: . I HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. - NIL DESPERANDT3M. Two Dollars per Annum." f YQL-X. KIDGWAY, ELK COUKTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1880. NO. 19. The Scarecrow. The farmer looked at hia cherry tree, With thick bads clamored on every boneh "I wish I ooald cheat the robbing," said he; " ii iomeuody only would show me how, " I'll make a terrible scarecrow Brim. With threatening arms aud with bristling head, And up in the tree 1 11 fasten him To frighten them hall to death," he said He fastened a scarecrow tattered and torn Oh, 'twas a horrible thing to see! And very early one summer morn, He set it up in his cherry tree. The blossoms were white as the light sea loam, The beaut ilul tree was a lovely sight; Bat the scarecrow stood there so much at home That the birds flew screaming away in fright. But the robbins, watching him day alter day, With heads on one Bide and eyes so bright, Surveying tho monster, began to say, " Why should this fellow our prospects blight. " He nevor moves round for the roughest weather, He's a harmless, comical, tough old fellow; Lei all go into the tree together, For he won't budge till the fruit is mellow!" So up they flew; and the sauciest pair 'Mid the shady branches peered and perked, Selected a spot with tho utmost cnie, And all day merrily snng und worked. And where do yon think they built their nost T In the scareciow's pocket, it you please, That, lin'f concealed on his ragged breast, Made a charming covert of sntety and ease! By the lime the cherries were ruby red A thriving family, hungry and brisk, The whole day long jn the ripe fruit led; 'Twas so convenient! They saw no risk! Until the children were ready to fly, All undisturbed they lived in the tree; For nobody thought to look at the guy For a robbinV flourishing family! Cetit Thaztcr, in Wide Jwake. THE BEST REVENGE. We were all so happy and cheerful in our little cottage when Aunt BueluinV letter caine ami to d us Jiat Fied Bras tome hail "jilt'd" niy sister Agnes. We were thunderstruck! Agnes her seli refused to -uviiit the report. They had only nei-n engaged a few montiic, and the amtng mcnt whs a seen t. My aunt was igtmra'il ol the actual engage ment, hut wni n she wrote andioid u thit Brasionii' was engaged to Sir Some body Sumt-tli uk's duiwliter, and had just .'inherit' d In uncle's property, quite unexrectKlly, t whs a terrible blow to us at lini Ytt there were his letters fall uf affection. Agnes bine up wondei fully, but at length ev' n she succumbed. We had heard no hn from Fred very lately, and my ii;quiiie- in y elicited the state ment that lie hud gone abroad suddenly. Even our neiiilihois, thePeiidiewitts, at whose house Anes had first met him, weieawny yachting, and we cou.d not get at the null). 1 wrote to Lis bankers and got his Redress, and then wrote to him (a stiflish letter) ior explanation, and then wailed. Agnes got worse. We could not res t I vowid vengeance against the man, und unable to btund ihe suspense and loneli ness w In u dariing Agnes' lift; was almost trembling in the ba.auce, I rushed out to do something, ready to encounter any danger in search ot forgettuluess of our injury. Only a few weeks since he had gone, and ihis was the result 1 I could scarcely credit it. I went out. it was a lovelv night. I stood upon the steps and looked across the moonlit bay, at the soutuern side of which the lighthouse rose disdainfully. A Hash came full upon my iace, and with it came the thought 1 will go out to the lighthouse. I descended rapidly at first, and then more slowly, and began to think; but still I went down and met Bob Murray, my boatman, as 1 entered a shop to make a purchase. " Good-night, Bob. Going UotueP-' "Aye, aye, Master Harry. Home it is, and time." " Well, Bob, I'm going out." " Out to-night ! And where, ii I may make so bold us to ask?" " To the lighthouse, Bob, and you must take me there, and call, to-morrow's flood, to take me back." "But, sir, my lady r Will she? " Bob alwavs called my mother " my lady," not that she, except as every woman is, was entitled to the courtesy ; but she deserved it, and the compliment passed unnoticed now, as ever. I silenced him, and he agreed. " I'm your man, Master Harry, but I think you'd better bide a day or two; there's a look about the sea that i dislike." " Wind, BooP I should like a breeze out there to-morro w." "Aye, aye! Wind is nothing to the lighihouse it s a sea. suppose an ac- cident shou.d ship-" happen suppose a " Suppose you give up croaking, Bob Murray, aud near a hand with the boat." I wrapped up my purchase and went out. iie responded with alacrity, and said no more. Somehow his tacit obedience impressed me more iorcibiy than his weL-meant warning. "All ready now, your honor," said he at last. "Thank you. Bob. Will you take the tiller, pleaseP" I knew the coast almost as well as he, and yet I would not touch the tiller. It was a tri bute to his superior skill and to my mother's fears. W e ran out quickly, and in about an hour were close to the lighthouse. A simultaneous roar of "Ahoy, there!'1 brought my old iriend Dobaon to the gailery. " Boat ahoy !" he cried. What cheer P" "Dobsjn, ahoy! 