HENRY A. PARSONS, VOL. XII. BIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 18. 1882 NO. 13. Voices of the Sea. Wakeful I lay at night and beard The pulsings of the restless sea. The morning surges Bounded like dirges From some far back eternity, Whose spirits from the deep are stirred, Awaking with the morning light, Again I listened to the sea; But with its surges We heard no dirgos, But only life's activity; Morning dispelled the gloom of night. At noon I sauntered forth to view The throbbing of that living sea; Still it was surging, But only urging All men to be both strong and froo Strong In the soul with conscience true. At closing day onco more I stood, Gazing across that mighty sea; Far ships were sailing, The light was failing; Time, lost in immortality, Was tho reflection of my mood. It is the mind, and not tho place, Our moods and not a varying voice, That fills with sadness, Or thiills with gladness, A soul whose onco great ruling choico Reflects in all things its own forco. WHERE SHE WAS. " I don't care I" "Well, I dono as I do I" And they had been just six weeks married, these two. .Pretty Sally Masters and Will Gray were poor people; he was a farmer, and sue om wonted in a factory in Lynn it wus like a new life to her to get ont into the sweet country, but she knew iiutmug ai an about larm work and cared less; it was all knew to her, and at first was very hard. Then she had a quick temper and a quick tongue, and Will was the only son of a widow and had always had his own way. i ; i i . - jxa luumur was aeau wnen ho mar ried bally, or he could not have nronglit a wife home to the lonely farm, for it would not support three people ns yet, though Will worked hard to make it pay; audtbeyear before he had received five hundred dollars from a railroad company for the right to run their road straight through his front yard. Ihis teemed afoitune to Will, ami he thought very little of the roud being vuy a iew roos jrora ms door, m com parison with the nmnc-y which enabled mm to unya woou-jot bordering on his farm and a piece of meadow on the other side. but wLen Rally cama there eh a com plained a proot deal of the nnisetlu engines made, nrd scolded to think tlx wagon never could come up to the door for Mie was afraid (o trot the trick in It, and the l ain lay on the olhcr side o) Doth road and rnuw.iv. However, a thiiig that can't be cured" must lie endmcd. po she tet hcisolf li ne endurance. But ImMer-mnkincr and cookinor wrrr- troubles to her, and to-day Will had Crumbled tt tho MiRnlts in 'tl-.A hntt,,,. and pushed his plate nwny at breakf ist because the buckwheat cakes were Rnm Sally hud been afraid they would froeze in the pantry, so aha (set them on tho nhelf above the stove, and they were epoiiea. TT -V - 1. j l i v i . xiuw cue wisnea mat sue nad nad a Home and a mother to teach her home duties, instead of being an orphan ever since suo could remember and worlrma ao many years in footoxj. Pnt Will never thought of that ; he fancied a woman knew housework if she did not know anything else, and ho had to take a long drive to-day and should miss the good breakfast he really ueuusu , uiiu ne ien very cross. He pushed his chair back and said; "I can't eat those things." "Very well, you don't need tol" snapped Sally, who was gust ready to cry, but would not show it for the world, - "I had ought to have some breakfast to go thirty miles on, and I'm goin' over to Mystio to day." " I hope 'n trust you'll get somethin' you can eat over there. I s'pose 'Phrony snows now to masegoodtnings. ' " I bet she does 1" said Will, emphat ically. How 'Phrony was a pretty, bricht. capable girl, Will's own cousin, and ho iiaa never thought of marrvinsr her. She was just like his sister, for till verv lately Uncle Dan had lived on the next farm, and the children had always piayea logeiner. But Sally had met Sophronia before and after her own marriage, and in her foolish heart had grown jealous of her beauty and capacity to do all kinds of home work. This morning the mention of Mystio, the village where Uncle Dan lived now, was the drop too much. Sally's face flamed and her eyes grew dark. " Perhaps you'd better staj to Mystio when you get there, p-eein' things aint to your likin' here 1" she said, with bit ter emphasis. "Mabbe I had, if yon can't learn how to cook vittles half-way decent," was Will's spiteful response. "I'm sure I don't caret" she an swered. Well, I dono as I do," he replied, and walked across to the barn. Sally was so angry that she flew round the kitchen as if she stepped on air; she was in one of those rages that exalt the body with the passion of the mind, and make any action easy while the inner temper lasts. It seemed to her as if she heard in her own ears the boiling of her rage ; she certainly did not hear out-door sounds at all; it was accidental that in stepping past the window she saw Will