iiiiii fwo Dollars per Annum. HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher- NILi DESPERANDIiM. VOL. X. Filikla. IThs Incident narrated In the following line, etuallr occurred near Atod.N. T., nd the Innocent Tlotlm of the Joke te lady nearly ninety ye.ni of sr., (treatly belored and venerated In the com mnnlty where sue resides. A lndr of ape, and ezperienoe rare, Snt knitting and rooking her old-time chair j When on the cold wintry air there came to her oar Through closed window and doors, distinct and clear, The tell-tale cackle ot hens from the barn; And laying aside her bright neitllos and yarn She sinned, " Oh! to be young! But I'm not too old now To go hunting again for eggs in the mow. For since the tar-time when but a wee girl, No ladder e'er scared me or made my head whirl; That old dominio hen thinks her nest hid away, Bat I know her trick she has laid in the hay." So straightway she entered the barn's open door, 'Where a ladder invitingly stood on the floor, And mounting as fearless as any ball stair, She climbed the steep ladder with dexterous care, One step at a time, one tound after round, And a nest in the crisp, lragrant hay is scon iound. Now a solt faint peep from a corner is heard, And she doubts it the voice can be chicken or Beard again and again; after searching and bother The chickens appear and their fidgety mother ; Fresh egs, ill-thnod chicks and hen well secured In apron all snug, the long-searching endured ; To the mow's edge she comes, not dreaming what work Had been done by a peripatelio barrel of pork Or what would have been pork in a day or two more (What a pity it had not been made to before) ; Now a pig's not a dnuoe, tho' pig-headed, tis true, And has plans of his own and can cleverly do A thing to surprise one as this rhyme aims to show; for while the lady was busied, piggie was busy below. Now the hen's silly cackle reached this phil osopher's ear, And h reasoned, " the barn door's now open, to mil it m clear Some oue has forgot it how else could that hen Go in and come out? I'll try my luck then; I Temember the sheaves nnd pile ol bwcet wheat, Some tew grains, perchance, are yet left to eat. 'Tis good lor my diet lor die-it 1 should, One cannot alwayBeat corn be it ever so good." So rousing himself from bis nest near the door, A clear coast he oiecerns and the coveted floor. To the inquisitive pig came disappointing surprise Scarce a giuin could he see with his black, beady eves; Twas all palmy stoied or transformed into Ro'd. For autumn had gone; t was winter and cold. But bent on discovery, this acquisitive pig Hound the bam Hour begins to snuff and to dig With liia long strong noBe soon the ladder he spies " Why, what is thiB ladder up here foi?" he cries ; "Of what use is it now, for the summer is over, And the fresh, cool grass and sweet-smelling clover Ai e spoiled for me now, for I cannot eat hay ; I could eat it vilule growing in fields Tar away. Now it's piltd above there lor somebody's use, An J nothing's lelt piggie save corn and abuse!" At the thought of his grievance he got mad der and madder; And somehow upset this most useful, long ladder; Or, it may be, to judge this poor beast with due charity, He assayed to ascend it himsell, for a rarity, And ignorautly trying its wrong side, we sup pose, A hard push he gives it and over it goes! Unsuspecting and careless of the mischief now done, Like thousands of human ones under the sun, He hastes in affright to get solely away, While the poor lady above him is exiled in hay! The wintry halt-day is fast nearing its close, That she has been there alone a long time she knows; It is strange she is missed not that no one comes near her, And vainly she cul s, she's so far none can hear her. Now it chanoed that the honsehold knew net of her going, But believed her still babied with reading or sewing; But the quietness there, too profound and too long, Hint surely what researoh proves, something is wrong. Long searching?, loud callings, prove quite to be vain In her chair only Bible and knitting remain AU the house and the garden, hunted over and over, Notnceof dear grandma can any discover; When at length from the barn, cries a well- kpown voice, At wniob all the household exolaim and ro- joioe; Girls, the ladder's fallen I guess the pigs can tell how Please put it up lor me, I am here in the mow." Bo the ladder is placed; " angels " ascend and descend, Like the angels of Jacob, and grandna attend. Half laughingly, seriously, the chide her and tell her: " Until all mischievous pigs are packed down in the cellar, It is saler by lar, than to hunt eggs in the barn, To be in your own room with needlos and yarn." " Pllikia "Is a Sandwich Island ward meaning " In a tight place," or, " In a oorntr " S. P. WuUworth. A RARE CASE. Mattie's story was simple enough. The orphan child of a former servant in wealth; family, Mattie had shared the lessons and the play of the young daughter of the bouse, until a time came when it was convenient to turn the hum ble companion adrilt to work for her self. It may have been a piece of the ill-luck his neighbors ascribed to Drew, that it should have been to his farm the girl came as help to his sister, or it may ave been a piece of his good-nature that made him agree t3 take under his roof this pretty lass, untrained for ser vice and educated