fchl if t. is TEE O0J8TITUTI0I THE UJIOI AID TEE EXT0BCE1O3T 01 THE LAVS. B. F. SCHWEIER, Editor and Proprietor. hi! VOL. XXXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA., WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 23, 1884. NO. 4. OlilLITr, liue worth is in being, not s.n ing; iu aoiug each !av ,hat ?s ,,y borne Iitti" poo.' if great tlni'jrs to do ly and by. for whatever men say in their blind ness, Ami spite ot the fancies f youth, 'there's nothing o Winiily as kioduess, And uothiug so royal as truth. Wr pi t b.n k our nieie as we measure YVe c;tiuot do wrong and feel right, Jv.-r can we trive p.iin and feel pleasure, For justice avenges each slight. '1 he air for the iuc of the sparrow, The bush for the room or wren, but always the path that is narrow Anil strait forthechildronof nieiu J'is not in tlx pages of story The heart of its ills bepuile. Though he w ho makes courtship to glory (,ives all that he h:ith for a suii'.e. IVr when from her heights he ba wou her, A!as ! it is only to prove That nothing so loyal as honor, And nothing so loyal as love! cannot make bargains forlilisses J."or catch them like fishes in nets; A ud sometimes the thing our life ruisseti Helps more than tLe thing which it get; for good lieth not in pursuing, Hot gaiuing of gri-at or of sm ill, 1; ut j list in the doing, and doing As we would liedoue by. is all. I.OsT IS T3E FLOOD. Why. Daniel, you talk as though oii doubted me!" No. Ethie, no, nol I don't want von to think that you musn't think so! But your father is so kind to nie, and treats" me so well, and loves you so much, that it does seem to Hie that if he knew how the happiness of both was tound up in it he would not refuse, lie Las known me from childhood. I have been in his service now these five ears ever since I was b;g enough to ilo a man's work and he knows who and what I am."' "Yes. Daniel, tlr.it Is all true, and I do cot wonder that you feel as you do. But mother kuows better than you or I what his ambition is for me, and she assures me that did tather suspect our love, he not only would not employ you for another day, but would forbid our even speaking t gether." "Aid then," lar.iel cried impul sively, "I could claim you, and we toul j defy the world to keep us from each other!" "No, no, not now not yet For the present we must hope and wait. We are both young, we see each other every dav; let us be patient for a time, and hope f r the best. Mj father, as you know, is very kind to me, and I love Lira as a child should love a parent, and 1 would not willingly displease him." "I i-.li you loved me as much as you do Lini!" TLe voi(e was petulant, but the tones showed that the speaker did not distrust his companion. Ethie bit her lij s in momentary vexation. "Daniel DeWolf. you must not talk so to me!" she exclaimed. "You know that I love you more than I love any one tl- on earth, and if duty colled me I should follow your fortunes wherever they might lead. But at present it is better as it is." And Daniel, who knew that 6he tpoke ti e truth, craved her ardo;i for the unkind reflection, and they parted. The scene, not devoid of a certain picturesqneness, cou'd scarcely have l-en called romantic, far the conversa tion just recorded had taken place in the interior of a rude saw -mill, rising almost from the bed of a brawling mountain stream known as the'Bninclu' The swirl of the water among the rocks, the patter of rain upon the roo', and the ceaseless tear of the great tip right saw through the massive log nircled with the voices of the lovers, while: a brace of antiquated lanterns gave an unearthly distinctness to the chill interior. It was early autumn, and a long drought had prevailed, but now the tlrst considerable ra:n was fa'lii g, and the stream was high enough to allow the continual running of the mill which whs pressed with demands for lumber which Lad bfen delayed by the low water. Daniel's assistant had long since gone home, but the former had volunteered to run the saw mill into the night, and Ethie hal come through the storm with a pail of hot coffee and a lunch; and it may be readily supposed that the op portunity was not allowed to pass w itlu ut a few sentences of endearment, for the young couple were ardently in 1 ive. The situation is made reasonably plain by their conversation. Hucii Crittenden, the father of Ethie, was t he one man of the section in w hich he lived. From a small lieginning he had Income comparatively wealthy. His were the mills, the country store, the postoffice, the local magistracy in fact, the business and social life of the little community revolved at his pleas ure. It as but natural that the father should take great pride in hissweet and beautiful daughter, now some nineteen years of age. There was, in fact, no limit to his ambition In her tehalf an ambition which Ethieno longer shared, since her heart w;ts given to Daniel leVolf, a worthy young man in her father's employ, whose fortune she would be content to share. "She must go into society in the cities," her father Lad said only the evening before cur story oiiens. "She is qualified, and s-he'll shine there mind what I tell von, she'll shine there!" For a week the storm hail continued aluicst without cessation. So great a rainfall had scarce been known, and the Branch, which had shrunken al most to a succession of pools, now roared and dashed with frightlul energy past the old brown mill. AH d;ty long, and far into the night, the keen -toothed saw tore its way through the eudless succession of logs and Daniel often gazing out upon the mad wate.s fancied that they reflected Lis own heart, for truth to tell, he was far from calm He loved intensely, but it was by no means clear to him how his love was ever a more hopeful phase than at presen. And wlu-n at l ist the gates were shut, and the wheel ceased Ks revolu tions, he wold retire to the little "office," in which a couch had been placed, and divide the few hours of rest between sleep airl the futile efforts to see beyond tLe dark veil of the future. The office was a narrow room, built outside from the side of the mill, and projecting directly over the bed of the stream, and the