ii i a i i if ii ii HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars par Annum. VOL. X. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA.? THUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1880. NO. 18. Consistency. Tbore a time to wake and a time to sleep, A time to low, a time to reap ; There's a time tor work, a time ior play, A time for haste, a time ior delay; There's a time to rejoiee, a time to weep, A time for the living, a time for the deep; There a time tor bope and expectations, A time for iulflllment and realizations; Poor mortal, whatever thy lot may be, Cultivate flashes of consistency. There's a time lor love and a time for hate, A time to augment, a time to abate; There's a time to adhere, a time to secede, A time 10 wound and a time to bleed; There's a time to endure, a time to forbear, A time to do and a time to dare; There's a time ior silence, a time to unfold, A time ior the meek and a time ior the bold; Poor mortal, whatever thy lot may be, Cultivate flashes oi consistency. There's a time to abide, a time to absterge, A time to caress and a time to scourge; There's a time to intrust, a time to decry, A time lor decoy and a time to espy; There's a tiuie ior justice, a time lor right, A time for pity and a time ior might; There's a time ior the noble, the good, and the true, A time to gather and a time to strew; Poor mortal, whatever thy lot may be, Cultivate flashes oi consistency. Charlet A. Fiichtr. The Red Flag at No. 54. (Mbs. Ghat to Mns. Thompson.) Cousin Ned from California, Nevada New Mexico, and all other places be yond the Rocky mountains, has been paying us a visit. You know just what a jolly good soul Ned always was, and he is just as jolly now as why should he not be, with an income of six or seven thousand a yrarP Beside that my poor Georges eighteen hundred hides its diminished head. He is handsomer than ever, too the same merry brown eyes and chestnut hair; but, in addition, an appearance, an air so altogether distingue that our neighbors nil go to their windows to gaze after him. Well, do you know, the mo ment he appeared I set my heart on him for our dear old friend Adelaide, who shali not waste her sweetness on the desert air if I can help it. You know I always had a fancy for matchmaking, though, to confess the truth, I have never yet scored a success in that line; my two predestined hflinities always fly off at a 'anterit just us I flatter mysell it is uti fait ai conip i. (You will per ceive 1 have not forgotten quite all the French we learned 'ogether at the River ide seminary, notwithstanding my years of devotion to pies and puddings. I will keep a little of il out of respect for the memory of poor Mademoiselle Laurent who worked so hard to drill it into me). t hut Adelaide and Ned have been cor responding a year or two; he speaks of hei wi h great respect as how could he otherwise, of course? and I have fonlly hoped that his mission to the East mav have more relation to the affairs if the heart thau to mining stocks, as ho pretends. Well, soon after his arrival three we?ks ago, Ned and I were sitting in the dining-room a.one; the children had starud ior school, nnd George had kissed rue and gone downtown, after an hour's talk with Ned about ranches, and buiTos, and gulches, and canons. Now that 1 was alone with our visitor the conversation took a confidential turn, bordering on the sentimental, and in pursumce of the idea uppermost in my mind, I told him I thought it mysterious, providential, that he had not fallen a victim to some bonanza primes?, or some bewithing senorita with no dower but her beauty. " And by the way," I went on, " what was ever the trouble between you and Ujp captain's daughter?" You remember of course, Julia, how much we heard at the time about that affair how duiing the war 1 used to read to you, even during study hours, the letters 1 had received from brother Jim, stationed at Fortress Monroe, giving the details, in Jim's rather satirical style, of the serious flirtation in progress between Lieutenant Ned, of Company C, and Captain Darring ton's pretty daughter, oi the regulars? And afterward, how some way a shadow came between them nobody could tell how, only that Ned was tasty, and had exaggerated ideas of a man's prerogatives, perhaps, and Miss Ditrrington proud and shy ? So it was forgotten. And now this same lieutenant, after hair-breadth escapes from shot and shell, and scalping Apaches, sat there in an easy chair by my Baltimore heater and actually turned pale because I mentioned the "captain's daughter!" Love is indeed la grande passion. He had nothing to communicate, however; bade me consider that we were always great fools at twenty-one, and likely at that time to get caught in a trap, or, on the other hand, to throw our chances of happiness away, just as it chanced to be; he became silent, and I had not the heart to rally him as he sat there watching the floating smoke of his cigar with a far-off look in his eyes knowing as I did that he had gone back fifteen years, and that he was walking the moonlight beach with pretty Lottie Darrington, while the band of the regiment played in the dis tance. From the sublime to the ridiculous it is always my fate, dear Julia. Bar ney, the iantotum of the neighborhood, tapped at the window, and as I taised the sash, "A folne morning, mum," said he; "there's a red flag out at Number 61, and I thought I'd be after coruin' to tell ye. 