far above her station. Drew's widowed sister, Mrs. Bankes, who lived with him, and whose child it was Mattie had come to nurse, amongst other duties too numerous to mention, , for there was but one servant kept ' Drew's sister exclaimed in despair ' when the farmer brought Home the young, lady-like, delicate-looking girl. " We want a strong, hard-working, lass! This one does not know her right band from her left. She is as good as a lady or as bad and has never milked a cow inner me: wuai were you Hank ing of to bring her bereP' ''!.! that's inst mv luclr; well -a, a must do the best we can with her. If the steward had never mentioned her to me, now but then he did mention her.tnd here she is." There she was, and there she stayed, Apt to learn, willing to be taught grateful for the real kindness she me1 with, Mattie was soon the best hand at milking for miles round, soon devoted to the baby. Three years passed quietly, and then came the romance of Mattie's life. She was twenty that summer and Adam Armitage, a grave man, was fully ten years her senior. A great traveler, member of a world-renowned scientific society, a student and discoverer he was, between two scientific expeditions, refreshing heari and brain by a walk ing tour throusrh the home counties. Adam's walking tour ended at the farm Drew had taken only a year be fore, and the dwelling house it had been found more convenient to .inhabit than the smaller building on the old land close to the road. Mr. Armitage found the pure air of the Downs good for him. He made friends with all the family. To Mattie it was delightful to meet once more some one with all the tricks of speech and manner of the more refined society amongst which her youth had been passed. Little Harry followed this new friend wherever he went; Harry's mother called him a right-down Eleasant gentleman ; the farmer called im a good man. They all missed him when he went away. Mattie most of all ; but the fol lowing summer saw him there again, a welcome old friend this time, and no stranger. Drew, a keen observer of all that went on around him. was not so much taken by surprise as his sister was, when one day, toward the end of this second visit, Adnm and Mattie were both mysteriously misting. A strong armed courtiy lass made her appear ance before night, bhe was the bearer of a note from Mattie, confessing that she nnd Mr. Armitage were married, and hoping the servant sent might sup ply her place so that no one would bo 1 nconvenienced. Drew might shake his head and look thoughtful, but Mr. Armitage was his own master, and it w:ts net the first time a gentleman had married a country lass. Besides, the deed was done and past recall. They had gone quietly to one of the churches in the town from whence the sound of bells flouted up to the farm, and had been married by special license. Adam had taken a lodging for his bride, and there they passed one brief, bright week of happiness; then one morning walked quietly back together, Mattie blushing nnd smiling, and looking so lovely and lady-like in a simple dress that she used to wear before she came to the farm, that they hardly knew her. Adam explained that he meant to leave his wile for two days no more in the care of her old friends; at the en a oi mat time lie wouia return to fetch her. There were arrangements to make with regard to the scientific ex pedition about to start immediately. It would sail without him now, but it be hooved him to do his best that his place jbould be as well filled as might be. There was also his mother to see, and to prepare for receiving Mattie. Maltie walked a little way with her husband and the farmer along the breezy uplands, and then Adam sent her back, and hastened his own steps in the direction of the little station at the foot of the Downs. W hen he came again, he said, laughing, that it would be from 8 station, and that he would drive in a fly through the Stoncdene gate and along the track, the only approach to a carriage road leading to the farm. Mattie went away smiling as he meant she should do, and only p.iused now and then to look after the two men as long as they remained in sight. It was natural that she should feel a little afraid of this unknown lady, Adam's mother, but that fear was the only shadow on Mattie's path. It was an idyll, a poem, as true a love story as the world has seen, that had written itself here in this out-of-the-way spot on the lonely Sussex Downs. On the third day they might look for Adam to return, but that day passed, and many another, until the days were weeks, and the weeks months, and he neither came nor wrote. Mattie remem bered how when she had turned to look back for the last time upon that home ward walk, she had seen his figure dis tinct against the sky for one instant, and in the next lost it entirely as he passed out of sight over the swelling line of hills Just so she seemed to have lost him in one instant out of her life. And yet, she never lost faith and trust in him ; never ceased to watch for his coming again. Drew after a time, either goaded to the step by his sister's loud-voiced argu ments, or prompted to it by his own sense of what was due to Mattie, not only took pains to ascertain that the marriage was real enough, but fie further pains of searching lor and find ing the address of Adam Armitage in London. It was