HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. - NIL, DESPERANDLTM. Two Dollars per Anpum. VOL. XII. Ant.ni Snm u dead and th otamn winds weeping, Wail amid the leaves that laMv VAM nun And tell how the year is with feeble steps creeping To join with the numberless years that hum been. When ftie sunshine was bright, and the birds ouiuy singing, We dreamed not of cold, or the eky's chill ing mien ; We saw not how swiftly the glad hours were winging; WeheJ but r.weet Voices with happiness 8n.nmer.is dead, the year', hopes are "uties that were bright when the epTing tide was young 'Vher. we each came with eagerness forth to TK 1 . With step that was firm and a heart that wan strong. And what can we bring as the cause of life's failing? Was the daylight too dim and the darkness Were the storm-waves too wild for the ship's tuning' ; Was the helmsman unnerv'd by the winds " ip-jir wailing? o ouinmer ls dea(j , ay bnt Epringti(j8 ig coming, And the leaves that are yellow, and brittle, nnd dead Will revive once again when the flowers are bloominp, And the boughs will wave green once more over our head. 'till the hopes then revive that are now swiftly waning? Will the life come again that is now nearly spear briall we hear once again the world's mirth and complaining? Ah. that must be loft for death's certain ex ilniniug. A BOY'S STORY. It all came of my having a railway ., nun ucing iiuiuo 10 iaue music lea sons. "Thompson gave me the kev when lie was leaving last term, I don't know how he came by it, or what good it whs to him, as he never saw a train except when he went home for the holidays; but he was always talking of the convenience of having such a thing whert you are traveling, and hinting at the mysterious penalties the company might inllict if they caught you using it. He gave it to me in exchange for a bit of Letty's hair (she's my sister, and Thompson was dreadfully in love with her) and a scrap of the bonnet trimmings she wore in church. I stole that, but had to ask her for the hair, ami she brought out a whole bundle and said I might trade awav the lot if I chose. "Hair wasn't worn much .now." Music was another thing altogether. Herr otto Finke was an old friend of my father's, and lived at Luckboro,' our market town. lie took a fancy to me bother me; and actually persuaded my father and mother to let me come over to Luck boro every market day, with my father, for a lesson in German and music. I didn't mind dining with him first (uncommonly oueer hipskps -n had, and lots of jam with them) but the music was simply disgusting (in the holidays, tco!) and the lessons generally ended by Finke getting to the niano himself jinrl wnri.iinrr or.- of his Vaterland by the hour. lie did so once too often though and now I have got to my story. AVo used to come and go between Mosslands and Luckboro bv omnibus. There was a Mosslands station on the line between Luckboro' and London, but my father never went by it if he could help it. "When he did, though I had the key with me I never dare use it, and began to tliink I had made a bad bargain witli Thompson. One Tuesday, however, last winter, Finke got so carried away by his own sweet singing that he kept on long after I ought to have started to meet my father, and then got so remorseful that I thought he was going to cry; or perhaps want to keep me all night. " Look here," I said, "it doesn't mat ter. There's a train that gets in as soon as the 'bus. I can catch it if I run good-bye !" And off I scudded, one arm in and one arm out. of mv top-coat, for I was sure he'd object, or . . . . ., . T 1 1 w im i, iu nuts mo uu. i uau money, and there was a train which came up long before I had seen all I wanted about the station. I made a dash at a carriage. It wasn't locked, as I half hoped it might be, and in I scrambled, but was nearly blown out again by a volley of the strongest language I ever did hear. The train started and jerked me down tato a seat before I'd time to get my breath. I was not used to bad expres sions, and my fellow-traveler's remarks made my blood run cold. There were ladies in the carriage, but he didn't seem to mind that. He had a red, scowling face, with heavy red eyebrows and bloodshot eyes. All the rest of him was a mass of railway rugs and wraps. I had tumbled over his toes into the middle seat opposite, where I Sat scared and speechless, till I caught the eyes of the lady next to him fixed on me. A Ughl such a bad old face! A tight, cruel mouth, witli all sorts of coil-lines about itfcand wicked, sharp gray eyes that screwed Into one like gimlets. I didn't care muda for Kedface by this time. I didn't believe he would "twist