(I lie Rarest JUqmblkan, 18 PURMSIJEO EVERY WEDNESDAY, BY OFFICE If ROMNSON & IIONSEH'B BUILTOTO . EIiM STREET, TIOSKJIA, PA, TERKfl, 11.00 TXAB. . No NnWi ipliotm received for it nhortm (n'lK'd tlmn Ihrco months. 'ii rpsponilciicp solicited from all pnrU m I ho country. No notice will Imj taken 0 anonymous communications. Rates of Advertising. fit One Squared inch, one Insertion On Square , " ono month -OnoNquaro " tlirpn niontlm One.Sqnare " nno year - - V - t - i j.i, i." a - :.:! ( -- M ( 0 100 CO Two fcUuarfls, one yar - . QnartrOol. " Half " " - -One ."."--.- Legal notices at established ratw. Marriage and death notice, gratia. All bills for Toarlv advertisements .' looted quarterly.- Temporary advertise. nient must be paid for in advance. Job work. Cash on Delivery. VOL. XIV. NO. 19. TIONESTA, PA., AUG. 3, 1881. $1.50 Per Annum. What Is Famo , Fame? Is it tovisit Europe,1"-. Study art ft while in Homo, Paint, perhaps, a dozen picturoA, Oct your name np and come homo ; Then to liave the neighbors ask you , When they see- your masterpiece, " Does tho knaok of painting pictures Take much time and olbow grease ?" And is it to write a poem Glowing with poetic lire, " Full of passion, and tho longing After something better, higher,. .., Some time read it to tho neighbors, . And then, feeling like a fool, Hero one nay, "I wroto such verse Very often Whilo in school." Fame ? It is to keep on painting, Keep on writing if inclined, . Till tho world that lies beyond you Your position has defined. Is it labor, till your pictures Are exchanged for so much gold ; Till your poems, liko potatoos, In tho market can bo sold. After you have climbed the ladder, From tho lowust round, Then tho neighbors pat your shoulder, And your fullsomo praises sound. After having, with your talent, Learned the money-making art, Then they say, 1 ' We always loved you ; Always said that you were smart." Paul Carton. DOLLY'S DESTINY. " I shouldn't be surprised any day, Dolly, to see David Wiggin tying Lis horse at your gate," said Mr. Blount, roguishly, gathering tip the reins. "Nonsense, brother I Anything the matter with his own hitching-post ?" re torted Miss Dolly, turning in the door way. Mr. Blount laughed. Everybody felt bound to laugh at Miss Dolly's crisp payings that had kept her friends in gooil humor those forty years. " And when David does call on you," pursued Mr. Blount, more seriously, " I do hope, Dolly, you'll give him a chance to do his errand. That'll be no more than fair, and the man won't be easy until he has freed Iub mind." What mischief are you the forerun ner of now, James Blount?" cried Mis Dolly, facing about like a soldier on drill. " What upon earth have I to do with David's errands ?" " Well, his wife has been dead a year or more," said Mr. Blount, suggestively, shutting one eye and squinting with the other down the length of his whip stalk, "and lately he has been asking about you. You can put that and that together to suit yourself." " Fiddlestick !' said Miss Dolly, ener getically. " I shan't say have him or don't have him though tnero isn't a likelier man living than David but I do say, Dolly, von ought to give him a hearing," and having convinced himself beyond a rea sonable doubt that the whip was right, Mr. Blount tickled his sleepy horse with it and drove away. " Oh, my sorrows 1" ejaculated Miss Dolly, closing the door with an afflicted couutenance, and sitting down so quiet ly for once that a photographer might have copied her then and there. Not that he could have done her justice, for her expression was too quick and varied to be caught by any trick of chemicals, and without it Miss Dolly's physiogno my would have been rather character less but for her llonian nose. This organ gave tone to her face. By which I would not be understood literally as saying that she talked through a nasal whine. I mean simply in a metaphori cal sense this bold feature spoke loudly of energy. And Miss Dolly had abun - dant need of energy else why the nose? Every two years during her childhood she had been tiptoed into the east bedroom to see a new baby, till, at her mother's death, five little brothers fell to her charge to be coaxed and scolded into manhood. "You can't bring up those boys," groaned a dolorous aunt. " They'll run square over you, Doithy Almeda." "Let them run over me so long as it does not hurt 'em !" laughed Miss Dolly, bkewing her flaxen hair with a goose