flood dashed by now so close to the flooring that it almost seemed he was pillowed on the whirl ing eddies; but w hen his emotions were most aroused he welcomed the com panionship, and its very madness was his lullaby. But one night there come a strange commition in the hat let along the smarm. Some one disturbed by a sick child was further startled by a heavy crash and roar from the darkness without. He Cew to the door, and his worst tears were continued. Plainly enough the crashing and splintering of timbers rame to his ears, mingled with the grating and crunch ing of great stone borne a'-oii by re sistless force. Then followed the roar and sweep of an immense body of water suddenly liberated and overwhelming every thing in its course. TV.ere was but one explanation possi ble the dam had given away, and the great mill-pond was added to the al ready swollen current of the Branch. From house to house the frightened messenger ran, and in a very short time a half-dozen men with lanterns were hurrying through the mist and darkness towards the pond. The dam had lieen located perhaps a hundred rods above lhte mill, where a large region was overflowed, but long before it was reached all doubts were removed. The current was immensely swollen and laden with debris, while much of the bordering land was overwhelmed, so that at la.st the effort to reach the dam was given up, and the party turned their attention down-stream. A few roils above the mill a highway crossed the Branch, but where there had been a heavy bridge high above the water, they could discern only a straggling wreck, crumbling away each moment under the resistless energy of the flood. The bridge had gone bodily with the current. Hugh Crittenden had not formed one of the first jwrty, for his house was more rmote than those of his neigh bors, but now they saw the flashing of lights about the mill, and heard cries of alarm. "There is something to pay there!" cried one, and all ran about the great piles of logs and made their way to the structure. Hugh was there, with a friend or two, and all were in the wildest excite meut. The mill was wrecked, and trembling under the force of the mad current which rushed through the lower part of the structure; bvt it was not that which filled those present with horror. At the rear the door leading to what had been the efflce Daniel's sleeping room was torn from its fastenings, but it opened only upon a Feething, howling waste of water. The little "annex" had been torn from its p'ace, taking away a section of the mill, and with all that it contained had gone down the turbulent stream. "DeWolf where is he?" gasped more than one and Hugh Crittenden, verv pale but calm, made all the answer that was in his power: "God knows, men; I don't. There is no trace of him here." "Then he must be in the river!" cried Nathan Goodman, Daniel's assistant at the mill, "for I was here till late, and he was verv tired and sleepy when I left, and said he should shut down and go to bed soon and try to get a good night's rest, which he hadn't had since the storm began. Poor fellow! Jfhe's gone into this flood he'll never wake again." "Possibly he may have been tlirown ashore somewhere," suggested Mr. Crittenden. "While there is hope we must try to find him Some of you men with lanterns follow down the bank we may get some clew of him'.' The search was made, and thorough ly made, for apart from the promptings of a common humanity the missing man was a favorite with his asosciates; but it was all in vain, though the ex plorations were carried far below the limit of hope, and with the coming of daylight the party made their way back to the mill with sad faces. As the water was now subsiding, and there seemed no danger of further dam age, the men repaired to their homes, Mr. Crittenden among the number. On entering the house he was met by his wife with an enquiring glance which voiced the question she would have asked. Sometime before a neighbor had told her the sad nws, but, in the hope that the worst m?iht not be true, Mrs. Crit tenden had kept the tidings from her daughter. "It's no use hoping." he said; "we've got to give him up." j A despairing word fell from the hear er's lii, at the same moment that Ethie, who had wondered at her moth er's constrained air and manifest agita tion, appeared on the scene, and eagerly demanded: "Who is it, fatliei? I know that there is some one hurt why will you not tell me what is the matter?" "Why, girl, don't you know that Daniel is earned down the stream, and we can't find " Before he could complete the sentence the maiden, with a cry of terrible an guish, sank at his feet in a swoon. "Why, mother, what is the matter with the child?" her astonished father demanded, as he lifted her to a lounge. "Dont ask me now; you'll know soon enough. I should think you would know without asking," exclaimed Mrs. Crittenden wildly; and both gave them selves to the restoration of Ethie to consciousness, until finally she came back to life, and gazed anxiously into the faces of those bending over her. "Tell me, father," the pleaded pite ously, '"did I hear arightthat Daniel is lost?" -'Yes, my dear girL I know it is sad, for Diniel was a good boy; but there is no doubt he was carried down and drowned, or dashed to death on the rocks. Xo one could live in such a flood. "And I loved him so much so much!" Hugh Crittenden sprang to his feet, and gazed first on his wife and then on his daughter. "So that is it. Why, you never breathed a word of this to me." "Xo, father; I did not speak of it, for I feared it would displease you; but indeed I could not help it." , The father bent over and kissed his daughter, resting Lis broad hand upon her brow. "Well, I don't think it would have pleased me over much; but I'd be glad to see the boy right here now, and I'd tell you to be hippy with all my heart that I would." The man's eyes were filled with an unusual moisture, and he moved towards the door, when, on the thresh old, he stood face to face with Daniel DeWolf 1 The young man was drenched and muddv, but there was no question of his Identity, and hi another moment he was the centre or a happy family group. "Well, well, my