my neck and chuck me out of the window," as he suggested; but I hated her all oyer at once, from her sausage curls grizzly-gray, two on each sid to her hooked claws of fingers that were twitching away at her knitting needles, in and out of a big gray stock ing. "Hush, Sammy," she said quite sweetly; "the poor child means no harm, and he can easily get out at the ?, ""' n nere are yu going to, I could onlv must have thought I was a softy, for she twisted my ticket clean out of my hand hpfnrp T . after "ew wum sue was "?l0?s?nd9- Vwy good. That's the "won. see him Bafe ouk Sammv dour " ' Sammy growled an inarticulate re- tui irum unuer nis rugs. The timid nnsspncrpr lmrl spoken or stirred. She sat on the snme iuu as me other two, covered With a big plaid ruff and a. hiiln iru 111 , ' " 'iwilli VCiA tied over her head. I could make nothing out except that she seemed to beasleen in a verv nnmmfnrt.i.u -j -i.nuiiinjio atti tude. I sal In the middle, onnoattn t.ho ri,i woman. It was so rHs!iiiro!iliU g,i ing her sharp eyes on mo while her neeiue clicked on just the same that I thoUffllt I miffht as well nrptpnrl tn to sleep too. So I curled myself up and gave one or two nods, and then dropped mv face on mv arm nn imt. she couldn't see it. Presently I heard the ripprllpa slower and slower I peeped, and saw the big bonnet and sausage curls giv ing a lurch forward and then hnnir- ward, once, twice; then a big snore; and then she was off too. I didn't stir for n. tnlmitn f.r t that " Sammy" was up to something. jio u'iuiii lorwaru anu peered at her as if to make Bure she was ouitn nslppn- then cautiously groped in the seat be side ner and named up a little black batr. He onened it soi'tlv. d rpw nllf n silver-topped flask, and closed it just as a jerk of the train roused the old lady. Sammy dived back in his cor ner; and she sat bolt upricht. rubbed her eyes hard, felt siisnipioiisivnrm,ri till she found the bag, stowed it away uemno. ner and resumed her knitting. Only for a few moments, though; with a weary groan she let stockings, needles and all iro down witli rnn mi dropped back sounder asleep than be fore. Then from Sammy's cornpr ram a n gnrcle soft and low niiinv titnpa rp- peated then all was quiet. iow was my time. I began to look about and think what I slum 111 ilu first. "Whether I dared m.fc im nn t.im seat and see how the communication with the guard worked and what would happen if I nulled it. Tf ti o train stopped I could make off or cay it was eammy. lie was half r.psv now and Deoule wouldn't, hpii pvr. In' in First of all I went to the window to look out a little. It was Pitch dai-k outside. and all I could see wna rli.- re flection of the carriage and of the lady in the blue woolen veil. She was sit ting up now and looking intently at me. n nai an uncomtortable set thev were, to be sure! I look round at her direetlv. Sim was very young younger than Lettv, and she's just seventeen and pretty but so thin and frightened-looking that I felt very unhaunv about her She fixed her bier, britrht eves on top and put up her linger. " Don't speak," she said, in a clear whisper. "Keep looiungoui oi the window. Can you near what 1 am saying ?" I nodded, and she went on. looking at me, and now and then at the old woman. " If they get me to London I am a dead woman. You are my last chance. "Will you help me?" I nodded very hard indeed, and looked at the communication with the guard, biie shook her head. "No, that's no good. I must get away at the next station. He is safe. Can you stop her from following me?" I didn't believe I could. I might have thrown a rug over Sammy and sat on him for a minute or two, but that old woman was too much forme. I felt that directly she woke she'd see what I was thinking of, and strangle me before I could stir. The precious minutes were flying the miles were hurryinar past us in the outsit crinm.i the girl's big wof ul eyes were fixed on me in desperate appeal. "I have friends who will save me if I can but get to them," she panted. "Just one minute's chanci3 onlv one" J All at once I had an idea. A splen did one ! " Look at this," I whispered, and held up my railway key. " If I open this door, dare you get out. You can hold on outside until the train stops. Eun straight across the down line. There is only a bank and a hedge on the top. Lot of gaps in it nearer the station. There you are on the Luckboro' road. Do you hear ?" I was quite hot and out of breath with whispering all this as plain as I could. She caught every word as fast as I could think it, almost. "What with the feeling of my own cleverness, hatred of that nasty old woman and delight in spiting her, and