drive off down the hard road without so much as looking back to his heme. She had not heard the sleigh bells at all. If some one else had been there for her to talk to, probably she would have cooled down sooner; speech is a safety valve many times to an overburdened heart. Jr., Editor and Publisher. But she was all alone in the honnn. and tho nearest neighbor lived round a mil ont oi sigbt. And as she flew round putting the dishes away and setting back the table in that bare, silent room, its only out look sheets of dazzling snow, gray woods, with here and there a d all-green cedar, or a round, flat cjpress on the barren hill-Bide, and one expanse cf Btainless sunny blue above, her thouguts ran riot. She looked back to the time of her marriage, and scorned herself for hav ing believed Will ever loved her. Just for a few hard words ? you ask. Yes, only that. " Words break no bones," the pro erb says, but they break hearts, which is worse ; and words mean very much to a woman, though very little to a man. Will, by this time, was whistling along in the old sleigh, not thinking at all of his parting with Sally, but of the feed and flour he must buy in Mystio, the price of cranberries and tho probable weight of his pig it was so near kill ing time. But poor Sally, pitiable as well as blnmable, for to have a quick, high temper is worse for its possessor than for anybody else, still brooded over her trouble. She blamed Will for his hateful words, excused herself and pitied her self for her lonely, motherless life and inexperience, find planned a rrreat ruanv things to sny and to do that should show Will she would not be trodden on and abused weakly and meekly. She finished her active work, built up the fire and sat dowD to her mending ; but by this time she had come to tears she felt so sorry for herself and they dropped so last sne could not darn Just then the Morning train thun- dered by and spun out of sight round sharp curve. tone remembered that she must go out to the barn and gather the eggs, as she always did about that time she was so airaid to cross the road unless train had just passed. She did not put on her hood, for the day was so bright and her head was so hot with anger and crying that the cool air was refreshing but ran across nastily; tliere were plenty of eggs to-ciay, but she had no basket large enongn to noiii mem. and to tier aston ishment she found Will had not fed either the cow or the pig; and her abated anger rose to think that ho had gone off :ti l i i niuiiuub uumg uiu uarn worn. " That's a little too much," she said to herself. "I aint a-goin' to do his chores for him, anyway I I've got eiHugu to ao in tne house, and don' suit mister at that. If ho thinks he'i got a dumb slave to work ior him, he' van took. I" here the cow lowed and the pig took up his own gruntinsrcom pluiut. They had heard her voice and knew that there was a chance of break- fas). Bully had a tender, pitiful heart for un jut temper. "Poor critters," she eaid. " I dono as I had ought to be usrly to them 'cai!BO he's ugly to me. I'll run over and fetch a basket and fret mv hood and mittius anyway. Pil feed 'em, but I'm hound I won't clean 'em, so therel'1 and boiling over aain with fresh wrath she left tho barn and slammed the door behind her. iuoantime ill went on his wav to ulyatio, where ho arrived in due time, did his errands and went to Unole Dan's, where ho found a srood and abundant dinner; and a plentiful meal of chicken pot-pie, mashed potato, boiled turnips, new rve bread and baked Indian pudding put-him into ex cellent humor, bo th' wnen rnrony, who hail fcoeu iitiore too busv serving and eating to talk, asked. "How's bally ? he said, verv honestlv " Why, she's well, real well: but she got kinder put out with me this morn ing, and I don't blame her a bit, for begun it, kinder faultin' my breakfast. and I guess I mado her mad; shouldn't wonder." I TTI VTT '11111 . . uny, huh ' saia I'nrony. with an accent of reproach that said more than ner words. " 'T would be strantre if she did know about housework to once," said mild Aunt dray; "the never had no mother nor no folks bo's she could learn: ba sort o' scitiy to ner, will; she s a lone- some iittlo cretur, with nobody but you to hold on to, ye know." wills really kind heart beean to trouble him; he went out again into the street ostensibly to finish his errands, but really to buy Sally a rose-pink silk tie that would look so pretty in con trast with her rich dark hair and eyes, and perhaps cast a glow on her too pale, smooth cheek. 