RATES OF ADVERTISING. A i r1 One Rare, one Inch, one lnert'oo..,. II 00 Oiie Romre, one innli, one month....... 8 00 i ne H. iri, ono inch, three HK-utUu.... 00 ( hie Npiarn, one inch, one year.. 10 (X) I' wo H jimroe, one year.........,,,. .... 15 (to 'Juart'T Column, oue year........ 30 (HI lair Column, oue yew,... ............ 60 (0 One Column, one year........ 100 O" JVtfftl notices at established rates. Marriages and doat,b notices (rratln. All bills for yearly alvertincment colleotol quarterly. Temp rary advertisement must ha p-id for in advance. Job work, caau. on deliver. i i ,yyj A iU' '10111)!: lily ill H j. 1 A I ( i '! it'tiotmrcceivod fur a shorter period I I' II l i 10 Ii i J I. '.' .r:.-j.-iM'(.in-i-nilIrti( from nil parts of th '' "''i'.''. V n-ii o ii 1 be takin of anonvmoni '.tiMitii'titii-ltt 01)1. Vol. XV. No." 15. : TIONESTA, PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1882. $1,50 Per Annum. rfcxc.1 i:?pM:ra J. n. WENK. O.Vi'.'s in Bmpsrljangh at Co.'g DiiiMing, rrrccsr, - .tionesta, pa. ri litMS, Cl.fio I'ICIi YEAH. Our One Life, Tin not f ir i.hii to trifle, life la brief, Aiid sin In bore Our a" is but the fulling of a loaf, A dropping tnivr. We. l.flvo no tiino to sport away Hie home; Al! must bo oarnoat in a world like ours. Ut ninny lives, but only one have we One, only one. How sacred should that one life ever be, That narrow pn ly after day filled tip with bloggcd toll, Ilonr after hour still bringing in now spoil Onr being is no shadow of thin air, No vacant droam, No fable of those things that nevor wero, lint only seom. Tis full of moaning as of mystery, Though strange and solemn may that moaning be. Our sorrows are no pbaiitoms of the night, No idle tale, No cloud that OoaU along a sky of light On summer galo. They aro the irue realitioa of earth; Friends and companions, even from our birth. Oh, life below bow brief, 'and poor, and sad 1 One heavy sigh t Oh, life above, bow long, how fair, and glad ! An endloss joy I Oh, to bo done, with daily dying here Oh, to begin the living In you sphere. : Oh, day of time, how dark ! Oh, day and earth IIow dull your hue 1 Oh, day of Christ, how bright 1 Oh, sky and earth Made fair and new I Conso; butter Kdon, with thy freshor groon I Como, bi-ightor Balom, gladden all the scene 1 Sonar. IXY LUCKY HIT. I like change; I delight in the un Vnosrn and unexpected, in contrasts and adventures. I had been "out several hbous, and knew by heart the deadly, lively routine of a winter in the city. Therefore I was spending the winter in the mountains of Maryland with Mar garet Hastings. ... Margaret hid been a "belle, a beauty and an heiress," a wife and a mother. Buo was now only the last Her hand some hunt and had carried her awa from her past, worn out her beauty, bpent her fortune, and died in time ti rave hia memory, at least. She shot berlf away from the world to monrti for him in singleness of heart, and givt her time to his children. It was something of a surprise whei she wrote to me, once her intimate, and begged me to ooroe to her fo the nex four months. 8he had quietly and et-eadilv refused all advances for so Ion that we had grown indifferent to 1 ei movements, and seldom spoke of her, icppt to pity her changed fortunes ami her infatuation. When the letter cam I forgot her rf jeotion of intended kind neses in the quite eelflbh idea of some thing new. It was not until I saw her, pale and sweet and sad, that I felt for her any of the old-time love, and re dined there might be more in my life with her than the mere escape from tire some sameness or the rapidly waning pleasures of novelty. She lived in a small house on the mountain side a curious, rambling, one-storied structure, witn an attic, in which we slept, and o id little porches between the downstairs rooms, where they jutted out or lapped over each other. She "kept her carriage'' a light rockaway and a steady horse ; and her servants, one old woman, a half-grown girl and a young man. Everything around her was neat, but plain in the extreme. Society there was none, vine few farmhouses scat tered here and there along the valley wero oniv shelters for their hard work ing, poorly repaid owners. No one had time for mere courtesies or means for other than pure hospitality food and warmth lor those who absolutely needed them. She was the "great lady" of the oountry, and went to and fro in a sort of stately exclusiveness, which enabled her to devoto every moment to her little oues a boy and a girl. I c"Id not wonder aha had at last grown restive. end reached out a longing hand for some kindred touch. We had a v.ry pleasant time together. it was so delicious to do nt as one pleased, and take up only suoh interests as one chose. 