IIP' I r in i . HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL. DESPERANDUM. Two , Dollars per Annum' ; VOL. XI. RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1881. NO. 39. A Thanksgiving. I bring my hymn of thankfulness To Thoe, dear Lord, to-day j , Though not for joys Thy name I bless .. And not for gifts I pray. The griefs that know not man's redress . Before Thy feet I lay. Master 1 I thank Thee or the sin That taught mine eyes to see What dopths of loving lie within The heart that broke for me J What pntienco human want can win From God's divinity. 1 thank Thoe for the blank despair, When friend and love forsake, That taught mo how Thy cross to boar, ' Who bore it for my sake, And showed my lonely soul a prayer . That from Thy lips I take. I thank Theo for the life of grief I share with nil below, Wherein I lern tlie 8040 relief Sly brother's heart to know, And in the wisdom taught of pain , To soothe and sharo his woo. I thank Theo for the laoguid years Of loneliness and pain, When flesh and spirit sawed in tears, But scattered not in vain ; For trust in God and faith in man Sprang up beneath the rain. I thank Thee for my vain desires, That 110 fulfillment knew ; For life's consuming, cleansing lires, That searched mo through and through, Till I could say to Him : "Forgivo 1 They know not what they do." What fulluofa of my earthly storo, 'Vhat Hliiuo of harvest sun, What ointment on Thy feet to pour, What honored raco to run, What joyful song of thankfulness, Here ended or begun, Shall mate with mine, who learn so late To know Thy will is dono 1 Rose Terry Cooke. THE MISSES TEMPLETQN'S TEAPOTS. "Well, ef it don't beau all ! I'm struck all of a heap 1" "An what's more," pursued the striker, leaning a little farther from his wagon, and speaking through tightly shut teeth, as if thereby the sound would be prevented from passing be Tond the listener, " there ain't no backin' down, as yon might think. If ever yon seen a f nee sot, you'd 'a seen it this mornin; an' she lookin' back all the time, too, as if I was carryin' her to the vault in the lower graveyard. I de clare I'd just, about as soon. I hain't got over it yit." " lint, for the land' sake, why didn't Dianthy stop her?" "Past stoppin'. These still folks, when they do take the bit between their tenth, don't stop for 'whoa.' Di anthy wasn't up, nnther. Yon'd ought to hev seen her when I druv up with Lncindy. Sho caine higher speakin' out when I handed in that hair trunk than she's done for ten year. But I guess the town '11 be in an uproar when it knows, lb ain't agoin' to allow it." "How '11 it hender it, Lamson, I'd like to know?" ' Don' know," said the first speaker, "but there's got' to be a way found. Why, this mornin' Jliram come out, an' his wife, too. They're good sort o r Iks ef they do run the town farm, an' Hiram sez : Now, Miss Templeton, I told you before, an' I tell you now agiu, 'taiu't no use. You ain't a pauper, and you jest can't an' shan't change off.' ' I've settled it,' sez she, hard an stiff as Dianthy herself 'You're bound to keep Lucindy, an' ef I chooseto change place with Lucindy, it's nobody's busi ness but my own. Ef you won't let her go, I'll stay here whether or no. Town ineetin' ain't till spring, an' I've made op my mind. There ain't nothin' but death can change it.' Lncindy dim np to the Beat before Hiram could inter fere, an' I druv off, an' how they'll settle it I can't say, but there she is. The last words I heard her say was: 'Hiram, there's no peaco for ma anywheres but here, an here I mean to stay.' " "She's out o' her mind," said old Hubbard, picking up the rake dropped in his first surprise " There'll have to be a special meetin' called, an' I'll see about it this very day." " Better let folks manage their own affairs," returned Lamson, gathering up the reins. "I don' know as I'd a druv her over if I'd undeibtood exactly what she wanted; an' then agin I don' know. But I will Bay I thought I'd like to see how Dianthy would take it. It beats me. Chloe Ttmpleton in the poorhouso, an' them Templetons 'ith money enough to buy you 'n me out this minute." ' '"Twouldn't take no great to do that," said old Hubbard, returning to his work, astonishment still predomi nating in his leathery face; and Lamson drove on, the tall figure of a woman appearmg in the open doorway of a house above, as if she had been watch ing the interview, - and were half dis posed to speak. . Hubbard made a step forward as if uncertain whether to speak or not, but retreated suddenly as the door shut with a bang. "Templeton temper," he said, shaking his grizzled head; " but who'd 'a thought Chloe had any of it ? I cal'late she got desprit, an' struck out for any kind 0' a cliange, an' I don't wonder nuther;" and with an other shake he settled to work, pausing at intervals to ejaoulate, " Well, it beats me 1" ... gHalf way . up Breakneck, so towering and assertive a hill that anywhere but in New Hampshire it must have been a mountain. Even now its claims to that title were not to be disregarded. Year after year the .selectmon threatened to labor no longor on a road more and more given over to gullies and sudden email laud-sJ'ies and big stones, which, appearing, mrsteriously Ju the wav. could never be accounted for save by diabolio agency.