I HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher- NITj DESPE11ANDUM. ' Two Oollars oer Annum. VOL. XI. KIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1881. NO. 8. The Captain's Sweetheart, " Only last night y b'i'P enmo in, Yet .Train it seemed cro I could seek Tour side, mid my to you the word-, That I bo long have lunged to apeak. Fof I am captain now, anil thought , To-ilay to win you fur my bride; Hut would I'd ne'er net foot on shore! Would on the ocean I had diedl" With kindling eye and crimsoned cheek IHh words of bitterness she heard, Tlien tightly claxped her littlo hands, Dut never spoke a single word. I ''Your lovely eyes were dim with tear j When last 1 Marled for the Bea; j Ion knew I loved von, and 1 dreamed I Poor trusting fool- you eared for me. j Each night your name was in my prayeH, Your picture on my heart hath lain; ' Once nioro I'll press my ll ' it, Then you may have It back again.". He kissed it thrice, nnd held it forth With trembling hand. She raised her head, And in his fnci Raited steadily, Hut net a siiAfle word she said. "To think that yon should wed for gold, Hell your sweet lace for sparkling gems i Love's sunshine, girl, would brighter make Your curls than precious diadems, And Faith and Truth would bring you flowers Where Pomp and 1'i ido but weeds can bow; But since you've made your choice, farewell !" And with a sigh he turned to go. A smile dawned on her pretty mouth; Mio shook her pretty golden curls. "Way, Italph. Who told this tale," she asKod "Of gold and diamonds and pearls?" "One who should know your brother Tom I in' t him as I reached your door. 1 What if you've gained your ship,' he mocked, And lost your Nell fur evermore? Old Skipper Brown's been courting her, And he has stores of gems and gold; And wedding bells may gayly ring Before the year is six months old.' " Ibr smile grew brighter, and at last Into a mu'iy laugh she burst. " 'Twas wi.-ke 1. llalpli, of Tom; but then He's but a b 'V. 'Tis April first." ''Ail-1. ?'' " No, of course not: how could I W!. ' ' You l'.ve rat ':" Yon say I do.' 'Ar. 1 a'.l the time I've been away?" "Tue u ii tli star lias not been more true." "A:il you will wed me when the sweet Wild ro...-!., love, begin to blow?" "S-i iju':'' sho si id. "'Tis ages, dear." " W. t'a.n, if y,,a w;n have it so." 'Anl from this time may April first Be ushered in with cloudless sky, And all the April fools,"' he cried, "Be just as glad and blessed as 1 1" llarprr'a 'tkly. Tho Interrupted Wedding. All tho Colorado hills were meltinc in the opal dimness of ihe soft Octobi i hazo, through which, among thrpinc. aspen groves shown like yellow fiamef . Day by day the wine-colored fronds o: the sumach were scattered by the winds. The air in its mingled brightness and vigor rekindled that pure joy ol living whoso loss the effeminate world bewails to-day. But it also reminded the miner that it. was time to bank his cabin or leave for the valley a thing he was likely to do earlier than usual this year on account of threatened Indian troubles. It likewise set Mrs. Kent to making preparations for her only daughter's wedding. Out there wed dings do not occur every day, nor are they generally of great importance when they do. This, however, was a special affair. Mrs. Kent having been widowed by on accident some years be fore, had proved herself a brisk, capable woman, had opened a stopping place on tho way to tl mines, and made it with Maudy'.- jelp so clean, so home like and popular that sho was in a fair way to become a capitalist. She owned on claims named more or less openly after herself or her daughter; sho had more than one present by which to re member grateful guests'; she had her regular profits and her privileged posi tion. It could not bo expected that such a state of things would long endure with out some, matrimonial catastrophe, though both were adored with that general affection which is not very dangerous in its results. Maudy's choice had at last fallen on a young ranchman well started in life, but no groat favorite of Mrs. Kent's. Site would have wel comed Prince Arthur if he had came to ake away her right hand, but, seeing there was no help for it, she determined to give, in honor of the occasion, the grand "spread" of which only such a housekeeper was capable. The poor, hearty, generous miners ! All the delicacies of Dcluionico's cannot so please the cloyed appetites of his patrons as the prospect of a wholesome " square meal does them. They were invited cordially where indeed, would Mrs. Kent have been without them? She had her two hired girls tidy to the utmost, the tidy dining-room that had welcomed such various figures, from the " tony " capitalist and his tonier hire ling to the last dead-broke adventurer. Under her directions caldrons of oysters, (stacks of ham, bountiful cakes and coffee were prepared to invigorate the guests who, mostly masculine, might be depressed by the coming ceremony. At tho very moment, however, when the minister was ready to unite