pity for the poor girl, I felt as brave as any fellow, however big, could be, and full of ideas as well. " Give me that," I said, pointing to her blue veil. " They won't see you're gone if I sit here with it tied over my head." " Oh, no, no ! They'll kill you." "Not them! They can't interfere with me." (I declare, I felt as if I could fight Sammy and a dozen old ladies just then.) "Quick, now or never." I tied tho veil over my head and lowered the window n softly as possible. There was no time to lose, for the train was slack pninrr speed even then. I unlocked the door. Nie gave me one look that made me feel braver than ever, and lnrli npil trt cry, both at once; and in a second she was uut uu nio siep. ine train stopped. I saw her skirt flutter In tlm stream of light that fell from our open carriage uoor across me down line 01 rails, and that was all and I was huddled down under the big plaid rug with the old woman, wide awake, standing over rue. RIDGrWAY, ELK COUNTY, PAM THUBSDAY, OCTOBER 5. "Drat the boy. Sammy, call the potter; he's got out at the wrong " Call-un-yer-self," answered Sammy, all in one word. She pulled the door to and tramped back to her seat, taking no more notice of me than if I had been tt cushion of uio parnage: it don't matter if he has broken his neck either," she mut tered, "perhaps we'd better make no mas, j. ue vrain was oir again. I rlnrprl Tint Inmn nr. 1 i - the wn.y, and thought I must take my luauuB hi, wie nexi siauon. "Oh! mv bones and hndtr!" .1,0 groaned, presently. " Oh, what a time ltnaa Deeni sammyj" No answer. "Sammv " She was nn niroln or. 1 tmnit she hauled him tip and shoo) him. lor somethinir fpll with a nmuii like a broken bottle. ' O ti v h V1IWU " You idiot," she screamed. ""When you want all the brains you've got anu more 1001 to play me this trick ? ofi vt? vou riiriiL 11 i irpr. iir nnri loova you at the next station utrhl" O O ' T C It sounded as if Rhe were banging ..v. n,.iiu.-.i, ng.misi. ino carnage. That and the fresh nir Rppmprl tn rmioa him. He got up and put his head out in mc window lor a snort time, and then replied, slowly rind 1 lrmrpeai volr " Now. look here, old woman. Vnno 01 your nonsense. hen he s wanted, oamuei .ixon is all t hprp. And mi man alive can say he isn't," he went on suit-muiy, uoiuing careiuny on to one in i. - IHHU LU1 11H AVHS Slirfl ftT T.lio TIDvt as to tlus business, I ask you is it mine or is it vours ? Now timn v " Yours, I should think; as it's your wife who is giving us all this trouble. I wish I'd left you to fight it out your selves." " Stop this," said Sammy, who was talking mmspit sober and consequently savage. "I'll not have it nut unon me. I didn't want to marry her; that .i3 juur tioing, and 1 don't want to make away with her; that's your tioing, and if it's a hanging matter, 1 m not the one to swing for it." " Heaven forgive you, Sammy," said the old woman, evidently horribly scareo. - jon t ye talk that way to your poor old mother don't. If the poor creature was only in her right mum sue u vo 1110 nrst to say her old nurse was her best fripnil t.h p nnlv fnci she had in tho world when her pa died aim leu ner. Here she sniffled a little. Sammy gave a sort of derisive growl. "And as to her marrying you; it stood to reason that she must marry somebody, sometime, left all alone in the world with her good looks and her fortune; and why not my handsome son? It was luck for you, Sammy, though you turn against me now, There vou were, hist foreign parts, without a halfpenny in your pocket or a notion where to find one; and there 'was she without a re lation or friend to interfere with you as simple as a baby not a creature to stop her doing as she chose with her self and her money. It would have been a sin and a shame to lose such a chance. Of course, I wanted to see 111V liandsomp bid nrnnH n iTontUmon as the best of them." The old woman aci-mi-u iu ub laiKing on and on pur posely, like telling a rigmarole to a child to keep it quiet. Sammy growled again in a milder tone. " Oh, yes. Say it's all my fault, do ! You can talk black white when it pleases you." " It was your fault, Sammy. You might have lived happy and peaceable if you'd chosen. Haven't I been down on my bended knees to beg you to let her alone when you was treating her that shameful that the whole country side was ringing with it. You know it, and others knew it. And I can tell you what, Mr. Samuel Nixon, if she'd been found dead in her bed, as I ex pected every morning of my life to hear, there wasn't a servant in the place that wouldn't have spoken up be fore the coroner and glad to do it. Who'd have swung for it then, I'd like IU M1UW