- Year after year the two or three farmers who tempted rroviaenoe dj a permanent wrestle with the thin layer of soil barely hiding the granite below, gathered to work out the road tax, the patient oxen painfully marking out the deep furrow on either side, and pondering why human beings should make so much evidently useless wort both 10 men and oxen. Why Isaiah Templeton had chosen Breakneck pastures, when river mead ows fat with corn and wheat lay be low, he never told, but the choice had been made. Half way np the hill. A turn in the road, and between two rocky pastures, where sweet-fern and brake disputed place with every root of grass, a strip of land, every stone long ago laboriously removed, and entering into the well-built wall on either hand. On the pasture side raspberry bushes and wild grapes and rambling vines in general had it all their own way, but Isaiah Templeton's life-long fight with weeds had not been unavailing, ond Dinnii his oldest born, piirouHiJ them with an even greater vigor and determination, affirming that hud every farmer done his duty half as well Canada thistles would have been con fined to Canada, and daisies havo be come an extinct species. Diantha, Althea and Chloe strange names for the three middle-aged women in the weather-Btamed house with sloping roof, where mosses grew in spite of Miss Diantha, and on whose sides a faint red still lingered, though sixty years had passed since it first showed bright against the dark wood behind and above it. Whatever latent poetry in the rusty little farmer had prompted the names had died with him, Watts' hymns being the nearest approach to such frivolity tolerated by either Diantha or Althea, two grim and deter mined females, with faces as hard as the stones that made up most of their patrimony, and who, through Miss Chloe's girllod,had carefully repressed the tendency to sentiment less sedu lously hidden then than now. Years had thinned Miss Chloe's hair, sharpened still more the nose sharp in the beginning, tipped it with a frosty red, and printed crow's-feet about the faded blue eyes, always a little per plexed and troubled always gentle and apologetic, and filling with tears as quickly as in her silent and sensitive girlhood. Life held small leisnre. Books were a waste of precious time, and more and more butter and cheese the chief end of woman; and thus Miss Chloe's sentiment found no outlet save in the flower bed, which, in spite of Miss Dianthy's arguments, held its place under the south window, and in summer filled tho little sitting-room with a perfume altogether out of place in those upright quarters. In the old hair trunk, well hidJen between towels and pillowcases, lay Miss CI l.o's chief treasure a time-worn copy of Mrs. Hemans, bearing on the fly-leaf in cramped letters the inscrip tion: "To Miss Chloe Templeton, from her well-wisher, Josiah Green." Something more than a well-wisher Josiah would willingly have been, but Miss Diantha had set her face against it, and Josiah, after a short period of de jection, married pretty Sophy Downer, and slept now with his fathers in the old graveyard. For years Miss Chloe kept the little book folded in tissue paper and laid away, but with the fune ral took it out as if death Rave a right, unelaioiable before, and read and wept over it at night, the only time when fcharp ears and eyes and tongues gave her respite from continuous observation and direction. For both Diantha and Althea quarrel ing was as their daily food. What cue wanted the other did not, and all day long the hard voices sounded from kitchen or pantry, Chloe cringing as they rose and fell, but silent os years had taught her to bo. Miss Althea pre ferred " salt risin's;'' Miss Diantha, " hop 'east, strong"o' the hops." Miss Althea demanded pumpkin pie without eggs; Miss Diantha pronounced them, in that condition, "not fit. for pigs." Miss Althea demanded Orange Pekoe, steeped; Miss Diantha, Oolong, boiled. Miss Chloe in her private mind clung to Young nyson, but would have drunk gall and wormwood rather than make any difficulty in fact, may be said to have done 60 in any ease. Miss Diantha, as eldest, threw out the Orange Pekoe, rinsed the teapot viciously, with expres sions of deep disgust at the fatal blind ness of any creature who would drink such stuff; and stood guard over the stove until the tin teapot cave out the rank steam sho loved to sniff. With many desires for revolt, none had yet come ; but one morning Miss Althea, having watched the operation up to boiling-point, both for herself and teapot, determined upon active meas ures, and suddenly seizing