HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher NIL DE8PEIIANDUM, Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. X. EIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1881. NO. 61. 3 The Unseen Friend. Lile is too long lor me. I cannot hew The weary days and honra. But II I ibare Thy weary vigil, wilt thon .till despair? My burden weighs me down. I am not tree lo haste with teager Btops. Yet 1 will be Thy help aid strength. Divide thy load with me. The path is strange and ragged, and the night rails blaok along the sky. I will be sight For thee, laint soul, and guide thy feet aright. May, but fair homelights on the valley gleam. And voices enll. What doth earth's splendor seem Better, tnoie lasting than too glow-worm's beam? And is there, then, for me, no home nor love Naught but those barren wastes? So thou shalt prove The bliss God givetb to bis own above. Thou, who art thou, that by me toilest on, Untlinnked, unasked T Friend, when thou lookest upon My Ince, thy luce in heaven will be won! Mary Aingt Dt Vft. A BACHELOR'S ROMANCE. A vigorous r ull nt the front door-bell start' fl Mr. Wells a', with his leet coni f ortaH i cisffl c-n his desk, chair tipped back, nnrt the fumes of an odorous Ha vana pervading the apartment, lie in rlulecf! in his usual after dinner smoke. Mr. Frcdeiierr. Wells was a confirmed bHclicicr, and notwithstanding the many solicitations of his fair friends, whose charms hud failed to melt his obdurate heart, Ft ill persisted in eschewing so ciety and living with Lis sister almo t the life of a recluse. But Mr. Wells had not always been so exclusive; only a few years belore le had met and loved Lucy Shel'.on. ti e daughter cf one of Chicago's wealthy c itizens. This young lady, though refu-ing to bo his wile, ac knowledged her hesirt to be his, but she had T( n.'ied her father to marry his partner, Joseph Parker, and circum stances over which the had no control conrellrd her to kcp her word and many his rival -her fathers choice. Iu vain he pictured to her the wrong the wou'd do him. herself, and her husband j notLins could turn her from her course. Not wishing to witness Parker's tri umph, Mr. Wells resolved to leave Chicago. Aecfirdincly Le, with his only sister, removed to the East, where thev occupied an elegant l.oi'se in one of New England's llourisLing cities Jntl.cirpracii'ul Ea-tern de-me rumors had readied tliim o iiio failure of the hotseof f-hdu n & Parker. L:iterthe Bad rtory ol jouijr Parker's downfall reached their ' rriputheiic ears how.by becoming a victim tf the demon, inletu piranco, he Lat reduced his lair young wife to the veeisily cf t,ivin.' maii lcpecms in ord-.-r tt keep st-n vation l.oni her door. Mr. Wells, by thinking o Lucy as the wi'p of another i.r.d a wo man false to i:i i' !.e-i!t"s Inst imiu'.ses sought to banish hrr forever from hip mind, and while he pitied the un'ortu nate Lucy, he still tin light that she, ii a measure, doei v d her sad fate. With thef-e hitter feel ns would come a wish to bt-ctch ou' a helping hand to thi woman, who. by miming iiis love, had consigned him to a hopeless, hapless, existence. On the afternoon cur story opens he was musing upon a means of aidins Mrs. Parker for he knew her proud spirit would refuse, any pecuniary as sistance from him when the sound of an unusually loud rinij of the door-bell aroused him from his reverie, and in stantaneously brought his feet and chair to their proper position. " Whew !" he exclaimed, as lie knocked the ashes from his cigar, "something unusual is wanted to warrant such impatience." Just then the door of his study opened, and his sister called him to come and see what hnd been left at their doi-r Hastily following her into the hall, he beheld, to his surprise, in the arms of a servant-wbo txplained that she had found "the little tuing" lying on the door step when she opened tho door an infant some seven or eight months old, wrapped in a Luge shawl, and calmlv gazing with bright bui eyes at the astonished group Taking the child in his arms, Mr. Wells proceeded to remove the shawl and found pinned to the dress a card bearing the name Lucy, and gath ering the little form t j his breast, reat tears welled up into his eyes as he bent his head over the tiny baby face and murmured: "Those eyes! that name! Surely, tLis is Luc's child " Then, as if ashamed of his emotion, be handed the child to his fci&ter, telling her in a eruff voice to see to its wants, vanished into his sanctura.slammingthe door with a bang that plainly told her he did not wish to be interrupted; and here, free from aoital gaze, gave vent to his pent-up feeli gs ; and while sous siioou lis maniy irauie, me question, can this be Lucy's child P con stantly recurred to him. He had not even heard that she had a child j besides, he knew she was in Chicago very re cently, in a state of abject poverty. But,notwithstanding these contrarieties, the resemblance he fancied existed be tween this little waif and Mrs. Parker, only served to coudrm him in the idea that this was indeed her child; then again he would ask himself How came it to that city ? to his doorP None of his friends in Chicago knew ot his whereabouts, i.nd bow was it possible for Mrs. Parker thus to leave her child to the mercy of a man she had so cruelly wronged? At length, not finding a satisfactory answer to his queries, he resolved to keep this little foundling, to bring it up as his own, cherish it as a boon Irom heaven sent to cheer his lone'y life and bring sunshine in to his heart and homo. "Well! Ellen, hejw do you and the little stranger agree?" playlully inquired Mr. Wells, us he met his sister at the tea-table that evening. " Her ladyship and myself are on wonderfully good terms, considering our limited acquaintance," laughingly re joined his Bister. " Come and see her new quart crs, but, as she is asleep, you must make as little noise as pos sible!" "Oh! hoi the little tyrant has issued her decrees thus early in her reign," jrayly retorted Mr. Wells; " but she'll not find an obedient subject in me;' and with stealthy steps he followed Ellen into the next room, where.lyinguponan In i-u 4 .. 