quill and tying a calico apron over her calico longskirt, preparatory to "bring ing up" said youths. From that day forward she went cheerily on, making the best of every thing, though it must be confessed she often had odds and ends to work with, as those do have who are born witn a faculty. Somehow she found time for all her duties except matrimony. If that were a duty, it was one she wouldn't und couldn't attend to whilo her father and the children needed her. Divers young men thought this a great pity, among them Wiggin. "Don't be silly David 1" said Dolly, when he hinted as much to her ; whereupon David went off and married Olive Searle, the plainest girl in the parish. This happened twenty years ago, and David was again wifeless, ana again tho current of his thoughts turned to . ward Dollv. who still lived at the old homestead at the foot of Bryant's Falls. Her father had died some months be fore. Of the boys James and Ezekie had settled on neighboring farms, and the remaining three had gone AY est, David's benevolent heart warmed with compassion as he remembered Dolly's lonely condition, and he felt that it would bo exceedingly kind in him to oiler her a home, especially as he owned as good a place as you'd find on the river, while the Blount cottage was fall ing into decay. He wouldn't let her f irmer refntd (ell againNt her, for as he looked back he couldn't really see how she could have married any one at that period. She ought to be rewarded for the devotion she had shown to tho family; and, for his part, ho felt mag nanimous enough to give her a second chance to accept him. Such was the worthy widower s state of mind when he asked James Blount, with mock humility, whether it would be of any use for bim to try and make a bargain with Dolly. " That's more than I can tell," Mr. Blount had answered. " Dolly's a puz zle, you'll have to find her out yourself." Mr. Wiggin smiled in complacent an ticipation of acceptance, indeed, if it might not seem like reproach to the memory of his lost Olive, I should say the kind-hearted man rejoiced in this opportunity of making Miss Dolly's happiness. Benevolence was in his face, benevolence was in his spirit, as he sallied forth at an early day to ac quaint her with her good fortune. The broken harrow which he had strapped into his wagon to give the neighbors as a plausible one for his trip to the falls, was by no means typical of men tal laceration to its owner. His feeling as he approached Miss Dolly's moss grown cottage was purely ono of thank fulness that it was in his power to pro vido her a better home. Not that be was grateful to his dead wife for leav ing a vacancy there. Air. Wiggin naci mourned faithfully for Olive a year and a day. Miss Dolly was out in the garden gathering catnip. She had built a chip lire under the tea-kettle and tlien whisked off to pick an armful of the pungent, leaves' while the water was boiling. There she was, stooping beneath the eaves of a log-cabin, wearing a big sunbonnet, and humming a lively tune, when Mr. lggin drove up. "Come, my love, haato away," piped Miss Dolly, cheerily, snapping away briskly at the stalks. " Cut short the hours of thy delay, Fly liko a youthful" " 'Fly like a youthful ' " struck iu a wheezy bass. The sunbonnet tipped back like cartbody. " Sakes alive 1 " cried Miss Dolly, not in the words of the hymn, as Mr. lg gin strode toward her on his slightly rheumatic legs. " I didn't mean to put you out," he laughed, shaking hands heartily : "but it seemed kind 'o nateral to take part with you in 'Invitation.' " You always had a way of falling in at the most unheard of time, 1 remeiu bered," retorted Miss Dolly, saucily, recovering herself and going on gather ing catnip. " You used to say I kept good time, only too much of it, pursued Mr. Wig gin with a sudden inspiration ; "but tell vou what, Dolly, .time never did drag with me more than it does these days." " It is a dull season," said Miss Dolly, with exasperating- simplicity. " I sup pose the grasshoppers havo eaten most of your wheat haven't thev so it'll hardly pay for reaping?" "Just so," asserted Mr. Wiggin, dis comiitod. He had not traveled five miles in the heat to discuss tho state of the crops. . " W alk in and sit down, won t you ? said Dolly, with reluctant hospitality, Her apron was crammed to its utmost capacity. She devoutly wished it had been larger. Well, yes, I don t care if I do, an swered Mr. Wiggin, after