George Dickerson and Amanda Kent in holy bonds, the young lady proved her womanly qualities by an engaging fit of hesitation. She didn't know as she wanted to get married at alL In vain her girl friends soothed the sobbing bride-elect, and urged her not to disap point every one. She only retorted, half angrily: ;' Just wait till you go to get married and see jf it isn t serious.' Finding that they could neither reason nor joke her out of her whim, they left the field to her lover, whose protesta tions finally induced her to dry her tears, and consent to their union. The patient preacher had just opened proceedings in the orthodox mauner when a galloping horse, the Western signal of disaster, Was heard without. A moment after a red-headed youth burst in the door, but no one resented his want of manners as tho new arrival gasped: ' '"The Arapahoes is is a-comin'. Hundreds of 'em, I saw 'cm and run." "Where? How fast? How many?" wcro the questions hailed on the un responding herald, who, pitching on horseback, was out of sight in a twink ling. Of course it was a fine chance to make a piece of border history; to die in do fenso of the ladies, and the dinner lmt no one happened to see it in that light. Miner?, so far from loving bloodshed, are, in their daily lives, the most order loving peoplo in the world. Danger does not frighten them, but many had -no firearm?, many had little ones back East to bo left helpless. The house was a wooden one, ten miles from town, mint for lack of amnnnition to stand a siege at all. So, to the immenso relief of the women, they resolved to evacnato the premises, or to use old Hnnds' ex pression, determined " to get out o' this as quick as the Lord'll lot yon." llelter, tikelter, not without a fierce regret for the lost provisions, they mounted nnd rode oil". Mrs. Kent's light wagon was filled. George and Maudy were to ride behind, when the girl suddenly requested him to wait a moment. George, white as ashes, de murred, lint rIio was resolute, declaring that she would go back alone if ho did not wait. Whilo she ran upstairs, ho remained by the gate, shaking in every limb os he looked at the low hills to the east. The last of the fugitives had dis appeared, still sho did not come. He pushed back his crisp black locks im patiently. "Maudy, Maudee," ho called, rather faintly, then turned, and, in a vcritablo paroxysm of terror, dropped her pony's rein and hurried away to ward town. In fivo minutes Maudy Kent camo down, a dark cloak thrown over her light dress. Nothing living was to be seen except her pony and the chickens, who pecked nway as tranquilly as if chicken was deadly poison to the sav ages. ' Ttvr gray clouds, coming up fxm tLs west, had already covered half the sky. With a feeling of bitter and indignant disappointment she tried to catch her pony. The skittish beast re treated up a steep gulch; she followed it a little di tance, then looking back, her heart sickened as she saw coming up from tho plain a swarm of Indian ponies. She ran up tho ravine to a lit tle cabin put there long ago for calves, drew out and examined the cause of her delav, a handsome dagger she hud played with as a child, and crouched in tho dark est corner of her retreat, her heart beat ing till sho was almost blind, her nerves strung to tho highest pitch of excite ment and terror. rr. If you do tot know what an Indian scare is, it is useless to describe it. No civilized understanding can conceive the horror of dealing with a foe apparently is subtle and as cruel as the evil one iiiinself. If you are acquainted with the West you will be able to picture to yonr elf the consternation produced by the startling news. Brick houses were in great demand. Women gathered up their young ones and fled to fireproof shel ters. A lady possessed of twins dropped one of these innocents in her rapid career, and it was found kicking and squalling on the street corner by a gentleman who at first was sorely puzzled to know ,what to do with it. Provisions were collected, arms ex amined, dispatches sent, and the local printers set up terrible headings for the bulletins, around which gathered loud talking and gesticulating men, even when tho clouds dissolved in drops of cold rain os the day wore on. Mrs. Kent began to feel uneasy about Maudy's non-appearance. She left her friend's house and questioned the men she met, but without success. At length sho saw Georgo sitting on a dry goods box, with his hat pulled over his face. ' W here s Maudy, George V she cried. "Why doesn't she come up to Mrs. Blake's?" He slowly raised his dull eyes to hers as he answered, thickly: " She stayed be hind. I couldn't wait vou know." Mrs. Kent turned awav, feeling hor ribly dizzy. She saw that tho coward had been indulging too extensivelv in " treats," and forbore to waste the full ness of her wrath upon him. Sho had taken but a few steps when she met old Jeff Sands, a gray-headed Samson, who, with his twosons, owned and worked a promising mine in Gopher Gulch "ut- told him the state