'Tis I Mister 'Knery" (he always insisted upon call ing me " 'iinery ' ). "Never! Well, and what brings ye here at this time o' night, sir?" There was a pause, and at last he said, as we tossed upon the rising sea. "I'll come down, air I II dis-cend, sir, if you please." He disappeared, and must have de scended very rapidly, for in a moment or two he appeared at a small door opening just above the rock on which the lighthouse was erected; there he parieyea : " Ye see, sir. that is quite out of regu lar orders ; I daren't let you in, not now keep her off. Bob Murrav. vew- vn'll have her stove in three threes' so ye see, sir." " Dobson," I replied, firmly, " it's no use. itegutations or no regulations, I want to spena tne ntgnt in the light house. Here lam. You can. of emirap keen me here if you like, but I am not going back now.'' Dobson paused irresolutely, and Mur ray said : "It's all right, Jack; I'D come for uim to-morrow ana take him off." "Ah!" responded Dobson. "To morrow r Where be thine eyes, Bob iviurray, laar" Murray made no verbal reply. He impelled tb.p boat toward the slippery iwk. me uoe was out; a wen judged spring as the boat rose to the wave, and I landed safely on the cranirn. When T turned round again Murray was already fix feet from my perch. "Good-night. Bob. Come back to. morrow. Tell them I'm coming soon if niey asa ior me. i m all right." " Aye. avo. sir. Good-niiir.. Mn. ray ran for home with the sheet hauled well aft, and lying as close to the wind as the flattened sail would draw. I turned and found Dnhson at mv elbow. He had heard my parting words, and commented upon them as follows, in a tone that chilled me through ; "If he gets ashore much inside of a week I m a Dutchman, and saving your presence, Master 'Enerv. vou's another. Come in now the flood's making if you piease." We entered the lighthouse together. and as we ascended the winding stait- way, Dobson said : Did you bring aught with ye, BirP" " Any spirits? I declare. Dobson. T quite forgot. But I'll make it all right." Dobson's reply had a disdainful ring in it as lie replied : "I ain't thinking of spirits. Have you brought any cloth ing or anything?" "Just enough for anight," I replied ' a toothbrush. WhvP" I uroduced mv late purchase as I spoke. " Because look ye here," he said, sud denly changing his tone. He led me to the windward side of the gallery, which we just men reached. " V ye see yonder hup upon the sear ' " Yes wh it of it? It's a breeze com ing up all the better." " AlHhe worser! Last time I see that with this moon and after these warn ings was when the Oa'liliy Castle went down on yonder reef and on 'y fifty was laved out o' nigh three hundred on board." I confess I felt a dull sensation of dread. That some calamity was pend ing I filt sure. I shivered, not with jold, though, and looked steadily at lob?on. Then affecting a cheerful man ner, I replied : 'But there's no prospect of a storm yet, and there's plenty ot time for any ship to get an oiling if the skipper can road the sky as well as you. At any rate I'm quite safe here." "Aye, aye, for that matter, safe enough. But you see, Mister 'Enery well it's ail right come inside." We went in again and descended the spiral stairway in the solid basement to the storeroom and thence to the kitchen. Everything appeared clean and tidy. A s'ovepipe passed through the ceilirg, doing duty for a chimney, as a small stove did for the kitchen range, and 1 knew that we would not starve. But Dobson's remark respecting the ap proaching tempest had affected me in spite of my determination to see the adventure through. I was anxious to have something to wean me from the somber retrospection I had been lately indulging, and so I tlmo It oS the feeling of strangeness and tried to feel as if everything was just as I had in my im-ig nation pictured it which every thing was not. We ascended through the bedroom. There were three beds between the win dows, a cuckoo clock, an almanac, the stovepipe tending upward, some cloth ing and two telescopes and some other nautical necessaries were visible at a glance. The bedroom was plainly and rather scantily furnished. Some books were on the single table, and in a cup board were some blue lights. A pair of pistols, three cutlasses and bayonets were also noticed by me, and I won dered why the firearms were keot there. As I gazed around the room the cuckoo burst open a little wooden door with tremendous energy and "cuckoo'd" ten times, retreating again, only just in time to escape a blow from the door. A sailor was descending from the upper floor He was rather astonished to see me, I think, but in a moment he touched his cap. and professed himself glad to see "a friend ot his mate's, who was a friend of his and welcome "so he said. " Mister 'Enery's going to take a berth here to night, Judkins," said Dobson. You and me will arrange about a shake down. It's my watch at midnight, so he can turn in as soon as he likes." " I should prefer being up with you. Dobson,' I said. " I want to see the sea