a hypocritical show of hesitancy. " I had a little bust ness further on at the blacksmith's. No hurry, though, as I know of," and he turned to let down the bars for Miss Dolly, w ho meanwhile slipped through tne lence, catnip ana an. " liiess my heart I I don t see but you are as smart as you ever was, said he, admiringly, as he puffed along in her wake. "Still you must get into years, Dolly, as well as 1 no ollense, 1 nope ana 1 was wondering whether or no it wasn't lone some fcr you to live alone here a woman so?" ' Oh, I never was one of the lonesome kind," responded Miss Dolly, briskly, seating her guest in the patchwork cushioned rocking-chair, "and, for that matter, hardly a day passes without some of James' folks running in." " Yes, I know ; but if you was to change your situation wouldn't you en joy life bettor, think ?" Miss Dolly fidgeted at the green paper curtains and intimated that her happi ness would be complete if the grass hoppers would stop feeding on her garden sauce. " That's just it" continued Mr. Wig gin, eagerly ; " you seem to need a man to look out for your farming interests, now don't you, Dolly ! a man that will be ready and willing to do for you, and make you comfortable ?" "I don't know," said Miss Dolly, dryly. "The year father died I did have Silas Potter, and he is the most faithful creature living ; but what with the extra cooking and washing I had to do for him my work was about double, and when mud-time came I was glad enough to send him off and hire by the day. I made up my mind that men folks cost more than they come to." "I guess we dont understand one another, Dolly," said Mr. Wiggin, slightly disconcerted at this unflatter ing view of his sex. ' I wasn't speak ing of hiring help, Dolly. Naturally you would get tired of that. It's wor ryin' to a woman. But if you was to have a compauion now one that could give you a good home, with wood and water under cover " " Shoo ! shoo 1" cried Miss Dolly, flying out after an inquiring chicken on the doorstep. Mr. Wiggin drew his red handker chief from his hat to wipe his glowing face. Certainly he had not felt the heat so bad through haying. "Hows your health nowadays t asked Dolly, frisking back with a look of resolute unconsciousness. 'Very good: remarkably good! I don't know where vou will find a man with a tougher constitution than I have got.' Ah!" and Dolly blushed like a sumac in October. "Yes, I'm well," pursued Mr. Wig gin, persevcnngly, "ana im tolerable well-to-do, with nothing to hinder my marrying again, provided I can Bee a woman to my mind." " J. here 8 the deacon s widow, sug gested Miss Dolly, officiously; "she's pious, economical " ones left with means enough to carry her through handsomely," interrupted Mr. Wiggin, quickly. " Now, I d rather have a wife to provide for one that needed a home. In fact, Dolly, I have my eye on a little woman I want this minute." He had both eyes on her for that matter, and Miss Dolly was forced to recognize the situation, whether she ac cepted it or not." 1 ve managed to sweeten my tea so far, David, without calling upon my neighbors," chirruped she, stooping to lay straight the braided mat, "and I might as well keep on. I don't feel it a t ax as some people would. But there's Martha Dunning, she s having a hard time to get along. Why don't you take her, David ? She'd appreciate such a ice home as yours." " It would seem as if most any woman might," said Mr. WTiggin, in an injured tone; " all finished off complete, painted outside and in ' "She'd be delighted with it, I'm sure of it," broke in Miss Dolly, with an air of conviction, as she darted into the kitchen to lift the boiling kettle from the crane. " But you don't mean that you won't marry me, Dolly, pleaded JUr. Wiggin, anxiously following her to the door. 1 have been dotm on seem you at the head of things at my house." " Martha is a grand manager, said Miss Dolly, coolly. "David needn't think he can buy mo with a new set of buildings I she added, mentally,, snap ping down the lid of the pug-nosed tea pot. " 1 never did have the name of being croping." "I tell you, Dolly, I won't have Martha; I don't like her turn !" cried Mr. Wiggin, testily balancing himself on the threshold, yet not daring to step over it. Miss Dolly gave her undivided atten tion to wringing the hearth. "You know you was always the woman of my choice, Dolly," pursued Mr. Wiggin, as tenderly as he could