Rates of Advertising. On" Square (1 lticdi,)one insertion - $1 On Square " ono month - -3 00 One N iiaio " throe wonthe - 6 W OntiM.!inrP " ono year - - 10 00 Two Ninares, on year - - 13 eg Om-.rterCd. - - - 30 00 Half " " - - Ono i i.... 100 10 Legal notices at established ratri. Marriage and demli notices, gratis. All bill for vearlv advertisements col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must bo paid for in ndvntice. Job work, Cash on Pelivciy. A 10 rUHMMJED EVEKY WEDNESDAY, BY sr. 33. waaxgrxc. OITICE 15 EOBIKSOS & BOSITCR'S BUILDIlfO ELM STREET, TI0IE8TA, PA. 0i mtnnmumi. TERMS, fl.M A TEAK. No Rubmrrlptions received for a shorter period than throe months. Correspondence solicited trom All par ortho country. No notico will bo taken ui Anonymous communications. VOL. XII. NO. 14. TIOKESTA, PA., JUNE 25, 1879. $1.50 Per Annum. A .Summer Mood. ATe said, when wan November days Had buried all the flowers, " The world uo longer wears the charm O! April's sparkling hour; A subtle change, a nameless spell Has turned the bloom to mold, The days are dark, the nights are drear, And we are growing old !" But whon the vivid folyige woke Beneath the solt spring rain, And from the maple boughs we heard The robins sing again, With the first note our hearts grew light, Our lips no longer cold, Drew glad with kindred melodies Can this be growing old T Rare meanings, radiant prophecies . Koch day and evening gave, All fairy land revived again Iu verdure, sky and wavo. The violet on the river's brink, The river as it rolled, Sparkled in sunbeams at our loet, And mailed at growing old 1 Then listening to the woods' low stir, The rapture of the birds, In the warm light of nature's smile More eloquent than word, We cried " He ours the heritage So joyously loretold Our youth but slept; our souls are strong, vThore is no growing old !" Jli, friend, I uvo cheer ! witbiu the breast Eternal sumnior lies, Our childhood's vanUhed roso is wet With dows ol Paradise. The rivur of our joy runs doep And flows o'er sands ol gold, We drink the wino of youth divine, We never Bhall be old ! -Fra:tce$ L. Mace, in Portland Tranuript. THAT UNLUCKY QUOTATION. A STOUY OK " PINAFOKE. They would have made a very pretty picture on a painted tile, as they sat on the porch in the vivid afternoon light. The cottage itself whs as trim and com - plcte as a toy house ; its color was a solt gray. The late sunshine was goldenly clear, and all the green world was shin ing, fresh from a shower. Auntie Trih was sitting in a bright red rockinjE-chair, and her pretty old lace was as pink ami white ns a hunch of roses; and as for Sallie 'herself well, ask any critic in Rockdale, from the oldest inhabitant down to the tiniest toddler, and you will hear a more enthusiastic comment than any which I can supply. Rockdale is a njat little New England village, far away out of the world, in a rocky, hilly-and-daly district, where the direct de scendants of the l'uritans still hold their sway. Auntie Trih's son. Tree Grace Hill called " Free " for short made his name good at an early age by snatching his liberty and inarching away " to town" nevermind what town; wecancallit L- . lie. verified his mother's title at the same time, for she became indeed an embodiment of tribulation; but Free disappointed her agreeably, for he found a good situation.) and worked in it faith fully and steadily. Uo was now a never failing source of pride and delight when on his brief visits he dazzled Rockdale with his " town-made ,v garments, his dainty mustache and general air of "sty lie." His last visit, however, proved an' epoch in the history of Rockdale, and al so in the history of his 'air little orphan cousin Sallic. He brought with him un older friend, employed in the same house with himself, but in a more advanced position. This personage, whom he de signated as Jack Arnold, immediately sent poor Free into the shade, and cast him down from that pinnacle of fame which ho had mounted at the cost of many a pair of highly-polished boots and much studied elegance! - I will not attempt to describe the effect which young Arnold produced upon the " simple village maidens." Every pretty wile which had formerly been directed toward the fortunate son of Auntie Trib was now leveled at his friend, with a force and energy thatprodueed the effect of a bombardment. Tire long, howevei, it was discovered that the new-r-omer was proof against every vceie of attack. Not that he was invulnerable far from it. The truth was that he had fallen under the very lirst shot. He had not been beneath Auntie Trib s roof twenty four hours before he bad succumbed un conditionally to the force of Sallie's rlianni Tim lit tin Puritan mn.ir)pn. with her cameo face and