of the case. " Th e deuce I" he gasped, thought fully. It was the only opinion he could give on the spur of the moment, and stronger language than he had ever before used in Mrs. Kent's hearing. For, be it known, that old Sands thought the ground she walked on sanctified thereby, and she, oh, wicked little widow, was not totally unconscious of the fact. " Hang me if I wouldn't like to shake that fellow out of his skin !" he muttered, , Bavogely. "But oh, Mr. Sands, what can we do?" she exclaimed. " Do ? " he exclaimed. " Why, get a posse and go for the red frauds as tight as we can lick. It's queer they ain't in sight already," ho reflected. "But, I'spose like as not they're trying to kill 'emselves on your oyster soup. I wish we'd thought to put strychnine in it." Poor Mrs. Kent was quite beyond making or taking interest in plans. She went away, leaving to Jeff Sands such a Eieture of distraction that he felt capa lo of wiping every Arupahoe, man, woman, or child, off the face of the earth. He went to the postoflice and set forth in a few strong words that he wanted a body of men to go to Maudy Kent's rescue. They were on file. Thev were ready to follow Captain Sands to the Norm role, if necessary. Hands, unanimously made captain. would not wait a moment. So they all started out, not, I fear.lin the strictest military order; but military order has not ever proved appal ing to savaeres. Night soon came upon them, blinding sleet and rain drove across their track. and they were obliged tinder penalty of losing their way to camp in the stock yard of a deserted ranch. Chill, damp and piercing blew the wind from the gray hills; fires refused to light. All the romance of the thing oozed away through the shifting straw of their ini- provised counterpanes. Still more cheerless was the dawn, breaking feebly through omnipresent clouds, anil bringing with if. extremely scanty and undesirable article of brrakfost. It was with dismay that their leader perceived that his men were getting into the fighting humor, and if he did not soon show them Indians to fight would probably end by lighting him. Some of the rear members of tho undis ciplined brigade quietly deserted at con venient points, while the rest rode sulk ily over mud and stone. A Westerner, unless ubsoluto destitute, never walks. n. It is now time to return to tho for saken mansion. At the very moment that Jeff Sands was addressing an excited crowd, Maudy Kent Mas shivering in mortal dread, and wondering if sho would have strength enough to strike when the lime came a party of white peoplo wilhin were indeed testing the soup and discussing the roast, chickens with tho hearty enjoyment only possible to a disturbed state of society. If a timid voice protested at the free and easy banquet, some instantly vowed to set it all right. Hadn't they money to pay for what they took ? W'liut busi ness hud people to leave the houso open and the (able set if (hey didn't want (o be hospitable? They had come to (lie place, a large body of campers, driving lioforo them a herd of ponies, lo seek shelter during the coming storm for n woman with a weakly child, rinding a deserted feast, the bolder spirits) guess ed the truth, and treating the matter os a huge joke, coolly helped themselves, inviting all to participate in Ihe fun. Ju spite of considerable hesitation they did so, unable to resist the temptation of stolen fruit, livery moment (lie nervoitH women expected to see the rightful owners put in on appearance, every moment, they raised fresh scru ples, finally Marling a cheerful theory of poison, as if (hey hail some occult knowledge ol Jell Hands mumble re gret. This suspicion, vanished when not indorsed by any fearful signs of internal convulsion on (he part of (ho revelers, but it did not leave theso Western Cas simdras silent. When the big lires hud sunk to coals, and the men wcro exiled to find promiscuous resting-places in sheds, under wagons, or where they list, they formed in doubtful conclave. Perhaps tho people of the house were robbers who had enticed them all into (heir power. They had read of such things. What if they were already hopelessly entangled in some border mystery? It was too like an enchanted house for these' simple-minded folk to feel quite easy in it. If its owners had fled from Indians was tho danger not as great for them ? Oh ! these men, these men, they never would take anything seriously. With their travel-stained garments, their weather-beaten faces and weary eyes, these women gathered around the dying embers. Looking into one another's dim-seen faces they told ghost stories till neither dare glance behind her; told of Indians till their hair stiffened upward and in every corner the shadows capered through fantastic war dances. The sleet still fell at intervals; the women, tired of talking, at length set tled into a dozy condition, through which they could hear the supernatural squabbles of the mice and the occasional tattling of the windows, without being exciuueit iroin indulgence in