strange how this girl and her former master both trusted Adam in the face of his inexplicable silence; in the face of even a more ominous discovery made by Drew when in town the discovery that he had never mentioned MaUie's name to his mother, or alluded to Mattie at all. As for Adam. Mrs. Arm.tage had declared he was not with her then, and that she could not give an address that would find him; an assertion that confirmed Mattie in the idea that he had started on those far-away travels he had so often spoken of to her. As autumn passed and the evenings grew chill with the breath of the coming winter, Mattie's health seemed to fail. The deep melancholy that oppressed her tnreatened to break the springs of life. In order to escape from Mrs. Bankes the girl took to loneJy wanderings over the Downs; wanderings that ended always at Stonedene; until, with the instinct of a wounded animal that seeks to endure its pain alone, or from the ever present recollection of the last words of Adam. when he bad said it was by way of Stonedene that he would return, she besought the farmer to send away the woman in cnargeoi tne House and allow ber to take her place. Dre yielded to the wish of the wife, whDse heart was breaking with the pain of absence, and the mystery of silence, and Mattie, on this foggy dav had al ready Jived months at Stonedene, on the WaiCU aiwnjt jui me coining Ol ACam. The fog increased instead of diminish ing with the approach of evening. Drew could not see his own bouse until he was close to it; as he bad remarked. the mystery of Mattie's affairs was not more impe etrabie man tne veti hiding all natural objects just then. When be had put up the horse and gone into tea RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JUKE 3, 1880. Mrs. Bankes, as she bustled about, pre paring the meal that Mattie's deft little fingers hart been wont to set out wun so much quietness as wen as celerity, did not fail to greet him with the ques tion : " Well, how is she f " " She" had come to mean Mattie in tho vocabulary ot the farmer and his sister. " About as usual in health," Drew re plied, lifting the now five-year-old Harry to his knee; "but troubled in mind; though, to be sure, that is as usual, too." ' She is out of her mind," exclaimed Mrs. Bankes, irritably. "Every one but yourself knows that; and if you do not know it, it is only because you are as mad as she is or any one might think so from the way you go on." " Nay, nay," said Drew gently, as the butter-dish was set upon the table with a vehemence that made the teacups rat tle. "There are no signs of madness about Mattie unless you call her trust in her husband by so hard a name." " Husband! a pretty husband, indeed! I've no patience with him, nor with vou. either. As if it was not a com mon tale enough! It would be better to persuade the eirl to come home and get to work again than to encourage her in her fancies, while you pay another servant here and times so hard as they are." " I was thinking to-day," the farmer went on, softly passing his broad palm over the blond head ot the child upon his knee, "I was thinking as I came along of how it stands written : "He that loveth not his brother whom he bath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen?' " At that instant the sbadowy form of some one going round to the tront door passed the window, against which the fog pressed closely. Drew set little Harrv on his feet and rose slowly, lis- teninz with intentness and a surprised look that made his sister ask what ailed him. " Rover the dog does not bark ; who by the mercy of neaven, it is the man himself!" cried Drew, as the door opened with a suddenness that caused Mrs. Bankes to drop the plates on the brick floor. 1 or Adam Armitage stood unon the threshold; Adam, pale and worn, a shadow of his former self, but himself unmistakably. Adam looked around the room as though seeking s om eone, smiled in his old fashion at Harry, gave a half curi ous, half indifferent glance to Eliza Bankes, and then turned to the farmer. " Drew," he said simply, " where is mv wife?" " Mrs. Armitare is waiting for you at Stonedene. sir ; there was Bome talk of vour coming back that way." ' ' Waiting !" Adam threw up bis hands with a passionate gesture ; what can she have thought?" " She has thought you weregoneafter all upon mat voyage, ana that your let tcrs had miscarried. Sometimes she has thought that you were dead, Mr Armitage, but never" Drew broke off and held out his hand : " We knew you could explain what has happened, sir." he concluded. Adam drew his own hand across his eyes, in the way a man might do who lias lately been roused irom a bad dream and has some trouble to collect his.thoushts. "That has happened." he said. which, if it had not befallen me myself and become a part ot my own experi ence, I should find it difficult to believe possible. A strange thing has happened. and yet" here the old smile they re membered so well broke slowly like light over his fact " and yet a thing not more strange, as the world goes, than that you 1 say nothing of Mattie but that you should have trusted me throughout. I detected no mistrust in your voice, no doubt in your eyes, not tven when they first met mineiust now They call mine a rare case, iriend; they might say tne same ot your oenet in me. But Stonedene, did you say? Walk with