HENRY A. PARSON8, Jr., Editor and Publisher NIL DE S PE EANDTJM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. XI. RID G-WAY,. ELK COUNTY, PA., TIIURSD A Y,IAECH 24, 1881. 10. 5. J r i t The' Ringing Bird. ,' Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet," tho swallow Ming, From the. nest ho bnildod high; Ami the bm's raptured echo rung From liiij leafy perch close by. " Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet," rang the joyful time, "Oh, Bwoet, sweet, sweet is tlio world in June.' "Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet," the maiden said, As she twilled her hair with flowers; From bird and blossom the echo sped Through the long and blissful hours. "Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet," rang tho joyful tune, 'Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet is the world in June." "Oh, sweet, sweet, sweet," the swallow sung On the summer's dying night; And "sweet, sweet, sweet," the echo rung, As tho robin plumed for flight; "Oh, sweet is the summer when just begun, And sweet, Bwcct, sweet,, when her lifois done. ' J)ut the maiden, never a, word she said, As she donned her weeds of woO; The bird that sung in her heart was dead. With the summer of long ago; Tho sweet, sweet, sweet, of the bloom and bird As idle mocking her dull ear heard. Oh, sweet, feweet, sweet is tho whole glad earth' When the summer days are here; And sweet, sweet, sweet is the time of dearth. Though the autumn days are drear: If only deep in the heart is heard Tlio gladsome song of the " singing bird." HANNAH AND I. My father ' Lad -moved into a new place. Prospectively, I enjoyed much in tlio dethronement -of our household gods, and the reduction of all our worldly goods to a state of chaos, I foresaw the delicious suspense, anxiety and final dismay or rejoicing that would attend the transit of our looking-glasses and parlor chairs. I looked forward to a kind of nomadic existence about the house during the days wherein we were getting settled, to tho exploration of unknown depths under the closet stairs, and of mysterious recesses be hind the chimney. I expected to sit and sing in the best rocking-chair, to. roll my tired limbs on the best mattress, and t'd take my dinner with a large spoon from out o fruit-jar. When, therefore, I rode up from the depot on top of the box containing my mother's best china and glassware, 1 felt that every one who beheld, also envied. The short ends of my hat band fluttered spiritedly in the March breeze, and tho anticipatory tremors in my breast creaked the starched shirt front beneath my jacket. At a very tender age wo realize that this is a world of disappointments. For the next few days my life consisted mainly in hunting up the hammer, run ning for nails, trotting up "to the store and down to the tinner's and after the carpenter, .pushing stove-legs into place, holding up footboards of family bed steads, lift in,? the corners of bureaus, waiting upon the painter and tho white wash man, getting my fingers pinched, getting scolded, getting a cold, losing my handkerchief, having nothing in particular to eat save a little baker's bread, and now and then a bit of beef steak cooked sometimes by my mother, sometimes by my father, sometimes by Mary Sullivan, and occasionally by ail three. - By the third day I. began to see that t rft anarchic style of housekeeping has its disadvantages and to feel that the springs of a naturally good constitution were wearing out in the family service. On the morning of that day I left my mother aud Mary Sullivan stretching a carpet lifted for a room 15x15 to cover our new dining-room, 15x16, and walked out in the back yard to take the air. As I sauntered down to the front gate my eyes were greeted by a vision of youth I cannot say of beauty swing ing upon the gate over the way. Tho " vision " wore a large bombazine hood, such as was at this time in high reputo among grandmothers, but was never calculated to enhaneo the charms if the vonnar. A little plaid shawl wen pinueif askew about her shoulders. One of a species of embroidered pantalets which, like the dodo of Mauritius, has since become extinct, had slipped down and lay like a wrinkled bandage around the top of her shoo. "Hallo !" said I. "Hallo!" responded she; ".you're a mean, nasty boy : I should have promptly returned this compliment but for the consider nt ion that I had just moved into the community, and everything depended upon my acquiring a gooil reputation. Without replying,, therefore, , I began reflectively digging a holo in the' gate post with, my jack-knife.