her steadfast gray eyes, stole at once into his heart an honest heart, for t here is no yillain in this unpretending tale and from thence forth he was her liege knight for life. It was not by passionate pleading and great deeds that he undertook to win her for his own : no, the task was but easy, after all. He was fair, good-humored, tall and handsome; Free said he was a capi tal fellow, and Sallie had great faith in Free; ho was'devoted and unreserved in expressing his affection: what more could maiden ask ? Before his vacation . was over he had bravely made known his love, and was shyly but readily accepted ; and w hen he and Free left Uockdale they bade a tender farewell to a happy little damsel wit h a ring udoii her finder. All this did not happen long ago, but in this very year of 1879. Rockdale was nestled away far and deep among the hills; it was not very near the town of 1) ; and L itself was not a great city. How slipuld Rockdale know what was agitating the world beyond? By " newspapers, of course; but women do not often read the newspapers carefully, and the two women of this narrative seldom looked into them. Especially did they, in their Puritanic rigor, neglect the amusement columns. After all, why read of operas, plays and concerts that one cannot see or hear? When anything was " going on " in Rockdale itself, ail the village was on the alert: hut no one cared what the fashionable folk stared at through tlieir opera-glasses in the great cities. So this year, when "II. M.S. Pinafore" sailed jauntily, with colors flying, into American waters, many of the inhabitants of Rockdale recked not of it, and this simple fact brought con sternation to the house of Hill. The " saucy ship " found its way to L , anchored there long enough to set a few enthusiasts to singing " Little Butter cup" and "The Merry Maiden and the Tar" (iaeorrectly, of course), and not finding quite so warm a welcome as in some of the larger cities, soon set sail, again for a more congenial haven. But the mania for quoting the libretto especially the " hardly ever " epidemic spread in that region, as it did every where. Our friend Jack Arnold went to see the performance, and of course he thought of Sallio all the evening, and envied young Hill, whose lady-love was in the party. The two young men were meditating a brief visit to Rockdale, and hence it was, perhaps, that Jack's thoughts were too far away to allow of his giving full appreciation to the incom parable little opera. . All the tender music filled him with thoughts of love, from which the irresistible jingle of the merry choruses beguiled him only for the moment. Therefore, when the day oame for the journey to Rockdale, and he found himself at last in the presence of his beloved, his mind was quite ab sorbed by the ioy of it, and he had no leisure for such trifling matters as the discussion of a pretty new opera. So Sallie was left still in her benighted ig norance; she knew nothing of "Tina fore." They began to talk of mundane mat ters, however, on the second evening, when they were all seated together. "That poor Laura Beam is!" said Auntie Trib, compassionately. "Hid you know she'd got back, Free?" " Laura Beamis!" uttered Free, with a laugji, and glancing at Jack, who looked a trifle conscious. "You had a flirt " " Yes," interrupted his mother; "and they do say shes been jilted by some town young man to a degree that's made her a poor, broken-hearted con sumptive." " Dear me !" exclaimed Free. " Heart and lungs gone at one fell swoop! That is going into the dying business whole sale." This irreverent comment was received by Auntie Trib with much reproachful indignation ; but Sallic sat mute, with a wildly-beating heart. Gossip had car ried to her ears the tale that Laura Hcnmis had claimed a former acquaint anceship with Jack Arnold. The un fortunate girl had gone to live with her aunt in L , and had returned in serious ill-health, the result, it was said, of a disappointment in love. Free's look was peculiar. Could it be "Mv grief ! it's an awful thing," con tinued Auntie Trib. " She was engaged to him, I think, and he went off some where and came back engaged to some other girl. My! the poor tiling looks as if she had one foot in the grave a'ready. It's leally drctful, ain't it, John?" with a sudden appeal to the silent listener. "Very very, indeed," said Arnold. " I T knew her." "You did? Well, I want to know!" said Auntie Trib. "Why didn't you say so before? Wasn't she pretty, poor thing, before site got so low-spirited?" "Who was the man?" asked Sallie, suddenly. " Very pretty, I think," said Jack, answering Mrs. Hill's question. He did not mean to ignore Sallie's, but Free broke in with a torrent of lively non sense, and the