consistently with the distance between "And when we were both young " " Pshaw 1" 'snapped Dolly, scorching her wing, "that's beyond tho memory of man." Mr. Wiggin's position was becoming painful. Miss Dolly was not to be won by the attractions of wealth and po sition, nor even by tender allusions of the past. He would appeal to her kind ness of heart. " I used to believe you had some feel ing, Dolly," 6aid he, tremulously ; " but you dont seem to have any for me, Here I am left alone in the world ; children all paired off, thout s Matilda, and she'll go before the snow flies; house empty " I suppose you can have a home with any of your boys, and welcome," put in Miss Dolly, still fluttering about the chimney like a swallow. " Yes, if it comes to worst, I suppose I can, assented Mr. Wiggin, mournfully, anything but consoled by this reflection. " It would break me up terribly, though, you may depend, to give up my place that l set so mucn by ana crowd on my children. No respond save the clattering of the tongs. "And it's dreadful melancholy busi ness for a man at my time of life to drag along without a partner. I'm getting too old, Dolly," and Mr. Wiggin brushed his sleeve across hia eyes as a fermled schoolboy might have done. " Yes, I'm getting to be old, Dolly, and it stands to reason that I haven't many years to live ; but I did hope that we might go down hill together, Dolly, you ehirpin' me up with that spry way of your'n that 1 always took to, and 1 carvyn tlio heft of Here Miss Dolly gave a little sniff, nothing worth mentioning only for the ellect it produced on JUr. W lggin. "Can't you make up your mind to have me, Miss Dolly f pleaded Mr. w lggin, " I don't see how I am going to stand it if you,can t. " Then Miss Martha wouldn't suit," said Miss Dolly, archly. "What a shame now, when 6he needs property so much I " "Hang the property? I'd mortgage the whole of it rather than not get you 1 " cried Mr. Wiggin, with a . vehemence that quite closed her month. And so at last he had Miss Dolly. Mrs. Millas, whose beautiful face has become familiar through the picture of the "Huguenot Lovers" was one of the Grey sisters of Perth, who were com monly called the "fair maids of Perth.1' She was a slender, blonde-haired girl, but is now described as fat, fair and forty, the mother of grown daughters. It is estimated that 75,000 women in the bitj New York support them selvesand many of them their families hv their own eiertions. The Telegraph In Arctic Exploration, It is suggested by Mr. James Gamble, general superintendent Western Union Telegraph Company at San Francisco, that profitable use might be made of the electric telegraph in Arctic explora tion, nis plan would be to use light steel wire say No. 20 gauge weighing about twenty pounds to the mile. The wire, coiled on reels, could be hauled on sledges, either by men or dogs, over the snow or ice, paying it out as tho ad vance exploring party went along. By this means the party would keep in con stant communication with their base of supplies. They would have no cause for,un easiness about getting lost or be yond the means of rescue, as they would be able at any moment to call for aid. With this feeling of the certainty of re lief in case of accident, they would not hesitate to push their explorations to a distance far beyond what would be considered safe in the absence of means of telegraphic communication with the main body. And should any accident happen to the advance party of explo rers, or should they require a further quantity of supplies, tho line of wire would serve to guide those going to the rescue straight, to the spot where the explorers were camped. It would also serve as a guide for their return, mate rially lessening the chances of danger to life and loss of the party. Having established a base of supplies at some central point, there would be nothing to prevent several exploring parties being sent out at the same time in different directions, they reporting each night to the central station the progress and observations made during the day. Directed in this way the practica bility of one route over another could, from the telegraphio reports sent in, be determined upon, and much time that would otherwise be wasted in vain endeavors to make way over barriers of ice, be saved. As hard frozen ground, dry snow or ice is a per fect insulator, no poles to string the wire would be required. It cotdd be paid out