dear fellow," cried Mr. C nttenden as he wrung the young man's hand, "we all supposed you dead. Tell us all about it." "There Is not much to tell," said Danie! modestly. "I was awakened by the water, which was so high that I foared the dam might be in danger, and I lighted the lantern and crossed the bridge to go up on the other side and look at it. I had scarcely reached the opposite side of the stream when the dam above gave way and took the bridge with it. I could only cross the Branch to get back by going up to the Four-Mile bridge, and the water was so high, and traveling so bad, that it took me a long time; but here 1 am." "Well, my boy, I'm very glad to see you back here, aud I was just saying something to Ethie about you; but she can tell you all about that later on. Get your clothes changed, aud we'll have some breakfast there'll be time enough to talk business afterwards." And the result of it all was that when the mill was rebuilt and enlarged the following season, it was put in the care of another, for Daniel found a pliee In the store as a partner of Mr. Critten den, and at the big house on the hill, which was the envy of all the neigh bors, there was a partnership of a more tender nature, of which the reader hardly needs to be told more. A a Anetrallaa Baroa. About forty-six years ago a farmer named Clark left the shores of England for Tasmania for the purpose of farming, taking with him consider il!o capital, and being, in addition, a remarkable judge of pheep and cattK Ha appew to hive failed in flint island, and as the Tasm&nians were forming a new settle ment on the shores of the grat An itra- lian continent, near Port Phillip, he de termined to try his fortunes there. Where the Queen City of the South. Mel bourne, with its 400,000 inhabitants, now stands, waj then a waste, inhabited by the savage and the kangaroo. Clarke at tLis period received from a distant relative a considerable sum of money, which he immediately invested in land in the vicinity of Melbourne, then called 'Baregras." As the Colonial Government ot Xew South Wales grant ed special surveys of 80,000 at the uni form price of ne shillings per acre. Clarke immediately invested his legacy in one of these immense blocks, an i tuns laid the foundation of fats gigantic fortune. This was io 1810, and for sev eral years he continued to take up sheep and cattle stations in the uninhabited regions of Australia Felix, now the Col ony ot Victoria. He always attended the Government land sale?, and bought largely in the B.i'larai districts, where the riohettt cod mines in Australia an sitnattd. The discovery of gold at Mi nnl Alexander and Ballnrat increased his growing weal I h,as he exacted rigid ly a tribute of royalty for permission to mine on l is coveted lands, aud thus ob tained immense en ma. Never were riches more worthily be stowed. He continued till the time of his death, 1 SCI to buy lauds sell merino wool and deal in cattle. Hia sod sao cccdtd to tbis vast inheritance, which c mpiiseJ at his father's death, 3 500,- 000 merino ebeep, 300,000 cattle, and nearly 3,000,000 acres of freehold lands, and a leasehold of Cro-rn lands equal in ana to that of England. The pro bate duty raid to the various Colonial Governments was calculated cn an es tate valued at 850.000,000, though that was not nitre than half its real va'ne. His eon. ti t pretext Lord Rupert wood Las by his care and attention quad rupled this vast fortuse. When the Duke of Edinburgh and the sons of the Prince of Wales vudted Australia, they were feisted right royally at Euperts wood, the family seat, and Queen Vic toria created him Union Bupertcwood of Bupertawood, m the Colony of Vic toria, arid a Peer of the united King dom. Without any exaggeration, the Australian is worth 200,000.000, and the influx of population is adding daily to his wealth. His genero lty is unbounded. Tje charitable institutions of Melbourne and the colonies owe bim a great debt of gratitude for his liberality. Ruperts- wood, the seat of this bucolic Australian, is snperb, and can compare with any residence in the Old or New World, its estimated cost being $1,000,000. Uuw aiany Murderers Escap. It appears that from I860 to 1882 a hundred and seventy persone were tried in Massachusetts for murder In the first degree, Of this number only twenty- nine were convicted and only sixteen paid the extreme penalty of the law. Of those convicted one committed sui cide and twelve got their sentence com muted. Here, then, during a peuod or little more than twenty years were a hundred and seventy murders in one State and only sixteen executions. In Connecticut during a period of thirty years, from 1800 to 1880, ninety- seven persons were tried lor murder in the first decree. Of these only thirteen were convicted of that crime and not more than seven were hanged. The statistics for other States would doubtless show simiPar results. In Xew York city there were a hundred and eighty-five homicides. during the four years ending with 1877. There was an average of nearly one homicide a week. During the same eriod there were four executions, or just one a year. The number of persons tried for mur der in the first degree in the city is about twenty-five every year, tne num ber banged does not exceed on the aver age one or two a year. These figures are full or signiucance. They show that either through the fault of the law itself or its administra tion by juries the statute imposing the death penalty for murder is in the vast majority of cases a dead letter. They further show that whilo murder is a common crime the murderer in a great many instances succeeds in escaping punishment entirely. A cokrk rosDEST who Lbs been ex perimenting" in planting potatoes, large and small, cut and uncut, says be has never been able to detect any differen ce either in tne yield or quality of po tatoes raised from large or small seed. But be has in every case noticed a mark' ed differences in the results obtained troro planting cut and uncut rotatoes. This difference was Invariably in favor of tie former method. -Don It a rurpoae.' At Greeley a young man with a faded cardigan jacket and a look of woe got