t. (ill ''f d?'t 'f rH HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. tJ - i j hi i , ., ' YOL. X. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1880. NO 25. '" 1 . ' ' , .- - - , i- ' I The Bedouin's Itebnke. A Bedouin of true lionor good Nebar Possessel a horse whoso lame was spread afar j No other horse was hall so proud and strong, His feet were like the north wind swept along In his curved neck and in his flashing eye Yon saw the harbingers ol victory. So, many came to Nebar day by day, And longed to take his noble horse away; Large sums they offered, and with grace be sought, But all in vain the horse oor.ld not be bought. With these came Daher, of another tribe, To Bee il ho uiiiht not the owner bribe; Yet purposeless no money, skill, nor breath, Could part theowner from his hone till death. Then Daher, who was subt'lo, mean and ely, Concluded, next, some stratagem to try; So, clothed in rags, and masked in iorm and lace, He as a beggar walked with limping pace, And, mooting Ntbar with the horse one day, Ho loll, and prostrate on the desert lay. ' The ruse succeed edj for, when Nebar lound A helplos9 man in sorrow on the ground, He took bim up, ncd on the noble steed , Gave him a place but what a thankless deed, For Diiher shouted, luughed, and giving rein Said, " Vou will never see your horse again.' "Take him," said Nebar, "but, lor mercy's sake, Tell no man in what way you chose to take! Lest others, seeing what has happened to me, Omit to do some needed charity." Pierced by these words, the robber's keen re morse Thwarted his plan, and he relumed the horse, Shamo-lncod and sorrowful; then slunk away As il he feared tho very light of day! Wide Awake. A STORMY WOOING. Charlie Van Anden stood on the qunrter deck of one of the steamers that ply between New York and Havana, and gazed with feelings of horror and indignation at the scenes which were being enacted at the vessel's sides. He was second mate of the Duchesse, and this was his first voyage on her. The steamer, as he had seen when a day out of pen, wm unseaworthy, and the owner had put her in charge of an in competent cattain, and an insubordinate crew had been shaped. A storm had come up, off the Jersey coast, and the captain hid from the tirsi shown either ignorance or willful disre gard ot danger, in heading directly for land, when, witli plenty of sea-room, he might have run before the gale to the southward. Van Anden did not know what he afterward learned, thnt the Duchesse was insured lor more than her value; but he did Know that the captain was acting unwisely. He vmturtd to remonstrate, but Capiain Butler replied with a bruta! ottb, Jind an admonition to"rmndhi own business," that silenced Van An den. He devoted himself to keeping the crew at work properly, and feeiing lice from resporsibiiiiy, watched the ap proaching danger with a clear con seierce but a heavy heart. There were eleven passengers on board, three of whom were ladies, and he trem bled for their safety. For himself he did not care much, lie had little to tie him to life, and al though he was not romantic, and had no foolish desire for death, yet he had schooled himself to exprct it at any t:me in the discharge of his duties as a sai lor. And now it looked as though death was staring him in the tace. The steamer had sprung a leak, the men had abandoned the pumps, and there were breakers ahead. At this juncture Captain Butler showed the whi'e feather. Careless ol hs passengers, he had called the crew to the Ions-boat, and had given orders to lauDch it. It seemed madness to get into a small boat in such a sea, but it was equally dangerous to stay on the steamer, and the crew gathered around him, wild with selfish terror. In a moment the boat was loosened from its fastenings and the cowardly captain was the first to jump into her. Enough of the crew to tiit the boat followed him, and in stantly pushed away, leaving the steamer to her late, and going to meet an almost equally certain death. Van Anden stood with a sneer on his lip, watching the proceeding. He could not interfere with the captain's doings, although there had been little discipline on deck for the few minutes that had just passed. But now the captain had deserted the ship, ana the com mand devolved upon the firsi-otlicer, whom he knew to be a brave man, al though not askilllul seaman. " Where i3 Mr. Dyer?" he shouted to a sailor who was left behind in the rush that was made for the long-boat. "Washed overboard, sir," said the man. The command then devolved upon him. He looked around with a fresh sense, ot responsibility. There was yet one chance of saving the passengers, and one of these passengers was a woman he would have died to save, even under other circumstances. This was Mary Danforth. She was a magniiicent beauty, and, as Van An den had long known by report, was an independent woman, living her life in proud defiance of Mrs. Grundy, and re lying successfully on her unsullied name and immense fortune to keep scandal at a distance. She was fond of traveling, and trav eled a great deal alone. She stood now a little apart from the other passengers, her proud head lilted as if in defiance