'lis a foine house, and a foine leddy, inore's the pity." You see, Barney knows my weakness, and he had seen me a tew days before an ani mated bidder at an auction in the neighborhood. "Thank you, Barney; I think I'll be on hand," I replied, clos ing the window. "A foine leddy," to be sure; I had often met her a fair-faced woman, plainly and tastefully dressed, walking with two charming children. Her house seemed the aoode of peace and comfort, so far as thn nasser-bv could judge, and what could have compelled the Dreaking up of so cosy an establish ment? At all events I would not stop to speculate it was possible here was my opportunity to secure a handsome sideboard at a bargain. As I wished to be on hand in time to look through the house before the sale began. I asked Ned to have the goodness to excuse me tor an hour or so. " Oh, I will go with you, Mrs. Too dies," said he, quite gayly, and ran up' stairs for his hat and cane. So off we went to No. 64, where the naming nag announced the desecration of household gods. We were admitted by the man in charge of the sale; anil such a charming abode! Not a down right curiosity shop, the effect of deco rative art run mad, but such taste and ingenuity everywhere visible. People with shrewd, hard faces, boarding house keepers, "second-hand men," e yeing the engravings and pretty water colors on the parlor wall, running their greasy fingers over the keys of the piano, turning chairs topsy-turvy, and shaking tames 10 see now urm on tneir legs tliey migm De. in ine oay window was a lare stand of beautiful thrifty plants of which I resolved to carry off at least half. The two floors above were neat and pleasant; but it was the second story back that wrung my heart. It was the nuisery. Toys and personal ar tides had of course bn removed, but there was a pretty little bed beside the large one, and two cunning little rock ing-chairs. The windows looked out on a pleasant garden, and here was sit ting old Mrs. Wiggan, with whom I nao. a nine acquaintance. " Such a char mini house." said I. ' is it not a pity to break up this pretty nest? Do you know the family?" " Poor Mrs. Graham ! She lived here with her children so comfortablv and happily.J two or three lodgers on her upper noor, until a lew months ago sue lost everything Dy tne lailureot a banking-house. She had no relatives in the city; has struggled on, tried to get boarders, but the location is too re mote : she sees no wav but to give it up, place her children with friends in the country, and try to earn a liveli hood by painting. She is said to bean excellent artist, though I'm no judge myself. These are all her own pictures, I believe. She is shut up fn the back parlor; everything taken out of it but ft chair. 1 saw her a few minutes ago. The tears were running down her heeks, but there she sat, bravelv stitching on her children's winter clothes, sewing on the last button, and mending the last stocking poor thing. There are the little innocents at play now m tne yard." Mrs. Wiggan herself (although she had an eye on the best chamber set) wiped away a good generous tear ; my eyes were dim, and I would gladly at that moment have relinquished the best bargain in sideboards. Ned, too, the dear old fellow, looked awfully sorry, as he gazed meditatively out of the window where the bright-eyed little girl and the boy with fair lone curls were loading dirt into a tiny cart with a miniature shovel. From the floor above came the sharp ring of the auc tioneer's voice : "How much, how much? Six dol lars, did you say seven? Six dollars. seven dollars gone at seven !" The auctioneer descended with his followers into the front chamber. Be fore I knew it Ned was there, and in hi impetuous way was bidding in a fashion to astonish the second-hand men. He swept everything before him; Mrs. Wiggan, to be sure, stood him a little contest on the " set," and I laughed to see her glare at him, while he was so absorbed that several punches with my parasol had no effect whatever. " Wat there insarity in his family?" I asked myself. By the time we reached the parlor the second-hand men tad slunk away, the board ing-house keepers looked aghast. I made a brave stand for the sideboard, but it was of no avail; and indeed most of us sat down leaving Ned and the auctioneer to themselves. Every article from the second floor down was purchased that morning by the distin guished stranger. This amusing turn of affairs rather confirmed my Lopes in regard to Ade laide: of course, thought!, he cannot rid himself entirely of those old recol lections; but he knows very well the sterling worth of Adelaide, and what a '-harming, intelligent, devoted wife she will make. All h id gone but Ned, myself and the auctioneer. The latter knocked at the d Kr of the back parlor. " Come in," said a voice, and the burly man swung the doors aside. The mother was mak ing an effort to rise, but the little fellow with the fair curls was clingling so closely about her neck that she could not readily free herself. As she arose and came lorward we saw the traces of tears, the Daleness of tier face, the trem- ulousness of her whole form. JtromNed, who was standing iust be hind me. I suddenlv heard the words : "My God! is it possible?" and turning saw him with a face most indescribab.e in expression. Of course there was no doubt about his being out of his mind too much auction had made him mad. 1 he auctioneer, after ODening the doors. had been called suddenly away, and we three now stood there those two gaz ing at each other, and I at both. ' Edwin!" at last said Mrs. Graham; "Edwin!" with a voice and smile so sweet and sad that I did not wonder at what followed. Ned's ashen face suddenly flushed all over. "Lottie!" he cried, stretching his arms toward her, "Lottie, my be loved, have 1 found vou again?" and he clasped her to his heart. 