on the tram, and as the car waa a little crowded, he sat in the seat with me, He had that troubled and anxious ex pression that a rural young man wears when he first rides on the train When the engine whittled he would al most jump out of that cardigan Jacket, and then he would look kind of foolish. like a man who allows his impulses to get the better of Jiim. Most every one noticed the young man and his cardi gan jacket, for the latter had arrived at that stage of droppiness and jaded' across-the-shoulders look that tne cheap knit jacket of commerce acquires after awhile, and it bad shrunken behind aud stretched out in front so that the horizon, as you stood behind the young man, seemed to be bounded by the tail of this garment, w hich started out at pocket with good intentions and sud denly decided to rise above the young man's shoulder blades. "Do you live at Greeley?" .1 in quired. "X o, sir," he said. In an embarras sed way, as most any one might in the presence of greatness. "I live on a rancne up the randre. I was just at Greeley to see the circus." I thought I would play the tenderfoot and inquiring pilgrim from the cultured East, so 1 s.d, "leu do not seethe circus often In the West, I presume; the distance is so great between towns and the cost of transportation is so greatr" ' AO, sir. This Is the first circus I ever was to. I have never saw a circus before. " "Did you go into the side show?" "No, sir. I studied the oil paintings on the outside, but 1 didnt go in. I met a handsome looking man there near the side-show, though, that seemed to take an interest iu me. There was a lottery along with the- show, and be wanted me to go and throw for him." "Capper, probably," "Pei haps so. Anyhow he gave me a dollar and told me to go and throw for him." "Why didnt he throw for him self?" "O, he said the lottery man knew him and wouldn't let him throw-" "Of course. Same old story. lie saw you were a greeney and got you to throw lor him. He stood In with the game so that you drew a big priae for the capper, created a big excitement. and you and the crowd sailed In and lost all the money you had. I'll bet he was a man with a velvet coat, and a mustache dyed a dead black and waxed as sharp as a cambric needle." "1 es; that's his description to a dot. I wonder if he really did do that a-pur- pose." "WeiLtell us about It. It does me good to hear a fool tell bow he lost his money. Don't yon see that your awkward ways and general green ness struck that canrjer the first thimr. and you not only threw away your own money, but two or three hundred other wappy-Jawed pelicans saw you draw a big prize and thought it was yours, then they deposited what little they had and everything was lovely." "Well I'll tell you how it was if it'll do any good and save other young men in the future. You see this capper, as you call him. gave me a$l bill to throw for him, and I put it in my vest pocket, so, along with the dollar bill that fath er gave me. I always carry my moaey in my right-band vest pocket. Wall, I sailed up to the game, big as old Jura by himself, and put a dollar into the game. As you say, I drawed a big prize, 'JO and a silver cup. The man offered me $ for the cup and I took it. "Then It flashed over my mind that I might have got my dollar and the other feller's mixed, so I says to the proprietor, I will invest for a gent who asked me to draw for him. "Thereupon I took out the other dollar, and I'll be eternally chastised if 1 didn't draw a brass locket worth about two bits a busheL" I did not say anything for a long time. Then I asked him how the cap per acted when be got his brass locket. "Well, he seemed pained and grieved about so me tiling and he asked me if I hadn't time to go away into a quiet place where we could talk it over by ourselves, but he had a kind of a cruel, insincere look in his eye, and I said no, I believe I didn't care to, and that I was a poor conversationalist anyhow, and so I came away and left him look ing at his brass locket and kicking holes in the ground and using profane language. "Afterwards I saw him talking with the proprietor of the lottery, and I feel somehow that they had lost confidence in me. I heard them speak of me in a jeering tone of voice and one said as I passed by: There goes the meek eyed rural convict now,' and he used a horrid oath at the same time. "It it hadn't been for that one little quincidence there would have been nothing to mar the enjoyment of the occasion." rat Name. As kerchiefs laid away with scent bags imbide their perfume, so pet words from homo uses acquire a sweetness not their own. It is a goou sign when one hears the masculine and feminine heads of the table "father" and "moth er" each other. The high chairs and the little plates associated with the ori gin of those appellations may be long gone from the sides thereof, but the memory of the flaxen curls that used to wave over them is still there embalmed in the amber of those loving designa tions; the more if "lather" and 'moth er" are now themselves grown white haired and venerable. We know a family where one little new-comer invented and bestowed uion the diguilied head thereof, a pet name, original in form and unsuggested by any cognomen to him naturally belong ing. And we have often been im pressed with the thought how the us age of that name ft r him, and to him, so to speak, has carried double ad ding to the simple use of identification which it shared with the names others called him by, a special thought of lov ing recognition and remembrance of its gentle author. . - The simple fact is, and there is no good m trying to disguise it, that we with our calm blood and proper and reticent ways, tend toward a frigidity oi mannar in the domestic circle. which has the appearance and some times has the reality of unsocialness. it not of positive want of affection. A more demonstrative way of speech and life would bring out the love which is underneath to the great comfort of all parties. A Daby World. All chemical and physical deductions tsnd to teach us that the earth is the child of the sun, left behind in its sue cessive contractions, as Laplace so grandly illustrated, or