on the snow or ice by the party as they went along. The generally ac cepted theory of those familiar with the Arctic regions is that the ice is seldom more than five or six feet in thickness, so that by boring through it with a com mon drill or through the frozen ground, there would be no diihculty in obtain ing a good ground connection to com plete the electric current. It would not be necessary to carry any battery mate rial. One main battery at the central station would be all that is required For a distance of 100 to 150 miles tel ephones could be used, dispensing with practical telegraph operators. Still, it might be advisable to have some of the party possessed of a practical knowledge of telegraphy. At twenty pounds to the mile 100 miles of wire would only weigh 2,000 pounds. It could be wound on reels in size easy to nandic. The cost ot steel wire of that guage is about twenty cents a pound, so that the total expense, in cluding cost of reels, winding, etc., would not exceed 1,000. Louisiana Yellow Pine. A correspondent of the Picayune, says: " lne building oi railway lines that will center at Alexandria is likely to make this city a lumber manufactur-, ing point. The pine section of the State lies north of Alexandria in the parishes of Grant, W inn, Jackson, Bienville, etc.; while the Sabine Eiver and its tributa ries furnish outlets for floating logs to Alexandria. Some iiarties from tho northwest who have ample capital are now engaged in selecting public lands along the Saline, preparatory to develop ing the lumber trade and transferring capital from Michigan to Louisiana. The demand for lumber in the American markets exceeds the supply. Prices have a strong upward turn, and, unlike cotton, there is no daDger of an oversupply. We wish these parties success in their undertaking. Jay Gould and associates are running a trial line for a road from Alexandria northward via Monroe. A trial line is also being surveyed under tho same management from Camden, Ark., direct to Alexandria. The surveyors on the latter line entered the State near the northwest corner of Union parish. Tho line passes near Vernon, in Jackson parish, and from this point to Alexan dria it will pass through a level, pine section. Should the direct route from Camden to Alexandria be adopted, nu merous sawmills will spring up along the line above Alexandria. It Cured lllm. When I was a boy of about nine, a servant of my father's put a pipe into my mouth, assuring me that to smoke would make a man oi me. i pulled away most vigorously, and perserved till I became sick and fell on the floor. I have never smoked since. In much the same way I was cured of hero wor ship. When I was a college youth I ventured one day to' call on a man of some eminence to whom I had been in troduced. He received me with smiles and compliments, and as I loft his presence I was ready to proclaim him the most gentlemanly man I had ever met with ; but after I went out I lingered at the door a moment to determine whether I should call on another great man who lived near, and I overheard the polite gentleman I had left call his ser vant to administer to him the most terrible scolding I had ever listened to in my life for letting in that stupid, im- Eudent stripling. This cured me of ero worship and of interviewing great men. Since that date I have at times gone to a distinguished man's house with lotters of introduction, and turned fit the door for fear of what m'ght c?me SCIENTIFIC 50TES. When in Africa M. d'Abaddie wit nessed lightning without any thunder. He contends that in this instance tho ordinary explanations of so-called " heat lightning " as the mere reflectior of a storm below the horizon is not ap plicable, because it was a thin fog occu pying a narrow valley which was sud denly illuminated by sheet lightning. Sir WTilliam Armstrong, at Craigside, near Newcastle, England, has utilized a brook to run a dynamo-electric maehina by means of a turbine water-wheel, and so manages to secure electricity enough to keen thirty-seven Swan lamps in a state of incandescence in his house. In this case the motive power costs noth ing, and electric lighting in this way is an exceptienal luxury. Color-blindness as a cause of disasters is now tolerably well recognized by those intrusted with the safety of pas sengers on land or by water. Sounds, however, as well as colors, are employed as signals, and the inability to distin guish