The bruto was mastered. I heard him shuffling his feet about uneasily; then, in a maudlin whisper: " It was drink, nothing else, and her aggrava ting, winning ways. Don't be hard on me, old woman, I'm sure I've given in handsome to all your plans." "Uecause you couldn't help yourself, you fool. Now you see what it is to have your poor old mother to turn to 1 our wife may talk as much as she pleases now. ho'll believe her when we've got it written down by two grand London doctors that she's as mad as mad can be? "Who's to mind her talk, or any one else's? Aren't we taking her up to London just for the guuu ul ner ueaiui, 10 a nice sate place where she will be well looked after and kept from getting herself and the other folks into any more trouble ? Then you and me will go back, Sammy, and live as happy and comfortable as you please." " They will treat her like a lady eh, mother ?" "Of course they will; a beautiful place and the best of living. Bless you, she'll be happy as the day is long. It does you credit being so tender hearted, Sammy. I knew you couldn't abide seeing her storming and raving as she did last night, so I just gave her a little sup of something before we started, and you see she's been sleeping like a baby ever since. And the gen tleman where she's going, you know he gave me this bottle; and when we get to London I've just to give her a whiff of it on a handkerchief, and off she goes as quiet as a lamb. No screams or tantrums this time; and he and his nurses will be on the lookout for us with his carriage, and before she knows it there she'll be as snug as you please." This was awful! "What shall I do? Were we ever going to stop? AVas there another 1 tation before London ? Should J be aniffffed. drajnrea off and made awn with ? I knew if they found me out 11- was an over witn me. The pattern of the blue Shetland vpil rt.mppH VinV my eyes the noise of the train was as .1... .i . 1 jiii . vim buuiiu 01 me roar 01 amiiery in my ears. 1 sat up, reaoy lor a spring and a struriffle: A jerk! Another! A stop, and the uoor iiung open. " Tickets, please." 1 made one nlunrp: T fi 'n tha rum .. 1 r 15 - " Clear OVpr tlin old woman, rlniliprl mv arm into Sammy's face, and tumbled 1 11 t 11 neuuiong oui into ine arms or the astonished ticket-collector. I felt him clutch me, and then the ground rose up, or 1 went down down into an unfathomable depth of darkness! " HulM old fellow. Better now?" were the llrr.t wnnfn T Vx,nrA rit,nm. son's Voice! There lie was with a. orlnun 01 water in nis hand, stooping over me a nuiunson s motner was Kneeling oe side me, cuddling me up against her nice, soft sealskin. I was on the wait ing-room sofa, and about a dozen neo- nle Were nil Ktundincr staring mnril hompsoh went and telecranlipd hnmn wiuu j was saie, anu men ne ana his mother took me to the hnnap in T.nn don where they were staying. 1 can t remember much after that Was ill fnr nmnv wppku T hplipup T tried to tell people what had happened. uub no one wouiu iisien. iney try even now to make me heiieve I dreamt it in my illness. I've irot it told now though, and every word is solemn truth. HpsiilpH didn't. T rpp ami ampll Letty burning the blue Shetland veil. I've had no more music lessons since, that s one good thing. The railway key? Oh, I left that sticking in the door. mat s all. Argosy. Life In a Montana Frontier Town. The following amusinrr dpscrintinn of the mixed life of a frontier town is from E. V. Smalley's paper on " The New Northwest." in tlip ('ontiirn Ine picturesque features of life in a are best seen as evenincr auuroaches. Crowds of rouehlv-clad men imther around the doors of the dnnkinc Ra- . . . . ,j "... . oons. A OTOUl) of Indians, who Ii.ivp been squatting on the sidewalk for two hours plavinsr some mysterious same Of cards of their own invpntinn breaks up. One of the squaws throws uiu carus into the street, which is idready decorated from end to end with similar relics of other frames. An other swinsrs a babv unon her back, ties a shawl nrraiml it. nnri herself, secures the child with a strap uucKled across her rhpst. nnd strhlpo off, her moccasined feet toeing inward in the traditional Indian fashion. She wears a frown made of a scarlet, rnlirn bcdnuilt. with leffcincrs of some. Mhp stuff; but she has somehow managed to get a civilized dress for the child. They all tro off to their enmii on the hill near by. Some blue-coated soldiers lrom the neichborin!? milit:irv Tinst. pp. membering tho roll-call at sunset. swing themselves upon their horses ind go gallnnins off. a little the worse for the bad whisky thev Imvn bppn drinking in tho saloons. A miner in blue woolen -shirt