B. F. SCHWEIER. TEE G0I8T1TUTI0I-THE TmOI-HD TIE EVTOSOEKEIT OF TEE LAV8. Editor and Proprietor. vol. XXXIX MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA., WEDNESDAY. DKCEMJJKll 23, 1SS5. NO. 52. Tin- .To-.ii nali-t- ...rManJ toeininig brain, r Tmn dole thee I St! . .'Yr aita: of t'av years of vour, ye: sc-Ta 100 tree , ,. f . .v-::re of thy nervous I tti-'-vofJniwil and heart. cry, -It is not art:" ,i r , jwsir:- Quick read, quick 24 tie tr.-a.4nre that it carries I .5 ur.J.r feet, who count thy '"""'Yar-e.ved Intelligence? , ihe uaiievs best-loved host! I ?V .it rwalls more than one vanished - ' fiun r.ii.k of tellers early lost A2J Iciin; r.ut a traco. I.. -rr, of r.e.vs young martyrs of the ?T of ivins from largeness of . t " f st.-ep-t in tenderness, "" 'VaVe ', O early slain. . . .1 11.. tin richft oliwurfl i JJ aaiu-j.4 can hold forever Jc't.:"T: i:-i ye blew a&r are sure 1 To sj-rici -niJ five at last. .-.y wa:.-,. within the swarming ls. a:'jiv.i-:i, in specking deeds of, i-iaiUi 2ic-.t :i m f:ou your deathless Your ti'j':;h;s will live again. . .,vv .ti- r.iui!, thi4 thy fate; '-vVn.t:i 1- w-iili, swi.nj u. 'h,'. loves Ills kind does, first and A r.orl: tuo .ireat for fame. R.oi) kobix Br wav of gratifying a long-cherished? Ivhiaof ni'.i:e, 1 determined to spena Ut sorxraer holiday, if possible, in a .-rMaiold-fa-diioned house situated tar Lrayfrom tht busy hum of men, where !' coia ew-'i' -.i-ii'iaie peaee ana recre ioii at theViuie time that I rode my Lisarisn l.s'bby as much as l UKea I "or long time such a desideratum was the ruaiket; tliere were country .pctiiieuts a-il V ieeu Aim nouses ana rtf.onesand firm-houses by the dozen :wry paper, but nothing that ap- raaclied i:iv real requirement. At ash, after soras weeks' miniate study 2e tapers, an .1 iiancing aitenuance thouse-acents, I tlattrred myself that ; lad tot "the very thing" and read rertomy vife, with almost the ling ine delight of a jo'i?ihU ''Afineo'.d Tudor mansion to be etif jr three months from July, replete r.;h even- modern convenience, but at it the expense of its antique char jf.er, wxle-1 k:tL-!ien-aarden, flower1 arJens. lawus, siirubberies, about foui jrasof meadow-land, and stablin, H wjnireJ. Apply lr. X.,' tt-otierai 3c'Ja rea i i-ettei ! I salu. "Staani!!;! ' exclaimed Bobby, Lorna from staou'. "Sareto be a ghost, and laprs, aiid secet duncoons, and ill Uioe thinss we real abourin Alus- wr.h " -rt:ie:ous!"' t.iid the sentimental I've 'ong wau- and Arcadia in a Hnen, aged sixteen. 4to read .1. trr.i .1:1 aiubie place." ''Ye?; but we ca:m-jt he too careful jbout these old houses," I said as a sort dfcjeck L'.).m too exuberant antisipa- Kiuaid imagination. "I shall not con- icSt-ar.j arrac;e:iie!:l3 until 1 liave sea the Lous-.'' So I went down, air.1 was received at laenttie counlrv-station by the X ' itle jjverLis(-!jei:t, a iiroiterous, con- testtd-ioukin-; KentUii farmer, in whose itt;;? the e.viau- bad been for centu- hs, w.hi-sy wiio had U en ordered chmze of air, a: l who, bcins a farmer, ffaaUed a', t.'ie bad times, and bad re- I solved to let the old house, during his limtt, to a refutable tenant. lue lioue cane quite up to my ex- ?t.wi! as formed from the wording if the advertisement. "I can leave an old family man ser- tt.it," &i:d the fanner, "if you like.' He is a queer old fellow; but, being au old retainer v:io was born on the estate; youotist not mini his little ieculiari- ties. 1 uji:,t warn vou however of one ifcik-uess l-e has that of satisfying his cat-.r.ir (1r animal atid liquid food at nsks and ha7,irds. "By which 1 suimose vou mean." I Bid "that his ideas of m um and tuum irpjaids bodily sustenance are a little ix?" u"lrccise!y," answered the fanner, Bat, mind, if you catch him in the Kt, or have reasons to suspect him, jack him off to his friends in the vil lage without a::y delay. lie is under a warning from me; but it is more atey than no: that vour being a new mm wdl eaue him to break out a;a!n o'-t here he js you can take stock of t:-n without his seeing us." So y.-e slipped bi-hind a laurel-bush, ti;e subject of our conversation 6151(1 view, i I e was a jovial-look-&i o.u-fel'ow, standing considerably er six feet, with a ruddv face and p aad a 1" 'e oeve'.opinent of the wer mrt of ins trunk which sufficient-' 'JP"('C.a;rced long and intiiite ao Ji-ALtauce v:th the good things of this Ash" roiled alonir almost with ,a :r 0,f Proprietorsliip, lie trolled forth ai i rich voice the words of an old Ken m fc.resoii!' '-a nave l n i a:, i ;,onse in Kent ir,'jq .-i:.i:. me, ..ve me now; :.; njv my rent. toun; every day lo woo.1 , 14 1,341 c:,tle 13 r"ui: Hayden Uiefarmei; -but Iwcauso of his aittd corpulence lie is universally onas i:.,ua Ujbin. He's off to kL nzV I10w' auJ. if e cannot ihttii alive theie, no oneelsecan.,r J e "'S'e-'ted the house and gronnds, tni?'1 t:'e necessary formalities, 'went home thoroughly HatisGed 1 had f0.tU.a what I wanted. u oia not tae us long to settle down ciclr 1 nmwas invaluable as a tomr?e' aJ3v-s!ns u- as to the best bed- PtilTtit11! , ,v'iuUn" 0ilt with tte-- Y"Qi-- a:il larder arrange ItTt pa,tr0Sil:a5 the servants whom iicTr .Wouht. and immediately lnstal- lwT? i:i lhl,il' c-d Peaces. tZ so far with the result , ",Jrlriinent, for the bouse was jS'-uiiie reiic, with scores of rooms, &prases. oak panelling, and a door,?0.1 ? filmi!v portraits, within tie..'; ,1llst, althousih the scenery of sottn' ll00(1 waa charming, I was loraui , 5a)'ne1 away from the quaint tod rt J1 Z1'. with their terraces ttd dagrf s v'ias tljt'ir &Ladv walks fewf ,6hruI,,ries. My wife was WerT' , ?or the kitchen arrangements Mch :trable' esPtcially the larder, f " blgea0U2hto bold nrnvi5t.