'(Eh forest glcpubltan.' 10 runLISIIED EVERY WEDNESDAY, BY OFFICE Itf ROBINSON & BONNER'S BUILDING ELM STREET, TIONEoTA, PA. t-,-,,., , rth - TERMS, tl.60 A YEAK. ' No Subscriptions received for a nhortor pmiod than three iiiont Iih. (.'(irrcKpoiiili'iico HolicitoJ ironi all part !'thi country. No notice will lip taken t anonymous communications. Rates of Advertising. Onrtquare (1 inch, )one insertion - OneSquaro " one month - - K Ofl OneSquare " three month - 6 00 One.Hqnaro " one j-phi- - - 10 (Mi Two Square, on vent J '0 Qunrtcrt'ol. ' - ;1" " Half " " '",) r0 0ne . . - - - 100 CO Legal notiepsat psfablished rafps. Marriairo and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisements col leetpd quarterly, Temporary advertise xrients muxt I n paid for in advance. Job work, (.'ash on delivery. n no & ) P VOL. XIII. NO. 10. TIONESTA, PA., MAY 20, 1880. $1,50 Per Annum, Friends of Long Ago. Wlion T sit in the twilight gloaming, .. And the busy itret-tsgrow still, I d renin oi the wide, given im ndows, And the old house on the hill. I can bob the roses blooming About tho doorway low, Again my heart gives grtvting lo the IriendB of long ago Dear long ago ! I pan see my mct'ier tilting, With lifu's Htiowflttkes in hor hair, And she smiles above her knitting, And bor luce is saintly fair. And I see my father residing From the Jtible on his knee, Aiid again I hear him prny;ng As ho used to pray ir inc So long ugo! I sen (ill the dear old luces Of tho hoy and girls at home, As I saw them in the doar old days lk-loro we learned to roam. And I sing the old sours over With tho liiunds t nsod to know, And my heart forget its sorrows In it dream of long Ro', Dear long ayo! How widely our lent have wandored From our old homo's tender lies, Some are beyond the ocean, And some Rio beyond tho skies. ; My heart grows sad with thinking, Ol the friend I used to know; Perhaps I shall meet in heaven All the loved ones of long ago, Dear long ago! UNDER AN UMBRELLA. It was alxiut sunset ol a changeful, Aoril day, when a young girl, lightly descending the stops ot a handsome residence, walked briskly down the sum, which presently merged into a thadi d Hvmue, spiin'dtd with niodest vill is ni d neat cottages. She was e n veloped iu a waterpioof cl-ak, which fve:iled only the gr ccl'ul contour of mr shoulders, over which fell a cluster if.'gihh n-brown ringlets. Her little feet tripped daintily along tho rough ro:td. uiiiu Idenly pausing she lifted a fresh, sweet fa:e, with laughing brown eyes and a dimpled mouth. "K.iiiiing again!" she said, aloud; and stepping undi r tho thelter of a lin den, she pulled the hood of I er cloak forward over her little hat.. -And then, an the light April rain was driving directly in her luce, fhe twver it a thick, brown double veil, "sunshine and shower all day," she roumured. ' '"The uncertain glory of an April da.' Very pi'crioking weather, when cne is compelled lo go ut; but then cvery thing looks so iresh and beautiful that ii would be really a sin to complain.' The sound of a quick stc p apptnach irg from behind caused her to glance back. It was already growing dusk, rendered deeper by the lowering clouds, yet she could discern a very nice-looking young gentleman approaching, sheltered beneath a huge umbrella. The girl walked on ; but in a moment the step was by her side, the shadow of the umbrella extended over her, and a gloveu hand was eagerly held forth. " Cousin Nellie, is it real!y youP" The girl started, and peered curiously thoouh her thick veil. " I am Nellie," she- said, with some embarrassment; "but I I don't re cognize you." "Not recognize meP and after only one year's absence! Why, Nel.ie, am I so much changed And besides, did you not receive my letter, saying that you might expect me this wcekP" "I don't think I did," replied Nell.e, demurely; and at the same instant she thought to herself: V 1 wonder who it is that he takes me forP" " It is strange that you should have missed the letter. But I hope I am not the If 83 welcome for coming unexpect edly." " Well, it is unexpected, I confess." lie was , silent for a moment ; then said, in a changed tone: "You don't seem a bit glad to see me, NelUfl. And yet, if you knew how I have oked forward to this mecing!" i "That was very kind of you, and I am sure I ought to foci niyst-lf very much flattered." Another ominous silence. "I don't care who ho is, or for whom he takes me," thought the fun-loving girl, as she walked demurely along be nentli"the umbrella held over her. ." What right had he to address me and call roe his cousin, before making sure who I was? Perhaps a little lesson will do him no harm." " Nellie," said her companion, slowly, "do you remember the last night that we were together alone ia the library P" " I can't sav I do, exactly." 