conversation drifted away from Iiura Beamis and her troubles. Swllie wiis slightly uncomfortable, but 6he had confidence in her lover, and did not allow herself to indulge, as yet, in causeless suspicion. Auntie Trib, how ever, recurred to the former subject, which iad distressed her simple, senti mental old heart. She exclaimed, medi tatively: w " My ! ain't It dishonorable for a man to behave so!" " If I knew him," said Sallie, looking like a youthful prophetess, in her sweet austerity, "I would never touch his hand again no, not if he had been my best friend." . "What! so severe?" asked Jack, with half-amused remonstrance. "AVhew! Look out, Jack," cried Free. "You never did anything dis honorable, did you?" " Never," answered Jack, readily and quietly enough. This was irresistible. ."What! never?"' asked Free, with intense significance. " Well, ' hardly ever,' " returned Jack, nervously rubbing his chin, apparently the ery embodiment of guilty con fusion. Then they both uttered cold little evasive laughs, and Free changed the subject. The truth was, they had both heard the joke so often that it could no longer raise a hearty laughr and they did not reuect tnat the quotation was entirely new to their hearers. They talked on, ignorant of the overwhelming effect which their words had produced. For Auntie Trib was seriously alarmed, and began to think that she ought to have inquired more closely, into the young man's antecedents. She resolved to question Free at the earliest opportunity ; but how could this be accomplished, since the two friends intended to leave Rockville at an early hour on the follow ing morning? She decided to write a most urgent letter, and sift the matter to the bottom. But how was it witli Sallie? The little incident was, to her narrow and innocent mini, a "con firmation strong as proofs of holy writ." Jack was evidently ashamed of some thing in the past; lie had been confused and silent when Kaura lioamis was dis cussed ; the events tallied ; yes. the cir cumstantial evidence was strong. Free had said. "You had a flirt " " a flirtation with her," he had intended to continue, when his mother interrupted him. But what if Jack were innocent in the case of Laura and her broken heart? At least he had openly con tradicted his first denial of having com mitted a dishonorable action. " Hardly ever," indeed 1 Did he think she she would marry a man who had ever com mitted the faintest shadow of a dis honorable action? Never! not though her own heart broke, like Laura's. All night long poor Sallie lay tossing on her bed, working her foolish little brain into a state bordering upon frenzy. She revolved the matter' in her mind until she lost all power of correct and tranquil judgment. The more violently she excited herself, the more conclusive, to her thinking, became the proofs of poor Jack's biiseness. At length she could lie there no longer; she rose, and by the faint light of the winter dawn she wrote a brief but decisive letter to Jack, slipped her engagement ring into the same inclosure, sealed the envelope, and wroto his name upon it. Jtaint and weary witli her long conflict, she was about to lie down again, when she re membered that it was near the early breakfast hour appointed for the two young men. and that she had promised to assist Jerusha in her preparations ; so she dressed hastily, with trembling fingers, and crept down to the kitchen. Had she obtained an hour's sleep she would have awakened with a clearer sense of things, and the unfortunate note would probably have been destroyed. But now her wearied and overstimulated brain continued to ponder upon the cause of her distress, and magnify it to gigantic proportions. "For the land's sake, child." ex claimed Jerusha, " you do look power- lul bad" " I couldn't sleep." said Sallie. shortly. "There. Jerusha, the table's set. and there's plenty of time for me to go and rest a while now." And quietly laying the note beside Jack's plate, she hurried back to her room. Her lover glanced around with rest less eyes when he met Free and AiiDtie Trib at the breakfast table. He had not believed that Sallie would elude him this morning. He seated himself, with anxiously drawn brows. "What? why. here s a letter!" he ex claimed. Then, examining it, he read the word " Private" beneath his own name, and flushing hotly, he slipped it into his breast pocket. from bailie, he said, quietly. "hat ever does the child mean?" cried Auntie Trib. " Ain't she upP Je rushy, go right up and get her." "hue said as how shea ben lavin7 awake," said Jerusha, " and she went to rest a spell." "Well, you go along and tell her to come," said Mrs. Hill. But Jack called out: Don t disturb her if she's asleep." J erusha went up, and presently