1 he queerest termination to an auc tion! i have seen many in my capacity of housewife, but never one like this. Mrs. Graham was the "captain s daugh ter," and the generous impulse of the honest Californian had restored his old sweetheart her home yes, and the heart of her faithful lover. 'Mamma." said the little fellow. shyly, " iuhisge.-.tleman the auctioneer, and will he take away all our pretty thiii's?" "No, my dar ing," said Ned, lifting the child far above his head, and then bringing the rouid cheek to the level witu hW o wn lips, ' all your pretty things will remain, you and mamma too." " And you, too?" said Bertie, cordially. " I like you." And so these two, after years of sep. aration, were brought together again. And in such an odd manner, too! I couldn't help thinking how differently 1 should have managed it. had I been writing a story instead of acting a part in reai me. i suouia nave lound Mrs. Graham hrst, ana sympathizingly won her to tell me the story of her troubles. Of course she would have mentioned Ned, and of course I should have seen at a glance that Bhe loved him still. And then I should have been the good angel to bring them together, and merit and receive their life-long thanks, una instead of that, here was Barney acting the part ofthtf angel without knowing it, and my one a chancefor a romantio adventure spoiled forever. It was shameful abominable, and then my plans for Adelaide and Ned, ot course ii was clear they never could su-joeed now. And yet I felt delighted. I went home leaving Ned at No. 64. What a heavenly change for Mrs. Graham! How different from that of the morning looked the sunlight of this afternoon. Her home intact her little ones safely near the prospect of the lonely garret faded away like a fright ful dream. And Ned, happy as a clam, for having remembered the widow and the fatherless. I had them all to dinner that night. Mrs. Graham is charming, I will say it even it Adelaide dies an old maid. There will be a wedding soon at No. 64. I have already received as a present a sideboard much handsomer than Mrs. Graham's. Barney will be provided for, and we shall all bless the day that Cousin Ned went to the auction and bought up the entire establishment including a widow and two children not on the list. It is time for me to look after the din ner; but I thought I must write to you this little romance of my humdrum life. As ever your old chum, Emua. Ehrich's Quarterly. Food as Wealth. The most pressing care is to provide for tho food wants ot the body, and the labor to satisfy these is as obligatory under the equator as in the frozen regions near either pole. It is true that in the torrid regions the earth is so pro fuse in her gifts of fruit and vegetables, and the population there is so scanty, that a sufficiency of food can usually be obtained by the mere gathering; but this labor, though slight, cannot be neglected, and even there, where cloth ing is not one of the human wants, a part of every day must nevertheless be devoted by some member of every family to provide food for the daily use of the household. In our more rugged climate food is still the most pressing want; and in the temperate zone of the northern hemis phere, where we dwell and where the most dense population of the globe is to be found.the struggle for existence is but a continual struggle for bread. Nature here doe3 not "endow the vegetable world with such wealth of human food ; and the fruits which aid man's susten ance are not here sufficient, either in quantity or character, to keep in good active life the over-working minds and bodies of the predominant ruling races which inhabit Europe and America. Man is here, by necessity, forced to till the soil, to aid the earth by his skill, and thus happily from her produce enough food for himself, the Cultivator. and all those whojare dependent upon him for their daily life. Commerce will fill its place in the aff.iirs of men, manufactures have their established position of importance, rail roads and ships seem to be indispen sable to the comfort, even to the life of us, in cities remote from the overburdened tieid. where tho golden gram and the homely useful roots cumber the ground with tho promise of the needed suste nance of far-off', unthinking millions. Wealth is nothing but food, and the means of growing it, excepting perhaps in thoss cool climates, like ours, where some shelter from the weather, either of clothing or of houses, is demanded. It lias been written that paper money is not wealth, neither are diamonds, al though selling lor millions; but that gold onU is really wealth. However opinions may fary. cich of these is as mueli wealth as the other, and none oi them are of any value unless some one, not tne owner, Iims tood enough and to snare, and is willing to exchange some of it for some of these articles. It is again said, and Willi an apparent show of reason, that as we may have shipped across tho ocean during the past year three hundred million