1 1 . .... 1 1 . 1 vi r-. r r rr i t 11 r. . , V. A . arm-chair and pillows, was the form of the sleeping child. As. Mr. Wells stood gazing at the infantile face, the blue eyes opened and looked up at him, while a bright smile lit up the biby features and rendered more striuing the memory of another pairof eyes that had looked into his, another smile that had once shed its rys over his natbwav- Ellen was delighted at the prospect of . .1. !- 1 . . 1 , , uniuiK iui in in iibue one, wuose coming she felt would dispell her brother's gkom and bring iov to them both. That evening, on returning home at a late hour, Mr. Wells perceived a pros trate figure lying directly in front of his door. " Hello ! Who is this? You will freeze to death in this blinding storm," he exclaimed. But the figure remained motionless, and, approaching, Mr. Wells proceeded to uncover the face. As the gleam of the street-lamp fell upon the upturned countenance of a young, and once beautiful, woman he stageered back, muttering . " Oh, my God ! Has it indeed come to thisP My poor, poor, Lucy!" and raising the lrail form in his strong arms he carried her into the house, calling to his sister, who was sitting up wniting his return, to send for a physi cian and bring restoratives, as he had just found Lucy Shelton, dead, or nearly so, Rt their door. Ellen, who had known and loved Lucy during her happier days in Chi cago, assuring herself that she had only fainted, immediately set about bringing back to life the inanimate ' form. At length her efforts were rewarded ; the color came slowly back to the pallid cheek, the beautiful eyelids quivered and re vealed a pair of blue eyes that wandered in a restless, searching glance, from face to face, as if looking for some beloved object. In tones of niteous agony she wailed : " Oh! my baby! my lost darling!" Then, as if speaking to some unknown person, she would clasp her poor little hands and implore the restoration of her child . The doctor declared hers to be a most precaiious case of brain fever, and that her recovery would be almost a miracle. as some great mental sorrow was aiding tue ravages ot mis terrible disease. lor many weeks Lucy's life tottered on the verge of eternity. Mr. Wells and his sister were untiring in their care and watchfulness, making every effort in their power to save the life of the hapless mother of their little foundling, for as such both had grown to consider her. During her ravings she reproached her faithless husband with having robbed her of her only source of hap piness her child, and besought him, in plaintive tones, to bring back her baby, to tell her where he had hidden their child. On one occasion she pleaded so piteously that she be restored to her arms, that Ellen, moved by her entreat ies, brought the child and laid it at her sielo; but instead of assuaging the mother's sorrow, this only increased her agony, as, turning away from her little one. she accused them of trying to de ceive her. "My husband has stolen my child," she cried. "Oh! what shall Id) without mv darling P " One day, after Mrs. Parker had been ill lor about six weeks, Ellen entered tier room to see after her patient's wants. Oa approaching the bedside a thin, little tiand clasped her3, and a trembling voice inquired : " Have I been ill long P Oh, Ellen! why did you call me bnck to a life of misery and soirow P" "Hush; you must not talk now. When you are stronger all wiu be ex plained," answered the delighted Ellen, and kissing her pallid cheek, and recom mending her to rest, she fled to her brcther with the welcome tidings of Mrs. Parker's recovery. On reaching Mr. Wells' study, she found him in a state of intense ex citement, caused by something he had read in the newspaper which he convulsively clutched with one hand, while with the other he pointed to a paragraph that read ; "Last night during a quarrel in one of the drinking dens in this city, a young man named Joseph Parker was Bhot through the heart by an unknown assassin. As Parker is a stranger in the city, his body will be in the morgue until to-morrow, in case some of his friends might wish to claim it." " A terrible end to an ill-spent life," was Ellen's verdict, as, g'ancing over the article, she realized how just are the punishments of an all-wise God. " Lucy has regained her reason," she told her brother, "and is sensible of her child's loss. We must conceal it safely and the death of her husband from her until she is sufficiently strong to bear this double shock.'1 "Yon are right; my dear sister," re