1 read a good deal, and walked, and drove and, above all, ' talked. There was so much to tell of my world, once Margaret's as well. And there were some things to hear in the quiet hours when the depths of our natures were reaohed. I began to believe, after all, that " love is enough," for Margaret had had that, and minded nothing else. Bhe had not been at all deceived as to her husband's real self, and did not attempt to deceive me. They had simply loved each other, each with the best that as in them and if his best had beon poor enough, it wjs his, and sue asked no more. One nisht we had an adventure that hUtffrested the charms of more civil ized state of society, as well as its draw backe. The children were in bed, the servants ttphtairs with them the man went to hia own home at night and we were remling in the east room. The siienoe was profound. The very fire was noiseless. Suddenly we raised our heads with one impulse nud gazed ete.a-.Iiiy into each other s eve. "What is that If" whispcrod Margaret, after a moment that seemed un age, "Home oue at the long room win dow,'1 1 answered, almost breathlessly The long room ran oil at right angles from the east room; the dining-room branched off from the long room, paral lel with the east room. Between thorn was a covered porch. Each had Ihree or four windows and two or three doors. There was not a shutter to the first nor a bolt to the last. And we were a houseful of women unarmed and unprotected. The noise continued. There was no doubt of its rneanincr. Some one was nrying the windows of the long room, oteadily, carefully, persistently. To reach the stairs and join the rest of the household we must either pass through the long room, all uncurtained and open to inspection from three sides, orcross the porch to the dining-room, thus going out into the black night where we knew not what danger lurked unseen, but fearfully roar. We sat in terror too deep for words, and then, as with one thought rose, slipped quietly through the door on to the porch, sped across it, and threw ourselves breathlessly into the dining room. "Oh, Fan !" gasped Margaret, "were you ever so glad in all your life be fore?" " Never I" I answered. " I thought I would never reach that door I Oh,what oan.we do." " Let ns ask Betty." In the same noiseless manner we crept upstairs and roused Betty in her attio. She was au enormous, dingy old creature, who looked able to protect herself and a score of women younger; fairer and less ponderous. But she was as great a coward as either of us, and less cautious. The young girl awoke calmly, and instantly got out of bed, and com menced dressing herself with all speed., and no words. "What are you going to do, Kitty asked her mistress. " I'm a-goin' to see ef thore is a man about," she answered, quietly leaving the room. I followed her, and together, holding each other tight by the band, we crept iown the stairs again, and softly iponed tue door or the long room on he tiny entry. The four gray spaces n the blackness clearly defined the window, and at first we could see lothmg e.se. But there was the noise nd Kitty's fingers trembled, rresent- y we saw. A man was bending for- v ard at the end window, with a regular low movement, that explained the iouod perfectly. H e was turning the undle of some boring instrument just inder tbe eaten. We fled precipitately. " He's ther," announced Kitty, " an' ie s a-comin' in." Betty nroaned. It was carina, but he knowledge that no one could hear i cry bad the effect of suppressing them. Under any other circumstances, vhere there was the faintest shadow of t nope that it would nave brought us nelp, 1 am sure each and all of us vould have sor earned- lustily. But we knew our danger and its hopelessness, e were awed from the nrst. The mountains bad been gaming an evil reputation for ?ome time ai the re sort of the border rncians of the war, Margaret's mode of life, in its differ ence from their own, had long raised for the outcome of enormous wealth in the eyes of the valley people, and her fame had spread across the rid go. Kitty put it into words in