t i 5 SCHWEIEB, THE OOISTmmOI-TEE TTHOI-ATD TEE EfTOEOEHUT OP THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXVII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17. 1SS3. NO. 42. V ' I I 1 av av av III ., V m. . L l OKV I V VV pi e if tie! jjife gepi mm. it" ' . 19 I 9 V I n MT MCltiHBOB'i GAEDKN. lu ihe bound of mine own enclosure ' The flowers are fair to see; Kut the rose in my neighbor's garden 1, fai.erthau all to me. So white and slender and stately, So gt-iumed with sparkling dew-, Tin rose that bloms for another, Ji the sweetest that ever grew. Jly heart to its grace and beau y tJiws forth as to a shrine; Anil I sih to it mystical fragrance "If it w ere only mine!" Anl yet if not my neighbor, But I, in f-e and thrall, HrlJ a!l that marvelous glory On the other side of the wall. I iui(;ht, erhai, grow weary of its royal pomp ai.d grace. And love with my love some daisy With a sby, up.ifled face. For since the gates of Eden Were chut on Atlaiu and Eve, The flowers we have are never so sweet as the flowers we leave. And rich within my garden Though many a flower might be, The roe that bloomed for another Might seem the best to me. I P THE ri.CE. "You umst liave some rare experi ences to tell us, Mrs. Boswell," said persuasive Lieutenant Kussel, while we waited for the mail stage. "You have been at this frontier postver since Captain Boswell was stationed here?"' -Yes; we have been here eight ears,"' she replied, with the rare smile that glorified her face. "I have passed through many trying ordeals here, but I really think I had an adventure in the east, before I married the captain, equal to anything that 1 have experienced." "W ill you relate it, and oblige us?" urged Bussel. ".Mrs. Boswell, v said Dan, the Irre pressible youngster of our party, "Jim," jerking his thumb toward the lieutenant, "is out west on purjose to spill ink lor the New York tapers. You can become a heroine of romance if you wilL" "Thank you," said our little.hostess. "I don't mind accepting the honor." Three of us were sittmg in an inner apartment of the small frontier hostel ry. The bar-room was packed with miners, and we had chosen to have our supier served by ourselves, as we had appointed to go on to Custer City In con pany. Mrs. Boswell was much below the medium size, quick of speech, light of movement as a bird, and graceful as a fawn. "It was in 1? ," she began; "I had just made the acquaintance ot Captain IJosweil, he having some business mat ins to arrange w ith father, had called at our place several times. Finally, there came a rare day in autumn, and he and lather were closeted the greater part of the day, overhauling papers, memoranda, deeds and receipts, My father at that time was doing a great deal ol business as an attorney. "At teatime father said to me: 'Bess, you won't mind an evening alone, so long as Thomas is about, will jou.' "1 said no, for although there were many robberies being committed in the neighboring cities, private families in th aubuibs felt no fear. Our house was a mile from the city proier, and a halt mile from neighbors either way. "'We rind,' he continued, 'that the captain has got to hunt up some more papers concerning the estate before he can give Barron a satislactory title. We shall go to Judge Whiiconib's of fice, and our search may 1 so success ful that 11 o'clock will find us home again. Still wemay be detained longer. Shan't 1 call and tell our Cousin Muly to come down and spend the night with your' " 'No ves,' I contradictorily an swered. 'Do as you plea.-e; laiu not ti mid in the least, with I nomas auouu " 'But Cautaiu Boswed is going to leave ?5.0U0 here until he returns, -lfc.es anv one know aboui about tlie money?' "'Only ourselves. "'ihen 1 am not afraid. Derides, you are likely to 1 back befor graye vards yawn andthievesdo walk abroad. Thwnas brought the horse lound, and while tathersiketohim, I touched the captain's sleeve: " 'W i.eie is your money lem " ln your lather's desk m i..,,, i,o lo.Lwl with ; the Iib- w ith a tender, ii iii.m oiMiu-fi into mv face (bow me litUe woman's cheek flushed at the me nion ) and said: 'little girl, u u m tne least alraid we will not go to night, although it, is absolutely ueces- "I told him, honestly, that I was not afr-.,.,i I had tliatsuataot timid ity in my make-up peculiar to woman kind; and so they rode away. -I" ...,t i-.nt mv work as I put ti.i,.., i.. ?,.a, uroimd the room, and viewed" the brilliant sunset; without a fear or care. ,. "Thomas, our new man of-all-worK, was very busy puttering grounds, tying ui; grapevines and mul cuing eveigreeua. "r" " tl. loll some coarse aftermath upon the wu that father was anxious to uac v the strawberry beds, and f fPJ mas go up there witn am .'-- a trurf nlvr mv head. IOOB basket, and went up to help him- "As'l passed up the bill I b? . . . ..i- tn him. 1 nesi- m uie uiguway - ..,Aa tated abJut going on, but tbenmade only a moment's pause, and theu eut down the hiU, and was soon concealed bv a turn in the fcignway. - , ........ .i.... rri.m:uiV'Imaojreu, - no was unn., - , - , i. " -Oh, miss, it was a man from the ....ii . . mv brother has u" iiiuiM, ms , , iMowine a bad fall on the dam, and is . . him. leB3 lUl UltJ LU CI wa - aie broken entirely. ' .... ....ii rii?' . . :V V,' ?. 1 J. " T .ld not come told the man i cou' -: h.u to-day-but if 1 ent nus .Id sure to be back by H of "e to ste I would sure to "fi-1."" ,!: Thomas, if your . " I'aa will not oroiuer is uuii. w 1 away loug.' , "But.myyomiglady-- . " Xyer a md me this.' I always w a v - bt ed. 'You may go, audi uirun' back to the house, . wa3 "He talked a lew inmates rnore profuse in his thanks tor my twdn e, and then started down foi fWJ took up the two baskets, and ent sing ing to the house. window. "I sat an hour by Sone, anJ ZX?TTLl autumn ana me aimpica - siniring mouth, "but litue birds were singm, 'a a new song in mv heart .... - . . let me hear the sweT quiet . But directlv I YL.,, . . in rather care has as T the rnd 1 t iAMnd.... lue road was a thoroughfare, and lme. I arose, closed mv 'd, obeying some strange Power I walked through' the lllirurtr - . . . . j iwn iuv lain f !y. ?rom Its customed place qu lockedhw desk, found the pacge f .theiiJor, aSd lioirt . i r?mg Toota- 1 di,i not. iglit a lamp; I had no need of a ike as that from the fcitel,., ... '.a; ;lf,rtlins room sul"tl in this mild "The llOUSti Vk-ASK nl.l f.