joined Mr. Wells: "but in the mean time I will have the unfortunate Parker decently interred ." Accordingly he proceeded to the morgue, and there recognized in the bloated, scarred face the features of a once brilliant man and the husband of the unhappy Lucy. By Mr. Wells orders the remains were conveyed to the nearest churchyard, and a plain marble slab erected, to mark the resting-place of him who had been the cause ot his unhappiness and of Lucy's misery. Under uuen wens' skiuiui nursing, Mrs. Parker's return to health was rapid. Day by day she gained new strength, till at length the doctor pro nounced her strong enough to hear the tidings of her child's saiety. As yet Mr. Wells bad not seen her, and only on one occasion had she mentioned her pre server's name. This was, when speaking of her past wretched existence, she blamed herself for having not only blighted her own lite, but for being the cause of his misery. She told Ellen that her father had extorted a promise from her to marry Parker by avowing himself on tho verge of bankruptcy, from which this marriage alone would save him. Accordingly she sacrificed her heart s dearest love in order to save her father's honor. Matters got worse, instead of better, after this ill-fated mar riage, l'arker spent bis time and monev at the gaming table, and, finally. not content with squandering his own mone v. SDent that ol the brm also. A crisis was inevitable, and when at last the house was declared bankrupt every thing was sacrificed to satisfy the credi tors. Even her father was not spared Ler; for, when he realized the extent of misery in store for himself and his cherished child, he took bis own life. But her trials did not end here. Her husband fell from one degradation to another, till at last, from neglecting his young wife, he grew to abuse her. With the aid of a few friends she ob tained several musio scholars, and with the money thus earned kept starvation from her door. Whtn at length her patrons refused to aid one whose drunken husband was ever in attend ance, she resolved to fly with her child, an infant of seven months, from the scene of her many sorrows, to tho East, where she hoped to get employment but here she was toll wed and tortured by her tyrant husband's pres ence Life became almost unbearable, and but for her child, whom she devo tedly loved, she would have ended her own existence. Jealous of the atten tion she lavished upon her bat e, the inhuman father threatened to take it from her. Not dreaming him capable of so diabolical an act, she did not fear the fulfillment ot this threat, and on the afternoon of the day they found her at their door, she left her darling under his care, while she went forth in search of employment. On her return after a fruitless afternoon's labor, she found their lodgings deserted, and not a trace of the whereabouts of her child to be seen. Realizing that her husband had kept his threat, she rushed, frantic with grief, about the streets in hopes of find ing some clew to the little one's retreat. At length, tired of wandering about, she sat down upon a door-step to rest. Here she remembered nothing further; and " Oh ! Ellen," the invalid continued, "to think that I should have come to you, to be nursed by you back to life you who would be justified in turning me from your door, because of the blight I have cast upon your noble brother's life. But God knows how bitterly I have been punished for mv folly." iears ailed Mrs. Jarker's eyes, as she concluded her sorrowful Btory, and trinkled down her pale cheeks. Ellen, kissing the tears away, vainly tried to cheer her by picturing a brighter fu ture, the possibility of again finding her missing child. She declared she would never be happy while her tyrant hus band lived. Ellen, embracing this oPDortunity, disclosed the details of Parker's death and burial to his heart-broken wife, who listened with bated breath and long- rirawn sighs till she had finished the sad recital; then throwing her arms about JMien s neck sue sobbed out her griei on her shoulder. The latter endeavored to soothe her sorrows, but Lucy was inconsolable, not so much at the loss of her miserable husband as at the realization of her own destitute condition deprived ol father, uusba ,d and ctiud. " Mv poor baby." she wailed, if I only had you I could bear all else." "Then bear with your trial, dear Lucy; your child is safe and well," Ellen said, and proceeded to tell the weeping mother now her child Had been found at a gentleman's door : now it had been taken in and tenderly cared for until she should be sufficiently re covered to receive it back; that this same gentleman was at that moment wa:tme to restore it to her arms. and. recommending her to quiet and rest, liiilon left the room to prepare her brother for the meeting. Lucy had covered her face with her hands and promised to comply ; but finding herself alone sue threw herself on her knees, and raising her hands and eyes to heaven, in fervent tones she thanked the Father of the widow and the orphan for having spared her to her fatherless little one. "Oh, God!" she concluded, " bless and prosper him who, m his charity, eas succored my lost lamb in its hour of direst need." rtisins. she stood lace to face with Frederick Wells. For au instant her tongue refused to articulate a word, but as her eyes fell upon her lost