her usual terse manner: 1 This comes of yer bii silver teapot, Mis Hastings. " Oh, Kitty, hush ! And it is only plate. Oh, I wish I could throw it out of the window to him." "It we only had a horn," I moaned. " or a pistol." '1 here s the dinner-norn, cried Kitty. "Can you fire a pistol, Fan?" cried Margaret. I cau do anything," I answered fiantically. " Anything but stand here and wait for that wretch. Kitty where is the born r "Out to the barn." "Oh, you little goose !" "&nd the pistol is downstairs in Bertie's tool-chest on the porch, sighed Margaret. "There is one, then? Ob, on the porch I" I think the fewseoonds that followed were the longest, the most terrible, the most hrroio of my life. I have el felt proud of myself when I recall the sinking of my heart, and the wonderful victory over my natural and excusable cowardice that brief struggle brought about. "i will go and get it," i said, very quietly. "Tell me exactly where it is.' "Oh, I oanuotl You will have to take a caudle!" Could anything be worse? Go out into the night with my very life my hand, and a light to show where I was I But I was wrought up to " Very well, give me the candle. Kitty. come down and stand ready to look the door, if any one comes." Margaret began to cry and Betty to moao, but neither of them uttered word. Kitty and I again crept down the stairs. I had an unlighted candle and some matches, which really was an after thought full of relief, since it allowed me to slip unperceived through the dining-room door, and to reaoh tbe chest under the welcome cover of dark ness. The night was profoundly dark an still. 1 remember distinctly the deeper shadow of the mountain against tb gloomy sky just over my head as paused for ono biief second to draw breath and steady my hand. Then knelt down, raided the lid of the chebt, ruck a match, and looked in before applying it to the candle. The pititol was ready to my hand, and recollected that only the day before Bertie had found it somewhere up stairs and carried it down in high glee. I seized it and rushed in to Kitty's weloome presence. Margaret had joined her, and had come to her senses. It is not loaded, Fan," she said softly, " but I have the cartridges here. lie is still at work. Light the candle and slip them in, and then we can fire from the long room door." "JDo you mean me to shoot t.heman?" gasped. " No, only to fire at him. You'll never hit him, but I wish I could I" I followed her advice. I was not an adept, but I knew enough to load a modern breechloader. Then we put out tbe candle, softly opened the door into the entry and the opposite door into the long room. Margaret and Kitty stood oloseto me. but at my back ; the man was just rais ing the window. The next instant the thunder of heaven seemed ringing in my ears mingled with the crash of broken glass and a wild, terrible ery, half-oath, half prayer, followed by a dull, sickening thud. A very demon of rage took possession of me. All fear was gone. I dashed across the room, and, one after another, in frenzied succession, fired the remaining barrels of the revol ver out into the night through the shat tered window. Then I turned and fled pstairs after Margaret and Kitty, who were leaning as far as possible from the attio-window, and screaming for help at tbe top of their lungs. It was nearer than we hoped. ..When Kitty paused to take breath before a fresh outburst, there were audible through the thinner piping of Margar et's cries a violent rattling and rapping on the door below us. Kitty only added greater volume to her shouts; but, nevertheless, I heard distinctly a clear anl full haloo that brought comfort to my heart. Oh, do hush T I screamed, shaking them vigorously. "There's a man down stairs. Listen 1" . " Who's there f piped Margaret, musically, for all the quaver in her tones. "What is the matter, ladies?" an swered a gentleman's voice. "What has happened T" " Oh, for the lovo of heaven 1" burst forth Betty; "we're all murdered in our beds?" Is there anything wrong?" impa tiently reiterated the voioe. "Yes, there is," I called in my turn Who are you, and I will oome down?" "I am Professor Jou vain." ' From Kalston 1" exclaimed Mar- rret. " I thought I knew the voice. Oh. thank God I" She sank crying on the floor by the children's cot, and I hurried away. By the time I opened the east room door, where the lamp was still bright and the fire glowing as when we sat