'Impossible! You cannot have for gotten it. and what vou said to me in adieu. You promised that you would welcome me biwck with those words." "What words?" " You said : 'Dear Charlie, I do love your Nellie, dear, won t you say them now. as you promised r" The young girl started. He spoke so earnestly that she was fairly fnehtet.ed, and felt herself blushing as though the words were addressed to herself, Nel lie Caldwell. Who the other Nellie was the Nellie beloved by this hand some young man she had no idea. At any rate, though, she began to think it was time to put an end to this adven tuie. What right had she to suffer him thus to betray his secrets to herP So she said, gravely, yet still with a spice ol miscinei : " 1 think you are mistaken. I am quite ture I never said those words to any man." He bent a little forward and looked earnestly under the hood and at the brown veil. " Nel'ie, will you take off that veil P I want to see your face, and to under stand what you mean by talking in this strange way?" "Oh, you will understand it presently, when we come to that green gate yon der; then I will remove my veil. But howenme you to recognize me?" the nsk d curiously. " How could I have failed to recog nize you, rather. You have grown slightly taller, perhaps, but I knew your step and your beautiful hair, more he'uutiful then ever, Nellie. 1 was on my wny to your house, wheu at a distance I saw you come down the steps, and I could not resist trying to overtake you. for just one word and look." "Oh !" siid Nellie, ns a light dawned upon her; nnd then to put n check upon fur companion's sentimentality, she added : " How it rains !" and quickened in r pace. "Let it rain!" he answered, impa tiently "cannon balls, if it will. I want to talk to you, Nellie." "Cannon-balls may suit your taste, perhaps, but would scarcely be agreea nletome; and as to talki.ig out here in the rain and darkness, I am not ro mantic enough for that '' lie was forced to keep by her side as she walked briskly on. "Where are you going P" lie inquired, piejontly . - "Home" '.' HomeP Why you are taking a con trary direction from home," " I tldnk riot; I believe I know where I live." "I did not know you had removed." "Hid you not? Ah, here we are, at the gate. ' Please open it, If you can, on the inside.'' . He reluctartly obeyed, hut raised ti e latch so slowly as to detain her while he whispered ; . "Nellie, you have not given ine the welcome you promised. You have not said tiiose words." . ' I don't believe you really want me to say them," she answered, very much incline! to laugh, jet almost frightened at lier own audacity. "Notwantit? When you know how I love you!" "I don't believe it is rr.c that you love," she rsturned, pushing open the ate. " Good heavens, Nellie.how strange'y vou talk! Who, then, do you imagine l Jove?" ' I am sure I don't know," said Nel ir, slowly raising hrr veil nnd pushing nek the fiood. "I don t know, but I in certain it can't be me!" And she looked up in his face with a l.muro, pured-un litt'o mouth, and hrown ejes shining with suppressed nirlli through their long, black lashes. lie stood gazing upon her as it petri fied with astonishment. Then a deep flush crimsoned his handsome face and his ejes Hashed with an indignant light. I beg your pardon! ' lie said, with eri-mouious politeness. Of course it is a mistake on my part." "I suppose it was," said .Nellie, ac nurely. "I I mistook you for another." he said, both embarrassed and angry. Was that my iault? ' he returned, ".hut you vou certainly allowed me to rest under the delusion." "That was for fun." "FunP" " Perhaps T was wrong. Indeed I now rather think that I was," said Nel lie, coloring beneath his gaze. " But, as neither of us shall ever mention this adventure, I suppose no harm is done," she added, coolly. He regarded her an instant with a strange, undecided expression. "1 beg your yardon i i am Keeping you in the rain," he said. "Good even ing!" And, luting his hat with icy polite ness, he walked away. Nellie, as she entered the tiouse, wa9 met by her elder sisters with a shower of questions as to who was that elegant looking man, how she had met him, what he hud said. Unlike herself in general, she returned hriet replies; rnd escaping to her own room, threw asii e her waterproof. changed her dress, and. seating herself before the tire, gazed absently into the glowing embers. Presently she laughed, then bit her lip witn a vexed expres sion, and finally began