darling, whom he earned in his arms, she utterd a glad cry, and snatching the child to her bosom, the fond mother almost smothered the frightened little one with caresses. Mr. Wells, standing a silent witness of this reunion, felt amply repaid for his long years ot pain, and lie thought how much more blessed it is to give joy than sorrow. When Mrs. Parker raised her eyes, streaming with tears of joy, ta imface. and said: "Mr. Wells, now snail 1 ever pay this great debt ot gratitude, tor not only do I owe my own mo to vour kindness, but also that of this child, infinitely more precious tome?" Uc answered : uy giving me me rignt to watch over and protect you both, I will be made immeasurably happy;" and drawing mother and child to his breast he kissed Lucy's tear-stained face. Of course she consented, tor a tew months later a quiet wedding took place lrom the Wells' residence, when, after all her sorrows, Lucy Parker became the wife of her heart s first love. A Determined OfSce-Seeker, Last spring a bright-eyed, pretty girl of sixteen made ner way into t .e presence ot Secretary Sherman and said : "Mr. Sherman. I have come here to get a place." "There are none vacant," was the reply. "I know you can give me a place if you want to, and I thing; I am as much entitled to it as anybody. Mv father spent his life in the United States army, and when he died he left nothing. The responsibility of the family is on me, and I think I've got as g?od a claim as any one else on the government." "What kind of a place do you wantP" " I don't care what it is, but I must have work at once." Mr. Sherman as sured her that there were ten applicants for ever? one place, and there was verv little chance. She very deliberatelv told him that such an answer would not do, and declared that if he would allow her she would come up every day and black his shoes, if he couldn't do better tor her The secretary was struck at her deter mination and charmed by her bright face and her sprightly manner. He told her to come back. In less than a week she had a good place in the treasury, which she still holds. Every morning she walks to the department with tho step of a business little woman who is proud that her delicate hands can be the support ot others. She receives $100 a month and supports in comfort her mother and sister. This brave, bright youn? woman is Miss May Macauley, formerly of Atlanta. Washington Letter. Tue qualities that make a great or tor are thus stated by wendeu riiiiiips: A man mav a stammerer and vet a great orator, a man may have a poor voice and yet bo a great orator, a man may speak incorrectly ana ungrammatt calfy, and still be a very great orator; all that is needed is to have an earnest cause thoroughly at heart, and have heart and cause so truly wedded that thev are one with his innermost nature. so that when he speaks be pours out his own self, exalted by that with which he uruuea. FARH, garden and HOUSEHOLD. Urape Culture. The grape ought to be as widely dis seminated as the apple, and there is no good reason why it should not be. The large vineyards can Bupply our city population, but to supply the agricul tural districts, grapes must be grown at home. This can be done at so small coBt that no man who owns a home with a half-acre of land has any apology for depriving his family of grapes. An eighth of an acre In vines will supply a family and leave a surplus to sell. Any well-drained land that will produce sixty bushels of corn to the acre mnv be expected to produce good grapes. Well prepared borders, with a good supply of bones, are desirable, but by no means essential. A dressing of wood ashes is an excellent fertilizer, but any manure good for corn will bo good for the vines. The varieties which do well under the greatest variety of circumstances, anl bear neglect best, are such as the Concord, the Hartford Prolific and the Ives Seedling. There are grapes of much better quality than these, but they are good enough to suit the popular taste, and are nardy. They can be relied upon to bear fruit every season in generous quantity. The Ives has a thick skin, and is particularly de sirable to pack in boxes for winter use. They have been for years before the public, are thoroughly tested and can be furnished very cheaply by any nurseryman. A cheap trellis of chest. nut posts and wire wi.i ne ail tne sup port they need. A fou? months' supply of grapes will promote health in the family, save doctors' bills and prove an important part of the food supply. American Agriculturist. About Hone. The stomach of a horse has a capacity of about sixteen quarts, while that of the ox has 250. In the intestines this proportion is reduced, the horse having a capacity of 190 quarts, against 100 of the ox. The ox, and nearly all other animals, have a gall-bladder for the re tention of a part of the bile, secretd during digestion. The horse has none, and the bile flows directly into the in testines as fast as secreted. This con struction of the digestive apparatus in dicates that the horse was formed to eat slowly, and digest continually bulky and innutrllious food; when fed on hay. it passes verv rapidly through the stomach in'x) the intestines. The horse can eat but five pounds of hay in an hour, during mastication, with four times its weight of saliva. Now, the stomach, to digest it well, will contain