more or less frightful dreams. I would like to say that the men en dured similar torments, but truth is stranger than fiction, and with one or two cantious exceptions, they jested themselves into the slumbers of the light-hearted, even snoring ; graceless wretches, the only comfortable sleepers within a radus of twelve miles. IV. Slowly, silently, the gray arms of dawn waved aside tho curtains from the awakening world. Shrill notes aroused the hen-roosts : from eaves, bushes and glass blades the sleet of the night before dropped into discouraged little pools, On the hill tops the flaming spears of morning tipped the beaded pine boughs wit ii rosy diamonds, men the royal light of day broke over them all, in danger and out ot it. Little children iliiirri'niT r i hoil TiinMmva ami lnnm'n r I fol. heaven as a place where there were no TndinnH ! wpavv editors iinlialiiiinr ntT , - i o w '- sanguinary items, determined spirits bound on vengeance ; women in fearful uneasiness all the cheering and cheer less phases of life on the border. The men at the ranch, while attending to their horses, were startled by the ap parition of a mounted crowd whom they at nrst mistooK lor Indians, then for desperadoes, but soou recognized as more terrible than either the frontiers men angry. Hiding up to the gate, their leader demanded in no gentle fashion the meaning of this occupation and the per sonality of the intruders. His manner did not suit hishearers. " Cuss words" came readier than explanations, weap ons were cocked, one unguarded move ment would have been the feignal lor a bloody contest. The women looked down from the windows, some of them sending up silent pravers. One of the campers stepped forward calmly. The softest-spoken, quietest man in the parti-. He greeted the grizzled and scowl ing giant before him with a deprecating smile. " Sir," he apologized, " we are will ing to pay for all we have consumed." " Hang your money. Wo don't want it Where's the girl?" "The girl I" repeated the puzzled mild man, "I assure you we would ne.er have intruded but for the fact that a lady with us had a sick child, and" " What's that to us V Where's Miss Kent, I say?" , " Excuse me, sir, but there was no person here when we came. W7as there, boys ?" Not a living thing !" was the answer. Some of the party inclined to tho belief that the opposite force were Mormons, on me track oi a runaway. Sands looked up at the windows, down at the ground, over the white tops of the wagons. "Look here," he said; 'this thing's enough to make a man swear his sal- votion away. We heard tho Indians was comin, an' cleared. Miss Kent.somehow, got missed, and was left behind. Here we come under tho cmistitui ton rf th United Stato-1, to send them redskins to blazes, and get back the girl. Wo find white men using other folks' things, making 'emselves at home, and not so much as a trace of Miss Kent. Your story's queer, to say, the least. Now we ain't to bo bought, nor yet scared off. Tell us whore tho girl is, or give up your shoot in' irons, and go with us to town. That settles it." "Old man," shouted a voice, con temptuously, "what do yon take ns for?" The women turned white; there was an instant of breathless silence. Neither parly wanted to give up, neither cared to open lire, and each believed his opponent to bo a villain. Suddenly a little girl in tho window gave a cry and pointed. There was Maudy Kent run ning toward (hem, her hair flying, her whole face radiant. Near the crowd she fullered, (ill sho got a good view of Captain Sands. She ran up beside his horse, and caught her old friend's large, rough hand. " I'm so glad (o sen you I" she cried, "so glad I Where's mamma?" The women craned their necks. The men edged forward or leaned over (he fence, (he very mules projected their enormous ears, and the true situation Hushed upon every tnind. Simultan eously nu immense dionm of laughter awoke (he echoes. Tlio mules brayed eiiiuloiisl v, and even thh pomes whinnied a lilllo ns the more iveiluliln ridel's almost rolled from I heir bucks in trans ports of merriment. The worse the scare hud been the greater the revulsion of feeling, and Maudy laughed with the rest. Well, ill (he lanr'tifign of chivalry, Glory laid snide his helmet mid Peace look the (lour. " Come and lake breakfast with U'4," said Ihe most delhi.nl camper. "We'll give you what's left I" Tho invitation was iiceciiloil, and over coffee, fried ba con and hot bi'ictiil, the late warriors ex changed friendly explanations. The women ipienl ioneil Mainly curiously, ami menially eniieir.oil the tasluoii ol her earrings. All the discomfort was smoothed owny. The scare, it seems, had arisen fnun a hilly youth's excite ment at sight of ii herd of ponies, when his ears were full of Indian rumors. The troubles along the border de creased with the cold weal her, but Mrs. Kent I beg vonr pardon, I mean the lain Mrs. Kent no longer keeps a stop ping place, though she has not lost that kindly feeding t iwnrd the miners notice able in most of