- The " vision " swung back and forth, and hummed " I want to bo an angel." In giving an unusually' vigorous lurch outward an apple flew from her hand and fell into tho middle of the muddy street. I digress here to stato' that, though a popular street, that portion of it in front of my father's- house generally was mnddy. During tho spring and fall months we had a large, swushy pool there one that appeared to flow from a secret perennial source of muddiness. In tlio' winter months it froze over and made capital skating. During the sum mer it gradually dried away, until, at the "pollywog" season, when alone a boy can take the highest rational enjoy ment in a mud-puddle, only a damp spot iu the center of tho street indicated tlio place from which tho water had sub sided. It was now at high tide and the apple fell into tho oozo just below it. "Boy, come over and pick up my upple," commanded my neighbor. Conscious, of sotting that young pagan an example of good manners, I returned the apple with-a bow my mother had taught mo. .She gave it two or three cleansing dashes ou her dress skirt and then said: "Lend me your knife and I'll give , you half." Sho set the applo upon top of tho gatepost, savagely jammed the knife through it, wiped the blade on her shawl aud returned tho knife with tho larger . parcel uiBaypie " Thank you," said I. i&" What is your name, boy?" ' George Harriiuan. What is yours ?" " Hannah Ann Farley. You going to live in that house ?" "I expect to." "I'm glad of it. There's been a dis agreeable, stuck-up little girl living over there. . I thought when first I saw you, you were going to be just like her." This I took as Hannah's apology for her reception. It was satisfactory, and we might then and there have become friends, but at that moment Mary Sulli van came to our front door and called me homo. She said the brass-headed tacks were all gone, and I must go to tho store for more. When I returned Hannah Ann was nowhere to be seen. The next morning I was fortunate enough to find a five-cent piece in a crack of a bureau drawer, and promptly started for a store wherein to spend it. The streets were so mnddy 1 thought I would go across and leap the neigh bor's fences. I was in neighbor Far ley's yard when I was sharply hailed from a littlo window high up in the end of the house. " Boy, come up hore 1" " How am I going to get up ?" " Oo around to the kitchen, and ask my mother to show you tho way." ' I hunted up the kitchen, and found Hannah's mother. Trior to this time when I wished to represent a female figure upon my slate I had a triangle surmounted by an eclipse, and this in turn finished by a small circle; here after, with Mrs. Farley in mind, I drew a cylindrical figure with a small circlo on the upper end, and a slight depres sion representing the waist-line. After once seeing Mrs. r aricy 1 could never wonder that Hannah was forever bor rowing a pin to lasten something on with. There could never be a more de lightful garret than Mrs. Farley's, for never could there be a woman who could excel her in the celerity with which she would use up furniture. Such a col lection of mirrors with shattered glasses, bottomless chairs, dismantled bureaus, and tables standing upon three legs is seldom met ! " What do you want to play?" asked Hannah. " Pirate." " What's a pirate?" I explained, and Hannah forthwith became the most bloodthirsty of pirates. It was in my heart to spare the women and children, but she refused to' listen to such a proposition, and felled her victims left and right without regard to age or sex. Once she pierced me through the heart, and I fell bleeding, dying, hitting my head against the chimney, and yelling out in unfeigned agony. Afterward, we were riding peacefully along over the green fields, and beneath the calm blue sky, on a two-legged and very dusty sofa, when a party of bri gands swooped down upon us, and bore ns off to a loathsome dungeon behind a dismantled bureau. We flattened our selves and crawled out, beheaded the brigands, appropriated their spoils, and returned triumphant to our own homes. We were very dusty and covered with cobwebs when I remembered my five cent piece and said I must go. " Hive me half of what you're going to buy, aud I'll go with you," said Hannah. I couldn't very well refuse this gener ous offer; so she put on her hood and shawl, at mv suggestion tied up her shoe strings, ami we started. She expressed a preference for black licorice, and I expended my money upon that luxury: and shared it liberally. We came homo hand in hand, and though Hannah went over-shoe iu mud and water three times, she bore it with inimitable good-nature. From that morning our friendship matured rapidly, hometimes Hannah was at our house; sometimes I played in the Farley garret; and sometimes when she had a sore throat, and wore a prepa ration of lard and camphor-gum around it, we had permission to play in Mi's. Farley's parlor. Whenever Hannah stole cookies and ginger-snas for her self, sho alwavs laid in for me; when Mary Sullivan made tea-saucer pies for ine, I carried them red-hot from the oven to neighbor Farley's, and Hannah and I watched them cool with hearts that beat as one. Then while one-half the juice drizzled over mv jacket the corresponding half dripped on Hannah's apron, iiunniiu was passionately fond ot "jooce! A hen school opened, Hannah and 1 went hand in hand, and stood by one another in clays of adversity as well as days of prosperity. Hannah