-j.;...! with a tueplacein the sitting r,w....' owning up into a chimney of capacity suthcient for a foundry stack, w'e had cheerful open tires later on; but the uouse being an ancestial pile, was get ting somewhat dilapidated, and the partition separating the flues in the large chimney had fniiMn in v,. been sent out to clear the rubbish and luokc rejwirs, but the work, half done, was suspended on account of the arri val of Captain Boswi '11 Ulld tliia iiiirwtt-t. ant business affair. 1 would have enioved inon..iij..nr t kmdle a sparkling tire in the huge wide tireplace, but as affairs were I could not. So 1 mused in dark iiess f or hour I really took no heed of time, until mv quick ear caught the sound of a foot tall approaching, close up to the door step, 1 could have taken mv oalli. It was so light an echo that I sprang to my feet, thinking that my Cousin Millv. absent when my father called, and re turning later had come down to stay with me. "I sprain? up with a smile to answer her knock, albeit I was a bit jealous of her pretty face, but no knock came, and tlie echoes died out, and altogether 1 concluded that I had deceived myself in regard to them. Anyhow I would light the lamp. I did so. and was star tied to find it past 10 o'clock. I had gotten sufficiently aroused from my re verie to want a book from the library shelves. 1 took up my lamp and went singing into the room. I obtained the desired volume, stepped down from the stool, and "If ever any one felt themselves dy ing, 1 did at that moment. Aiy song died on my lips, while a thousand thoughts seemed to flash into my mind in one instant. Involuatai ily I gasped, and tnen with a strong effort of the will power, for which 1 am famous, I took up the song again and sang it to the close. "Among other things I remembered that the lock was off the library door lor repairs. I remembered the late ness of the hour and the probab lity that all the people were iu bed and asleep. I remembered the footsteps in the dooryard, and there was a fresh, pungent smell of tobacco smoke in tne room. A scent of smoke that was not the room when I was there and placed the package of money m my bosom. . . ro vou wonder that my brain reeled and my heart stopped beating for an instant? Besides, whoever the robber was. he would soon begin work, not ' . 1 K, know ing how eariy my iaiuer uu iuc captain might return. And 1 should be murdered. Somewhere within a few yards, or a few feet of me, the robber assassirf was concealed either in the recess behind the cabinet, or under tue long, draped, paper-strewn table. "A taint souna ouisiue nctnj mtuc mo rimn th himD: still I had uncon sciously left my first song and was sing ing: -For his brio a soldier won her, And a winning- umfue luvl I knew that temporary salvation nower and liberty to leave that room, even depended upon my appearing un conscious of tlie robber's proximity. I got out of the library aim iouuu myself in tlie sitting-room, a uij glance at the door showed the key ab sent from the lock. "Treachery? "I wonder that this new revelation did not sunocate me. ine man on me hiebway the lnjureu orouier uv had beu-aved us. lie had overheard about the'money. A robber was in the house and another was outside. My retreat would be cut off. Howthoughw ran riot tlirougti my minu. u thevkillme? Would 1 suner iouSr mcj " . . i...i I a that instant 1 was u: - - faint creak of the library door at the far end of tlie loug halL -One swift, deiiring glance around me. one wild idea of escai, and 1 ex linguished the light upon the table, and crouching in the fireplace 1 rested one foot upon the anairou, ' " on crane, stepped the oilier foot upon. strong support, auu ul ...y the flue. Jjouieimng wucmu Thank God! It was the rope with which out. uraspius u"3 , " : uands 1 held 1uyse.11 fe- - Z!in,. If 1 had envied huge, noble- r1 , ..r......,u.i u-fore. 1 now had rea- rn to be tlianktul for my dhninutive form and ninety ouu dupOlS. K.urovr to Cim- 1 .1.- mmtnunt smer ""f M,t. ,,f z ....rtlillllT aVXCfUL U1C luiuiu.v... diuizer 01 aisioujjuiB , . u.uij,ri ....a thus riisrnvermz briclL or monai , ... iiiiimcr-niace. " --o Uiw c omus ials to strike eleven. with Undercover of its echoes there . were ?" .P outer door was withdrawn. 1. a, A t RT 111 U1C uau. must have acted like a A"eJ fhlard every sound with rTdlstmctness. First, there was a nause by the door of the sitting-room, l . in it fi.n wins eriuir. then urer.iuuiB " -"I heard Thomas distinctly, wher JrtLue isn't here; she's gone to bed, but the money is in the library. .it cautious . advised a si strange . ,i..t liavp tit hurt voice, 'ana -ber.Vi. .orofnllv retreated, and my heart struck off the seconds against my i. ...... . It Tal I knew that their search would soon be over, aud what then? "lu less than five minutes they were ribs in a way iu - rr whispering in the room again. - Confound herl' aspirated Thomas Mie took the money with her.' . n.on 'll have it if tTii muse meat 11 an inai. woiua .... ,., C""'" ' . ,: ,.t l .1.1 iitiVPV- nf mv bodv. The dust of the creosote had penetrated my mouth " ,wtriis. and I had to take one hand th rone in their absence and place a finger upon my lips to prevent annezintr. " HJome, huiTy,' was the angry -otrhwoid exchanged between them. and I heard the stairs creaking as they my chamber. Thomas was Iam.1 !ar with all the house. " hy d,d 1 "ot droP Iow" Jlu'1 carm nnt.,i. "First, then, thev hail lorrked th outer door and withdrawn the key to prevent a surprise from without Se cond, there miifht be a third confeder ate .iiitsi le. But the most important reasju of all wa?, it seemed to me, that I never could set out of the aperture that had allowed me entrance into the chimney. I ran the risk of discovery and death in any case. why did not my father and his companion return? It misjht be hours nrst. "They had found me absent from my chancier and the adjoining rooms. They no longer used extreme caution. They hurried from one aoartment to the other. I could feel the jar of mov ing furniture, and closet doors were opened hastily. The upper part of the house was ransacked, and theu they came down stairs upon tlie run. Time was precious to them now. W Ith dire ful oaths they rumuiairod the lower floors, and finally returned to the sit ting-room. "1 saw the lhilit here la-t.' said Thomas, moving with his lamp across the room, 'and here is the lamp on tlie table. '!he must liave got out.' " Xo; I watched for her. and every window is fastened on the inside.' Then he continued: 'Curse her! site's a witch:' and bulled they stood and iioured oaths after me. 