to cry. 1 wonder what makes me to men silly, unlady-liko things P" she thought. " I am always getting into some ridicu lous scrape or other. What an opinion he must have ot meP I shall be really ashamed to meet him again, as I sup pose I must, if he is Mr. (.ray." Inen her mood changed. I don't care. He nfav be as dicnitied as he pleases, but he shall never see that I trouble myself even to remember this ridiculous walk, and the horrid um brella!" Presently another change came over her. "Poor fellow! I can't help, pitying him, for I fear this has befu-merely a rehearsal of the real act. Why-', Nellie Archer was in tho parlor with captain Lloyd nearly two hours this aftfnoon, when she must have known, ffom that letter, of Charlie's coming. I wonder if she ever said to the captain or to young Doctor Bliss what she- said lo her cousin? Poor fellow! And Nellie has been showing his letters tojurthe girls! She could not have done so had she loved him." Nellie Caldwell was correct in her anticipation of again meeting with Mr. Charks Gray. The society of the little town was veiy gay; and what with church fairs and parties, and other social amusements, it was impossible that these two Bhould not be thrown to gether. Nellie blushed, despite her utenost en deavors to look unconscious, when Mr. Gray was first presented to her; but the gentleman was so cool and composed that she actually doubted whether he had recognized her. lie conversed with Jer a little, danced with her once, und 'ie observed, was chiefly inteiested 'n, 'ehing Nellie Archer and Captain A- And Miss Archer, pioud tosh" J her handsome couain. and her oa influence over him, treated him very sweetly in the intervals of her flirting with other ad mirers. Some weeks glided by, in which the acquaintance between M iss Nellie Cald well and Mr. Gray imperceptibly as sumed a more agreeable character. His cold politencFs, nnd her equally cool indifference gradually thawed, and each vacunly felt that, despite their mu tual effort 8 to Ixep apart, there was something which mysteriously drew them together. Nellie attributed this to her sympathy with his disappointment in regard to his cousin, nnd often expressed tha wish that the latter would love him, as she was sure lie deserved, and make him happy by marrying him. It was inex plicable to her that any girl cou!d prefer Captain Lloyd to Mr. Charlie Gray. Neither had ever but once alluded to their first mcetirg Coming out of church one evening Miss Archer said: "Nellie, what have you been doing with yourself this last terribly rainy wcekP Isn't such weather enough to give one the blues?" "Oh.no," she answered, cheerfully. " I like rainy days at home, and can alwnys find something to amuse meP" "Even in the rain itself," paid Mr. Gray, on her other side. "What an enviable disposition is yours. Miss Cald well, to be able to find ' fun' in such a situation!" . Nellie looked up quickly, and met the halt-laughing glance bent upon her. Instead of answ ring gayly back, as was her wont, she colored, and her eyes filled with tfars. "Mr. Gray," she said, as Miss Archer fell' ehind with Captain Lloyd, "I want you lo promise to forget that hateful walk in the rain, and never again allude to it." . " I am not sure that I could keep such a promise at least the first part." "That means that you haven't for given me." "I really do not feel as though I had anything to forgive, or you to ask pardon for," lie said, pleasantly. ." I was very silly and wrong, htit you see I have grown older and wiser since," said Nellie, demurely, d " If the increase of wisdom is,jn pro portion to tliatof age " he commenced, but was interrupted by Miss Archer. "Nellie, are you and Charlie flirting P or what is that mysterious whispering aboutP" "We are not flirting,'' returned Mr. Gray, coolly. "Miss Caldwell does not flirt, I have observed ; and for myself, you know I detest it." " I know you have some old-fashioned and absurd notions," retorted his cousin, laughing. "One must n very prudish and old-maidish to meet your ideal of perfect womanhood, Charlie." Ar.d again Nellie Caldwell felt con- scicnce-frtricken, remembering that un fortunate walk, and the . impression which her conduct must have pro duced on this very particular young gentleman. Some time after this, there was a pic nic at a picturesque old mill a few miles from town. Nellie Caldwell spent rather a tiresome day, wondering why it was that she could! not enjoy herself as usual, and envying Nellie Archer her high rptrits. To-day. at least, she ob served, she and Mr. Gray seemed to be petting a'ong unusually well together, she appearing radiant, i.nd