dollars' worth oi farm produce, and that we have five times that amount left, that our home reserve is worth only fifteen hundred millions. Can this be true? Let hungry Europe offer again to buy of us the same quantity of grain, beef and pork we have just sold her; would five hundred millions buy it? We think not; and there is not enough gold, silver and precious stones in the world to take from us Our entire annual vield of food products. Gold may be dis pensed with, lood cannot. tiold cm never measure the value of our farm oroduce, but merely regulates the value our surplus; we will not sell our life, nd the life of the nation is its food, and he nation is the farmer. A few hundred years ago our ances tors landed upon this continent, a mere handful, and planted themselves upon t lie eastern border of a vast territory of to them unknown dimensions, from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the frozen regions of the North to the sunny gulf on the South, as yet untouched by the plow or the spade. From the new but comparatively rugged soil ot the lands they tilled, they wrung their sub sistence, little dreaming that in the then unknown lar West vast areas ot toe most fertile land were waiting, and waiting in vain for their cultivation. Gradually as they increased in num bers, and as the soil became in some measure exhausted of the elements necessary to bountiful harvests, our fathers moved westward, tilling the richer ground as they moved, producing therefrom crops of fabulous size,- com pared with those now attainable in the East. They who were left behind on the Atlantic coast, by harder work, more caretul cultivation, as well as by the application of large quantities of enrich ing material, strove manfully to pro duce from mother earth a harvest of equal value with those raised by the pioneer in the great West. By these means they were for a long while enabled to compete with them, as the cost of bringing to the East the bountiful Western yield tended to equal ize the value of an acre's return in both places. But as time rolled on and still more bad been gathered from our East ern fields, without adequate return, and the West was still unfolding myriads of new fields, the contest became more unequal. As a country w have, and no doubt shall for many years continue to have, a large amount of harvest of all food products, enough and to spare, but surely as the sun moves westward every day can we see the time in the future when many of our most fertile States, now furnishing to Europe millions ot bushels ot the most nourishing trains, will silently enroll themselves with those who are now compelled to go down to Egypt to buy corn. Russia is afraid of American grain competition. The Orient. The native bazaars of Cairo and Al exandria reveal to the traveler, at a glance, the character oi the Orient; its cheap tinsel, its squalor and occasional richness and gnrgeousnrss. The shope on each side of the narrow street ars little more than good sized wardrobes, with rooms for shelves of goods in the rear, and for the merchant to sit cross legged in front. There is usually space for a customer to sit with him and, indeed, two or three cn rest on the edge of the platform. Upon cords stretched across the front hang specimens of the wares for sale. Wooden shutters close the front at night. The little cubbies are not places of sale only but of manufac ture of goods. Everything goes on in the view of all the world. The tailor is Btilching, the goldsmith is blowing the bellows of his tiny forge, the sad dler is repairing the old donkey sad dles, the shoemaker is cutting red leather, the brazier is hammering, the weaver sits at his little loom with the treadle in the ground every trade goes on, adding its own clatter to the up roar. What impresses ua most is the good nature of the throng under trying cir cumstances. The street is so narrow that three or four people abreast make a Jam and it is packed with those mov ing in two opposing currents. Through this mass comes a donkey with a couple of paniers of sOil or of bricks, or bundles of scraggy sticks : or a camel surges in, loaded with buildingjoists or with lime, or a Turkish officer with a gayly-caperi-soned horse impatiently stamping; a porter slams along with a heavy box on his back; the water carrier with his nasty skin rubs through ; the vender of sweetness finds room for his broad tray ; the orangeman pushes his cart into the throng; the Jew auctioneer cries his antique brasses and more antique rai ment. Everybody is jostled and pushed ani jammed; but everybody is in an in perturbable good humor, for no one if really in a hurry, and whatever is, is .8 it always has been nnd will be. And what a cosmopolitan place it is! We meet Turks, Greeks, Copts, Egyptians, Nubians, Syrians, Armenians, Italians ; tattered dervishes, " welees," or Mos lems, nearly naked, presenting the ap pearance of men who have been buried a long time and recently dug up; Greek priests, Persian parsees, Algerines, Hin doos, negroes from Dafour, and blacks from beyond Khartoum. The traveler has come into a country of holiday which is perpetual. Under this sun and in this air there is nothing to do but to enjoy life and attend to re ligion five times a day. We look into a moBaue; in the cool court is a fountain for washing; the mosque is sweet and quiet, and upon its clean matting a row of Arabs were prostrating themselves in prayer toward