1' or Will had an instinct of taste in his nature, and knew very well how pretty and retined-looking his wife was even beside 'Phrony's less delicate and more blooming beauty. So he stepped into the sleigh and drove off, thinking how he would "make friends" with Sally, and how that dimple in her cheek would come and go, and how her lovely eyes bright en wnen sue saw tne pink tie. ine road seemed verv lonsr. for be knew he had left home in a passion. and now he was sorry. He got there at last, just before sundown, and driv ing into the barn was received with a chorus from the cow and pig jerus lonir lie exclaimed. "I never fed tbem critters this morning 1 I did lose my head, that's a fact. Well, I've got to tend 'em now. Wonder Sally didn't. Mabbe, though, she diunt come over, or if she did she fetched the eggs and didn't look at nothing else." ery speedily he fed the hungry beasts and put out his horse, resolving to go in to supper and finish his barn work afterward, for he was hungry. There was no light in the house, which looked rather cheerless, but then Sally was frugal and sat far into the twilight without a lamp, so he went on and opened the kitchen-door. A cold chili struck nun ; tne plaoe was empty, still, nreiees; a rat ran across the floor as he stepped in. Nobody was there. The low light of the setting sun struk across the snow-fields with a wan glitter into the bare room j the fire was out ; the store oold. Behind the door into 1 . - 1 1 .. - . z the shed hung Sally's hood and shawl, and her mittens were on the shelf. Sally must be in the bedroom, sick no doubt. With an anxious heart Will opened the door into it. Nobody was there ; the room was in its usual cheerless order ; the bed white and smooth as the outer drifts; the white-curtained windows shutting out even that wintry sunshine. Probably Sally had put on her Sunday cloak and bonnet, the same dark-red velvet turban and jaunty, jet-trimmed sack she had looked so well in when they were married. Almost as if he were afraid of seeing a ghost, Will opened the closet door to see; there the things hung against the wall, straight and smooth, sack and shawl too, and the toqae was on the shelf above. Then he opened the tiny parlor, with awful misgivings. The andirons shone in the open fireplace; the wax fruit was und3r its glass shade, between the glass candlesticks on the shelf; and the big Bible, the photograph album, the copy of Tupper's Proverbial Philosophy all wedding presents occupied the small round table in the middle of the room, and took a ghastly tint from the creen paper shades and the wan light of dying day. Everything was as prim, as dull and as musty as ever. Sally was not there. There was but one room upstairs. and either Bide of it a dark attic; ho lit his lantern and searched there, but found nothing. Then he took a bee-line for the near est neighbor's house, but though the lamny were rail oi pity and astonish ment and suggestion, he did not find ms wife. " Hev ye s'arched the barn?" queried old Grandsir Phelps from the chimney corner. Will had not thought of that; so Royal Phelps went back with him and peered into every corner of the bin, mow, harness-shed and cellar. They found the eggs she had left in the hay, but they did not find Sallv. Then the two men went over the house again, peered shudderingly down into the well, and weighing the bucket with neavy stones and lengutening the rope, let it down till they heard the wood strike hard against the rocky bottom from whence bubbled up that living spring. Nobody was there. "You haint tramped around the lots any, liev ye ?" inquired Royal Phelos "Nowhere only tow'rdsyour house," uuHwereu win. 1-17-11 1 1 . a veii, men, wnen mornin' comes we Ism track her; for it snowed about an hour arter breakfast, and there haint ben no passin' onto tho road sence, for I've ben a-choppin' 'long side on't the una time to-day; and I took a bite along so's not to stop ; I was boun' to nnish, up to-day.' But would that morning ever come? It seemed not to Will ; he walked the house while Royal snored in the rocker. and recalled with despair and distress how ho and Sally had parted in the morning in anger ; parted now, it seemed, for the last time. He had not much imagination, but he had enough to conjure dreadful things about his wife's fate. All alone there in the farmhouse what might not nave happened ur, nioro proba bly, had she not fled from him forever. afraid of lus temper and his tongue ? Ho blessed the shower of snow that nad fallen in lus absence and must tell I e 1 it : . 1. 