he serenely happy. v , i wonder if they are engaged?" she thought, and did not leel nearly so elated as she ought to have done at the prob . ability of such a consummation. . . He sought her out occasionally, but had little to say, seeming to prefer re clining at her feet on the turf beneath the willows, looking dreamily on the water, or up into her face, as she talked. Several young ladies observed that they both looked very stupid and unin terested at each other. As the evening waxed late, there was a sudden stiramoug the company. It was certainly going to rain, some weather-wise prophet had declared, and the elder portion of the company, at least, were anxious to get safely under shelter before the shower came. ; Mrs. Caldwell collected her dessert-t-poons and her daughters, who had come with "tier in the family carriage. " Why, Nellie,' said one of her young companions, "you are surely not going so soon. It would spoil the party ; and, besides, you will miss the plantation songs, and your favorite Virginia reel." .Mr. (iray stepped forward. Would Miss Nellie accept a seat in his bugcry? and would Mrs. Caldwell intrust her daughter.in his charge P If so, Mies Nellie could remain to en joy the reel and yet arrive at home al most as soon as the carriage with the tat and lazy horses. So Nellie stayed, and her spirits rose unaccountably. The final favorite reel was scarcely commenced, when a few scattered drops of rain startled the gay throng. An im mediate rush was made to the convey ances. "Don't be alarmed," Mr. Gray said. as he assisted Nellie into his buggy. " It will be but a passmg shower, probably, and we will take the road through the woods, which will afford some shelter in addition to that of my umbrella." A few other vehicles were going the same way. Mr. Gray's was the last in the procession. "You don't object to the umbrella?" he said, raising it, and adjusting it to its socket in the back of the buggy. " I hate umbrellas!" Nellie returned. " Do put that down there is hardly anv rain." " Nevert!ielee s, I am responsible for your safety and good condition, so will keep it up till we get to the woods." . "A little rain never hurts me." " But it may hurt your hat. Are you a woman, and never gave thought to that important Question? Why, there was not a young lady on the ground to day who did not make that the urst cou sideration." " Well." said Nellie, laughing. " per haps I am uot much liko other young women." " Perhaps so. la fact, that idea pre sented itself to me on my first meeting with you." She colored and bit her lip but made nonnswer. " Nellie," he said, bending forward a little, and looking in her face. " doesn't tlmremind you of that evening?" " I thought," she answered, sharply, " that you were never again to allude to that subject." " I can't help it; it is too often in my thoughts. In fact, I like to think of it." Her heart beat a little at his tone, but she looked straight before her, without reply. , "Nellie, do you remember the request I made of you that eveningP" ' That request was not for me." " It is now." Their eyes met for an instant. " Arov you sure," said Nellie, half archly, but with a strange tremor in her voice '"are you sure you are not Btill taking me for some one else?" "Quite sure, despite your golden hair, and your voice, nnd your similar ity of name. If is Nellie Caldwell that I now ask to to say those words!" he whispered, as he clasped one of her hands in his. " How long," said Nellie, half mis chievously, half seriously "how long since you said this to Nellie Archer1"' "I never said it to Nellie Archer. When I left you and went to see the original Nellie," smiling, "I found her to te quite a different character from the ideal which my fancy had pictured, during a whole year's absence. Enough ; you know what I mean I never spoke to her of love, and to-day we came to, a pleasant understanding, when she in formed me that she had engaged her self to Captain Lloyd. I lovelier well enough as a cousin, but not as I must love a woman wnom I would make my wife." They were bowling along the wood land track, where the trees made a ver dant arch overheard, through which the rain-drops slowly dripped, like a shower of diamonds. Nellie had never before felt how beautiful the world wan. They arrived at home in a drizzly shower, through which, iu the misty east, a glorious rainbow Bhone. At the door he detained her for an instant under the umbrella, as three months before he had done at the gate. "Nellie, darling, you have not said those words" 1 love you, Charlie." "No," said Nellie, blushing. "No, Iwon'tsay them now; but," and she glanced