mouilaiu women. One, however, is all she makes provision for, in tho ordinary course of her domestic arrangements. Captain Sands has been heard to de fend even the red-haired author of the scare from the unmerciful jeers of his companions, but on that subject ho is considered an unfair judge. As to Maudy, I can only state her interrupted wedding was never completed. She did not want to see George again, nor did that gentleman show any desire for her society. The matter was dropped by mutual consent, and before a great while she married one of tli3 very party that had given her such a night of terroi as sho hoped never to bo called on to live over ugain. Sjirinijiuld Hejtuliliatn. Power or the Plug Hat. The plug hat is virtually a sort of social guarantee for the preservation of peace and order. He who puts on one lias given a hostage to the community for his good behavior. Tho wearer of a plug hat most move with a certain se dateness and propriety. Ho cannot run, or jump, or romp, or get into a fight, except at the peril of his headgear. All tho hidden influences of the bearer tend toward respectability. lie who wears one is obliged to keep the rest of his body iu trim, that there may be no in congruity between head and body. He is apt to become thoughtful through the necessity of watching the sky when ever he goes out. The chances are that ho will buy on umbrella, which is an other guarantee for good behavior, and tho care of hat and umbrella perpetual and exacting as it must be adds to the sweetness of his diameter. The mau who wears a plug hat takes naturally to the society ol women, with all its ele vating tendencies. He cannot go hunt ing or fishing without abandoning his beloved hat, but m the modern enjoy. inent of croquet and lawn-tennis ho may sport his beaver with impunity. In other words, the constant use of a plug hat makes a man composed in manner, quiet and gentlemanly in conduct and the companion of ladies. The inevitable result is prosperity, marriage and church membership. Bungs. The bung is a homely device, lacking altogether tho symmetry of an obelisk and having little even of tho grace which corks often possess. But wher ever liquids are contained in casks or barrels there must the bung be also. It is almost impossible to estimate the quantity of bungs made and used annually, but the number is well up in tho millions. They are mado of wood well-seasoned, and are cut by machinery which is patented. In no country are so many bungs made as in the United States, for nowhere else are the woods which are used so plentiful. Oak, hick ory, spruce and pine are among the varieties utilized, and the bung facto ries are scattered about the country in tho neighborhoods where the woods used are found. By cutting the bungs bofore shipping the cost of transporting the waste material is saved. A great many bungs for beer casks are sent both to Germany and England from this country,. not because they are better, but because they are cheaper than those made abroad. Bungs are cut oy pecu liar and ingenious machinery, which works against the grain of the wood, tapering the bung with the grain. In many cases the taper is made but slight iu tho cutting, and then the bung is submitted to a powerful compression to increase the taier The outside fiber of the coooanut is now used for shoe-heels, and is said to bo a good substitute for leather. Florida Oranges. The orange culture in Florida amonntcd to little or nothing before the war. Northern industry and methods have found their way into the State since, and gave this cultivation a remarkable impetus. Ten years ago even the product amounted to but little. Now it brings millions to the State, and its in crease for the next ten years can hardly be estimated. General Cameron was taken recently by ex-Senator Yulee. a friend and former associate, who repre sented Florida in the Senate thirty-five years ago, to seo the largest orange grove in the world. This was the first time they had met since Mr. Yulee left tho Senate for the South in 1861, and the renewal of the friendship between the two has been ono of the pleasing incidents of the stay in Florida. Colonel Duffy and myself were invited to ac company the porty, and did so. Long boforo we reached the great grove to ward which wo were tending there were patches of orango trees to be seen on every side, many of them with the golden fruit still hanging to the branches. Beautiful flowers bloomed in the black muck, and early vegetables wcro just springing up. A little later the (rain dropped us in the midst of 75,0(10 orango trees, covering over 400 acres of ground. A perfect wilderness of orange trees, apparently not culti vated with care, certainly not planted regularly, but just as nature had sown the wild seed. The wild lnxurianco of nut tiro had, however, been curbed by man, who in pursuit of wealth had turned vinegar into honey, and by graft ing on the sour trees the finer sweet va rieties, had snatched from the wilderness an income of over 8-M),000 a