r1 HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. Nit. DESPER AKDTJM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. X. HIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY MAY 20, 1880. " NO. IS- . , . - 1 I , I ... . ! - II , I ., I - Mnslc in thelNIght. When stars pursue their solemn flight Oil in the middle of the night A strain of musio visits me, Hushed iu a moment silvery Such rioh and rapturous strains as make The very soul ot silence ache With longing tor the melody. Or lovers in the distant dusk Ot summer gardens, sweet with musk, Pouring the blissful burden out, The breaking joy, the dying doubt; Or rovelera all flown with wine, And in a madness hull difino, Boating the broken tune about. Or else the rude and rolling notes That leave some strolling sailors' throats, Hoarse with tho salt xpray, it may be, Ol many a mile of rushing sea; Or some high-minded dreamer strays Late through the sol itary ways, Nor heeds t e listening night nor me Or how, how whence those tones he heard, Hearing, the slumbering sonl is stirred, As when a swiitly passing light Startles the shadows into flight, While one remembrance suddenly Thrills through the melting melody A strain ot music in the night. Out ot the darkness bursts the song, Into the darkness moves along; . Only a chord ot memory jars, Only an old wound burns ita scars, As the wild sweetness ot the strain Smites the heart with passionate pain, And vanishes among the stars. Harriit Pmcoti Syofford. A Slice of Bread and Butter. " Dorothy Dorothy Waldo!" cried Mi9S Lorinda Cross ("cross by name and cross by nature," the children yes, and many of the grown-ups of the neighborhood fleelared her), as she pounced upon the huge loat of bread which she had taken from the oven and put into the big stone crock only half an hour ago, just before she turned her straight-up-nnd-down back on the kitchen, to stalk to the earret after "that idle hussy, Molly" the maid-of-all-work " who had been twice as lout; ns she ought to have been rn iking ttie liei.3 there." I said the huge loaf. I should have said half the hu-re lo-f, for only that proportion of the newly baked bread remained. "Djr-o-thy Wal-dooo!" again cried iMiss Cress, in an ascending scale, with an ominous tremoio on the last note. . "Yes, aunt," replied a sweet, fresh voice; and a p ettv young girl came in from the garden, with a basket ol cherry-red currants in her hand. A tiny thing she was, with round, dimpled, rosy face, innocent child-like blue-gray e.ves, and lair hair, some short tresses of which hud escaped from the braid into which they had been bound, and were making a delightful use of lli'-ir freedom by curling in the most charming manner about the low frank brow and little pink-tipped ears. About "sweet sixteen." a stranger would have pronounced her; but Dolly, as her youthful companions, much to the disgust of her nunt Lor inda, called her, was older than that by a year and a half. An orphan at the age of twelve, she had been k it to the care of the only relative she knew, her mother's elder sister a woman Hard in speech and manner, and anything but soft in heart. This maiden lady soured ir revocably on her twenty-fourth birth day, which should have also been her wedding day; but at the very moment she was fastening the orange blossoms in her hair, had come the news that her betrothed had eloped with the girl-friend she had chosen for her bridemaid. Lorinda tore the bridal wreath into frag uents, and sea tered it to the winds; never mentioned the ftlse pair from that hour, banished for ever all the womanly grace and tender n ss she had ever possessed (truth to tell, she had never possessed much), and became the hardest worker of her sex that ever worked upon a farm. In a man's boots, coat and hat, early and late, hot or cold, wet or dry, with set mouth, lowering brow and silent lips, site toiled side by side with Iter sturdy old father, until the day he was struck down by the pitiless sun, and died a fer hours after -died just in time to be saved the pang ot hearing that his youngest and iavorite daughter was lying at tho point of death", widowed and friendless, in a far-away city. Lor in da buried her father if she wept for him, none saw her promoted a man who had been long in Lis employ ment to the position she used herself to occupy, and started for her sister's bedside. When she returned to Fern ville again she brought dear little fair-haired, soft-eyed Dorothy with iter, and some ot Iter neighbors fancied that since that time site had been a shade less stern; but if she had been, it was so slight a shade that it was almost im possibld to perceive it. True, she did less out-of-door work, and devoted part of the timo thus saved to teaching her niece to sew and cook and churn, and other like accomplishments; but nev r were the lessons accompanied by an approving smile or kindly word, much less a loving kiss. Even to the geitle. winning child, Lorinda Cross remained a cold, stern woman. Bat Dorothy, God bless her! was so sunny in dispo sition that the stern ways and dark face of Iter aunt could not cloud her young life. And thouji shut out from that inflexible woman's heart, she found the doors of all other