it ran across the road and threw it with all her force over the fence bordering the "gully wood road," where, bounding from stone to stone in the almost sheer descent, it lay at last in the brook be low. Miss Diantha, for the moment speech less, poured out, as breath returned, a torrent of rage on the triumphant Mies Althea, who took down an earthen tea pot from the shelf and proceeded to scald it. " As sure as I'm a living sinner, I'll break it if you put it on the fire," said Miss Diantha, a new grimness in voice and eye. "Try it," said Miss Althea, defiantly. "I calculate you'll find more'n one kind o' tea kin be drunk in this house. I've stood you some years too much, an' as fast's you break, I'll buy. You hain't forgot the will, an' that all expenses has got to be equally shared by the three, or as many as lives. It '11 be a leetle hard on Chloe, but then she's used to your imposin' on her, an' a grain more won't make much difference." " Sisters," Miss Chloe began, in an agony of tremulousness and apprehen sion, "for mercy's sake I Oh, dear! how can you ? Why don't we each have a teapot, an' why didn't I think of it before? There's one for each, and a caddy apiece too the little ones grand father brought home. Oh, don't look that way, Dianthy, an' Althy too To think that we're all sisters, an' alone in the world ! For pity's sake !' , "Be still I" said Miss Diantha, im peratively. " An' now, Althy Temple ion, you hear my last word to you. When you say you're sorry for this morning's work I'll say baok, an' not before. The will's fixed so't We can't split nor divide, an long as we live there's got to be three in the house. Well, I wouldn't split if I could. Folks '11 ask, an you kin tell. I'm done." Done, truly. Eight years had passed, and not one word had Miss Diantha been heard to speak. If direction wa3 needed she wrote on a slate and handed it to Miss Chloe, who acted as mediator and interpreter. ' Confident that a day would end it Miss Althea had gone her way, missing more than she would have told the war of words which, after all, had been only wovds a family privi lege never destroying a certain family feeling holding its place under all assaults. But as day after day went by without a sign she, too, grew more and more determined, and if an occasional opasm desiro or th o Eerhaps abetter state of things visited er, she put it sternly away. Daily the two faces settled into harder and harder lines; daily Miss Chloe's eyes 'grew more apprehensive. The three caddies she had filled at once, the time for some decisive action on her part seeming to have come at last beyond any question, and daily she took down the three teapots, hidden for years in the recesses of the upper sheif of the china closet one old blue, the last piece of a set long ago scat tered or destroyed; one a tiny Wedg wood, a great-aunt's property, and last, the bronze-colored earthen their mother had sometimes used. The three had each its own place on the stove, and curious neighbors, who had heard there was "something beyond the common goin' on at the Templetons' " looked at them with suspicion as in some way ac countable for the difficulty and at last with a shake of the head as the silence refused to yield. The minister argued and pleaded, tho deacons came singly and in a body, exhorting and threaten ing suspension of church privileges, and the parish was in a ferment, till a new cause for discussion arose in another quarter, reverting to this, however, with surprising constancy. By degtees Miss Althea had grown almost as silent as the elder sister, whoso life Beemed a black shadow, dark ening even the sunshine of summer or the golden light of autumn on the hills. MiBS Chloe grew more haggard every day, and her forlorn blue eyes, red rimmed with much crying, brimmed over for months, as she looked appeal in gly from one to another. Anything was better than this hard, grim silence, and the two faces always with averted eyes. "Oh, why didn't I think of these three teapots before?" Chloe moaned to the old minister. " Such an easy way out of all the trouble; an' there I let it go on, an' now I shall always be responsible." No argument availed against this con clusion, and no length of time proved sufficient to overthrow it. Months ran into years at last, but time seemed never to deaden the continuous self-reproach of this Templeton, who had absorbed the conscience of the whole generation, aud who sought vainly to reconcile ir reconcilable forces. "When an irresistible wave encounters an immovable rock, what is the result?" bad questioned Leander Lamson, home from Dartmouth, and overflowing with Sophomorio logic; and old Lamson, after a pause for reflection, answered: " Tarnal smash for whatever comes be tween." Miss Chloe had come between, and her looks indicated something equiva lent to "tiraal smash ' Lucinda Wetherbee, once the owner of a small but profitable farm, had "signed" for her brother, a luckless