'I'd like to catch and knife her . myself now.' How he ground it out bet reeu his teeth. " 'Miall we search morer "'It's no use; we've turned over everything under which a mouse could hide.' " 'What, then? Shall we waylay the old man and fix him?' They haven't the worry; it was left here.' ' 'The cellar,' suirijested the voice. "Once more they dashed out, only to return in hot haste now, for there was the trot and rumble of a horse and car riage on the bridge betweeu us and tiie citv. " 'stay,' ur,;ed the str tiier, 'trump up some' kind of a story, aa I we may secure the money yet.' I would.' returned 1 nomas, but the girl's a witch, and I am just as sure that she is somewhere near us an tue time, and would hau 1 me over to jus tice' Theri was a scamper outside and the sound of feet nuining toward the river came down the wide mouth at the top of the chimney. Father and Cap tain Boswell drove into the yard and up to the door, just as the clock struck twelve. " 'Thomas!' callel my father, in his rimriiii tones, 'come and take care of the horse.' "Iteeeiviiv' n. resiMiise from his uu- al ituucttiid factotum, he siirau ' up the steps, and uttered an exe.amatiou oi horror at find in ' tlio door opea. " 'IJosweil,' said he, 'we certainly saw a lihl here when we came down the hill.' " 'Quick, Jasou,' said the captain, there has been foul play here.' '"Foul pUiy? My God! my poor little girL' " 'Father,' I strove to call, but tue first attempts, choked in the dust and soot, ended in a hysterical hiccough. " -VYhere is tliat? What is it?' called mv distracted father, aud both men dashed for the library. "I now strove to descend, but the movement brought down bushels of mortar and broken bricks from all sides, and closed up the flue. I bethought me of the roi, and by sticking my toes in here and there I went up the cnim- Dev hand over band. "Acile as a cat. when I reached the too of the low chimney I sprang down upon the roof and began calling loudly for father. You should have heard them run throuch the house and halloo before they located my voice. At last the cantain came out of doors. " W ill you get me a ladder, please,' . ... . . said I, 'I want to get down from here.' 'A ladder, Jasou,' shoutea tne cap tain, 'the little girl is on the root.' 'For the love of heaven, girl, how came vou there?' said my father, as I landed upon the ground ana began sliakinz the soot from my clothes. "1 went up there through the chim ney, pajia. uut you naa oeiier put, up the horse you will have to groom him yourself to-night and then 1 will teu vou all about it. "T he captain led me into tue nouse, for 1 was trembling violently, 'Now,' said father, being absent only a moment or two, without letting me have time to mop tne smut irom mv face and hands; 'now tell. us what this means my little girl climbing the ridgepole like a cat at midnight ( ' "In a few moments matters were ex Dlaiued. .Thrttnoo tl.A villain ?' colMllAtod auvuu.?, v KU ......... . j . -" -- my father; 'IU have him if 1 have to hunt tne two continents ior uuu, auu he shall have his deserts.' lie kept his word. Thomas got a term in the state prison. "W ben 1 gave the captain bis money I should have burst out into hysterical sobbinr only I remembered the soot in time to prevent shading myseii m oiacx crayon; and captain iiosweu oenevea that stature and duik were nos always certificates of the best materials, and " "And." finished Dan, our jester, may be said, Mrs. Boswell, that you actually flue to his arms." She smiled and bowed as tlie sonor ous tones ot the driver came in among us : Stage ready, gentlemen." Th Irish Baxp. The old style Irish harp was about four feet hiitli, bad no peua t, and was strung u the back with ctraps. The one belong ice to King Brian Bsroihme, killed at the battle or Clontaif, id 1014, still exists In the museum of Trinity College Dablin. Ii Is black with age, and polished, but now corm-ealea, and adorned with silver orna- inents. It was taken by bis son league 10 Home after the battle and presented to the I'ope with the crown and regalis. siicceeding Pope presented it to Uenry VIII. with the title of "Defender ot the Faith," and Uenrv gave it to tbe trl of Clmncide, in wboce family it was heli until tbe beginning ol t ie eighteenth ceo tury. It then passed through several hands uutii 1790, when tne college became Us owner. Mont animals drink by suction, as tbe ox, and a few by lapping, as the dog tbe elephant pumps the water up with its trunk, and then pours it into its throat. Birds excepting doves, fill tbe beak, and then, wising the head, allow the water to run down. H was no Sloucu. Tue otter day Bill Hig?ousoa, a well- known character of the White Springs neig'uborh xxl, came to the city in com- Danv w.ta several young ladie. to one of whom he wa eugiged to be married. Bill bas always thirsted lor notoriety. He wan's to be known by the leading men in town, aud to show paopls of his community that. al'bongU born in ob scurity and reared on the farm, he can address promiuent men in a familiar ay. While the yonug laches were at the hotel Bill went luto a wholesale tore, and approaching a man whj sat in the cfiise, sail: "Cap'n, yju cau do me a big favor. if yon will. I've got a lot of gals ia town with me, aa' I winter show 'em 1 ain't no slouch. I waut 'em to go home an sav that Bill that's me coine to town an' was knowed by the biz bugs. Now, I want to make this agreemeat with you. I'll go away, aa putty soon wdl come around with the gals au come in here, slap yon on tbe houlder aa say, "Old cUp, now ao you hold oat?' Thea you slao me, aa say, 'Why, Bdl, old boy, I'm glad to see you.' Tha'. will be bloire 1 ad over my country, aa win De wuiu m mejr character to me, lem me tell you. The euutlKman said that be did not object to helping a young feilow along, and th.it the aspiring YVilliiin migut come in aud slap him, wuou he would ffi through with his p irt ol tue pro gramme!. Bill, highly delighted witn tue ar rangement, went to the hotil and told the girls that he wanted them to use walk with him. As uiey walk! along toward the store, Bill said. Sow 1 in Rom to show yo 1, liiza, that yon ain't goiDg to marry no alonch. 