me there, and hear my tale as we go, "This evening; and in this mist; and you, sir, looking far from well," began Eliza Bankes. " Mattie has waited so long already that one night more will make but little difference." ' One night, one hour more than can help will make all the difference between willlul wrong and a misfortune that has fallen on "both alike." said Adam. He would not be dissauded from setting out at once, and in another minute tiie two men were pursuing their way through the driving mist, Adam talking as they went. After parting from Mattie he had taken train to London, where arriving in due course no drove in a cab toward his mother s house in Grosvenor street within a few yards of which his cab oveturned and Adam was thrown out, falling heavily upon his head. After long interval, however, he opened his eyes and recovered consciousness ; and as he did so slowly at first, after a time more fully, the astounding discovery was made that memory was entirely gone. However, this state was one from which, so said his friends, science could at will recall him, and the operation necessary to restore Adam to himself was deferred only until his health ad mitted of its being attended by a mini mum of risk. It was while Adam was in the state above described that Drew had seen Mrs. Armitage. A proud woman, she was ill-pleased to bear he had married a farm servant; for that was the one fact that, stripped of Drew's panegyrics upon Mattie's superior education and refined manners, alone stared her in the i ace. Hastily resolving that there was no need to embitter her own life by an at tempt to recall to ber son this ill-fated marriage, she did not hesitate to de ceive her unwelcome visitor. Change of scene had been ordered for the pa tient, and before Drew called at the house in Grosvenor street for the second time Adam and his mother were gone. It was in Paris, months after, tiiat the operation was finally and successfully performed, and then the first word of Adam's was Mattie's name. The first effort of bis newly-recovered powers was to relate to his mother the history of his marriage and to write to bis wife. "God grant the suspense has neither killed nor driven her mad!" he ex claimed. It was to bis mother's hand the letter was confined, and with that exclama tion of his ringing in her ears, Mrs. Ar mitage stood beside the brazier filled with charcoal and burning in the ante room of their apartment in the Champ Ely sees. She was not a bad woman, but the temptation was too strong to al low this affair to unravel itself, and see what would turn up. If the girl were dead, why no harm had been done, and this terrible mistake of her son's was rectified at once. it tne otner aiterna- ive were to prove true ana wattle nan lost her senses, Adam would be equally free from ber, or measures couia do taken to insure so desirable a result. Mrs. Armitage tore tne letter into pieces and waited by the brazier until tne fragments were charred - Adam askea no awkward questions, and was not even surprised at receiving no answer to his epistle, since in it he nnd announced his coming. The first day bis health ad mittedit, he set out alone for England. Such was tne story, wnen urew had told of bis efforts to seek Adam. and had mentioned that no letter had reached Mattie, Adam was at no loss to understand at once tne part nu mother had played. But he never spoke of it, then or at any future time. ine nouse ooor-aii otwneuene biuuu ajar; evening Had closed in now, ana the chilly fog was still abroad, but the figure at tne gate was dimiy aiscernioie. Adam Hastened nis Bteps. " For heaven's sake, sir. be careful ! the suddenness of it might turn her brain," cried Drew, laying a detaining hand upon the arm of his companion. Adam gently snoon mm on. " Suddenness." he repeated. " Ave. it Is sudden to you and to Mrs. Bankes, hnt. fnr me and for Mattie. whose thoughts are day and night, night and day full of each other, how can it be sudden P" Drew stood still end Adam went on alone until his footsteps became audi ble and Mattie turned her head to see him standing at her side. Adam had been right; no fear was there for Mattie's brain. All excite ment, all surprise and wonder came afterward: at that first supreme mo ment, and with a satisfied stgh, as of a child who had got all it wants, Mattie held out her arms to him with one word "Husband" As Adam drew her to him it was not only the mist or the darkening evening that blinded Drew so that for a moment or two he saw neither of them. People say Drew s luck has turned from the day Stonedene found a tenant It is newlv done un and prettily fur nished now; Mr. and Mrs. Armitage come down there once or twice a year. with their children, tor a breath of sea air and to visit old friends. Bells. The history of bells is full of romantic interest In civilized times they have been intimely associated, not only witn all kindB cf religious and social rites, but witn almost every important Histor ical event. Their influence in architect ure is not less remarkable, for to them indirectly we-prob&Wy -ewe all the most famous towers m tne wor a. dbiih umiv summoned soldiers to arms, a? W.ell as citizens to bath or senate, or Christians to church They sounded the alarm in fire or tumult, and the rights of the burghers in their bells were jealously guarded. Many a