23T .r B. F. SCHWEIEB, THB OOIBTTTUTIOI-THE TnTIOI-AJD TIE ETFOIGOCEXT 0? TEE Lll Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XLI. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. MAY 4, 1SS7. NO. 19 iiifetfet 1 If ill i i SCitilL t.randpas Trt. hen sunshine lift, the drowsy lids of morn And earth awakes. Sweet as the lark my Utile grandchild's rolce The silence breaks. His gladsome face reflects the rosy tint Of summer skies. And ever from his prattling lips there conies borne sweet surprise. As flowers unfold th-ir petals to the air And scent the earth, Bo bads and blossoms forth his baby life In fragrant mirth. He drains the nectar from life's chalice sweet Of childhood's years. And recks not of the vexing cares unborn, Of griefs and tears. Thus day by day he brightens all the hoars And romps and plays A petted idol throned in loving hearts By winning ways. With laughing eyes he shakes his golden cur.s So cbarniinc cute You fain condone the mischief that he does By keeping mute. And though the past with all Its garnered years Scarce counts him these. In woven lth my woof of life he grows More dear to ma. Uod Tant through all the heritage of time To him ordained, The sweet fruition of a life well spent Aud honors gained. JUST LIKE ARGENTINA. "Heroines are always gliding hiding," Kelly Fairfield tuought, ing down the three volumes of and lay- "A Dead Mystery.'" She had read "Lady Dampstilk's " Doom." and "Lurrid Lightnings," and 'Green-Grey Eyes," and "The One-I-gged Witch," three volumes each, of the most blood-curdling description that the village library could supply. Nelly's taste in romance was not of t ic highest. Sho liked to have her blood curdled. And as the four weeks of her country vis;t had been incessantly wet she had trotted her young friend and hostess, Mary Marsh, in the pony trap every second day to the village library in search of the weird and mys terious. At the end of her mouth's visit to Darkleigh Court. Nelly's fair and curly little head was bewildered by three puzzling discoveries that Hubert Marsh, Mary's obliging brother, and the heir of this grand old place, was desperately in love with her iuslgnili cant httle self; that the country was a compound of gray sky, rain, and mud, whatever the poets said to the contrary; and that heroines especially Argentina, the last heroine could cry without spoiling her violet eyes and their pretty little noses, and that they had a habit of gliding and hiding. Argentina often did; and Kelly was beginning to feel just like Argentina since the heir of Darkleigh Court had begun to do her chivalrous service from morning till night to win a word or a smile. "Hubert is like Lord Loekwood in "A Dead Mystery," she told Mary Marsh, as they went down arm-in-arm, ready to see a new guest at dinner a great event in a weather-bound country house. "He has black hair and eyebrows, and there the likeness ends," said demure Miss Mary, with a smile. "We don"t want Hubert to be a forger, or a high wayman, or a corsair, or whatever it was not like Lord Lockwood thank you'." 'But I do like a man to have some thing mysterious something grand as if he were able to " "To slay somebody:" hinted Mary. "That would be romantic and out of the common." "Oh, no," said Xelly helplessly; "but I can't explain. Hubert looks adven turous. He might have been a courtier in the old times, and helped in secret councils, and " "Planned the smothering of princes, and all that," laughed Mary. "Poor Hubert! I did not know what a bad opinion you had of him, Kelly." Kelly drew away her arm, and tried desperately to explain, but they had reached the last step of the stairs, and the new guest was taking off his coat in the hall. He was a big-eved, big-mustached, burly man, with a sort of cousinly like ness to a bull-dog. He was afterwards introduced as "our friend Gobblecock, who has come from London to spend a day or two with Hubert," There was also at dmner that day, a neighbor of Darkleigh Court a hand some young fellow, Sir Harry Clive who took the world easily. His chief pastime was twirling the ends of his mustache, and his only troubles in life were laying foundation-stones and gracing the platform at public meet ings. His occupations ranged from lawn-tennis in summer to sleighing in winter, and driving a four-in-hand, lie called Miss Marsh "Mary"' and she called him "Harry;" they had known each other since he painted new com plexions on her dolls in his Eton holi days, and since her baby hands stitched the calico that sailed his ship. Kow, when boys and girls begin as playmates, they