of fate, looking death in the tace without a tremor. Ven Anden had fallen in love with her the first time he had seen her, which was on this voyage, She had looked at him once or twice with admiration for his manly beauty, but be had not even spoken to her. and did not suppose that she knew of his existence. Yet beloved her, although it was the kind of love that a poet gives to a star that he knows is out of his reach. All this passed through his mind as he Stood looking at the cau tain's desertion. and he saw his own scorn reflected in her eyes. Tuen he began calculating the chances. The steamer, he knew, would sink in a few moments more. There were eight men of the cre. left on deck, and among them he saw three of the best sailors that bad ship. ped. The passengers were all on deck, gathered in a group. Van Anden looked around to see i f thre were any boats fit for service. Only one remained. "Stand by to lower the yawl!" he shouted, in a voice that rose above the storm. The three good men answered in one breath, "aye, aye, sir!" and jumped to the side of the vessel. They recognized a voice of authority. The other five, incited by their ex ample, followed. Van Anden was there as soon as the rest, and turning to one of the sailors, he shouted : " Fetch life preservers for the passengers!" The man demurred. "To with the passengers!" he answered j " let's save ourselves." Without an instant's hesitation Van Anden knocked him flat on the deck. Seizing a belaying pin, he stood on the defensive for an instant, not know ing how the others would act. ' I'm in command now," said he, " and you've got to obey orders." Then turning to a man ne knew he could rely on, he said : " Go fetch the life-preservers " They were soon brought, and first see ing that each passenger was provided with one, Van Anden had the yawl low ered. He knew that the boat ought not to have over fifteen passengers, and there were twenty souls in all on the steamer. Turning to the passengers he said: " One at a time, now. Ladies first." And himself superintending, he saw them lowered to the yawl which the two sailors below were barely able to keep in position. He put Miss Danforth in the yawl first, and as he handed her down, he felt the pressure of his hand slightly returned, but no words passed between them. When the passengers were all in, he turned to the best men of tho six that remained, and ordered them to follow. They obeyed, and then as the other four were preparing to follow them, he shouted : " Shove off! She's full enough, Davis j I put you in command " It was an unexpected order, and seemed like a death warrant to four men besides himseif. Two of the men still on deck, with angry oaths, rushed past him and made a leap for the yawl, while half a dozen voices arose in remonstrance from be low. But Van Anden sternly repeated his order: "Shove oft!" and raised his belaying pin threateningly at the two men left with him, who stood undecidedly for a moment. "Aye aye, sir," came from the yawl, and she was pushed off. "You'll find an inlet two or three miles south," he shouted to Davis. 'Try and make that, and you can get ashore." "Aye aye, sir!" came up once more from Dick Davis, and the men bent to their oars and pulled away. Van Anden turned to his two remain ing men. " Your chances are better with me than they would have been in the yawl," said he. "There are two more in her now than she can safely ca;ry, and we can get ashore on a rafc." He spoke thus to keep their courage up, akhough he knew that a raft would be unmanageable. It seemed, however, to be 'he only chance remaining, and he was going to try. The men were sullen, but knowing as well as he that there was no ottier chance helped him as he began to lash together some of the debris that strewed the deck. But belore they had accomplished their purpose the ship gave a sudden lurch, and they knew she was going down. "Lash yourselves to a spar," cried Van Anden, suiting the uction to the word, and then all were struggling in the water. Van Anden was submerged for a few moments, which seemed like hours to him, and when he came to the surface he realized that he held in a tenacious grip one end of a piece of rope that he had thrown twice around his waist. The other end was fast to a spar, and he was thus kept afloat. Ho looked around, but could Gee nothing of the two sailors who had been with him. "Poor fellows!" he thought. "I have sacrificed their lives, but it was to save the others that I did It." He had little time for moralizing, however, for his thoughts were speedily directed to his own probable fate. During the little time that had elated since Captain Butler put off in his boat tue steamer nan neen driven in shore until when she had at length sunk, she was within half a mile of the long row ot breakers. V an Anden had recognized the coast. and knew of the inlet to which he had directed Davis. He also knew that he was driftincr di- rectlv toward a rocky point where he would probably be dashed to death by uie waves. It was only a matter of a few minutes. and with a proud senee of having done his duty as far .is he could, he breathed a snort prayer lor Miss Danforth's safety