. . : 7 - : V ' ; - 1 HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. i VOL. X. RID G WAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1880. NO 27. Amid the Grasses. Come! live in innocence again, Sweet soul ot mine; And weave once more the tender daisy-chain. And ringlets ot the dandelion fine! Come, sing and oroon and chant, Here lurks no aching want Of past or present; Hero honoy.bind is lound, And creeping o'er the ground Mellow sunbeams pleasant! Come! live in tender joys and sweet embraces Of bird-notes dropping hither, All in the golden autumn weather, All in the grasses and gray lenves togethor, And see how eyes shine out trom (air young Ifioos In gentians bluo, that catch the thistle's leather; Come, breaths and live! For here grow sweet all gracious things to give. Here nodioth fino My Lady Columbine; Jacket and Breeches, some do call her. Oh, naughty name! She is my Lady Colum bine! May no ill frost or plucking hand bclall her! Oh, hither come and hide! Here in the grasses nestle, nestle deep with me! Here with my bountoous love and me abide ! Sweet nature, queen ol all green things that be! For over all Some high spirit mystical, With vaporous lormand goldon-droopinghair, Breathes through the drowsy skies The mellow-tinted India-summer air And oiluia ar.criilce! Ah ! what's so sweet As the tripping, twinkling Jcot Ot tho biojklct 'ncath the willows? And what, ah! what's so fair As tho summer air, And the lark high up in its fleecy billows? And hore iu the meadow-laud lur below We can listen r.nd catch the streamlet's flow, And hear tho lark till he's out ol sight In the breezy blue above tho hill, And watch the sunbeams drop and All Each little flower-cup with delight; For here the shadows are solt and still Hist! be hushed as a startled mole Curled in its cuulle; lor over the knoll I see the solt brown twitching ear Ol the shy gray rabbit peeping! He thinks that we are sleeping Mature anil L! Ha, ha! J. And soon more near Ho'll crouch his lorm and crop the hill-side tender j And if tho winds blow by, He knows them, knows them just as well as I, No. lears their shrill pipes slender. Hear how alolt tho old crows caw! Ca! ca! Wicked block cros that fill their maw With pretty field-lures. What a shame! Here's one that built his nest close by, Last summer, and the grasses lie Trampled by the path he came. See! here deep down nro mosses and sweet ferns, And meadoK-flre that burns: Love s torch, they call it ratntr, Or CupiJ s cup, il maidens pluck and uihcr. litre s Jiiilim)-;i po, tho luiries smoke f hey light il by tho uieiidow-rire And hero s t.,m magic ring they broke When dareiir to their cricket choir. And he- e are spicy mints, And club-head lichens full ol'heakish dints Of toothsome elves, and prints 01 winding pathways thro' the reedy grasses, Where, burryihg wild, the emmet's army passes ; Here dainty roads, Whero, shining solt, the velvet-coated toads, Crushing the herbage, pant when rain is over, Hopping to nu ct their loves iu musky clover; And here the field-mouse conies, Stealing sweet nature's crumbs Seeds that she plants lor mice and birds un heeded ; Far trom the cark ot men She stores her wealth ot grain Way-side lanns by walls, brier-grown and over-weeded. Here, hore I watch them come The wild Vice with his drum; The tilting dragou-Hy with azure wing; The painted moths; and lo! AVith his sharp, wiry bow, The elbowed grasshopper, with sudden spring Setting the thickets brown in wild commotion; Wliilo lluiteting down like shells through some blue ocean, In undulations lhythmically slow, Through the hluc-misted air ol autumn lucid I'urplo as Tynan tides, and interluscd With incense odors of ull Bwcet shrubs bruised The splendid wide-winged maple leaflets mellow! Here still are buttercups, so silvery yellow; And here sweet winter-green, with berries red. And he io from nud ling head The leathery dandelion soweth wide Her venturous parachutes how light They mount the breeze, and vanish trom the sight! And hoie low-couched abide, And creeping soltly slide Arbutus tendrils through the rustling grass, Waiting for snows to pass, To breathe once more the verdure of the spring. And here on wing Come the sharp sparrows, and late robins sing Their larewells. So, laiewe 1' The light dull pass From sky and vale und mountain As from some spent and golden-watered fountain. So, larewell! While through the meadow-grass Cricket and restless midge and night-wings rally Their loi ces far and near, And All the ear With panlings ol soil plumes and rustlings clear, And music shrill aud high, through the lon dushy valley. W. M. Bi iiigs, in Harjier'i Magazine Story of a Skeleton Skirt. I was in the civil service at Rich mond. Enough that I was there and on honest business. That business done, I prepared to return home. And there by hangs this tale, and, as it proved, the fate of the Confederacy. For, of course, I wanted to take presents home to my family. Very little question was them what these presents should be for I had no boys" or brothers. The women of the Confed eracy had one want which overtopped all others. 