but about ten quarts; and when the animal eats ono-third of his daily rations, or seven pounds, in one and one-half hours, he has swal lowed at least two stomnchfuls of hay and saliva, one of these having passed to the intestines. Observation has hown that the food is passed to the in testines by the stomach in the order in whicu it is received, 1 we teed a norse with six quarts of oats, it will just fill his stomach; and if, as soon as he fin ishes tiiis, we feed him the above ration ot seven pounds of hay, be will eat sufficient in three-quarters of an hour to have forced the oats entirely out ot his stomach into the intestines. As it is he office of the stomach to digest the nitrogenous parts of the feed, aud as a tomacntui ot oats contains lour or live times as mucn ot these as the same amount of hay, it is cer tain that either the stomach must se crete the gastric juice five times as fast, or it must retain this food five times as long. By feeding the oats first, it can only be retained long enough for the proper digestion ot tne nay; conse quent y it seems logical, when feeding a concentrated food like oats with a bulky one like bay, to feed the latter first, giving the grain the whole time between the repasts to be digested. The digestion of the horse is governed by the same laws as that of man ; and we know it is not best for a man to go at hard work the moment a hearty meal is eaten, so we should remember that a norse ought to nave a little rest after his meal, while tne stomach is most active in the processes of digestion. PlntUer and Farmer. ICeclpe. Lemon Cake. One cup cf butter, two cups of sugar, three and a half cups of flour, one scant cup ot milk, two wnoie eggs and yolks of two, two tcaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, one teaspoonful of soda, grated rind ot two large lemons. Bake in laver cakes. Icing for the cakes whites of three eggs beaten to a still froth, one pound of powdered sugar, juice of two lemons. Fourchette. Bits of nice salt pork. about one- third of an inch thick, two or three inches square ; bits of calf's liver the same size. Puf these alternately on a long skewer, beginning and ending with Dork : lav it in tne oven across dripping-pan, and roast as you would a bird, basting occasionally, wnencone slide the pieces from the skewer, and serve on a hot plate. To Keep Tomatoes Whole. Fi 1 large stone jar with ripe tomatoes, then add a tew whole cloves and a little sugar; cover them well with one-half cold vineear and half water: nlace piece of flannel over the )ar, well down in the vinegar; then tie down with paper. In this way tomatoes ean be keDt a vear. Should mildew collect on the flannel it will not hurt them in the least. Stuffed Ego Plant. Cut them in halt, lengthwise, and parboil them in salted water; scoop out most of the in side, and pound this to a paste in the mortar, with a nttie iat bacon and some mushrooms, previously cnopped up. littie onion, also chopped, pepper and salt to taste, and a little crumb of bread soaked in stock. Fill each half with this mixture, lay them in a well-but tered tin, and bake for about a quarter of an hour. Swallows In Louisiana. In the winter swallows collect by the millions in Louisiana swamps and teed on what the trencti call swallow trees, a species of willow. They will settle on the trees in such myriads as to orcak limbs as thick as a man's leg, and a heavv load of mustard seed shot from double gun will sometimes kill thirty or forty dozen at once, mey are dres.-ed and sold in the market for fifteen cents a dozen and are used by French and Creoles in making "j ambles," a prepa ration of rice and meat, fish or game. The New York Tribun says the bil liard saloons oi that oity have suffered a great loss of custom owing to the introduotlon of billiards as a household attraction. TIMELY TOPICS. The inquiries of Professor Conn, of Breslau, indicate that short-sightedness is rarely or nevsr born with those sub ject to it, and that it is almost always the result ot strains sustained by ' lie eye durinf study in early youth. Ten pounds of tobacco out or every eleven that is used in this country is grown here. We grow about 391,000,000 pounds, import about 7,000.000, export about 321,000,000, leaving 77,000,000 for consumption. It is estimated that there are about 7,000, roo smokers in the United States ; thus the yearly average per smoker is eleven pounds. A number of English coal mines are being worked under the ocean. In Northumberland the net available quan tity of coal under the sea is estimated at 403,000,000 tons, and on the Durham coast under the sea, including a breadth of three and a half miles, with an area of seventy-one square miles, 734,500,000 tons. The latter mine is in a vein of an agares ate thickness of thirty feet, dis tributed in six seams. Engineers are considering how it can be worked suc cessfully in the future. It is some consolation to know that the prophets of disaster to our steady going old planet do not agree among themselves. Two of them have de duced from the Bible the conclusion that things will go on as they are til I 1887. Then people must look out for a tremendous cataclysm; the Star of Bethlehem will reappear, and moral, physical and mundance convulsions will follow. Others, however, equally en titled tocredene-e also, have set the date of the