the niche that indi cates the direction of Mecca. We stroll along the open streets, encountering a novelty at every step Here is a musician, a Nubian, playing upon a sort of tambour on a frame ; a picking, feeble noiso he produces, but he is accompanied by the oddest char acter we have yet seen. This is a stal wart, wild-eyed son of the sand, coal black, with a great mass of uncombed, disordered hair hanging about his shoulders. His only clothing is h brcechcloth, and a round shaving-glas bound upon his forehead; but he has hung about his waist heavy strings ol goats' hoofs, and these he shakes in time to the tambour, by a tremulous motion of his big body as he minces about. He seems so vastly pleased with himself that I covet knowledge of his language in order to tell hini that he looks like an idiot. Charles Warner. An Adveuture at Lschlne Rapids. Canadian tourists, or those familiar with the liver St. Lawrence, need not to he told of the picturesque danger of the Laehine rapids. Many traditions find some authentic stories are preserved of luckless persons who have been engulfed there, and the "shooting" of the rapids even by skillful pilots is always an anx ious mil delicate piece of work. Another sad example was recently added to the record of calamities at this celebrated locality. In this case, as in others, the presence nnd exertions of a famous pilot named Dui.lebout in the present instance failed to avert the catastrophe. Ten lumbermen.under Dail lebout's command, started early in the morning from Caughnawaga village to make the descent of the Laehine rapids. Another raft under Baptiste, also a well known pilot, set out at the same time from tue same place; and those who were on board the last raft saw all that happened to the crew of the first one. It seems that, by some mischance, Daillebout swung his raft out of the right channel at a critical moment. Be fore he and his men could retrieve their error their control of the raft was gone. in a lew moment mey were driven with awful velocity into the vortex of foam ing waters that tue tourists' steamers Dass through when running the rapids. Those steamers, steered with matchless dexterity, and having their engines to steady their course, get through habit ually in safety. But with a rait, having nothing but human strength to shape her course, it is, of course, lar different. In this case the frail structure was rolled over and over and hurled in every direc tion. She had to go through a mile ot tumbling, Beething waters for the most part indeed halt a cataract before she or any fragments of her could emerge into the smooth safety ot the river be.o w. The spectators saw a moving and extra ordinary sight. Logs sixty feet long were tossed in the air like so many twigs. Piece by piece the raft broke asunder. No power on earth could aid her wretched crew, and it seemed inevit able that they must perish to a man. But it was otherwise decreed. DesDite this amazing ordeal, and despite most of their number being lrightlully bruised. eight of the eleven occupants of the raft went through the rapids alive. Not only that but they managed to cling to portions of their shattered bark so as to be rescued at last Dy tneir brother mm bermen who had seen withe ut being able to aid them in tneir peril. The re maining three raftsmen perished; and the wonder is, according to the reports that have reached us, that there should have been any survivors at all from a catastrophe which in former cases has usually been latai to every man con cerned. Jefferson Davis' plantation at Hurri cane, Miss., is leased by Montgomery & Sons. This firm is composed of four negroes who were formerly owned by a brother of the ex-president of the con federacy. They own plantations worth S75,000, hire several more, and do Ui xe mercantile business at Vicksburg FARM, HARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD. Tomatoes on Trellises. As an experiment I trained one to mato vine 1 his year on a trellis and do not think I shall ever plant another vine, without some kind of a trellis, un less It is to experiment. The fruits on trellised vines attain a large size, are uicy and do not taste of the ground. While the fruit of the vines that were left to run on the ground were rotting, those trained to a trellis were sound and growing rapidly The trellis I use is the same as tne one described and en graved in the Sural last spring. It takes but little work to make one. Any farmer can make all he wants in the barn some day when it rains. The fruit will ripen more evenly and ten days earlier which is quite an advantage. Moreover the arrangement gives the garden a more tasty appearance and it is muci easier to keep the trellised ground free from weeds. C. 7, in Rural, New Yorker. Kill Tour Sheep While Y ounce. There are few animals kept on the farm which, when they are in their prime, pay as well as sheep, and there are very few, if any others, upon which old age has such a damaging effect. As sheep are much shorter lived thun any other of our domestic animals, it is not strange that m my farmers attempt to keep them too long. At ten years of age the horse is just in his prime, and the cow is as good as ever, with the frospect of remaining so several years onger. But the sheep is very old when it reaches ten, the natural limit of the term of its life. After reaching this age sheep are very likely to be injured by the slight exposure which