his service, although he was entitled to a vacation of thirty days each year. No other man in all that time ever did any part of the work that it was his duty to perform. In a room which he occupied is a set of books covering the entire history ot the First Comptroller's office eighty-six years and in those books appear but two styles of penmanship those ol John Laub and his father. Mr. Laub never allowed any person, not even the secretary himself, to examine his books; but it tbere was ever an in quiry he would examine them himself, and read their contents to the inquirer. He was neatness itself, and wrote a plain round hand. He loved his books as it they were human, and kept them wrapped carefully in oil-cloth, when not in use, but when compelled to take them from their case, he would handle them as if they were made of glass. He became a machine, and had he been transferred to any other duty would have been ut terly u-eless. He ppeared at his desk at the same hour every morning, and went through the same routine every day. He walked to the department from his house and returned always by the same route, and his. appearance at the same locality at the same moment each day was as regular as time itself. During his last illness he Buff ered much pain and anxiety because his work was neglected, and for fear some other per son would touch his books, and relief was given him only by an order from tbe First Comptroller that they should not be disturbed. Life and Death In Switzerland. Vital anil annlal n'.ntintlejl are alwftVS Interesting, but the recent report of the Swiss bureau of federal statistics for 1878 is worked up with exceptional thor oughness and suggestivenfss. It will very much help the general reader to an appreciation of the figures to bear in mind that the population of Switzer land in 1870 3,669,247 was about 100, 000 more than that of Illinois, and that its area is between one-third and one fourth that of Illinois, or about equal to that ot Maryland and Connecticut. The number of marriages is given at 20,590. These figures mark the contin uance or a decline which began in ibo, and is now traced to the facts that men, on the average marry at twenty-nine, and that the birth-rate ot the years 1846-55 was below the average. lhe divorces were 1,036. and Switzerland is said to have more divorces in proportion to marriages than any otner European country. A very commonplace reason is given for the strange fact that widows and divorced women are more likely to get husbands than maidens the thruty Swiss, it sems, prefer women of ex perience, with the houses and furniture which they usually have, to sweet sim nlicitv without a shelter. The births wsre 91,426, of which 46,950 were boys and 44,476 girls. The favorable death- rate 23.4 per 1,000 is attributed to tne characteristics of the weather of the year, which was not suddenly variable, and was neither very hot nor very cold. The ratio of deaths amo ig the mar ried is much less than among the celi- nnxe. irom wmcn it is a iaii mieiriiee that marriage promotes longevity. The excess of births over deaths was 8.1 per 1.000. and the death-rate among chil dren lass than one vear old was 11.1. The number of murders was 114, of which thirty were cases of infantioide I ne number of accidental deaths was 1,650. Suicides continue to increase. In 1876 there were 640: in 1877,600; in 1878, 643. Suicides were less frequent among women than among men ; among the young than among the adults and aged; among the married, widowed and divorced than amone the celibates: among agriculturists and artisans than among domestic servants, day-iaoorers, traders, manufacturers, artists and members of the liberal professions. Summer would seem to be the best time to commit suicide, as the number lises very much in proportion to the temnerature of the months. Emiera tion reach id its maximum in 1869,when Switzerland lost 5.206 men. women and children: in 1877 the number was only 1,691, and In 1S7S it Had increased to 2.608. Domesticated Quail. Several summers ago S. S. Gibble. of Mount Joy, this county, lound the nest ot a quail, containing niteen eggs. Determined to make an attempt to domesticate these birds he took them home and placed them under u hen He made his first mistake at the very outset by putting them under a Brahma to incubate ine size ot tne eggs and of the hen was of course altogether dis proportionate. Still she was fortunate enough to break none of them, and in due time a family of fifteen of these at tractive and lively birds made their ap pearance. A grassy plot was selected for a nursery, and a pen sixteen feet square was made. This was made per fectly tight at tue ground and ior some height above it, rendering escape im possible, at least until they acquired the use of their wings. But the mistake of selecting a heavy hen to bring up these birds soon became manliest. Une alter another of the pretty things had its life tramped out by the heavy feet of its foster mother, until only four of them remained. These grew until they at tained the full stature of adult Bob Whites. They were released, and ran with chickens, flying here and there, but never leaving the premises for a greater distance than the chickens themselves. One day the house cat, who was something of an epicure, thought she would try quail; so she appropriated one of them, leaving the once numerous family reduced to three. These re in lined around the house, associating with the chickens on tho most fraternal terms, carrying the intimacy so far as to roost close by them in an old apple tree near the hcuse. Unfortunately, how ever, the cold weather of winter brought a covey of wild birds to the barn, and these, coming into friendly relations with the trio of tame ones, had such a seductive power upon them that, when the strangers went away in the spring they carried with them two out of the three remaining birds. This left but a single one on the premises. This one continued to eat with tbe hens in the barnyard and roost with them in the trees until June, when, no doubt, the promptings of nature so wrought upon the companionless bird that it was im pelled to leave the hospitable home wnere nearly a year 01 11a me was spent, and seek the companionship of its Kind in the fields. So ended the experiment Lancaster (Pa.) New Era. A Brave Baby. A woman who lives in Ashville. Ala.. writes to the sEgis of that place of the miraculous rescue 01 her little three vear-old bov from drowning. The child fell down a well, the depth of wiiieli was thirty feet. The mother saw lam go down. She says : On reaching the well I was just in time to see him rise to the top of the water. I was alone, save three other little children whom I sent for help. I had. amid all the anguish of my soul. nresen( e of mind enough