down to our books and a quiet evening, the pro- tet-Hor naa ueou joiueu vj some in we . I 1 3 1 neighbors. " Tbe ringing; shots had eolroed far and with terrible meaning throngh the quiet valley. There was the rapid beat ol running lootsteps, coming nearer and nearer, to right and lo:t, as we Btood facing each other. The professor was tall, dark and handsome. I saw at a glance, as he stepped into the ciro le of Lght, that he was another sort from any 1 bad seen of late or ever He was wonderfully ocol and calm the quietude of strength and gentle ness. Involuntarily I bent toward him, relieved, soothed, thankful, at rest. He drew my hand through his arm, and led me at onoe to the large, low couch near the nre. ' Sit down, and tell ns all about it," he raid, smiling pleasantly. "Yon are chilled from exoitement. What has frightened you? Who fired those shots r "I did. Ob, I shot a man I Do you think he can be dead ?" "Dead I" cried one of tie farmers, with a jolly laugh. " My lawd, miss, I'll bet he ain't dead, ef yon p'inted it at him." I heard them all laugh ; I saw the professor's grave smile ; but I did not mind it There was more behind than they knew. The cry and the fall came back to me with terrible meaning. "Oh, but he was hurt! It was the first shot. Oh, somebody, please, go I lie was at the window of the long room, on the other porch." "This way 1" cried Kitty, opening the door into the long room and taking up the lamp. They all followed her except the pro fessor; I candidly own I held him and would not let him go. " Oh, don't leave me I I am so fright ened. It was so terrible I" " But it is all over now," he said, gently. " You must not lose your self control when yon have been so brave. I must go now. They are calling me. Don't move I I will come back and tell yon what it means." There was no need for him to oome back. I heard plainly what they said to him, although their voices were curi ously subdued and muffled. " She's right, professor.- She hit him. He's a goner 1" said one. '' Laid him out like a log I" exclaimed another. " It's Bam Frout," said a third. And then it suddenly mulied upon me in its fall meaning the thing I had done, and they were putting it into words, uncouth but freighted with eter nal woe to a lost sooL A sense of fear and horror I had never conceived came upon me, a wild despair that crushed me, and from which I sud denly slipped away into a vast blank. When I saw Margaret's pale face close to mine, and felt some one's hands moving across my forehead, and some one's strong grasp on my hands, I knew that I had fainted for the first time in my life, and I knew why. " Oh, Margaret P I cried, faintly. But it was the professor who an swered me, bending over me, and cheer ing me with his voioe and eyes. " The man U all right, Miss Fannie. You did hit him, but he was only stunned." "Then I am safe?" "You are, certainly. And quite a heroine. As soon as you aro able, if you wish, you shall see your prize, although he is not beautiful to look upon." Margaret kissed and petted me for a few minutes longer, and the professor held my hands and chafed them me chanically. I was myself again, and a very merry, light-hearted self I felt after that terrible burden of blood and death. I looked up at the professor and laughed. He loosed my hands sudden ly, and stood up very straight. " Will you come now and see Sam Prout in the flesh ?" he said, with an effort to appear unembarrassed. We went. The farmers were keeping guard over poor Sam in the dining room, while awaiting the constable's arrival. He was sitting in a great chair, lean ing his head against the chimney-piece, a very much used-up man. There was a good deal of blood about him, and his head was bound up pretty tidily, if not scientifically. He looked pale and dazed aud wretched, and I felt quite ashamed of myself for" the ruin I had wrought. What creatures of the moment most women are, to be sure I We only peeped in at the doo for a few seconds, and then went back to the east room. Of course we were too ex cited to think of rest. The professor had been thrown too close to our inner lives to seem strange, and we sat over the fire chatting as oozily as friends of years. He told us how he came to be on hand, riding home from a lecture in neighboring town in order to com plete some work at the college early the next day (and whioh, by-the-bye, he seemed to have forgotten), and we