do younger animals no harm. They are more liable to be attacked by disease, and if they live they will be likely to pro duce less wool and smaller lambs than they have done previously. We do not think it pays, except, perhaps, in special instances, to keep sheep after they are six years old. Put Clover on Tour Land. An Ohio paper says that by clovering hundreds of farms that were about worthless have been rescued from dilap idation and ruin. It is an accepted truism that as long as "clover will catch " the farm can soon be restored to paying fertility, and by a good rotation is even getting more productive and profitable; for after some years of such treatment the land will bear harder farming that is, two or three crops mav succeed a good coat of clover before laying down t clover again. Rough new land should be subdued bv the use of large clover. Nothing so effectually rots out stumps and kills weeds and sprouts, and prepares the land for the plow and good pay'iig crops. Wild, new lands should always have it sown on the first grain crop down. It saves a vast amount of labor, for in a few years it so tames the ground and clears t of enemies to tue plow that it works like old ground, and is good for full crops. One great error is often fallen into, and that is following the old tra dition that a bushel cf clover seed will do for eight a res. That mav have bei n enough to clover land partially when it was new, but whoever aims at getting up his land in a speedy and profitable way should sow a bushel on four acres so that hU land may b"5 thoroughly s 'jaded. lleclpes. CuctninEK Catsup. Grate three dozen large cucumbers and twelve white onions; put three handfuls of salt over them, ineymust be prepared the day beforehand, and in the morning lay them to drain; soak a cupfni and a hall of mustard seed, drain it and add to the cucumbers, with two spoonfuls of whole pepper; put them in ajar, cover with vinegar, and cork tight; keep in a dry place. Jiwiah Cookery Book. Veal Hash. Take a teacup of boil ing water in a saucepan, stir in an even teaspoon flour wet in a tablespoon cold water, and let it noil five minutes; add one-half teaspoon black pepper, as much salt, and two teaspoons butter, and let it keen hot. but not boil. Chop the veal fine and mix with it half us much stale bread crumbs. Put it in a pan and nour the gravy over it, then let it simmer ten minutes, serve tins on buttered toast. Asparagus Soup. -Select about two dozen of gxd asparagus stalks; boil these thoroughly in enough water to cover them; a quarter oi an onion boiled with the asparagus is an im provement; when tender take the aspar agus out of the water, saving the water aud removing the onion ; cut the asp agus into small pieces, oi course only the tender part, and put them in a mor tar, adding a little of the water; must be pounded until perfectly smooth ; now take some sifted flour, a dessertspoonful, a bit ot butter as big as an egg, and a very little pulverized sugar; mix well. and then put on the fire until it melts, stirring all the time; add this to the pounded asparagus and the rest ot the water; when it nas D'nied a lew min utes mix the yolk of one egg with a tumblerful of cream, aud add this; it properly made it wants no straining; use salt and pepper to taste and a very little nutmeg; one stalk of asparagus may be left, which may be cut in thin slices and added last. A Wlass Mountain. Another marvel recently brought to light in the Yellowstone park, of North America, is nothing less than a moun tain of obsidian or volcanic glass. Near the foot of the Beaver lake a band of explorers came upon tbij remarkable mountain, which rises in columnar cliffs and rounded bosses to many hun dreds ot feet in altitude from hissing hot springs at the margin of the lake. As it was drsirable to pass that way, the party had to cut a road through the steep glassy barricade. This they ef fected by making huge fires on the glass to thoroughly heat and expand it, and then dashing the cold water of the lake against the heated surface so to suddenly cool and br ak it up by skrinkage. Large fragments were in this way de tached from the solid side of the moun tain, then broken up small by sledge hammers and picks, not, however, with out severe lacerations of the bands and faces of the men from flying splinters. In the Grand canon ot the Gibson river, the explorers also found precipices of yellow, black, and banded obsidian, hundreds of feet high. The natural glass of these localities has from time immemorial been dressed by the In dians to tip their spears and arrows. The Ilindeos are imitating the mis sionaries in circulating religious tracts. heir tracts are devoted to accounts ot t exploits of their gods. TIMELY TOPICS. It is now tolerably certain that by the year 1883, when the New York word's fair is to open, the Brooklyn bridge nnd the Hudson river tunnel will both be finished and in constant use. An exchange is responsible for the statement that more people lost their lives in this country by the burning of hotels in 1879, than by the accidents of travel on railroads and steamboats on all the rivers, lakes and sounds corn mined. Little Wolf, who was sixteen years old when the declaration was signed, but who, nevertheless, never saw Wash ington nor acted as his body servant, died recently in bis wigwam, near where he was born in 1760, on the St. Croix river in Wisconsin, five generations being