'Vhey could make coffee out of beans ; p.V.a they had from Columbus ; straw hats they braided quite well with their own fair hones; snuff we could get better than you cot Id in the old concern." Wu had no hoopskirts skeletons, weused to call them. No in genuity had made i hem. No bounties Lad forced them. The Bat. the Grey hound, the Deer, the Flora, the J. C. Cobb, tho Varuna and the Fore-and-Aft ail took in cargoes of them for us in England. Cut tho Bat and the Deerand the Flora were seized by the blockade n, the J. (J. Cobb diuk at sea, tho Fore- and-Aft and the Greyhound were set fire to by their own crews, and Varuna was never heard of. Then the State of Arkansas offered sixteen townships of swamp land to the first manufacturer who would exhibit five gross of the home-manufactured article. But none ever competed. The first attempts, in deed, were put to an end when Schofield crossed the Blue Lick and destroyed the dam on the Yellow branch, which that brute of a Grierson said there was never anything of it but the outside. Of course, then, I put in the bottom of my new large trunk in New York, not a "duplex elliptic," for none were then made, but a " Belmonte " of thirty springs, for my.wife. I bought for her mora-common wear a good " Belle-Fon-taine." For Sarah and Susie each I got two " Dumb-belles." For Aunt Eunice and Aunt Clara, maiden sisters of my wife, who lived with us after Winchester fell the fourth time, I got the Scotch Harebell," two of each. For my own mother I got one " Belle of the Prairies" and one " Invisible Combination Gos samer." I did not forget good old Mamma Chloo and Mamma Jane. For them I pot substantial cages without names. With these tied in the shape of figure eights in the bottom of my trunk, as I said, 1 put in an assorted cargo of dry goods above, and, favored by a pass, and Major Mulford's courtesy on Hie flas-of-lruce boat, I arrived safely at llichmond before the autumn closed. I was received at home with rapture. But when, the next morning I opened my stores, this became rapture doubly enraptured. Words cannot tell the silent delight with which old and young, black and white, surveyed those fairy-like structures, yet unbroken and unmended. Perennial summer reigned that autumn day in that reunited family. It n inncd the next day, and the next. It would have reigned till now if the Belmontes and the other things had listed ns long as the advertisements doclared. I w.t3 up in the cedar closet one day looking for an old parade cap of mine, which, I thought, though it was my thiid best, might look better than my second best, which I had worn ever since my best was lost at Seven Pines. I say I was standing on the lower shelf ol tho cedar closet, when, as I stepped alonj in the darkness, my right foot caught in a bit of wire, my left did not give way in time, and 1 felt with a small wooden hat box in my hand full on the floor. The corner of the hat box struck me just below the second frontal Binus, and I fainted away. When I came to myself I was in the blue chamber: I had vinegar on a brown paper on my forehead ; the room was dark, and I found mother sitting by me, g'.ad enough indeed to hear my voice aud to know that I knew her. It was sometime before I fully understood what had happened. Then she brought me a cup of tea, and I, quite refreshed, said I must go to my office. " Office, my child !" said she, " Your leg is brol'.cn above the ankle; you will not move these six weeks. Where do you suppose you are?" Till then I had no notion that it was five minutes since I went into the closet. When she told me the time five in the afternoon I groaned in the lowest deptiis. For in my breast pocket in that innocent coat, which I could now see h ing on the window-sill, were the duplicate dispatches to Mr. Maso". for which, late tho night before, I f'ad got the secretary's signature. Tiijy were to go at ten that morning co Wilming ton, by the navy department's special messenger. I had taken them to insure care and certainty. I had worked on them till midnight, and they had not been signed till near one o'clock! Heavens an 1 earth, and there it was five o'clock! The man must be halfway to Wilmington by this time. I sent the doctor for Lef arge, my clerk. Lefarge did his prettiest in rushing to the tele graph. But no! A freshet on the Chowan river, or a raid by Foster, or something, or nothing, has smashed the telegraph wire for that night. And before that dispatch ever reached Wil mington the navy agent was in the offing in the Sea Maid. "But perhaps the duplicate got through P" No, breathless reader, the duplicate did not get through. The du plicate was taken by Faucon in the Ino. 1 saw it last week in Dr. Lieber's hands in Washington. Well, all I know is that if the duplicate had got through the Confederate government would have had in March a chance at 83,211 muskets, which, as it was, never left Belgium. So much for my treading into that blessed piece of wire on the shelf of the. cedar ck3et upstairs. " What was tho bit of wireP" Well, it was not telegraph wire. If it had been it would have broken when it was not wanted to. Don't you know what it was? Go up in your own cedar closets and step about in the dark, and see what brings up about your ankles. Julia, poor child, cried her eyes out about it. When I got well enough to get up, and as soon as I could talk and plan with her, she brought down seven of these old things Belmontes, simplex elliptics and horrors without a name and she made a pile of them in the bed room, and she asked me in the most penitent way what she should do with them. " You can't burn