and for his own. and waited as calmly as he could for the shock. On ana on went tue soar, until at length it was hurled far up on the rocks by a mighty wave that broke further in than the others. A dull crash was all that Van Anden felt, and then he wus unconscious. When he came to h mse f he was lv- mg in a large, coin lor table bed, and a kind, motherly-looking woman was watching beside him. w Here am J r" he asked, in a voice that surprised him bv its weakness. "You are among iriends," was the repiy. lie was too weak to question the woman any further, and he shut his eyes again, contented with the one word " friends," while the joyful nurse stole out of the room to carry the news of her patient's recovery from delirium to the kind-hearted family who had harbored the stranger. In a day cr two more he was strong enough to listen while he was told that lie Had been louna on the shore insensi ble, and bleeding from a wound on the head, and had been cared lor by Captain v liners, a icurcu sailor, ana 1113 lam ilv. When he asked if any one else had been picked up he was told no, and he supposed that lie was the only sur vivor. II is recovery was rapid, and in a f ;w days he started for New York to report ins lots oi tne v ucnesse to Messrs. ship ley & Wright, her owners, When be arrived in the city, however, he was too weak to attend to business immediately, and entering a carnage, he told the driver to take him to a hotel. " Which one, sirP" asked cabby, "Any one, I don't care," was the re ply of the sailor, who was only con scious of a longing to lie down and rest. The driver looked in astonishment, and then seeing that his passenger was ill, he started uptown. "I'll take him to a first-class place, ai'yway.where he'll be taken care of," he thought, and drove to one of the best uptown hotels. Van Anden staggered into the office and asked for a room. "Yes, sir," said the clerk, politely enough, but indifferently. " Please reg ister your name," and he pushed the big bonk toward him. Van Anden wrote his name, and leaned against the counter, waiting for the clerk to assign him his quar ters. But the clerk stared at bim in aston ishment when he read the name. "Are you Charles Van Anden, of the steamer Duchesse?" he asked. " Yes," said our hero, not a little sur prised in his turn. The clerk summoned the proprietor of the hotel and told him who the latest guest was, and Van Anden was speedily installed in the handsomest room in the house, and Berved with the best of every thing that he could wish. And halt a dozen cards were sent to his room within half an hour, the names on which he did not at once recognize. But he was told by the obsequious ser vant that the passengers of the ill-fated Duchesse had gotten safely ashore, and were stopping at the same hotel to which he had come. And when ho was rested sufficiently to converse, he found that he was a bero with whose praises the whole town was ringing. His first inquiry was for Miss D.in forth, and while the servant was telling him that she was one of the guests who had inqu'red especially after him, an other servant came with a magnificent bouquet, to which was attached a tiny card bearing the name of Mary Dan forth. As soon as possible, he sent a note asking that he might see her, and in a few minutes more he was in her private parlor. Her magnificent beauty was not im paired by the exposure to which she had been subjected, but her flashing eyes looked on him with an interest that thrilled him as nothing had ever thrilled him before. He never remembered but one thing that happened at the interview, how ever, for he was as modest as he was brave. That one thing was that she made him promise to call again. And he did call again the nex1; day, after lie had seen Messrs. Shipley "& W right, who received him coidiv enough, being afraid of the testimony tnnt ne could give in tue lawsuit tliat they expected to be involved in regard ing the insurance money, They had told bim that they could give him a subordinate position on one of their ships that was going to China within a week, and he, knowing that he must work for a living, had accented the offer. So he told Mary Danforth that he was going as a boatswain on the ship Mary Ann. and she blazed with indigna tion. ' As boatswain!' said she: "indeed you shall not. I'il build you a ship my self sooner than have you do that. You sha! 1 not go to sea again except as cap tain." The bashful sailor was overwhelmed. " Oh, Miss Danforth." said he. " vou are too kind. But it is too much for you to do. 1 can tight my way up alone, and if you will only remember me kindly I shall bo nerved to the strugg.e by the greatest happiness I can ever know." She looked at him a moment without speaking. She knew that he was too modest and too manly to appear in the light of a fortune-hunter, and she could not bear the thought of his leaving her. So although her cheeks flamed with blushes, sue spoke again : "ies, 1 will build you a ship and make you the captain, but onlv on one condition. " What is that9" said noor Van An. den, bewildered, and 7et half guessin? at what was coming. ' Only on condition that you make me your hist mate," replied