up, roguishly, " I do love that dear umbrella!" And she rushed upstairs as her mother came into the hall, inquiring if taey had gotten wet. Domestication of the Buffalo. The early explorers of the Mississippi valley .believed that the buffalo might be made to take the place of the domes tic ox in agricultural pursuits, and at the same time yield a fleece of wool equal in quality to that of the sheep; but no persistent attempts have yet been made to utilize it by domestication. That the buffalo calf may be easily reared and thoroughly tamed has betn conclusively proved, but little attention has been paid to thtir reproduction in confinement, or to training them to labor. During the last century they were domesticated iu variniu parts of colonies, and interbred with domestic cows, producing a half-breed race which i9 fertile, and which readily amalgam ates with the domestic rattle. 'The half breeds are large, tine animals, posses sing most of tho characteristics of their wild parentage They can be broken to tee yoke, but are not so sober and manageable in their work as the tame breed sometimes, for instance, making a dash for the nearest water, with dis astrous results to the load they are drawing. It is somewhat difficult also, to" make a fence which shall resist the destructive strength ol their head and horns. But the efforts at taming buffa loes have not been many or seriously carried on, and no attempt appears to have been made to perpetuate an un mixed domestic race. Probably after a few generations they would lose their natural untractableness, and when cas trated wouid doubtless form superior working-cattle, from their greater size, strength and natural agility. Ernest Jngersoll, in the Popular Hcienee Monthly. Bear Sausage nt Berlin. Liver sausage is regarded as an ex quisite delicacy throughout Germany, aud it would appear from a quaint achievement recently effected in Berlin that its maximum of toothsomeness can only be obtained when the material composing it is extracted from the car cass of a deer. A few days ago an ex hibition of culinary art was opened at Hamburg; and the Berlin committee of restaurateurs, desiring to contribute thereto an edible worth of their gastro nomic renown, applied to Dr. Bordinus, the managing director of tho zoological gardens, for leave to purchase and slay one of the society's bears, in order to convert the ursine liver into a sausage of paramount excellence. Having a bear to spare, the learned doctor parted with one for the modrate consideration of ten guineas, and the committee, twelve in number, proceeded to the doomed one's den, where Heir Wiese, the proprietor of Sommer's salon, shot bruin through the head, and afterward narrowly escaped mutilation by ven turing to stroke the luckless beast's furry coat before i t had quite given up the ghost. JTho beast's liver was duly chopped up, spiced and manufactured into a gigantic sausage weigh ing twenty five pounds, and his remains having been artistically set up by a noted taxi dermist, he now occupies an honorable and rampant position at the chief en trance to the Hamburg exhibition, sup porting upon his fore paws a silvern platter containing the dainty comesti ble prepared from his own body. Lorr don Telegraph. A Boston artist painted an orange peel on the sidewalk so naturally ttiat six fat men slipped down on it. Mrs. Partington at the Sociable. There was no mistaking the costume, and the fact that the venerable dame led a small boy by the hand confirmed the impression that Mrs. Partington was in tho assemblage. J here was a momentary lull in the buzz of conver sation, and the party gathered around the new-comer, engr'o shake her by the hand. " Bless me!" said she, with a beaming smile, which played over her face like sunshine over a lake; "Bless me! how salutary you all are! -mst as vou ought to be at a time like this, when nothing harmonious should he allowed to disturb your hostilities. You are very kind. I'm shore, and I am glad to sec you trying to enjoy your selves. We liad no church sociables in my young das, but we had huskin bees, and quiltin' bees, and apple bees, and" "Bumblebees," said Ike, break- ins in like a bov on thin ice "and though we had good times, and sociable enough, goodness knows, When the red ears were found, they were nothing to the superfluity of this." Ihere was a slight disturbance in the circle, as Ike in bis restlessness placed his heel on a circumjacent toe, but it was stilled as the master of ceremonies came up to in troduce the minister. " Glad to see you, madam," said the minister, "I hope you may find the hour spent with us a happy