them," she said, fire won't touch them. If you bury them in the garden they come up at the second raking. If you give them to the servants they say, ' Thank-e, missus,' and throw them in the back passage. If you give them to the poor, they throw them into the street in front, and do not say ' Thank-e.' Sarah sent seventeen over to the sword factory, and the fore man swore at the . boy, and told him he would flog him within an inch of his life if he brought any more of his sauce there; and so and so," sobbed the poor child, "I just rolled up the wretched things and put them in the cedar closet, hoping, you know, that some day the government would want something, and would advertise for them. You kaow what a good thing I made out of the bottle corks." In fact she had sold our bottle corks for $4,216 of the first issue. We after ward bought two umbrellas and a cork screw with the money. Well, I did not scold Julia. It was certainly no fault of hers that I was walking on the lower shelf of her cedar closet. I told her to make a parcel of the things, and the first time we went to ride 1 hove the wtioie shapeless heap into the river. But let no man think, or no woman, that this was the end of the troubles. As-1 look back on that winter, and on the spring of 18(15, it seems to me onlv the begimiiug. I got out oil crutches at last; I had the office transferred to my house, so that Lafarge and Hepburn could work there at night and commu nicate with me when I could not go out; but mornings I hobbled up to the de partment, and sat with the chief, and took hia orders. Ah, met shall I soon forget that damp winter morning, when we all had such hope at the office P One or two of the army fellows looked in at the window as they ran past, and we knew that they felt well ; and, though I would not ask old Wick as we nick named the chief what was in the wind, I knew the time had come, and that the lion meant to break the net this time. I made an excuse to go home earlier than usual; rode down to the house in the major's ambulance, I remember, and hopped in to surprise Julia with the good news, only to find that the whole house was in quiet uproar, which shows that something bad has happened of a sudden. " What is it, ChloeP" said I, as the old wench rushed by me with a bucket of water. " Poor Mr. George, I 'fraid he's dead, sah." And there he leally was, dear, hand some, bright George Schaff the delight of all the nicest girls of Richmond; he lay there on Aunt Eunice's bed on the grourd floor, where they had brought him in. He was not dead, and he did not die. He is making cotton in Texas now. But he looked mighty near like it then. The deep cut in his head was the worst I had ever seen, and the blow confused everything. When McGregor got round be said it was not hopeless ; but we were turned out of the room, and, with one thing and another, he got the boy out ol the swoon, and it proved his head was not broken. No, but poor George swears to this day it was better it had been, if il could only have been broken in the right way, and on the right field. For that even ing we heard that everything had gone wrong in the surprise. There we had been waiting for one of those early fogs, and at last the fog had come. AndJu bal Early had tha morning pushed out every man he had that could stand, and they lay hid for three mortal hour?, within I don't know how near the picket line at Fort Powhatan, only waiting for the shot which John Streight's party was to fire at Wilson's whart, as soon as somebody on our left center advanced in force on the enemy's nne iiDove xursey lsiana, stretching across to Nansemond. I am not in the war department, and I forget whether he was to advance en barbette or by echelon of infantry. But he was to ad vance somehow, and he knew how ; and when he advanced, as you see, that other man lower down was to rush iu, and as soon as Early heard him he was to surprise Powhatan, you see; and then, it you have understood me. Grant and Butler and tho whole rig of them wouia uave Deen cut ou trom tuelr sup plies, would have had to fiaht a battle for which they were not prepared, with their right made into a new left, and their old left unexpectedly advanced at at oblique angle from their center; and would not that have been the end of themP Well, that never happened. And the reason it never happened was that poor George Schaff, with the last fatal order for this man, whose name I forgot (ttie same who was afterward killed the day before at High Bridge), undertook to save time by cutting across behind my house, from Franklin to Green streets. iou Know now much time he saved; they waited all day for that order. George told me afterward that the last thing he remembered was kissing his hand to Julia, who sat at her bedroom window. He said he thought she m'ght be the last woman he ever saw this Rid of heaven. Just after that, it must have been, his horse that white Meawn r colt old Williams bred went over like a log, and poor George was pitched fifteen feet headforemost against a stake there was in that lot. Julia saw the whole. She rushed out with nil th women, and had just brought him iu when I got home. And that was the reason that the gi-3at promised combin ation of December, 1161, never came oil' at all. I walked out in the lot. after Mc Gregor turned me out of the chamber, to see what they