hearts open to her. The dogs, the cats, the hens, the chickens, the hoisrs, the cows, the calves, the very geese, regarded her with adoration. The farm laborers blessed her pretty face whenever she came among them ; and as for Molly poor hard-woiked Molly! she wouH Lave kissed the ground the little feet troa upon. What wonder, thpn. thnt. TYin TTnnrali the young surveyor, who lived half a I way, m the old stone co;tage, and whom i she had known from the very first day of her arrival in Fernville (when he, then a tall, bright-eyed boy of fifteen, passing her fill tit, t) ITti a n A seeing tho sad-looking little eui, iu her black dress, standing by ft, silently ottered her the prettiest white rabbit he had ever seen a rabbit he had eoaxiug Abner Brown for a month putt to sell him, and which now he parted with, without mother thought, at sight of thoBe lovely tearful eyes and that sweet wistful face) what wonder, I say, that he " thought of her by d".y, and dreamed of her by nightP" But to go back. Dorothy came smil ing into the kitchen, her lips and cheeks as red as the currants she carried ; but the smile faded away when she met her aunt's irate gaze. ' Did you cut this loaf, and then leave it here in this hot room to dry to a chipr" demanded Miss Cross; and then she added, emphatically, without waiting tor an answer: "But of course you did. No one else would have dared to do it. And how dared you, knowing that I never allow breid to be cut in my house until it is at least a day old?" " I am very sorry, aunt," began Dolly; "but he looked so hungry!" "'He!'" screamed her aunt, regard ing her with a look of horror. ' You gave it away, then! And to a "he!" A tramp, I've no doubt, who wi.l come back some night, rob the house, and murder us all." " Please, aunt," entreated the young ?irl. "don't be so angry. He wasn't a tramp; indeed he wasn't; but a hand some young fellow with long golden hair" "A wig," snarled Miss Cross. "And the most beautiful blue eyes," Dolly went on, "I ever saw in all my life. And he wasn't near the house. And he didn't ask for anything. Oh, do lister, aunt, while I tell you all about it. I was on my knees in the path, pick ing up some currants I had let fall, when I saw him, through the hole in the hedge Brownie's calf made the other day, coming slowly up the lane " "If you had been looking at what you were doing, you wouldn t have seen hitu," said her grim listener. " He didn't see me. of course," said Dolly, "or I shouldn't have looked at him so intently. And, oh, Aunt Lo rimln, it was just like looking at a pic ture!" 'Stuff ." said Miss Cross. " He was so handsome, and so dusty, and so shabby, poor fellow! And he sat down under the old tree, took a crust of bread out of his pocket nnd began to eat it as though he was very, very hungry. That went to my heart." " Rubbish !" said her aunt. "And 1 got up softly, and ran into the house and cut a slice " "A slice 1 Great grief!" interrupted Aunt Lorinda. "A piece big enough for the breakfast of a whole family." "And I buttered it." "You buttered itP" "Yes, aunt; I only took the butter that was left in the dish." "Half a pound! You to without butter for a week." " And I ran out again, and into the lane, as fast as I could," continued Dorothy, apparently undismayed bv this threat, " for fear I might lose cou rage: and Btonoinff ' suddenlv before him, I put the bread in his hand, and said, "lam so sorry for you!' and turned to run away, when he seized my ii ind, and kissed it" (Miss Lorinda Cross became rigid as marble), " and said, 'These are the first kind words I ve heard since 1 came to this beastly country. Tell me your name little one.' 'Dorothy Waldo,' said I. 'Dorothy Waldo,' no repeated; 'I shall never forget it;' ai.d he rai3ed his hat and went away. Dear aunt, had you been in my place, would you not have done as 1 did!"' "1?" cried Aunt Lorinda "I carry meals to strange men on the public highway P I let a foreigner who called my country 'a beastly country' kis3 my hand? No. indeed; he never would have kissed my hand." ' Perhaps not," said Dolly, with a momentary twinkle in her eyes; and then she added, pleadingly, " But don't be angry any longer, aunt. I'll make another loaf of bread right away." "But that won't bring back what you've wasted." said her inflexible rel ative. "A pretty wife you'd be for a man wlio hasn't a dollar to call lnso.vn, giv ing away bread by the loaf and butter by the pound " (Miss Cross had retained at least one womanly trait a slight tendency to exaggeration) "to all the thieves and tramps who happen to come along." "Oh, aunt! exclaimed her niece; "ho looked like a prince." "A prince!" with a sort ot scorn. " Your head is turned by that trashy poetry you read. A prince! A likely story in shabby clothes, and nibbling a crust! A disguised burglar, in my opinion. But burglar or no burglar," sue continued, it must be conlessi d with some irrelevancy, "you shall never marry a man who hasn't a dollar to call his own, with my consent, and if ever you marry without my consent, you make a iiar of your mother in tier grave." " Aunt, I have told you again and again, "said Dorothy, tirmly but gently, "that I never would. I have not for gotten