1 . ii a mo awry ui ner uigut ; ana lie made a lew but very earnest resolutions as to his future conduct toward her if. in. deed, any future found them once more together. But morning came, and on no field or road, not even on the railwav trunk in cutlie direction, was there a foot print except tnose of Will's old horsn and the two men. Sally's light feet had not traversed that yielding service ; nobody had been there. Then Will broke down : without food or sleep, oppressed by the awful mys tery of his loss, as well as by the less itself, he grew half-crazy, sobbed, raved and tramp ed the house till RovalPhelp at last went over to fetch his wife, with the suge remark. He s past my handlin' ; I cruess women folks'd know better how to fetch him to now." So 3Irs. Phelps came over, made some hot coffee and persuaded him to drink it, set things to lights a little, and pre pared to eet dinner : but Will still lav on his face in the bedroom, as wretched and hopeless as a man could be. Suddenly a horse s hoofs beat on the crusted snow up to the back door. Will lamped up and rushed out. and a man handed bim a telegram; he did not hear, while he was opening it. the bearer's explanation : "It come to Taunton deepott for ve. and the operator said 'was real import ant, an' you'd giv' me a doller to fetch if Will did not answer; his brain reeled as he read: William Gray, Taunton. Your wife is at Sbyms Station very ill." Uau 1 go baclt to Taunton with you ?" he said to the man, handing tho telegram to Mrs. Phelps, with a light in his eyes that told the relief he was scarcely conscious of as yet. KecRon you kin. for another dol lar," and with a nod to the astonished Mrs. Phelps Will was off, and in an hour was seated in the train for Seyma Station. The story is stranee but true: when Sally slammed the barn-door behind her, she pulled her apron over her head, and ran across the road, safe in the knowledgo that the morning ex press had passed. The light full of snow dulled the sound of a special freight train slowly rounding the corner just at that moment, and Sally was struck by the cow-catcher as she stepped on the track, and was thrown violently to one side. Stunned by the blow, she lay on the ground unconscious. She did not hear the cry of the engineer, who had wit nessed the accident; did not know that the train had stopped, or that she was surrounded by a group of strange men. J. he engineer and one of the brake- men entered the house and found it deserted. No other dwelling was in sight. NIL DESPERANDUM. To leave a woman lying insensible in an empty house was out of the question, and so at last, after calling in vain for assistance, they laid her in the con ductor's car to carry her to the nearest station, some miles farther on. When she regained her conscious ness it was her. turn to f ael all those pangs of regret and repentance that Will suffered, and to make resolves of her own, if ever she returned to live up to them. She could not move or speak when the train stopped, and the men took her from the car supposing she was per haps fatally injured. She did revive, however, but only enough to whisper Will's name and town in reply to persistent questioning, ueiore delirium set in, and wnen her husband reached the hospital where they had taken her she did not know him, and it was weeks instead of days before she could go home. In the meantime Will sold his farm to Royal Phelps' brother, and bought another close by Mystic, and two miles from any railway. He knew that neither he nor Sally would evff again feel safe at tne old place. So far, their first jnarrel has been their last; the resolitions have been well kept. Sally can make pot-pie and rye-Dreaa, as wen asmany other things, quite as skilfully us Cousin 'Phrony, and she is so happy with her husband and her baby that ijhe sometimes thinks Will lost all his bod temrjer wlion lin lound his wife at Ssyms. Youth's Com panion. ' A Cat tin Ranch. Many pens have essayed the task of describing a catte rauch in the far west ; yet the writer must confess to total and radical misapprehension of the subject, corrected only when he himself crossed the plains and saw with his own eyes. The idea is a difficult one for the Eastern mind to fully grasp. It is required that all preconceived notions of what should constitute a well-regulated stock farm must be abandoned and a totally new set substituted. Fences, green pastures, stables, the whistling boy driving home the cows from the meadow when the sun is casting long snaciows, tne stone mansion embowered in stately trees upon tho overlooking hill this picture of rural beauty that graces ten tnousand canvases through out our land must be laid aside and forgotten if we would contemplate Western cattle ranch, He who would successfully follow the business of cattle raising upon the plains must keep ever on the frontier, pushing farther on into tho wilderness as civilization follows in his wake. If he is pressed too closely, ne must strike into a new country ' to find a range." His judgment must bo exercised with regard to several partic ulars. Tho coup t ry ho selects must bo lainy coverod with tbo natural ci bhhph. with here and there patches of grease wood, white sage or other browse to serve as lood incase the grass is covered by a fall of snow. He must further assure himself as to the perennial character of the stream or water-holes upon the range, upon which tho cattlo are to depend for or.e essential elpmfint And, lastly, he should also see to it that the country affords good shelter from the winter winds and