being a miserable scholar, her days were mostly of adversity. Tho months slipped away, and the years grew apaeo. My father petitioned the town authorities to fill up that mud puddle in frout of our house; The town authorities gave every encourage ment that the " whole board" would be on the spot at an earlv day, but we looked for them in vain. Mv father mado a second and third importunity with like results. Then he pressed his grievance upon their attention as gen tlemen and men of honor. As gentle men and men of honor they gave their word that the matter should be neglect ed no longer. We lived upon that promise six months. Then my father, grown irate, threatened to sue. The board, becoming defiant, just wished he would sue : thev should like to see him sue. At this retort my father's feelings rose to tho summit of moral indigna tion ; he wouldn't sue ; ho scorned to lower himself to a quarrel with such men ; but ho would pay no raoie taxes in that town ; and energetic prepara tions ior our removal began. Hannah and I were sitting upon the edgo oi mi. Farley s coal-bin when J communicated to her my father's de cision. As soon as sue saw 1 was in earnest sho dropped over upon the anthracite, and gave vent to a flow of tears. She declared that she couldn't and wouldn't have mo go. She should dio with loneliness, and sho wished she was dead. A few tears of mine drizzled over into the bin and mingled with Hannah's. Afterward she appeared re concilcd,and manifested intense interest iu our preparations, obtruding her ser vices at her house until my mother do dared she should never be ready to go if that Farloy girl couldn't be kept at home. The morning of our departure dawned at last. My father and mother went to tho depot, leaving me to follow, as I had come, on the last load of goods. It was an April morning, succeeding a heavy rain-storm, and tlio waves of my father's mud-puddle ran high. Hannah sat upon the old petunia mound by the gate, sobbing. I raised her drooping form to bid her farewell, pushed tho hair from her face and gave her my last kiss. She clutched frantically at my acket, but. realizing that delays are dangerous, I sprang upon a dry-goods box in the wagon. The horse, most se verely afflicted with spring-halt, started off at a fearful gallop, and we disap peared around the corner forever. As soon as circumstances would per mit I addressed a letter to Hannah, and soon received a reply, of -which the fol lowing is a verbatim copy; Jfjl Dear Llortje : I now set down to let you know how I am. I have had a soar throat nerely all the time sence ycu Left. Somebody has shot our Cat. School commenses next week. I dred it. A new family lias moved into your House, there is too boys, Eddy and willy. If we never see each other again on urth I hope we may meat m heaven, Yours Irulv, Hannah A. Fajilky. The letter also contained two blots and a grease spot and was directed by Hannah's mother, wrong side up with care. I wrote her once more, but received no answer a failure which I attributed to her aversion to all literary labor rather than to any diminution iu the ardor of ner anections. I attended school for tho next three or tour years, ami then entered the wholjsale mercantile business in tlio service of an uncle. I became a rising young man. borne of the time I rose rapidly, as gaseous matter and young men between the ages of sixteen and twenty-five are iu tho habit of doing. Our family nlso prospered. From three- ply in our parlor wo passed by easy stages through body Brussels to Eng lish ilton, and v;a numbered the successors of Mary Sullivan by twos and by threes. Presently I arrived at that age whereat extremely witty people begin pointing at a young man peculiarly sharp and or iginal jests concerning the subject of matrimony. At first the implication therein conveyed that I had only to choose was gratifying to my vanityfbut by the timo I began to direct any serious thoughts that way myselt, so much solid wit had become an insull'erablo bore. There were girls in large quantities and excellent qualities all around me, but the thought of advancing to anything serious with any one of them always suggested Hannah. My reminiscences of Hannah were not such that I could create an ideal femi nine character of her; but when a fel low has sat in a coal -bin with a girl and taken alternate suclt3 on as many Jack son-balls as i had with Hannah, no subsequent experience can ever entirely etiace the impression. 