came clattering down again. "She's asleep," she said as she entered. Poor Sallie had indeed dropped into a troubled slumber, and IJack would not admit for an instant the idea of rousing her. "It would be cruel," said the soft hearted fellow, " Free and I will run down here very soon again." He was disappointed and doleful, but he hoped the letter would explain mat ters. "The ring had been dropped into the fold of the paper, and its shape could not be distinguished through the thick envelope. Poor Jack wondered vaguely what the hard substance within could be, but the real state of the case never dawned upon him. As he and young Hill were walking together to the railway station he took the note from his pocket and tore it open. It was brief, mysterious, decisive. " Queer enough," said Free, " for Sal lie to give us the slip in this way. Just like you not to wake her. She'll be mad enough to Bless me, Jack, what's the matter?" For Jack had stopped short, with a violent exclamation. His face was pur ple, his eyes blazing with wrath and pain. He held up the ring before Free's astonished gaze. " What in the name of" began Free. But he was unheard; Jack turned swiftly, anil ran like a madman back to the Hill cottage. Sallie was walking the porch in an agony of doubt and trouble. Her brief rest had cleared her perceptions, hut it had not yet freed her from the state of mingled perplexity and stubborn de cision into which she had worked her self. She was not yielding, but she was wretched and regretful. Suddenly Jack appeared before her, flushed and glaring, his excitable tem perament roused to its highest pitch. "Are you insaneP" lie cried, seizing her roughly by the arm. " Do you want to drive me to pedition with your wicked cruelty? In Heavens name, explain yourself." And he fairly panted for breath. " Let me go!" sho uttered, sternly; " I will not have you to touch me. Ad dress me as if you were at least a gen tleman." Jack was goaded to frenzy, and an swered lintemperately ; so the miser able quarrel raged high. Noexplanation was given; mutual recriminations passed back and forth. At last Sallie taunted him with an allusion to his flirtation with Laura Beamis. "So it is for petty jealousy that you treat me so?" he cried. " No," she answered. " It is because I know you to be dishonorable." At the word Jack's heated face turned pale as death. The two foolish people were now at white neat. "It is a lie," said he, in a voice of ominous calm. And she, as sternly and quietly, sent him from her, with orders never to return. So he turned upon his heel and lett her there, and their bond was broken. After this the days went on quietly enough. Night succeeded day with re morseless regularity. No one knew what Sallie Hill suffered; no one knew what she would have given to recall her bitter words. She had cast Jack away without counting the cost; she had learned at last that she could not afford it ; she was a bankrupt in happiness. Gradually Jie slim, haughty figure grew slighter and less erect; the proud little mouth soft ened, and let fall words of piety with greater readiness than of old. She was growing meek through pain. One month changed her as a year might have done. Talking one dav with Laura Beamis. who was growing stronger and more cheerful, she looned down at her ring- less linger with deep dejection, and Laura, following her eves. said, sud denly : "Sallie, I hoped you would have mar ried Jack Arnold. I knew him in L ; he is such a good fellow! He and I once had a little innocent flirtation, be fore before well, when I first left Rockdale, and I have always since thought of him as a friend. You're not engaged to him?" "No," replied Sallie, in a tone which forbade inquiry. "So that was all!" she thought. "I believe I have lost all for nothing for nothing! But it is too late." Still her pride nevertlrearaed of bending. But further revelations were to come. At last a "Pinafore" company visited Rockdale, and Sallie, seated by a rustic swain, who basked in the cold light of her rare smiles, heard with languid pleasure the inimitable opera. Sudden ly, like the jest of a mocking fiend, there broke upon her ears the fatal words which had helped to destroy her peace, the familiar "What! never Pr' " Uardly ever." Strange words to be associated with heartache and misery! Yet, ab surd as it may seem, they were, to Sallie's ears, freighted with a drearier spell than the ancient cabalistic mut terings of witch or wizard, or the fate ful utterances of the oracles. For this, this mere quotation, this idle joke, she had wrought herself into a state of virtu ous indignation and angry suspicion of the man she loved. And she lost him. This was the bitterest touch ; yet more was to come. When