scamp, who fled to the West when the nnal crash came, leaving Lmcrnda at sixty to lace it as she might. The end was the town farm, where the poor creature went for life, too crushed by the sud den cessation of all the small activities that had made her world to think of other methods. Her mind failed par tially, and she appeared periodically at houses she had been accustomed to visit, complaining that the society at the town farm was not what she had been accustomed to or expected, and that " she'd come to stay a spell an' git the taste out of her mouth." When Miss Chloe had made the ar rangement and agreement to exchange, she refused to tell, answering every in quiry in tho same unvarying words: "We thought we'd each hev a change." She took up her life on the hill as if born to the place, and, to the astonish ment of every one, Miss Diantha ac cepted the change with no break in the immovable silence. Bat when the select men appeared and appealed to her to end the scandal and go in porson for the sister, who had banished herself in tho hope of bringing about peace, she listened till even old Lamson had said his last word.and then.having written for a few moments, laid the .slate on the table and left the room. " She's got a dumb devil," said Dea con Piper, as he read slowly; " 'Chloe has made her own bed, and she can lie in it. She chose to go, and she can stay. If yon will not have her any other way, I will pay her board.' " Miss Althea went to the town farm but once, fury of anger possessing her as she crossed the wretched thresh old, and venting itself in words that brought terror to every one within hear ing distance. Underneath the storm hurt feeling and affeotion really lay, but Chloe had passed beyond any power of interpreting the perverse and tumul tuous manifestation. She lay back in her chair with closed eyes, her patient face a little more patient, and slow tears falling one by one. " When Diantha comes for me, I'll go back," , was all she would say, and Miss Althea, worn out with her own vehemence, went unwillingly away. The winter went by, Miss Althea waiting upon Lucinda " by inches," as the neighbors said, as if in this way to atone for past lack toward Chloe. The reluotant New England spring came slowly on, and in the " Devil's Gully," by the mill, . faint green showed here and there between the linirerinsr drifts. The road to the town farm, seldom used. had been almost impassable, but Hiram at Intervals had brought word that " Jliss Chloe was about the same, fur's he could see, but maybe her own folks could tell better." The hint passed without notice till one evening in early April, when a messenger rode swiftly up Breakneck and burst into the house where the three sat by the dim lamp, Lucinda keeping up her monotonous flow of words, the two sisters silent. "She's dyin'," he said. "The doc tors said she might livejill you got there." ' "Who?" Miss Althea had risen, and stood now, fierce and rigid, clutohing the fright ened boy as she spoke. "Miss Templeton," he said, strug gling away. "Hiram told me to get you a team." "Run, then," Miss Althea screamed. " The fastest Viall's got. Tell him to be quick." JjUClnda traxol InK luud Ctrinir. "Be still, you fool I" rang out Miss Diantha' s voice, with its old sharp com mand. " I'm goin' on the hoss," and snatching her hood she ran to the gate, climbed from the long-disused horse-block to the horse's back, and with dangling stirrups and flappinar rein she held her place by sheer will, as the frightened animal tore down the hill and through the village street, still, as speed slackened, urging him on over the lour miles between ner and the chance of speech. Up hill and down. through thick wood and between low meadows, the rush of tho swollen river drowned in the clatter of hoofs, and at last the faint, twinkling lights of the farm. The horse stood with drooping head and streaming flanks as she slid from his back, and pushing aside the startled and curious group about the door went up the stairs and toward the room to which Hiram pointed. She passed swiftly in, the doctor and attendant were motioned out by a hand so imperative that none could cainsav it, and Diantha, bolting the door, turned to the bed, and after one loots at the motionless form upon it, fell on her knees and buried her face in tho cover let. " I thought you'd feel bad, Dianthy," Miss Chloe said, the words coming faintly, and as if from some remote dis tance. "I thought you'd come, an' I held out an' waited. There isn't any time now, but, Dianthy, you must prom ise me one thing. You must go home and let by-gones be by-gones. I want you to be good to Althea." Miss JJiantha raised her lace, white and set, as if death had touched her, too. She lifted her hand as she knelt. "Don't, Dianthy don't !" Chloe cried, trjing toiise. " .before you that I've killed, 1 swear it," said Miss Diantha, solemnly. "I've held my tongue for spite, an' I'll hold it now for punishment. The