the former may prove as fatal as a lack of sensibility to the latter. Some times, too, persons, having, excellent eyes have very poor ears, and the con trary is also true. But perhaps the gravest source of catastrophes, espe cially in railroad travel, is the tendency of engineers to what may be called ab sence of mind, especially wnen tnose men manage their locomotives for months and years over the same monot onous tfack. Long ago it was customary for the men employed at railway stations to convert unoccupied spaces of ground near th9 stations into flower beds. The taste and skill displayed incited people in the neighborhood to try what they also might do with tho unsightly and unused pieces of rocky ground near their dwellings. In a short time the country all round the stations under went a sort of transformation, and a study of botany, in which book knowl edge and actual practice went hand in hand, was greatly promoted. In other countries likewise on a few of the great lines of railroad there are some stations that present magnificent displays of floriculture, which are a grateful relief to the eye of the weary traveler and a source of elevating enjoyment to those who produced them. Importance of Thoroughness. One of the most useful lessons a boy can learn, w hethcr on the farm or else whero, is to do well whatever he under takes. There is a growing tendency in all departments of labor to slight tho work, to get along with as little manual labor as possible. Every progressive porson welcomes the substitution of tho use oi maenmery wnenever is is possi ble for human labor, but whenever manual labor must bo employed we would insist upon its being well done WTo would also insist upon any machine used to faoihtate work being so adjusted as to bo the beat of its kind, and capable of being run with the smallest possible expenditure of power. Aids in farm work are seldom auto matic ; the use of auimals, or of machi nery, demands individual tnougnt, skiii and careful attention to detail, lwen in the employment of a horse or an o it is important that the teamster or plowman should so drive the team or attach it to the plow that the power shall be economized to the best advan tage. Careless indifference i3 an offset to the best mechanical appliance. The economic value of cart or wagon may be lessened materially by neglect in oiling the axles. In a hundred ways may careful thought and study add to the power of team or machine. It is never too early in the life of bov to form habits of care-taking and thoroughness. There is an enormous sur plus power stored in the strong, active, healthy boy, and if directed in proper channels it is capable of becoming an elh. cient force on the farm. A reckless boy will almost certainly become a reckless man. Caution and thoughful considera tion of matters in hand increase by cnl tivation, hence the importance of incul eating correct principles iu the youth ful mind. The practical education of a boy w'ere better confined to a lew suujecis, thoroughly mastered, than a superficial knowledge of a multitude of facts. To do a few things well is of more import ance to youth or man than to perform all work slightingly. Proper attention to little things, a place for everything and everything in its place, are impor tant items in farm economy. Many ! boys and hired men have a provoking way of carelessly throwing down tools and implements where last used, and when subsequently wanted not knowing or remembering where to look fortheni. Beside tho damage to the tools from ex posure, the loss of time in hunting them ui) is very considerable. Xot His Handwriting. "Sir," said a fierce lawyer to a wit ness, "do you, on your solemn oath, declare that this i not your handwrit ing?" "I think not," was the cold reply. "Does it resemble your handwriting ?" "Yes, bir, I think it don't." "Do you swear that it don't resemble vour handwriting?" " Well, I do." "You take a solemn oath that this writing does not resemble yours in a single letter ?" "Ye-e-e-s, sir," "Now how do you know ?" "Clause I can't and never could write." Spell pea soup with three letters SOU pe toup.