told him every incident and throb of feeling during our experience. We saw Sam frout off in state, and then went to bed. The professor and a young iarmor from the adjoining place volunteered to remain until morning, and were made oomiortable before the fire in the east room. Left to himself, the professor remem bered his task, and did set off at day break, leaving his aduux for us with Kitty. But he came back that after noon, and Margaret invited him to stay to tea, because ho had misseck his break fast. He did not refuse the invitation. That was the beginning of a gay season. We were the belles of the county, and had admiring and awe struck visitors from all quarters. How many times we went through the recital of our night of terror, I dread to think. Every nail-hole and paint scratch about that window remains photographed upon my mental vision. Then there came the trial of Sam Prnnt. and wa had a court Fuene. in whioh the professor and I seemed to a arure largely, to the creat delight of the public and his serene enjoyment, wa very broadly complimented for my bravery and prompt action, and Sam was sentenced and sent off to jail. " Now, Fan,"sjiid my father, who had oome down to see me through the or deal, "I intend to take you home with me, my fair lady 1 I am inclined to think Sam was not the only victim of your night's shooting, and the other may prove fatal. If it does, youwill be best out of the way." "What do you meau?' I asked, somewhat faintly. " You know very well what I mean You are inclined to be soft-hearted to ward the sufferer, and I am not. You shall not marry Professor Jouvain, if oan help it." " Well, you cau't,"I said, coolly. Mv father and I were "oronies " al ways, and said what we pleased to each other. He looked at me intently, got up, ad justed his glasses and then turned me round for inspection. "I think you mean it," he said, slow ly. "And I had such a splendid chance for vou in New York I" " I have had two or three myself," I replied. "But they were nothing to the professor. He is a man after my heart." I saw my father's face redden with mingled embarrassment, irritation and amusement, and I turned hastily. The professor stood lust behind ns and had heard every word. I covered my faoe with my hands in shame and confusion. " Mr. Crawford," began the profes sor, instantly and coolly, "it will not surprise you if I enter upon this sub ject, since your daughter has broached it?" "No, sir; not at all. Nothing sur prises me now I said my lather, as coolly. I felt an arm, strong but infinitely tender, take me into its kindly shelter. "Your daughter's expression of her feelings natirally prepares yod for the acknowledgment of mine," continued the professor. "Naturally," inteiieoted my father " She is the one woman of the world to me" here the arm trembled a little, but held me close. "If jou will give her to me, I shall devote myself to making her happy." " I think you have made a very fair beginning toward a successful ending," said my father, grimly. "Possession being nine points of the law, I need make no merit of gracefully ceding tbe tenth. At all events, she is evidently yours." And my father walked away, carefully closing tne door behind him. ui course, there could be but one ending to my story. I have been the professor's wife these five years, and I am more than ever convinced that "love is enough." But I have never owned before that the professor, like Sam Prout. was brought down unexpectedly. When I is red mat candid oonfession at my father naif in jest, ball in earnest pro test against his objections to the pro fessor I had no idea it would strike home. Until that moment the profes sor had never spoken to me of his feel ing lor me, and I was not at all sure of it. How can a girl be sure of suoh a thing until she is told 7 And what would have become of me had he met the acknowledgment in any other way? But he did not It was all right, as it turned out, and I don t care in the least when he laughs at my "lucky hit1 False Eyes. Most people are under the impres eion that the artificial eye is in the form of a globe, and that to have it in serted it is necessary that the entire eyeball should be removed. But this is not the case. In very few instances is the eyeball completely destroyed, and to cut it out to make room for a false eye would be an operation equally dan gerous as useless. Tho artificial eye is merely a thin shell