1 had a curiosity to know what Hannah had besoms. The surest way to satisfy this curiosity seemed to be to go and see her. I ac cordingly went. The girl was pretty. She had color mid frankness ; she had graco and re pose of manner. Her finger-nails were crupulously kept, root and crown, and her hair was glossy, as well as fashion ably dressed. The year we left town Hannah's mother died ; and after the billows of affliction had surged over his soul for about six months, Mr. Farley again lie held the sun and took a new wife. The new wife had takeu infinite pains with her step-daughter. The step-daughter's present appearance, as compared with her former condition, bore favorable testimony for tho lady's system. Han nah said that when we wero children I had seemed like a brother to her, and I at once placed myself upon a fraternal standing. I interrogated her in regard to the occupants of mv old home, and she finally confided to me that she was engaged to the younger Wetherbeo, the "willy" ot her letter. I afterward saw him, and could not but inwardly applaud the discrimination that led her, even in childhood, to be gin his name with a small letter. He was an individual of from 110 to 115 pounds weight, though what theie was of him was drawn out and judiciously distributed with a view to making the most of straitened circumstances. There may bo no more ink in an exclamation point than a vowel, but it is better adapted to attract attention. As to color, energy and vivacity, Hannah had enough to supply three iust like him iiunnahs, 1 soon perceived, was the philosophical form of engaged life. One evening when we went to walk, she said to me : ' Mr. Wetherbee has his faults ; no one knows them better than I. But where," added she, touehingly, "where will you hnd a man who liasn t faults ? "Whore, surely!" responded I. " I don't look for perfect happiness here below," continued Hannah, pen sively; i vc seen too much ot lite tor that ! Hannah is some years my junior and must at this period have arrived at the mature ago of nineteen vears. I returned homo and two years slipped awav. l was still halting between two opinions and looking inquiringly at a third, and tho " opinions had bguu to manifest lively symptoms of taking care of themselves, when one day in a neigh boring city, strolling through a paper box factory whose proprietor was my friend, I came across Hannah. " How m tho world came you here?" bluntly ejaculated I. "By the fortunes of life and the rail way." I didn't know whether she was to be addressed as Farley or Wetherbee, and observing that she was dressed in deep mourning, avoided anything that might suggest explanations. She presently told me that her father was dead. Then as I sought her confidence on the fra ternal basis sho told mo tliat her father had left his estate incumbered. " Those disagreeable Wetherbeos hold a mortgage on tho house," said she, "and they are just the exacting, unac commodating kind "of people who wouldn't. lics.it.atc,. f Jil'YWi'ning tho .day. tho time expires ! Sho had set horsolf about earning I money to pay tho indebtedness. " You see," said she " the property is left by will to mamma and myself con jointly. If it is disposed of at a forced sale it must be at a great sacrifice, and tlien poor mamma will be left without a home. She has done everything for me" here Hannah's large eyes filled with tears " and it is a small thing for me to try to savo the home for her." 1 said I wondered sue hadn t sought a different kind of employment and sug gested teaching. Oh, I've tried applying for schools. Two or thrttB times I've received invita tions to exauiinaJTdns; and they've given me perfectly dreadful lists of questions asked reasons wny we performed operations that I never before knew we did perform." "Alusic, then." "I love music: but there are three teachers to evei7 pupil. This is pleas ant work, and I am happy' in feeling I shall save the home for mamma ! When I reached home that evening I sold an opera ticket I had purchased in the morning, and, whereas I had always smoked fifteen-cent cigars, now pur chased a box at ten cents (I gave them away before the close of the week and went back to fifteen's) and asked mother if there wasn't a place somewhere in the city where they cleansed and dressed over-soiled kid gloves to look as well as new. For tho next few weeks I had consid erable business in a neighboring city, and I used to transact it in season for the three-o'clock train, and then con clude to wait for the express. Hannah was always in fine spirits, buoyed up by the belief that she was making sure progress in paying that debt. I should as soon thought of discharging the national obligation by peddling matches. One warm Saturday aitcrnoon, when I stood by her side, and she leaned back fatigued, but distraetingly pretty with the loose hair cm ling around her temples, she inadvertently laid her hand on the corner of the table next me. It was growing thin and the H formed by the blue veins on. the back, and which, in the days of youthful simplicity sho had told me stood for Harriman, stood out with great distinctness. I suggested being allowed to make an rangement removing her from the necessity of liquidating those debts. Sho refused to listen. 