one." " I know I shall, sir," replied she, "for happiness depends very much on how we enjoy ourselves. and enough ot anything always satis hes me. How could I help enjoying my sell in a scene of such life and ani mosity as this?" "Very true, madam " "And then the lights, blazing like a consternation, and the music and flowers mako it seem like Pharaoh land." The minister was called away, and the master of ceremonies askea Mrs. P. if she would like "an ice." which she faintly heard. "A nice P"she replied, looking at him and hanging on to the long as if it were the top bar of a gate. "Oh, very." A rush by the contestants in a game nere broke m between them., the band cave a crash. which seemed to start the roof, the mass of people waved to and fro, Ike started off with a new crony in quest of some suggested peanuts, and Mrs. Part ington backed into a seat. She looked nintiQflnt.ltf nnnn the tnnvinfr Bnpp.tnele ...uuw. . K - r- through her own parabolas, 51er fingers beat time to the music, and iier""oii factories" inhaled the breath of flowers and the smell of coffee from an adpv cent room, till she was becoming "lost,' when she realized that a figure was standing before her, and a cold spoon wa9 being thrust into her right hand It was the attentive manager again with an ke-cream which ho invited her to take. " You are very surprising, sir," said she, smiling; " I was unconsciona ble at the moment. Thank you; I will. Iam very partially fond of ice cream, and this is manila, too, which is my favorite." She ate with a sense of enjoyment caught from the scene and went away soon after, when Ike had lomed her, with plethoric pockets, bid diux the manager convey a good-night from her to tho party, saying she had enj yed a real sociable time. Is. I'. fi'iillaber, in the Avemte. Then and Now. Owing partly to the improvement in tools and sh-p appliances, and partly to the system or subdivision ot labor, there is no parallel by which the workman of to-d iy can be g mged or compared with t he wi rkmaa ol thirty or iorty years ato Then the apprentice was taught crudely, perhaps, but still. taught-all the mysteries oi his calling, Horn the rr. paration of the crudo material to the finish of tho completed result. The carpenter hewed hi timber from the tree trunk or Umo by means ot chiv.k line and broadaxe. He bored, and mor tised, aud cut tenons, erected the frame J. . I .11. 1 .11 1.1 oi tin ouuuinsr, ooaruea ana smngiea. and clapboarded and lathed. Ihe blacksmith shod horses and oxen, tired wheels, made bolts and nuts, chipped and filed and drilled, forged and tem pered axes and chisels, and performed numberless jobs of a variety of forms and for a variety of purposes. The ma chinist sometimes made hi own pat terns and often his own tools, worked at the vise and the planer, the lathe nnd the forge, and was ready to undertake any job, from repairing a broken stove to buildiugan engine. Our venerable contemporary, the Bos ton Journal oj Commcre, remembtirs when the above practice was universal. We congratulate it on surviving to see all this changed. Now timber is sawed and not hewed : mortises and tenons a re machine cut; houses are built by the shinglers, the lathers and the joiners, as well as by the carpenters; and the deors, windows, window and door frames and sashes are factory built. The liorse shoer does nothing else. The forger of steel seldom works iron. Tho tool maker is nothing but a tool maker. The mac hinist is a bench man, a lathe man, a planer, a fitter, or lie has a specialty in cotton machinery or woolen, or never works b'lt on steam machinery. ikicn tfic American. Meteoric Iron in Snow. Observations of snow collected ou mountain tops, and within tho Arctic circle, far beyond the influence of fac tories and smoke, confirm the sup position that minute particles of iron float in the atmosphere, and in time falls to the earth. By some men of sci ence, these floating particles of iron are believed to bear some relation to the phenomena oi the aurora. Gronemann, of Gottingen. for instance, holds that streams of tne particles revolve around the sun, and that, when passing the earth, they are attracted to the pole, thence stretching forth us king fila ments into space; but, as they travel with planetary velocity, they become ignited in the earth's atmosphere, and in thi way produce the well-known lumi' ous appearance characterizing auroral phenomena. Professor Nordenskjold, who exam ined snow in the far north, beyond Spitzbergen, says that ho found in it exceedingly minute particles of metallic iron, phosphorus and cobalt. Onward. Like a bell ol blossom ringing, Clear and