11 show you that yonr own jj-u u looked np to an' Lke.l by tbe be it o. em." The girl laughed self-conipliccntly, and declared that it was nice to marry mm that "wau't a stranger au a slouch." Wuen thev reached the store, B;ll con ducted the ltdies to the ofliee, where a man sat looking over accDunta, he was not the man with whom the arrange ments had been made, but Bill did not reoognza the aiffjrenee. Advaucing. be strncK the man a pretty heavy siad, and exclaim!: "Hello, .U ch ip, how are yon holl ' out?" The geutlman sprau? to his feet and glared at William, but William, with out embarrassment, punched him among the ribs aud suid: "Oil cusp, how are yon h 1 tin out Ljok out, herel aat do yon meau? Xo foi I'm, old boy. Don t you re- me u',er the agreement?" bj aided in an undertone. It's me; don't yon re.neui oer ihe man what see4 you je-' nowi" as he fancied he saw a change of coan. euauce, he j ilted tue geutlem ia aui )Jt tbe truncate ribi and eic aimed, "now are you hojdm' oat?" The gentleman "naoiea on witn an ink bolt e aud knocked Bui down. The girls screamed and ran awav, and Bdl, as soon as he was able to regain his feet, sulked awy. Vueu he reachtd the hotel with his face a 1 Ik smeared with ink, his betrotued ran to him, pouched him iu the side and sail: "UjIIo, old chap, ho ara yon noiaiu outr" This settles it with ut," he said sadly, regarding the girl with a lojk that spoke of trie meiincuoiy yeuow leaf. "Jest at the time 1 need yjur sympathizm' the most, when oil frien's go back on me and m ics ma uowa, you jine the eneaiy. O) aud pay your hotel bill an' go home." "Am t you goin to pay my b.b.' "Nary red." "Would vou see me disgraced right in a place whar there's so many folks?" T'uat am t my lookout. 1 am t a goin' to py nary red cent for yjo. "Then I'll take all bock au' 1 am s i sorry that I ma le fun of you." "J uff said. Coma an put yonr neaa on this here manly bh julder, Timber la SMje, Throughout the isles timber is a rare and precious t rticle, most irequ.-ntly the gift ol ocean. The man wuo secures a go ju ;oit uf driftwood has o'jtalucd a prize worth h&vinar. It mav have been a brave old tree, tempest torn from its home in come distant forest, carried to the sea by rushing torrents, and perchance tossad by the waves and watted to aud in by many a current, ere it drifted to its rest oa these far isles. Or it may be tne mast or spars. or perchance the cargo of some wrecked vess-l whatever us story 11 is ireasure- trove, and most aeepiy vaiueu. 1 aoua ncrasted with barnacles or riujiea dv oholades it can all be turned to good ac count; the smallest piece will make a stool or a settle, or box. or part of door; while larne timbers become ratters pre cious heirlooms, for a young couple cannoi wed uutU tbey have accumulated enough rafters to support theu thatch, and should ibev have occasion to "mt tne only part of their bothy that commands any pecuui- rv compensation is the roof; not the woodwork oily, out aiso tne neavy taaicn saturated with thick greasy peat-reek (in other words with a thick coa'.in j of soot). Tms. when broken up, forms a valuable manure Ior the unieru:e croi.s. 1 oor, ndced, are many of tnese island homes, generally consisting only of two rooms; an niter byre tor the cameanu an mn.r room for the family; and untd recent years all uch bothies had a fireplace in tue middle ot the fijor. around which tbe whole tarn- dy might gather and equally share its com- ort. liul now most nouses nave tne nre- plixj at one end of tbe bouse, and though tbe smoke general I v contrives to wander at nil amooir the ratters (forming a blue haze stinging to unaccustomed eyes, and at last resolving itself into the rich browns so dear to tbe artistic mind), it does sjme- dmes And a wide, open chimney prepared for Its escape. But more frequently a bole in tbe thatch is the only means ot egress, a hole perhaps crowned with an old heiruig barrel in lien ot chimney cap; this, now ever, is an elegant eupetfl Jity, to whuh few aspiie. All, however, must lake toe pre ctuuon of lying on the.r roots with uetwoik of ropes, and weignt them with laree stone in order to resist tbe wild easts of wind, which would carry of any ordinary cottage roof. As a general tule these bothiea are too wretched to be even picturesque, yet here sod there 1 recall one which, happily rendered on canvas, might yield to the artist m re gold than the inmates ot the hut might hope to earn in all their lives. Troy's (X. Y.) assessed valuation has been reduced 200,000 by the recent assessment. A recent day's buzziness at the 1 Dead Letter Office included the open- ing of a box of live and lively bees. Alive at IOI. The town of Wilton, Conn., enjoys the distinction of having among its un usually large number of aged citizens, a person who lived bevond five score years, and who is probably the only centenarian at this time in Fairfield county, and probably in the btate. This is not new to the community in which she dwells, for everybody knows and reveres Mrs. Clarissa Davenport Raymond, who, humanly speaking, has fair chances of reachinz April ao, 13S1, when she will celebrate her 102d birthday and enter upon her 103d year. Mrs. Raymond resides opposite the Congregational church in Wilton of which she became a member oeiore most of those who surround her were born, in a mansion which