event as November 12, 1881. It gives one n vivid idea of the incal culable loss to the country in material wealth from the wanton or accidental destruction of our forests that the dam age from forest fires in but three States, New York, Michigan and Wisconsin, nd in but a single year. 1871, is estima ted at the enormous sum of $215,000,000. As a consequence of similar destruction settlers in' Minnesota have been com pelled this winter to burn their furnit ure, farm implements, outhouses and ven the doors oi their dweJlin-s to keen from freezing. Others have Daid from $17 to 20 a cord for firewood. No wonder t'je Minnesota Foresters' asso ciation is pressing so energetically the need of renewing their woodlands. Murder," according to the San Ber nardino Times, "still stalks red-handed throucrh the Pacific coast." The record of violent deaths for a single week is given as a sample : At Cucamonga " a man undertook to shoot another; bis hand was struck up, the pistol dis- harged, and a voung man entirely in nocent of the row now lies at the point f death; at El Monte, Hunt, who is known to have murdered one or more men in Utah and others in Arizona, and was allowed to elude the law, butchered one of the best ' itizens of Los Angeles, and name within a hair's breadth of killing a citizen of the Monte tue same time; in Keno, on the seventeenth, a man shot another over a game of cards; at Bodie the people arose in their indignation and ym.-hed a murderer who had been ar rested and allowed to escape; at San Die?o, a day or two since, a saloon eeper shot two men in self-defense, nd thev are now in a dving condition.'' Ihe Times says this record is repeated week after week, and thinks it about time that jurors should begin to convict murderers, and that a severe penalty should be imposed upon carrying a deadly weapon of any kind. A Terrapin Farm. The Mobile (Ala.) Reaisler has the following account of a terrapin farm owned by Mulford Dorlon at Cedar Point: This projection of land is on the western shore of Mobile bay, about thirty miles below this city, and is in habited principally by oystermen, who reap golden harvests from the many beds which furnish nearly every oyster brought to the port of Mobile. Mr. Dot Ion, who keep? a store at this point, has about threo acres fenced in with strong pilings Leading to this inclos- ure are two canal", one on tue bay side and the other on the gulf side, which supply with salt water a number of ditches ten feet wide and 100 leet long. The sand accumulating from the ex cavation of these ditches is thrown on each side, and used by the terrapins to sun themselvt s and lay their eggs in, which, if counted, would go up in the millions, and can be raked up by the bushel. In the winter season tue terra pins remain imbedded in the mud of the ditches, where they stay until spring time, never toucumz a morsel ot lood. A system ot sluices enables Mr. JJorlon to Keep the ditches full of salt water, or drain them at, pleasure, and tie is not at all dependent on the tide (or that pur pose. rne number oi terrapins on tne larm, as far as can be ascertained and by the closest calculation, is between 20,000 and 25,000, anl in the course of the next three or four years will be some thing hard to calculate. About May I. Mr. Dorlon makes his purchase of terrapins from the country people on the Mississippi sound, and takes all to can secure at $3 a dozen, and that generally averaaes about 8.000 a year added to his farm, outside of those bred therein. The inhabitants ot Mississippi and Alabama hunt the terrapins with dogs trained lor that purpose. The dog barks when he finds one, and the hunter immediately secures it by going to the spot where the dog points. The cost of feeding the terrapins which, as we have said, is only done in the summer, is about one dollar per dozen for the season, and the price per dozen in New York has varied from 818 to $8. The food, which consists of crabs and Hah. is caught with a seine, in front of the farm, and really very little expense is attached to the raising ot tliese valuable land tortoises. Mr, Dorlon begins to ship about October 1 and then on to May 10. He generally sends his to Savannah by rail, and thence to New York by steamer, averaging about 13,01 0 a season, and had it not been for a disastrous hurricane, which some time ago washed out Mr. Dorlon'i farm, it wou d be to day the greatest terrapin farm in the world. He can al ways ship all he can get, for there is a ready market lor these delicacies. There are only twenty-four factor le in tho United State. match Injecting Morphine. A number of persons more or less prominent in different walks of life have died in this city, says a New York paper, within n few months from the direct effect, it is said, of hypodermio injections of morphine. Most of them had, according to report, begun the in jections in order to relieve themselves from pain caused by neuralgia, rheuma tism, or some other distressing disorder. The effect was so pleasant, so delicious, indeed, that they were gradually sedu ced into such use of morphine when they had no need of it, and, soon yield ing completely to the habit, were destroyed by it. Physicians say that this has grown to be far from uncommon among persons of wealth and position, particularly among wo men, who, after having tried it a while, have not