and brown canvas trousers, witli a lmt nf ne tonishing dimensions and a beard of a rai a gmwui, irois up tne street on a mule. and. with droll oatha .nml slmf- fling talk, offers the animal for sale to 11m crown 01 loungers on tho hotel piazza. No one wants to buy, and, after provoking a deal of laughter the miner trives his ultimatum: " I'll hitch the critter to one of them piazzer posts, and if he don't pull it down you may have him." This generous oiler is declined bv the landlord- nnri tlm miner rides off, declaring that ho has not a solitary lour-uit piece to pay for his supper, and is bound to sell tlm mule to somebody. Toward nisrhtfall the whole male population seems to be in the street. save the busy Chinamen in the laun dries, who keep on sprinkling clothes by blowina1 water out of thpir nmntha Early or late, you will find these indus trious little yellow men at work. One shuffles back and forth frm n tlin 1' drant, carrying water for the morning wiixii in old coiu-nii cans hung to a stick balanced across his nhiililpr More Indians now a "buck" and two squaws, leading ponies heavily laden with tent, clothes .mil lint'. falo robes. A rone tied nrniimi a pony's lower jaw is the ordi nary halter and bridle of the Indians. These people want to buy some article at the saddler's shop. They do not go in, but stare through the windows for five minutes. The saddler, knowing the Indian way of dealing, pays no at tention to them. After a while they all sit down on the ground in front of the shop. Perhaps a quarter of an hour passes before the saddler asks what they want. If ho had noticed them at first they would have gone away without buying. Earnings and Savings. According to Mr. Edward Atkinson but half of the 52,000,000 people of the United States can be reckoned in the working force of the nation. The earnings of this working force, male and female, cannot pycppiI un ovcmni of 11 a day each for the 3G5 days of the Jem, ou uiat me annual income of the people, in round numbers i fcmnnn 000,000. He estimates that the rhkIa. nance of our population averages forty five cents a d:iv fur each mun ,...,. and child, so that ninety centsof every, uuuiu ciiruea is consumed, leaving but ten per cent, of the annual maintain existing capital and increase mo uauons weiuiii. jus opinion is that the increase in wealth ia lpaa than 1500,000,000 annually. His purpose In this exhibit is to encourage economy. Learn to work morethoroncrlilv savingly; to raise as much as possiblo with as little waste as possible, is his injunction. TTISE WORDS. It is wisdom to think and folly to sit without thinking. It is a good rule to be deaf when a slanderer begins to talk. Charity gives itself rich, but covet otisness hoards itself poor. I! very one of our actions is rewarded or punished, only we do not admit it. Life is just long enough for a man to deckle where he ill spend eternity. Nature has sometimes made & fool, but a coxcomb is always of man's own making. It is easy enough to forgive your enemies, if you have not the means to harm them. It is a fact worth remembering that It. does not tnVo half no long to make a wound as to heal one. "We should not measure the excel lence of our work by the trouble that it has cost to produce it. "When alone guard your thoughts; when in the family guard your tem per; when in company guard your words. Foundations are good, and paths are good; but they are not enough. Foun dations were made to build on; paths were made to walk in. There is no time in a man's life when he is so great as when he cheerfully bows to the necessity of his position and makes the best of it. The best receipt for going through life happily is to feel that everybody, no matter how rich or how poor, needs all the kindness he can get from others. This life is not ordained in vain; it is constituted for a grand purpose, if through its lessons of experience we become convinaed that this life is not all. "What men want is not talent, it is pur pose; in other words, not the power to achieve but will to labor. I believo that labor judicious and continuously applied becomes genius. , Much talk and much judgment sel dom go together, for talking and think ing are two quite different qualities, and there is commonly more depth where there is less noise. HEALTH HINTS. In cases of fainting lay the person flat on the back, loose the clothing and sprinklo cold water on the face. If the fainting is from exhaustion a few drops (10 to 30) of aromatic spirits of ammo nia taken in water will afford a good stimulant. Dr.Foote's Health Month ly. In the early stages of typhoid fever Dr. Guillasse, of the French navy, has administered