my mother's last commands." "Then don't be encouraging that Daniel Howell to meet you every tack and turn; and if you must have some one to walk home from church with you I can go and come myself, thank heaven ! there's Abner Brown, and he has a thousand dollars in the bank." " But, aunt, I've known Dan so long, and he is away so much, that when he is at Lome I feei as though I mean, I wouldn't like to hurt his feelings." "Bah!" retorted the grim maiden. " Men have no feelings. And as for knowing him a long time, I think you've known him quite ljng enough." " But if he had the thousand dollars, instead of Abner Brown P" questioned Dolly, with more spirit than she had yet shown. "That would be in his favor, cer tainly. But he hasn't, and never will have, with that old father and mother depending upon him. A thousand dol lars, iudef dj Where would lie get it? Tho sooner you forget Daniel Howell, and the sooner Daniel Howell puts you out of his head, the better." "There's no need for you to talk so loud, aunt," said the little girl, indig nantly; nnd then, startled by the look of malicious triumph on her auut'g face, Dorothy looked around, just in time to reseive a farewell bow from Daniel Howell as he turned from Die door. "He heard me," said Miss Cross. I'm glad he did ; 'twill save trouble." " Oh, Aunt Lorinda, how can you be so cruel P" said poor Dolly, bursting in to tears. A year and a half passed away, dur ing which, owing to his frequent ah seuees and MUs Lonnda's watchful care, Dolly and her lover had met but thret or lour times. " It's bard," said the young man, on the last of these oc casions, "to know that I cannot ask your aunt for your hand because I have not a thousand dollars of my own, when I know that there is plenty of room and love and everything for'you at the old stone cottage. Oh, Dolly, if you would but brave her anger, how gladly I'd make you my wife this moment!" "Dan," interrupted the girl, with dewy eyes, ''it isn't her anger though I feel that it would be most ungrateful in me to provoke it but the promise my mother made for me on her death bed. And ii it had not been for that promise, Dan, you must remember, I should have been the inmate ot an or phan asylum, and we would never have met." Adding, the sunshine coming back again, " Don't you see how much worse things could have been?" - "You are "right, my darling, as you always are," said Dan ; " but think it may be years before I have 'the bond.'" " I can wait, Dan. Yes " with a mischievous little laugh" I can wait until I am as old as Aunt Lorinda." "God lorbid, love 1" lie said, catching her in his arms and kissing her sweet lips. " And nowgood-bye; I am going a ay again to- morrow, to be goue I can not tell you how long. Oh, Dolly, heaven speed thetimewhen a little wile shall be waiting with the old father and mother at the stone cottage to welcome me home !" She raised herself on tiptoe, clasped his face between her two tiny hands, gazed into his eyes with a wealth of tenderness In her own, and said : " Who knows? Good fortune may at this very moment be on its way to us." And the very next day, Januar, 3, 1880, as Dorothy, with a crimson shawl thrown over her head, was out in the garden scattering crumbs on the snow tor the snarrows, she heard the jingle of sleigh-bells, and Farmer Beers came down the lane with a sled-load of wood. " Mornin', Miss Dorothy," he called, as he reined up at the back gate. " Here's a letter for you. They thought it might be important, at the oflice, and so, knowin' how keerful I be, and that I was comin' this way, they asked me to fetch it to you." And the old man tossed the letter over the hedge, into the girl's cutstretched hands and drove off. " A letter for me!" said Dolly, in tones ol the greatest amazement. "Why, I never received a letter before in all my Hie!" Then she turned it about, and inspected it curiously. The envelope was a common large yellow one, and bore the printed address ot a law firm in f n adjoining city, as well as her own address, written in a plain legal hand. "Who can it be fromP" wondered Dolly; and then opened it, to find her question but partially answered. A sheet of blue paper and a smaller en velope were inclosed. A paper con tained, in the same hand which had addrchsd the letter, these lines: " Miss DoitOTiiY Waldo : " Dear Madam We send you the ac companying check in compliance with orders received to that effect from a client in Europe whose interests in this country wo represent. Please acknowl edge receipt. " Your obedient servants, 'Find & Pkove. " January 1, 1880." Dolly's lovely eyes opened to their widest extent. "A check!" she ex claimed, and with trembling fingers tore open the second envelope, which was also addressed to her, but in a dif ferent, more elegant hand; and sure enough there was a check a check for a thousand dollars, payable to the order of Miss Dorothy Waldo. And on a slip of paper which had kept it com pany were these words : In payment for a slice a very large slice of bread and butter," And that's all the young girl ever knew about it. For one moment she stood dazed with joy and astonishment. Tho next she thought of Dan. Perhaps ho had not started yet. How could