she reached home, Auntie Trib met her with a rueful countenance. " My grief! Sallie," she exclaimed ; " I don't b'lieve you treated Jack Arnold right. Here's a letter from Free sayin' Jack's down with typhus fever, or some thin' like it, and he says you've killed him, and that we must come down to L- right off. But, lawme! what's he thinkin' of, wantin' you to run your head into a contiguous disease!" (Auntie Trib's words wereoften changed at birth, like the captain and Ralph, when she spoke in haste.) " Why, you might as well face small-pox as typhus not but what I'm sorry for Jack; but of course we can't go." "Go!" cried Sallie, whohad snatched the letter. "Try to keep me, that's all! I must go to-night to-night! It's ty phoid, not typhus, auntie. Oh, if I could take it and die! Oh, Jack! Jack!" and quiet, dignified Sallie broke down, and wailed like a child. They could not go that night; there was no train till daybreak; but Sallie made ready for their journey witlrfever ish energy. Her poor bewildered aunt remonstrated feebly, but in vain; she was whirled off in the early morning light, and sat in a dazed condition on the train, with her best bonnet all awry, and with Sallie's white inflexible face beside her, gazing straight forward, like a mournful Fate. How the young proud heart had been humbled that night in prayer and tears! Would the journey ever end? It ended at last; and Jack, who was, I am bound to say, not quite so ill a Free had represented, awoke from sleep to find bending over him not the fair avenging goddess of his late troubled dreams, but the sweet woman whom he loved. Of course he forgave her; of course he recovered. What would you expect? He was tender and vehement, and grief and perplexity and remorse had broken him down; but he was vig orous, and joy and confession and for giveness restored him. Of course you knew from the first how the story would end ; it is but a trifling tale of a tempest in a teacup. But Sallie had learned a lesson which she never forgot. How Jack laughed when he heard her explanation! "As 'Pinafore' was the cause of our despair," he said, "let ' Pinafore' express our newly-recovered happiness." And lie began to sins, feebly and in correctly, but still heartily, " ' Oh, joy ! Oh, rapture unforeseen !' " Free and Auntie Trib stood by like a "kindly chorus," smiling benevolently. "I'll never be so foolish again," said poor Sallie, meekly. "What! never P" hissed Free, in a stage whisper. " No, of course she never will," cried Auntie Trib, failing to recognize the joke, although it had been explained to her a great many times. With which exhibition of innocence the old lady " brought down the house" as Captain Corcoran himself could never do. But you see her audience was so very happy. Harper's Bazar. Words of Wisdom. . A hopeless person is one who deserts himself. Ignorance has no light ; error follows a false one. A fine coat may cover a fool, but never conceals one. There is no grief like the grief which does not speak. He who blackens others does not whiten himself. Genius is sometimes arrogant; knowl edge is always diffident. We are never so proud and so humble as when we are praised. What is styled timidity is probably nothing but the fear of showing too little merit. A good constitution is like a money box its full value is nover known till it is broken. Good taste is the modesty of the mind ; that is why it cannot be either imitated or acquired. In general, there is no one with whom life drags so disagreeably as with him who tries to make it shorter. It the shoe of a monarch could do as much as the monarch himself, the court would be divided between his majesty and his shoe. The dearer and more gaudy the silk handkerchief the further it is allowed to I stick ou of the coat pocket. TIMELY TOPIC'S. A Vienna journal says that when start ing for Livadia, the Russian Czar went to the station in an ironclad carriage, escort ed by about 400 mounted guards. The station was surrounded by military and police, and entrance was strictly pro hibited. Similar precaution? retaken at all stations along the li .v train full of police and guards p.:eded the emperor's, and no one for twenty-four hours was permitted even to approach the rails. There are certain comparisons between the vital statistics of France and Prussia, in a recent report to the Academy of Sciences of Paris. Thus, it appears that in France 100 marriages give about 300 children: in Prussia, 400. It is also shown that in France the annual in crease in population ("births over deaths) is 2.400 for each million of inhabitants, while in Prussia it is 13,000. At this rate the population of France should double in 170 years ; that of Prussia in forty-two. Dr. Keith, of