often only end as friends; new faces and new ways have some day a mysterious attraction that the too well known faee had not. Sir Harry Clive stood by the window that night, curliug his mustache on his finger, and enjoy ing Kelly's chatter with little Robin Marsh, on l;er theory of Bluebeard having possibly been the "wicked un cle" mentioned iu the "BaUs in the Wood." "He couldn't have been their uncle," said the small boy, "because there were never any babis in reality; and it's all a story." "Oh, yes, there were babes there were; its a positive fact," said Kelly, truly enough. The little boy looked bewildered, and Sir Harry burst into a laugh, and watched the pretty girl as steadily as little Robin did. Hubert Marsh disappeared from the group at the window. He was after ward seen in the garden, kicking the gravel aud smoking a cigar. Poor fel low! There are big boys that sulk in this upside-down world of ours. "You darling little mite! You don't believe in Bluebeard, either. Wait till you meet him some day!" said Mary demuie and diligent, looking round from her lace-work. Master Kobln looked straight across the room at big Mr. Gobblecock. It was a look of inquiry; he bad bis doubts. Luckily the friend from London was not turned that way. He had made a thousand apologies, saying he would not ask a favor except in an old friend's Louse, and they had all clamored excuse and assent; and he had begged for a lit tle table to himself in an out-of-the-way corner of the drawing-room, and spread- j ing newsWner? there and alary book-V all out of his black leather bag lie set to work studiously, tiring remarks all the while like stray shots into the con versation, and paying attention to what everyone was saying. "I would do it in another room if you would let me go," he said; "but as you will not exile me you are too good I shall be free and at your service in one half heir." Mr. Marsh carried on the talk about stories from the point where his daugh ter had left it. "Ah!" said that merry little man, the kindly host, "my Robin is not what I was long ago. I set beans to grow a stalk like the famous Jack; and even now, if I will read a story I like to be lieve it. Once in the six months, may be, I get hold of one worth reading, and then all the men and women I have met in it live for evermore. What's the good of a story tliat a fellow feels is a hoax and a yarn? Kow, there's that book that every one is talking of, 'Brightley Court;' that girl Kuth Moss is somewhere in the world; she is living like a violet in a wood, and the air is better for her presence happier and that's all one knows. 'Let us love much because life is short ; let us do much because we love much!' That girl is alive for me now almost as much as Kelly there and my Mary. She marries no one in the novel; why, there isn't a fellow I ever met fit to put his hand under her foot to send her up to the saddle. I beg your pardon, Harry, but you won't mind. 1 don't think you are good enough for Ruth either." "All right, sir! S'uan't break mv heart for that," said Sir Harry. "I'd rattier nave a real live gul than a dream, though that is a very true char acter very real very! Iu fact Kuth Moss reminded me of somebody I have met. Have you read 'Brightley Court,' mantic. "Ah! you should read that!" cried both the men in duct Mary's father and Sir Harry Clive. "Who is it by?"' said the voice of M Gobblecock. "Hyacinth Grey." Mr. Gobblecock with a grunt, return ed to his pajers. "A lady, 1 should think," said the young baronet. "Ah I I'm sure of it. ho else could have told us about Ruth's dresses and the color of her hair? Yet there's an amazing amount of knowledge of horses in that book, aud of larrack life," said Mr. Marsh, "and Hyacinth Grey had one novel about London city life, and another about yachting." The voice of Gobblecock interrupted. Iu my time at school Ilyacinthus was a Greek boy, but these ladies that write novels don t trouble their heads about classical accuracy." Soon he wrote a long letter, sent it to the post, folded his newspapers into the black bag, and came with a thousand more apologies, and made up for hi3 i.bsence by talking with the volubility of a dozen. His stories made every lnxly lauh; his gentleness with the girls made up for his good looks; his talk of foreign cities made them wonder how (as our friends bey . the channel would say) he was most at home whan he was abroad. In a word Gobblecock was a p'.easant man, good company, a success. Even Hubert came back. heart-aches and all, and joined tin ca de. And then the candles gleamed