she get to him through the deep snowP Sleigh bells again. Farmer B ers coming back without the wood. Sho ran out iut ) the lane. "Oh, do take me with you!" she cried, to the great surprise of the honest old fellow. "I must see Dan Mr. Howell, I mean. I must see him as soon as possible." "Jump right in, my dear," said tho old man, "and I'll have you at the cot tage in aiiffy." Away they went, the gray mare mak ing excellent time for her; and as they neared the house, Dolly caught sight of Dan just leaving ic. "Dan! Dan!" she called, tier clear young voice ringing on the clear air, and madiy waved her crimson shawl. Dan turned, saw the bright flag and her sweet face below it, and came bounding over the snow in time to re ceive her in his arms as she jumped from the sled. ' Youcouldn t no, not if you guessed forever," she said, half crying and half laughins "you couldn't guess what brought me here this morning." " Whatever it was, heaven bless it a thousand times!" said her lover. "It is leap-year, you know, Dan." " Yes. now I think ol it. it is. But it can't be possible you have come here to propose to mei"' "Very possible indeed." answered Dolly, slowly and deliberately. "Mr. Daniel Howell, wl;l you marry me?" "Mr. Daniel Howell's" only reply was to fold her in so close an embrace that, being the tiniest ot maidens, she almost disappeared from view. " And has Miss Cross'' he began, when the pretty blushing face, all dim pled with smiles, was atain raised to his own. 'No, sho has not," interrupted Dollv. " She knows nothing about it. But it's all right, Dan," carefully tuck intr something with her dainty left hand Dan held the right into the breast pocket ot his overcoat. ' xou may come and see Aur t Lorinda as soon as you choose. You didn't know it, Dan dear, but you've got a thousand do! lars." Harper Bazar. Joshua II albeit, of Crawford countv. Mo., although running close into a cen tury of life, has been confined to his bed throuzh chronic rheumatism for more than twenty years, but in all that period Das retained his cnecrtutness and socia bility in a remarkable degree. When he was young he was very strong and a great hunter. He killed eleven bears in the winter of 1U16. Jim Ingrabam, of Wynn'i Mill Henry county, Ga , is said to be a cen tury and a quarter old. He is very in firm, and totillv blind, but can aril miikp n.n ffnnii n hark Anllav m m,il ever looked through, and really seems 10 enjoy me occupation. A FREE PltESS. Some of It Advantages Tersely Stated. The beautiful ?dea of getting some thing for nothing is nowhere more readily traceable than in a newspaper office. So much has been spoken, written and sung about a " free press," that peo ple have come to accept the term in a sense altogether too literal. If a man has a scheme of any kind germinating he just steps into the edi torial room and details it with the re mark ; " I'm not quite ready to advertise yet, but a few words will help me along." He gets the few words and never gets ready to advertise. Two tickets admitting lady and gent to the " G. R. X. M. T.'s grand ball," are expected to produce a six-line lo cal and a quarter of a column descrip tion of the ladies' toilets after the ball is over. Church fairs and the like are worse than balls. They never leave tickets, but demand more space, because "it's a matter of news and a help to the cause." Should a boy saw off his finger, " Dr. C. O. Plaster dressed the wound with great skill," would be a graceful way of stating it, and besides it is "unprofes sional" to advertise. The patent rat-trap man brings in one of his combinations of wire and moldy cheese bait, sticks it under the editor's nose, and explains how they catch 'em every timo the spring works. "It's something of interest to the community, and if you put in a piece save me a dozen papers," which he quietly walks off with as though he had bestowed a favor in allowing editorial eyes to gaze on such a marvel of intricacy. An invitation "to come down and write up our establishment " is a great deal more common than a two-square 'ad from the same firm. Newspapers must be filled up with something or other, you know. The lawyer, with strong prejudices against advertising, is fond of seeing his cases reported in full in the news papers, with an occasional reference to ns exceedingly able manner of con ducting the same. It is cheaper than advertising. In fact everybody, from a to izzard, w ho has an nxe to grind, asks the news papers to turn the crank, and forgets to even say thank you, but will kindly take a free copy ot the paper as Dart pay for furnishing news. Ihe press being "tree" all hands seem bound to get aboard and ride it to death. That is why newspapers are so rich that they can afford to pay double price for white paper, and never ask Congress to aid them by removing the duty on wood putp. yew uaven lieyisler. A Mother's Love. J ust before the circus oDened vester- day nfternoon a woman, nccompanied by her son, a boy about sixteen years of age, appeared on tno grounds and was t he hrst at the ticket wagon. When the window was opened the mother said to the ticket-seller: ' If vou will be so kind as to let a poor widow woman's Johnny into the circus he will