coffee with marked suc ccess. Three tablespoonfuls are given adults every two hours alternating with one or two teaspoonfuls of claret or Burgundy wine. A beneficial result is immediately apparent. A little lemon ade or citrate of magnesia is also ad ministered daily, and after some time quinine is recommended. All heat or warmth in the body comes from food oxidized, slowly burned in the body, just as much, and in abcut the same way that heat in tho stove or furnace conies from fuel oxi dized or burned there. AVarmth is al ways escaping from the body, unless it is an atmosphere nearly up to 100 de grees of heat. "Warm clothing, warm hooses, stalls, sheds, that prevent the rapid escape of heat, save the necesity of taxing tho stomach to digest an ex cessive amount of food (fuel)to keep up the heat of the body, human or rute. A Dangerous Bedfellow. Ferryman Iloppy, of Arena, "Wis., recently experienced a fearful sensa tion on awakening during the night. He felt something crawling over him, and knew, when fairly awake, that it was a snake. He did not know what to do, but finally took both hands and threw the bedclothes over it and got on it with his knees. Tho reptile im mediately coiled its tail around his neck, he being on its head. By re peated efforts ho succeeded in uncoil ing it, but not before he was nearly strangled. He gathered up snake and clothes together, threw them from tho window that was open near the bed, and then as quickly as he could get out of doors caught up a polo and struck the snake a blow. He could see him coiled up and could hear the rattle, showing it to be a very large rattle snake. As he struck the reptile coiled around the pole and as he raised the polo to strike again it sent the snake away out into tho river. It was a close call for Mr. Happy. He doesn't like such bedfellows, and has wire screens to his windows now. A Tocm Written on a Grain of Rice. A Chinese teacher in the colony has just presented quite a curiosity to the city hall museum. Many of our read ers have doubtless seen specimens of printing compressed within very small limits, such for instance as the whole of the Lord's prayer contained within a circle the size of a finger ring. This, however, is not a specimen of minutn typography but of caligraphy, for it consists or a stanza or poetry, com posed by the teacher himself, which contains thirtv-three distinct, nnd wpii formed Chinese characters written out in the lull style without any contrac tions, thouerh the most comnlirntPd characters are not introduced into this liliputian poem. It seems almost in credible, but it is a fact that tho whole of these thirtv-three characters are. in. scribed on one grain of unhulled rice. TAJ- . . it is oniy another instance or the pa tient toil which a Chinaman will HnpSid over apparently unremunerative work. Al... I J il ... . r About 3G000 barrels or 360 car loads Of Salt are Weeklv uliinnprl woat rm Saginaw, Mich. 1 ' i 1882. Glacier Accidents In Switzerland. Glacier accidents generally arise from falls into rifts hidden under a Layer of snow. In the summer of 1629, tho day being Tuesday, as three men of Lenk Jacob Trachsel, Peter Blatter and another were crossing the "Wild horngletcher on their way home, Blat ter had the ill-luck to fall into a con cealed crevasse, Though not so badly hurt that he could not call out, he was too far down to be helped up without ropes. So it was agreed that Trachsel should remain by the crevasse, while the third man, whose name the record has not reserved, went to the nearest habitation for ropes and help. "When he returned Trachsel had disappeared, and the rift into whicli Blatter bad fallen could not be found. The third man and the men he had brought with him after search ing and shouting until far into the night gave up Blatter for lost, and went away without the least hope that they should see him again. But, to the unspeakable surprise and almost con sternation of his neighbors, he turned up two days later at his own house, not much the worse, seemingly, for his ad venture. How he escaped is not men tioned, probably by running down one of the water courses, which run under every glacier, to daylight. Jacob Trachsel, who had left his post on the crevasse simply because he was weary of waiting, was tried at Lenk for deserting his companion. Being convicted of "faithlessness" he was sen tenced to three days' imprisonment and to do the Herdfall, whicli signified ask ing pardon, publicly -of God and man on bended knees for the sin he had committed. In July, 1787, a similar accident be fell Christian Bohrer, of Grindelwald. As he crossed- the nipper Grindelwald glacier