storms, spenre rl by clumps of trees, bluffs or other features of a broken country. With feed, water and sheher assured, he feels that a suitable range has been found, and returns to drive thither his herd Into a heaw freicht wasron is IobiIa,! the whole ranch equipment, including tent, bedding, cooling utensils, and provisions to last pcihaps a year. The mounted herders drive the cattle with many a whoop and halloo, and the procession strikes ont for t-V r country. Owio loJiioepiain, making a wagon road as they go, fording un known streams, finding a wav across deep ravines, often suffering for water, and making many a dry camp, riding all day long under the scorching 6un, with alkali dust, stirred up by ten thousand hoofs, blown into mouth and nostrils, riding all night lensr around the prostrate herd, and sometimes gal loping away in the darkness to check, if possible, the wild stampede thus for months, it may be, the procession moves on until the selected range is reached. Here the cattle are turned loose to explore their new home, to eat, drink, wander and rest at will, to forget the hardships of the long drive and to prow fat upon the nutritious grass. Meantime the site fur the ranch-house is selected, a few ttees are felled and logs cut, and a low, dirt-roofed log cabin is quickly thrown together. Several small fenced inclosures, or corrals, and a branding chute are soon completed, und the ranch may be considered as established, No title to the land is secured ; none is desired. The sovereign American citizen simply takes possession, fully persuaded that it is his privilege to dedicate to useful purposes the waste plaoes of our great country. Lippincoit. Digitated Stockings. From time immemorial stockings with toes have been used occasionally, particulaily in the treatment of certain foot troubles. Lately they have come into more general use, and not a little publio discussion has arisen over the fashionable novelty. The London med ical authority, lancet, is strongly in clined to favor them as likely to con duce to comfort, and spare many per sons who now suffer from the develop ment of soft corns between the toes, a serious trouble. "They would also be more cleanly than the stockings in common, use, because they would nat urally absorb and remove the acrid moisture which accumulates be tween the toes, and which it the gen eral cause of offensive odors from the feet. They will, moreover, give the foot better play, allowing its phalanges greater freedom of aotion. And, lastly, a well fitted digitated sock or stocking will remove a mass of material from the toe of the boot, and, at the same time, secure increased breadth and space for expansion across the base of the toes. The new stockings, supposing them to be well cut and fitted, possess many ad vantages." Patienoe, the second bravery of man, is, perhaps, greater than the first, - FACTS AND COMMENTS. The writer of a report on English fao tones and workshops has drawn a pic ture which is anything but alluring of London bakeries. He found that in a great number of cases the staff of life is prepared amid surroundings which are as unhealthful as they are unappe tizing, and that in some establishments the arrangements are positively shock Reports from Lonisana indicate that the cane which was covered by the floods is not so much injured as there was reason to fear that it would be, This is accounted for by the low tern perature at the time of tho floods, which retarded the growth of the young cane instead of rotting and killing it. In the regions which escaped inundation the prospects for a large crop of sugar are lavorauie. Dr. Koch, a Berlin physioian, has dis covered the secret nature of the parasite which causes consumption. Matter from the lungs of consumptives has been found to be swarming with para sites which are highly infectious. He has propagated the disease artificially and killed animals with the parasites thus produced. And now if he will only produce a parasite which will de stroy the tubercular parasite, he will have conferred a lasting benefit upon the human race. neep your eye on coins passing through your hands and you may make a strike. The rarest coin in the United States is the double eagle of 1849, of which there is only one in cxistenoe. belonging to the cabinet of the United States mint. The next in rarity is the nan eagle of laia. it is said that the king of Sweden, to complete his col lection of United States coins, paid $2,000 for a specimen. Only five of these half eagles are in existenee. The silver dollar of 1804 is rare and valua ble. Only ten pieces of the kind are to be found. A peculiar business has been com menced ia Texas, the breeding of ponies tor tne use and pleasure of children An 8,000-acre ranch in Bexar county, has been fitted up for that purposo. The owner has on it forty-five Shetland mares and 100 Zacetecas ponies, a Mexican