had the strength to relinquish the delightful anodyne. Nor is it by any means confined to Hew York. The evil has spread all over the land, though it is naturally most prevalent in the large cities. It is said to have grown alarmingly during the last five or six years, and many persons wbo would never be suspected of the habit are its irredeemable victims. It has largely usurped the place, with certain classes, of the old custom of taking morphine, laudanum, and other preparations of opium into the stomach. The popular notion is that it is not so harm ful. But there is very little difference, and the injections aro thought to be more dangerous because they are more insidious. They can be self-administered without the least trouble, and are so administered in nearly all cases where serious misrhief is done. Tho efl'ect of the morphine under the skin is de scribed as peculiarly and wonderfully agreeable. A delicious languor steals over the frame, the senses are wrapped as in a voluptuous waking dream, and a most joyous consciousness of perfect yet fascinating repose softly over flows the mind. Even strong men and women have frequently found it hard to resist its allurements, have not been able to surrender its beatitudes without arousing all their will. On this account some physicians will not administer or prescribe mor phine under any circumstances, fearing the consequences to their patients. Not a few women of the finer type have been weeked by the habit, and many men, professional and commcrcisl.are steadily ruining themselves by its indulgence. It was hailed ns a great blessing once, and so it is. properly regulated ; but, like so msny blessings, it may readily be convi rtrd into a curse. Beading the Kccipe. Old Mrs. Jones borrowed Mrs. Brown's recipe for making watermelon pickle the other day, and, being tard of hearing, as she couldn't see to read very well, sue got her grandson Jakie to read it for her. Jakie took the paper, like a dutiful child, and, holding it UDside down, commenced : " Take a green watermelon" "Why, Jakie, ain't you mistaken P I thought the melon must be ripe." "Oh, what's the matter wid yew! Gew ever see a watermelon that wusn't green P" "Cut the watermelon into four halves" " But there ain't only two halves to anything I don' believe you are read ing ttiat, Jakie." "Well, I don't have to. anyhow that's what the resect says. Then soak it in a pint cup" "Oh, dear me! How in the world can ycu put a watermelon in a pint CUD?" " wen, 1 ain't nere to ten tue where ases and howfores. I'm just readin' the facts and you can put in the filosoiee to suit your taste. Alter soakin' the melon put It In a skillet and fry it lur five days." I wondjr if Mrs. Brown sent mc such a recipe as that?" said the old lady ; but Jakie kept on: ' Then nut the watermelon in a quart bowl and pour over it a gallon of vine gar, taking care not to spill the vine gar" " I'd iust like to know how you can nour a trailon into a auart bowl without spilling any oi it;" out jame continued men sitt a peck oi red pepper through a milk strainer over tue melon, and to one cud of butter and the white and volks and shells of three egg3. and throw in the old hen that laid tnem.and four sticks of cinnamon drops and two tablespoonfuls of quinine and run it through a coffee mill and let it stand until it ferments, and then put it in a tin can and tie the can to a dog's tail this will stir it up to the right consist ency and then you can turn it off in crocks and nave it ready lor use. &ere it cold and spread it o mince pie and it makes capital dessert," and Jakie slid out of the door and left the old lady looking like a wrinkleon a monument. Detroit Free Press. Unman Force. In the lives of most persons there are periods in which everything is at stake, Home, uonor. competency and happi ne'ss all hang on the balance. They may be almost ours, or even be in our posses sion, while the events will shortly tell whether they shall be ours for life or be lost forever. No matter how dark it is ahead, we must go into the contest or lose all without a struggle. It is unon himself that aman must de pend in such emergencies. His friends have their own battles to fight or victo ries to enjoy. The quality ttiat will help him most is aggressive force the persisting and indomitable energy that bears down all opposition. The man hlled with this combative spirit is tne hero, the master spirit of the world in whicti he moves, impediments which would dishearten weaker men cause in him the most vigorous exertions. Dim cullies are swept out of bis path, and though borne aown time alter time he strus7les on and wins. Thev are fortunate who are thus en dowed. But wo all need what we can of strength of action. We must have the desire and the determination to push our wav through the world. Goin reolutely on our way, thrusting ob stacles aside as they are met, gives us the power of conquering. To be self reliant keep in sight the motto " God will not crush me and no man can." Concerning the cause of London fogs, it is now suzpestcd that they are largely due to the burning of sulphur, 200 tons of this substance being daily burned in London. The Scientific American estimates that more than $35,000,001) was brought into ins united btaiet last year by foreign immigrant. My Valentine My valentine lives in her deeds, Nor praisei