had done with the horse. There he lay, as dead as old Messenger himself. His neck was broken. And. do vou think. I looker! to see what had tripped him. I supposed it was one of tho boys' bandy holes. It was no such thing. The poor wretch had tangled his hind les in one of those hoop-wires that Chloe had thrown out when I gave her new ones. Though I did not know it then, those fatal straps of ruby steel had broken the neck that day oi itonert Lee a army. That time I made a row about it. I felt too badly to go into a passion. But, before the women went to bed they were all in the sitting-room together I talked to them like a father. I did not swear. I had got over that for a while, in that six weeks on my back. But I did say the old wires were nuisances, and that the house and premises must be got rid of them. The aunts laughed though I was so serious and tipped a wink to the girls. The girls wanted to laugh, but were afraid to. And then it came out the aunts had sold their old hoops, tied as ' tight as they could tie them, in a great mass of rags. They had made a fortune by the sale I am sorry to say it was in other rags, but the rags they got were new instead of old it was a real Aladdin bargain. The ragman had been in a hurry and did not know what made the things so heavy. I frowned at the swindle, but they said all was fair with a peddler and I own I was glad the things were well out of Richmond. But when I Baid I thought it was a mean trick, Lizzie and Sarah looked demure, and asked what I would have them to do with the old thines Did I expect them to walk down to the bridge themselves with great parcels to throw into the river, as I had done by Julia'sP Of course it ended, as such things always do, by my taking the work on my own shoulders. I told the oi to tie ud all thev had in as small a parcel as they could and bring them to me. Accordingly the next dav I found a handsome brown-paper parcel not so large, considering, and strangely square, considering which the minxes had put together ana laid on my otuce table. They had a great frolio over it. They had not spared red tape nor red wax. Very official it looked, indeed, and on the left hand corner, in Sarah's boldest and most contorted band, was written "secret service." We had a great laush over their success. And, indeed, I should havo taken it with me the next time I went down to Tredegar, but that , I happened to dine one evening with young Norton, of our gallant little navy, and a very curious thing he told us. we were taming about the disap pointment of the combined land attack. I did not tell what upset poor Schaff's horse ; indeed I do not think those navy men knew the details of the disappoint ment. O'Brien had told me in confi dence, what I have written probably for the first time now. But we were speak irg in a general way of the disappoint ment. jNorton uniBuea nis cigar rattier thoughtfully and then Baid : " Well, fellows, it is not worth while to put it in the newspapers, but what do you suppose upsetwour grand naval at tack the day the tfkee gunboats skit tled down the riveso handsomely P" ' Whv." said Allen, who ia Nnrtrm'H best beloved friend, "thev sav that vou ran away from thera as fast as they did from you." "Do tneyr" sat.t Jiorton, grimly. " If you say that I'll break your head for you. Seriously, men," continued he, " that was an extraordinary thing. You know I was oa the ram. But why she stopped when she stopped I knew as little as this wineglass does; and Cal lender himself knew no more than 1. We had not been hit. We were all right as a trivet for all we knew, when, skree! she began blowing off steam, and we stopped dead and began to drift down under those batteries. Callender had to telegraph to the little Mosquito, or whatever Walter called his boat, and the spunky little thing ran down and got us out of the scrape. Walter did right well ; if he had had a monitor under him he could not have done better. Of course we all rushed to the engine room. What were they a", thereP All they knew was that they could get no water into her boiler. ' Now, follows, this is the end of the story. As soon as the boilers cooled off, they worked all night on those sup- ly pumps. May i oe hanged it tliey ad not sucked in, somehow, a lona string of yarn and cloth, and, if you will believe me, a wire of some woman's crinoline. And that French folly of a sham empress cut short that day the victory of the Confederate navy, and old Davi3 himself can't tell when we shall have a chance again." The Diamond Fraud. A New York correspondent of the Troy Times writes : A view of metro politan Hie, as atlorded by the advertis ing columns, will give one a glimpse of many strange features, some of which are worthy of af.ention. Tho diamond fraud for instance. This is still exten sively advertised, and no doubt occa sional hits are made, the bait beingf ound in such notices as these : A la ly must have $.280, and to raise said amount will part with her diamonds, cost $'400. I'leaso to call at once and inquire lor advertiser at 150 East Thirty-third street. A lady, whose diamonds and jowelry are in pawn, is unubli to redcfcni them; will sell tickets at sacrifice. Address Mrs. Ilivlia Uptown olllce. A lady having her valuable jewels in pawn woma ijko some nonorauie eeutleman to te- deom and hold lor a short time. Sirs. Sinclair. A lady having