and how things look in the dead of night. It must be very weird and very grand herein a storm." " Aye, aye, sir. You'll have storm enough Belter sleep while you can, and let the sea take care of itself." " But I came here to sit up, and un less youohject ' " Me, Mister 'Enery ! Not a bit of it. Come alolt ii ye like; I'll keep you com panv." We went up to the gallery again, and I stood leaning over, gazing steadily, halt dreamily, at the rising water. The sea was evidently rising, and yet the long, heavy, booming swell rolled in without breaking till close upon the rocks. Then the roar arose, the spray dashed uo in vain attempts to reach the gleaming beacon, and lell back ex hausted on the whitened sea. As I continued to look across the moonlit waves a strong sensation of un reality of it all came upon me. I could fancy it was all unreal. I knew and felt that I was in the lighthouse, and all was right, that I was in good health and f pirits, and yet all Ihe surroundings appeared as if I were in a dream. 1 could see a shape in the water beneath, a dark form, and lo! suddenly it was clad in white, a female shape, ascending to the gallery. I knew the lace in the lamem light. It was Agnes. Strange illusion! I called out ; the form vanished ; the BDrav splashed heavily down to the water, and Dobson approached me quickly and anxl usiy " Did you call, Mister 'Enry ?" " Yes. I did," J replied. " The spray very nearly came up into the gallery. It frightened me." "That's nothing," replied Dobson. " You'll have it over the lantern afore to-morrow. Hold up your hand d'ye feel the salt on it?" I put my palm to the wind, and then touched my tongue with it. It was quite salt to the tii st e. " You'll excuse me, sir, but you's looking pale and wom out. Turn in, and come up at daybreak. Thai's the time to see the sea, and sunrise, too." J knew the well-intentioned siilor was quite right. I waa overwrought; my nerves were highly strung I wanted ret-t. Will you call me early, or if any thing turns up?" J "I will, sir: you shallknow. Oneof my mates is goin' ashore at dawn; I'll hail you then lor certain shure." So we bade eac'i other good-night, and I descended to the sleeping-room in semi-darkness. In ten minutes I must have been sound asleep; the noise of the waves dashing outside, and the rushing of the wind, far from keeping me awake, were soothing to my troubled spirits. I slept, nor did the restless cuckoo in the clock, that whirred and chirped the hours through the stormy night, wake me from my dreaming. I was half aroused bj a touch on the shoulder and opened my eyes, but the semi-darkness was still before them. Then a voice I knew said, "Tom's just off, but the morning's wet and stormy, sir. Be advised and stav blow : vou " I had lain down again and Wis asleep once more before he had completed the sentence. I must have slept some time wbpn a dull sound aroused me. I looked about and it was not till the clock donr burst open anil the bird came out that I re collected where I was. "Cuckoo!" I counted six Kt.rnkps. Then the dull and distant sound came clown upon the wind aud I began to wonder what it was. A third time, louder, and now " flat ter," so to speak, as if the wind had caught the noise and borne it against the stone pillar wherein I lay. I could hear Dobson and his companion hurrying to and fro and in a few moments, as the former passed the door, I called aloud and he came in hastily. What's the matter, Dobson P" "Vessel drifting in. disabled. She'll strike I iear. They're signaling for help don't ye hear the gunsP" lie was gone, liuns! A vessel in dis tress! Here was an adventure, indeed. I leaped out of bed nnd hurried through my toilet, from time to time looking out upon the angry, tumbling sea, driven in before a southwest gale, in broken hills of wa.er. I Mtended to the eallerv. and the grandeur of the scene beneath took my attention for a moment from the reeling yacht that was drifting helplessly, it seemed, fairly down upon the cruel line of j urged rocks that were now and then visible to windward. " Now, mate," said Dobson. " vou and me must take this iob in hand. We'll cross the rock belore she strikes yonder. inn save tne poor ihiiows." To their astonishment I volunteered to hpp. "Excuse me. sir, but vou ain't anv good in this. You can bear a hand on the life-line, howsomdever: and if we should not both turn un to muster. whv " Without another word tlmv shrink hands solemnly with me and with each othpr, and then descended to the rock. I followed to the door and made fast the ines they had secured about their waists. The sea was now sweeping over the rocks, and the hissing of the foam wasnue escaping steam, or the horrid whizzing of an avalanche, which few can hear and live alter they have heard it. The men disappeared round the rnol and left me standing at the door irreso lute, a life-line in my hand, a buoy at tached to it hanging ready for use. A loud crv attracted mv attention s crackling, grinding noise the vessel had struck, and as I looked over the rushing, swirling? waves I could spp. though indistinctly, three white faces and three