unmerited leeks; Her poor little mother she heeds, And kindly her brother betpenks. My valentine no ernel thing Will chatter ol'olher girls' ways, Or make a new gaiter or ring Her moasnre of eonsnre or praise. My valentine mixes the pies. And rolls out the crust for her ma; And such a girl, earth or the skies Might claim for a flow'r or a star. HUMOROUS. A dangerous collision Running into debt. A good trade mark A big advertise ment. Rubbers do not necessarily give a man an elastic gait- Yonkcrs Statesman. A New York man calls his sweetheart Kitty, because sho gets her back up so often. The counterfeiters making ten-cent pieces cannot expect to have very good dimes. Circumstances maVe men, yet one man isn't a circumstance to another, frequently. Burglars are of great assistance to merchants, manufacturers and clerks in taking stock. Thermometers reform late in life; they never become temperate until nearly sixty. Why is a police officer like a confi dence manP Because he takes people in. Philadelphia Sun. Out in Montana, when tncy start a man down hill in a barrel, they speak of his "appearance in a new role." Smithkins, who is a tailor by trade, got married lately. Ho says now that, before he was married he had only one " goose," but now he has two. loronto Grip. A country doctor on being asked what was the best way to cure a ham, remarked that before answering that question he should like to know what ailed the ham. When the telegraph comp inies are compelled to run their wires under ground, the worms will learn to read by sound so ns to know when the fishing is good. Philadelphia Chronicle. " I didn't like our minister's sermon last Sunday," said a deacon who had slept all sermon time to a brother dea con. "Didn't like it. Brother A. P Why, I saw you nodding assent to every prop osition of tho parson." ' A meditative man was roaming through an anatomical museum, and came across the skeleton of a donkey. "Ah !" he said in reverential awe, as he adjusted his green spectf.cles, " we are indeed fearfully and wonderfully made." Nearly a vear has elapsed sinco the last wealthy young lady eloped with her tattler's coacuman, nnd tne many re- pectable young men who hopefully sought employment in the stables of the rich during the epidemic are disconso- itely drifting back to their former pursui's. Modem Argo. An exchange combines a great deal of sound sense as well as sarcasm in the following ironical answer it gives one of its subseribers : " We are sorry you don't like this paper. Wo publish it simply to please you. We should ask you to come to tue office and editit.only that if you did some iniquitous idiot might write to tell you how much better ho could do it himself, and that would annoy a nervous person like you." Young Mr. Stayer was a frequent caller downtown, and always sat up very late with the girls. The other night the old gentleman w as heard call ing to some one in the hall. "Ah." said Mr. Stayer, "what was thatP" " Nothing," said Miss Angelica, " only papa failing the hired girl to get up and go about breakfast." it was tnen uaii past ten o'clock and Stayer knew better, but someiiow lie couldn't remain and be happy, and ho went away long before the e.lock struck eleven. Some young men are so sensitive, you know. Steu- benville Herald. Bound to Have It. Elder Traverse was once the most noted man in Extern Ne v York as a camp-meeting leader. He hai a power ful voice, was a uuent speaker, and in the prime of life could get away with any man who ever sought to disturb his meetings. The elder was once holding a camp- meeting near Yonkers, and word reached him that a notorious rough, known as " Chicago Bob," intended to be on hand on Sunday for a row. He made no reply and took no precautions, and when Bob appeared on the grounds with a cigar in his mouth nnd a slung shot in his sleeve, the elder didn't grow pale lor a cent, bob had come out there to run things, and he took a for ward scat. Whn the people started to sing he began crowing, and thus created confusion. " Robert, you had better sit down." observed the elder, as he came forward. Chicago Bob sits down for no man." was the reply. bit down. Robert." continued the elder, as he put his hand on the loafer's arm. ' Here goes lo clean out the crowd!" crowed Bob, as he peeled off his ooat. Next instant the elder hit him under the ear, and, as he fell over a bench, he was followed up and hit again and again, and' while in a semi-unconscious state ho was carried off by is friends. Next day he was the first one to go forward for prayers. The elder put his hand on his head and asked : " Robert, are you in earnestP" " I am." "Are you really seeking after faith P" "You bet 1 am! If iaith helps a man lo get in his work as quick as you did yesterday I'm bound to have it if I have to sell my hat I" no didn't get It verv stronir. but he did no more crowing while the meetirg , u.ii itiMt tfCWI, At the Castle of Simonetta, about twenty miles from Milan, a surprising echo is produced between the two wings of the building. The report of a pistol is repeated by this echo sixty times ; and Addison, who visited the place on a somewhat foggy day, when the air was unfavorable to the experiment, counted filty-six repetitions. It is stated that the sound of one musical instrument in this place resembles a great number playing lo concert.