in pawn valuable diamonds and Jewelry, unable to redcom them, will sell tickets. Mrs. l'aloott. Uptown olllce. A lady having in pledge gold hunting watch clnii a and diamond ring would like to dispose ot tickets. Adlress Mrs. Lyman. It need hardly be said that "tho ladv" mentioned is merely the tool in the hands of professed sharpers. The best illustration of the method wa3 afforded by the manner in which two Washing ton market hucksters were fleeced. They had a snug amount of surplus funds and wished to mak a temporary investment. Having noticed an adver tisement of the above-mentioned charac ter, they opened a correspondence and were met by a "lady," wlio told a wo ful tale. The diamonds were worth $20,000, and had come from some royal house. Could 5,000 be advanced it would be only one-quarter their value. and tho money could be raised on them at any time. A diamond broker (so called) then appeared, who solemnly averred that Simpson the pawnbroker would advance $10,0.10 on the jewels. but his terms ("twenty-four per cent, per annum; were too tiigu. ino lady ottered to pay ten per cent., returnable on call. lucre is no sliarper class 01 men tnan Washington market hucksters, but when taken off their usual traok they are as weak as childhood. These men fell readily into the snare, and advanced 3,uuu on wnat proved to be a mere fraud. This revelation was made at the police office where tho swindlers were arraigned, but the cuarge failed for lack of testimony, and the hucksters became merely the object of ridicule. Not long afterward a kind-hearted clergymen. known as Father Zucker, fell into tho same trap. He had some money, and the moving appeal of a lady in distress touched his Heart, iie responded to the advertisement, was charmed and affected by the tale of misfortune, and advanced nearly a thousand dollars on some paste diamonds which could be bought for a trine. Washington's Table. A visitor to Governor's Island, in New York harbor, says : As the writer looked at the stand upon which his hand rested he observed a quaint old table with carved, crooKeu lees. i.ne tOD was . -1 j m 1 square, except mat tuc sides were cut in tor several incnes, iormmga neat curve, so as to permit four men sitting around it to 00 so wtcu greater comiort. It was coverrd witu red cloth. Jiach corner, however, was bare, to rest cards upon for it was evidently a card table. In front of each player there was an oval shaoed hollow, or bowl, for holding coins. This table had evidently been used for poker playing, and the attend ant was asked wnose table it was. "It was the property of General Washington," he said, "and was pre sented by him to Judge Berrian, of Rocky Hill, New Jersey, where the general olten used it, we are informed, while on visits during 1780 to I8J." On this table appeared the name oi Washington, each letter, representing a neat scene from the life of the first Pres ident. Upon the " V " appeared the Home ol Washington at mount Vernon: a likeness of Latayette in a standing at tltUde was on me letter a . s ren- resented Washington's headquarters at INewburg; "n "me meeting of Wash ineton and Lafayette ; "I" Washi at Trenton ; " W ' his headquarters at Arenton; " u ttie capitot at Washing- wvu 1 s-w -.VMUIUbUl completed, as it was at one tim m. pected it would be ; " O " a battle scene, and "N" the tomb at Mount Vernon. All was executed with a pen, by Lieu tenant J. Edward Blake, who wag killed during the Mexican war. TIMELY TOPICS. A visit was paid to the house of com mons recently by two giants, Cbanz, a Chinese, eight and one-half feet in height, and Von Brustad, a Norwegian, eight feet four inches in height. They were accompanied by Chee Mah, a Chinese dwarf, about two feet in height. The three distinguished strangera were shown into the speaker's gallery, where they remained for a while listening to the debate. The railroad between Vera Cruz and the city of Mexico is said to be a marvel of engineering. It ascends 7,600 feet, 4,700 in twenty-five miles. It passes from hot to temperate, and from the latter to the cold country. It spans ravine?, scales precipices and plunges through the bowels of mountains below ; then up into the clouds again. To con struct this line took thirty-six years, forty presidents and one emperor. Some of the French journals give very flattering accounts of the progress of the preliminary work on the tunnel which is to connect Fran-e and England. It ia stated that the shaft is sunk to the stratum in which the tunnel is to be cut, and that those engaged in the work are about to sink another shaft, and to lower the machinery for boring under the channel. The work on the tunnel is expected to be finished in two or three years. Bret Harte says : I never see here "in Europe a woman toiling in the hot fields, or a peasant working to reclaim and fertilize a few yards of srerile moun tain side, that 1 do not come home to my room and abase myselt before the tittle American nag mat Jiangs above my head, and thank heaven that I live in a republic where there are men enough to piow and hoe and reap, and which has room enough oa level ground for all itj people. The manufacture of bottle 'corks is a considerable source of wealth in France. The annual production amounts to 1,83.000.000. valued at about S3.100.0CO. The value of the raw material is about $600,000. The French