-inl oa.rinient of soldiers, as likely' "si it had m the old days, and which : juuging from its height and its groined for another purpose. The children were delighted, for the bouse, with Its gal leries and broad landings, was a splen did playground in wet weather, whilst tuo four acres of meadow gave them a capital place for cricket in fine weather further, there was the attraction of the fruit-garden, which was a veritable Eden for productiveness. For a week or two 1 think my wife must have been too generally ecstatic to notice that the consumption of food and drink by our household was too great to be satisfactorily accounted for as the mere result of change from town to country; but, when, in the course of ten days, it was found necessary to or- I der a new cask of beer (our servants were all teetotalers), tnd when the ! butcher 's and baker's books came to be examined, her suspicions werearous hi. Then, and not until then, did 1 recall what the farmer had said about Round llobin; so I called Jhim into the room which every coustry gentleman, although the title may be but temporary Tcsls bound to call his study." "Kobin," I said, "it is very disagree able for me to be obliged to find fault at such an early stage of our acquaintance; but my wife tells me that things disap pear trom the larder in alarming quan tities." "Dear me, sir," sail the giaut, with out moving a muscle of his setting sun like lace, "that's exactly what my mas ter never did find fault with. ' Kobin, ' be used to say to me, I can't for the life of me make out how you sustain that big body of yours upon such mod erate eating and drinking. Why,' he would say, sir, 'I'm not half your size, Kobin, snd yet I eat more at a moai than you do in a day!' " "Well," I returned, amused at the serious impudence of the fellow, "it's incomprehensible; but there's the fact the meat goes, the beergoes, the bread goea, the puddings and pies go." "Excuse me, sir," said Kobin, "but have you asked your servants, sir? Town servants require a powerful deal cf feeding so my brother( who's a I,u:mon policeman, says. "My servants," I answered, "have lived in my family for years, and my wife knows almost to an ounce what they eat, and, as to leer, they neyer touch ic" "Weil, sir." said llobin. with the light of a discovery on his face, "I tell you what it is! It's an old house, sir, ain't it? And rats and mice is uncom mon fond of old houses, sir. Depend on it it's the rats and mice!" "But," 1 objected, "rats and mice don't drum beer. "Xo, sir: that's very true," said Robin, not in the least disconcerted by what I flattered myselr was a clincher, "Xo, sir; nut, if you'd been born and bred in the country, as I have you'd know that, if there's' one thing rats tnd mice like better than another, it's the moist wool of a beer cask, and they bores and bores, and the beer escapes. " lie seemed to think that I was satis fied. becs:s,deswte all my efforts. I could not keep my seriousness up to tke proper pitch: so I said "Weil. I shall lock up the larder for the future, and my wife shall keep the key." -Do, sir!" he said earnestly. "I've never teen suspected afore, and, if you have reason to suspect me again, send me out of the house, and I'll go like a innocent lamb." And be waddled out of the room. When the door was closed behind him I was obliged to give vent to my feel ings in a hearty laugh; but, all the same I was convinced that he was at the bot tom of the pillage system. Baited traps were put in the larder, of which the door was kept constantly locked. Still the viands sndthe beer disappeared. Cold fowls went and tht-re was nota cat in thehouse; cheeses appeared at the table with systematic wedges cut out of them; the beer had to be renewed as frequently as before. Then one or two strange circumstances occurred. The children, who were of course all over the house at all hours, were con stantly finding out new nooks and cor ners; and one day they hit upon a new playground amongst the gables and chimneys on the roof, which they insis ted I should see. So I went up with them to the top of thehousa. But when we arrived amongst the garrets, I was at a loss to perceive how we were to pr-Tceed farther. The children pointed out a small trap door in the ceiling, which could be reached only by standing on an old oaken press. It was so small that I, although cot a big man, could with difficulty squeeze myself through it; but, when I had, and found myself on the lroad stretch of leads, 1 was as de lighted as were the children, for before me wa3 mapped out a lovely panorama stretching from the dim Bell Harry Tower of Canterbury, on the one hand, to the distant glitter of thechaunel near 5andwicti, on the other, whilst far be low lay the estate, with its gardens and greenery, and the little brown-roofed vliiage nestling at th j lodge gates. I walked about admiring the view, when I saw the broken fragments ot a tobacco-Dipe, an empty match-box, and a piece of newspaper. This was curi ous, for I had never been here before and Kobin could not have squeezed himself through the trap door to save his life. Hooked about in vain for another means of approach to the leads; but there -was none apparent. Tne children then insisted upon my playing with them at "castles," as they called it, a square leaden place in the middle serving as a "keep," which I was to defend. The "keep" was not a very solid affair, tor, when I struck it with my foot, it sounded hollow. I exam ined it, but it was tightly enough fast ened down. Then it occurred to me as old houses are constantly being re paired, the workmen last engaged might have left the relics I had found; but.alas the newspaper was dated within the past fortnight! The whole affair was very mysterious, and for some reason or other I did not feel comfortable. The next occurrence took place one evening. 