breed, and he thinks that he will succeed. The Zacetecas ponies are spotted, cost no more than a goat, are very hardy and well adapted to the sad- die. They roam over the mountain like nocks of sheep and are about as gentle. In a short time every child in the United States will be supplied with a beautiful prize spotted pony accord ing to tne owner ot the ranoh. Jir. Charles Dudley Warner writes from Palermo that brigandage is about at an end in Sicily. The organization of the brigands is broken up and they are discouraged. "My own explana tion of the change," writes Mr. War ner, " is that the brigands have gono to keeping the hotels in Sioily, and take it out of the travelers in a legal but more thorough manner. I might as well say here, from considerable expe rience in Sicilian hotels, that they are on their way to be first-class. Their prices are already first-rate. They have only to raise the accommodation, the food and attendance up to the prices and they will be all right. The land lords have simply begun at the wrona; end." A piece of good luck has befallen the prisoners in jail at Council Bluffs, feet eleven inches high in his stockings, weighs 275 pounds and is only twentv years old, has been added to their num bers. As soon as they perceived that his gigantio proportions were likely to Bx the gaze of visitors to the jail, they put their new comrade on exhibition at ten cents a head. At the approach of a visitor the giant retires from the cor ridor to his cell and refuses to emerge until the dime has been handed to another prisoner duly appointed to col lect the fees. With the funds thus provided the prisoners purchase to bacco and other luxuries to cheer the dull routine of jail life. An accurate little photograph of Mr. Longfellow is given by a writer in the Indianapolis Journal : "His dress was scrupulously tasteful and beooming. HisJiair and beard, Bet off against a snowy collar and a coat of black, showed silvery bright, but were in quantity and texture much thinner and nner than his engravings represent. The features, too, were not so full and rugged as in his portraits, but were mi nutely lined with time, and of that pe culiar pallor of complexion that comes only of extreme age. Yet he was won derfully agile in his movements, and continually shifting positions some times settling forward, his elbow rest ing on the table, the head propped rest- fully in his hand ; then, suddenly lean ing backward, the entire figure assuming an air of enviable languor." Cincinnati has a strange hermit in Edward Holroyd. He was once a part ner in a large and successful dry goods house, and at that time was publio spirited, jovial and widely known. Twenty years ago he retired suddenly from bubiness, secluded himself in a very handsome suburban residence, and has never since been off the premises. For months no human being sees him, his orders to the family who live in tho house being sent out from his room in writing, and his food being passed in through a wicket. The building is going to ruin through neglect, and the grounds are untended, but neither through stinginess nor lack of means, as his property has appreciated to $'-50,-000 in value, and he frequently gives away money in charity. He takes the daily newspapers, and seems to keep informed as to what is going on in the world, but will have nothing to do with it, and lately refused to see one of his former business partners. Many of his old associates believed he was dead, so completely had he dropped ont o! notice, when a description in the En quirer of his manner of existence called their attention to him. He is now eighty. The cause of his seclusion was his wife, with whom he quarreled, and who obtained a divorce, compelling him to provide for her a separate mainten ance. This soured him, and he vowed to be done with human beings. Electric Lamps. If we examine one of the electrio lamps in the streets we shall find it consists of two rods, one pointing up ward from the bottom of the lamp the other hanging downward. The rods seem to touch, and the brilliant flame is exactly where they seem to meet. Once a day a man comes around with a bag of the rod3. He takes out the old rods that were burned the night before and places a new set in each lamp. After he has gone about, as if he were putting new wicks into the lamps, and each is ready for its night's work, all the lamps are lighted in broad day, to see that every one is in proper trim, They are allowed to burn until the men have walked about in the streets and looked at each lamp. If all are burning well, they are put out till it begins to grow dark. If one fails to burn properly a man goes to that lamp to see what is the matter. The rods are made of a curious black substance, like cnarcoal, that is called carbon. When the lamp is out the two rods touch each other. In order to light the lamp they are pulled apart, and