of silica that can be inserted under the ejelids by the individual himself. It is held in position by the contraction of tbe lids, and is moved about by the optic muscles pretty much in the same manner as the natural eyo. JNo dis agreeable sensation U felt by the wearer, and, as far as appearance goes, it would be difficult to detect anything out ol the common, to suoh a degree of per fection has the manufacture reached. There is a great difficulty in match ing e; es, as tho contraction and dila tion of the pupil when exposed to sun lght or on entering a room, causes tue eve. of course, to assume a darker hue than it really has, owing to the differ enoo in the density of the pupiL The only way in whioh this can be remedied i? to have the artificial eye several shades darker in color than the natural tye, a.d this is invariably the practice. The nrst thing a man, alter getting n artiucial eye does, is to ask every friend what they thought of it; whether it matched in color and size his other one, and so forth, and the friend, glad to have a chance of airing an opinion, after a slight examination declares the color wrontr and probably the eye a misfit in every way. The purchaser then comes running back to the shop and storms aud rages until he is assured taat it is owing to a natural phe nomenon that his eye assumed a slight change in size and oolor in the open air, and so on. A comical dde of the picture is when the party who is anxious to temedy his defect cames attended by, 6ay his family and a few others ; these oollect around him, and each perhaps selects a particular eye from the case and deolares that it is just the thing. The argument waxes hot and heavy and tne inevitable con clusion is that the unfortunate man is compelled to go away with an eye un suitable in many respects, and whioh he is only too ready to come back and change a few days later. While on the subject of eyes, it may be said there is scarcely anything more absurd than the practice usually cur rent of going to Europe for ophthalmio advioe whenever it is required. Amer ican oculists have, long sinoa earned for themselves a world-wide reputation by their wonderful skill la treating this disease, and besides understand the peculiar phases whioh are the produot of a different climate far better than their European compeers could possi bly do. Mistaken Kindness. Mormon wagons took sunflowers along with them on their way to Utah, and Iowa formers have had a hard time ficrhtinsr tho peat. A single Scotch thistle planted in Victoria the Scotch men there had a congratulatory dinner over it twenty years ago has covered tens of thousands of acres and been tho destruction of farms. The scattered (train emptied from the bags of Ger man troop ships in the Revolution knocked millions eff the value of cur grain crop for all time to ocme by bring- ns the Hessian fly. A careless man set out a French grape-cutting a few years ago with phylloxera on it, and the pest is now sprinkled along the raw no coast, creeping inland. Its ravages in France have cost 8100,000,000. A man with a taste for peppery greens planted water cress iu New Zealand, and the little plant has spread so thali the local leg- nuaiure una io pyruprmi,o u ruuuu oum yearly to improve the water-cress out of existence and the water courses. A kindly, misguided man brought over to Isew lork a basketful of sparrows not twenty years ago, and the little wretohes have already driven half our song birds into the woods, la South America the same thing was done, and tho birds are cleaning out the fruit crop. Our Manufacturing (Miles. J The statistics of manufacture, ai returned for tho tenth census, show New York to ba the greatest mannf:;r-. luring ci'y in tho Union, l'hiladei- . phia, which has hitherto enjoyed that pre-eminence, is now relegated to the second place, though its capital invest ed in manufactures, $170,000,000, is $(1,000,000 more than is credited to New York city. In number of estab lishments New York has 11,102 and Philadelphia 8,877. The amount paid in ware durinar the census year was: New York, $93,370,000; Philadelphia, 60.000,000. The value tf the mate rials used in the industries was: New York, 275,000,000, and Philadelphia, 8187,000,000. The value of the prod ucts was: New York. $148,000,000; Philadelphia, $304,591,000. The largest single item of manutac- ure in .New York is that of men s clothing, the product