1 was In my "study," when the children came hurrying in one after another with fright depicted on their a"Oh, papa!" they began in chorus, end then stopped to take breath. "Well, well," I said, not very pleas el at being interrupted in the midst of a most teliing sentence 1 was writing, 'now what is it?" "There are ghosts herel ' was the re- Pl"Xonseusel ghosts in these days? You're old enough to know better," I said. "I thought you had something iniportantto tell me!" . "Well, papa, we were playing m ibe Ion- gallery," said Bobby, "and we helrd fSeps overhead quit dtatlact ly all ot us, didnt we?" "Yes," waUhe corroborative ensrus; "and there's nothing above the long gallery but the leads." Rats, children that's what It is. Now run away and play," I said. But all the same, I was not at all as assured as I seemed; and there are lew things more unpleasant than to be convinced that there is a way of getting into your bouse of which you know uo.hlng. The next day my wife said that real ly something must be done, or we should find that the cost of our living at this out-of-the-way rustic spot would be considerable more than we were accus tomed to spend in town; the victuals went as fast as before, although, since the tap of the lieer-cask had been re moved for safe custody, the rats had not indulged in moist wood as they had hitherto done. tw I was resolved that Bound Kobin should be got lid of, for it was very evident that he, and no one else, was responsible for these mysterious pro ceedings. I called him into the "study." "Rabin," I said, "I gave you fair warning last time, and I did not think you would continue your depreda tions." "My what, sir?" said the injured in nocent. "My dilapidations? I haven't broken a single thing, sir!" "Xo, ne; 1 mean your Well to put it in plain language, yonr larcenies," I said impatiently. "My largeness, sir? I can't help; it, sir; if I don't carry my largeness, sir, I don't know who wonld," he answered, with the utmost simplicity. "Well, I think you had better live with your friends in the village," I said; "my servants ate quite sufficient lor our wants." "Very welt, sir," lis said; "you'll find that things will go oit 'xactly the same when I'm gone; and then you'll say, Toor old Robin, I treated him uu common bad, and I'll ax his pardon.' HowJomedever, sir, I'm off;" and, with a profound salute he left the room. Robin had been gone a week, yet the disappearance of viands continued. Evidently 1 had been unja.st to him, and 1 sent to the village to find him out but nobody had seen him. JlWehelda council of war; the ser vants were called up, and. said unani mously that nobody could get to the larder without their lelng aware of it. The larder itself was examined, and the only possible means of ingress for the leanest of cats supposing it could have climbed a perpendicular wall some twelve feet high was by a small grated window near the roof. The village locksmith examined the bolts and locks j of the entire establishment, strengthen ed some, and put in new ones, in fact we did all, so we thought, that could be done to render the house impregna ble. One night there was a violent storm of wind suid rain. My "study" abut ted on the long gallery, and in my med itative moods I used often to stroll up and down amidst the pictures. At about eleven o'clock, when the storm was at its height, I was startled by a tremendous crash. It ok my reading lamp to see the cause, nnib four.d that one of the large pictures, hung but a few inches above the floor, had fallen face downwards. I placed the lamp on the floor, and stooped to raise the pic ture, when 1 felt a piercingly cold draught of air. Bringing the lamp to the panelling, 1 examined it, and saw what was evidently the crevice of a door immediately behind where the picture had hung. Examining it fur ther, I saw a very small iron knob, scarcely noticeable amidst the orna mentation of the wood-work. Pressing this, the door flew inward, a rush of cold air came in, and, peering before me, I beheld a flight of steps leading up and down into utter darkness. I began the descent, and, to my hor ror, I had hardly taken three steps when the doer by which I had left the gallery closed gently behind me, and to all appearance I was literally walled up. However, I thought the steps must lead somewhere, so 1 continued my de scent. I went straight Uowa for a long time, and then came a sharp turn to the left. ''Evidently leads out into the garden," I thought. Suddenly I was face to face with a blank wall. I was about to re turn when my eyes caught a small bolt I moved it, and d;scovered that half the stone slipped back, making a tiny aparture. Up to this I brought my lamp, and by its light I looked directly intotbo larder. Notwithstanding my position, I almost shouted at the dis covery. This was evidently Mr. Robins watch hole. Now how did he get in? And, although I searched every inch of the will, I could find no appearance of an entrance. I retraced my steps iast the gallery door, which was fast closed, and ascen-. ded. The stairs made a turn to the right; I was walking on planks, and guessei that I was over the gallery, and that after all, there was reason iu what the children had said about hear ing footsteps alwve their heads. Then I came to a small wooden door ajar. I pushed it noiselessly, and my astonish ment may be imagined when I found mvself in a fair sized room, in which were a bed and, snugly snoring in it, Mr Robin! On the floor at the foot of the bed were the Kin tins of a cold leg of mutton and an empty beer-bottle my luuttou and my beer-bottle ot coursei A ladder In the corner led dp to the roof, and by the sound of tbe wind and the rain I cuesscd that thereby was ac cess to be gained to the leads, so that the appearance cf the smoking adjuncts thereon was sufficiently explained. Xow what was tt be doner l must awaken Round Robin, or else make up my mind to be immured for the night, very much to my own discomfort and lnconvenienC3 ana, wnar, was more, io the alarm of my wife. Suppose, when I awakened him. he should grasp my situation at once, turn ferocious, and Well, at any rate, I put away the knife lying beside the mutton. I touched Rouud Robin on tne snoui- der. He muimurel thtf it wasn't his turn to sing a song, as Mike Hedges hadn't sung his dreams were of the tarlorof the "Plough." J toucneu mm again; this time he started with a snort and Si tup. Gradually, as ins returning senses mrf:rpd the fact that there was a man standing over him with a shaded lamp the expression on uis lace cnangeuiroui irritated boredom at having been dis turbed to the mMt genuine astonish ment I have ever seen on human fea tures before or since. At length he exclaimed ... "Why, Mr. 1 No. hang it, it can i be! I'm adreamin'l Hallo, though it Is! Why, how in the name of all that's wonderful did you find your way here? There's not a soul livln' as knows thli but me no, not even the farmer. 