pairs of arms siruggling in the water. I was fascinated I could only stare. Help was yet out of the question, but even as I gazed one swim mer, witn great presen ;eot mind, turned with the waves toward the leu nf t.hn lighthouse to a spot where in a momen tary eddy he might be saved. I saw this now. and "pulling myself together," step- ed cautiously just with out the reach of the hissing waves which swooped in masses down upon the rocks and slid in smooth layers of water, like thick gWss. into the boillni? surf beneath. When I had reached a coign of vantage the poor swimmer was still bravely battling with the undertow, and in a few moments I hoped to be able to heave the life buoy to his assistance. It seems so unreal to look back uoon. and were I not sure of all this sad mornings's work I could almost believe it tancy. Hut there was no time to thiuk what to do. In another moment I had grasped the line and was about to swing the buoy to the struggling, drowning man, when I recognized his fetiures, notwithstanding the wild spray and the disheveled hair that was matted by the salt water around his forehead . The swimmer was Frederick Rros- tome the man who had all but killed my darling sister the traitor! my arm leu listlessly by my side. Agnes was dying, poor darling, almost within sight of the heaving sea which bore her faithless lover on its nnprv bosom; and should I save his life when he has wrecked hers? No! My revenge was complete. I had him in my power The demon tempted me to let him bide and die, and yet a strange sad compas sion ior the heartless destroyer of my sister's life in his dire extremity filled my heart. He recognized me and called frasp inglyfor help; help for Agnes' sake! or her sane i um lie dare to trade his safety on her blighted life? And yet at the sound of her name the thought that she had forgiven him his trespasses against her now prevailed. I called out and hove toe life-buoy close to him. He was almost spent, but clutched it with the grasp of drowning men. As sisted by the waves, I hauled him al most senseless to the rock alive! (The yacht drove on the reef just then, and the crew were rescued after.) Thank heaven. I had saved him ! Now that be was free from danger I felt more at ease. The black cloud of revenge bad passed awav. and Aenea' num in. fluence had worked a wondrous change in tne. He lay insensible, but in a short time Dobson and his mate. huHn. hauled the others out of danger, came vu uij nsBiDbAuvw, nuu tuey c&rneci Eras- tome m auo iaia mm ou the bed. I could not see him, though I saved his life, but afterward I heard the facts from the other young men, who over whelmed us with thanks, and their ac count was this (we were sitting in the gallery when they told the tale, and how they met their companion him my enemy, as I judged). They bad borrowed Mr. Pendrewitt's yacht, and hadsaiied to Cherbourg. At that port they had encountered Bras tome, who was very anxious to return at once to England, but had missed the steamer. Knowing who he was, for they had met at Mr. Pendrewitt's house, they volunteered to bring him to our little port, as he said he had received a most urgent letter from a friend. My friend, his own sailing master, had managed to get good anchorage about ten miles away at six o'clock the pre vious evening, hut the storm increasing the yacht dragged her anchor about three o'clock the next morning. Thus they had drifted, and although they had managed to keep off shore, the set of the tide carried them to leeward and the yacht bore down on the reef, struck and sunk in eight fathoms. I listened to this narrative with very mingled feelings. The letter he referred to must be the one I had sent. Why did he not telegraph his reply P I was debating on the course I should adopt when Dobson came up and said that the other gentleman wished to see me. I followed the siilor, and in another mo ment was in Brastome's room. He held out his haad. I hesitated to accept it. " Why, Harry," he Bald, " how have I offended you P Your letter puzzled me considerably." "Can you ask how P You have jilted my sister and blighted her life, and, I fear, caused her death by your dastardly conduct. I saved your life, but I al most regret it. I have a long reckoning to settle with you " " But listen to mo. You are quite in error. I never injured your sister; I am as true to her as even you could desire. I am. indeed." " Are you not engaged to be married to Sir William A 's duughterP" " Certainly not. My cousin, who has come into the title, is going to marry her. I hope to marry Agnes, your sister; and I can't really understand '' I did not permit him to finish. I wrung his hand nearly off, begged his pardon, and almost cried in doing it. Then I rushed out and wanted Dobson to signal for a boat, which he very prop perly declined to do; so I sat with Fred and talked about Agnes till I began to think I had carried my affections quite far pnouzh. All was explained, and I was happy again, and then the next day! Oh, what a happy day it was! The sea for tunately aba'.ed. MuTay came out with the welcome news that darling Agnes was better, and that eveninz wp ail went ashore in the highest spirits The glad intelligence of her faithful swain's return w.u gently conveyed to her, and she at once got so bright and happy that we declared she had been "shamming "all tho time, and whep. three days nfterward, she and Frederic were allowed to see each other well. the meeting is beyond the power of my pen to cesceioe. Nothing now presented any obstacle to their engagement being announced. About three months afterward, on a coldJanuaiv morning, my dear sister was united to the husband of her choice, '"tor richer, for poorer, till d ath do them part;" and judging bv external evidence, I am thankful to say that there is no prospect of a separation tor n au years. 