government has formed many plantations of the cork oak in Algiers. Parts of the United States are well adapted for the success ful cultivation of the cork oak. On the other side of Jordan is the town of Salt, ascertained to be the an cient Ramoth Gilead, containing a pop ulation of about 8,000 nominal Chris tians and Mohammedans. There are up ward of 1.80O vineyards in this town and neighborhood, and also large fields ot corn land. It is a singular tact, as credibly reported, that these people know nothing of intoxicating drinks, and make their grapes into raisins, honey and a kind of sweetmeat called mnban. The American consul at Ganeva says American beef and livestock have pene trated as far as that region and the value of choice cattle raised in large numbers in Switzerland for Paris and the French markets has been sensibly diminished by the importation from America. Pre servpd meals and fruits lrom the United States are so well established and ad vertised that they may be left to take care ot themselves; but butter and cheese could bo sold in much larser quantities in central and southern Ea rope and a profitable market for a more nutritious brand of American flour could be found. Pins and a Woman's Dress. Oar wife wants a new dre3s. After two or three or a half dozen stores have been ransacked for the goods tiie dressmaker is sougut out. Hie matter of measurement is tedious, and then the matter of httin5i3 one of numerous and repeated trials. Finally the dress is nnisbed and sent liome. TUen it is sent back to be taken in here and let out there, and at last, after tho customer has been htted more times for that one dres? than her husband has been measured in three or four vears, the dress comes home lor the last time and is pronounced by the wearer, her friends and the dressmaker as a beautiful and perfect fit, and it is finished. lieautilul it certainly is, tar more beautiful than anything her husband ever wears. Colors, and materials. stylo, blending shades and contrasting bits of colors, are all in the perfection of good taste. No man can improve upon that. But. it isn't finished. When it is completed as far as the skill of the dressmaker can finish lt.and it is cut 011 it has to bo pinued somewhere ; some times 111 two or tnree, otten in a na'.t- dozen places. Leave out the pin and the dress is all awry somewhere. On all this broad continent there is not one American woman who can dress so as to make any kind ot an appearance in society without pins. Now, suppose our tailor should send our suit home and on puling on the coat we had to pin it in the neck? Or sup pose there was no suspender-button att, and we had to use pins there? Sup pose he made our shirts so that we would have to pin on the collar, how long would a shirt or uch a suit of clothes stay in the house? Who would be responsible for the language used by the man who had to pin his coat? No tailor would care to so tempt the wrath of an independent man. But women alas I she patiently pins on the dress that she paid some $30 or $40 to make, and don't think anything about il. We will not pursue this painful subject. Let the women of America think it up and think about it and learn, in the noble independence of women hood, to make their clothes before they put them on. Burlington Uawkcyt, Words of Wisdom. There is nothing so sad as happiness if uio BiguL 01 tue unnappy. There is a past which is gone forever. But there is a future which is still our own. A Christian is like a locomotive. A firo must be kindied in the heart of it Deiore it will go. The gnarled and twisted oak ha s Its counterpart in the narrowed and stunted ID.1HO.. ' The human mind In lit-n An InpririafA on horseback prop itou one side and it ia.ua on tue otuer. What would be the state of the high- ways of life if we did not driyt) our tbought-sprinklers through them, with vaivo uji?b, spiyeumes. MURDER OF MME. SKOBELEFF. Atrocious Inirrnflt urte nml Treachery of a Yoiind ltumlan Officer. The London Telegravh gives the fol lowing details of the atrocious murder of Mme. Skobeleff, mother of the dis tinguished Russian general: Mme. Skobeleff, during her two months' Btay at Bulgaria, had devoted her time, money nnd energies to the development of benevolent institutions in different parts of the principality, and had made numerous excursions with that object, refusing the escort of gendarmerie of fered to her by the local authorities, on the ground that she was too well known throughout the country to run any risk of molestation. During these expedi tions she was only acccmpanied by a young female attendant, by a faithful and intelligent Russian man-servant named Ivanoff, and by Captain Uzatis, formerly her son's personal aide-decamp, who had earned great distinction by his splendid gallantry during the late war, and whom she was accus tomed to address as "her son." To this young officer she had upon several occasions presented considerable sums of money for the purpose of enabling one of his brother, a civil engineer, to erect a mill in Demendere, a village near Philippopolis, but had recently re fused an application on his part for a further gift, holding out, however, hopes that she might grant the asked-for subsidy at some future period. Mme. H ccbelett Had Set tier neartupon establishing a model farm in East Rou- melia, and started by carriage from