has ab3Ut it lines of antiquity just such a spot as a centenarian would choose as an abiding place, "ller girl," as Mrs. Raymond familiarly calls her, Mrs. Nathan Corn stock, now drawing nigh to seventy nine years and a well preserved matron, keeps house, and she is assisted in mat duty by a son, Mr. John Cohiscock, nearly sixty years old and his wife, and when his son, Mr. Frank Corn stock, aged thirty years, and his wife and children come up to the old home from or walk to spend the day, as they frequently do, the scene under the old roof is one peculiarly interesting. Mrs. Raymond takes upon her knee children of the fifth generation, and talks to them of events occurring a great wuile ago, when she was a child, like them years before ueorge w asu iugton had been thought of as a candi date even for President of the United States. By chance she might tell them of his first inauguration as President n .New York, in 17U2. when she was 10 years old, of his death and the sor row which accompanied iu announce ment, in 17'JO, when she was 17 years old. Favored ones are they indeed who can enjoy the privilege of listening to the intelligent narratives of their great, great grandmother, and this veteran, amiable in the lingering twi light or the evening of a life so pro tracted, can interest those who are older by calling to their minds events, some of them historical, which she actually observed, but which they knew nothing of save in books, and she has frequently been known to correct the errors made by those who have gone into print as historians wearing the garb of authenticity. Mrs. Raymond is very genial, and rarely iorgets a iace she has oiice set eyes on. She hears tol ably well, aud her sight is so acute that she can thread a coarse neeaie ana read coarse print unassisted by glasses. She moves about the house with a fir mer step than many who are fifty years her junior, and when conditions of weather permit calls on her friends residing near, walking to their houses, bbe attends church seldom now, but her interest in the church has never flagged, and no mre welcome visitor is on her list than the Rev. Frank Thompson. A few days since she called on Mrs. George. A. laenport and vividly described a thunder storm which took p'ace seventy years ago. One secret of Mrs. Raymond s lon gevity may be compliance for untold years witn the rule, "Farly to bed," etc. In this particular her habits have been regulated, as it were, by the clock, aud as a consequence each morning's light, to her, means glad ness, and "day's decline and d..rkness sombre" bring neither dread nor sad ness. When asked a day or two before how she felt, she said, "Well, as usual, though I believe I'm getting old." Mrs. Raymond has no lack of visitors, many of whom call simply that they may look upon the face of a centena rian, she has a pleasant word ior each, and she never forgets to express an affectionate personal regard ior au her real friends. Fishing la ths Ueraars. "Speaking of fish," said the smiling stranger, ' if the President wants to have some centime inn. be wants to cast a line in some o them geysers. Tuat's where you get fish. I got in there once abont a year ago, and kttchod 1,000 smelts m an hour an 1 a uaarterl And trout! Well. I should whn-per m an undertone l im snout ing, gentlemen, wnen 1 say a man can take trout out o one o them gtyjers that'll weigh half a ton. I ve done it. "I thought tho water in tne gtyn-rs was warm, chipped in an unbelieving listener. Hot. stranger, hot, protested the unabashed Wyoming man. "And vou pretend to say those fish lire in hot water?" "I never alluded to the possibility, stranger. I don t even think of it. Tueui li h I ketcned was dead, every ash of 'em was dead and cooked. There s were you get the bnlge on all other kind n aim'. lou get tne nan au reauy for the tabM" 'That aounds reasonable, observed a keen-eyed man. "I taink he's telling tho truth. I sar. how do yon catch those fish?" "With worjas, stranger" respoalai the Wvonung man, eagerly, rejoiced to find a friend in the crowd "Xou bail your hook with angle worms, and the nsh takes right noiu as soon as your sinker toucuea bottom. "Than we are tJ understand that dead and cooked fiih will bite at a hook. are we?' asked the keen-eyed man. "In them geysers, stranger, lhey won't do it anywhere else. In them gevbers they are hungry for worms, and beside that they tun t cojked until von land 'em. Yon see, the water at the bottom o' them geysers is cold, and it's the hot water at the top, together with the friction, that cooks 'em. You don't see it anvwhere bat in the Ktysers but there you never muss it?" Mar KumII MItlord. Many years ago some Americans who were traveling in England took a p3st-chalse, after the old-fashioned way, and had a morning drive to pay their respects to an old-fashioned woman who was living in poverty with her one servant in a cottage not far from the tiinrn nf flreulin?. The word "cot' I taire" must have a little explanation, for wita us it is so often made to mean a quite capacious house, almost a man sion, or a villa on a moderate plan, therefore, tnese iouneen uajs were This cottage was far enough from being called "halcyon days," or days of cairn, ample; it was small and poor; to be pleasant weather. On this account plain, the rooms in it were not much the ancients regarded the halcyon as bigger than closets, and were close and the symbol of tranquility, and because stuffy, and in heavy rains the roof it lived near the water it was con leaked. As the mistress of it once secrated to Thetis, a sea-nymph. The wrote about it to a friend it was a bird about which such wonderful stories tight "squeeze," and she added, "In- deed my great objection to a small room always was its extrems unbe- comingness to one of my enormity, 1 I really seem to fill it like a blackbird 1 in a goldlincb's cage. 1 lie parlor looks 1 all me. Nevertheless, 'the cabin u convenient,' as I said before. Its negative merits are very great." She had managed to make it as some women cau make the poorest place a "very nest of comfort;" and this is the cheery way she describes it