1 am very glad now that I heaved the buoy at h rpderic's hPad from the old Channel rock that stormy morning just niteen years ago. And that was mj re venge. The Little Shuvers. "Oh, pa!" cried a little fe'low upon seeing a trout lor the first time, "it s got the measles, hasn't it?" A youngster joyfully assured his mother the other day that he had found out where they made horses; he had seen a man finishing one" he was just nailing on li s last loot." A bright little five-year-old miss was taken to the barn to see some sheep, and after looking at them for a moment she exclaimed : " Oh, auutie. see, the sheep all wear their hair banged." The ownei ot a pair of bright eves says that Ihe prettiest compliment she ever received came from a child ol four years. The little fellow, after looking intently at uer eyes a moment, inquired, na veiy : " Are your eyes new onesf" Young Boston quickly learns to feel tho weight of years. Said five-year-old Bert to his mother, the other night, after saying his prayers, and getting ready for bed: "Well, mamma, I'd like to die now. I've seen all there is here." Little Annette, who has been sick and is not yet allowed to eat all she wants, turned from her thin toast and weak tea the other day, with an air of disgust, and said to her brother: "I'm gomg to take a nap; perhaps I shall dream that I am eating my dinner." A little fellow, turning over the leaves of a scrap-book, came across the well- known picture oi some chickens just out of their shell. He examined the picture carefully, and then, with a grave, sagacious look, slowly remarked : "They came out 'cos they was afraid of being oouea. A little boy in a Sunday-school put a poser to his teacher. The lady was tell ing her class how God punished the Egyptiars by eausing the bret born ot each household to be slain. The mil boy listened attentively. At the proper interval he mildly inquired: "What would God have done it there had been twinsP" A little four-year-old was at one of our photograph studios having her pic ture taken. The artist said: "You must keep your mouth shut, my dear. and your eyes open," as the little mito showed a decided inclination to open uer mouui ana suuc her eyes, cut oi being instructed she bract d up, and after a few minutes wonderinelv said t " Now, what shaul I do with my noseP' An Englishman who traveled up the Nile btates that his beaid. which at home was straight, soft and silkv. began immediately Ou arriving at Alexandria to curl, and to grow crisp, strong and coarse. Before reachina Es Socan It re sembled horsehair to the touch and was disposed in rirglets. He accounted for this by the exceeding dryness of the air, and considers that in the course of many generations it permanently curled and crisned the hair of negroes. The hair ou the traveler s Lead was not affected TIMELY TOPIC'S. The king of dentists, as he calls him self, is a Philadelphia curiosity. He wears a jeweled crown and gorgeous robes, rides in a resplendent chariot, and extracts teeth without charge. While a glib-toniued attendant sounds his praises, the king takes out teeth for all who apply, sometimes pushing them out with the point of his sword. Then he sells an ache-destroyer at fifty cents a bottle. . The preliminary workings for the tunnel under the English channel, uniting Enghnd and France, have had the most satisfactory results. The pro moters have sunk their shaft to the stratum in which they propjseto bore the tunnel, and are now going to sink another shaft, and lower all the ma chinery for the bore. In eighteen months they expect to have reached two kilometers (about two and a quarter mil'!s) under the channel, and in three or four years to have completed the task. Idaho Territory holds court at Boise, where is located all . the government offices, and is the home of t.'ie United States marshal. He goes to Lewiston, 400 mile3 di-tant, twice a year to attend district court, and also twice a year to Malad for the same purpose, traveling a distance of 525 miles to reach there. To simply attend the courts in the three districts requires him to travel 3 7(10 miles. But to do all his official work last year caused Mr. Chase to travel by stages 9,000 miles. The elan phrase " queer fish " has been realized in piscatorial form in California. At Monterey some fisher men cought it in a seine. It was about nine inches long. The first half of the fish