1 say, when you've got a good thing stick to tt ear" I was somewhat relieved that the sleeping Hon should have changed into a lamb: so I said "Xow look here, Robin; I want to get out. You didn't think I should bowl you out, did you?" He looked at me quietly and said "More you haven't, sir, yet. You want to get ont. Well, get out if you can without me! No, sir we're quits; so we'd better keep so. Ycu've found out my secret I've got you in my power. Very well, sir. If you promise as a gentleman, not to say a word to the farmer about this, I'll let you our," What could I do but promise? As Kobin was putting some clothes on, he said "Vou see, sir, in the old days, when this house was built, in Henry's reign. j It was a rough time for the i'apists; so uiey comriveu in 13 ere convenience. Your larder was their private chapel, and the stairs led to it, and, when they wanted ai? and exercise, they could go up yon ladder to tbe roof, where they could see every thing and not be seen. Thai's where I has my evening 'bacca." I followed him down to the larder wall, and he showed me a ring in the floor, by raising which a step was seen leading down to a square bole from which another trap opened up 111 the middle of the larder. We retraced our steps to the gallery door. "And now, sir, you ve seen al!,"s.fld Robin, touching a spring, whereupon the door flew inward. "Hallo! The door is precious easy to-night!" he ex claimed. "Well, iu course, if the wind hadn't blown Sir Geoffrey down, you'd have never found me out, sir." To cut a long story short, Rouud Rubin made no more depredations upon our larder, but turned out an honest good fellow, so that It was with genu ine regret that, at the end of three months we packed up to return home and said good-bye to him. We occupied the old hou t'.ue years in succession in the same way When we arrived the third yeir Round Rabin was missing. We asked when he was. "1'oor fellow," said the fanner, "In met with a sad fate fell down a si cret staircase near the long gallery an-1 broke his neck!" 1 'T discovered that secret staircas; three years ago," I said to the farmer; "and it leads where do you think? Iu to your larderl" 'And that s how all the things used to disappear!" exclaimed tbe farmer, astonished. "Well, he paid dearly for it, did poor old Round Robin!" A Vl-.it l'rom Captain Kiil. "Iiord John Gardiner one June even ing observed a mysterious sloop with six guns riding at anchor off Blockisland. It was Kidd's last vessel, the Antonio. This Lord John was a large, hearty man, who lived generously, 'was clever' to the Indians and squaws, and had so much ability in affairs that, although he married four times and spent a great .deal of money, he portioned off his daughters liandsomeiv ana left a iani estate at his death, ne was not a per- j sou to be scared by a mysterious armed sloop; so, after she had lain in sight two days without making any sign, he put off in a boat, to board her and inquire what she was. As he came up over the side. Captain Kidd till then unknown to him received him with the tradi tional politeness of a thriving despera do, and asked after the health of him self and familv. Then, in answer to Lord John's inquiries, he said that h j was on his way to .Lord Beuomont at Boston: would Gardiner do him the favor to carry two negro boys and one negro girl ashore, to be kept there un til he returned or sent an order for them? Gardiner consented, and went back to tbe bland. The next morning Kuld resumed intercourse by sending ashore a request that Gardiner should come on board at once, and bring six sheep with him. This was rather for cing the acquaintance, Gardiner may have thought; but he compiied. There upon Kidd promptly ripened acquaint ance into Intimacy, and asked him if he could spare a barrel of cider. Lord John once more proved neighborly, and found that he coM spare the cider, sending two of his men ashore to fetch it. While waiting for their return, Kidd got out from his cargo two pieces' of damaged Bengal muslin, a rare and valued fabric iu its pristine state, which he put into a bag and re quested Gardiner to take as a present to his wife. It Is likely enough that the captain, seeing in Lord-John a ca pacity for such things, produced some of his fifty shilling ruin, or three hun dred pound Madeira to be tasted. Some thing, at any rate, warmed him up to increasd generosity, for 'in about a quarter of an hour' ho presented the Lord of the Isle with some muslin for his own use. When the men came back with the barrel of cider, he gave them four pieces of gold for their trouble. Furthermore, after getting ready to sail, he offered to pay for the cider; but Gardiner protested that he was suffi ciently rewarded by the present to his wife. They parted at last, and Kidd, gallantly firing a salute of four guns, stood for Block Island. "His purpose in lingering in these waters was to get rid of his suspicious j ireigui oeiore going 10 uosion. xurmij his stay near the island two New York sloops took off part of his cargo; and three days later he returned from Block island in company with another nefari . ous sloop, which relieved him of chests containg plate and gold aud other goods. This time Kidd again sent for Gardiner and committed to his charge a chest, a box of gold, a bnndla of quilts, and four bales of goods. The box of gold, as Gardiner afterwards solemnly deposed, was destined by Kidd for Lord Bella mont All the treasure and merchan dise was buried in some swampy land near Cherry Harbor, beside Home I'ond, within a mile of the Mauor houp, to be kept for Kidd or his order. " 'If I call for it and it is gone,' Kidd declared to Lord John, I will take yonr head or your eon's.' " He bowed, and ventured to say, "Excooz me, I dink I haf met you at Brighton; my name is Moses." She: "Really, I do not recall your face; but your name has a rather familiar souud. A Railroad Disastei:. Dumley was telling bow narrowly he escaped from being run over by a railroad train. "Why." he went on, "it fairly took my breath away. " "Did you say the train had two en gines?" asked yoang Featherly, very much interested. "Certainly not; 1 said nothing about two engines." "Well," responded young Featherly, "I don't see how a train with onlv one engine could take your breath away. ' SMAOmCK XVGEXT. Imv a Man IjOok AVI10 is 125 Years OM He Don't Drink or I'nn Tobacco. fdiadmck Nugent is a light-skinned mulatto, 'who has lived in New York ainee t war of 1812. He was Dorn, ue says, in 1700, in Frederick County, MJ., near t'of present town ot Freder ick. He owns a couple of houses, and is rather well provided for. He is uni versally respe'-ted by both white and colored and In a steady church goer. II 9 uses a care only when he goes out at night., and while rather shaky be walks well enough for a man half his age, whatever it is. He cannot read or write, though he sticks very carefully to datei.Sud; seldom gets mixed up in his reminiscences. He i3 known as "the Moon Mail" for the reason that he has devoted vnru.y years to observations of the moou rind tbe relations of the moon to the ctrwtes of the weather. Of labj yews S'JfldracK has seldom gone very far ron; us home, which is on M street, between Twenty-second and Twenty third streets. The sight of one eye has goue entirely, though the other is nearly as good as it ever was. He has never worn any beard on his face, shaving it almost every day. His hair is some what longer than most colored people have. It is pure white and but little kinked. ' He talks remarkably well, though Jie has lost most of his front teeth, ind delights iu talking of King George' days and what he heard about them in h's boyhood days. The old man claims to bav seen all the Presi dents since James Madison, and to have talked to tliem all with the exception of rre-ider-t Cleveland. He is going to the White House soon to talk with President Cleveland. He says lie was not a lx-dy servant of General Washing ton, ti t claims that he was a servant of Lieutenant George Graff who served iu tbe devolution. Shad rack's ideas of mo; liTv can be gleaned from his word s that 10. ow: "l smoEeu wnen 1 was a 1 "I smoked when I was a boy and for rome time after I grew up, but-1 ytjs never much of a smoker. I never '-hewed tobacco because 1 was not allowed to. Mr. Graff said it did not loo irood for a boy to chew, and I did not chew. He chewed, and the rufSjs'of his shirt were dirty all the time w ,th tobacco juice. I believe that was th reason he oppoccd 1110 chewin. Yes, I have drank some liquor in my life, bi;t very little. 1 haveut touched a drop of any kind of liquor since Gen eral Lafayette came to this country. 1 was awful drunk the night he arrived, but pr that no more. My experience has be.n with white and colored peoj lc that l.quor causes more trouble than everything else put together. Regular ity in everything is beneuciai, ana es- peci2.'V so about paying all bills that 1 , are c. a. If you ain't got anything anything donV money romise, only pay when you have Idttle Jkr. PTISv&u'i Wi.-.t hft always was called. in a big dry goods establishment, he' " ",, ?w , lli,t 1 "v ir, uTre- '! "Where's the man that runs the ele-' vator'" n-i. ' iitfi t..i- 1 1 .... (-,,., his corner: tV JL:C" . 1.,m t bnt . r, f e;,nhinfl lil.t ii , if sunshin Ta,,T, a dark place. He was of such lowiy statue that when be was in his corner there seemed to be nobody r mere. gradually tbe small, earnest, cheerful face grew visible, and as you looked it brightened into such a happy smile that the little man seemed to till the whole elevator with sunlight. give him a nod or a word as they went up and down absorbed in their purcha ses will miss him now and speculate a. to what has become of the quaint little fellow who was ever smiling, helping, always doing his duty bravely? He went home sick one night and said "Good night" bravely, swallowed a lump in his throat and ran off. The day after this his father came in. "Ue was petter, nicoch petter," his fa. her said. Then his mother came; they wanted the place kept for the boy. "Ob, so sick. He is tx much sick here," the mother said, laying her hand on her breast. "Tell him to get well and he shall have his place," said his employer. "To-morrow we shall come to sje him. ' But on the morrow the father came into the store and his eyes were red and swollen. "Mine leetle Jake," he began, and then broke down and said no more. It went the rounds of the store like wild fire the news that little Jake was dead, and you would have thought at least that he bad been the proprietor. And he was, In his small way, pro prietor of the hearts of the people be served; of their esteem, their good will a dividend that will serve him better than money in the land where he i3 to day. They sent, every one or them, beauti ful flowers to little Jake's funeral; he was covered with tbe last offerings oi good will from those he served. "We wish we had known that he was so ill. We might have ministered to his wants or perhaps saved him," his em ployers said with sad regrets. But there Is nothing to regret. "It's well with the child. " And its no long er "Guten nacht" with thee, but "Gu ten morgen," Little Jake." Tbe Pip. This is not a disease in itself, but the result of a feverish cold. A dry, horny scale forms on the end ot tbe tongue, preventing the bird from eating. The bird becomes weak, its feathers grow ruffled, its beak turns yellow at the base, and, without attention, it dies. The cure is simple. With a sharp knife remove the scale at the end of the tonge, and give two or three grains ot black pepper with fresh butter thret times a day for a week. A Cobeect AxswEn. Teacher "Cant you answer that question?" Little Nell "How can I? I never saw a wall built." Teacher "Well, I will put it in an other shape. If it takes one servant nine hours to do the entire housework of a family, how long