last word I sav to livm soul I ear to yon now, Chloe Temploton." "Oh, Dianthy, don't 1" wailed Miss Chloe, falling back on her pillow, end ing with this last appeal tho long en treaty of her life. When Miss Althea entered with the doctor, the elder sister sat motionless and silent by the bed. In silence she pointed to Miss Althea as the ono to make arrangements, and waited till nothing further remained to be done. In silence she rode home, and shut herself into her own room, ond there she remained till the hour for tho funeral, servicos, held in the oTd church on the common. From every quarter the people flecked in. No such opportunity had come for years of seeing all the actors in this vil lage tragedy, and iuiss JJiantna laced them oil with a composure that made the more sensitive shiver, and moved many to fierce anger. The old minister broke down as he tiwd to tell the gen tleness and patience of the soul that had passed beyond need of human words, and for an instant there was an ominous rustle, as if then and there judgment must be had on those who had lain on it a burden too heavy to be borne. Miss Diantha stood by the grave until the last shovelful of earth had been lain on, then turned and walked home, stopping for a moment at tho village store. hen Miss Althea and Lucinda returned her door was shut, and no sound was heard from the room until next morning. But as thev made preparations for tea Miss Althea saw tbut the three teapots and caddies had been removed, and that an earthen one and a tin caddy filled with Orange Pekoe stood on the lower shelf, and knew that by thU sign Miss Diantha had spoken, and renounced her will once lor lor all. Years followed. Lucinda lingered, unchanged in look, and clinging more and more to Miss Althea, who had aged suddenly when Chloe died, and who made oontinuod efibrlo to break Miss Diantha's silence. But though a cer tain wistfulnoss seemed at times to show itself, she only, when appealed to, shook her head solemnly, and retreated to her room. What secrets the old walls knew, who can tell ? What sor row and late repentance I But none knew till a morning came when, alarmed by the long silence, Miss Althea went in to find her with wide-open eyes, but powerless to move from the floor where she had fallen. In the open drawer of the old bureau lay Miss Chloe's Bible, the worn volume of Mrs. Hemans, and near them the broken fragments of the three teapots, each in a folded napkin. , A week of quiet waiting, and then in the hours between night and morning Miss Diantha suddenly lifted her head, " I thought you'd come, Chloe," she said, and with the words was gone. When her .will was opened they found, first, a legacy of one thousand dollars " to Hiram Steele and wife for kindness to mv sister Chloe," and then an order that on the plain tombstone erected for her should be simply the words: "Diantha Templeton, aged seventy-three. ' I was dumb. I opened not my mouth for shame.' And so at last people knew that the scorn and indignation, never quite lost even in the long years since Miss Chloe's death, had been acoepted as i'ust punishment, and that Miss Diantha tad known sorrow, and left this last message of tacit confession and repent ance, rper' ISatar, Many Uses for Apples. However we may esteem other fruits the apple is the main reliance in late winter or early spring, as there is little else in the way of fresh fruits. For cooking no fruit is equal to the apple, which is susceptible of being served 'in a great variety of acceptable forms, some of which are here suggested. Apple sauce is the form in which the fruit most frequently appears. To make the best requires the best apples. Select high flavored fruit, such as the Rhode Island Greening or Spit zenberg; pare and slice in thick slices, and put, with the needed quantity of sugar, in a dish with a tight-fitting cover. Some have a dish made for the purpose, but a tin pail with a good cover will answer. Set in a moderate oven and allow it to stew slowly until thoroughly done; good apples will need no water. Apple sauce so prepared is far superior to that made iu tho usual way. Next in popularity to apple sauce is Apple Pie. Stewed apples half an inch thick, between two flabbv crusts, is a caricature on apple pie. The apple pie is made with sliced raw apples, in a very deep plate, and as few plates are deep enough the sliced apple should be heaped up in generous measure. It is a mistake to spoil good apples with much seasoning. Cloves and allspice overcome the natural flavor ; a very little cinnamon, or minute bits of dried peel of a sweet orange develop it. In many families sauce and pie end the changes, whilo they ore really but the beginning of the list. Baked Apples. Either sweet or sour. Many have a notion that sweet apples are the only kinds for baking. They are indeed excellent, when sour ones cannot be had. But for the perfection of baked apples, Rhode Island Green ings are