if you look at tne name through a smoked glass you will see that the rods do not quite touch. There is a small space between their points, and this space is filled with fire. Look at the other parts of the rods or the copper wires that extend along the streets. They have no light, no heat, no sound. The wires are cold, dark and silent. If we were to push the two rods in the lamp close together the light and heat would disappear, and the curious hissincr sound would stop. Why is this ? Let us go into the woods near some brook. and it may be that we can understand this matter. Here is the brook, flowing onintlv along, smooth, deep and without a rip ple. We walk beside the stream and come to a place where there are high rocks and steep, stony banks. Here thn channel is very narrow, and the water is no longer smooth and silent. It bnila and foams between the rocks. There are eddies and whirlpools, and at last we come to the narrowest part of all. Here, tho once dark and silent water roars and foams in white, stormy rapids. There are sounds and furious leaping and rushing water and clouds of spray. What is the matter? Whv is the smooth, dark water so white with rage, so impetuous, so full of sounds and turmoil ? The rocks are the cause. The way is narrow and steep. The waters are hemmed in. and there is a grand display of flashing white foam and roaring waterfalls, as the waters struggle together to get past tho nar row place. It is the same with the elef.tiiVit.T flowing through the large copper wires. It passes down one wire into the other, through the lamp in silence and dark ness, so long as the rods touch and the path is clear. When tho rods in the lamp are pulled apart there is a space to be got over, an obstruction, like rocks in the bed of the brook. The electricity, like the water, struggles to get over the hindrance in its path, and it grows white-hot with ancor. nnH flames and hisses as it leaps across the narrow space between the rods. lhere is another kind of nlnntrin lamp used in houses; it has a smaller and softer light, steady, white and very la these lamps, also, we have tomn. thing like the narrow place in the brook. They are made with slender loops of carbon, inclosed in glass globes. The eleotrioity, flowing gently through a dark wire, enters tho lamp, and finds only a narrow thread on which it can travel to reach tho homo-going wire. and, in its struggle to get past, it heats tho tiny thread of carbon to whiteness. Like a live coal, this Blender thread gives us mild, soft light, as long as the current flows. It seems calm and still, but it is enduring tiio same fury of the electricity that is shown in the larser lamps. lhis is the main idea on which these amps are made: A stream of elec tricity is set flowing from a dynamo eleotrio machine through a wire until it meet3 a narrow place or a break in the wire. Then it seeks to get past the obstruction, and there is a grand putting forth . of, energy. , and in. this way the electric force, although itself invisible, is made known to our eyes by a beautiful light. St. Nicholas, A Strange Scene in the House. The Washington correspondent of th Chicago Times alludes to an odd scene in the House of Representatives a short time ago. Alexander H. Stephens was allowed ten minutes, and he wheeled himself around in the peculiar vehicle in which he sits on the floor of the House, and spoke in favor of pasing eome bill which, would give the honest claimants against the United States a chance to have their claims considered and paid. Mr. Stephens was very much in earnest, and he gesticulated with his gloved hund with such vigor and spoke in euch loud, clear tones as seemed a marvelous exhibition from such an at tenuated, feeble and paralyzed body. In his seat he wheeled himself all over the open space in front of the clerk's desk, and the members gathered around him in a circle, so that it would have appeared to a stranger iu the gallery, who did not know what was going on, that the members were looking at an expert exhibition of a curious kind of a bicycle. Mr. Stephens was applauded when he finished. A hungry rat devoured fifteen canary birds in Cleveland, Ohio, in one night recently, and in consequence grew so corpulent that he couldn't escape .from the cage. That rat was killed with much promptness. Don't shut every cranny and crack to keep out the air from the rooms, bat let the windows stay open for a time. Two Dollars per Annum. Tho Mountain and the Squirrel. The mountain and the squirrel Had a quarrel; And the former called tho latter Little Prig; Bun replied: Tou are doubtless very big, ' But all sorts of things and weather Must be taken in together, To make up a year, And a ppboro. And I think it no disgrace To occupy my place. IF I'm not so large as you, You are not to small Ml, And not half so spry. I'll not deny you make A very pretty squirrel trap. Talents