carry water to the cle- phant." "Stand hack, madam, stand back!" le cried, as he took the half-dollar over her head. She took her boy by the hand and marched to the entrance of the bie tent explaining to the man at the door: ' My Johnny is going to carry hav to the camels." "You nnd your Johnny carrv vour- selves right out of this!" was the verv emphatic reply. ' Couldn't we both go in for ten cents. if we sat on the ground P" '.So, ma am ! bland back, now : vou are in the way!" They fell back for a consultation. The boy had tears in his eyes, an 'I the mother looked determined. " Don't cry, Johnny, dear your mother ioves you and will get you in," sho consolingly remarked, as she led h'm again to the ticket 'vagon. Crowd ing and pushing her way in, she called out: 'This hov's father was a Dreacher. and you ought to let him in free." 'Stand back, madam, stand back!" was the answer she got. "Can t you let U3 in for ten cents?" "No. no!" She drew the boy out of the crowd and took a walk around the tent. There was a spot where the canvas was raised a little, and as they halted there she said : 'Johnnv. a mothers love can sur mount every obstacl . I'll stand here and you crawl undT the tent." She spread her skirts as far as possi ble, and the boy made a dive and disap peared, in about ten seconds he reap peared in the shape of a ball, and he dn't stop rolling until lie had gone thirty feet. The mother straightened him out, luted him up. and inquired what had happened. " I I don't exactly know," said the boy, as he looked back at the tent, "but I guess I don't care for any more mother's love. I'll take pink lemonade in place of it." Detroit Free Press. Look Oat for the Moon. The theory was advanced some time ago by an English astronomer that, owing to the peculiar solar and lunar action, the earth and moon must eventu allv come into collision. This theory was opposed by some of the most learned scientific men, who areued that. owing to the position of the tidal wave, the moon is drawn not exactly in the direction of the earth s center of gravity, but a little to the east of that center, and that in consequence she is made to recede trom the earth, her orbit is en larged, and her angular motion dimin ished. The partisans of the collision theory reply that this does not prevent the consumption oi me vis viva or the earths motion around the common center of gravity, although to a certain extent, at least, it must prevent this consumption from diminishing the moon's distance and increasing her i neuiar motion. As this consumDtion of vis viva will go on through infinite ages.it the present oruer ot things re main unchanged, the earth . and the moon must ultimately come together. with results which the imagination can only faintly conceive. The total cost of the Gothard tunnel. the most gigantic work of the kind in the world, will not exceed $10,000,000. It has been very costly of human life as well as money, no less than 150 work men having been killed and 400 disabled during its construction. TIMELY TOPICS. Hitherto when a professional diver went under wa era tube has supplied him with air. But a Mr. Fleuss has patented a process by which an experi enced diver can remain under water for hours, having within his helmet and dress a supply of compressed oxygen gas, diluted with nitrogen, which is naturally present in his lungs and in the diving dress when he assumes it. The exhaled carbonic acid being brought into contact with caustio soda, the deadly gas is transformed into simple carbonate of soda. It is asserted that numerous experiments and tests have conclusively proved that Mr. Fleuss's system is attended with no incon venience, and the expense is one-half that of the old method. Mr. Fleuss is only twenty-eight. His process has been brought out since the Tay bridge disaster. The gold and silver minirg fever is not altogether confined to tho United State'; it has jut broken out afresh in New Zealand, and to a degree which indicates the dawning of a new era upon that country. The mineral resources of the islands have, all at once, bern brought to light to an enormous extent ; coal fields have been opened; and gold. silver and copper mines are revealing wealth to an extraordinary extent. The discoveries are not so much new: it is the marvelous development of the old that is exciting attention both n the colony and in Great Britain. The German emigration is startling to the authorities of the empire. It is just published that nearly 34,000 emigrants left the four ports of Bremen, Hamburg, Stettin and Antwerp for America dur ing the past year. But a small portion has gone elsewhere. This report does not include the Germans who left Brit ish and French ports, who may be roughly stated at 10,000 persons. The new German army bill, it is feared, will bring the emigration up to the propor tions of that time succeeding the Franco German war, when it averaged 115,000 per annum. The important branch of American commerce with India is almost entirely controlled by the cities of New York and Boston. The former has now the lion's share, but which she did not pos sess in times past. There are now 109 ships and barks bound to New York from various ports in India and China, and twenty-five ships and barks to Bos ton. All theso have valuable cargoes. In 1877 Boston had sixty East India men to arrive, bringing over 1,000,000 baskets and bags of sugars. Boston has latterly taken quite a start in the ocenn steam trade. A new steam line has re cently been startedlbctwcen Boston and London. The steamers are 2,500 tons register. It is not generally known that panes of glass can be cut under water with ease to almost any shape by means of a pair ot scissors. 