bloody .chapter in history has been rung in and out by bells. On the third day of Easter, 1282 at the rineine of the Sicilian vespers 8.000 French were massacred in cold blood by John of Procida, who had thus planned to free Sicily from Charles of Anjou. un ttie xn ot August, At. Bartholomew's day, 1571, bells ushered in the massacre ot tne Huguenots in France to the number, it is said, of 100.000. Bell founding attained perfection in Holland in the sixteenth and seven teenth centuries, and the names of Hcmorry. Dumery, and the Van den Ghens stand as the princes of the art Bell ringing by rope is still a popular art in England. Tho first regular peal of bells sent to England was in 1456 bv Pope Calixtus III. to Kine's college Cambridge, and was for 300 years the largest peal in that country. At the be. ginning of the sixteenth century sets ot eight bells were hung in a lew euurcne" The great bell at Moscow, Cznr Kol okol. which, according to the inscnp tion, was cast in 1733, was in tbe earth 103 years, and was raised by the Em peror Nicholas in 1836. It seems never to have bten actually hung or rung, hav ing been cracked in tne mrnacc. it stand on a raised Dlatform in the middle ol i square, and is used for a cliaoel. It weiehs440.000 pounds; height. 19 feet inches: circumference, 60feet9 inches thickness. 2 feet: weight of broken piece, 1 1 tons. The second Moscow bell, the largest in the world in actual use, weighs 128 tons. The great bell at Pekin weiiths 53 tons ; Nanking, 22 tons Oimulz, 17 tons ; Vienna, 17 tons; Notre Dame, 17 tons; Erfurt, one of the finest bell metal, 13 tons. The Kaiserglock of Cologne cathedral, lately recast (1875) weighs twenty-five tons. The Force of the Wind on the Body, It is doubtful whether attention has been sufficiently directed to the part the force of wind plays in producing altera tion of the blood-pressure in localities of the surface. In full health this mav be an unimportant consideration, the skin being stimulated to a proper dc gree of tension, and the underlying ves sels suffering no compression; but, in the case of persons of low vitality, this " bracing " may not oecur, or almost in stantly BUDsiae, ana congestion oi deep organs may men De mecnamcaiiy pro duced bv prolonged exposure to thi force of a strong wind. Sometimes numbness and even paralysis of the nerves may result from the same cause In the old coaching days facial paral ysis was a well-recognized result ot sittins with the face to the onen win dow. In the more rapidlv moving rail' way carriage of to-day the angle of in cidence and reflection throws the cur rent of air on the passenger sitting one seat removed from the window, or the current of air strikes the back ot the carriage, and is passed round behind the necks of the passengers, as any one may demonstrate with a lighted match. In all these instances It is the force as much as the temperature of the jet of air which produces the results some times experienced from "sitting in draught." The question arises whether this little fact, taken in connection with others, mav not hereafter be found to throw some new light on the nature of a "cold" and Its moroia phenomena, Perhaps, after all. "cold-catchinir " is. in part, at least, a process in which the blood is forcibly dnvenuut ot a parucu lar area ol tne sunuce, wnue tne vitality of its nerve is diminished by mechanical depression. A small jut of air, playing continually on a limited space, will give some hyper-sensitive individuals a severe " cold." London Lancet. New York city consumes 1.600 bus.bpls ot potatoes per (lay. . T t i.i . The Country Weekly. At the banauet elven by the Wheel- tt ( W.Va.) Sunday Leader in honor of its sixth birthday, A. O. Bunhell, editor of the Dansville (N. Y.) Adverser, re- ponded substantially as louows to tne toast "The Country Weekly; next to the city daily the first power in the land :" In the first place, the country weekly is older than the city daily by nearly one hundred years We cannot be ex pected to take a bacK seat ior a junior i Secondly, the country weekly has edu cated the most brilliant and versatile editors and the most profound writers who ever gave character to the city dailv. Can't stand below a scholar ol ours! Thirdlv. the country weekly outnum bers the city daily many times over, and we would like to see the majority giving way to the minority in a repub lican countrv like ours. Bad precedent! Fourth 1 v. the country weekly is An- teoss multiplied indefinitely. At thou sands of events it touches the people, its mother earth, and its strength is thereby nnnt.innallv renewed and absolutely in exhaustible. It defies the Hercules of the citv daily to lift it from the ground to its death. Fifthly, it molds pvblio opinion as no city daily can. ine city eoicoriai, be it never so brilliant and powerful, comes from afar, nnd in a sense is vague and unreal as its author is unknown and intangible. Whereas, the writer lor the countrv weekly knows, and is known by nine-tenths of his subscrib ers, who are are his champions through think nnd thin. And so we might go on to thirtecntuiy , but what's tho use ot sparrng a deaa man P Those who believe in punish ment after death may indulge in this nrohtless pastime. L;t us look around for something still alive. Perhaps the pulpit or the platform or the school house, the