the blushing beauty, hiding her face in her hands. He seized her hand and drew it eentlv from her face. It lay auietlv in his own. Then he kissed it, and still it was not withdrawn. And then But it is not for me, nor for the reader to know what he did next. All that concerns us to know is that the ship was built, and on the very first voyage Cap tain Van Anden made his wedding tour. The Sumac Business. A Brunswick county (Va.) letter sajs: bumac abounds here in large quantities, and it is gathered by colored people from June to October, who sell it to the proprietors of sumac mills .t. Petersburg, where it is Dulverizfid nnH prepared lor northern markets, to be used in tanning and dying. The gather ing of this article has of late becoina so extensive that it may be reearded nan new inausiry. lears ago the virtue of Virginian sumac was verv little known, and consequently ve.y little was gathered, but as soon as it was found to be among the best in the world, the demand for it has stead lly increased so much so that it la likely that before long it will be culti vated. Last year one of the merchants in Biunswick county shipped fifty tons to reiersourg. a. colored hand can easily gather one hundred to one hun dred and fifty pounds a day. Saturday is the busiest day for merchants in the rural districts, and then colored people can be seen coming to the stores from morning until evening to dispose of their sumac gathered during the week. Those that are too poor to own oxen or horses, carry it. It is nothing unusual for a colored woman to carry forty or fifty pounds at a time on ber bead a consid erable distance. Since the article grows wild, there are no restrictions in the privilege of gathering it. but the cnWnH people, in general, ask permission to uo no. Xhere are in the State of Texas 522 counties. Of these, at this time, 163 are organized and sixty-two unor ganized. At the last election, in 1878 154 counties voted for governor, He Wanted to Engage Board for Twenty Years. Yesterday afternoon shortly after the arrival of the train a man entered a hotel in this city and asked Hip cierk, who stood busying himself with a pat ent blotter, the terms upon which be could engage board. - " Owing to the location of your room, sir. Big demand for our rooms. Feed well." " I don't care so much about the eatin' part," replied the man. " I'm forty odd year old, and have been eatin' about all my life. It's gettin' to be nn old thing to me. Well. say. give me a respectable rooni how much'll you charge P" " Just yourself, sirP'' " Well, in a m inner." "Twenty-five dollars a month, in case you are alone." "You see, it's this way: My wife will be with me, but as times nre pretty tight, I concluded to arrange it this way, I'll take breakfast, my wife will take dinner, and we'll tfcrow up wet or dry for supper. By that means we can both get board for one price. I reckon I'm a little the best manager you ever SG6c! " Fifty dollars for the two." " I don't understand that sort of 'rith metic. Both together we'd only eat the meals allowed for one person. It don't hurt a bed any more for tvo people to sleep on it than for one. I'vegotabd out in the country that was presented to my wife when we got married an' I'll be dinged if it ain't just about as good as new. It's one of those old-fashioned beds, with high, yaller posts with knobs on the tops as big as young pumpkins. I'll furnish the room with this beci nnd one chair. My wife can set on the floor. I've lived in the country all my life and, bavin' made a little money last year, I concluded to come to town and splurge a little. Thar's a woman down the country that has all the time been buckin' agin my wife, and to git away with her we have concluded to board at a hotel." " Fifty dollars per month is our lowest rate." " How much by the year ? I am goin' into this business right." "Six hundred dollars." " This is a wholesale business with me. How much for tea years?" " Six thousand dollars." " That's a gettin' down to it. How much for twenty years." " Twelve thousand dollars." "All right. Mark me down for a square meal right now and check it off for twenty years." " dee that card?" said the clerk point ing to the hotel maxim of persons with out baggage are required to pay in ad vance. "Oh, I've got the baggage," and the man lifted up a carpet bag. " That won't go.fi " Won't you take this as security?" " No ; get out of here." " But I want to board here for twenty years." "Go on away." " I'll leave your one-horse hotel, sir; but first let me show you." He lilted up the carpet bag, opened it and dis played $50,000 in government bonds. " You can stay, sir." "No; I beiieve not. It takes too much money to put up in this hotel. Guess I'll go aiound and put up ft a wagon yard." Ever since Cain gave Abel a clip with a club people have lost money by not ob serving the laws of politeness Lillle Hock (Ark.) Gazette- Bibles With Queer Karnes. An interesting collection of Bibles was recently exhibited in London, which comprised copies of all the editions that, became of peculiar errors of the primers, or irom some other reason, have been known by strange names. tYoiong the Bibles on