will It take three servants to do it?" Little Nell "Oh! I can answer that. I heard mamma speak of it this very morning." Teacher "Well, how long will it take then?" Little Nell "Three Unies as long.' THK WOKIJVw KEMXRKABLE KIVEIW. Stream- Tiiat Present Uniiie and Curious Features. A number of rivers that can be found in almost any atlas possess remarkable characteristics which entitle them to rail . among the natural curiosities of the world. In Algeria, for instance, there is a small stream which the chem istry of nature has turned into true ink. It is formed by the union of two rivu lets, one of whic.li is very strongly im pregnated with iron, while the other, meandering through a peat marsh. Im bibes gallic acid. Letters have been written with this compound of iron and gallic acid which unite to form the little river. In Colombia there is a liver which, by admixture with sul phuric acid, becomes so sour that it is appropriately named Rio de Viaagre, or Vinegar river. Many varieties of fish abound in the large Orange river of South Africa until the river passes through a rocky region containing cop per ores, below which the water ii said to be poisonous and to kill the fhh that venture Into it. "China's Sorrow" is a uame that hr.s been given to the great Hoaug Ho, which rises in the mouutains ot Thibet and follows a wouderfuly circuitoa channel for 2,5o0 mile? to the sea. The waywardness of this might- volume of water makes the rivejr a constant source of anxiety and danger, instead of wealth, to 170,0iX,tJ of people inhab iting the central part of China. It is known to have suddenly changed its course nine times. It has moved its mouth over -1 degrees of latitude each time, emptying its va3t Hoods in differ ent directions and digging a new chan nel for itself where scores of villages had stocd. It has greatly changed the physical character of a wirtn area, turning fertile regions Into a sandy waste or making shallow lakes of them, .. n.t . : ,.1. ... t, ; .. ... - .. .. 1 ... 1 ,," '.i. :, : "u u . ' "c l'"r' . "' this great, plain from disastrous over l.iws and changes of the river bed is a tuestion that has Ieen considerably iiscussed in K-igland of late years. Some recent explorers of Alaska tell us that the Mississippi can 110 longer le resarded as the largest river of the North American continent. They claim that distinction for the great Y'nkou river, which, acording to Mr. Ivan Petroff, who spent two yeais in Alaska collecting materials for the last census, empties into Norton sound one-third more water than the Mississippi pours into the Gulf of Mexico. The Yukon basin comprises the most of southern Alaska, and is a mile wide OX) miles from its mouth. Many centuries before it was visited by white men it very ,, -inr . .,," i.Vu.vi tn iave crosae,, from Asi;i t0 this conti. ! llPIlt, A very curious river is the Webbe Shebcyh of east Africa, a deep and rapid stream, abounding in fish and crocodiles. Though it lbws for bun- I ditus of u.lit J tliroiili fert lands, j immense volume 01 water never reaches He sea. A little north of the lm'MT t,lfi river Io8 ,tselr 1:1 a ',wrt $n a from llie 1 ! Very few great rivers have ever i been thoroughly explored by going up stream. Travelers tried for I'.OOO I years to find tho source of theXiloby ! aBCSIiUlUg UIH TlVer. luj llllir.lliry : . 1 ii. . t v- i a i i. cbed the difficult part of the stream their stores and energy were 1 ..... , ,, ,,, r- . ... i .,..:., ,1, i""Viin heads first bv overland routes !? tTnt ?hv l Yrt ttZ . Ii1" hl!f tiT.t -!5ifM? li , 0" "d 9k0 30lve1 t!,e S9" ! ther. It was only by seeking the A C.AMBhKKS Sl KIIlE. Staking a Fortune on an .Vi e and Irfxinij. A Tragedy r Tlirillin; IiitereM. "There used to be in the neighitcr hood of Camargo, an old and wealthy ranchman who was ridden by one of the most singular gambling hobbie3 I have ever seen. HU name was Refu gio Garcia. He was devoted moute player, and his idiosynorasy was the ace ot diamonds. Ue had a tremen dous reverence for that card under all conditions, bnt when it lay face up ward on tbe table, flanked on either side by a spade or clnb, his faith in it knew no bounds. He was said to have obtained bis superstition from a dream of his dead wife, who was scalped by Lipans three years before I knew him. It may have been so and it may not. Anyhow, ho clung to his card with a reckless love. And the most singular part of it was that it rarely won. He had wasted away many a fat cow on it when I first saw him, but threw away more afterward. When the first gambling booth was opened and before the trainmen had fairly prepared for the opening night liefugio was there, gasing patiently at the dealer and waiting for the game to commence. 1 knew him, as I said, when he had money. I was with him daring a part of his long chase after fortune and I was to be with hiui at the death. The train, under command of Jaau Nandez, arrived at Camargo and pitched its tents. It was a big one and brought lots of goods and money. "There were several gamblers con nected with it; in fact, they were nearly all gamblers by instinct, but tke loudest and the wealthiest aud the fanciest the man with the finest booth and the greatest quantity of money spread on the table before him- was a Frenchman named Antoine. Ue was the first man, tx. who was ready for business, and, of course, he caught R iugio. I had learned that the old man bad sold bis last ranche a few weeks before, and ho was supposed to have the money with him. Be entered the tent, stooping low at the entrance, and I fol lowed him. When heaUightened up in the glare of the lamp3 1 saw that his face was very pale. His lips twitched nervously and his hands shook as he dived beneath his vest and unfastened a broad belt. He spilled a few gold coins on the table and carefully replaced the remainder. 