idol3 of the people, would like to compare notes with the country weekly. It will take just one minute to dispose of those, for it can be easily shown that tne country weemy suoor- dinates them all. It hns a larger con eresation than the minister, a wider range ot subjects than the orator, more attractive and more practical lessons than the nedaeoeue. The fact is, we cannot bring to mind just at this mo ment anv peer ol tne comntrv weekly. ti . ' .ui um:- .a Uul, seriously, we moiousuij uencvo in tne country weekly, an i our ueiri reioices in the glorious estate to which it has attained. Yet " No Minerva-born thought is this countrv Dress. Springing lorth from some brain in the pride ol its prime, A itod from tho flrat in its panoplied dresa, But the slow-going, slow-growing triumph ot titno. It represents the work of many brains for many years. Its power for good or evil is not computable, wnue we re. in its glory and its strength, we tremble iu view of tho responsibilities which have-grown with its growing power, and in conclusion? tKUiyi hands with the citv dailv. we echo the senti ment of a lamented journalist recently dead : "The press ot America is its hope its prophet and its guardian woe be tide press and nation too, if the former tails ot its opportunity and its trust The Printer, B. F. Taylor once paid the following tribute to the toilers at the case: The printer is the adjutant of thought, and this explains the mystery ol the won derful word that can kindle a hope as no song can that can warm a heart as no hope that word " we," with a hand in-hand warmtn in it, for the author and printer are engineers together, en eineers indeed! When the little Cor, sican bombarded Cadis at the distance of five miles, it was deemed the very triumph of engineering. But what is that range to this, whereby they bom uard ages yet to ber There at the " case " he stands and marshals into Hue the forces armed for truth, clothed in immortality aud Eng lish. And what can be nobler than the equipment of a thought in sterlin Saxon Saxon with tho ring of spear on shield thereon, nna that comnus sinning it when we are dead, to move gradually on to the " latest syllable recorded time." This is to win a vie. tory from death, for this has no dyin in it. The printer is called e laborer, and the office he performs, toil. Oh, it is not work, but a sublime rite that he is performing, when he thus sights the engine that is to fling n worded truth in itrandor curve than missile e er be fore described fling into the bosom of an aee vet unborn. Ho throws off his coat indeed ; we but wonder, the rather, that he does not put his shoes from off bis feet, for the place whereon he stands is holy ground. A little song was uttered somewhere, long ago it wandered through the twilight feebler than a star it died upon the ear. But the printer caught it up where it was lying tbero in si lence like a wounded bird, and he equips it anew with wings, nnd he sends it forth from the ark that had preserved it, and it flies forth into the future with the olive branch of peace ; and around the world with melody, like the dawning of a spring morning. How the type have built up the broken arches in the bridge of time How they render the brave utterances beyond the pilgrims audible and elo quenthardly fettering the free spirit but moving not a word, not a sylla ble lost in the whirl of the world moving in connected paragraph and period, down the lengthening line of years. Some men find poetry, but they do not look for it as men do for nug gets of gold ; they see it in nature's own handwriting, that so few know how to read, and they render it into English. Such are the poems for a twlight hour and a nook in the heart; we may lie under the trees when we read them, and watch the gloaming, and see the faces in the clouds, in the pauses; we may read them when the winter coals are glowing, and tbe volume may slip from the forgetful hand, and still, like evening bells,- the melodious thoughts will ring on. A ton of cold or silver contains 29,160 66 ounces. A ton of gold is worth $602,875. A ton of silver, at the present rate per ounce, is worth about $32,000. A cubic foot of gold weighs 1,200 pounds, and is worth nearly $3C0.O00. A cubic foot of silver weighs 000 pounds, and is worth about f 10,000. rue value ot go id coin, bars and bullion in circulation in the world is estimated at $3,500,000,000. This would make in a mass a twenty five (cot cube. TIMELY TOPICS. Fortv ner cent, of the Chinese of San Francisco have been hack and forth be tween the United States nnd China four or five times. Most of the Chinese go back once in five years, and rarely any one stavs longer than eight years contin uously in this country. Many unineae merchants return regularly to spend tho Chinese New Year at home. Bartholdi. the French sculptor, says there is no doubt that the great statue of Liberty enlightening the world will be ready for its place in New York har bor in 18H3, tne year in wnicn iNew York's great world's fair is to be held. This statue, when erected, will be the largest in America. It was presented to the United States by the Freneh peo ple, and Hart bold i is bard at work at it in France. Buckley is a Texas horse thief nnd murderer, for whom the law officers searched long nnd fruitlessly. A man called on the governor, introduced