exhibition were the following: Die Glttexhf.ug Bible. The Ear liest Book Known. Printed from Movable Metal Types. is the Latin Bible Issued by Guttenberg, at Mentz, A. D. 1450. The Bug Bible. Was so Called from its Uendering of Psalms xci. : 5: " Afraid ot Bugs by Night." Oar Present Version reads, " Terror by Night." A. D. 1551. The Bkeeches Bible. The Geneva Version is that Popularly Known as the Breeches Bible, from its Ren dering of Genesis iii.: 7: (Making Themselves Breeches out of Fly leaves.) This translation of the Scriptures the Result of the La bors of the hngltsu Exiles at Geneva was the English Family Bible During tho Reign of Queen Elizabeth and till SuDnlanted bv the Present Authorized Version of King James 1. IHE 1 LAUE-MAKKUS I3IBI.E. B TOIU a remarkable Typographical Error which occurs in Matthew v : 9: "Blessed are the Place-makers," in stead ol Peace-makers. A. D. 15G.J. The Tkeacle Bible. From its R-rder ing ot Jeremiah viu. : 22: "Is There no Treacle instead of Balm in Glleadr" A. D. 1508. the xvosin bible. i rom the same Text, but Translated " R-Mn " in the JJouai version. A. D. 1G09. The He and Ishe Bibles. From the riespective Renderings of Ruth iii 15 one Heading that "She went into the uity." The other has it that "tie went." A. u. 1011. The Wicked Bible. From the Fanr. that the Negative has been Left Out ot the seventh Commandment (Exodus, xx. : 14.) For Which the Printer was tided $300. A. D. 1031 The Thumb Bible Being One Inch square ana nan an inch Thick, as ruonsnea at Aoeraeen. A. D. JB70 The Vineoar Bible. So Named from the Headline ol the 80th Chapter of 1-.UKB, wuicu reaas as "ine tr arable ot the Vinegar," instead of the Vine. yard. A. D. 1717. The Pkintehs' Binjj:.-We are told by Cotton Mather that in a Bible printed prior to 170-3, a blundering n i,. , j i r . v . n J-ypograp"cr luaue iviutr uaVId CX claim that "Printers instead of runce&J Persecuted him without cause." bee rsalms cxix.: 161. The Murderers' Bible.-So called from an Error in the Sixteenth verse of the Epistle of Judo, th word " Murderers" being used instead ol "Murmurers." A. D. 1801. The Caxton Memorial Bible. Wholly Printed and Bound in 13 hours, but only 100 copies struck off. A. D. 1877 Samuel Johnson defined' nonsense as " bolting a door with a. boiled, carrot. '1 TIMELY TOriCS. A person with a turn for curious statistics has calculated that the 10,000, 000 barrels of beer reported by the brew ers' congress as sold last year would bave filled a canal twenty-one feet wide and five feet deep, extending from New York to Philadelphia, and that it would take a pump throwing thirty gallons a minute, running night and day, over twenty-one years to pump it out. It was all swallowed, however. Dora Young, a favorite daughter of the late Brighnm Young, is in Chicago. She i? deicribed s a particularly attractive and bandsome woman, with a beautiful complexion and golden hair. She dresses fashionably and in good taste. She ha9 considerable property, secured from her father's estate by a successful suit at law, and intends to enjoy it. Two years ago she was a zealous Mormon, but now she abomin ates the system and has forsaken her old home and friends. It is a popular sanitary error to think that the mor j a man eats the fatter and stror ger he will become; to believe that the more hours children study the faster they learn; to conclude that if exercise is good, the more violent it is the greater is the benefit; to imagine that whatever remedy causes one to feel immediately better is good for the system, regardless of the ulterior effects. Despite the ad vance of hygienic science, these mis taken ideas remain a monument to the public apathy concerning health mat ters. Mrs. Parker, of Glastonbury, Conn., whose famous cows used to be sold every year for taxes, wtites to the Womin's Journal, signing herself Julia . Smith, and says that her husband not only paid the tax this year without protest, but went to the collector to pay it, and then told her that "it was his tax and not hers, and that as he could vote he had no reason to go contrary to aw." Airs. Parker says: "1 want to take my own stand and tight it out, as long as men make laws so uruust that women cannot say how their own prop erty shall be disposed of, but men can use it as they please, without any ifa or ands about it." It was recently remarked by Trof. Maudsley that one striding feature observed by medical men in case3 of hallucination is that the patients cannot be convinced that the objects they see, the sounds they hear, and the smells they perceive, have no real existence, and that the sensations received are the result of an excited state of their nerves. Hallu cination often extends to but one sense, the person affecte being othewise in a perfectly normal condition. It may irise either from an idea on which the mind has dwelt closely, or from excite ment of the sensory nerves. It is said that Newton, Hunter, nnd some others of equal eminence, could, at wid, picture forms to t hemselves until they appeared to be realities. Dan Watson, who is known to the police throughout the country, is now in the penitentiary at Philadelphia. Being asked why his