dilTorj e.ll is well and wisely put; If I cannot carry forests on my back, Neither can you crack a nut. - Emerson, HUMOR OF THE DAY. Why do ducks put their headslundo water? To liquidate their bills. "Anxious Inquirer." A vessel is spoken of as she, because " she" has to be managed by men, Rockland Courier. It takos 800 full-blown roses to make a tablospoonful of perfume, while ten cents' worth of cooked onions will scent a whole neighborhood. It is now the sparrows flutter In the gutter, And the housemaid, very utter, Scrubs the shutter. Puole. A "three-year-old"' discovered the neighbor's hens in her yard scratching. In a most indignant tone she reported to her mother that Mr. Smith's hens were "wiping their feet on our grass." Tho Rochoster Democrat thinks that one of the saddest sights in the world is to see a young man trying to treat his sweetheart's email and depraved brother as though he were his dearest friend. " I want one servant girl," ho said, " Ouo maid, to onliT, so to Bpc'ak." Tho f-niploymeiit n(,'Piit scratched his head, And told tho man to call next week. Next week ho camo as per reqnost Tho clerk could furnish no such grade, But quickly put his mind to rcijt, Iiy iriving him ouo ready maid. Courier-Journal, A silver watch that had been buried in a Maryland gvavo for twenty years ii now keeping cood time. But the practice of burying watches, even in the vaults of a pawnbroker's mausoleum, is not recommended. A Pari photographer has invented a process by which ho can lake a likeness in the l-100th part of a second. This time is not so short, however, but that the average boy could change his posi tion throe or four times durinc a sittii g. A Boy Lover's Tragic Deed. A most singular and romautio case of immature passion ended at St. Paul, Missouri, in" a tragedy. For several months Albert Drake, a well-connected youth of sixteen years, had been in the agonies of a first love with Miss Jennie laulknor, fifteen years old. daughter of a well-to-do and highly respeoted family. The affair having assumed a more dangerous form than a sohool- mate attachment, the mother of the girl forbade the youth the house and further association with her child. She had no further objection than their youth. Young Drake asked the girl to elope with him, but she declared her intention to obey her mother. Having broken the news to her lover in person gently but firmly, young Drake acoused her or having deserted him for a rival. and they separated in mutual distrust. XiiO IlljAU UtJ bUO Kll.. nuu IbVULhiUK from school when she met the lad and spoke pleasantly to him. He was white with passion and made no answer, but drew a pistol and fired it point blank at her face. Although they wero only a few feet apart his aim failed him. She turned on her heel and ran down the street. The boy ran after her, firing as they ran, until a gentleman caught the girl up m his arms and ran into a house with her. Drake came quickly upon the scene and demanded admit tance, but was refused. In the mean time a party was in pursuit of Li m and he ran from them. In his flight he fired a shot at himself without effect. As tho pursuers woiro gaining he sud denly stopped, placed tho pistol in both hands, and luvinir the muzzle against his forehead, fired, and fell dead upon the street. Both Saw the Ghost, iu unoiui iut unit x i'ebtm," lately published in England, the following ghost story is specially curious as being the only recorded example of a death-bed apparation witnessed end heard by two persons : W hen the English forces were in possession of Martinique in the seven years' war, Major Blomberg was detiched from headquarters to a distant part of the island, and there died of a violent fever. The morning after his decease a Colonel Stewart was surprised, while in bed at headquarters, by the appearance of Major Blomberg in regi mental dres3, who, in answer to an alarmed inquiry why he was not at his post, said : " I died yesterday at 1 a. it,," aud then he delivered an earnest re quest that his friend would, on his return to England, attend the welfare of his young son, then in the island, by seeing him put into possession of an estate to which he was entitled, the deedB of which were secreted in the private drawer of an old oak chest in a house that he named in York shire. He then disappeared. Colonel Stewart directly called to Captain Moun sey, who slept in the came room, and auked if he had seen Major Blomberg. It proved that ' he had heard aud seen the same as the colonel. The other officers laughed at the story, but soon afterward came the tidings of the death of Blomberg at the hour he had named. At the residence of Jesse McCollum, two miles from Canton, Ga., there is growing a rosebush that was planted since the war, in a flourishing condi tion, which measures eleven and a half inches in circumference, measured six inches above tho ground.