him self as a friend of the outlaw, and said that he was prepared to buy his pardon bv giving information against other criminals. The governor was inclined to mnke finch a harcain. and sent him to the attorney-eeneral, who recognized him as none other than Buckley mm self. The rascal drew a long knife out of his bootleg, but was overpowered and locked up . The New York Bulletin makes a com pilation of crop reports which shows so far as can bo shown at this time that the wheat production of 1880 will tully equal that ot 187'J. lowa ana Kansas will fall off, but their deficiency will be fullv made up by gains in llli- nois.Ohio. Minnesota and Pennsylvania. If present promise shall be verified, that will be the fourth successive great grain crop in the United States a continu ance of prosperity almost if not qui te without precedent. The New York State fish commis sioners are advocating tho eulture of carp. The experiments at the govern ment nonds in Was hineton have been very successful, fish that were put in there three years ago having crown much larger than in Europe under tho same circumstances. They are an easy fish to raise. Any kind of a pond, no matter how restricted, can bo used. Providing that the water is not too cold, carp thrive, no matter how impure it is. No natural water hns been found too warm for them. They thrive on plants growing in the water, on boiled grain or even offal. A pond may be dug in arable land and used for three or four years as a carp pond, after which the land may be again cultivated. A correspondent of the Leavenworth Time i calls attention to the similarity between tho stand storm in Kacsas and ono in the island of Sicily, in the Medit terranean, two days afterward, and be lieves both wereof meteoric origin. The Kansas dust was composed of brown i VOfwlr liYiTnlr,Vln mittpr nnrt fi abundant that on the next day traces of the deposits could be seen on the surface of the ground, and on a north porch sufficient to receive the imprints of a cat's feet. The writer says : The near coincidence of dales between the phe nomenon in Sicily and here, with an ap parent similarity in the physical proper ties of the dust, might sug,.; est a common origin. The act incorporating the New York world's fair of 1883, in celebration of the treaty of peuce between Great Britain and tho United States, provides for the subscription of $12,000,000, which is $2,000,000 more than the centennial exposition estimate was based upon, tho commissioners of that celebration limiting their financial operations to $10,000,000. This extra $2,000,100 does not by any meansrepresent the increased magnitude of tho proposed exposition over tho last ono held in the United States, for it is confidently expected tliHt the receipts alone, owing to the metropolitan location of tho exposition and its ready means of access to allpaits of tho world, will be immensely greater than at the Philadelphia exposition. Besides this, the commissioners having in charge the projected f:tir believe there will be no difficulty in raising the amount mentioned in the net, or even more. Women are doing a good work in foreign fields under the direction ot the Woman's Union Missionary society, whose nineteenth anniversary was cele brated recently at the Broadway taber nacle in New York. In Calcutta and Raj pore 1.162 women and girls are under the instruction of one lady and her assist ants. An orphanage has been estab lished at Calcutta, where more than 500 children receive care. Twenty-five pupils are now boarding at the mission in Pekin. and there are also u large number of day scholars. Moreover, village schools are being opened in China. In Cyprus a school has been opened for Giteic girls, and about sixty are in attendance. In Allahabad, India, where there ore about 450 pupils under instruction, the earnestness of the women in their mission work has been rewarded by a gift of $4,000 from the government. Bailroad Statistics. T, ere are some 85,000 miles of rail road in the United States operated by some 600 different companies. There are over 20,000 slat ons. On these lines are 13,000 locomotives, 13,000 passenger cars, 5,000 baggage, mail end express cars, and some oou.ooo lreight cars. No reliable statistics show the number ot men employed on this 85,000 miles of ro:.d, hut it is estimated that tiiere are about 40,000 engineers and firemen, 20,000 psssengcr train conductors nnd brakemtn, ubout the same number of baggage, mail and express men, and at least 50,000 men on fivij:ht trains. Add station agents and clerks, train dispatch ers, telegraph operators, yardmen, road masters, truckmen, watchmen, flagmen, freight laborers, machinists; car-builders and repairers, employees in round houses and shops, and last, but not least, presidents, general managers, su perintendents, the auditor's depart ment, treasurer's department, etc., and we have . almost 1,000,000 men em ployed in the railroad business of the United States. Add to this tLe num ber of men employed in the manufac ture of railroad supplies, in car and lo comotive works, in rolling mills, in cut ling ties, etc, and, perhaps, we could bring the number ot men who derive their living from railroads in our coun try alone ty nearly 8.000,000. NO. 15. Clothed In White. Clothed in white ft happy ohildjat play. 1 lor face all radiant as the hnos of