toward the Mettenberg a snow avalanche threw him. into a crevasse seventy feet deep. Though his arm was broken and his wrist dislocated in the fall, he managed to work his way under the glacier to the stream at its base, and after a desperate struggle of two days he succeeded in escaping from his icy prison. The Naturufsehichle des Schweizer landes tells of a very unpleasant ex perience which in the early part of the last century befell a chamois-hunter of the name of Kaspar Stoeri. As Stoeri and two other hunters were in hot chase after chamois on the Limmer nalp glacier, ho disappeared as sud denly as if ho had been swallowed up by an earthquake. He had fallen into a hidden crevasse. His companion peered fearfully into the hole down which Stoeri had vanished, and think ing that all was over witli him, com mended his soul to God. But when they heard his voice faintly crying for help, and perceived that he was clinging to a ledge of the crevasse, they ran to a goat-herd's hut hard by him in the hope that they might possibly find there a rope. They found only an old coun terpane too rotten to be of any use. Meanwhile poor Stoeri was in fearful plight half his body in freezing glacier-water, and holding on desperately with hands and feet to the icy walls of the rift. He had given himself up for lost, and was saying, as he thought, his last prayer, when his comrades lowered him a rope, which they had contrived to make with their belts and part of their clothes. He grasped it joyfully with both hands, his friends pulled lustily, and Stoeri was just about to thank Heaven for his happy escape, when one of the belts gave way, and down he fell again. The second misfor tune was worse than the first; Stoeri took part of tho lino down with him, nnd in the descent one of his arms was badly broken. But ho held on with the other, and by splitting their belts his companions made the" extemporized belts long enough to reach him a sec ond time. As one arm rested on the ledge, and as he dared not remove it for fear of falling further into the abyss and being drowned in the water, of which the crevasse was nearly full, lie had to bend the rope round Ids body with the broken limb, which caused him terrible anguish. This time the belt held, and Stoeri was safely landed on the glacier. As his companions drew him out of the hole he fell into a dead faint, and it was a long time be fore he came round and could be re moved to his home. But not every one who falls into a crevasse is equally fortunate. In 1821 M. Mouron, a clergyman from Vevey, while crossing the Lower Grindelwaid glacier, went down a rift seven hun dred feet deep. "When his guide (to "whom he ought to have been attached by a rope) reported the accident at Urindelwald, a suspicion aroso that the poor man had been robbed and mur dered, and his body thrown into the crevasse to conceal the crime. In order to ascertain tho truth, another guide was tied to a rope and lowered into the abyss. After several attempts, the man, though he suffered much from cold and bad air, succeeded in fastening the corpse to his own body, and so carried it to the surface. . M. Mouron's watch and purse being found intact in his pockets, tho guide was freed from tho suspicion which rested upon him, and his character for hon esty, if not for efficiency, redeemed. In the year 1820 three guides were swept into a crevasse at the head of the Grand l'lateau at tho foot of the final slope of Mount Blanc. More than forty years after they had been buried in their icy tomb tho remains of these unfortunate men were found near the end of the Glacier des Bossins, whither they had drifted with the moving ice, miles below the rift in which they were engulfed. Joseph "White, of Bake Oven, "Wasco county, Oregon, began as a sheep herder in that region without funds five years ago. He recently sold out his band of sheep for $6,300. From his this year's shearing he sold from 678 ewes $1,158 worth of woo and raised 478 lambs. NO. 33. SUNDAY READING. Semetlms. It is a sweet, sweet song, warbled to and fro among the topmost boughs of the heart and filling tho whole air with such joy and gladness as the songs of birds do when the .summer morning comes out of darkness and the day is born on the mountain. We have all our possessions in the future, which we call "sometime." Beautiful flowers and singing birds are there. Oh, reader, be of good cheerl For all the good there is a golden " sometime;" when the hills and valleys of time are all passed; when the wear and fever, the disappointment and sorrow, of life are over, then there is the place and the rest appointed of God. Oh, home stpnd! over whose roof