Philippopolis for Tchirnan. witli tne ob ject ol purchasing apieceof land suit able to tne luinllment ot nor project, taking with her 25,000 rubles, which Captain Uzatis assisted her to pack up in a valise. The money was destined to pay for her purchase. To avoid the in tolerable heat of the summer sun, she commenced her journey at nine o'clock r. m , accompanied by her usual attend ants, with the exception of Uzatis, who excused himself, alleging indisposition and the necessity of remaining with his brother, who was also on the eve of de parture from Philippopolis. For about Halt an hour s drive, alter quitting tue town, Mme. Skobelefrs carriage was closely followed by a vehicle containing Mme. omoiekoit, ttie directress ot tne Philippopolis hospital, and a Russian officer named Petroff; but the two car riages separated at Kemer, close to a stone bridgo over the Maritza, on the road to Adrianople. Mme. Skobeleff's carriage had proceeded a lew hundred yards further, when Ivanhoff', who was seated on the box by thecoachman.espied Captain Uzatis a little distance oli by the roadside, and, turning round toward his mistress, wtio, in ttie meantime bad lailen into a doze, awoke lier with the announcement that the captain was ap proaching the carriage on loot. The old lady ordered the coichman to stop, and, leaning outot the window, wascxpress- ina her thanks to Uzatis for the trouble ho had taken t o wish her goodspeed on her journey, when he suddenly drew his hand-jar and cut Ivanoff down. At the same moment four armed men made their appearance and fell upon the at tendants with their yataghans. While they were slaughtering the Bulgarian driver and Mme. Skobeleff's maid- upon the former of whom they inflicted lourteen wounds, and upon the latter four terrific slashes, each of which was sufficient to cause death Uzatis elelib- erately butchered his aged benefactress, despite her piteous appeals tor mercy and despairing offers of all her money and valuables if only he would spare her lite, lie lurusttns broad-Diaded cimeter completely through her body, killing her on the spot, and then proceeded to plunder the corpse, white his accom pliues broke open the trunks and rifled them of their valuable contents. Mean while, Ivanoff' lny still, feigning death. He had received eight severe wounds, but, when the murderers made off with their booty, he contrived to crawl away, and, alter incredible exertions, during which he lost so much blood that he repeatedly fainted, reached the Russian consulate at Philippopalis about midnight, when he related the horrors of which lie had b'3en a witness A detachment of cavalry was at onco dispatched to Demendere. whither Uzatis had betaken himself, having pre viously returned to rliuippopolis lor the purpose ol changing his clothes and concealing hia weapons. He and one of his fellow-assassins were in the mill belonging lo his brother when he per ceiveel the militia squadron approach ing. Forthwith they took hurse and walloped off toward the Turkish fron tier, but found the high road occupied by a section of infantry, the officer com maudiug which summoned them to surrender. Dismounting they fled up a hillside and took reluge in a narrow glen, where thev defended themselves for some minutes with their revolvers against the soldiers pursuing them Presently, however, seeing himself sur rounded on every side, Uzatis put the muzzle of his piste i in his mouth and blew out his brain . liis companion was captured alive, as were later on tue other three rutuana who snared in 111. atrocious enterprise, lho valise con t aining the stolen money has not as yet J. J 1 1 .1 Ol U I iy been discovered. Madam Skobelt-ff's body, embalmed by order of the Rus sian consul-general, was conveyed to ot. Petersburg via uonstantinopie and Odessa. United in Death. An aged husband and his old wife went hand in hand to tho gate of death This touching incident is narrated by theOskaloosa Herald: Mr. and Mrs. Dickson, for convenience in attendance durins their illness, were placed in sep arate bedrooms. J. he heads ot the beds were placed asainst a thin partition. which having an open door, permitted the old people to converse, though not able to see each other. The night before the husband died his wife heard him groaning and was very anxious to be with him, but was unable to rise. Soon she was informed that he waa dying, and in order to be near him the beds weie moved so as to bring them parallel with the partition, the heads opposite tue door. This done, the fond wife reached out her hand, grasped her husband by the hand,-and held it during his last mo ments. Thus death found them, as fifty-one eara before the marriage cere- 1 1 1 : 1, .1 mony leit mem, juiuuu unuu 111 uauu. It was a simple aud affectionate token oi the love of a long life, and the day following the wife, too, tolded her arms in the sleep of death. William M. Evarts' professional in come is estimated at from $75,000 to $100,000 a year. What I Lore. I love the plowman's whistle, The reaper's cheerful song, The drover's olt-repeated shout, Spurring hiB stock along; The bustle ol the market man, As he hies him to the town, The hallo lrom the tree-top As the ripening trait comes down; Tho busy sound of the threshers, As they clean the ripened grain; Tho husker's joke and eatoh of glee 'Neath the moonlight on the plain; The