required.. Remove the core, fill tho cavity with sugar, sot in a bak ing dish with a little water, and bake rather briskly, and just before they are eaten pour over them a liberal supply of cream. Apples so treated are better than most of us deserve. Apple Dumplings. That person is not to be envied, whose recollections of childhood does not include apple dumplings" such as mother used to make." That kind will never be found again, but a fair approach to it may be hoped for. Hers were both boiled and baked, and wo never could tell which were best. Isn't the making of tho crust for boiled dumplings a lost art? Well, we can manage baked ones, and thero is less risk of failure, and conse quent danger to the digestion. Apple custard is not to be omitted. Pare and core the apples, stew in very little water until tender; pour over them a custard made in tho usual manner, and bake until the custard is done. Housekeepers find it difficult to select a pudding-dish large enough for this. Apple fritters are much liked by many. Rather large slices of apples are sprink led with sugar And cinnamon, allowed to lay for an hbur or so; they are then dipped in a batter of flour atiu eggs and fried in abundance of very hot fat; for these a wire frying basket is very con venient. They aro drained for a few minutes, ond served hot. U for des fert, they are dusted with powdered sugar when served, but if, as many pre fer them, to be eaten with meat, the sugar is omitted. knows Betty. All the clean bits and fragments of bread are dried crisp in tho stove oven with the door open, then oiieJ, and breadcrumbs are alwavs at hand. Sliced apples, breadcrumbs, sugar, cinnamon and a deep pudding dish. A layer of apples, tuar, spice. rumbs; apple- sugar, spice, crumbs': and so on nntil tho dish is full. Bakci Pax-Dovy on Apple Slcmp. Since wood fires and the oldbake-pan or skil let, with a cover to hold coals on the top, went out of fashion and use, an "apple slump has not been possible. An imitation ia made in a deep pan, and baked in an oven, but it is only a baked apple pudding. Probably the real thing can still bo found in the lumber camps, and in the few other localities where wood is the fuel, and the open fireplace has not given way to the stove. The apples are quartered: the bake-pan is lined at the sides with a crust; apples are put in, packed sol idly, some spice is used, and sufficient molasses, or part sugar ond part mo lasses, to sweeten; a top crust is put on, gashed to let the steam escape; the pan is set on the coals, and the coals put on the cover. Eaten hot with butter 1 Who can ever forget it ! The side crust baked before the juice came from the apples; it then became partly pene trated with syrup; the apples were done to a rich crimson mass. Talk about apple meringues and such flummery Here was richness ! American Agricul turist. The Five Tenors. A story is told in most Parisian green rooms of " The Manager and the Five Tenors." The manager had engaged a French operetta troupe to perform in a city of South America. He was the most polite and generous ol managers. He offered high terms, promised his Eroteges a benefit apiece, made the est arrangements for their comfort on the voyage ont, and at last had the sat isfaction of steaming off with them all. The day when they started was a fine one, and as soon as the shores of France had faded out of eight the company, to keep up their spirits, began to sing on deck. But very soon they stopped, and five gentlemen were seen to stare at one another with consternation, They were all five tenors. "Why, how is this?" cried one. "I was engaged as the only tenor." "That is my case, too," chimed in another, and so said they all. The manager had slunk down into the cabin during this altercation, but he was called np again, and was re quested to furnish explanations. "Calm your minds," he said, in a cheerful tone; " you are five tenors now, but I calcu late that four of you will be carried off by the vomito negro as soon as we land, and I promise that the one who survives shall be my only tenor." London Daily News, , . ' '- 1 A man, being tormented with corns. kicked his foot through a window, and he pane was gone instantly. FACTS ASD COMMENTS. Cyrus W. Field proposes to erect a memorial window at Williams collego to the late President Garfield. Senator Morrill, of Vermont, now seventy-one years of age, is the senior member of the United States Senate, and the youngest is Senator Aldrich of Rhode Island, now forty years of age. Some one has taken the trouble o collect statistics of the existing pawn brokers in the United British Kingdom. Their total number is 4,372, and during a single year they take in, it is esti mated, some 200,000,000 pledges. Re turns made by 731 pawnbrokers repre sent a business of 32,500.000 pledges, and the total of 200,000,000 is calculated for these returns. In order to make marching easier for the German soldiers, their feet are wrapped in linen