1 wo things, however, are necessary for success: First, the glass must be kept quite level in the water while the scissors are applied; aud secondly, to avoid risk, it is better ti perform the cutting by cropping off small pieces at tuo corners and along the edges, thus reducing the form crad- ual'y to that required for if any attempt be made to cut the glass at once to a proper shape, as one would cut a card board, it will mo3t likely fracture where it is not wanted. The softer glasses cut best; and the scissors need not be verv sharp. When the operation goes on vell tho glass breaks away from the scissors in small pieces in a straight tine with the blades. Since the first of Januarv an extra ordinarily large number of emigrants have arrived in this countrv. and it is estimated that during this vear the population will be increased by 400,000 foreigners. They come chiefly from Germany, Great Britain, Sweden, Nor way, uenraark and Holland. The famine in Ireland is driving thousands to America. There is one feature of the present emigration which teems to have struck all who have examined the iu coming tide of new citizens. That is that the emigrants are generally from toe letter classes ot the European peas antry. and that large numbers of them come provided with means to purchase homes in this country, liut a small pro portion of the new-comers stop at the ports of arrival. As a rule they start mmediately for undeveloped regions with the intention of cultivating the soil or engaging in mining. For some time past the money-changers at Castle tiarden, New York, have exchanged tor newly-arrived emigrants, upon an average, $150,000 per day. Besides this very many of them are provided, before leaving burope. with oralis upon com mercial firms in this country. On some days tne average aiuount ot ruonev ascer tained to be brought by each emigrant was as much as SoOO, and it is reason able to suppose that those coming in at otner ports are equally as well ou. Concerning Lizards. A discussion on the hereditary trans mission of peculiarities took place at a recent meeting oi the society oi biology, of raris, when Mr. ttouget is said to have mentioned as a remarkable fact. that a single tail, which he had caused to be amputated lrom a salamander. was replaced by two tails, which sub sequently grew out. This is by no means an uncommon occurrence in the West Indies, where I occasionally no ticed lizards with two tails. I he original one is replaced by another, always. I believe, of inferior length, with a second shorter one growing lrom us base. The common lizards ot the West In dies are extremely fond of music. In a list) ning attitude, they will approach the open window of a room in which music is played, coming nearer and nearer, with hi ads elevated, intently listening. In a somewhat rare book, entitled -,Barbadoes and other Poema," by M. J. Chapman (Iiondon, 1835,) this habit is thus reierreo to : Gaysouuds are beard witbin the lighted halls ; Tne lwteiuDg leaves tne miloily ent brans, The charmed Eenhjr pauses as be flion, And mingles with hit .trains tuo scfuest sighs The awakened lizard leaves dm Dually Da, Climbs to the lattice and erects his head. A lizard, so eneaeed. had its tail acci dentally cutoff by the sudden closing of tne winaow on uie sm oi wuicu n was stationed. This curtailed lizard, how ever.oontinued to visit the spot.cb armed with the music. After a short time it was noticed that, the lost appendage was arraduallv reolaced bv two. Ihlsoo curred at the house ot a friend in Bar- , badoes. Thomat Bland, in Bcuhm Acum, A Tremcndons Spider Story. A correspondent writes from Plain view, 111., to the Chicago Inter-Ocean : The following facts transpired on the farm of an honest Old farmer, about two miles from the town of Plainview. Last Monday morning on entering his barn the farmer found, to his great sur prise, his pet bulldog and old cat and her kittens suspended from the cross-benms in his barn. On examination he found them to be suspended there by a cord about the size ot common wrapping cord, the fiber of which much resembled silk, but proved, however, to be a spi der's web. At first he thought the kit tens, which were on the hay just above the beams, had accidently dropped into the web, and the old cat, following the instinct of her maternal nature, endeav oring to rescue them had herself be come entangled. As to the situation of the bulldog, he thought he had been trying to get at the cat while in her trouble, and had himself to succumb to the same fate as the cats, but he after ward came to the conclusion that they had been picked uo by the spiders as they went about seeking whom they mient devour. The farmer went out to call in