Illinois, asserts that diph theria comes from potato eating. Dr. Keith claims this notion to be the result of his own experience as well as that of his father, extending over twenty-nine years, and embracing eleven hundred cases of diphtheria. In all of these cases the patients were potato eaters. Persons who eschewed the potato escaped the diphtheria, though residing in the midst of an infected district. It may be pre sumed that this sweeping charge does not apply to healthy tubers, but only to those affected by the potato rot. When the Duke of Argyll, father of the MarqU'S of Loi'ne, Canada's Governor-General, nrrived in New York, on a Cunard steamship, he was interviewed before he could land by the ubiquitous reporters, one of whom described the Scotch nobleman and his family as fol lows : " Then came a pleasant, somewhat stout gentleman, with red hair, gray whiskers and slightly freckled face, who, it was whispered, was the Duke of Argyll. He wore a dark, mixed summer overcoat, standing collar and black cravat; and although he had three or four servants in attendance, was littered up with the small traps of a traveler. On the Duke's arm was his eldest daugh ter, Lady Elizabeth Campbell, a tall, delicate-complexioncd blonde, with light auburn hair and pale face. She wore a black cloak of some plain stuff', with a black fur collar, over an ordinary traveling-dress. Behind this couple came Lord alter Campell, a younger son of the duke, and almost an exact picture,, sav ing that he looks younger, and that his hair is redder, of his brother, the Mar quis of Lome. Lord Walter wore a blue, flannel yachtman's suit, a blue checked shirt and black tie. He escorted his younger sister. Lady Mary Camp bell, a pretty young woman of eighteen or twenty, with wavy auburn hair, who was dressed like her sister in traveling dress and plain black cloak." A Rich Widow and Her Adopted Son. It is better to be born lucky than rich, the proverb says, and 1 believe it. You may be born rich and die poor, but if you are lucky you will never want. A case in point is that of Mrs. Mark Hop kins, the widow of the California mil lionaire. She was a school teacher in this city, and no longer a young girl when Mark Hopkins happened at the same boarding-house, wooed and won her. They had no children, so she adopted a boy of seven years of age by the name of Tim. He is nineteen now, and a very amiable unspoiled fellow, not particularly bright, and not at all dull, His adopted mother is perfectly devotee to him, and indulges him in all his de sires, hhc is anxious to have mm love literature, and is building a magnificent library for him. During her last visit to New York she bought $7,000 worth of rare books from one importer. She buys knowingly, too. The house she hiis just completed in San Francisco cost $2,000,000, and llerter fitted up two floors at a cost of $ sJOO.OOO. " My room is magnificent," said Tim. " I just gave Herter unlimited authority, and suits of armor re hung on the walls, and he has made it look like a castle." Mrs. Hop kins travels in her own drawing-room car like a princess, with French cook and silver table service. Her bedroom has a large double bed in it. and there is a handsomely furnished parlor and kitchen besides-. When she stops any where, the car is switched off", and waits her pleasure on a side track. The last time she was in New York it was brought up to within a block of the Windsor Hotel. I would not pretend to say how many millions that the Widow Hopkins is worth, but you may imagine from her manner of living that it is a goodly sum. And Tim, has he not been fortunate? A poor boy, picked up to bo the heir to such a fortune. So I say again that it is better to bo born lucky than rich, lor neither Mrs. Hopkins nor Tim were born rich, but see what luck has done for them ! New York Letter. A Sheep Bults a Mirror. Quite a commotion occurred in a far mer's house a short distance out of Rome, N. Y. They were cleaning house, ami left open doors leading to all parts of the house. In one of the rooms was a large mirror, reaching to the floor. On the premises is a sheep whose head is graced with horns, and which is very tame, entering the house whenever an opportunity is presented. This wooly animal got into the house unnoticed. When first discovered it was standing face to face with the mirror, shaking its head fiercely. Before it could be reach ed it jumped back for a good start, end then plunged its head into the mirror. Instead of coming in contact with some other animal, as it expected, it demol ished a fifty-dollar mirror. The crash so frightened the animal that in its endeavors to escape from the screams and attacks of the women of the house it found a place of exit through a French