exploded from the mass of the parent orb in some con vubdon hardly vaster than those which the astronomer constantly beholds. The earth was begotten of the solar fires. As we look upon the great planet Jupiter, we see a picture of what, per haps, the earth once was. It is not such an orb as the early astronomers imagined progressed, exalted, the home of lofty intelligence. All re searches tend to show that it is Mill a red-hot world; a baby world. The oceans of water which will some day cover its surface are yet vaporous er gaseous with intense heat. It is 1,400 times as large as the earth. If these two bodies came into existence at one solar birth - throe, we can readily understand why the earth is superficially cooled and habiUble, while Jupiter u still glowing with solar heat. . If theso planets were both created at the same time, the larger orb would more slowly radiate its heat Into space; it would remain in its lnfaucy, while the earth .was swiftly passing through Its stages or development. What would become of the earth if its who'e mass should be heated red-hot? Its ocean wruld boil for a little while and swiftly vanish in vapors. Carbonic acid, stored up in the limestones or pro duced by combustion of the coal beds, sulphur, mercury, all volatile materials Uiese would swiftly rise from the earth's crust, and form an atmospnere 10,000 miles deep, enveloping the glow ing orb. Looking at Jupiter, we see what the earth once was; looking at the earth we see what Jupiter is to be. The red planet Mars more fully illus trates the same line of deductions. It is smaller than the earth, and has sent a larger proportion of its heat into space. As we contemplate the activities now in progress beneath our feet, we can com piehend the forces which have reduced to Its present state our bi other pi met. Imparted Imagas. In a rough, soft wood box in a marble dealer's store was an image of Cupid cut from marbie, chunks of wood supporting the weak and delicate parts. "It is a specimen of readv-made par lor statuary," the dealer said. "It has just arrived from Italy, and. when dusted, is ready lor the parlor of a mil lionaire." "Why do you call it ready-made?" "Those statues are all maJe to order. but not as the term is generally under stood. In Florence, for instance, are a number of studios over which artists of ability and repute preside. In a mo ment of inspiration that Cupid was conceived and moulded In clay. Good workmen, whose inspiration lasts them from twelve to fourteen hours a day and for seven days a week, carve from ihvi- block as- many copies of the nuxkd as the trade will Lar. Thus the price of the inspiration may be distributed over twenty-five fifty or one hundred Cnpids. If a man should Lire a sculp tor to make a single image, he would pay $.000 or 51000 for the inspiration, besides the price of the block aud the labor of the workman. The sculptor himself might put a tile on the statue aud he might not. Just as the exigen cies of society jierniitted or his fancy dictated. "In Sicilian marble, which is now an outdoor stone, we have many de signs suitable for cemeteries and graves. These imported goods are not only su perior to, but they are cheaper than, anything you can get in any other way. The price of cemetery pieces tange from $100 to $500, and of parlor pieces from $150 to $1000. The difference between these statues and those costing from two to five times as much is simply that these have no great sculptor's name at tached. The duty on these goods was raised from ten to thirty per cent, by the latest adjustment of the tariff. That was not to protect home inspiration, but merely as a matter of revenue. On block marble the duty was raised from 68 to 65 per cent. We are not quite sure why this was done, but we know it was not to protect the infaut quarry ing business." Ha Sold Himself. A bat finisher in one of the Connecti cut hat factories applied for a pension, and in his application stated that on account of disease contracted in the army he could not do more than half work. One day there appeared in his shop a long, lank individual in a Ion;, lank ul ster, who took an interest la hat mak ing. He was especially plised with the finishing. He came arounl to where our mend was at work, and, after watching his motions a moment said: "Are you new at the business?" "N'ew l What makes vou think I'm new?" hastily asked our friend. "Nothing," said the long, lank man. pleasantly, "only that I thought you didn't work as fast as the others." "Fast as the others," gasped our friend. "I'll bet $5," he added with spirit, ''that I can finish more hats than any other man In this shop." A few davs later the rapid hat fin isher received word that his petition for a pension was refused. The long, lank man in the long, lank ulster was a detective in the employ of the Pension Bureau. Gift-Making in Mexico. Among the higher classes of Mexico gift-making is carried to such an extent tbat to return the regolos of one's friends, consumes a large portion of the average income, Every child, of either : sex, is named alter some saint, and the annual return of that saint's particular "day" is made a season of great re joicing, at which all the friends are ex pected to send girts and come with per- snnal PAntrrat nl:it ions In the ixmi manner every birth-day Is also observed from the grst recurrence to the last. In the kiterior it is customary to send gifts to one's friends on All Saints' ! day, in remembrance or the dead but its application to the living I am at a loss to understand. It is a matter of daily occurrence for the creado of some friend or neighbor to appear about the dinner hour, bearing a tray covered with a crocheted spread or finely em broidered towel, containing fruit, dulce, cakes, home-made cheese, or other dainty, all of which delicate at tentions must, of course, be duly returned. IMTlo j far Treasures. Mr. Lowe, the auhmiriue engineer. was a-ked by a reporter it the wreck of the English frigate ritmvr. wliiok is aid to have snnk off Port Morru about nee hnndrel years ajro, having on board 5 000.000 in gold, could be raided at Una ute day. "This Hasw treasure torr." sni,l he, "is an old. old tale. When I wai a boy I heard of it and to my knowledge hey have boen workinr at it for tbe last thtrtT ye vn. The Hussar is said to hsve struck on Port Rock and bee a ran ashore at Port Morris. Hawsers were attached to her and fastenei to neigh boripg trees, and for a time it was hoped that her damage cou'd be re paired, but she slipped her cable' and sank. Now it is more than likely that the officers utilize 1 their BDare tim- io setting off thd treasure an 1 housing it safely on shore instead of risking it in a sinking ship. About twenty Tears ago t looked into the matter, and I met an old gentleman who was the first diver who ever eamo to this country from EnglaDd. He was very tench inters ed in the Hnssar, and he tni 1 me that he Ltd looked up the records in Eng land. From what he could learn there he was satisfied that the money was all, or nearly to. taken out before she sank. The Hussar is a Captain Kidd story I think. I was asked to take part in the present enterprise in 1867. I went t- the place and was 6urprfoel, They bad no took, and 1- frankly told them tbat it was worse than nseless to go on in that way." "Has anybody else worked at it?" "I es, I believe so, A certain Cap tain Fratt, from Worcester. Miss., got the insane idea that he coul I make a fortune, and worked seven year- and then gave it up. Some persons say tbat he mdo money by the operation, but I don't believe that he and his party could have recovered any very large amount. If they bal it would have been given out b fore now. On the whole, they hive been working in the neighborhood of the wreck for more than tnirty years, sad if they took my advisa they wo-ild sliake tue job. But it seems that these treasure banters never get tired." "Bat this onmpany propc sos to give tho United States Government ten per cent, of the find, aud that, modestly placed, amounts to half a million. "That s so," said Mr. Liwf, "I didn t think of that. I'iJ tell you what we wi!l do yon and I will sign a contract, as citizens of this couLtry, re inqaishinar our share of the proceed-; we'll give it to the poor." "Now there is one thing," he con- tinned, "that the pnblio do not know. aud as I havd been a diver f ir the psat twenty-flva years I caa affar J to tell it. In our waters we have a rpecies of bore worm, a sort of paraaite, with what yon may call a pattent b't month. These animals, by a peccliar cork-screw action. can bore a hole through six-inch pine in a few years. 1 sm ure that seven veira after the Hussar went 1 1 the bottom all that f art of her that was not imbedded in tbe mud was honey combed cmpltte?Tt and, mini yon, the Hussar neTer sbif ted tn inch alter the sank. So there u little left cf her to examine. "What would lie tbe best way in wh'cn to decide whether there i treas ure bnried in the Hussar or not?" "That cou'd easily be dene. I am re idy to make a contract to raisa any trigate ot the Hussar's eiz- within two vears, or 1 will raise the Haatar, keel and all, inside of a year, if they choose to make tbe eontraoc. There are others beaide myself who will do the sane. I don't want any of tbe treasure, but I must be paid for tho work. ' "Do yon know of any greit treiiaros that were reclaimed from the sea?' "If my memory serves meriglt there a-e three or four very clever pie -es of clving work re'iorrted. The steamer Golden Gate, on her way from Cali fornia to ew lork with about 2,000, 000 in gold, was wrecked somewhere in the Pacific. It was during the early gnld days, and everybody was ani ons to get the wealth. There were great diflk-ulties met with in the shape oi heavy surf, but in spite of a'.l about f 1 500, 00J was recovered. The steamer Gorge Lord, which sank off Hattera- with a large amount of golJ, bad soma of it brought back to terra firms, sul H.treraa is a rough place." Snooting Oatter-Snlpa. She was thin and tall, and scantily dressed and looked as though square meals were entirely unknown to her. In her arms, wrapped in a tattered old red shawl, she carried a very diminutive specimen of humanity. It was on Sun day morning that a resident of Cleve land first dlscovored her and was at tracted hr her actions. She walked along in the emter front of the big res taurants on the square, and peered steadily down into the slime and mud gathered there Every few moments she stopped and picked np something from the ground and stowed it away in her dress pockets. After each act of this kind she would raise her eyes for a moment to see if any person was obser ving her movements. For half an hour she continued operations, and then the babv awoke from its sleep and sent forth such a wail as only hungry babies can give utterance to. The mother then went into the old court house al'ey and s:it down to nurse the little one back to sleep. Having accomplished this, she laid the infant down on the hard stones near the fence, and, thursting her hand into her iiocket, she pulled it forth and deposited on the stones near the sleep ing youngster a quantity ot naif smoked oigars and stubs which she had picked from the gutter. All or tbem were dirty. In the vernacular of the boot black the woman had heen "shooting s in.es." Alter emptying her pocket, she looked around cautiously and then lifted her dress skirts up around her waist. Suspended from the latter 'and hanging between the dress and skirts, was a huge bag which seemed to be at least half full of something, probably "snnies." into mis bag tne yellow faced woman emptied her collection of cigar stubs. Then she picked up her baby and moved away. The reporter's curiosity being excited, he accosted the woman and asked her what she did with the cigars. She looked disappinted to learn that she had been watched and answered very shortly, as she moved rapidiy away. "Why I sell them, of course." She vanished around tbe corner. "What do jou buy cigar stubs for?" the reporter propounded to a manufac turer. "We don't buy any for any purpose." ha repllsd, "aud neither does any first- class manufacturer. These tenement house cigar and tobicco makers buv mem, and use them as saloon cigar filler or make 'kill me quick' smoking tobacco of them. Saloonists buy ci gars made of this refu-te stuff and palm them off on half drunken persons as 'pure Havana fillers. We cant use them at all, because we can buy the good tobacco in tbe first place, a great deal cheaper. You see the stubs have to go through four or five operations beiore they can be made in any way ht for use. First they have to be picked apart and each particular piece washed iu clear water. Then they are submit ted to a thorough reswearing. After all this, the odor of smoke will remain, and to take this away very strong rum must be used. All this takes time and time is money to us. Consequently we bel eve it is cheaper to buy the tobacco in the first place and make good cigars. These tenement bouse dealers get most of their trade from the low grog shops and saloons, and as a consequence don't think it Is necessary to put tbe stubs through all these operations. They simply wash them and use them in that condition for filler or cut them up into tobacco. They pay these snipe- shooters all the way from six to eight cents a pound for the stubs and make money on the investment, too. There Is very little or such traffic going on in this city and Cleveland manufacturers turn out a pretty good quality of cigars as a general thing. A lage quantify of the 'snipes' are shipped to Xew l'ork however, where tenement bouse manu facturers do a thriving t mi ness. Per haps some of them return to U3 in the shape ot manufactured goods. In France this busine-s of collecting cigar stumps is quite a large industry, and stores by the score are opened for the purchase of the castawav remnants of cijar. The Ita'ians also deal largely in them." Ir ail cigar stores and at almost every cigar stand are little nickel-plated ma chines to be used by smokers to cut off the tips of cigars. The but-end of the cigar is inserted in a little hole, and by pressing downward a sharp knife is moved against the cigar and the tip amputated. These machines do the work that the American forefathers used to do with their teeth. The tips fall down into a little box, and are either converted into smoking tobacco for cigarmakers' own nse or manufac tured into snuff. Thev are too small to make saleable smoking tobacco or cigar tiller. In Europe these tips are put to a very good use. Some twenty yt-ars ago a philanthropic and philo sophical German suggested that a ci.l- otion be made of tne; tips, and a sa.e made to Bnuff dealers and that the rev enue resulting be applied to charitable purposes, The philosopher was laughed at but he persisted that much valuable tobacco was being thrown away that might be converted into ready cash. His Idea finally attracted so much at tention that boxes were put up in all the cigar stores for the purpose of re ceiving the tips. At first the result was not very satisfactory, but it was sufficient to encourage the originator. Finally smoking clubs were organized for the purpose of collecting tips, and boxei were placed in all the stores an 1 saloons where cigars were sold. Every month the collections were made and the tips sold. Tbe re? ult was a most handsome revenue, aud to day hundreds of worthy poor in Germony are ctothed and fed by the moaey received from ths sale of tips. The fe?er wai spread throughout Europe, aud in Germany or Austria the dealer, in selling a cigar. almost invariably cuts the tip from ir. and puts it in a box before ti.iud.ng it to a purchaser. An effort w as once made to intro luce the system into this country, but it failed ignoininiously, and the tips, if saved at all, are either sold to snuff maim' act ure rs, smoked by cigar makers or thrown into the ash barre'. It seems strange, however, that the plan of saving them should not work in this country, where more cigars are smoked than iu all Europe put together. rrozca Water ripaa. "Who is this man?" "The one who is rushing along, with his hat on the back of his head, and his eyes hangipg out?" "Yes," "That is a man who warned the ser vant girl the other night to shut off the water so the pipes wouldn't freeze." "And the good girl obeyed?" "Xot exactly. She meant to, but her beau came up and she forgot all about It. Consequently there was a freeze-up. Poor girl! She is very sorry! If tears would thaw the pipes she would shed 'em by the hundred." "And why does the man rush?" "He l ou his way to the plumber for consolation." "And what will the plumber do?" "He will show the man 14,678 calls which were booked before he came in, and which must be attended to in rota tion." "And will there be any swearing?" "There will, my boy! There will be swearing and stamping and growling and blasting, but it wont be on the part of the plumber. He will preserve his serene smile through it all. When the other man gets out of wind he will retire." "To his office?" "Oh, no! He wiil get off and buy himself an alchohol lamp, have a drug gist fill it for him, and he will return home to thaw out the pipes for himself. He can thus make a caving of several thousand dollars, saying nothing of the personal satisfaction cf getting ahead of a plumber." "And will he succeed?" "Xot by a John Rodgers! He will crawl under the bouse, scalp himself on the joists, fill his knees with rusty nails, choke himself with smoke, and finally crawl out and give it up." "And wait for a thaw?" "Xo, sir-e-el He wont wait for any thing. He'll skip d ywn town for a fur niture van and move into another.house. That's where his head is level. It's cheaper to move than to thaw out fro zen water-pipes. " Thh Rural Home reminds ns that no leached ashes, though valatbla for use on the gardau, must not be applied too plentifully, and says that if applied too heavily over tne sartace as a top-dres sing either jist before or just after sowing tha a e 1, it will kill the young plants as readily as the yousg weeia. xhis is tbe e e when t x heavy a u reu sing is given, and is especially so with radishes, salsify,ca3bage aud egg pi in. With be ins, pe is, lettuce and parsley, tbe result will be beneficial, as they seem to s'and more than the first men-ton!. four Vr Mcaltnv Womca. Some of the very rich women ot Xew York have many peuliaritiv Mrs. Stewart, for instance, never opens her front windows an i she g e. on: riving so seldom that even the neUhbrs oa she adjoining b!o-k do not know her. She is a sincere Christian, be lieving more firmly in the English Church than any other, and yet worshiping more to suit her own quiet taste than according to anv set tenets of faith. She does not care for her per sonal appeara'jee and does not dress half so neatly ss her servants. She walks out of pleasant afternoons twice or thrice a week, and while always accom panied at a respectful distance by a strong man servant, she looks so com monplace that not one of the multitude are aware that she is the richest widow in the world. Mrs. Stewait always car ries goodly sized coins for beggars. Miss Wolfe differs from Mrs. Stewart in this respect. When she meets a beg gar she must know his or her references before doing any thing of a substantial nature. It is a very difficult matter to !ix the a-e of Mbs Wolfe. She is no longer young, aud yet she does not look iu. sue poaeiS'S a face of the typo that never ages. There is a story of her raving loved a brave fellow some years ago, and that he passed away be fore the day agreed upon for the wed ding, and when he was buried her heart also was put away in the tomb. it is a pretty romance, all devotion, no thing but truth and pureness, and she now devotes her Ufe to cnarkv. Mrs. Goelet, like her late husband, is of a retiring disunion. ForinrvaU of weeks she will remain closely at home, out to all callers, aud then again she w ill be seen at every place ot note in the city. Her jewels are said to be the finest private collection in the coun try. The Goelets we. e a! ay3 a cuiiou3 family. But the most sensible and attractive of the rich ladies in Xew Yolk whem this article has ca Jed to mind is Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts. The widow of a mining king, intelligent, cultured and :andsome, she, wiih 0 iaw.OijU in her own rigm. numbers her suitors by Uio dozens. Some time azo. it will be readily recalled, the goosips said that she proposed to enter the White House as the wife of Arthur and its mistress. According to an infotmant o mine, Mrs. Koberts, when this siory came to her ears, burst out crying as though her heart would break, pronounced it fiilae. and supplemented it with thes;a:eaaent that she would never a?ain go to the aitar as an exspectant bride. She is the center of a social circle of brave men and women, does a great deal in aid of literature and art and is well known to the poor of the Five Points and the Ea,t Side. The Dead Letter Office. Fo::r million three hundred and seventy-nine thousand oce hundred and Dinity eight letters strayed iir.o the 1 -ad-letter Office tluricg tho last year; 3,340,307 ot these were not called for at the postotliees to which they were sent; t?.o were sent in from hotels because the depirte-i guests had left no addresses for forwarding their mails; lu,.l5 were insufficiently pail; l,Zi contained forbidden an ides, lottery tickets and the like; were erro neously or illegibly addressed and 11, U79 letters bore no address whatever. Of these letters 15,301 contained money amounting to $32,047.23. Besides that l.OUo letters couuiiuei drafts, checks, money orde-s, etc., to the amount cf 1.3S 1.904. 47. Morc-over, 00,137 letters contained postage stan.ps aud 40,125 contained receipts, paid notes and can celed obligations of all sort. With this remarkable showing of more than $1,000,0011 gone wroug, too much cunnot be said in caution to tnose w ho contide letters and packag -s t the maiL The money thus collected at the Dead Letter Office is turned into the treasury. The goods and mercandiso from the packages are sold at auction. and the Chiistmas and fancy cards are done up in packages and sent to the children's hospitals and the orphan asy lums of Washington. A whole history of possib'e anguish and heart buruit.gs is wrapptd up in tie collection of 35.100 photographs that came to the Dead Letter Office in a year, and Injured and resentful swains, an gered relatives and friends may know where some of their treasures have gona to. The photographs are preserved and this portrait gallery of the Postoffice Department numbeis up into the mil lions, beginning wkh a miniature that was lost in the mails fifty yeirs ao. Human Hcasta of Bar tie 3. At last the problem of our school days is solved, says a Mexican letter, aud we have discovered how Cortex ac complished the overland transportation of that historic fleet of ships, built on the coast and borne over the mountains to the lake of Mexico. Nearly all the labor in this queer country is performed by man-powers few carts or horses be ing employed. We mee. buman beasts of burden carrying wardrobes on their heads, pianos on their backs or huge blocks of building stone with apparent ease. Mexican Indians who transport goods from the interior are so trained that they will tire the strongest horse in equal time and distance, carrying from 100 to 150 pounds upon their backs. It u an actual fact that, after making a long trip thus heavily loaded, they till their baskets with stones on the return, their strained and distorted muscles re quiring the accustomed burden. Aa Astoiuahea "Librarian. A book agent with an ermine trimmed and lined overcoat, a cap of Russian seal and driving a m igmficeut span of grays, drove down Bank street, ew London, Conn., and after repeated in quiries succeeded in fluding the down town reading room at the corner or Bank and Howard streets. He had a trunk and valise deposited at the door and was setting out his samples of cy clopedias, scientific digests and stan dard authors in the various styles of binding, before the astonished eyes of Librarian Clarke, when the latter got breath enough tjask him into the read ing room. The agent stepped over the threshold, threw one switc glance around, muttered an ejaculation which was not a prayer, packed his trunk in a hurry, closed it with a bang and drove up towa as if Tom O'Saanter's pursu ers were cutting behind. Alexander took off his hat, scratched his head and as he looked after the flying book agent wondered what it was that madu him mad. ; ; i 'ft i II it-; '!"" 1: t -' l 1 - V. : I- j' i' ' (' i I--; ! I' n: 3