year, General Cameron rambled with us over tho place, oil of ns plucking tho golden fruit, ad lib., and imagining ourselves iu (lie veritable Garden of l.den earth, air and sky, soft, balmy and ethereal, combining to lix the illusion and were only brought back to a realization that we were fifty miles from our hotel by an exclamation from ono o( the party "By Jove, we're lost!" This fact soon became apparent to us all, and just think of it you who are bound by bands of thii-k-rildieil ice lost m on orango grove in Florida! General Cameron enjoyed the joke, and busied himself eating the fruit plucked with his own hands. Many of tho trees were laden with fruit of immense size and beautiful color, although much of the crop had been gathered One of the tempting sights in the grove was the grape fruit, of great size and beautiful lemon color. It is said to bo the forbidden fruit of tho Garden of Eden. It is use less, except to look r.t and for preserving, although it is eaten by some. It has a sour, iusip'd taste. Lemons of immense size, growing upon small trees, now and Mien tottcd the orchard. After an hour spent in looking over the grove we, one by one, found our way back to the pack- ng-house, where the superintendent told us that 13,000 boxes of oranges had been shipped this season from one-half of (he grove over which we had been rambling ; that means 1,800,000 oranges, for which tho owner had been oflered $35,000 while the fruit was on the trees " How many years does it take for an orange grove to come into bearing?" 1 asked the superintendent. "Eight years from the seed, and about five years if grafted or budded on to the wild fruit. That is, I mean to say they will bear in eight years from the seed, and in five years from the graft. They constantly grow better and bear more oranges every year. No man can tell how long the tree will be useful cer tainly more than 100 years." Mr. Fairbanks, the historian of Flor ida and an eminent authority upon the orange, says that, an average tree will boar, season m and out, 700 oranges, and that where they are grown from the seed or transplanted regularly, about sixty trees to the acre would. lie a fair average. Theso sixty trees in a fair season would yield -12,000 oranges, worth at the grove $840. This is a cold, reliable estimato of what an ordinary orange grove will do; many will do more, and still more will do less, but $840 worth of fruit upon an acre of ground will strike the Northern fanner as being decidedly profitable. Boston llrahl. A Dwarf Who Wears a Man's Hat. John McConnell is the name of the smallest man iu the coal region and one of the smallest men in the world. Un like many other small men, he is only noticeably small in the matter of height. His head, the breadth of chest and size of waist are those of a fully developed man. To see Mr. McConnell take a seat on an ordinary chair would bring a smile to a bronze statue of grief. He climbs upon it like a three-year-old, and when once seated his feet dangle six inches from the floor. He has a pleasant and intelligent-looking face, which he keeps closely shaved. He will bo thirty-two years of ago on the twenty-fourth of June, and stopped growing a good many years ago. He was born in Vermont, and came to tho coal regions of Pennsylvania nine years ago. He wears a 71-8 hat and measures thirty-six inches around tho chest. His arm measures sixteen inchea from tho shoulder to the tip of his middle finger. His legs measure eight tgen inches in length. Ho wears a No. 2 boot. He stands three feet eleven and a half inches with his boots on and weighs eighty-six pounds. Pottxcille Pa.) Journal. The Calculation or Interest. A well-known actuary, has devised a very simple and easily remembered rule for determining how long it will take a given sum of money to double itself at a certain rate of interest. Divide the rate of interest into seventy-two and the quotient will be the number of years to within a small fraction. Thus, at four per cent, interest, the answer is eighteen years, which is only one-quarter of a year too great, the exact time being about seventeen and three-quarter years. For six per cent., it may be said to be exact. This is a good rule for editors and other large capitalists to remember. The New Xork Commercial expects that when Bowel' dies his legs will be buried in wes nun iter Abbey. CURIOUS FACTS. A tree bearing thirty bnshi Is of apples is really sustaining half a ten of wat.tr, for water constitutes about eighty-five per cent, of apples. A brick of gold measuring twelve by seven by four inches is worth al out 875,000. Such a brick represents one month s product of one of the hydraulic mines of California. The rings noticed in tho wood of a tree cut across have been considered an index of the age of the tree counting one ring for each vear. but this does not hold in all species. A treo eighteen years old has shown, when cut, thirty six distinct rings. Nerve impulses are conducted along the nerves very slowly in comparison to me speed oi