window. Beware ! i. Keep wnkctul eye and ear, my triend, For nil mankind; Thou canst not know nor toll, my friend, What lurks behind The flattering speech, the gracious smile How little truth, how much of gaile, Is hid within the heart the while. Beware ! II. Remember, e'en thysell, my friend, Host cratty grown ; Consider how deceit, my iriend, Erst deeply sown Within thy breast, slow fed upon Its kindlier nature, until won The victory o'er thy peace undone. Beware ! III. Ah, life's a losing game, my friend, A taunting blank When love itself is tricked, rny friend, By wealth nnd rank; Take council of thy wit, and seek No lavors that thy feelings pique Of both the fawning and the meek Beware ! iv. Trust him who makes thee pay, my friend, And squarely, too, For all he grants; 'tis he, my Iriend, Alone that's truo. He hath no subterfuge, no plan To cheat or cozen ; such a man Thou canst respect, and waive this ban Beware ! Erratic Enrique, in Puck. ITEMS OF INTEREST. The hair crop is very short this sea son. Oil-wells vary in depth from 100 to 1,100 feet. Walking skirts The garden's mar ginal path. Sticking to the bitter end- Chewing rhubarb root. London has 220 dry days i the year, and Dublin but 150. The Japanese government has ;' ist purchased in New York State 200 Me rino and Cotswold sheep. It is very dangerous to make up your judgment concerning a young lady's weight by measuring her sighs. A small boy in New York was brought to life after having been at the bottom of the Iludson for eight minutes. Gen. Henry Lee was the author of the phrase, " First in war, lirst in peace, first in the hearts of his fellow-citizens." It was used in a series of resolutions pre sented to the National House of Repre sentatives, December, 1700. Reuben R. Springer authorizes a posi tive contradict ion ol the stories circulated throughout the country that there is trouble between Theodore Thomas and George Ward Nichols in the manage ment of the Cincinnati College. The Erie railway pays Jewett, its president, a salary of "40,000 ; Tom Scott, of the Pennsylvania Central, gets $100,000 for the same service. The president of the Baltimore and Ohio railway, one of the wealthiest corpora tions m the United States, refuses to iccept over $4,000. Chicago Commer cial Advertiser. Her liege lord had a bad cold, and she, though she is perpetually nagging him and even wishing him dead, goes in tears to confide to a friend the gloomy apprehensions inspired by her poor dear husband's hacking cough. "Ah, my dear," she concludes, "1 shall immedi alely call on the best medical talent the directory affords, for if I Mere to lose my husband I know I shouleVco wild." " After whom?" says her friend. The great elephant fair of India is an nually lield at Sonepoor, on the Ganges. Thousands of horses and hundreds ol elephants may then be seen, and the bar-gam-driving and deceit ol elephant-sellers seem to be fully as great as the tricks of horse-dealers at home. The price of elephants has risen enormously of late years. In 1633 the price of elephants was $225 per head ; on the Bengal gov ernment requiring seventy of these ani mals in 1875, the sum of $700 each was sanctioned, hut not an elephant could be procured at that price. Seven hundred and fifty dollars is now the lowest rate at which young animals, and then chiefly females, can be bought. Tuskers of any pretensions command from $1,000 to $7,500, but the Koomeriah, or best strain of elephant, will fetch almost any price; $10,000 is not an unknown figure. A Blind Artist. One of the most remarkable disciples of art in the world is M. Louis Vidal.of Paris, who is totally blind, yet models as exactly and carves as truly as many another who is blessed with the sense of sight, lie began the study of art when a very young man, and lost his sight by paralysis of the" eyes when twenty-one years old. Having received good in struction and being wholly in love with his art, he would not allow his misfor tune to check his career, but continued his studies until by degrees he found his sense of feeling grow so acute as almost to compensate him for the loss of vision. Unlike many of his predecessors, Vidal has executed many original works, and lias exhibited for more than twenty years in succession and received a medal in 1HC.1. Many of his works, though pro duced slowly, have been purchased by the State on account of their real merit, and the Empress Eugenie made the ac quisition of one of his productions dur ing the reign of the late Emperor Na poleon III. He prefers to work at night, when all isquiet, and when friends come to see him at his labors he often forgets that they cannot see in the dark ami lets them sit without a light and unable to tell what he is about. k