of which for 1880 is valued at $60,798,000. The vrairea paid in their manufacture wore $10,- 00,000. The value of the product in the manufacture of women's clothing for the same period is $18,930,000. Viewing only the value of the product, meat packing is the second largest in dustry in New York city, its product for 1880 being 829,297,000. "Printing and publishing" shows a product of $21,696,000. The cigar product is $18,347,000. That, of refined lard is $14,758,000, and sugars and molasses, refined, $11330,000. In Philadelphia the largest single product of manufacture in value is sugar and molasses refined $21,294, 020 The industry having tho largest capital invested is that of woolen goods, with a capital of $11,752,900, and whose product in 1880 was $21,350,000. The value of the produot in the manufacture of men's clothing is $18,500,000; that of cotton goods, $16,350,000; carpets, $14,263,000; drugs and chemicals, $11, 804,000; machinery, $9,684,900; boots and shoes, $9,034,000; worsted goods, 8,327,000; hosiery and knit goods, $7,683,000; printing and publishing, $6 834,000 leather, dressed skini, $6,741,000. The third manufacturing city is uni- cago, with 3,479 establishments, having a capital 6f $64,000,000, paying $33, 000,000 in one year in wages, and whose product in 1880 was $24l,uuu,uuu. ine leading manufacturing industry is meat packing, whose product in the census year was $85,000,000. Brooklyn is the fourth city, with 0,089 estaDiisumonw, paying $27,000,000 year's wages, and the value of whose products is $169,000,000. The leading article is sugar and molas ses, refined, the pioduct of which in 1880 was $59,711,000. Boston ranks fifth on the basis of the value of the manu factured product, it being $123,000,000; men s clothing and sugar and moiassf s, refined, being each $16,000,000. The sixth city is St. Louis, with a product of $104,000,000, of which $13,759,000 is flouring and grist mill products. Cin cinnati is the seventh manufacturing city, its produot in 1880 being $94,000, 000. The manufacture of men's clothing brought $13,873,000 of this aud meat packing $11,614,000, Baltimore comes number eight, witn a proauos oi s.o,- 000,000, the largest item of which is men's clothing, $9,446,uou. Pittsbur is the ninth m rank oi manufacturing cities in the vtlne of its product, which in 1880 wa& 5f74,OUU,uw. It has 850.000.000 of capital invested in manufactories, which exooeds that of St. Louis, Cincinnati, Boston aud Bal timore, and makes Pittsburg in that respect the fifth manufacturing city of the Union, those ranking it being in order Philadelphia, New York, Ch cago and Brooklyn. The number of Pitts burg establishments is l,0(i; tne men employed are 31,651 ; the wages paid in 1880 were $16,918,- 426, and the value of the materials used was Sil.201.000. The largest item of manufacture is iron and stool, tho prod ucts of which are $35,490,000. The next is glass, with a product of $5,000, Q00. After Pittsburg the cities rank in the order of the value of their manu facturing products as follows : Newark, tenth ; Jersey City, eleventh ; Cleve land, twelfth ; Buffalo, thirteenth; Providence, fourteenth : Milwaukee, fifteenth ; Louisville, sixteenth ; New Orleans, seventeenth, and Washington City, eighteenth. President Arthur's Letters. President Arthur, it is stated, receives 600 letters every day Allowing 1T3 to give each letter one minute's tinro, ten presidential hours of the twenty-four are accounted for. A famous English man of a century ago, who suffered from the same kind of inundation, used pleasantly to say that one-thud of the letters he received were answered, that another third answered themselves, and that the other third got no answers of any kind. It is to be supposed that the President follows the precedent of the Englishman, who borrowed his practice from a royal philosopher ol tho lassio time s. Laud In Euluud. Lind in oorn-srowing parts of Eng land is fulh-ig off in value. .1 small es tate in one of the eastern counties, wlrch four years ago w valued at $125,000, w put up at auction thre weeks ttfcO and the highest price oflvied for it was $15,000. It comprises 490 acrof, and Was bought in by the trus tees. It is said thut iu tho same part of England much arable laud h running to vubte for want of capital to pay for tb n labor it eo Mire. Mo Urujiogt i- cept grazing and ?airy fanning is oid now to pay for tho outlay s. v