morning With Tairy step ho trod; creature lovely as tho flowers of May. Who could bewitch at with her ohildish scorning, Or ml ns with a nod. Clothed in white with blossoms in her hair. A maiden whom to love appeared a doty A spell around her hung; A sense ot all that nature makes most fair, That tilled with rapture all who wateheil her beauty, Or heard her silver tongne. Clothed in white she heard the wedding chime, Blushing beneath her erown ot orange flowers, As her soft answer flows Like mnsio, with no pretence of the time When o'er her lite, which love so fondly dowers, The shadowy grave will close. Clothed In white her form we seem to see Shine in the glory of a now existence, Delying time and nfcht, And from all earth born memories set tree; While wo, like travelers toiling in the dis tance, Yearn for the coming light. Tintlty't Magattnt. ITEMS OF INTEREST. A display of American plants is to be held annually in Hyde Park, London. " My work's dun," remarked the col lector as he started out in the morning. Marathon Independent. Two Iowa men h.-.da ow race the other day on a bet of $50. The best time was seven minutes. The latest London fog: First pedes trian " Is your lantern out?" Second pedestrian I don't know; l li tcei." A Cuban ciar manufacturer made for the King of Spain 1,000 cigars, for which he received $1,000, ana refused to duplicate tho order. In the six New England btatca there are nearly 2,000 divorces every year, and within twenty years me numoer has fully doubled. Hie cuttle on a thousand hills Contribute to the milkmun's wealth, So does the water from the rills That's Blipped into the cans by stoulth. The Canadian senate lately rejected, by thirty-two to thirty-one, the bill legalizing marriage with a deceased wile's sister or a deceased brother's wife. A man who offered for five dollars to pu' any one on tho track of a paying in vestment, seated an applicant between the rails of the Bo3ton and Albany rail road. Rocliester Express. VW4"' VI J VI A U U - -- . . w . M"' inniiioilitra tn tn r F lYiinfl m on men ot aniH"'""VD "f V ' T " wlm nrn niMiniea Willi 1UUK1UK HI a buzz-saw without feel of it with their finger Sentinel. This is the season when the sward in the front vard is kenl smooth and unobstructea, ana yet a man win btumble on the lawn mower during the next few months more than in any other part of the year. Keokuk Gate Ciiy. The Auichkoff palace, the residence of the czarevitch, is now connected with the St. Petersburg Alexandrinsky theater by the telephone, and the czare vitch and his wiie listen to the music without having to go to the theater. That which takes the conceit out of a rising young statesman as quick as any thing is to be caught in the act of going for a cent's worth of yeast in his native village. He feels like p tting himself in the hands of his friends. 1'icayune. A man had $110 with which he was told to buy 100 cattle. He went into tho market nnd found he -ould buy cows nt $10 each, sheep nt $3 each and pigs at titty cents a head. He bought 1U0 animals with his $100. How did he make up his assortment? An old miser, who was notorious for seif deninl, was one day asked why he was so thin. "I do not know," said llu miser; I have tried various means for gettins? fatter, but without success." 'Have jou tried victuals?" inquired a friend. When a man comes limping into bis place of limine s late in the morning, and presents the general appearance of having had bis spinal column si-altered by a railway accident, his friends need not be alarmed ; lie has been working in the garden. Albany Argus. A report to the annual conference oi tho Mormons says that the Mormon population of Utah is 111,620, that the church iu that Territory has lost 600 members and gained 1,500 in a year, and that the church receipts in that period were over 1,000,000. A colored man at Danville, 111., offered to drink all the whisky that a barroom party would give him. The effort killed him, und the widow sued those who had supplied the beverage for $15,000 damagts, but a jury cut down the valuation of the drunkard to $15 X The summer days are here, and the perspiring editor dreams of green fields and babbling brooks and solt bretz:s laden with the fragrance of J une roses and awakens to the sad fact that there is such a thing as a composing room and a horde of printers hungry for "copy." A tuird-of-o-century plant is attract intr miif.h attention in Greenviiie, Miss. Thirty-three years ago a lady, now iiv . ' Si IM.. ....... .-..Ki.la.t nml Dili plant was in bloom and some of its liowcrs graced the wedding breakfast. The owner has carefully tended the plant ever since, und this season it has hr-t into flower lor the first time Biuce the wedding day. There is long grade on tne xerre Haute and Logtmsport railroad In In diana. A heavily-loaded freight car broke loose from a train and Biarted down this incline. It gained a frightful rate of speed, and was going in the di rection lrom which a lust passenger train was soon to come. A dreadtul col liEiou was thus Imminent. A locomo tive was quickly sent in pursuit of the runaway. The chase was most excit ing. The engineer, by ioicmg a speed of sixty miles an hour, finally overtook the freight car, fastened to it, and drew it in a reverse direction, lust in time tj prevent a disaster, s desire to jwiieuon vine mo Q