childish, short and sweat, Flouting to the porch's shadow, With the tiiinU-st lull oi fc.et, Comes tho answer softly backward, Bidding tender watcher wait, Whilo the baby queen out rnns her, "Only going to the gate." Through the moonlight, warm and scented Love to beauty breathes a sigli, Always to depart reluctant. Loth to speak the word " good-bye j" Then the same low echo answers, Waiting love of older dute, And the maiden whispers soltly, " Only going to tho gate." The gates wo passthein upward On o ir journey, one by one, To the distant, Bhining wicket, Where each traveler goes alone Where the friends who journey with us Strangely taller, stop nnd wait, Father, mother, child or lover; "Only going to the gate." ITEMS OF INTEREST. Pasteboard shutters, in imitation of wood, are the latest. The Governor of Kentucky, under the constitution of tho State, is ineligible for re-election. Seven Bibles or Testaments are now turned out every minute by the Ameri can Bible society. A pretty girl's house is a legal institu tion, for the simple reason that parties go there to plead. A wooden shoe factory Las been started in Illinois. It will use a great many feet of lumber. Nashville got its name from Gen. Francis Nash, a brave soldier of the Continental army who foil mortally wounded at tho battle ol Germantown. The manufacture of clo thing in Chicago has doubled in four years, and gives employment to 30,000 people. The value of the goods made is $15,000,000. There are in the United States 380 theaters and 120 concert halls, 140 regu lar traveling companies, 50 variety companies, 68 companies formed to sup port stars, and seven resident stock companies. The Boston assessors' tabulation shows that there are 49,229 buildings in the city, of which 1.433 dwellings, valued at $5,872,300, are vacant. The hotel of the highest valuation is the Parker house, at $500,1100. An observer in England has found that the depth of the dew-fall in that country seldom exceeds the hundredth part ot an inch during any night of the year, while the average annual depth of the deposit is not more than an inch and a half. Of the 2,120 commissioned officrs in the United State regular army, only 829 are graduates of West Point. Of the re mainder 174 rose from the ranks, 084 w ere appointed from civil life, chiefly froai officers of tho volunteer force during the late war. A drunkard fled into the woods, near Nashville, Tern., while wild with de lirium tremens, dug a grave, and was found lying in it dead. His wife was muilo lrantic by the sight, and she loudly called upon heaven to let her die too. It happened that, on her way home, lightning struck and killed her. Accerding to an official statement, the effective strength of tho Swiss Federal army on the first of January, 1880, amounted to 119,047 men, as against 119.743 in the previous year. The num bers required by the existing law are 105 388 men in the regular army and 07,012 in the Landwehr, or altogether 212,400. The actual total at present is 215,063. Words of Wisdom. Youth looks at the possible, age at the probable. Charms strike tho sight, but merit wins the soul. No man ever looked on the dark side of life without finding it. One should seek foi others the happi ness one desires for one's self. Truth is the foundation of all knowl edge, and tho cement of all societies. They that laugh at everything, and they that fret at everything, aro alike fools. No manner of sneaking is so offensive as giving praise aud closing it with an exception. As the firefly only shines when on the wing, so it is with the human mind when at rest it darkens. How many are there like Atalanta in the fable, who lost the iace by stopping to pick up the golden apple. Pleasant occupation lends to prolong life, for longevity is much dependent upon the feelings ot the mind. It is not merely the individual but so ciety that suffers by every idle.very selfish, every mean, every unjust man. As the sun appears largest when he is about to set, so does the proud man swell most magnificently just before his fall. Ileal merit of any kind cannot long be concealed; it will ho discovered, and nothing can depreciate it but a man's ex hibiting it himself. Lei.ure is tims for doing something useful; this leisure the diligent man will obtain, hut the lazy man never; so that, Poor Richard says : " A life of lazineus and leisure are two things." Ho is moit see-ure of lifo who lives for his fellows. One lives through all periods who has in all periods lived lor his race. We must see humanity through our ambition always, if we would make and perpetuate that life which consists in an undying reputation.