soaked with lard. But on the march, especially where the boots are too big, the sticky mud will pull the boots off. During a parade before the emperor, not long since, the boots came off by tho hundreds, and a fatigue party had to be sent out to pick up the footgear. A New York man has a bee farm on the top of his house, within a few rods of the postoiliee. The bees have to fly to Central park to get at the blossoms to collect their honey. They come straight home to their hives, and know the spot where they are placed. It is said that the bees being so much above the streets ore not disturbed by the noises of the city. Mrs. Campbell, the wife of Alexander Campbell, founder of the Christian church, of which;President Garfield was a member, is a striking-looking woman of eighty years. Her hair is as black, her eyes as bright as in her youth, and her mental activity is remarkable. She reads ond writes often until past mid night, and is now engaged upon a vol ume of reminiscences of her husband. Mr. Whittier's days at home in Ames bury, Mass., are devoted to h;s books, with the exception of one hour in the forenoon ond one hour in the afternoon. During these intervals he ia always to be found at the postoiliee or reading the Boston papers in a book store, the townspeople watching with real rever ence tie tall, slender, white-haired poet. He occupies two furpished rooms in a pleasant home on Fiicnd street, Amesbury, and his life therein i3 that of a student simple and hardworking. There recently died in Oregon a mule that has a history that would fill a smal book. Ho was forty-six years old, and had been in the service of the govern ment for the past thirty-six years. He was known all over the coast as " Old Tom," and has been at different times stationed at almost every garrison on the coast. His funeral was attended by the quartermaster's department iu force, and his body interred with a feeling of profound sorrow at the loss of this old timer. A monument has been erected over his grave. The agricultural bureau est imates the wheat crop of the United States for the current year will bo 881,479,200 bush els. The yield of 1879 was 458,000,000 bushels; that of 1880 is now set at 498, 500,000 bushels. The decrease this year from last is therefore 117,000,000 bushels. On an examination of the table by States it appears thai there was a loss, as compared with 1879, in every Western State from Ohio to Colorado, excepting Texas. Oregon and the Ter ritories alone show any considerable in crease. Formers will get more for their grain, but consumers will have to pay more for their flour. It would astonish people in the coun try to know to what on extent fortuue lelliog is carried on in New York city. A fortune-teller, calling herself Madam Do London, was arrested a short time ago for swindling, for the business is contrary to a law which is seldom en forced, it is estimated that between fifty and a hundred of these adventur esses, for most of tbem are women, get a living by that business in New York. And most of the fools who allow these harpies to swindle t'.'era are women, says the Christian at Work, and many are women who dress well, too, and move in a pretty fair sort of social circle. They can hardly be set down as ignorant, for thoy keep np with the times, so far as reading goes at least, But they believe in fortune-telling just as firmly as the hopelessly ignorant, aud are duped in exactly the same way, Asiae irora me omections to it as a fraud and imposture, the whole business of fortune-telling is an agent of immor ality that ought to be sternly suppressed, A Sea Serpent Story, A good sea serpent story comes from Madras in the shape of reminiscences of Captain Taylor, when lying at anchor at lauie bay some years ago. One day an " enormous monster," about 100 feet in length, was seen advancing with snake-like motion round Green point into the harbor. The head appeared to le crowned with long hair, and the keener-sighted among the observers conld see the eyes and distinguish the features of the monster. The military were called out, and, after peppering the object at a distanoe of 500 vards. and making several palpable hits, it was observed to become quite still, the boats ventured off to complete the de struction. The " sea serpent " proved to be a mass of gigantio seaweed, which had been undulated by the ground swell, and had become quiescent when it reached the still waters of the bay. Probably if mariners would attack the " monster " in the same manner, when ever it is seen, we should hear little more of tbo sea serpent. ' The annual mail of the world contains 2,300,000,000 letters, and its telegraphic dispatches aggregate 111,000,000 in 79ar. Tho Frojr ond the Lily, I. In arching woods of piuo mid oak, Through which the cheerful sunlight broke, A pond loDg lay, by soft winds swept, And on its bosom lilie3 slept. A story of this pond I'll tell, Of homely frog and lily-bell. II. ." Twas