was a mountain brook trout, hav ing the eye, head, scales, spots and shape of the lir-li. It had a pair of tins at the usual place behind the gills; an inch or two back of this it suddenly changed into a silver eel, t ie shape, color and absence of scales being periect. It will probably tinu a resting place on the shel ves of the San Francisco Academy of Sciences. A German paper relates that at Bi berich, recently, quite a crowd gathered to witness the novel spectacle of a dmnken driver being taken home by his horse. The man was so intoxicated that he could s-.arcely stand, but the laithful animal pushed him onward with its head. Now and then the driver attempted to turn into side streets, but the horse seized bim by the coat with its teeth, and thus piloted him to the stable. The horse had a great deal of trouble with its master, but finally got him home safe It is said that this valuable animal has acted the good Sa maritan for his master repeatedly be fore. An excellent instance of tho way in which the children in tho average pub lic school learn without learning is re lated by Barnes' Educational Monthly A teacher in one of our public school has b.en accustomed to require her pupils to say: "The equatjr is nn uiaginary line passing around the earth," etc. It never occurred to her .lat the boys and girls of her school had no idea what an imaginary line meant, until one day a visitor asked thpm how wide tncy thought the equator is. So ne 'bought it was 5,000 miles wide, others 2,000 and others thought they could jump over it. The visitor then asked hew they thought ships got over it. One pupil said he thought they got out and drew them over, and another said he had read that a canal had been dug through it! " What is the name of this anal? ' was asked. The buez canal!" was the answer. On the road from Albuuueraue to Silver City (New Mexico) i3 Cook's canon, in which the Apache Indians of ictoria s band have been m the habit of waylaying and Slaughtering white people attempting the passage. A pri vate letter of recent date from Silver City says V at S40 white settlers, miners and man carriers hav been butchered and scalped in the caron by the Apaches. A fortnight before the letter was written the Indians killed a party of eighteen persons and burned their wagons, lacy also slew the driver and three passengers on the mall coach and destioed the vehicle. A detachment of soldiers surprised five Apaches in the canon a couple of days after that occur- 1 1 ! J 1 It ' 1 I I rence, Kiueu ami, ii is saiu, sea i pen them. Among the Inditns killed on that occasion was the fifti en-year-old son of the renowned chief Victoria. The lad fought desperately as long as he could lift a hand to strike. The pe ple ot Silver City are greatly exercised about the Apaches, who have made mining in that vicinity extremely haz ardous. Dolus Right. A man who loudly calls attention to the tact that he has resolved to " turn over a new leal in his lite is not always to b s trusted. He who perpetu ally makes good resolutions is pretty sure to break them. People should re form, if necessary to do so, at once, and without parading their intentions be fore the eyes of the world. They should go to work silently, anu with a him determination to carry out, no mattter how trving or hard it mi? be at hrst. those virtuous designs which they deem necessary tor their welfare. I hey bliould not look tor applause from the world: their hkhest reward will in due time come ior the good they have done for themselves or other : meanwhile thev will enjoy that wmch assuredly is a sweet and precious possession the con sciousness that they are wortlulv lul ninng the object lor which tiny were brought into this world. A more odious form ot conceit than this bragging about lf-reform does not exist, and no effort should be spared in order to stamp it out. Lt those then who wish to im prove, labor to that end in silence and in sincerity; success is sure to crown their efforts. But they suould not flaunt their excellence in the eyesot the world. " I saw you hangiug out the clothes to-day, Meiinda," said Adolphus to the idol of his heart, as they sat billing and cooing on the parlor sola. "Ou. no. Doiphy. you are mistaken; it couldn't have been me, for I have t'l washed for a week!" And the alacrity with which " Doiphy" dropped that " beautiful white hand" that he had been so fondly caressing can be better imagined than described. BuUttman. FOR THE FAIR SEX. Mexican Women, A correspondent in New Mexico writes that the Mexican women are, as a rule, tidy housekeepers. Their do main is not an extensive one, but ns far as it goes they act fliciently. Their earthen floors are well swept, 'air white wash coats the walls, the man of the house has a clean shirt with decent frequency, and the crawling baby, probably as naked as at its birth, lias its skin scrubbed to the shining point. It must,nevertheles, be admitted that the skin-scrubbing practice is not applied by tho adult Mexicans to themselves' and that their personal habits are in many respects very uncleanly. When away from home the men are very dirty. The