fall no shadows or even clouds, and over whose thresh old the voice of sorrow is never heard; built upon the eternal hills and stand ing with the spires and pinnacles of celestial beauty among the palm-trees of the glorious city, those who love God shall rest under thy shadows, where there will be no more sorrow nor pain, nor the sound of weeping " sometime." Advent Review. Religious Newi nnd Note. There are now 700,000 Protestants in France. The State of Michigan has 209 Con gregational churches. One-half the cadets of "West Point are church members. Edinburgh, Scotland, has been be sieged by the Salvation army. New York city has twenty Lutheran churches and Pliiladelphia thirty. The Reformed church in America has 509 churches and 80,167 commu nicants. The sale of Bibles and other Chris tian books in Japan is increasing rapidly. The head chief of the Pima Indians has cut his hair short, dresses in American clothes and regularly attends church. Members of his tribe, are erecting a small chapel at Blackwater The late Rev. Dr. Geo. "W. Musgrave, a Presbyterian pastor of Philadelphia,.. bequeathed $30,000 to Princeton col lege,, to be invested till it reaches $50,000, to found a Musgrave professor ship, and $ 17,000 to other Presbyterian institutions. Atlanta, Ga., shows, it is claimed the best church record of any city in tho Union. "With a population of nearly 50,000, it has forty-eight churches, with a total membership of 18,950, and an average Sunday attend ance of over 20,000. A woman forgot to send home some work on Saturday, On Sunday morn ing she told a little girl who lived with her to put on her things and take the bundle under her shawl to tho lady's house. " Nobody will see it," she said. " But is it not Sunday under my shawl, aunty ?" asked the child. The Protestant Episcopal diocese of Indiana presents the following statis tics : Clergy, twenty-nine; parishes, forty-eight ; baptisms, 105 of which were adults, 429 ; communicants in forty-five churches, 3,830 ; contribu tions in thirty-four churches, $57,122. Diocese of Tittsburg : Clergy, 46 ; parishes, 55 ; communicants, 6,040 ; confirmations, 411 ; Sunday school teachers, 495 ; scholars, 4,749 ; contri butions, $132,499. A very pretty story is told of the mother of Rev. Dr. Cuyler, of Brooklyn, who recently completed her eightieth birthday. She is too deaf to hear her son preach, but every Sunday morning before he is going to church he tells her what he is going to preach about and gives her an outline of his sermon, and then she prays for him in her room during the hours of service. She was left a widow fifty-five years ago, when her son was only four years old. A Hunter's Extraordinary Shot. The Santa Fe (X. M.) News tells the champion hunting story of the season: II. J. Sheldon left his camp at Cooper City, on the Pecos, New Mexico, last Saturday afternoon in search of game. Saturday night he camped at the up per forks of the river, and Sunday, bright and early, was again on the march. About 4 o'clock in the after noon the burro, which had wandered ahead, came running back, apparently in great terror, ears and tail erect, eyes glaring, making that peculiar mournful sound for which its species is noted, and refusing to be caught or comforted. Not being able to make out from the report of the confused burro just what had happened, Mr. S. cocked his, gun and advanced slowly and cautiously on the unknown enemy. Crawling along on his hands and knees for aboi't a quarter of a mile, he at length doubled a bend in the river, and there, standing in full view in the meadow, and not more than 150 yards away, lie saw a huge grizzly bear with three cubs, and, just beyond the bear and in direct range with her, an animal that he at once recognized as t-he long-sought-for elk. Neither of the beasts were aware of his approach, so, quietly rising upon one knee and resting his rifle across the other, which is Mr S.'s favor ite position in shooting, he took a de liberate aim. Bang went the gun, away sped the bullet and down fell two ani mals in fact, three the bear, the elk and Mr. 8. himself. The bullet had cut the backbone of the bear com pletely in two, and passing through liad lodged in the heart of the elk, and the extraordinary task to which the rilie had been subjected produced such a violent recoil that the hunter him self was stretched flat upon the ground. Recovering himself speedily, Mr. S. advanced upon the prey, hunting-knife in hand, but life was extinct in both animals. The little cubs on hearing the report of the gun fled, but being only a few weeks old were speedily captured, tied in bags and fastened on, the back of the horse, ' '