In the summer month of June, When robin chirped his merry tune. That lily spoke to frog so free: "Oh, could I only leap like theo' But hero I am so still and lone, And dull as any old white stone. III. The frog then said to lily fair: "Just see me jump so high iu air;" But down he came into tho flood, ; And stoppod not till he Toaahed the mud. IV. Tho day was fino, tbo sky serene; A boat upon tho lake was seen. A man caught froggy by tho throat, And threw him in the fatal boat. The lily plucked by maiden fair, 1 Was placed upon her golden hair. JIonAL. The richest man may lose his gain, Tho poorest one may rise to fBm; Be not puffed up with self-deceit, Tho boaster always courts dofoat; Nor proudly say what you can do, But be mode&t, gentle, pure and truo. i. n. t. HUMOR OF THE DAY. The saddle horse knows enough of arithmetic to carry one. "I find that with light meals my health improves," paid the Esqnimau; and down went another candle. A little heat that can't be beat, the window open wide; a little breeze, a little sneeze, and you're the doctor's . prido. The Commercial Bttlktin says the man who does not advertise has it done for him finally, under the head of " failures in business." Vassar college has one small girl who will iu the hereafter be heard of in tho woman's rights societies. She de scribed " straw'' as being a hollow thing with a ten-cent man on one end of it and u twenty-cent drink on the other end. "You can't add different things to gether," said a school-teacher. " if you add a sheep and a cow together, It does not make two sheep or two cows." A little boy, the son of a milkman, held np his hand and said : "That may do with sheep ond cows, but if yon add a quart of water it makes two quarts of milk. I've seen it tried." A ypung gentleman who is very par ticular about the getting up of his linen wrote a note to his laundress, and at tao Eame time sent one to the object of his affections. Unfortunately, he put the wrong address on the envelopes and posted them. The woman was puz zled, but not in the least onended ; but when tho young lady read, " If yon rumple up my shirt-bosoms and drag the buttons eff the collar any more, as you did last time, I shall have to go somewhere else," she cried all the even: iog and declared she would never speak to him again. A Colorado Sunset. Standing upon the margin of a lovelv lake in the boeomjsf the nestling moun- tains above the beautiful village of Georgetown, in Colorado, one can see a sunset more brilliant and beautiful than was ever looked upon in the East, and which is only equaled by the virgin reach of reddening light which mellows into twilight shadows on the pluiua. I saw it on a summer evening when all nature was hushed in stillness. The fireflies shot through the growing dusk like sparkling lourics in Egyptian night. Overhanging forest and swart and blackened crag were reflected in the green waters of tho lake. Tho sun hovered, as in a fascinated spell, above the mountain tops, while rays of golden light, rlusned with crim son peek and turret on nature's battle ments, it seemed to glow and expand . like an opening rose, until it became full-blown, and cast its arrowy pencil ings for miles across the sky like a mighty flame. Then, as if ashamed of its boldness, it drew a veil of grayish mist about its face and blushed beneath it. The mist changed into a cloud shaped like a crescent, with ragged fringes flecked with gold, and in its wonderful aspect recalled tho legends of Mohammed's banner, red ond lurid be neath Asian skies. Even as I looked it changed. The darkening scarlet waa transformed to ruby brilliancy. Long lines of pallor whitened on the parti colored surface, side by side with golden lances, which seemed to flash from the glowing orb like dissolving rays. The enamored sky for one feverish instant caught and mirrored all the colors of the rainbow. Then again it darkened flushed and paled and drawing the hovering draperies of the night about it, sank out of sight. The stars came ont. The night-hawk poised on swoop ing pinion, shrieked above the forest solitude. The leafy murmur of the moaning pines took up the refrain and awoke the spellbound senses into life and action. The charm was gone, but the beauty lingered on the fancy like a beautiful memory. Omaha Herald. , Slates. Last year the capital stock invested in the slate trade in the United States was nearly 810,000,000, and the produce wa 600,000 equares, Pennsylvania alone producing 320,000. The largest quarry contains sixty acres and employs vjuu men. it was opened in 1855 and in 1880 turned ont 40,000 squares. The most durable slates are from Pennsyl vania and Maine, ?nd are dark bine and . blue black. Green, red, purple and variegated do not keep color well, and the red kinds are the most expensive. : The London Economist estimates the importation of food into Great Britain at present as forty per cent, of the to tal imports tff the country. 1-: )