some of his neighbrrs to witness the marvel ous scene.but imagine his surprise when, on his return, he found a sucking colt ascending to the web, having been en circled by two different fibers, one just before his hind, and the other just be hind his fore legs, he was being drawn up by the spiders. When the colt had been drawn up five or six feet, a spider, apparently well versed in physiology, came down one of the fibers and began boring for the spinal cord, just between the atlas and the axis, as I have seen mall ones do with flies, but the farmer was unwilling to sacrifice the colt for the benefit of scientific investigation, and so he was rescued. The soiders were then taken from the dove-cote, of which they had taken pos session, and killed. One measured three and one-half inches in length, and weighed one half a pound. They are of a dark brown color, with a light stripe down their backs, strong, active and ferocious. Several men of good repute in this section are willing to testify to the above facts. They Missed the Boy Arter All. Jack was not a bad boy, but he was a terribie mischievous one, and his pa rents really teit reuet at the thought that he was to start for boarding-school the next day. His father thought of it when he found that Jack had used his azor to whittle a Lite-stick. lie thought so again when he discovered that Jack's ball had gone through the parlor win dow. Jack's mother thought so when he found muddy footprints all over tho parlor carpet and a great scar on the piano leg. They both thought so when their chat at the supper table was in terrupted by whistling and the upsetting of the milk pitcher, and they told Jack so, wnen, niter navmg driven almost wild his father, wlu) was try ins to read the evening paper, by getting up a light between the dog and cat, he sat down on Jiis mother's new bonnet she had ust been lixin, and utterly ruined it. Early the next morning Jack was packed olf. Oh! what a relief from noise nnd trouble it was. His father's razors remained undisturbed ; no bound of breaking glass was heard; the par lor carpet was unstained by mud. But, somehow, the house didn't seem cheer ful to its occupants. It was a long day. Tea was served. There was no whist- mg and upsetting of dishes to inter rupt the conversation, but the talk didn't seem to run so smoothly after all. And when it came to reading the even ing paper and fixing up another bonnet, the dog and cat slept serenely on the hearth-rug, and no ilisturbance inter rupted the proceedings, ihats tho difference between having a boy in the house and having him away, und the gentleman put down his pper and re marked as much to his wife, when he noticed a quivering about her mouth and two big drops on her cheeks, nnd there was a kind of mistiness about his eyes that bothered him about seeing les, sue answered; "it is nice and quiet; uh, uh, ou u-u!"and he got up and went to tho window and looked out and blew his nose lor twelve minutes steadily. A Tongh Story to Swallow. There is sid to be a French babe, need six months, born at Cherboure. the naDe of whose neck has the singular gift of producing un uninterrupted succession of feathers. Twenty-three have already sprouted, reached maturity, and fallen off, to bo carefully stored away by the fortune may be considered made if the amazing story turns out correct. The manner in which theso leathers grow is thus described : A pimple forms on the nape of the neck, quite close to the roots oi the hair. At the expiration ot a ccr tain time the pimole blossoms into i feather, the child, at the moment when it appears, seeming to experience a slight uneasiness. The feather, which is curved and gilded, attains.when fully grown, from ten to twelve centimeters in length. When it falls a few drops of a whitish color issue from the pimple, which then heals, leaving no trace of its existence for awhile, until another ap pears, inclosing the germ of another feather. A curious circumstance, says the Cherbourg paper, is that the feather remains six days on tho infant's neck when fully grown before falling, aud that its successor takes as many daj s to sprout as its predecessor to reach ma turity. The father of the phenomenal child intends taking it to Paris in order to ask science to investigate the cause of this freak of nature. The "Great Hurricane." The most ten io'e wind storms do not occur in this latitude. What is known as tho great hurr.cane started from Barbadoes October 10. 