round the drawing-room, and Nelly looked her prettiest, and Mary Marsh was her sweetest, and Kobin w;is his noisiest. Harry Clive was pleased with himself and all the world; Hubert was only heard ouce (overheard by Kelly) to murmur to his sister that lie wished Harry was "far enough;" Mr. Marsh made a hamv paterfamilias, and felt like a boy again when he detected Harry Clive waiting on Nelly, and poor Hu bert getting angry- In short it was a pleasant family circle, and Gobblecock had become a favorite with everybody, excent little Robin, whose mini! had been disturbed about Bluebeard. At Darkleigh Court the ladies liad always an hour to themselves, while the men hnished the late evening in me smokine-room or at the billiard-table. To-niirht Kellv took up the book that was the talk of the season, and read a few chapters while Mary worked. Present!? Mr. Marsh came in. "So clad vou are reading that, Kelly! It is beaut v and poetry from cover to cover, no matter what it talks about the hunting field, or the camp, or the bar- raek-vard. or anything." Ma'rv did not look up from her work. but she siid gently," Hyacinth Grey's books are all delightful. lie must be a man with a noble mind." Mr. Marsh paced up and down the room thinking; his thoughts had darted off to a subject nearer his heart. "I wonder what that boy of mine has on his mind?" he said. "He stumps about over my head, up and down, up and down, till 2 and 3 in the morning. I wish you would find out what is troubling him, Mary. Poor Hubert! It worries me to think he has some trouble and won't tell me. Find out, if you can." "He lias a little sitting-room too in the west tower, has not he?" Kelly asked, when Mr. Marsh was gone. "The iight is burning there till 1 every night, I have looked out and seen the bright window, and wondered." The light burned in the upper window of the west tower that night till the clock struck 1. Afterwards Huberi walked up and down in the room over his father's till hali-pasr. "He must have some great trouble on his mind," thought Kelly, peeping from under the corner of her window-blind and seeing the lonely light. "He is like the Polar bear in the zoo logical gardens!" thought his sleepless rather, listening to the footsteps for half the night , , , On the next evening Hubert bad car ried off "Brightley Court" to that snug little sitting-room of hi3 in the tower, Mary Marsh asked Kelly to run up for it, as her brother, and her father, and the great Mr. Gobblecock were all far away at billiards. . . Kellv, in Hubert's own dominion?, delayed to look around her before she took the open volume from the table. All at once footsteps, and Hubert's voice, and the voice of the dread Gob blecock were close outside the door. Seized by a silly fear of being found, she thought of Argentina in the last romance; and, resolved to be a heroino for once in her life, she did just what she should not have done, she stepped behind a screen. True, she might have rip! out at once bravely and made a joke of it; but by hesitation it was lost. Should ane raint, o auouiu ouo vuugu, for the smoke wa choking her? She stormed her ears with a pair of fingers, and stood there in an agony of fear. When she took her fingers out of her ears to hear if they were going away, Hubert was saying: "It is absolutely necessary to put the baronet out of the way. My uta was poison.7 Kelly shudered and turned coli "Ko, not a murder not i murder, if it can possibly be avoided. I hav slirunk from that for years always,' said Gobblecock. Xellift rnnlil not nut lior rmtrora inr. her ears again. Should she scream ou' loud? Should she fall down with a bant on tne noorr "It is rather a horrid idea," sail Hubert, retlectinir "But I shall havi no horrors! It shall be poisoning 01 drowning, if I could manage takin; him abroad and doing some boating perhaps he might 1 lured Into a Med iteranean ralucco." "Very good," said the other. "That man is a monster!" thought Kelly. "Hubert is excited, I lit lie i: cold. He is goading Hubert on, sine pretending to think ill of it," "I mean to put some money iu ni' pocket, I can tell you!" said Hubert "I want you to put mc up to the lega formalities of arranging the will. For gery is rather worked out, but I don't see anvthing else." "If I were you," said Gobblecock, ' should send the old man to a luuatic asylum, and " More aud more Kelly was like Argen tina, she had tried gliding aud hiding and had stepped iuto the middle of ai entanglement or crime and mystery She knelt down wringing her hands. "I shall make him a lunatic at large,' said Hubert. "Very