electricity along a copper wire. The latter travels sixteen million times as fast as a nerve impulse, and yet the nerve impulse travels with the speed of the fastest railroad train. There is no tide perceptible in tho Mis sissippi river after you have passed up about thirty miles from its mouth, and the tide only rises from one and a half to two feet at Balizo. The number of tributaries (the Ohio, Missouri and so on) which help to flood tho Mississippi and swell its volume of water, gives it that downward current which over comes every resisting influence, even the tidal. Catgut, it is stated, was used in the earlier watches in place of chains, the latter, it would seem, being first at tached to such mechanisms in the gold en egg or acorn-shaped watches of Hans Johns, of Konigsberg. Some of this maker's timekeepers had small wheel lock pistols to serve as an alarm, an addition that would go far to upset tho equable temperament and delicate sus ceptibilities of a modern chronometer. Female Smugglers. A New York paper says: Sho walked off tho steamer Germanic on to the dock with dignity and au evident con sciousness that she knew what sho was about. She wore a silk mantle, whose bottom was tucked in. This haviivi' been pulled down a largo quantity of valuable black lace a foot deep was found to be tacked on the garments with stitches eight inches long. Tho woman boldly claimed that the lace was for her personal use, and that she had a right to sew it and wear it in any manner she pleased. " There being no means of disproving her statement she was re leased. (Now hear the twitter of sat isfaction among the ladies, that for once tlioso odious custom-house ruffians have been outwitted But see what followed.) A moment later two women quit the steamer, whoso apparel also attracted tne captains attention, and ho gave them in charge of the lnspoctre.ss. One wore a new silk dress that did not fit her around the waist by four inches, anil the other, under her ulster, had on a magnificent silk cloak trimmed all over wi'h beads, and reaching to the ground They abused Captain Adams in the most voluble manner, and threatened him with all sorts of disasters for put fing such an indignity upon them. At length, when the elder paused an in stant to catch her breath, the captain took advantage of the opportunity to ask whether she would candidly answer a question or two. deceiving an alhrm ative response, the following colloquy took place: " Are vou a dressmaker ?" " I am." "Do you intend to offer thosefcOods you are wearing lor sale ? ' " I do, if I can get a customer for I them," "Did you put them on with the in- ! j tention of evading payment of duties?" "ldul. But i havo been instructed that I have a right to bring in free of duty anything I can wear." Captain Adams said that there was a difference of opinion on that point, and j informed the deputy surveyor present of his discovery. The women were told that the goods were liable to seizure, and they then offered to pay the duties. This was agreed to, and an appraiser was sent for. When the silk cloak was being removed by the inspectress. for his examination, she noticed that it was unusually heavy, and asked the reason. ! One of the women replied that it was made so for purposes of warmth, but on closer investigation the inspectress dis covered evidences of " tacking," and in a few moments, by the rupture of a few stitches, had resolved the apparently single cloak into two, both equal in costliness and beauty. The women paid the amount demanded, which was 8120, without another word. A Woman's Foot Blown Off by Light niug. A woman named Galligan, who re sides in Castle Grove, Iowa, was struck by lightning while engaged in her houshold duties about the cooking stove. The electric fluid seems to have struck the chimney, tearing and setting on fire the end of the house, demolish ing the stove and striking. Mrs. Galli gan's foot, tore it to pieces and then escaped through tho door. The fupt was mutilated and shattered as though blown to pieces by dynamite or some other terrible explosive. The heel of ono of her shots was driven hidf through the floor. The most singular feature of tho allair is that Mrs. Galligan was not stunned or shocked by the stroke, and with great presence of mind drag ged herself to a tub of water, extin guished the flames, and then crawled to the door and summoned her hufbvnd. V doctor was sent for without delay, and amputated the foot just above the ankle foiut. Travelers in Egypt are surprised at tfie large amount of opthalmia and blind ness prevalent among the inhabitants. Want of cleanliness is the cause. An Egyptian mother, under the influence of a widely prevalent superstition, does not wash her child's eyes until eight days after birth. By that time the organ is frequently ruined. The teachers in the American and British mission schools of Cairo say that Egyptian mothers become invariably angry "when urged to wash 1 the eyes of their newly-born infants, and can rarely be persuaded to comply with a request of the kind. Mysterious Disappearance. 