'I wiU play only a little to-mgbi, he said; 'but, Antoine, I dreamed of Jiili anna lst night aud I shall win froa you.' The Frenchman showed his white canine teeth, and said, in sibils Spanish: 'Glad, very glad to see yon, Ssnor Garcia. The fair has only commenced. We will bavj a lo.:g sUting. In two weeks' time yon should be able to win back all yonr ranches.' and be langhod. "The deal began, the ace of diamonds rustled to the table, Garcia played bis mocey on it and lost. Contrary to my expectations, he arose and strolled lUtlessly from the tent. 'I will play no more to-night,' he said. 'You may not believe it, friend, bnt I am directed. 'I saw no more of him for a few days, but learned that he had lost a few gold pieoes every night, waiting patiently 1 for his loved ace of diamonds, seeing the money swept iu by the harpy lingers of the dealer and then turned qnietly away. On the last night of the fair I walked over to Autoine's tent. On every side tbe hum of trade, the flash ing of lights, the snapping of castanets, and twang of guitars were accentuated by the sense that on the morrow the vast caravan would bo Rone, and the great prairie lie bald and bleak in it loneliness. Inside the large booth ex cited players were grouped around tbe table, and the clink of dollars was in cessant. Antoine was dealing and his usually impassive face was flushed with mescal. Refugio sat almost in front of him, with a strange, drawn look on his features, anJ his great, heavy belt in front of him. " 'I have here,' he whispered, patting it excitedly, 'the bill of sale of five hundred mares aud three hundred gold gold eagles, Sll.000 in all. I am wait iug for my fate and I shall win.' "Antoine glanced across the table at him nervously, I thought, and raked to gether bis cards for a fresh ileal. Uis fingers trembled as they felt Refugio's yes on them. The sards were sho tiled, cut by the right hand man and the first two were laid face upward ou the table. They were the deuce of hearts and the king of clubs. A few pesos were placed on the deuce and turning his pack face downward, the dealer drew the bottom card and with a slight, graceful motion flipped it on the table, I: was tho fateful diamoud ace. Rifugio reach! over and showered a haudful of gold pieces upon it. The next card wa tho lonr of spades and it fluttered down by tbe ace. Refugio's painted vhihboth was flauked on either side by the club aud spade. " !). you lake a tap?" ho said to Au toine. "'Rjtail you like, said the latter, savagely, and pulling out a drawer of his table he showed t'te ranged columns of com. " 'Eleven thousand pescsou tho ace, said Rjfugio, emptying his lelt. "The game paused, while slowly aud quietly Antoine counted the money, lie exunined tho bill of sale carefully, expressed his natixfaetiou, said tua money was correct, and whiio the black aud bine eyes of the assembled Mexi cans aud Americans were fastened on his wiry fingers with an eager interest, resumed the deal. Yon know Mexiosu mnnt of course? In placing bis money ou the ace R3fugio simply wagered that, the deck l-eiug turned face np and tb top cards removed successively and placed on the tab(e, an ace voaid fchow up before a fonr. Tito tin lamp rih-k-ered fitlully, the figures around the greeu cloth soemcd carved of stouo aud the deal went on. Refngio sat with his face hidden, his hwd resting ou bis hands. Tho bnrly Trench man sliowej no emotion. Suddenly, as the cards stik one by one to the Ixiards, there was a universal exclamation from the watchers. The top card slipping mwu disclosed an ace. " "Yon have won,' said Antoine. aud he cou u ted nut the money. It left his : drawer and table bare. 'I am a ruiucd j man, he added simplv, aud walked out I of the tent. A moment later wo board j a pistol shot. Wo found htm not tcu paces from the spot oi his ruin, with bullet 111 his heait. A tiny, jeweled r. i a t ..I wnmoj,.'. VHnn!i lav niir li i 4 - " . -t ( ...j . outstretched and nerveless hand. O.J the handle was chased in letters of j silver the single word 'Jalinuna.'" "Had he known Refugio's wilt?" I think not. Simply a coincidence, j I suppose.'' Vanity Fair. Iii personal appearance, Turkish women present a type as icu!iar and remarkable as any under heaven. Their complexions are generally fair and of the most delicto softness, owing, doubtless, to the constant use ot the bth, as well as the protection of the (osi.iictJl-, or veil, without which they never go ahead. Their features are regular, and their almond shaped eyes bright and black, and so valued for the;r size that great-eyed ladies ar promised by the Prophet as one of the suWimest joys of paradise. Beauty spots, or moles, are considered of great value. Their costume is as peculiar as their iersonaI appearance. It con sists of two parts the tiUarry and the .ihnhnr. The tnlo.rrij, or dress, is a long robe, trailing about a yard behind, ami resembles much the morning dress of a European lady, only the tit'irrj is composed of three skirts, as it were, opeu in front and on the two sides, the latter openings extending to the hips. The front skirts are not thrown open, as Is the European fashion, but brought together and buttoned up, the ends gathered between the limlisand thrown back, which, pressing upon the skirt behind, serve to form the train. When the ladies are under no restraint of etiquette, the trains of their dresses are either tucked up to their girdles or held in their bands, and thus they walk about the house in a free aud easy style, whether rollicking, chasing each other, dancing, strolling in the garden or en gaged iu household work. A lielt or a scarf encircles the waist, a coquettish coiffure surmounts the bead and em broidered slippers adorn the feet. These slipiers are worn slipshod to facilitate their leaving them on the floor when they ascend and seat themselves on the scfas. Their movements are graceful, their forms being under no artificial restraint, as that instrument or torture, yclept the corset, is never worn by them. Their gait is also peculiar. They do not move about on tiptoe, or walk in measured and firm steps, but glide about softly in a dieuilied manner, as if "bkimming the earth" In a sort of j?i'..it(f, which is considered lady-like in their estimation. The bang is purely Turkish, having originated with them, as is the square cut of the neck ot a dress kuown as the "Poropailour," which style th:.t lady had doubtless iwrrowed from the Turkish lxdles. Sometimes the t.itnrry is worn high neck, and at others decollete, exposing much of the bust, but never the shoulders. Ax American paper says snuie gi to church to weep, while others go to sleep. Some go their wives to please; their conscience others go to e-. Sum go to bear the preacher; others like the solo screecher. Boys fro to re connoitre; girl3 go because they oughter. Many go for saga reflections, precious fe'jr to help collections. NEWS IN BKIEF. Russia is building a $2,300,000 ram. South Carolina has C13 lunatics la her asylums. General Kilpatrick's widow is to nave a pension. London, it is estimated, has about "?I,K'1 paupers. There are about .1,0(10 Chinese iu Xew York state. Pickjiockets have been "working" . Newark (X. 3.) churches lately. There were 3,310 houses built In London and the suburbs in lS?i Professor Agassiz is said to be tbe wealthiest of American scientists. Diamonds are reported to have fal len 7." ier cent, in price in London. The !ast )ensioner or the war of '12, reading in IOwell, died a few days ilRO. Pocket handkerchiefs came into use in the lime of Henry IV of Eng land. Vienna officials rigidly exclude the use of velocipedes or bicycles on the streets. The four-track system on the Penn sylvania railroad now extends a distance ui eleven miles. There have been sixteen suicides and two murders at Monto Carle since the 1st of January. Genera! Beauregard came out of the war a comparatively poor man, but he is now wealthy. Iu Xew Orleans heads offish are dried, mounted and sold tor table and mantel ornaments. Thirty-three of the ieadinz ciiiti of Edgeiield, S. C. are under indict ment Tor lynching. An old companion of Scii-uz and SeRel is woiking contentedly as a bar ber in Atlanta, Ga. Sulphur is i!es:ted hi the ti.p of .Mount Popocataptl at the rate of a ton a day. It is stated. Ten novels are written and rejected in England, it is stated, for everv one that is published there. Nickel is a letter conduct or 1 13.11) than lead (s.:!J). is lighter than lead. and does not oxidize so much. There is a "slave corner'" in all old N'ew England graveyards, where th blackamoor chattels were buried. Georgia's penitentiary now contains 1332 prisoners, the largest iiuuiber ever recorded on the registry at one time. England lias an insurance society which makes a specialty of insuring against damage done by hail storms. At an exhibition of cage birds in London recently, one of the great at trartions was a bullfinch valued at According to the last census, then Is one milliner toevery 37 women, while there is only one tailor toe-very 7'J men. Sixty-four counties in Texas did not vote at the last Presidential electiou. Many of them have siree been organiz ed. A dog belonging t- a Cincinnati shoe dealer chews tobacco, using up about a quarter of a ten-cent plug every day. Guatemala encourages cattle farm ing by prohibiting the slaughter of cows and severely taxing the exportation of heifers. There are said to b only about 1 members of the Soc iet y of Fr ieuda (ijuakers), now in Great Rritain and Ireland. Indies iu the Cadet Club of the Sate University, Mo, arc said to drill with guns and to Is- "making excellent progress." San Jose (Oil.) dry goods dealers were victimized last, week by an insane woman, who ordered an expensive wed ding outfit. Roller skating is indulged in with great ardor at tli-American Institute, X. Y-, with over a thousand skaters o'i the floor iu an evening. Senator Gorman and Congressmen Townsend (of Illinois) and W. U Scott I Pennsylvania) are said to hav:; served as pages in the House. The distance from Trinkitat to Tokar is twenty miles: Trinkitat to Suakiin, twenty-iive miles; Tokar to Suakiro, forty-eight miles. Xew Yolk City has u;ht hundred rag-pickers who gather $7i,0in) worth of nigs In the streets and roads. The pickers are mo--tIy Italians. An old farmer living near linliatia poiis has just lost his fourth w,f- The first three died and his latest has eloped with the old man's bachelor son. The tueen of Madagascar is saiu to have oignnizeil a police foree to pre vent the manufacture, importation or sale of intoxicants in her dominions. A dividend authorized a few days ago ou the eld account of the JXewark (X. -I.) Dime Sivings Bank brings the total paid depositors up to !."0 per cent. Scientists affinn that diseases such as typhoid fever pee in many cases dis tinctly traceable to the milk of cows who have had only impure water to drink. A young Jew in St. Petersburg has invented a watch which goes by elec tricity. The watches are made without any springs, and consist solely of two wheels. The combined ages cf a family of three brothers and three sisters living in Auburn, Me., aggregate ."Of; years. The eldest 13 a sister, aged 0f, and the youniresl is a brother, 73 years old. At a library sale in Xew York, the other day, JOM was the sum paid for a copy of the second edition of the "John Eliot Bible," being Eliot's translation of the Bible into the Indian language. Oiea Bui!, the 12 year o!d daughter of Ola Bull, the famous violinist, is alxvit to visit Xorway with her mother, and it is thought will appear in concerts there. She possesses some of her father's talent as a violinist. Crystals of oxygen have recently lx-en obtained in Paris by first hquefy iug the gas under great tuessure, and then suddenly renioviuit tlwr pressure. The temperature of th liquid mass is thus greatly lowered, und crystals of oxygen arc formed in i. Non-poisonous organic acids aid digestion. Hence the ise of vinegar as a condiment is bnvii on good rea sons, but with the condition that the quantity must not be . great as to irri tate the stomach itself. During the present year, forty fe male students have entered upon a course of study at the Paris hospitals. Only three or four of the?e are French women. There are some English ajd Americans and a lew regresses, but Russia is the natioi.ality most numer ously represented. t .JE1-