1 pressed the matter unavailinglv. I then went to tho proprietor, told him Miss Farley was an old schoolmate and a friend of mine, who was heroically trying to save the family residence for her stepmother, and asked him it he could not furnish her a better position; but i rank is the most obtuse ot creatures. He finally asked me if she could keep books, ltemembering the splurges in that useful epistle of hew, I felt by no means confident, but said I: ' Give her tho books, anv wav, and look to m for dampges." Ho found that she wrote a neat hand, and had a slight inkling of double entry ; but when it, came to the subject ot remuneration, and she asked him how much he had paid his last book- eeper, ho had tho stupidity to reply: 1 Ho had 800, but I shall allow vou 81,200.' Ah! said she, " he was un old and experienced bookkeeper, while I kuow littlo about it. Why under such cir cumstances do you increase tho salary V" Frank wouldn't have scrupled at nn entire series of equivocations in his own behalf, but sinco only my interests were at stake, his conscience became as ten der as George ashington s. He finally acknowledged that the increase was pro vided lor bv a mend. " I shall aeeopt the position at $800," said she, with dignity. I went up and held a conversation with Hannah, f "reasoned" with her; I "set things in their true light;" I " made matters clear." It did seem us if sho might see, but she wouldn't. Upon tlio urgent and repeated invita tions of my mother she consented to spend her Sabbaths at our place. She wiuj in the frequent receipt of letters from li3r stepmother, in which the most anectionate sentiments were couched in the most beautiful language, and on Sunday evenings she used to read me extracts from these letters with tears in her eyes. Tho pav-day came at length whereon I was morally certain she would receive enough to complete her payments. I went to see her at her boarding-place that evening, and broached the deferred subiect. She attempted evasion, but I had decided that if ever I was to have my own way in this connection it was time I began. The result was I went homo with her the next day. We found Mrs. Farley had just de cided to marry the former chairman of that board of road commissioners who wouldn't fill up my father's mud- puddle. " I think, Hannah," said sho, reflect ivcly, " that perhaps we'd better dispose of tho property, and take our re spective portions to purchase our trous seaux with." They did accordingly, and one " re spective portion " was made up as quickly as 1 could spur on an able and experi enced corps ot dressmakers. During the ' years that have elapsed since that eventful period, our domestic life has been sometimes critical, and often peculiar, but always jolly. I've never seen the hour when in the inmost recesses of my heart I've regretted that my father's family once resided opposite that mud-puddle aud Hannah Aim. Hjiriii gju-ld Rejuthl ami. By a "Galway jury" is meant an independent jury, neither to be brow beaten nor led by the nose. In 1G;5 certain trials were held in Ireland, re specting tho right of the crown to the counties of Ireland. Leitrim, Boscom mon, Sligo and Mayo gave judgment in favor of tho crown, but Galway stood out, whereupon each of the jury was fined 20,000 Tho Golden Horn, the inlet of the Bosphorous, on which Constantinople stands, is so called from its shape and beauty. The Golden Gate of Constanti nople ; consist's of a triumphal arch, surmounted with a hronzo statute of Victory. It was added by Theodosius to r...i..n..'o .....ii FACTS AND COMMENTS. Some learncdjpersons are advocating tho theory that 'outbreaks of crimes are due to sudden and peculiar meteorologic charges. If the theory is correct it seems to us that the criminal outbreak per centage for the past winter should bo about the highest on record. An association of the shipowners and shipmasters of Maine, with five hundred substantial members, has been organized in Augusta. They believe that the groat prosperity of the country at large is about to make itself felt in the ship yards of Maine, and their purpose is to aid in the revival of the great industries for which the State was long famous. The organization, which represents many million dollars, was perfected by the election of permanent officers who have enough to stake to secure their best services. The laborers in the St. Gothard tun nel have suffered from a mysterious disease that long baffled all physicians ; but an Italian phvsician, Dr. Giaccone, has now traeoid it, with the aid of microscopic investigation, to parasitic worms that are engendered by the un derground atmosphere and lodge in the intestines of men working in it. A Swiss physician, Dr. Sonderegge, has supplemented this discovery by devis ing a method of expelling the parasites Tho two doctors are hailed in Switzer land as benefactors of their race. An article in a California newspaper gives some interesting information in regard to the present condition and prospects of tho kingdom of King Kalakaua the Sandwich Islands. The native race it appears is dying out, the terrible disease of leprosy being on the increase. Since the reciprocity treaty with the United States went into eil'ect the labor conditions of the country have been greatly improved, the chief beneficiaries being the Chinese, who raise the greater portion of the sugar crop and who are m