women seem to monopolize what ever sense of neatness the race is en dowed with. The lurnisbment of the Mexican house is not a complicated af fair. For culinary use there are a " skillrt and lid," a frying pan, and a c flee pot. Tables are not freauent in the ordinary run of houses. Neither are chairs. When the meal is prepared those who are to eat squat down on the floor around a small collection of cups and piates, and help themselves from the central vessel without ceremony. Forks are very seldom to be seen. A piece of tortilla answers the purpose when there is food that cannot con veniently be placed in the mouth by the fingers only. Bed steads are not in gen eral use. The Mexican women make very good pallets of wrtol, and these are laid at night on the floor, or in warm weather out of doors, in the courtyard, garden, or in the street itself Nearly ev ry house is well supplied with coarse but comfortable homemade blankets, and usually there is some provision of linen. Of a morning the bedding is rolled up and stowed away in the cor ners of the room or rooms. There is one piece of furniture which rarely is missing, and that is the chest or trunk containing the women's finery. The female Mexican has a passion for ac cumulating dresses, generally calicoes, which are 'stored away in the chest and may remain there, hidden ;rom the sight of man,' forever. 1 suspect that when only women are present, these brilliant and costly treasures are ex hibited and discussed with critical ad miration. Americans who have Mexi can wives tell me that the number of calico dresses that can be packed by them in an ordinary chest is somewhat amazing, and renders contemptible the feats ol the magician who produces a whole millinary shop trom his hat. Juanita's actual wear is apt to be con lined to a very simple matter. The hot summer climate induces a tree-and-easy attire ot chemise and shirt, and in win ter the women are generally seen with shawls covering them from the waist up. When J uanita's man earns enough co pay tor a new dress now and then, she aks for no more; but when the household can boast the ownership of a little flock of goats, her happiness, as well as that ot the rest ot the lamuy, is utter and complete. Tho goat is the familiar pet, the dear little darling of the Mexican home. It furnishes the milk and the aboaiinab.v 'ndia rubber eheese which is dear to the Mexican palate. Your Mexican will call his goat by all the abusive names of which his to'.gue is master, but in his heart of hearts he cherishes the animal as the ne plus ultra of brute creation, and an niury inllicted on the goat is a mortal affront to the man. Faihlon Note. Round pelerines are revived. Leghorn hats are in high favor. Lisle thread gloves are more worn than ever. Mauve and red are a fashionable com bination. Surtout effects are given even to mus lin toilets. White is more popular than ever for little people. Gold lace and gold cord hold their place in favor. Handkerchief costumes are worn in the country. A novel combination is of wall flower yellow, brown and flame color. One strap over the instep on. slipper. is more fashionable than two or more A terrilic torrent of new fashions threatens to overwhelm tasto and tact in dress. Archerv and angling are the fashion able outdoor amusements for ladies this summer. Brown linen suits, made with de cidedly short skirts, are shown as ang ling costumes this season. Dressy parasols are most elaborately adorned with beads, lace embroidery, and artificial flowers. Soft sashed belts with tasseled ends. and carelessly tied either in front, at the side, or in the back, are popular. Dark blue flannel remains the popular material tor seaside suits tor children, young girls, and older women. Oil silk bathing caps are made with brims of the silk this season, the brims being stiffened with a wire on the outer edge. White underskirts are made very short, gored and trimmed round the bottom with three rows of fluting. edged with embroidery or iace. Princess sack dresses for little peo pie rxve made with loose fronts covered with tucks and insertion, while the backs are halt fitted to the figure, and finished with a Spanish flounce also trimmed on the edge. Words of Wisdom. Anger, like rain, breaks upon whatever it tails. Draw not thy bow before the arrow be fixed. Never expose vour disappointments to the world. If you would make a thief honest, trust mm. The simple flowers are sociable and benevolent. Fortune can only take from us what she gave. Words sometimes wound more than swords. A good book supplies the place of companion. He who stops to pick a flaw in other'i knitting work, drops many stitches in tits own. The climate of North Africa might. thinks Dr. Theobald Fischer, be more easily improved by the planting of for ests man dj wrming an tuianasea. The Ideal. I think the song that's sweetest Is tho one that's never sung; That Hps at tne heart of tho ginger Too gran.l lor mortal tongue. And iometimi-s in the ailenoe Between the day and night, He fancies that its measures Bid farewell to the light. A picture that is fairer Than all that have a