well; then stop at that. Over excitement piling on the agony i altogether a mistake, I don't like th idea of murder, but I shall gladly pro vide you with all the information abou me win. 10 avoiu norrors, i snouu get rid of the old man into a lunatic asylum, I am not sanguine, but 1 wist you luck, my lad; and plots of this kiiu have succeeded Itefore now, though 1 tell you it is not to my taste," There was a pause of smoking and o' choking for Kelly, who had sunk on tlx door. Then that horrible monster Gob blecock said, "And the girl is it to lx Kelly?" She could hear the laugh iu hi: voice, as if he had made a shrewd guess ''What is to become of her?" Hubert hesitated. "OUi:bt she evei to know who the murderer is?" Miss Fairfield?" Kelly had not; Mary had suggestec it, aud she had rejected it as too unro By this time the poor heroine, whe was just like Argentina, felt as if tin human heart that Argentina had nol were being smashed by a blow am' torn in two. Hubert, the man whoii she had begun to love a:.d trust, was loaded with guilty secrets a villain o! the deepest dye. It was Gobblecock thai had ruinetl him of course, it was GoU blecock who had doue all the mischief Gobblecock was an unmitigated mon ster. Kelly screamed out loud a shrill piercing scream, that rang througt every lamp and glass, and echoed as it the ground itself had shrieked, till wall.' aud ceilings thrilled with it. Nellvcame to her senses lying on; couch in the drawing-room, surroundet by the whole household. She was afi.uc of Gobblecock, who was gently fanniiip her the monster! Aud she shrank from Hubert, who was so glad to sof one conscious look in her eves. Pool Hubert! She burst into tears at th sight of him. That villain of the deep est dye! Had he not brought "oiu friend from London" to be a conspira tor, a plotter of dark dneds? Kelly wanted to speak to Mary. Tin others were all sent away; and to M.ir she told all the escapade: how she liar slipped into a thrilling situation just like Argentina in "A I toad Mystery,' aud Mary interrupted her by saying quietly, "Hubert is writing a story. His friend is a writer from London. You dear little goose they were onlj planning the book. Hulieit's friend i: corresjiondent for a foreign paper. Yoi saw him at his letter last night. And he has written stories. 'Brightley Court is his. He put our home in that and even poor little me. You nee.l nol make jour eyes bigger, Kelly." "Oh, Mary! will Hubert ever forgivt me?" "Poor 'villain of the deepest dye.' He will never ask you to be the heroim of a dead mystery again." "But, Mary, lid you say that that that big man wrote 'Brightley Court? You are Kuth! I know it you art Kuth?" "He imagines so. He is Hyacintl Grey. But you look frightened." "Kuth will marry Hyacinth Grey!' Kelly gasied. "I do admire him from my heart,' said this calculating heroine; "but I must show my little pearl ring. Ilarrj gave it to me to-night." Alas! let Shakespeare say what he will, there is something in a name. Kot even Juliet's love would have sufficed it she had lived In these days, and if Bo rneo's name had been Gobblecock. Superstitious Concerning Bolls. The effort of an Indiana family to have certain church bells of their city silenced as a nuisance has been par-i elleled in other places. But the war on ciiurcu bens nas not always been waged on such grounds. In some cases it has beeu the outgrowth of an iconoclastic temper on the part of per sons who wished to break the torce oi the religious asociations which cluster around the music or tne spirits, in olden times bells were suppojed to have certain supernatural powers. They were used to disarm Satan when he visited pious communities on earth. On their holy sounds the souls of the dea l were wafted to heaven. When the French took Zweibrueckeu in 1G77. we read that they tried to melt one of the local church bells, when it sweated drops of blood, which one of the officers wined off w ith a Handker chief so that he could show the stains to King Louis in proof or his asser tions. . in Sweden, loiur. long ago. mere lived a race of giants who were so wicked as to hurl rocks at the churches to try t j destroy them. One day a peasant, going to the cave of one of these mons ters, heard himself called : "Jacob, Jacob, come in aud eat of my stew." "Kay," answerea jacou, wuo wuum not for worlds have broken fast with a sacrilegious creature like that, "if you have more stew man you cau eau, you better lay the rest asiue ior tne mor row." "But I cannot wait till the morrow," pleaded the giant; "they have brought those horrid church bells Into Sweden, and I cannnot withstand their power. I must nee"' "Ana when come you bacK t" assea jacon. "Vnt till the bills have become the bot tom of the sea, and the sea turned into farming land," quoth the giant. And hA waft as eood as his word : for from that day forth, the rock hurling mons ters were not Known m oweueu, mi the churches hare enjoyed a peace like that of heaven. If voa are too lazy to think, thou will h-vi poor to know. FOX-HUNTIXG. Description of a Winter England. 1 , Fox-hunting has made a secure place for itself in English literature, as every uci vi uuyj iu say uounng 01 descriptions ot out-door sports, knows, for it is a British institution. The chase of tna fox is weal chase. It must enjoyed in the early morning of the winter, when tne love of out-door lire, 1 wl"i-h is the basis of the sportsman'! healthful enjoyment, can be gratified under the best conditions. The larger tne company the better, so that com pauionship adds to the pleasure. There is no necessity for silence or strategy. Ko unfair advantage, according to the sportsman's code is taken of the victim. The unskilful can participate in it with as keen enjoyment if without an equal chance for the honors of the brush, as veterans. Indies can ride to the hounds, and men that lack horses are not thereby denied participation, while those who are mounted have need for all their skill and endurance as equestrians. It is a sport in which all classes can and do take pride. The ladies and gentlemen assemble at the meet, at an early hour in the morn ing, mounted for the chase. The farm ers come on foot. The master huntsman withholds the hounds, eager for the race, until the morning greetings are cheerily exclianged, and expectancy and the bracing air have produced the true sjiorting spirit. And then the hunt begins. The hounds make excursions in every direction, keeping, however, within hearing of one another, and riders and footmen follow slowly. When a f resh track is scented, the suc cessful dog gives expression to lus own delight, the others "oiien" and follow him, at first slowly, now and thenlosin, the trail and going tuck to find it again, A little laUr it Incomes warmer. The hounds follow it with greater ease, at a sw.fter pace, aud in louder chorus. Kow the excitement of the race begins. The riders spur their horses to keep pace with the dogs. Ihe footmeu abandon the race behind the hounds, and take shorter routes to what each considers the course the fox is likely to take. Some go in the wrong direction, and lag further and further behind. Others anticipate dogs aud riders, and meet them at the crowning moment. It not infrequently happens that the whole forest for miles around is alive with the army and its stragglers which are following one good runner. The fox is uot a rapid runner uatil he becomes fully aware of the danger, and then he is likely soon to run himself down, so that when the hounds come within sight of him his strength is almost exhausted. And it Is only where the track is fresh that the hounds go at great speed. But the most exciting period of the race is likely to be long enough to give horses and riders, and pedestrians as vigorous exercise as any but cavalry desire. Yet it is invigora ting and exciting, without being violent or dangerous. The excitement is just great enough to supply a motive for rule across fields and over fences, and through the forest, wherever the sly victim leads, aud the baying of the hounds acts on the sportsmen as music on tile soldiers making a charge. There are just falls and bruises, and other accidents enough to bear witness to the engaging nature of the sport to hint of recklessness without causing serious fright. The sportsman carries off the honors who is the first to ize the fox after the hounds have captured him, and the trophy is the bruslu There is sure to be a spirited struggle for this, and the gallant fashion still holds in England of rewarding the most daring lady in the chase with the fox's tail. Kor is it any wonder that fox-hunting has from time immemorial beeu one of the favorite diversions of the country gentlemen In Northern England it isau unwritten law that miners aud farmers and all the country folk shall sjiend Kew Year's day on the chase, and there are always parties of ladies and gentlemen who join them in this combination of merry making and healthful sport. And it is a matter of honor that a fox shall not lw entrapped or shot. The country gentle man would judge any person fit for treason and unworthy of resjwet who should wantonly kill Reynard, and