a male numerical majority on the islands, llio elective franchise is open to all, but thus far the Chinese portion of the population mani fest no desire to avail themselves of the privileges of Hawaiian citizenship. The tuture. ot tho islands is an extremely in teresting question. If the lorces at present iu operation are allowed toworic unchecked the Mongolians will m a lew years have complete control, and Hono lulu will become a small Hong Kong. How and to what extent such a condition of affairs may affect American interests is a question which the future alone can determine. Apropos of an urticle in its eoluinus, tho Clirixtiau Union savs: It is worthy note that the coffee-houses estab lished in the chief English cities as a means of keeping men away from liquor- shops have proved a decided success, many of them paving an annual divi dend of ten per cent, upon their capital. J. hev .supplv conee, tea, cocoa, soups, cold meat and bread and but ter of good pituity and at low prices. Newspapers are Kept in abundance, and customers arc welcome to remain and read as long as they please. Thus the coffee-house serves tho purpose of a cheap club. Similar experiments have proved successful in Boston, Troy, St. Louis, and other points in this country. It is a matter lor profound astonishment that the organized workers against intem perance have paid so littlo attention to tho palpable facts that drinking is partly due to the tact that men are thirsty, partly to the desire for social good fellowship, and neither thirst nor fellowship is adequately provided for in any of our great towns and cities except by the liquor-shops. Iu 18H0 there were in the United States no less than 170 boiler explo sions, which killed 25'J persons and wounded 555. It is remarkable that, while the number of explosions per month varies slightly, and is rather larger iu winter months, the number of resultantcasualties was decidedly largest in June. Probably that was due to the exceptional character of that month's disasters; but it is only fair to expect that violent deaths will increase regu larly with the return of each excursion season. A classification of the boilers shows that forty-seven were used in wood-working mills. Presumably wood was used for lucl under such boilers, and the much less equable temperature produced by tho burning of wood as compared with coal would go far to ex plain the undesirable pre-eminence, The next most numerous class of explo ded boilers numbered nineteen, and were used in paper, flouriDg, pulp and grist mills and elevators. Eighteen exploded boilers were the motors of lo comotives and fire-engines, fifteen were marine boilers, thirteen wero " portables," being used in hoisters, thrashers, pile-drivers, cotton gins, etc., and thirteen were used in iron works. As compared with 1879 there is a large increase in these figures. In 187!) there were but 132 explosions, which killed 208 persons aud wounded 2M0. This fact is traced to the reviv al of trade, which demanded the new uso of idle boilers, and in many cases the over working of others. The celebrated Italian embalmer, Paolo Gorini, lately died at Lodi, aged sixty-eight. His whole life was devoted to science, and ho died a beggar. The State gave him a splendid funeral, and the day after his burial a subscription was started to raise him a monument. Among the peasantry in a certain por tion of Germany it is considered a sign of good luck' to meet a pig. Some shrewd goldsmith utilized the idea by manufacturing charms, or pig emblems, which became all tho rage in Germany, and which have lately been the fashion in this country. The demand for George Eliot's bools has been' so great since her death that the London publishers have not been ablo to meet it. Ono thousand readers inquired for " Adam Bode " in one week of a leading circulating library. .THE FARM AXD HOUSEHOLD. Pens. For an early crop of peas plant early j in iuu opuuK, jusu tia nuuu un tumt: is liu longer any frost in the ground. Choose a southern exposure, and, if possible, a northwestern protection. The warmer the place the better. It is our practice, as far as possible, to prepare our ground the autumn previous, so that the fertil izers may become finely mixed with the soil. We have found old leaf mold a very good manure. We prefer double rows for at least tho tall sorts, which should be bushed when they are five inches high, having previously been hood. The rains will pack the earth around the young plants, and it needs good stirring. The double rows wo make seven inches apart, and from that to tho next double about four feet. It has been our plan in order to get a good start to sift some earth and fertilizers, get a number of pans or boxes, soak tho peas over night and plant in tho boxes, two inches of tine earth to a good sprinkling of soaked seed, one after the other to the top. The boxes are put in a warm room in the sunshine, or near a stove, and tho earth is kept moistened with tepid water. When the ground is ready the boxes are taken into the