in one of those sketches of hers which so many thousands of persons have read: A cottage no a miniature house, with many additions, little odds aud ends of places, pantries, and what not; all angles, and of a charming in-and-outness, a little brick court before one half, and a little flower-park before the other; the walls old and weather stained, covered with hollyhocks, roses, honeysuckles, aud a great apricot trei; the casement full of geraniums (ah, there is our superb white cat peeping out from among them); the closets (our landlord has the assurance to call them rooms) full of contrivances and corner cupboards; and the little gardm behind full of common flowers, tolipi. pinks, larkspur, peonies, stocks and carna tions, with an arbor privet not unlike a sentry-box, where one lives in a-deli-cious green light, and looks out on the gayest of all gay flower-beds. That house was built on purpose to show in what an exceedingly small compass comfort may be packed. And that description shows the poetic side, and what a happy faculty she had, like Uudfrand'3 wife, ot mak ing the best of everything. It does not look as if the place were poor, but it was; though very picturesque with that old shed and granary overrun, like all the rest, with untriui-ued and un trained things as pretty a subject as an artist could desire. The American visitors found her that morning in the bit of front yard which kept her house from shutting right on the turnpike road. She was walking along a passage between two rows of geraniums as tall as she was, snipping off the decaying leaves with a pair of scissors. She wore a cap, and a snowy white muslin handkerchief was pinned across the bosom of her cheap black gown; aud on her plump hands she had mitts such as our grand mothers used to wear (and they have come into fashion again), where the fingers were all free while the thumb had a little compartment by itselt; it seems to me that they were 01 inick black crape with rows of white feather stitch down the back, and they did look so quaint, like the antiquated gentle woman who wore them. Mie was snort aud stout, a "duinpting of a person," with a face as round and good-natured as Phebe Cary's; and as she slowly walked and snipped she was chirping like a canary to a silky-hairei spauiet who kept close by her gown, aud au old house-cat on the window-ledge. Her voice was sweet; her manners were charming. Th Last Survivors. Beavers are now so scarce that it seems hardly credible that their dams once lined all the river shores irom Hudson'sbay to the Gulf of Mexico. Like the Chinese gardeners who live on artifi cial river islands, they certainly tried their best to be in nobody's way; but at the current market value of their skins they could not be permitted to survive. And what has become of the wild pigeons that once darkened the sun with their endless swarm? There are a few "roosts" left in Arkansas, one or two in southern Missouri aud West Virginia; in northern Ohio they are still hunted toward the end of the year, and fly from county to county In flocks of four dozen or so; but what is that to the legion that once traveled through the beech forests of the Ohio valley? The naturalist, Audubon, once saw a swarm eight miles wide, as nearly as he could estimate it, flying overhead at the rate of at least fifty miles an hour; and after sitting five hours with his watch in hand, hoping to see the end of the phenomenon, he got tired of waitiuz any loneer. for as yet tue swarm had not perceptibly diminished. Of their total number hardly one in ten thousaud is now left. How many pounds of powder must it have taken to exterminate the rest? Still, our last wild pigeons will out live the last buffaloes and last grizzly bears for in the warfare against a su perior foe caution is a belter weapon than strength. T he forests of northern Europe were once inhabited by a fight- iiiK ox. the Ur. or Auer-Ochse, an ex tremely fierce brute, that otten turned the tables against its would-be hunters. But the invention of gunpowder ueci ded its fate, and the only wild speci mens are now found m the deep forests of eastern Caucasus. The grizzly bear has been driven back to the Pacific slope, aud seems to disappear faster than his black brother, who has more talent lor tree-cumbing and cave-digging. Wherever gunpow der is used in the warfare of man against the beasts and birds of the wil derness, the art of hiding is their best hope of escape, and of all the iortst creatures ot this continent the lat but vivors will probably be the raccoon and the squirrel. llaleTva Dajs. According to the ancients, the king' fisher, called in Greek, Halcyon (from "the sea" and "brooding upon"), was so named from Halcyone, a daughter ofiEolus. and the wife of Ceyx. The story goes that Ceyx was drowned while on his way to consult the oracle, and that, in a dream that night, Ilal cvone was informed of the fate of her husband. Xext, morning, as she wan dered disconsolately on the shore, she found his body washed up by the waves and. overcome with grief, threw her self into the sea. The gods, in admir ation of their mutual affection, changed them mto kingfishers. The kingfishers were supposed, at that time to make their nests during the seven days pro ceeding the winter solstice (about De cember 21st), and to lay their eggs during the seven days directly f ollowing it; and it was a popular superstition that the sea remained calm and tranquil - ; while they reared their young. And, were told was probably nothing moie than the common kingfisher of Europe, the habits ol whicn are very mucn like thost of the belted kingfisher. B Rvls la Ooltlaa Laxarr, The ruler ot the two hundred and flftv millions of which tbe Chinese nation prob ably consists is now within Bve years of his majority, a:id is au occupant, wuile yet a minor, of the same appirtnients in wbicu lived the Empsror who preceded him on the Dragon Thronf. There be ea's with ifold-tipped chopstieks of ivory. There he sleeps 00 a large Xingpo bed-tead. richly carved and oruameated with ivory and e ld. the same on which the noble minded Z nperors Kanz Ha and Chien L