to let the bucket down and tell him to take hold of it. which he did. After some min utes he let loose from weakne (is, sank again, except his little head. I lowered the bucket lower, telling him to take hold of the rope. He ran his band through a ring tied on for the purpose of sinking the bucket, and caught the pail, and there he held on for one and a half hours, begging me all the time in his baby talk to come down and help turnout. I would say: " Hold on, Bobbie." " I will." he would reply At length a lady came to my assistance, and we took a rope and made a noose on the end ol it, and, letting it down, told him what to do He put his foot through the noose and drew it up around his knee. I asked him it he could hold on. He said he could hold on to the bucket : " Daw me out." He holding the bucket, tbe rope around his leg, I telling him not to let go, we drew him up until I could reach his littl shivering hands. Thus I saved m little baby from drowning. Safe t my breast I clasped his little shiverin body, and praised God fur His mercies. A Falling Star. At dead of night A radiant star Like a gem in a monarch's crown Shone clear and bright With a palo, oold light Then darting across the heavens alar Lighting fith Are and rapid Alight To the earth came falling down. It seemed to glide Through the npper air On the s wiriest wings of light, And at my side As it flickered and died There ;emed to oome a spirit fair, And the soft, sweet voioe of an angel eried " I will lead thy steps aright." Jamt$ Clarinet Harvtf. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Half of the writing paper made In America Is manufactured In Holyoke, Mass. John Payne Collier is the oldest lit erary man of the present century. He is ninoty-one. Senator In calls is the thinnest man It Congress, and wears abigred hand kerchief around his neck. One or more Western railroads are reported to be now using none other than paper car wheels on their moun tain grades. Of the eighty-eight solid business men of Springfield, Mass., sixty-four were brought up on larms and were iarmers' sons, twelve were brought up in villages, and of these six were accustomed to do farm work. fifith Green advocates frog culture. He says that many farmers liave for tunes in frog ponds, and that a little care and cultivation will produce a crop of frogs large enough for family use, after supplying the market. Tbe total number of Turkish prison ers who fell into the hands of the Rus sians during the war amounted, accord ing to a statement lately printed in tne St. Petersburg Golos, to 94,433 officers and men ot all arms and branches of the servise The Cow Boys. The Las Vegas (New Mexico) Gazette says of cow boys : This class of men are about as badly abused as any other set of men that we know of, when they really deserve but little of the tongue of reproach. There are many bad men who hover around the cattle ranges for the purpose of stealing, and whr prey upon the fruits of the labors of the cow boys. People at a distance, unac quainted with the situation, in fact, greenhorns, who hear of the depreda tions and crimes of these parasites ol the aa.Ule range, class them as cow boys and condemn the whole. This is a great injustice to that hardy class of men who inhabit the pastoral ranges and who, as a class, have no equsl in all manly vir tues. They are honest, brave, intelli gent and generous. " The bravest are the tenderest, The loving are the daring." Theii outward life is rough, but they are of kindly and manly rii positions. They are not a class of people to be dreaded, but on the contrary, their ac quaintance is to be sought, for they num ber among them men of high culture and refinements, while integrity and high sense of honor is the characteristic of the common run of cow boys. Com mend us to s ock raisers for true men, whose lives are not cramped and wor ried by the petty dealings and chican ery of email trado. but grow big under the influence of the vast Dlains and ma jestic nature wherein is cast the lines tf their daily life. It is their constant and close communion with mother na ture, the corrector of perverted tastes and tendencies, which develops manli- nefs in the cow boy and reduces to a minimum every inherent meanness winch may pertain to frail human na ture. Wo favor cow boys, cattle men, sheep raisers and the whole tribe of people who graze their nocks and neras on all the mesas and plains from the mountains to the Indian Territory, and will ever be ready to give them a hear ing when unjustly assailed by ignorance and prejudice. A Historical Relic. A recent letter from Washington to the Boston Advertiser t-ays : The Hon orable Robert C. Winthrop in the course of the centennial oration de livered by him on the fourth of July, 1876, in Music hall, Boston, exhibited to the audience there gathered the writ ing desk upon which the declaration of independence was written, and the thoughts suggested dv tuis mien-sung , historical relic formed one of the most eloquent passages of his oration. He concluded his allusion to this detk with these words i " Long may it hnd its appropriate and appreciating ownership in the succes sive generations of a family ot whom the blood of Virginia and Massachsetts is so auspiciously commingled, diiouiu it, in the lapse of years, ever pass from the hands of those to whom it will be eo precious an heirloom, it could only have i s tit and final place among the choicest and most cherished treasures of the nation, with the above title deeds of independence it so proudly asserted. This evening the Honorable Robert C. Winthrop, who is now in Washing ton, took the occasion 01 a can at u executive mansion to deliver personally to the President, as a gift to the United States, this little mahogany desk on which Mr. J enerson wrote tue aeciara tion of independence. It was presented in the name of the children of the late Joseph Coolidge, of Boston, to whom it was given by Jefferson himself in 1825, whose granddaughter Mr. Cool idge had married, and it was aa auto m aph inscription as follows : " Thomas Jefferson gives this writing-desk to Joseph Coolidge, Jr.. as a memorial of his affection. It was made Irom a drawing of his own. bv Ben. Randall, cahinet-maker. of Philadelphia, with . . .. ."... j w' !.!! whom ne nrsi loagea on uis nmviu m that oity in May, 1776, and the identi- ni nim nn nrhien im wrote tne ueuiain- tionof independence. Politica as well as rehzion has Its superstitions; uiene gaining Btrengtn wiin lime, may u" riav iriuo imacrinnrv Vnlllfl to thlS TellC I tor its association wnn tue mnu yi frro&e hnrt.pr nf our indeneudeDce. It I fs probable that this desk will be de-l posited mthe nreprooi library 01 tue. State department, wnere is Kept u original draft of the declaration, written on this desk. ) i: