g.F.'SOHWEIER. tee goisttttjtioi-the otioi-aid tee rrrosoExnrr or the lavs. Editor and Proprietor. voi, xxxix. MliTLINTOWINV JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 12, 1SS5. NO. 33. . - - . ., r,iB tl ouuttered thought JJW ""'I'""-' Iraulu' ,,T:fiXi rm:.' t is stirred. ', ,..riM'"!t umii . need '?U' tU- ;ivsi.le scattered mmJ; ir "";,, .-"-! .ry. ' ttei-'i' 'f Mv an., care. ubJ"?. ..V uo., WW.'. :irt of aiieli race; r'tl..l tli i-r.sent hou;: ,1-eJ i tnulttp led rst : . i .....I 1 r it T ti MliU13 ,rrr Muiu 't ... t,..ter wrnllL Le&r'il y"V'v nes .1 t'ueyeaii n ,r . j ,,i ,.ur loutuj kuo.T. ..,'gaaiJ "r thuru-iiued way. ..fail. i o'Mlr e"": .. ,.vri.rJ i.-r evt-rroore. -:;tc UV bii y reaping tie'ds., itriM- if"! harvest yie.d.s, ub --rii4 world: xio ' 51 '-"l:')- l!H' ..iu,cit,'..td Wuhi to couie out .i -dJ '.2 to ta".k over a little busi T. -Kl, ... n lit- should arrive before ft lev .'U uni: to hiui uJil 1 Zl li kii-a a:ul jK.lite to Lira my " jje jj rt;i.:y a vny well-meaning .... ,..,:.. it :Ui. and the most t..uH.K.k-k.tir 1 have ever bad. Z'j sectned a little out of sorts late asdl!" sure would be most grate liitie a tent son from you." "iVs Kii-l'iTil l'.lair. the rich tea ffiertU:. t--l to llis JuKliter in .ia,,.ru::.-'.on Uaving bis pretty villa c aicla.i'Ul f..r tl.e city, with an Vl; 0f j.,i;iii'is condesceusiou r riiV.Bil u..iu:fet bis sentinieiits t i Wiii t Uxilt-kee;ers and tbeir K ." i eledieiit daughter, as ir'itotiO'H il' I'-'i i.'.bers guest tliat ekiz I'i'-uly sled; but certainly itt'r:Ly Ua uit-rcLant would have e uiuuJi'- character if be liad leu i nt:r of bis tie Uirain r on that occa b3:for no s.iui:er had the door closed cm. tie serv.iiu who uhered bini iuto it '-reJcti of !iis joujiir mistress than -t.talj us.l-sLed and iiublusaius be J.i 'H-.hz !r:rl iuto bis arms, only rvirx' ii'-r alter leaving uion her r rui iijc. at lcisl balf a doea warm lhii. n.'t ap:-.ir'.iis in the least sur yjei or dirc.'iiivrtcd at this greeting, Ure ai;;u-h:ng'.y the situation for fr.wrt miiiutcs lfore she bluAingh Jftiturk atid ei.de.tvored to bring in airi'il in? l:ke or.ler ber soft brown itt,-likh'witli the dainty ruffles at L.td Ik-u-me souiewtiat dis it'hI ly Hie welcome she bad so utahi-mly i.veii her father's guest. "ltv-4 li'iijt.rue since I have seen tea. Hurry,"' she remarked, with a brriilerxj glance from leneatli the feck"u?5:es shading the large gray pes "lili-.'Uld thiiik so indeed quite an Kr!"rr.-pn!iileii the Uiok-keei)er dis- iy. "I ru.u..ured to ;et away lialf it!.. Kfoie the tiaie your father fcilmtfce should lie home, hoping to fee jf'U ai'ise- but he'll 1 sure to turn ?MT" he's exjiected it's just m ki:-' "Ildny. do you know why my father La::: fur you to-night?' "lhaver:t an idea, excepting that I'Si'Qjt-'.'.i! ; aiciul the branch of the test'ta :l Il.ii.-kong." "'I caii ten y-iu a little then, Z- I lordij think you will be as liorl ks LiV father seems to expect, (h of the men in the house out there as Just (!ieij; he 1 ad rather a resjK-n-i-t'ie j"SUi:.ii. I l-!ve, and papa wants tujfLd j.njiut to Ukt his place." "A? if anything c.'uld induce me to ave E::.'Ui.,( an. you. lora!" cried "J vullj man. ,; Whv, the separation jt.'i pruUhly ht- for years!" "1 am afraid you must go. Harry," u-tiie f!rl s rather sorrowful response "ldukoow luy fattier; your refusal to ' La wishes w i mid piobably make Mhirir very like an enemy of him, 'A retiler uiatteis between us even ifcw Uijurle? s than thev are at pres et"' ""Uora, I must speak to vour father," the jrtuug man exciteilly. "When hU ti.at his da'iqliter's happiness is p".vr.l, he eau't be heartless enough L'rtfu- our united piaers. lie seems J?, Mt-er kindiy toward me. Any- : '"uld be 1 letter tl.au this uncer- -V, lcar Harry, lielieve me, it c Ik miiv exchangiLi: uucertamtv , ,' f";t:ve resignatiou of all our hopes. ul-.w my father well, and it isu.se-'-e from myself and you that ? ' "i-ik-y far better than bis child ..'.' eclaied over and over again lrfw.il i,ever give bis consent to . t10-" man tKK)rer than a:'d 1 be will never re- ! iS Wll.l.' p.-ieju auv.se me to go off to -,:t!i t!ie probability of never , K-aazain, Ii.,ra? Nothing can .'wthai, that, surely!"' t!;-k' 1 1 n" 1 Ulli ijave time U) (iini ' t uf il "ny tllis morning,"' T ' 011 ll'e of tt,a,s- tar"! n1"" ,,al)a uow 1 l)ave SO Ka ; ''Uo -'.v to juu. I must see WnT, d you IU;'"'ageto come tot k ilrs'la-v at lhis time for ''." -M' fber is going to a die city on that evening. 5sIoUr? 1 ca"-" responded Harry, tJZ- ,!, ' "ned to admit the 'flM,il,!i,l,U:(.11t. i.i "Win. v.m ..r.Mv.wt n,T ,c s ever a most excellent qual " uUi:ni i t i.. . . r 1, a i uuie my uaugii' ik.ri-' ".: jou comfortable 'oufi f i So" l'H'" responded ti.w' y eni,lr''1-v- MI suppose lV.i :" 1 dispensed with hLty ".v g "dy-the :: us a bottle l'ie-1-;.'' '- yiiu." be?au lhe merchant, iyu ,' , - . a. :t. in V, v e c,niiact with that rle t i'kof wliich you have Cln. ''ell.ka"d the transaction """v tl i"3 '? tlhing very like s Kh.r , 1 P"nis. ot at all a 1 r... ... sir. .IT. J I i a little bitterlv. Vi '"'thingelseLo av whi,-h V. 5WiV.'U m"tk! "early, my boy. Lh?Ul of the death of secretary at Hongkong, and i t itsi'v,...; U' f 1,1 13"' 11 the room, evi i; orti'!;':, , Wllli Ijii'iself and all k'e"; 1::'Ve 10 teU 'ou that "-iL Lews IliinTi A m-riu am ca!led upon to send some on t. mi nis place, it's rather a good posi. uu w t ureu auuie one we can irusi. 1 ve ueen rttber pleased with uie way you ve uoue your duties lately, and I've been thinking heml in short 1'vj made up my mind to give you the "But, sir," begau Wynn, iu desper- auiou. 4.. .L. . . I .... ju, uo inauKsi i Know you appre-c-'.tc :t and all that, oi course, and I'm -! ie we shall be satisfied with vnu Cmild you le ready to go next month?' 1 w ill think it over, sir. I supiose ii ia not necessary 10 give jou my an- !"er lor a uay or iwuf -AO, certainly not," replied the a,ercnant, a little surprised at Wynn's way oi receivmg sucu a "piece of good uniuue. inen ionowea an announcement wnicti, for an instant, caused the book keeier to turn hot and cold with light- uiui: lajnuuj. "1 erbaps you will be interested In a piece of family news which has given me the greatest satisfaction, Wynn My daughter is to be married," Impossible! 1 mean, sir, I had beard nothing of it," stammered poor ynn. ""Kh?" exclaimed the merchant, star- n. g at bis companion in astonishment. "So. I suppose not. The fact of the matter is, llis JJlair doesn't know of it hen elf yet; but she will, of course, be as pleasvd as I am. The letter only came to-day from an old friend of inine who has made millions millions, my ooy in sugar, and writes proposing a marriage between his only son and my daughter. The younif man Has seen my Dora somewhere, it seems, and was quite smitten with the sly bttle puss. lie is coming to us on a visit next week s ow haven t I cause for rejoicing to day. Wynn?' Tray accept my congratulations. sir,'' replied the book-keeper lugubri ously. "Uy-the-way, Wynue," the merchant went on, after a moment's pause Cevo- ted to golden anticipations, it mis struck me that you have been rather dowu In the mouth lately. Are you out of health?" " Oh, uo, sir, thank you not at all!" responded the young man hurriedly. rather disconcerted by this unusual solicitude in his behalf. The delight with which the merchant bad that day beard of the success of business schemes likely to make an itn portant addition to the banking account of the Grin, and especially anticipations of the brillliant marriage to be made by his daughter, had tilled his heart with a sort of comfortable condescen ding benevolence and goodwill to all the world, which descended even to the affairs of so unimportant a personage as his book-keeper. "Have you had any bad news? "Xo, sir." "Perhaps you are In debt. Don't be afraid to tell me the truth, Wynn. I feel quite a fatherly interest in you, I assure you, and I might do something to help you. 1 shouldn't at all mind advancing a hundred pound or bo." 1 thank you most gratefully, Mr. Blair; but I have no debts." Then there is nothing else for it boy; you certainly are in lovel" Wvnn started, blushing to the very roots of his hair, but could tlnd no words to reply, while the merchant stared at him for a moment, and then laughed uproariously, rubbing his hands with glee as be exclaimed "There, I have it at last! Come out with it.young man; what's the trouble? Won't she have you?" "Yes, sir," stammered Wynn, in an agony, "but she is rich and i am poor. Her father would never consent." T'ooli, pooh! is that all? You sure ly ought to be able to manage that somehow. Is it indiscreet to ask who the young lady is? Do I know the family?" I am afraid it wouldn't do to mention her name," said poor Wynn, looking wildly about for some means of escape. Well, do I know the father?" "Yes, sir:" The merchant reflected for a moment then brought his fast down upon the table w ith a vehemence which made the wine-glasses rattle. 'I have it new 1" Wvnn turned fairly cold. "You needn't say 'yes' or -no,' nor commit yourself In any way; but I think I've got your secret. It's old Brooks's daughter! I've seen you twice with the young woman lately. Old Brooks got the better of me in a busi ness transaction the other day, and ld like to be even with him. Any way whoever the girl is, I'm disposed to help vou." "How, six?" gasped Wynn. "Why hem! if the old fellow won't give his consent, why shouldn't you do without it? What do jou think of elo ping with tier?" "What sir?" cried Wynn, hardly be lieving his ears. "You really advise me to do that?" "Yes why not? What's more, I'll give you the price ot the license for a wedding-present and lend you my car riage any night you like to be off, be sides throwing in my blessing into the bargain! I know a clergyman a few miles from here, who would do the job for you willingly, especially if I gave you a note to him. I did him a favor once." "And you positively will give us your blessing and assistance, no mat tr wt.n f hR vonnir ladv mav be?" ex-, claimed the book-keeper involuntarily. "Positively," replied his employer, firm in the conviction that there was a delightful opportunity of becoming re venged u,xn a man who had assailed him in his weakest point bis pocket. "I w ill help vou without asking any questions. We must teach the grasp ing old sinner that his daughter's af fections are not an article of merchan dise. Xobody need 1 ashamed of you for a son-in-law, Wynn, my boy." "Thank you, sir," responded the young man faintly. "Just consult the young woman, and if ail's right in that quarter, let me know the day, and the carriage and the price of the license shall not be want ing. I shall not go back from my promise." . . Wynn did not fail to keep his appoint ment at Richmond on the following Thursday evening, finding Dora at home and alone, as he had hoped; and the next morning, when Mr. Blair en tered his counting-house, he found his book-keeper waiting anxiou-ly to speak with him. . . "Well, Wynn. is anything the mat ter?" asked the merchant, a little sur prised at seeing the young man at so unusual an hour. "Has anythine new turned up about the American affair? No, sir," Wynn summered, blush- !!. ,. ..rioai- aplinnl-ffirL "1HII1 sa not here to speak of business. I must beg your pardon for trespassing upon jum inue at uiis nour; out you were soveryiud a few days ago as to promise " 'Well, out with it, man!" "That you would assist me " a.ua uio young woman! I re niemlier now!" exclaimed Mr. Blair laughing heartily. "8o you have seen her? What does she think of my pianr" Mie baa consented, sir," faltered the book-keeper, keeping his face care fully hidden behind the lid of a desk in which, to all appearance, he was search ing busily. "On the day after to-morrow evening, if convenient to you The sooner; the better! My boy, I ui quite ready to keep my word." As he spoke, the merchant turned to his desk and filled up a cheque, wtrtclitie hand ed to his companion. "Theta is the wedding-present of w hich I spoke. Of course you must get a special license. My carriage will also be at your service at whatever time and place you choose to appoint, uy-the-way, what- does the young lady think of the China pro ject? I hope your marriage will not affect your decision with regard to it." "She is anxious that 1 should do whatever is most pleasing to you, sir." "Ah, I ee she is a sensible woman! I should like to call in the course of the evening, after the ceremony is over and offer n v congratulations, if you and Mrs. Wynu - intend to remain iu London." "Thank you, sir. 1 was going to ask something of the kind. We expect to be at the (irosvenor Hotel." "Should you like a week's holiday?" "Not at present, thauk vou." an swered Wynn, feeling guilty that he was extremely likely to be given a much more prolonged hohdav than he desired. "Very -yell, my boy. I wish you all manner or luck. Return in the course of the morning, and I will give you the - t v. 111 J 11ICUU U1C eleigyLiaiu" About nine c -clock a m. on the dav of the marriage Mr. Blair, adorned with the unusual splendor of the light kid gloves and a white neck-tie, and carrying an enormous bouquet of roses and orange blossoms, entered the Gros venor Hotel and inquired for Mr. and Mrs. Wynn. He was told that the gentleman had been at the hotel in the morning and engaged rooms for him self and wife, but bad not as yet ap peared with the lady. "Ihen 1 wnl wait in their rooms un til tney arrive: it caat be long now," replied the merchant; and he was shown into the pleasant little sittin? room re served for the pair whom the astute clerk bad already settled In his own mind to be bride and groom. Mr. Blair liad not long to wait. though in his present state of good humor he could very easily have borne a longer delay than the half hour he passed in well satisfied musing over the good luck which lately seemed to have attended his eveiy moment. lie had received a letter from the young man whom be hoped to call his aon-m-law, appointing a day lor his visit to Rich mond, aud the prospect of this mar- i iage was above all a source of self congratulation with him. Then too this evening's event affor ded him indescribable amusement, as he pictured to himself the wrath and consternation of the man who he had firmly convinced himself had injured him deeply when he discovered that bis only daughter bad bestowed herself upon an impecunious book-keeier. All alone to himself Mr. Blair chuckled with malicious enjoyment over this most delightful of jokes, and rejoiced in his own share in bringing his enemy to confusion. I wonder how soon papa is to be told of the happy event" besolloquized. "Who knows? Perhaps it will be a family party to-night!" Later the merchant had taken out bis pocket-book and was deep in an abstruce calculation as to certain weigh ty transactions which might be under taken when a little of the wealth of his prospective son-in-law had filtered into the firm, when there was a sound of footsteps in the halU pausing at the door, aud Mr. Blair knew that the bri dal party had arrived. Thrusting the book iuto his pocket and seizing the bouquet, he rose and stood in readiness, when the door was thrown open by the waiter, aud, sui-e enough, Wynn entered, having on his ai m a lady closely veiled. The merchant advanced, liowing low with outstretched hand, which was rather hesitatingly taken by the book-keeper, who muttered only a few half-incoherent words of thanks in re ply to the congratulations offered him Mr. Blair scarcely noticed tbe young man's evident confusion, so occupied was he in vainly trying to discover his companion's identity through the" thick yeil whicn she naa nor, as yet raiseu. There seemed to him sometning oauiy familiar in her figure, though, much to his chargm, he saw instantly that she was certainly some incnes snorter man Miss Brooks. "And your wife? Am I not to have the nleasure of making her acquain tance?'' he said, feeling somehow vague- uneasy. Then the veil was slowly raised, to reveal the face of the merchant's own daughter, pale, frightened, beseeching; but still for a moment me man iaueu to understand. "Dora!" he said, in Dewiiuermenu What are vou doinz here?" Dead silence followed; then the fair est of the merchant's castles In Spain fell with a crash. !'Can it be possible that you are this man's wife?" vou vrv much difference to you. Y'ou cant miss me, you know, for you never needed me, aud I needed so sorely some one to love me!" The book-keeper was holding his wife's hand firmly all the time; and on ly drew her closer to him as he added "We are far from deserving it, I know; but I hope you don't forget that you promised ns your blessing, Mr. Blair." The merchant was about to speak, but suddenly checked himself, and, turning abrubtly, walked to the win dow where, in total silence, be stood motionless for a few moments, battling with the bitterest disappointment of his To his own surprise, even in tne midst of his almost uncontrollab e an ger, something In his daughter's pa thetic words caused him a pang of gen uine self-reproach, as he . suddenly re alized what a lonely neglected life his child had led, while, in his pursuit of wealth, had never known or cared for any needs she might have which money "Yes, dear father, it is quite true, id the girl's pleading voice. "Won't rrv in rortrive usr it wu "" could net supply. Was it strange that she should have sought abroad what she could never hope to find in her own home? Then, too, the deed was Irre vocable; no amount of opposition could render the marriage Illegal; and, after all, Dora might have done worse, for what Wynn lacked in fortune be partly supplied in business capacity.. While these thoughts were passing rapidly through his mind, something else struck Mr. Blair most uncomfortably. If be were to cast off these young people in anger, might they not in return make known to all their friends his own ridic ulous part in this affair? Might it not even come to the eais of the detested Brooks? This decided him. "This is a great disappointment to me, as you of course must know.Dora," he said at last, turning to his compan ions, who were awaiting his words in almost breathless 8usinse. "How ever, the deed is done, and I suppose the most sensible thing is to make the best of what I must consider a rather bad job. I promised you ivy blessing, Wyun. aud you shall .have it, upon two conditions. The tirst is that you and I suppose your wife shall go to China, as I proposed." - "We are quite willing, sir," the book-keeier replied eagerly, "Aud the second condition?" "That you never, either of you, dis close to auy human being who was the promoter and instigator of your elope ment" "I promise, papa," said Dora. "And so do I, sir," said the young husbaud immediately afterwards. A Otfujiola Sni storin. Midday, everything sweltering and seething in the suu that happens to be exiiosed to it; everybody bubbling pos itively bubbling with perspiration that happens to be in the shade; thermome ter looks as if It would burst I am afraid to say how high the mercury has risen in fact, the perspiration pours so into my eyes that 1 cannot see the small figures. Rock aud sand pain the eye by their glare. A black, dense, mud-colored cloud suddenly appears on the hor izon at the south, at tirst a speck, then growing larger and larger, rolling rap idly towards us, now iu the distance, now- nearer and nearer. Down go tents. and up in the air go straw ' huts and sheds, while the palm branches wave and nod like the plumes of a hearse caught in a gale, or of the helmet of a kaight at a mad gallop. On, on it rolls, that grimy, fast-rid ing cloud. Now I cannot see twenty yards ahead of me. The landscape is suddenly enveloped in a black shroud. It bursts upon my hoveL Away, away, away go my half-answered home letters. Who shall catch them? "Go run after them; quickly, quickly, boy." I am en veloped in sand. Over goes my only globe lamp crash! My bottle of seven days' allowance of limejuice it totters and capsizes. Down come the spiders, and away bolt the rats whom I en courage to run about and eat the scor pions, centipedes aud white ants. In comes a flock of little crimson-headed bat. aud tumble exhausted. 1 nave no doors or windows to be blown in, and there is no fear of a shower of broken glass, such as I have seen dur ing a sirocco on the shores of the Le vant. Books, sketches, writing paper, manuscript, linen, lie scattered on the floor. I was going to say no, the earth we have no floors here in Ethiopia bur ied in a moment in black dust; and over goes my only bottle of cognac, kept for medical purposes. I put my head out of my window, was I going to write? I mean a square hole in one of the four mud walls form ing what is called bv courtesy a bouse. I was blinded as quickly as any-inhabi-taut of the cities of the plain was by the band of tte angel. My eyes were in stantly filled with sand, every molecule if which was a burning spark every particle a scintillation. It wearied me to Mud my way to my washing-stand 1 meau my pile of old wooden cases, on which was balanced my basin an old biscuit tin, with a classically-shaped red amphora in it. Fiuding it at length 1 cleanse my eyes, smarting with Uie fiery dust, and put on a pair of huge green goggles aU glass; these are the only kind that keep out the sand. Thus armed I looked forth into the moving mountain of sand. A burning blast like unto the breath of a fiery furnace, scorches my face, dries up my skin, stopping every pore, I look into the beaveus. The sun was a blood-red ball of Ore floating "all In afhot and cop per sky," while along the horizon hung a lurid light, such as one sees on the ocean before a storm. In the distance trees, huts and tents were invisible, but near one could just make out the wind ing, lead-colored Xile. lashed iuto bil lows. A dense cloud, which enveloped all, seemed raining tire, the atmosphere as if seething, boiling, sputtering. And now waltzing, whirling along the banks came the "devils" (shay tarns), as the Arabs call them, the sand, spouts aerial giants each indulging in a pas seul, their high, fantastic figures rear ing their heads from earth to heaven. Oue is reminded of the djin of the "Arabian Knighta" let out ef the casket in which King Solomon had sealed him up, and rising as a tall col umn of smoke. How grim and grew- some are they ! No doubt the fanciful ghouls, efreets and genii of the Arab folklore drew their origin from such as these. And a destructive element are these rolling spiral sand billows pow erful agents of disintregation, having a griuding, roughing action on rocks aud stones as they ride the whirlwind, accelerating destruction in a country replete with decaying pedigrees of decay a country where all changes are not of life, but of destruction where the characteristics of the scenery around are heaps of rocks breaking into frag ments. And these gusts of sand penetrate everywhere, into clefts and fissures of stones, eating into and sapping their foundations and acting with immense mechanical strength, lifting and rolling rock over rock. There is a weird and ghastly dance all around, in a dull and lurid glare. Now I am euveloped In a heaving mountain of sand; the air is stilling, my mouth is parched, speech is impossible without wetting the lips, the tongue is swollen. I never before properly understood "the darkness of the Egyptian plague" which "could be felt" Half an hour the sand tornado has swept by. I can hear the rush of scared horses, mules, donkeys and cat tle, as they rush madly by, having broken loose; the tremendous guttural roar and grunting cf camels, the howl ing of dogs, and the shrill screaching of vultures and kites flying before the gale. All nature groans. Half an hour the Dongola caruivel of the wild elements of the "Soudau" is over. A v . V a battle tin news bf war, belongs to the A Kmim Mr. Occasionally in the spring there comes a day that seems to have all zones and seasons condensed into brief space. Two or three such days are indelibly nxeu in my memory. The morninir may dawn upon us clear, cool, and soft. witu sparkling dew, and tne song of tnousana meadow larks. The sun comes grandly up above the clean cut horizon. We feel no languor. It is c delight to live and breathe and move. The sun mounts toward the zenith, and the air begins to grow hot It Is Insuf ferably hot There is no tree, no hill. no rock, to give a cooling shade, and tne aeep-uue Sky contains no passing cloud to give us a moment's respite ftom the sun's blinding rays. We think regretfully of the umbrella that yester day's wind turned inside out, and de termine to put up a tent as soon as the weather Is cool enough to encourage the ecort . But atmospheric stillness never lasts long in Kansas. The wind begins to mow, and our stilling breath grows more free, r rom the south the wind conies, reaching our ears with a mur muring sound before we reel it in our faces. The prairie grass and fields of grain rise and fall, first in waves, and theu in heaving billows. The wind In creases in force and becomes a sirocco. scorching our faces worse than the hut test rays of the sun could do. There is no dignity in walking. We struggle with our skirts and wraps We tie our hats down, we hold on to' them with both hands, and still they escape us. and we rush madly after them. The clothes on the line at the next door flap wildly around, beating out their hems and splitting in every weak spot, while the washer-woman is striving to keep her balance long enough to rescue them before tbeir total destruction; lucky is she if they are not snatched from her grasp and scattered far over the prairie never to be recovered. Great tumble- weeds come rolling like hoops across tlie plain. Here comes a market-bask el escaped from tne hand ot some urcn n who for a moment forgot to be vigilant We start to catch it for him, but i: eludes us, and goes bumping over the prairie for half a mile or more, and Is soon out of sight. A canvas-covered carriage is seized by the wind and roll ed down the street On the next house comes toppling down the stove pipe chimney. Three or four "claim shan ties" are laid over on their sides, and the builders of the large house in the upper part of the town will have to begin to-morrow putting up their frame anew. We think about tornadoes and cyclones, and then remark quietly, "This isn't anything; just an ordinary straight blow." Clouds of dust till the air. penetrating the thickest veils, red dening our eyes, and sifting through the cracks of doors and windows to the utter ruin of all good housekeeping. The only comfort is in the thought that tins state of things cannot last long; as a change will surely come soon. And here It comes. In the south east, a black cloud appears, moving nvTidiy. ' We toon anxiously to ee if t is funnel-shaped, and a few nervous persons retreat to their cellars, or caves , that is, artificial excavations that serve as outside cellars for some of the hmses. But this Is not a tornado.only a Kansas shower. First comes a cloud of dustsweeping with the rapidity ot. a whirlwind, and veiling the town from sight. The lightning blinds our eves, and streaks the black sky with chainsof light Housewives bring sheets and pieces of old carpets to stop the cracks of the doors and windows on the wind ward side, and "hurry" must be the word, for in a moment the rain is upon us, not la drops, but in blinding slteets moving hor zontally along. In a few moments the roadways are streams of running water, the tubs and rain bar rels and cisterns are overflowing. The fanners exultingly exclaim, "This in sures the corn crop." and the local edi tor writes for his item column, "What slanderer said 'Drouthy Kansas?" It is no longer rain ; it is sleet and haih Next comes a rift in the clouds, a perfect arch of rainbow, and the clouds roll away out of sight leaving the clean washed earth dotted with flowers. The afternoon wanes. The winds axe still. The sun sinks in a blaze of golden glory and almost without a twilight the day is ended. In the ocean of dark blue ether above and round ns, the moon and stars are shining. - It is the perfec tion of glorious night We linger in Its beauty, unwilling that sleep should, claim the best hours of the 24, but at last, the thought of to-morrow's labors and vicissitudes drives us to our coucn. We fall asleep, to awaken perhaps in a few hours and find that the bee-covering is insnfflcient We wrap ourselves in all the blankets we can find, but are still cold, and grow colder. The south wind has given place to a norther, which creeps in through the seams of the windows, lifts the carpet in billows, and drives us back to our warmest flannels, and our rekindled fires. In weather, as in almost all phases of this prairie life, it is the unexpected which usually happens. Vv hat adjec tive is there, applicable to weather, that may not be used in the superlative degree here! I do not wonder that it is called "Sunny Kansas," but it is also windy Kansas. Yes, it Is drouthy Kansas, but it Is also fertile, beautiful Kansas. A Diver's Good rortnne. The old divers are fond of recounting the glories of their craft and are specially Impressed with any informa tion as to the fate of the vessels of the Armada. This spirit has been fostered no less by the successes of the ancestor of the Mulgraves than by the good for tune of John Gann, of Whit stable, England. The old diver was, many years since, employed on the Gal way coast and used to pass his evenings in a public house frequented by fishermen. One of these men, repeating a tradition which had long existed in the district, told Gann that one of the Spanish ves sels had been wrecked not far from the coast and intimated that he himself could point out the spot Gann, hav ing finished his special job, made terms with the fisherman and they were both out for many weeks dragging the spot indicated for any traces of the wreck. They were at last rewarded by coming upon obstructions with their grapnels. Gann brought out bis diving apparatus, and sure enough the truth of the tradition was vindicated by the finding of a number of dollars which had origi nally been packed m barrels. The bar rels, however, had rotted away and left the gold stacked in barrel shape. With the money so recovered John Gann built at Whitstable, his native place, a row of houses, which to commemoratt the circujW4cv be called "Dollai Row' Shop Lilting. "Ton would be most wonderfully sur friaed," said one of Omaha's prominent dry goods men, to a reportor yesterday, "if I ebouid tell you how many people cd who they are, that have a mania, s they call it, for 'nipping' aiticles eveiy time they go into a store, and hiding them under tbeir clothing. Why, I'll stake my honor, "he continued, "on the assertion that there are no less than one hundred profeisioual shoplifters in the 61,800 population which goes to make up the life and soul of this town. No, they are not all among the low, hard-ap class either. In fact a very large majority of thed move among the upper circles and have plenty of money. The merchant contended, when asked why, that to prosecute and expose them would be very detrimental to his trade: "I get pay for everything thoy steal, so wbtt's the difference?" "Make them pay double price foi what they buy?" "In some instances, yes; but let me give you a pointer and eite a little case tuat happened in my store only one day last wobk." "All right, fire away and talk slow.' "Well, you see, we have got all these people, or at least nearly all of them, spotted so closely-that it is impossible lor one to come to the store without our knowing it and keeping an eye on her. This particular case was an elegantly dressed woman. She was out shopping in a handsome rig, with livened driver and stylish horses supposed to be her own. oue came into our store and went to the lace department. Before going out I received a note from the lady clerk who waited on her, saying that she had stolen several pairs of gloves and silk hose and was about to get away with them. 1 called the wo man into my office and asked her about it At first she became very indignant and threatened to send her husband down, who she knew would paralyze me for offering her such an outrageous insult, but I was cot to be frightened in that manner, and when she found ont that I knew she had the articles hidden about her garments, and pro posed to satisfy ber that I knew by having her searched, she broke down completely aud offered to givej me 8100 if I would let it pass and never give her awav. The woman buys any amount of goods, is wealthy, and has no excuse whatever for stealing, bnt she said to me then that she didn't know why she took those gloves and hose; that she had no use on earth for them, but couhlu t help it Thar were worth about SI. 50 a pair, bnt charged her So, which she gladly paid and went away. At 'another time a well-known woman, whose name I will not meLtion, came in weanug a tilk drees, the goods of which we had niu-sed and I knew it The next day we tent her a bill for the dress, and you can bet she paid it with out saying a word. Numerous times have wn missed gloves, hose, bolts of ribbon, handkerchiefs, etc., bnt we generally know who takes them, and wnen they come m the next time we respectfully request pay for such arti cles and the pay is always forthcoming. I don't know bow other merchants are harassed in this business, but if the shoplifters were cot known to ns we would be sU len blind. It is Dot probable that Omaha is any worse on in this respect tnan otner towns, but possibly Omaha has more of the shoplifting class than many places of its size. Many of the mer chants complain, and why they don't cause some arrests to be made is strange, As stated above, no donbt they would to a certain extent injure their trade. It is quite noticeable also that when cornered and brought Into close quar ters nearly all of the professional shop lifters make the same defense, as an excuse, for their crime, and that is, that it ia a mania they can't control and are not responsible for. "What kind if actions do they go through to get away with the goods?" was asked of the gentleman interviewed. "You would be amused, bo said, to see them. While pretending to look at goods they lean away over the counter, play the blind racket, and get down with'their face almost against the counter. While in this position it is easy enough to rake off with one hand anything lying near, and stuffing it under their cloak. It is noted that those kind of people always wear some kind of a loose saonne or cloak, hot or cold weather." Antlpatblm. Some strange cases of antipathy are rfvorrird in the lives of eminent men. Erasmus was made feverish by the I smell of hsh. Ambroise Parr had a patient who would faint at the sight of an eel, and another who was convulsed ou seeing a carp, liardan was disgusted at the sight of eggs. A king of Poland and a secretary of France bled at the nose when offered apples. A huntsman in Hanover, who would attack a wild bear valiantly, ran away or fainted whenever roast pig was presented to his view. A person is told of who fainted whenever he saw a rose, and similar stories are told of antipathies to lilies aud honey. Tycho Brahe abhorred foxes, Henry IIL of France cats, mice, spiders, eta, and Marshal d 'Albeit pigs. There was "once upon a time" a lady who could not endure the sight of silk or satin. The man who would faint whenever he heard a servant sweeping is not so much of a stranger, and the one who was similarly affected by the sound of a bagpipe invites uni versal sympathy. Boyle was overcome at hearing the splashing of water. The jueen. Horses At Windsor it Is considered the cor rect thing, after the inspection of the royal apartments and chapels, to visit the royal stables. Admittance to the stable yard is gained by the registration of the visitors name at the yard gate. Why this formality should be observed I do not know, for it would hardly ena ble the authorities to find any person disposed to steal anything, and more over, there is nothing to tempt the most incurable kleptomaniac No man of the least discriminating taste in horse flesh coula be induced to take a present of any of the twenty or thirty royal hacks that are usually kept in the Windsor stables. A mile in 16 minutes would stagger most of them, and an India-rubber jockey would not be safe iu tiding any of them over a patch of thistles, much less a post and rail fence. Nearly all of these ringboned and spa vined chargers appear to have come to the royal stables at the coronation of their venerable mistress and to have remained ever sinu 'n royal seclusion. Tn. Bad Land, in iMtota. The buttes themselves, varying in height from fifty to two hundred and fifty feet, are beautiful objects to con template either at a distance or at short rauge. When, viewed from afar off they appear to lie crowded closely to get her. and as Mr. Winsor so happily remarks 'in the hazy distance seem like ocean billows stiff ened and at rest." Their tops are of variegated colors aud their sides are striped with broad bands of different shaies, the coloring of which is very ricli. The summits of the buttes are on a level with the gen eral prairie, while the whole valley ot the Bad Lauds is some hundreds ot feet below. This tact con-oliorates to sotue extent the geological idea that the Bad lauds' bottoms were "at some remote period the bed of a great lake. When examined closely, the buttes present a most fantastic and gorireous array of color that is positively dazzliug to look at The spectator viewing teesestrauge freaks of nature for the first t'rue is almost struck dumb with awe aud as tonishment at the utter lavishness and waste of delicate shades and tints of all colors that are here so profusely distrib uted over miles and miles of nature's canvas. Iu some cases the whole side of a butte is plastered thick with a rich crimson that would be the delight of a painter's heart could he but behold it. Others are striped with alternate black and brown, while again others are of blue or brown or gray or else vary from a dazzling white at their summit to a sober dark gray at their base. The writer observed a number of buttes,t!ie tops of which were a fiery red, the in termediate being girdles of pure white and the bises a distinct and positive yellow. Nmie again were completely red, but of different shades from top to bottom. There are a great many bare clay aud sand buttes, and also a uuiuber that are composed of very hard vitreous or pottery -like slag, either a green or brown or else dark reddish color like iron stains. While the actual comiiositioii of the buttes appears to be a crumbling, volca nic scoria, yet there is little doubt but that their present condition was brought about by hres which raged through the country lu days gone by. In fact, some tires are still burning in the Bad Lands,oue of which, when seen at niaht from the Xorther Pacliio train which passes i ear, has the appearance of a volcano In active eruption. There is another lire fiirther back in the Bad Lands which has been smouldering ever since the country was knon to the whites, and according to Indian traiition from the time when the Great spirit upheaved the land with an earth quake. The truth of the matter is, the Bad Lands are one vast bed of lignite coal which runs through the buttes aud hills in solid veins from four to ten b et thick. This lignite was probably ig nited by fires that sometimes prevailed over the plains, set by ludians, ami the coal I eing iu continuous veins, has been burning, no doubt, uninterrupted ly beneath the surface for years. Intutitll. Inmincc. Chickens, two minutes after they have left the egg, will follow with their I i- t I : - : ,1 ejes iue mojeiueius i crawling msecw auu i, b uiruj, jiiuiii iii.-iiaut- oiiu direction with almost infallible accura cy. They will instinctively appreciate sounds, readily running toward an in visible hen hidden in a box when they hear her "call.'' ome young birds also have an uinate, instinctive horror of the sight of a hawk and the sound of its voice. Swallows, titmice, tomtits and wrens, after having been confined from birth, are capable of flying successfully at once when libeiated, on their wings having attained the neieisary growth to render flight possible. The Duke of Argyll relates some very interesting particulars about tlis in stinct of birds, especially of the water ousel, the merganser and the wild duck. Even as to the class of beasts I find re corded: Five young polecats were found comfortably imbedded in dry, wither ed grass, and in a side hole of projier dimensions for such a birder were forty frogs and two toads, all alive, but mere ly capable of sprawling a little. Ou ex amination the whole number, toads and all, proved to have been puiiiosely and dexterously bitten through the "rain. Evidently the parent polecat bad thus provided the young with food which should be kept perfectly fre.sh because alive, and yet was reudered quite una ble to escape. Tins singular instinct is like others which are yet more fully developed among insects, a class of animals the in stincts of which are so numerous, won- derf ul and notorious that it will be pro- bably enough to rei'er to one or two ex amples. The fern lie carpenter bee, in order to protect her eggs, excavates in some piece of wood a series of chambers, in special order, with a view to a pecu liar mode of exit for her youug, but the young mother can have no conscious knowledge of the series of actions sub sequently to ensue. The female of the wasp, sphex, affects another well known but very remaikable example of a complex instinct closely related to that already mentioned in the case of the polecat Thi female wasp has to provide fresh, living animal food for her progeny, which, when it quits its egg, quits it in the form of an almost help less grub, utterly unable to catch, re tain or kill an active, struggling prey. Accordingly, the mother insect has not only to provide and place beside ber eggs suitable living prey, but so treat it that it may be a helpless, unresisting victim. That victim may be a mere caterpillar, or it may be a great, pow erful grasshopper, or even that most fierce, active and rapacious of insect tyrants, a fell and venomous spider. Whichever it may be, the wasp adroit ly stings it at the spot which induces, or in the several spots which induce, complete paralysis as to motion let us hope as to sensation also. This done, the wasp eD tombs the helpless being with his own egg and leaves it for the support of the future grub. Ill habits gather by nnseen degrees, as brooks make rivers and rivers run to seas. It takes bnt thirteen minntes to lead an elephant on a train, while it takes twenty for any sort of woman to bid her friends good-bye and lose the check for her trunk. An Englishman has discovered that kissing to be Scriptural, must be be tween those of the same sex. We nev er knew that it was orthodox for hand some ladies to kiss each other so fre quently, but we always regarded it as a needless waste oi precious material, NEWS IN BRIEF. Berlin has an apothecary shop nearly 40o years old. Mobile, Ala., was founded by tho French in 1711. Three Georgia weekly newspapers are edited by women. California produces 100,000 boxes of grapes every year. The Brooklyn Directory for IdSi contains ls0,0x names. The seed of the petuuia grandirlora is worth i"i)0 an ounce. The late Lord Dudley's life wasin suied tor over 1,500,000. A doen humming birds are grouped cm some imported bonnets. "Shepherd" on a Western ranch ia enlarged iuto -sheepherder." The debt of Memphis iu 1ST! was 5,000,000 now it is 2,.VXH. Texas has l.(KJii,iiOii heail of cattle belonging to non-reidiits. The population of London is shel tered by iiOO.OoO dwellings. California has on hand a surplus of GO.OfK i,i j bushels of wheat. Mammoth Cave, in Kentucky, re ceives 3,fX)0 visitors annually. Large deposits of mica are said to have been found in Xev Mexico. There Is a gorge in Yellowstone Park where no sound can be heard. Over 40 i pO0,00U cent pieces were coined iu the United States hist year. Between ." ) ,000 and tiO.Ooo people annually visit the White Mountain1'. The capital invested in wild animals in this country is estimated at $4,000,- 000. The farms of the United States are worth at least one thousand million dol lars. New Orleans was founded by a company of French adventurers lu 174:5. The Duchess of Montrose lights her training stables w ith the electric light An insect is ravaging the oyster beds in the vicinity of New Haven, Conn. It costs annually il,J0O,ooo for links aud pins for the freight cars iu this country. A Livingston county (New York) woman is the mother of tweuty-seveu children. Sing Sing prison has 1.0-jO imates. : sixty-five being murderers serving life sentence. Mr. Dana has see u New England women eat live different kinds of pie at oue uie il. There are now over 8,000,01)0 stoves in use, and the average life of a stove is live years. Fifteen thousand transient guests lodge in New York every night, it is estimated. The death rate of Dubliu baa jumped to per l,00o, the highest since lbSX Sjiecimen postage s,Liups are no longer furnished collectors by the pos tal department. The annual value of the milk i.r.i- 'duct of this countrv is about i,af rt,,. national debt. Xo je33 tUim forty-Seven candidates are running tor Sheriff m Phillip, county, Kan. A ton of gumarahic is used weekly at the government envelope factory at Hartford, Conn. There were nearly 1.000,000 pounds of sugar made from soighum cane, in Kansas, last year. The population of Stockholm, in creased between loCo aud 1SS4 from 100,0110 to JIm.ooo. Cigars by the cwt. buving them by the hundred and telling the dealer to wait for his money. Russia wants immediate action on the Afghan question in case Lngland reoi ens the discussion. Governor Hoadly, of Ohio, aays his expenses as governor are annually aL least four times his t.ilary. A double w hite rose flowering on a red crao apple tree Is one of the sights of South Farmingh.ini, Mas.-.. No few than 111 dead lxxlies were received at the Paris Morgue last month. 40 of them in two days. Ex-Marshal Bazaiue, w ho surren dered Metz during the Frauci-Prnssiau war, is reported destitute at Madrid. According to statistics not more than five per cent, of the persons living in New York city own their houses. --Mount Hood, Ore., was illumina ted on the night of July 4 with red cal cium lights, visible all over Oregon. Tom Reed, who has been re-elected to Congress from Maine, was a crack, oarsman at Bowdoin College in l'stxl. Vaccination is carried out so strictly in the Prussian army that not a soldier has died of sniitllpox since la75. Senator lnealls,who has been visit ing the Indian Territory, speaks favor ably of the habits of the Indians there. Henry M. Stanley is disapiKiinted in not obtaining financial assistance from England for the Congo compa ny. Paper flour barrels are made iu Connecticut at a cost of twenty-three cents each. Wooden ones cost seventy five. It is estimated that the. average consumption of eggs throughout the United" States amounts to 43,000,000 daily. A Japanese inventor has just made from seaweed a paper transparent enough to be substituted for window glass. In Geruiauy teachers employed by the Government travel from place to place and give instructions in bee keeping. A convict iu an English prison perfected the style of lawn-tennis rac quet now the most popular among Bri tish players. The timber woik of the domes of the Church of St Mark at Venice is more than M0 years old and is still In a good state. S. W. Talrnadge, the crop statisti cian, reports that the total wheat crop for lss." will show a shortage of 152, 000,000 bushels. Recent experiments have demon strated that the heating value of coal is d.minished from lo to 2a per cent, if it is used while wet A company In the upper part of New Jersey 13 making a counterpane and pillow shams of paper, which re tail at to cents a set A well has recently beeu discovered in Jug Tavern, Ga., which, it is said, runs mineral water half the year and freestone the other half. w 1