band had not made an attempt on the Northumberland bank while operating in that neighborhood several years ago, he said: Three times we went to do it. and each time we were fiustrated, and by what do you think? a terrible bulMog? the watch man's revolver? or the strength of the saftP N either, but a little child, lou see, the watchman went down to the bank from his supper leading his little child hy the hand, we had it an ar ranged to pounce upon him and gag and bind him and then rob the place: but, jniehow. when I saw that littl : one. I hadu't tho heart to give the signal and hurt it, so ho escaped. I'm a bad man, aiid I ain't afraid of the best man living but 1 couldn't bear to see the little thing hurt. Tho Perils of nn Ambassador. The position of ambassador was not always quite 8'vh a safe one as it is no wa lays. Oar Henry VI II. wanted to send Bonner, the bishop, as ambassa dor to Franco with threatening mes sage to Francis I. Bonner ohjiicted that it might cost him his head to utter a de fiance couched in such terms. " Il they harm you," said Henry, "I'll make ma.iy French heads fall for yours." ' May it please vour grace, answered Bonner. " but I doubt whether any head would lit my shoulders quite as well as my own." More than a century later Cromwell banged a Portuguese envoy for murder committed in London. Apparently, however, he was not a regular ambassa dor. Possibly if ho had been it would not have made much difference. Am bassadors and their servants were de clared exempt frooi civil procedure ia the reign of Queen Anne, an net of par liament having been pa-sed to that ef fect in consequence of a slight offered to the minister of tho czar. Peter the Great was naively nstonished because every one concerned in the business was not hanged. French became the recog nized language oi diplomacy about the middle ot the sevei.teenth century though it had begun to assume that posi tion much earlier. Cromwell, with his usual pugnac.ty.pro'.ested against the u ;e of Frencu international correspondence. " I will have nothing but Latin or f-ng-lisn." said the protector. Euglish was out of the question, there being proba bly less than loo persons out oi the British isles who understood our tongue, but Latin, the mediioval lan guage of diplomacy, was conceded, it was during the commonwealth that an Italian ecclesiastic, sent to Lon on on a temporary mission, bitterly excla;med that there was only one man in this bar barous country who could speak Latin, and be was blind. Milton was Latin secretary at a salary of 288 a vear, afterward cut down to i00 when be required the services of an assistant France retained its formal aso ndancy till the congress of Berlin in 1878, when it was decided that either English or French might be spoken. The English Plenipotentiaries spoke in their own language. Indeed. Lord Beaconsfield cannot speak French fluently. The Berlin congress was held in the capital of the German empire and presided over by a German statesman, perhaps the most arrogant as well as the ablest bis couhtry has ever produced, yet no one ventured to claim for Germany equal honors with English and French fall Mall Qaaette. When a man has once forfeited the reputation of his integrity, he in set fast, and nothing will then seryia turn, neither truth nor falsehood. NIAGARA FALLS. Some of the People Who neve Gone Over tlie Cataract. John Paul writes as follows from Ning- araFalhto aNew Yorkpaper: Within twenty-five years more than sixty per sons have gone over the falls. Last summer seven went over, four on the American side and three on the Cana dian. Of those who co over the Ameri can falls the bodies are very seldom recovered, thev tell me. while the bodies of tose who go over on the Canadian s:de aie usually found. Tins is because of the jagged rocks which lie hidden in the whirl and foam at the foot of Uih American falls these, grim teetli that they are, seize upon the victim delivered to them, and hold bim in a grip from which neither bell nor diver can deliver him. a grip which shall not be relaxed until the sound ef that trumpet at whose blast the most inaccessible graves shall give up their dead. It is generally boatmen, I am told, familiar with the river, who fall a prey to the falls. Crossing nnd recrossing the river in safety thousands of times, knowing, as they suppose, every phaseof the current, they finally come to look upon it with indifference if not with contempt, and, going once too often to the well, come to have their pitchers terribly broken at last. The usual fate of all who toy with the manes of lions or attempt tho role of tiger-tamers is theirs. Some day there is a craunch, and all is over. Last sum mer, for instance, two boatmen started to cross the river in a sailboat, taking no oars along. It had been their home since childhood, and boating was their business. Who should presume to warn themP But in mid river the wind died awny, and they found themselves in the grip of the current a grip relentless and unrelaxiug as that of fate. Faster and taster, as though drawn by demons be neath the keel, their boat neared the rapids. And once in the rapids ah, the story is soon told. From