--? Trn"iipt Advertise. Yo men of business, step this way, riease notice what I have to say; 'Tia simply this I would advise: " Do not forget to advertise. The efforts of an honest man, When made according to this plan, Can scarcely fail success to bring, And wealth will bo a certain thing. How is it with tho stingy knave t" . Desirous all his cash to save; He gains no wealth, and wins no prize, Because ho does not advertise. Suppose tho cost seems rather high, Twill surely pay you by and by, And all the world will soon (Wpise Tho man who does not advertise. VI. r should yon wait? It will not pay; fcio M-nd your orders right away Straight to this sheet, whero frieudly eyes Await to seo you advertise. Tlnsshcot, my friends, is just the thing; Success it cannot fail to bring. If you would bo admitted wise, In this sheet's columns advertise 1 HUMOROUS. Accofding to the Waterloo Observer ove is so heavy that it sometimes break down the gate. At this season of the year most every man on his way to ue baroer shop is looking for a snort cm. " 'Tis the last rowo of summer," ai the farmer said, when he finished plow- ' ing his corn. New York Disatcph. Astronomer Proctor says the world will last 50,000,000 years yet. That will do. Any man who demands more is a hog. Medical men say no benefit is derived from seasickness. It will continue to be fashionable, however. New Orleans Picayune. Two or three hairs properly arranged on a plate of butter will save it longer and make it go farther than eight pounds of oleomargarine. Bingliamton Repub lican. It takes 800 full-blown roses to make table8poonful of perfume, while ten cents' worth of cooked onions will scent a whole neighborhood. Detroit Free Press. . " I think the gooso has the advantage of you," said the landlady to an inex pert boarder who was carving. " Gutss he has mum in age," was the wither ing retort. The little ones will keep on saying things. Six-year-old Mabel is industri ously engaged in "cleaning out" a pre serve jar which her mother had just emptied. Four-year-old Bobby looks at her for a while and then blurts out: ' Say, sis don't you wish you could turn it inside out, so's you could lick it?" "You sit on your horee like a butcher," said a pert young oflieer, who happened to bo of royal blood, to a veteran general, who was somewhat bent from age. " It is highly probable," responded the old warrior, with a grim smile, "it is because all my life I've been leading young calves to tho slaughter." Now whoa I my gallant bicycle 1 My nickle-platcd btced I Thou'rt cleaner than an icicle, . Thou ai t of noblo breed 1 They talk of Foxhall, Iroquois, ' And Luko, theldackbuin nag; It'sstalo and ancient stutT, my toy, A jockey's maudlin gag. Now fly, my gallant glittercrl . No spoke of thine bo soen I We'll see who shall be tw ittorer When halts my courser keen 1 Louisville Courier-Journal. Woodcock Telegraphy, . On a number of occasions I have closely observed the woodcock's sys tem of telegraphy. The bird's mandi bles are furnished with extremely sensi tive, nerves, so arranged that when tho point of the bill rests upon the ground the slightest sounds are conveyed to its brain. Standing upon the water-saturated earth of a spouty bog, our bird utters a faint, keen cry, scarcely audible at two rods' distance, then immediately lets fall his head till the tip of hia bill tonches the ground, and listens atten tively. If his mate hears him she replies, puts her bill on the ground, and listens in turn. " So the love messages go back and forth as long as the birds have anything to say. This sort of thing usnallv happens in the soft. twi lights from May to the middle of August, though occasionally 1 have seen ana heard it in the broad light of a summer day. In Jun, 1SCH, I made tho follow ing note : "To-day sketched a wood cock iu tho listening attitude. Shall try to get further studies." Five years later I succeeded in getting three more sketches and last year (1880) I got four more. Many of. these and kindred sketches have been obtained at the end of indescribable care and labor The woodcock is so shy, so attentive, so sensitive, that the leant sound will cause it to skulk and hide a thing it does with even greater cunning and success than the quail. The only way in which I have been able to get near enough to tho bird to sketch its natural attitude has been to crawl on the wot ground through tangled weeds and shrubs until I reached a hiding place on the bolder of its feeding range, and there patiently and silently watch for its coming, lhis I have done over and over again for days together before getting wght of the b i id. ( h icngo Trib u ne. The Boston Courier thinks that i' deutibt will be abltf to pvll thro,,. Ufa all right.