thereby take away the chance for him to sacrifice Ins hie nobly to tne cause ot healthful and merry sport for a whole community of hunters. There are as many days of genuine pleasure in store for English menjand women as there are foxes in the kingdom, and nothing but the extension of the British Empire gives greater glory than the capture of many brushes. HERUXCHIKMSER The Fonnlains and Gardens of King Ludwie's Barariau Versailles. The palace, which was intended to be an exact imitation of Versailles, stands on a highland near one end of an island, looking toward l'rien. As the land was low in front it was necessary to fill it in with soil to the height desired for the parterres and terraces. The trees were all cut away to the shore of the lake, giving a vista through the main land, and the hills in the distance on that side are visible. This was intend ed as the royal approach to the palace. Whatever the visitor may have heard in regard to its extent or magnificence, he is not likely to be disappointed. The palace consists of a facade, to which access is gained by a series of immense steps. Back of the facade extend two large, long ells inclosing a marble court. At the right and left a. e wings, only one of which is finished, the other remaining an architectural skeLtou. The facade and two wings present a front not far from a quarter of a mile in length. In front are the terraces, with immense fountains and brilliant flower beds, falling gradually down to the general level of the island. It was the idea of King Louis during the Litter part of his Wfp to cover every th ng with gold. This plan has been but partialiy carried out as regards the fountains, but they present in their un finished state a splendid area of gilded surface. The two principal, which occupy the right and left of the first terrace, are large marble basins. That at the right is occupied by an immense pile of natural rocks surmounted at the height of thirty feet by a colossal figure of a genius mounted on a Pegasus. At the base, C.io, mounted on a sphinx, proclaims the defeat of the monsters, : I.!.-- 1 .!! ,, . iaiuai n uh.ii u uaiue uau ueen wageu ti. .,..!. v., t-. . r ine soutu uaseno represents i ortun jeated on a throne surrounded b1 cueruLoi x uriuer on in angles ot thr terrace are two fountains copied Iron Versailles, that -of Soana and of the Dawn, Beyond the terrace and its im mediate belongings there is little t re ittla yi call the park of Versailles. Time was wanting to develop the King's plans, therefore beyond these fine fountains, these masses of marbles and the hand some statues that decorate the esplanade in front of the palace one hardly cares to look. To the lower terrace one de scends by a series of twenty-two 3teps nearly three hundred feet in length. Here are other fountains of marble, adorned with classical groups and gro tesque figures. The gardens, alleys, walls and rustic paths beyond are bare ly sketched. THE BAZAARS OP CAIRO. Quaint and Dingy Shops and Their Rich Treasuries. The Cairene bazaars are as marvel lous in their way as anything one sees in this "crazy quilt" city. You can go to them in a carriage but not through mem. 1 ou can go through them par tially on donkeys: but to see them thor oughly, you should go to them often and on foot. Narrow alleys between the low booths, where solemn gowned-and- turbaned creatures sit cross-legged. smoking, drinking coffee, counting their beads, or in silent meditation, i rom any of which they will rouse themselves to say: "Very sheep." "How much?" "Ten piastre." "Too much" "Ko, very sheep." "Eight piastres?" "Ten.' "Six piastres?" "Ten; very sheep.' "Four piastres?" "Ko, no, no!" Then you turn away laughing. Sometimes you are allowed to go; but usually you are soon stopped, and the dialogue be gins again, when you should stand man fully by your lowest offer. "Ten pias tre?" "Four." "Eight piastre?" "Four," "Six piastre?" "Four." "Oh, I ruined, ruined:" "Four," "Take, tike!" with an accent of de-pair that seems to portend instant bankruptcy, You feel a little mean, but recover rap idly when the merchant having put away your piastres, eagerly offers you the rest or his stock at the same price. Then you feel "done," and inclined to demand the return of a part of your money. There are certain expensive things, like silk, where you have to sit down and spend the morning. It is very amusing to see the Anglo-Saxons. fresh aud fair and clean, and striving to be patient, sitting among the grave and shadowy Orientals, and waiting until a decent offer is made. Sometimes the alleys