present at his death. A list of the railroad lines either di rectly or indirectly under the control of Mr. Jay Gould has been published, by which it appears that he now operates, under the Wabash consolidation, about 8,168 miles, or nearly one-tenth of the entire mileage of the United States. It is si !e to say that, as far ae n ileage is concerned, this is the largest combination of roads in the control of any one individual or corporation in the world. Some years since a cluster ot women in association with Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, founded a society whose purpose was to bring the influence of women to bear in the promotion of peace. Their annual meeting recently took place in Boston, and addresses wew made by Mrs. Diaz, Miss Selma Borg, Miss Jen nie Collins, Miss Horatia Ware, and others. One of the speakers illustrated the blight of war by mention of the single article of gunpowder, of which the annual produetion for military use was rtated to be one hundred million pounds, which would be equivalent to ten million pounds of fertilizing nitro gen, again equivalent in productive ca pacity to five hundred million pounds of bread. The origin of the familiar abbrevia tion SS., so often seen in legal docu ments, has caused not a little discussion. An exchange says that the received opinion that SS. is an abbreviation for scilicet is correct in substance. It stands, however, not simply for scilicet, but for three repetitions of the word. The court crier prefaces announcements by " Hear ye, hear ye, hear ye," arid in like man ner writs and memorials of courts are prefaced, in contemplation of law, by a thrice repeated "Be it known," or ' Know ye." The initial S of scilicet is doubled to express the repetition, in analogy with the familiar use of the double initial as an abbreviation for plurals and superlatives. The little busy bee commits murder more often than is generally supposed, and the danger of keeping hives, espe cially incities, has recently been pointed out by M. Delpech, speaking for the hygienic council of the department of the Seine, to whom the question had been referred by the police, great incon venience having arisen from bee culture in the department. M. Delpech cite3 many cases of fatal results from the sting of the insect. It appears that especial danger attends sueh wounds about the head and face and near the great nerve centers. The blood, being changed in character by the poison, can no longer excite the motor nerve and asphyxia rapidly supervenes. A Lover of Shakespeare. One of the most noted characters on tho border twenty years ago was old John Bridger, of Fort Bridger, in Utah. On one occasion he came to New York. He did not like the narrow down-town streets with hi!i buildings on each side, and com plained (that he had once lost his way in " i)ey Street Canon," nnd henn rescued with difficulty by the police, lie like the theaters, and expressed the utmost delight at a performance of the " Midsummer Night's Dream. He had no clear idea who Shakespeare was, but conctived and developed the most extravagant admiration lor him. Returning to the tort, he sold stock and supplies to emigrants and other travelers as in times pa it. One day a man wished to buy some oxen, and Jini said he could have any except one yoke, which he had made up his mind to keep at all hazards, in the morning a messen ger came to say that the man wanted tni syoke, and none other. "lie can't have 'em," said Jim. " There's no use talkin'." " Well, he wants them, and is just a-wailing for them," said the messen ger. "He's a-settin' there, readin' a book calloi Shakespeare. " "Eh?" yelled Jim, jumping to his feet. "Did you say Shakspeare? Here, you, give mo my boots." He ran to the corral. "Stranger," said he, "jest give me that book, and taue them oxen." "Oh, no," said the man. "I only bought the book to read on the way. i will give it to you." "btranger," saU Jim, resolutely, "jest you take them oxen, aud give me that book." And so the man did. Jim hired a reader at tilty . ollars per month, and listened to Shakespeare every evening. All went well, untii one night, as the reader came to the proposed murder of the princess in the Tower, Jim sprang from his seat, with blazing eyes, and yelled, in thunder- tones, " Hold on there! Jest wait till l git my ii lie, and I'll shoot the scoun (IrRl! ' As one ot his old " pards" justly re mai-Keo, a sincerer compliment was never paid to Shakespeare. Harper's Mayazine. Lyman Beecher, on returning home from church one Sabbath, said that he had done very poorly. Said one of his boys: "Why, father, I thought you were never in better trim; you just shouted it out to 'em." "Aye, aye," re plied Mr. Beecher, "that's it exactly when I'm not prepared I always holler ar. me top oi my voice." " Goods at half price," said the sign "How much is that teapot?" asked the old lady who had been attracted by the announcement, "jtuty cents, mum. " I guess I'll take it then," she said throwing down a quarter. The dealer let her have the teapot, but took in his sign before, another customer could come in. Boston ifanscrxpt. What Is't Endures. TLis trifling jewel which a maiden wore In her pink ear thousands of years betore lliis timo in which I look at it this toy Is hero; while she to whom to breathe was oy tn the dark earth a part of it has lain. No record ot her lite, no name, no word remains. And I who ieel such rapture on the earth, To whom existence is a thing ol worth, Must soon resign it with regrets and lears, And this lead thing I write with stay a thousand years. M . A. Marshall, in Independent ITEMS OF INTEREST. There are 80,000 gypsies in England. There are 60,000 German in St. Peters burg. The iron horse has but one car The engineer. A five-cent fan makes as mucli wind as a $50 one. The mortality in London is only twenty in 1.000. There are 3,500,000 watermelons in a Bingle patcii in Georgia. A bottomless pit The one inside of a cherry. Marathon Independent. English farmers are liable to arrest for killing hares on their own farms. Authors are spoken of as dwellers in attics, because so few of them are able to live on their first story. Where New York pays bd average salary of $814. 