ing ud to recline after the day's fatigue last century and the ceatury before. Like one of those living Bud! lias who may be seen in a la'ua-tery on tha Mongolian plateau, he is kne't to by all his attendants and honored at a e d. There is this differ ence, that the respect felt for him if more profound than for them. The secl'ision in which he is kept is also far more complete The bud ling in which the Emperor resides is called fang lisia Tien, and is a little to tae we t of tbe Ca'ien Cb'ing Men in the middle of the pi.ace. At the back of the ceutral g Ue, on the southscie. is the itrea reception hall. When Ministers ot Siaie and others enter for an audience at four, five, or six in the mornirn;, according to cufetom, tnsy have t go 00 foot to the ceu're of the palace over halt a mile, if they enter by the east or west gate; and when the get oa in years they can appreci ate the Eaiperor's favor, which then by a decree allows them to bs borne in a c'uur instead of walkm. Ihe rooms of the Emperor consist of seven compartments. They are provided with the divan xk'ang, the peculiar institution of North China. The k'an are covered w.lh red felt 01 ntlive manufacture, and tbe flxr with European carpets. The cushions all nave eoibr n.leretl on them the dragon aud the pi os iix. Pretty thing) scat'.ered through tbe looms are endless In variety, and are changed in accordance with any wish fx pressed by the Enperor, The rooms are in all thirty yards ions hy from encht to nine yards deep, and are divided into tnrec apartments, the Throne-room b.iag the inidd.e one. folding doors ten leet in height ojien into each of taese apartments to the mirth and south in the centre o each. The upper part of these doors is in open-work in which various auspicious characters and flowers are carved. At the bict paper is pasted to admit light into the rooms, Tbe !pnt is ornamented with gilding, sculpture, and varnish of vari us colors. Th doors remain open even in winter, because during that season a thick embroidered curtain of damask is huug in the doorway, which by its weight keeps its place close to the door post and prevents cold air fr m enteriug. Iu summer this is replaced bv a curtain admitting tbe brecZ-: on account ot lis being made of very thin strips of Iaui'kjo. The 8:1k threads used in sewing the strips ot bamboo together are ol variots colors, and passing through the whole texture of the curtain irom toe top to the bo loin are very agreeable to the eye. Tucae summer and winter curtain; are ro.led up to give air to the rooms when required. Exit aud entrance are ef fected on each s de ot these curtains by side doors. Along the while front ot thirty yards there is a covered fliubt o steps 0 teen feet wide. Ihe root over this rests on two rows of pillars. Ine pillars shine with fresh vermilion, both within tbe rooms and on tbe steps outside, and are decorated with sculptured work, partly gilt and partly varn.shed. Tbe Uoppo who la'ely returned from Lantoa ave the r-uperr a present va.ued ai S,000. It consisted of chande.iers hold ing 500 wax candles each. 11.9 Majesty bas also some electr cal machines and nuinbtr'ess foreign curiosities. The a nperor was vaccinated when an infant, before his high destiny was thought o'; otherwise it would have been difficult . to vaccinate htm. for bis person being sacred when E nperor, no lances can touch him. Uism'Aher, the Princess ot Ch un, who is a sister of the Empress of the West, will be raised to the rank of Express Dowager when he is sixteen, and his father will alio be made T'ai Shang Huang. At least this is to U expected by prece dent, so that after three years we shall again have two Expresses Djwager, but in this cae they will be sisters. The Princess, his mother, g es in to see him once a month, and kaeeis wue.i sue nrst speaks to him. but rises afterward. II s lather does so too. The tmperor studies Chinese daily for an hour and a ba f, and Mancbu also for an hour and a half, lie pemts two hours in archery and tiding. and in winter amuses himself in sledging, lie has a little brother of five, whom it may be hoped the mother takes with her when ate goes to the paiaie. 1 be teachers who instruct him kneel to him on entering, but aferarda sit. The Emperor nas eight eunuchs who constantly afend hui, besides an indefinite number Ior special jeeasions. He bas his ineali alone, and the eight eunuchs wait around him, re training him if be takes too much of any one thing. His school room is at the back ot tbe 1 ang lisin l'iea already described, and the hall for conference each morning with Ministers is a httle to the east. A Rival f Xtwcarw. Two Dinahs capitalists and a baaker, of Butte, Montana, nave embarked in no less an enierpn-e man iue purcuasr 01 a waterfall tbe Big Shoshone in Idaho. Until six months ago the property was not in sight" and its exigence was only known through the report ot an occasional hunter, who, reaching the edge of the basin which surrounds the approach to the falls, peered at them cunonsly at a distance of three-tourths of a mile and gained only an unsatisfactory impresuon of a vast body of water, much spray and more roar. From the' edge of this basin there was no sure tooting to a nearer point of view. Siaatinz and picking have cut a path through the rocky sides to the water's edge and tbe falls can now be as easily viewed as Niagara. The Snake river, which forms these falls, is at this point a deep stream, run ning for twenty-five miles through lava rocks hundreds of feet in height. At the falls, which are 1,500 feet wide and have a descent of 210 feet, the rocks l-m up grandly to from 500 to 1,000 feet in height Their brown walla are utterly bare and. except for a grassy plot ot a few acres. with a coil tp- ing and a shadv grove, which border the falls, the scene is one ot ulter desolation. For miles beyond t ie lava b'ds sfe'en away, with only tbe sae brush and cactus to relieve their barren w.ista. Three miles above are tbe Twin Falls, with a descent of 180 feet and cloven by a huite rock. The rivr is broad and tleeo between the Twin Kallaasd the Big Shoshone aad a boat ride along