garden, the earth and peas are gently dumped out, and, as the peas will be found to have sprouted, they must bo carefully dropped into tho drills, with fear that the sprouts may be broken. Then they must be gently covered. We plant pea's so that they are not more than a half inch apart, sometimes almost touch, and our success with peas has been very great. In fact, we had tho vanity to try and show our country neighbors that a family can have plenty of peas, and good ones. As to varieties our tastes may be. peculiar, but wo do not like the little, round, plump peas, and would rather take castor oil than a dose of the old-fashioned marrowfats. Wo like the wrinkled, green, sweet sorts, which, when cooked, are surrounded with juice and eaten with a spoon. Tho Philadelphia pea is very early, and is a saleable early pea in market. For our personal use we do not want it. The American wonder is a nice wrinkled dwarl pea needing no brush but its coat is considerable, and we do not propose it for any but the rich. r or a somewhat tall, early pea needing brush, give us the Alpha. It is tho ice cream of peas. It is very early. One year it did not yield well with us; the next year it did. The Premium Gem is our favorite early dwarf pea the most satisfactory early sort that we have ever planted. Next to that we like the Littlo Gem. No one can go wrong on that variety. It is dwarf. For safety and for general early crop we commend it. For tho later general crop there is no choice. Of course the Champion of England is the champion of peas. Llllizlua Hone Uiimi. As good a way as any to utilize bone dust, mid have it prepared for immedi ate plant food, is to mix it with barn yard manure. Heat is soou generated, and decomposition both of the bone dust and the manure takes place. Barn yard manure generally lacks phosphoric acid, while bones contain a largo quan tity. A ton of pure bone dust contains as much nitrogen as eight and a hall tons of fresh stable manure of an aver age quality. Tho quantity of phos phoric acid contained in tho manure depends upon the kind of food consumed by the animals, though the ton of bone dust contains as much phosphoric acid as 110 tons of stable manure, but. one tone of the latter contains more potash than five tons of bone dust. In the Poull l'Y-1 Inline. A correspondent of the Country Gum tin man says : Kerosene and laid arc as essential in tho poult rv-house as soap and water iu the nursery, and I would as soon think ot going w ithout tho latter as the former. I never see a sign of a louse unless we are careless and neglect the remedy, or rather tlio preventive. I do not wait until the chickens are ten or twelve days old, for by that time the mischief would be done; but I begin the fall before, aud all through the winter, once iu two or three weeks, rub the roosting poles with a mixture of lard and kerosene, half and half, and put a littlo on the corners of the nest boxes. When I set a hen I use new, soft, clean hay, and on each corner of the box pour clear kerosene; it must not touch the eggs. If very late in tho season, it will bo best to repeat this a few days before hatching. I take the chicks out as fast as they are dry, and keep them by the kitchen stove in basnet under a woolen blanket for one or two days, men each ehicii s head is rubbed with the anti-lonso mixture, and any stray insect that may have lain iu wait in some unguarded spot will never obtain a meal from that chick Care must be takeu not to put on too much, or it will run into the eyes, Once a young assistant used it so freely that thirty chicks became entirely blind, and died from starvation. IluUHclluIfl II 1 11 In. If, when bread is taken from the oven. the loaves are turned topside down in the hot tins and are allowed to stand a few minutes, the crust will be tender and will cut easily. I When washing fine laces, do not use starch at all; in the last water in which they are rinsed put a little fine white sugar, dissolve it thoroughly, and the result will be pleasing. No housekeeper should put quick-! silver on her bedsteads. The mineral is absorbed by those sleeping upon them, causing paralysis and many other serious and fatal diseases. To keep bread moist, have the dough stiff when it is set for the last rising. The larger the proportion of flour to that of moisture in the dough the longer it will keep moist. After the bread is baked and cold, put in a tin. box or an earthen jar with close cover, and keep it covered tightly, uread thus made and kept cool, and always from tho air, will last and be moist for a week, The Brooklet. Whenco comest thou, Oh, little brook, With silvery voice and limpid look? lieveal to ono all worn with strife The secret of thy joyous life. Tho rock's dark bosom'is my home, Through field and woody glen I come; Tho kindly heavens, sercno and cool, Are mirrored iu my shining pool. . And so my life is full and frco, What matter whore my course shall bo ? Sinco He who brought mo to the day Will surely guide me all the way. From the German oj Qathe, HUMOR OF