17, to public school teach ers. Philadelphia pays $486.10. Montreal is acknowledged to have about the finest wharves of any city in America. The harbor is lighted with the electric light. The rentals of grass land in England this year show a considerable increase, while those of corn land show a corres ponding decrease. The uses oi adversity May be sweet as honey's wing, But we'd rather have some other chap Than ourselves to teal the thing. Steubenville Herald. A Connecticut man has made a walk ing caneTontaining 649 pieces of wood, no two being of the same kind. It is almost as good to club a dog with as a cudgel all of one kind ol wood. Denver is bragging about a resident who is gradually turning into stone while he is yet alive; but he is nothing compared to lots of chnps who turned to brass soon after they were born. De troit Free Press. One thousand dollars is a large sum ot money to pay for a little piece of floating wood, but if it is found and can be shown to be a part of the missiny ship A talan ta, t ie British admiralty will pay that amount to the tinder. A writer in the Scotsman avers that out of 35,000 hams imported into Ham burg last year, '297 were found to con tain trichinre, while of 14,000 sides of bacon eighty-live were found to be more seriously infested. The Philosophical society, of Glasgow is to hold an exhibition of gas apparatus ou a large scale next autumn, and it is intended also to make u display at the same time of the apparatus which will llustrute the progress made in electric lighting, in telephonic communication, in the manufacture of mineral oils, in water measurement and regulation, in hydraulic engines, in heating and venti lation, etc. There can be no doubt that this exhibition, taking up, us it means to do some of the most important prob lems to which man's attention is given at present, will prove of great service to ttiose who have to deal practically with anilury appliances. " Wrecked." Few men can hear of the loss of a gal lant ship without a touch of sadness. Lite has been compared to the great , . ,- ;i ocean, ana men to snips which san thereon. When a oarK which lias braved the tempest ol strange seas comes Home with rusted hull and tattered sail men welcome her buck just us they do one of their own kind who has jour neyed afar and passed through pern to benefit his race. It is when we come upon the wreck of a once noble ship that men trv hardest to remember how well she served her builders, it is when we hear that some gallant barK is missing, IPRvini? no siim nor trace, that men are awed as they speak her name. There is nothing tuat win iouuu ami soften the heart like the sight of the wrecks which dntt here and there on life's ocean once grand ana gifted men now blown tiitner anu lunucr, auw going with currents, now hidden nom sight by the mantle of night or the mysterious log. lie who vioils nu lum for the insane will gaze out upon an ocean Whicu is evei cuuugiug surface and its shores. One moment the waters will be calm and peaceiui tuo next there will be the rour ot a stoim and the growl ot breakers. Uciore mm will drift wrecks without number some moving tlowly out of the fog some drifting into it some skirting the shores on which Btand tearful friends to wave farewells others being carrieu oy unseen currents afar to sea. 11 is an ocean without a harbor of reiuge. Once a wreck upon its bosom and tneie is no landing. Day and night, tor weeks ano. months and ye.ir, ine aismaaucu uu dismantled hulks weave in and out ot the fog-i-in and out ot the suuught whirl slowly about in the eddies-catch on the shoals and go driving further out upon the troubled waters, otoiui silentlv at work, and one by one, as the y ears creep on, old wrecks Bink silently into tue sea nuu " heard of no more forever. When men die we lorget tuas wiey worn lilra tlinaft who Still live On. 0 orget all that was bad in them and re member all that was goou. c that tlmv are dead, and the busy world oioses up the gap and marches along. QUI wuen uieu u uuu '." - ,T " to become wrecks to be dead in all but name to drift in the darkness without chart or beacon to feel the sh -res go-, ing further and lurther away from them, there is something so pitiiul that eyes fill with tears and hearts grow tender. They are not dead, yet their faces are never seen on the streets. They have no tombstones, yet men read their epitaphs and forget them. In a battered hulk drifts a skeleton crew dritting, driving, swirling, plunging, and there is no help. The end is a darker night, a stronger gale and a cry of despair as the water close over all nnd roll on as before. Detroit Frte Press-