this stretch is exciting, but not nece-sarily dangerous. Perpendicular walls rise on either tide and a "hello" or a comet peal echoes and rebounds a dozen times. Several tourists who have visited the place within a few weeks declare it a wonder and do nit hesitate to draw comparisons witb3igtva. Columbus (O.) parents are petition' ins for the tuacbrnir ol Uerinan in the I public schools of that city. NEWS LN BPJEr Gold, when coined, becomes h ird money though it is (leg-il) ten ler. Ferrets are said to ba r.ipiJIy Jviu off In this country, of a disease some thing like the epizooty. Thirty-five total abstainer sn s:iid to have membership in the British House of Commons. London, Eng., consumes, it is esti mated, about ten and a half million tons of coal annually. Frank Carpenter of Sodus, X. Y., pared sixty-five bushels of apples in nine hours. "A million bats" are said to In habit the dome of the Bienham (Ga.) Court House. The "hot water cure" a glass of hot water sipped before breakfast !i;h spread to England. The Weather Department Drotnises Xew England rains from tima to time, but the drought reigns there arMly By the aid of the American idea of using refrigerator cars, Lm loners now enjoy fresh herring from S-'otl in I. The Peruvians can travel for as long as three days without other fool, solid or liquid, thtin the 111 ite leaf, it is said. California's oraue crop will lie the largest in her history, it is report ed, but the lime crop is smallsr than usual. Watermelon rinds and banana skins are not in themselves fall goods, but they frequently cause displays i:i that line. David Huikley, of La Grange, Me., is over 01 years old, but he drove about 00 miles iu one day recently, on a visit to an older bother. Senator Bayard will give the citv of Wilmington, Del., the grove adjoin ing his home it the city 'ill ac.pairethe rest of the square for a park. The largest cow In America is le lieved to be the one that John Pratt, of Chase co.. Kans.ts, owns; she is 3 vears old, 2-l bauds high and wei '!is 33011k. Russia has decide I t use petro leum as fuel for her B'.tick S.m fleet. Russian vessels iu the Caspian Se t have for some years used n.i;htli i refuse for fuel. An exhaustive re;xrt 011 the dis eases of plants, and of the parasites that infest tiieui, is to be 111 l ie to the Swiss Government by D. Johu E.-iks-son. Itev. Sydney Gedge, wao die I at Cromer recently, was one of the oldest clergymen of tha Church of E:i,'l.m-1, of which five of his sons were also clergymen. The winner of the recent interna tional swimming match at Berlin swam a statute mile in 41 111 in. 3 sec. The champion diver remained under water ?1 seconds. The female mackerel, it isase-tod, is fatter, sweeter aud lunch superior in flavor to the male fish, and may be dis tinguished by the distinct dark line of the backbone. The Paris Ttmps reports that the Count de Chambord left GO,nk,000 francs, which are to be divided be tween the Duke of Parma ami the Count of Bardi. A good brick will absorb a quart of water, it is said. There is also a certain kind of brick, not good, that may be absorbed with less tlian a quart of liquid, not water. The lives and property of soui-s 20.000 persons in Houston, Texas, have been guarded until reeeutly by thres policemen. The force h;is been in creased ti eight men. Prairie fires are annoying ranch men in southwestern Texas. Incen diarism is charged, certain persons hav ing been offended by the ranchmen's fencing in their pastures. Patti will receive $o0iX for each of the concerts she is to sing at in Bir mingham and Manchester, it is under stood the highest price ever paid for such iierformances iu England. Munkacsy's picture, '"Christ be fore Pilate," has met with an enthusi astic reception in Manchester, England, no fewer than 1-'J0,0W people having seen it within the space of a few weeks. According to a Lorraine newspa per, it is intended to collect tilt scattered bones ot ail tnose uermans wuo reu 111 the battles around Metz and to deposit them in a hugo ossuary, with a suitable monument. A newsboy of Cincinnati, John E. Flynn, is said to have drawn from bank 22,000 the other day to go into the ho tel business 111 Denver, Col., with, the money Lav ng been sill made at new s paier selling. There are over 520,000,000 acres of land in the South of which 70,000,000 are in cultivation. In 182, these cultivated lands produced crops valued at $'JJ), 000,000, an increase ot $214,000,000 in value over the production ot ltso. The total number of iension claims pending iu the Pension otlice at Wash ington on the .50th of .1 11110 last, was 244,ooT, of which 14-s,81'i were for ar rears, nie number ot claims from Pennsylvania was 24)9o;5, of which 10,- MJ were for arrears. General C. P. Stone estimates the cost of tne Florida ship canal, l !7l miles in length, and sutficieutly wide to allow the passage of two sea-going steamers of the first class, at $ 10,000, 000. The saving of distance between Xew York and Xew Orleans will be oOO miles. The First Comptroller of the Trea sury reports that the total amount of money in circulation 111 the Liutert States is $1,575,101,042, of w hich $74.';, 317,573 is coin aud $1,757,0VJ paper. Assuming the total population of the country to be 52,000,000, the distribu tion per capita would be &J0 2t. The revised figures for marriages in Paris during 12 are as follows: Between young men and young women, 17,570; 7oung men and widows, 1,2-Xi; widowers aud young women, l,17v widows aud widowers, 'J04. Tne num ber of divorces is given at 12. The his-, is an instructive figure which Xe.v England iwpers might tlo well to copy. An estimate, which seems to have been made with considerable pains, says that the number ot melons raised in Georgia this season was not far from 0,5oo,001. About 1,200,000 were eaten 111 Georgia, mano into syrup, opened for tlie seeds, or left ou tha vines. Three acres of land produce two car loads. There are about 1,200 melons ia a car load. The cost of rais ing a car load is not far from $14, and that of gathering and loading Is $15. ' The average net profit is about $15 to I the car load. - ' 1 f i