tho bead of the rapids to their foot the falls a dis tance of perhaps eighty rods, the decline is nigh upon ninety feet. And down this inclined plane, as vou can very well see, the water slides with something of the speed ot nn express train. It is a terrible meteor that shoots by the few (for the exhibition has not been adver tised in advance) who stand on the banks and bridges. Two pale-faced men in a frail boat, seething waters around them, and the falls thundering in antici putive triumph below, arms wildly out stretched for an aid which none can give, no cry for succor audible, though you know that the shrieks ot the doomed are sent up to the skies one glimpse of this and no more. The baleful vision has vanished, and again the glad waters are dancing and glancing onward in the sun. You know that lives have been quenched like tapers in the fateful foam of the falls, but the only testimony to the tragedy is the great clouds ot spray which roll up to heaven like sinoKe from the altar ol immolation. Here, as well as elsewhere, whisky comes to the aid of water and supple ments it in the work of destruction. Liquor is cheap on the Canadian side, and so an abnormal boldness may be begotten at what seems (and is in the outset) a very inconsiderable cost. But after crossing to tho Canadian side the American side not infrcqueutly knows tho boatman no more forever. Charon takes up the oar, and the Styx, not the Niagara, is ferried. Thus Mr. Whitney, of the Cataract bouse, tells me that last summer his son, sitting in the summer house of his grounds above the rapids, saw a man getting dangerously near the sliding water. Running down to the bank he shouted to hiin to pull in shore or he'd be caught in tho current, but a drunken stare was the only answer. A lew minutes more and the boat, was among the dimpling eddies the smiks, as it were, which precede the infernal laughter of the rapids. Then the poor wretch, suddenly sobered, realized his position. Belore he cou.d hiccup a single pater his sodden soul stood before ks God. No human being ever wont over the falls and lived. Sam Patch but jumped from a ladder a hundied feet high erected near the toot of Biddlo stairs. Of thecats and dogs with which human itarians have at various times experi mented it is said that some have been picked up aiive, but I mainly doubt it. Why. let the fail but biush yeu with its outermost skirt, and 'twere death: but one corner of that ponderoui sheet, strik ing with only half the impetus gathered by its descent, would smite the life out ot behemoth! Mustard. The seads of two species of mustard (Sinapis) are commonly used for culin ary and medicinal purposes, and are known as black mustard seeds and white mustard seeds. The 11 -ur of mustard, so extensively used as a con diuient, is prepared from a mixture of tho two kinds, usually in the proportion of two parts black and three parts white. The seeds are pouuded and the husks then removed from the Hour by sifting. It is remarkable that tho pun gent principle lor which mustard is valued does not exist in the seeds, but it is produced when the constituents of the seeds are brought together under the influence ot water Internally, flour of mustard is used as stimulant, diuretic and emetic: ex ternally as an irritant and rebefacient White musiard seeds are often taken in an entire state as st mulants in dyspep sia. Mustard should be mixed with water that has been boiled and allowed to cool. Hot water destroys its essen tial qualities, and raw cold water might cause it to ferment. Put the mustard in a cun with a small pinch of salt, and mix with it very gradually sufficient water to make it drop from the spoon without becoming watery. The tier- mans have a way of preparing mustard in which much ot its pungency is modi hed by spices. The tollowing is an ap proved method of preparing it : Take of the white and black mustard seed, ground round fine, each one pound, and half pound of sugar. Pour upon this mix- a ture a sufficient quantity of boiling vinegar to make it of the consistency of soft dough. It should then be stirred constantly with a paddle tor about half an hour, in which time the mustard will swell and become much thicker. "Alter it has cookedsay about an hour add one ounce of powdered cinnamon and haltanounceot powdered cloves and mix thoroughly It may then be set away in tightly covered bottles and jars, and if the vinegar is good it will keep any length of time and improve with age. It may be thinned with vinegar as it is wanted for use. Mustard prepared in this way is tar superior to that mixed, intbe usual manner, 5(Voy J'tme. now Can a Woman Telll Ho told me his lore this morning, With his dear hand clasping mine, And he said : "God speed the dawning When, sweet, 1 may call thee mine. Bat my tond heart questioned softly, ThouKh loving him trne an I well, Will h.s love outlast all changes T Oh! how can a woman toll T When the years shall bring their trials, And the cares and pains o tweigh The .ya in the littlo honsnhold, As ctoudH might obscure the day, Will the hand that has heM mine fondly, Wiien maidenly ids belel, As earnestly shield from sorrow T Oh! how can a woman