kind voice ol the drayman, The shepherd's gentle call These sounds oi pleasant industry, I love I love them all. Yonlh't Companion. ITEMS OF INTEREST. A shooer thing A woman chasing a hen. Men of letters Postal clerks and sign painters. Marathon Independent. Farmers have learned that it takes the best of soil to raise a mortgage. It requires eighteen barrels of ice water daily to supply the fountain in the New York postolliee. About one hundred thousand watche are sold every month in this glorious country ot hours. js cw 10m jxewa. Mr. Bereh is coins to give his atten tion to the bull and bear fight in Wall street. He pays much cruelty is practiced there. Puck. Artificial egg hatching is a fashionable garden amusement in London. The eggs nro hatched in nests of hay and STietland wool, heated by hothouse pipes. The total number of seals taken on the west coast of Vancouver island, Washineton Territory, during this sea son, was over 20,000, of which the value would bo $180,000. The St. Paul and Pacific elevator at Minneapolis has been seriously damaged by a peculiar worm that perforates the boards and lets tho wheat down as if running through a sieve. The fact that a quarter of beef can not be kept for a few hours in warm weather without spoiling is considered by the London Tinu s to be a reproach to science, there being known no easily applicable way of preventing it. There is on exhibition at Oakland, Cul., a sea serpent or shark-fighter. It has a head a little larger than a cat's, and its mouth is armed with strong, glittering teeth. The body is about six feet long, and tap ers to a point an inch in diameter. J twas caught outside 01 the Heads. A folding-chair factory in Newburg, N. Y., is a monument to the pluck and sagacity of its owner, who, though he is totally nana, and uas Deen ior many years, and had nothing to start on, has built up an establishment which now cmplojs fifty hands and sends goods to all parts of the country. The floatine store on Tillamook bay, Oregon, is a novelty as well as a con venience. It consists of a boat about sixty by twenty, with a cabin the entire size, well filled with a stock of grocer ies. In this they sail around the nay, putting in at the settlements, and fur nishing the people with what they want in the way ol groceries. . In the villazo of Guta-Zabolotsk, o the Volinsk province, Russia, a number of bojs were bathing in a liver, when a she wolf suddenly sprang on one of them and disappeared with him in the woods. Alarmed by outcries of the boys some peasants hastened up and made a thorough search in the woods, but eliscovered only the clean-picked bones of tho little victim. The First Stars and Stripes. Not long since a correspondent ot the New York Mail gave an intfresting account of the history of the United Suites flag, in which account it was st ated that the first stars and stripes ever flung to the breeze were unfurled in tho battle ot Saratoga. September a, 17 a. This is a mistake that needs correcting. The honor of unfurling the first star- spansled banner belongs to the garrison of FJrt Stan wix, the site of which fort is now the site of Rome, irom Pom roy Jones' "Annals of Oneida County " we glean that at tho beginning ot the siege ot ort stanwix, August s, iu. Colonel Gansevoort's garrison was with out a Hag. Military pride, indeed every sense of propriety, would not allow them to dispense with an appendaire 00 proper to a beieagured lortress. .neces sity being the mother of invention, shirts were cut up to form the white stripes, bits of scarlet cloth were joined for the red and tue blue ground for the stars was composed of a camlet cloak lurnished by Uartam Aorauam owari wiut.of Poughkeepsie, an officer of the garrison. This sa.ne camlet cloak was taken from a detachment of the British at Peekskill bv Colonel Marinus Willett, in the spring of 1770, he being then in 1 A i . 1 . 'i,:J V.i ... V . ii- Ir fit rim UU111LUUUU Ul LUC 1UIIU lien a. v.. ii i . ment, to which Captain Swartwout be longed. There is glory in the flag ot our Union, and the honor of first unfurling it to the brezi belongs to the gallant garrison of Fort Stanwix. which tought under that Has on the sixtli of August, 1777, a day the events of which con tributed more to the independence of the United States than is generally under stood. Jtonie (AT. .) Sentinel. Scientific Hunting A man who belonged to a village riflo team was recently out on the plains of Wvomins Territjrv looking for game. Finally the party sighted an elk at 700 yards and prepared to shoot him. He was a noble buck, ino memoer oi tue rifle team put a blanket down among the sage brush and artistically placer! himself upon his back, with his left arm like a figure 2, supporting his neck, and liia right arm like a figure 7, sup porting the aft end of the rifie. The measure of the wind waa taken, and the sights were scientifically adjusted while the expert made a figure 8 with his leva and rested the rifle's bow be tween the toes of his shoes. The meas ure oi his forefinger was now taken by a patent machine, and the trigger waa hied on slightly on the near side in order to be adjusted to the weight of the finger. Two men were then sent out to put flags each aide of the elk to show the bounds outside which the rifle team ster waa not to tire; but tho elk thought it had waited long enoucb. and r&u away.