THE DAY. Tho Bay of Naples and the Bay of Biscay what horseman has a finer pair of bays. Steubeneille Herald. A down-East girl who is engaged to ft lumberman says sho has caught a feller. JJostun Bulletin. There is nothing on earth so lowly but that duty giveth it importance except sifting ashes on the nigh side of a healthy wind. Boers are not by any nieans confined to South Africa. It is astonishing how many are to be met with on a single day's travel in the United States. A man who offered bail for a friend was asked by the judge if he had any incumbrance on his farm. "Oh, yes," said he " my old woman." Some enterprising searcher after painful realities tells us that the cucum ber was cultivated 3,000 years ago. Tho inference is probably drawn from the fact that many bodies at that early date were interred iu a sitting posture, as if doubled up with the cramps. Modem- Arro. " I'm sitting on the style, Mary," he warbled, as he unconsciously planked lumself on her new white bonnet. "Oh, whisper what thou fcelest," she mur mured, as she promptly introduced an inch and a half of shawl pin through his epidermis. Eb'rcilnd lluilwuy Journal. There is in Baltimore a boy named ' ' Ollie," who is just out of dresses. A friend of the family asked Ollie "Whoso bov he was? "Im mammy's boy." W hy, Ollie !" said his father, reproach fully. " Yes," continued Ollie, " and l ni papu s bov. now can thai tier asked the friend. "Why, my gracious! was the reply, " can't a wagon have two horses?" Pre-histoiie Footsteps. Oregon, the Arcadia for the red man, rich in minerals and fertile in soil, held a numerous population oi aborigines who still flourished when the white man set foot within its borders. They dwelt near tho rivers and the shore of the ocean, were warlike, and primitive, noat- 1 their canoes upon the streams and lived their wild life undisturbed. Less than u century has swept them into obli vion, leaving only a lew bleached bones, a few stone idols, and a few implements f warfare and domestic use. No earth works, nor temples, houses, nor pottery remain. Yet tradition and the great hell beds prove that numerically these people were strong. Thinking of their sudden extinction, we may well wonder at the brevity of human life and the effac ing power of time, who passes his hand over a race and it disappears like figures under a sponge. These peoplo worshiped, for they have left their idols. They joyed, sorrowed and loved in their rude way, and now there remains of llicm onlv a few feeble creatures in the lowest scale of Immunity. Then there are tho mound builders, of Ohio, that curious race long departed, wlio left their earthworks to puzzle a civilized people. One writer describes tho observatory mounds as forming a chain of signal stations so located as to communicate across the country from valley to valley. They are built upon the highest hilltops, and undoubtedly served the peoplo who built them as lelegiaphs whose messages were beacon lights. Inside these mounds is an arch of clay and stone and an altar. These and some flint implements are all that remain of those vanished tribes. That they leaned toward civilization, and had a certain form of government is a theory not unsupported by the traces they have left. They tilled the soil and cultivated art in figures sculptured from tho hardest stone. Another race was contemporaneous with the mound builders. They were agricultural and ingenious, and they wrote their history for us in curious pot tery. Earthen vessels shaped liko tor toises, shells, fish aud birds aro found in tho pottery mounds in Missouri. They ' carved stone with great skill, too. Hu man heads of almost Grecian beauty adom many of their woiks. They, too, suddenly disappeared, leaving behind them a wonderful record in stone and pottery. All that remains of their pa tience, industry and skill are found in their mounds, graves, and in the relics scattered about the vicinity of the habi tations. What wind of fate swept them out of existence is not yet known. Near Joliet, Illinois, a row of human skeletons with copper ear ornaments be side them were found recently, aud sev eral sections of Minnesota send news of similar discoveries. Ono mound revealed six hundred skeletons, supposed to be the remains of Indian braves slain in a buttle which tradition says took place several centuries ago between the Chip pewas and Sioux, the former winning the dar. Everywhere over the earth lie buned the tribes and races that flourished be fore history was, and before civilization began. How limitless is the store of facts the silent earth holds bidden in her bosom 1 Ages pass and races perish yet she loses not the record of either.' Under her fresh and smiling face, green with verdure and might with flowers, are the tombs of the centuries. Wonderful are the forces of nature, the laws of change. Who can contemplate the mighty evolution of the universeand ot feel the egotism of his soul grow less, and h -ar in fancy the tramp of the army of u race in their march toward oblivion ?