tell T When the silvery threads are creeping Through my treses one by one; When I lose my youth and beauty, As many a wile has done, Will his heart be mine as tru'y As when in tho flowery dell He gave me his trusted promise T Oh! how can n woman tell T 1 glance at my sweetheart waiting, His eyes t'ioy are clear and true! " I will love him," my heart says gladly, " I wih trust him the w de world through." I will be to him joy and comfort, I will all other wives excel, I will keep him with love's sweet maic Tais much may a woman toll . o ITEMS OF NTEREST. Coney Island is said to be more popu lar with foreigners than any other American watering-place. The Territory of Montana has already produced upward of 147,000,000 in gold, and $6,000,000 in silver. A temperance lecturer in Georgia estimates that liquor costs the people of that State $15,000,000 annually. The people of Zurich, by a vote, main tained the idea that involuntary vaccin ation is good for the general health. Tho government is pressed for storage room for silver dollars. It can build a vault in our pocket free of charge. New Haven JScgiskr. The assessed value of land in the chief oities of Iowa is as follows : Des Moines, $3,593,000; Dubuque, $3,533,3H4: Daven port, $2,620,810; Burlington, $2,708,102; Keokuk, $2,010 582. Dr. T. S. Cobbold, micro3copist, says that it is curious to find that the hearts ot birds as well as of carnivora, are crowded with nematoid insects. Atmospherical knowledge is not thoroughly distributed in our schools. A boy being asked "What is ruistP" vaguely replied, " An umbrella." Soldiers must be fearfully dishon est," said Mrs. Partington. " It seems to bo an occurrence every nignt ior a sentry to be relieved ot his watch." It is reported from Shefheld, England, that heavy orders are daily coming in from both Scotch and east coast ship builders tor light steel-plates. I he in troduction of steel into ship-building is causing an important and growing trade. "If vou are a ouiet. honest citizen of Galveston, how did these skeleton keys and brass knuckles happen to be in your coat pockets?" "I recKon, judge, me and tho poliaeman must have changed coats in the scuttle. We were very much excited." univcslo?i News. A Sail Francisco manufacturer has received from the interior of the State an order for a pair of boots which, if the numbers in use ran so h'gli would be eighteens in size. I hey will be 171 inches in length and in width. Tho man who is to wear them is small, ex cept as to his hands and feet. Two thousand be ven hundred men are now being employed in the Baldwin locomotive works, Philadelphia, len locomotives are on an average turned out weekly, 251 having been completed this year, uruers are Ding nueu ior railroads lor South Australia, New South Wales and many places in North and South' America. She had a prettv diploma tied with a pink ribbon, from one of our best young tadies' colleges. In conversation with a daring and courageous young man, a ter he had detailed the dangers and delights of riding on a locomotive, she com pletely upset his opinion oi independent education of the sexes, by inquiring, How do they steer locomotives, any how " J, Two men at Peoria, 111., tied their horses' tails toget her and started them in opposite directions to settle a bet as to the strength ol the Vutes. But a quarrel arose before the trial took place, and the angry owners agreed to pull each other's noses instead. Both lost, for they were fined $10 each in a police court. The following document was drawn up by a lawyer at Joiiet, 111 , and Bigned by the husoand : " ueceivea irom stlO. in consideration of which I hereby r nounce all right and title to my lawful wife, aud from this day tiencetortu sue is the charge of said , and forfeits all claim on me for support.' Schoolboys and Headaches. Professor Treichler has delivered a lecture before the German association of naturalists and nlivsicians which con tains a fact of some int.rest to teachers- He says that headache in schools decld- ftrilv increase, until in some schools. and notably in Nuremberg, one-third of tne scnoiars suueriioiu il. iiu ucuuvca that the cause is over intellectual exer tion, caused partly by the adoption ot too many tubjects, but principally by the tendency to Ucinund night work. The brain is then freshly taxed when its cello are jxhaused. We betinto hear tho same complaint in England, espe cially Irom London schools, and are tempted to believe that in some of them ' an imperceptible but steady increase in the amount ol night worn demanded has been going on, which is passiug a sate limit. It does not hurt the quick, and it docs Hot hurt the stupid, but it does hm t the boys and girls who want to fulfill all demands, aud have not quite the quickness to do it. 1 he usual quan tity of Latin, for example, to be learned at night has within the last thirty jears more than doubled, while the pressure from parents upon the children to learn it a.l has increased in nearly the same proportion. The increased crowding of schools explains much, but it does aiK explain this headache, whicu u not su fered by the boys ia proportion to theU jH-healiU. Lowlgn fyect'Mr. 1