1780, engulfed un English fleet anchor d before St. Lucia, ravaged that island, where six thou sand live3 were loat, traveled to Mar tinique, where it sunk a French fket of forty bhips, Currying four thousand sol diers, devastated St. Domingo. St. Vin cent, St. Eustache and Porio Itieo. and sunk many vessels sailing in the track ol the cyclone. JSine thousand per sons perished at Martinique and a thousand at St. Pierre. At Port Royal 1,400 houses were blown down, and 1,600 sick and wounded wero buried b'neath ths walls of the hospital. Great as has been the suffering and loss of ife from tornadoes in this country, they cannot be compared to this truly great hurricane of a century ago. . Coming Home from Church. Coming homo from olmrch together, In the lovolv spring-time weather, Pretty Jonny, dashing Willie She as fair as my lily. Slowly wending, 'noath the shadows, Past the brook and by the meadows, Arm in arm so fondly twining, While the silver stars are shining. Summer days are longer growing, Summer nights their joys bestowing; At the porch, in silonoe meeting, Eyes alone extend a greeting. Ah, the rogae! hor mother taught her That the other way was shorter! Longest road and brightest weather, Coming home trom church together. Autumn days wero sweet and mellow, Autumn grain was ripe and yellow; Oil, the moonlit hours for roving! Oil, the liitle " Yes" so loving! Blushing Jenny, handsome Willie She as fair as any lily Wedded in the golden weather, Coming home lrom church togethor! George Cooper, in Baldwin' Monthly. ITEMS OF INTEREST, The watchmaker does his spring work all the year round. The SDarrows are little thieves, but they don't do the robin. If you want to compliment a tenor singer, call mm nign-ioneu. oorry Press. When two dentists are partners they rarely quarrel; they pull together Cfriswoui. Nothing is wholly bad. Even a dark lantern has its bright side. Balcm Sunbeam . The rain fall on the just and the un just. But not on the man who has just stolen an umoreiia. aoswn x ranscripi. There about 1,000 applications for ap pointment on the Boston police lorce now on file at the commissioner's oflice. " Music by the quire," as the fellow remarked when he bought twenty-four sheets of the same. Ma.raihonIndepend' ent. It is expected that coal mines worked bv modern machinery will soon be opened in the province of Nganhiong, China. On little hornet on the nest A shining little vilyiiia Josepiins gave tho nvet a kick And then there was a million! Tho vouns Emperor of China is al lowed to smash $5i0 mirrors when he feels funny, instead of beinir greeted with a shingle serenade.wcll laid on. Vein tt Free Press. If those who are the enemies of inno cent amusements had the direction ol the world they would take away spring aim youth; ttie lornier irom tue year, and tho lutter from human life. Dr. Peck, of Indianapolis. ha3 ampu tated the lees of a young girl on account of decay in the bones, produced by ex cessive rope jumping. He ndvises pa rents and teachers to prohibit this play under all circumstances. A Deep Well. Tho Continental Diamond Boring company, limited, have lately completed tor the government oi jucctiennurg-Schwerin-a bore hole of exceptional depth, and the execution of which is of particular interest from the rnpidity with which it has been completed, ihe boring which vns made for salt, is situated at Probst Jesar. near Lubtheen, Mid it was commenced on the sixth of Jmy of last vear, with an opening twelve inches in diameter. The first part of the bore had to be through a diluvial bed consisting mainly of drift sand and coarse gravel, and for sinking through this Kobrich's system was adopted, the diameter of the bore being maintained at twelve inches. Thetotal depth sunk on this system wi s 321 feet tilit inches, the sinking occupying thirty-four days of twenty four hours each, of which thirty-one clays were spent in nrtual boring, and three days in surdry works. Below the diluvium the gypsum and rock were reached, and through this tho boiing was carried on with dia monds, the commencement bcin made on August 25, 1879, with a hole ten and a half" inches in diameter. Until a depth of 1.670 feet had been reached, however, no firm looting could be ob tained on which to rest the tubing, and heuce great annoyance was experienced from the falling iu of masses of sand, tho infalls being so great that some times, when the boriug rod was with drawn, the bore became nli"d up again to a depth of over 420 feet. The boring, however, was steadily proceeded with, and u.timately the final depth of 3.0til feet was attained on the 6ixth ol Feb ruary last, the diameter ol the bor at time spent in laboring with diamonds was 163 days of twcn'y-Jour worKiug hours. . . . With the exception of a bore hole put down to the depth of 4,183 feet for tho Prussian government, a lew years ago, and which took four years to ac complish, the boro of which we have been giving particulars is, we believe, the deepest jot Bunk, and the fact that it was completed in less than six months speaks well for the skill and energy with which tho worn was carrieu out. Scientific American. Words of Wisdom. To live long it is necessary to live slowly. Give neither counsel nor salt until you are asked fur it. Advancing or resting we still go on by-and-bye to go off. We hand folks over to God's mercy but show none ourselves. There are calumnies against which even innocence lescs couvage. Ho that ran compose himFelf, is wiser than he that composes books. Thcro is in every human countenance el'.her a history or a prophecy, which mutt sadden, or at least soften, every rejecting observer. Afflictions are the medicine of the mind. If thev are not toothsome, let it sutlice that they are wholesome. It is not required in physio that it should please, but heal. To fill the sphere which Providence appoints is true wisdom; to discharge trusts faithfully and live exalted ideas, that it the mission of good men, TT