'Come little pet,"the old birdiud, In most endearing term, ' You must be e irly out of bel If you would cstch the worm." The smallest of the feathery herd A puny little thing Outeprang the tender baby-bird, To grab for worms and sing. And lo I Bbe found an early worm It was a monster, too She chirped: " Oh you may writhe and squirm But I will gobble you 1" That birdling'8 chirp, the rest affirm, Was never uftcr heard, And it's surmised it was tho worm That caught tho early bird. HUMOR OF THE DAT. A crying evil A cross baby. A backward spring gnirps, Tho scale of good-breeding B nat ural. A poor relation Telling an anecdote badly. A fish would be real nice it aidn t drink. What word is always pronounced wrong, even by the best scholars? Wrong. Some ladies are so fond of dress that they have their meals served on fashion plates. Ewe, go to grass, as Mary said to her little lamb when sho sent it out to get its meals. It's easy enough, after you get your hand in," was the reply of the criminal with the fetters on his wrist. WTien steamboat passengers talk too much to the captain he can always find relief by shouting: " Man over-bored 1" Picayune. Tho moral of " Josh Billings' " suc cess is a very bad one lor boys, is shows how much money can be made by bad spelling. We have seen spring bonnets with sixteen full-blown poppies on them. The young ladies' poppies have to pay dearly for them. The young man who would scorn the idea of being a farmer is the very one who is apt to be on expert in sowing " wild oats." Meriden Hecrder. " Is that mule tame ?" asked a farmer of an American dealer in domestic quadrupeds. ' " He's tame enough in front," answered the dealer. Josh Billings says that " a good doc tor is a gentleman to whom we may pay three dollars a visit for advising us to eat less and exercise more." It is said that a long upper lip indi cates a certain degree of good nature. But the less lip, the better nature on the part of the unwilling listener. "Yes," said the schoolgirl, who had risen from tho lowest to the highest position in her class, "I shall have a horseshoe for my symbol, as it denotes having come from the footl" A stranger in St. Louis, thinking he recognized his coat on the back of a pe destrian, shouted: "Stop Thief!" and about thirty of the inhabitants suddenly disappeared down a side street. Child at table devours gluttonously her fnod. Mother, with gentle reproof " Well, what does baby say to kind nnrsey that brings her oil these good things ?" Babv, with her month full "More." It has been estimated (hat the common fly moves its wings 330 times per second, and 10,800 times per minute. The calculation was m de by a bald- headed man, one day last August Jeo A'ork jVflir.i It runs thuswise: " There came to our cabin ono morning in spring, a sweet little robin. Ho came there to sing, but tho cat was attentive, and watched from afar till the robin, all heedless, was killed like a czar." Derrick: A Milwankeo girl, suffering from lockjaw, was left alone with a mouse by a shrewd physician, and she con grived to open her mouth enough to tive a yell that made tho crockery in the china closet rattle. In the year 1880 America issued sev enty patents to women. And not one of these was an indicator to be attached to a bedpost to show if there is a man under the Vied. And yet think how much getting down on hands and knees such a thing would save women. Bos ton Past. It is not pleasant to have the barber's, apprentice practicing upon you, lay open your cheek with a two-inch gash, and then follow tho cut with the cheery remark, " Skin's very tender, sir." It is not pleasant. We don't know what it is, but it isn't pleasant. Burliwjto Hawkeye. Died While Laughing. A singular and fatal accident occurred at Jackson, Miss., recently. Mr. W. Bailey, chancery clerk of Madison county, in company with Mr. T. Wharton, of Jackson, was eating diunerat a restau rant. During the meal, while engaged iu friendly and sociable conversation, allusion was made to the strange and sad fate that befel the late Walter Brooks, of Yicksburg, who was choked to death by eating au oyster. Mr. Whar ton said something further, which dis tracted Mr. Bailey's attention and caused him to laugh, and, a fow second after, it was noticed that the latter gen tleman appeared very sick, and was gasping for breath, Mr, Wharton and others immediately attempted to relieve him by carrying him to the door and slapping him on the back, but without avail. Physicians were sent for, but before they arrived Mr. Bailey was dead, and it was beyond the power of medical skill to revive lain, ne had inadvert ently swallowed a piece of beef, which became lodged in his throat and choked hi'u to death There are on Long Island forty ilsh culturists. Some of them breed trout for the market, and others let fish privileges to sportsmen in the season. Seth Green says that an acre of good water can be made to produce twico as much food as an acre of land. 7