part Among the masterpieces In the marble halls of art, Is (he one that haunts the painter In all his golden dreams, And o the painter only A real picture seems. The noblest, grandest poem Lies not in blue and gold Among the treasured volumes That rosewood bookshelves hold; But in bright, glowing vinions, It onmes to the poet's Srain, And when he tries to grasp it He finds his effort va'.n. A lairy hand from dreamland Beckons up here and there, And when we strive to clasp it It vanishes into air. And thus our, f air ideal Floats always just bolire And we with longing spirits Reach for it evermore. ITEMS OF INTEREST. A motto for authors: "By their know them." Every works ye shall Satunlay. A SHORT I.OVE POEM, i S tii it ton, Mitten. The writer of the well-known hymn, I want to be an angel," Miss Sydney Paul Gill, died at Newark, N. J., re cently. The New Haven Re.qLiler intimates that when a man offers to take back his unkind words he wants to use them over again. In a Minnesota town a horse fright ened by a hailstorm tried to jump over barbed wire tence and was cut to pieces in the effort. At Ortonvilie. Minn., a hailstone fell that iust filled a pint bowl bv itself. A girl thirteen years old died of fright in thunder-storm tnere. The Montreal Witness says that most of the medical students who recently obtained their degrees at Laval univer sity. Quebec, will settle down for prac tice in the United states. There are now in the United States 000 miles oi bridges. One-thii d of them are of stone and iron and two thirds of wood, and these latter will have to be rebuilt by our engineers with the more durable material. A rattlesnake was found recently in a gaden a few miles north of Fan ers- villc, Texas, and in the snake's head was clearly traceable the counterfeit presentment of a child's face. A pho tograph was taken of this lusus nature), and is on exhioition at Dallas. A woman slipped out of the house one h -t night at London, Ontario, and took a comforting bvlh in the cistern: but, on trying to quit the water, found that she could notc.imbout. For hours she was a shivering prisoner, but was hnaliy rescued. " Wouldn't you like to have a bow?" aid the bold voung archer as thev suuntered down the field, ind she mur mured " Yes. and the absorbed archPi said, "What kind of a bow wou.d you refer?" bhe quivered a little as the replied, archly. " 1 think I should pre fer yew," and then tho young man heaved a bull's Bigh. There are twelve firms in Wilmington. Del., engaged in the manufacture of morocco, which employs in the aggre gate about 1.000 hands, thev have a capital invested of some $2.0H0 000, and turn out a total ot about out) dozen finished skins per day. This leather is made exclusively of goat skins, which are procured trom all parts ol the coun try. There was an elephant that had been trained to play the piano with Us trunk in a show. One day a new piano was bought for it, but no sooner hud the lephant touched the keys man it burst nto a flood of tears. " What ails you. KiouniP" asked its keeper. The poor beast could only poiiiti to the ivory keys. Alas! they were made of the tusks oi his mother. A Permian Experience. A San Francisco gentleman who was in South America during the past year, having occasion to go from Valparaiso to Tacna, Peru, on legitimate private business, was arrested upon suspicion ot bcin a Chilian spy. Being anxious to penetrate into Bolivia, aud unable to obtain a passport, he ran the Chilian blockade from Iquique, carrying in his pockets some business und lamily cor respondence and family photographs. Oneof these home letters contained the painted head of a paper doll, sent to him by his two-year-oid boy, and a funny letter, scrow'ed in unmeaning Hiero glyphics by the same baby hands. xuese momentoes were viewea wim great suspicion by the olliciais and deemed quite sufficient to justify his be in ir shot. II j was lncarct raied in a dungeou, guaied by two seiitmels and Kept ior lue ni si tiiree o ays wuuoui, wu. Iu the course oi a lew days every Chilian in the province was arrested, and as the families ot the prisoners wire anowtu to visit them the American managed to smuggle a letter to a prominent mer chant of the place, a Mr. uamerery oi the firm of Camerery & Koch, to whom ne had brought letters oi introuuctiou. This gentleman hnuliy sucuteuea, uitue expiration of three weeks, in obtaining his release, ins conntcaieu posses sions were returned to him, with ihe exception of the momentoes descriued, which will probabiy occupy important place9 in Peruvian annals, to the sur prise oi the little fellow who sent them. The pi is jner was discharged by the authorities with considerable reiuct auce, a taut perhaps due to his manner ot reception ol their oourteoiea. Even the thiee cays' starving did not tame him, to see whether he was ready to come to terms, and yield the key to the mysterious cipher, he told them he would acknowledge he was hungry, and informed them tuat if they wouid roast their prelect or General Mnteio, he would gKdiy eat them, and the act mixht make him a civilized Bciuuuo.' ban Ifrunouc C'fwowl ir ii