are shaded from the sun by mat tings or boards or rugs stretched from roof to roof of the high overhanging houses, and the sunlight strikes through rifts and cracks In rays and sitears of solid gold. Silk from Ifcimascus, and soft stuffs of mixed cotton and silk; gold and siver ornaments, bracelets and anklets and rings and collars, rough work from the Soudan and tine work from smiths here in Cairo; pottery and brasswork, rags and mattings, fruit and tobacco and grain, coffee and drugs and china aud carved wool, scarfs and handkerchiefs, firearms. and swords and strange knives. In the Tunis bazaar are the Moors, who are neither black, umbra, nor red nor white, but are or a strange bleached or livid hue. Here are woolen stuffs and cotton stuffs and slippers of curious shapes and of all sizes and colors. The wood bazaar where one can see and smell the pine. dear to all southern hearts, and logs that might have come from the mes- quite trees of Texas. The spice bazaar darker and more picturesque than any other, where the air is heavy with rich odors and perfumes, some familiar some strange, and where one goes back in voluntarily to the familiar old story of how the Jealous brethren, wishing to get rid ot the young "dreamer," lifted up their eyes and looked, and behold a company of Ishmaelites came from GU ead with their camels, bearing spice3 and balm and myrrh, going to carry it down to Egypt." And so the young Joseph was sold. And to this day the caravans come, bringing their spices down into Egypt. Following the tor tuous lane to what seems an indefinite distance, refusing bargains and beggars on all sides, making your way with difficulty In some places because of the throng of people, you come at last to the old town gate, the Bab ez uweleh, or, as it is often called, the Ba)l llu- tawelli, from a tradition that the most revered of all the Mahammedan saints lives behind one of the doors. The two huge towers on either side are built of solid blocks of stone. The g..tcs have bars of iron on them, aud between the iron and the wood are rows upon rows of old nails, aud on the nails are bits of rags, of string, of leather; bunches of hair and wool. This extraordinary decoration is made by people who enter Into contracts, or who make vows a nail is put in as a witness, or a piece of string is tied to a nail already there. Once having done this, the Moslem feels he has sworn by the holy saint, and will on no account break his oath. Outside . the gate hang bales of wood and stone. thrown into the city during the siege of Mohammed All. Free Access to Windsor. I happened to visit Windsor the other day when the Queen was holding an 'investiture." Several matters struck me with surprise, t or one tunig tne remarkable freedom accorded to the public of entry to the Castle, and its appurtenances. All the opfn spaces within the precincts, except tne quad rangle Itself and the private garden. seemed to be free to everybody. The Windsor children use as a play-ground the grassy sloie in front o! St. George's Chapel and the region about the Wind sor end or tneing vaiK. mere is not a gentleman's seat in the kingdom wiiere very mucn greater seclusion is not maintained. Tlre are plenty of sentries, but they do not interest them selves jabout the .eople who lounge about their beats. Here and there, at Intervals is a bcnerolent-looking police man in uniform, whose leading func tion seems to be to gossip with any one who will eossi with him. With some practice in thr.t sort of introspection I could not se a single detective in plain clothes. Tat the queen is in the resi dence is proclaimed by what I suppose we should call a white nag nymg irom the top o? the Round Tower. But such flagl.jo meaner piece or bunting can well be conceived tlian "the banner of Britain'' which, it seems, is thought good eaough to mark the personal pres ence of the sovereign. It is much larger than s good-sized bandana. The most econwnical Lord Lieutenant in the Kinrdom would be ashamed to display so '.ltry and slobby a rag. Our hone for self is strongest and less inelflm when it is blended with hope for tne woria. The most dangerous of all flattery is the common kind that we bestow upon ourselves. Life is a duty, and one ought to de sire its preservation. Wilfully to let It decay would be a sin. THE BELIEF IX MONSTERS. How Remarkable Giants and Start liuz Beasts Have Been Displayed. The great lesson which Cuvler taught the world was that many races of animals were entirely extinct, and that nature's chain of existence bad not one, but many missing, links. From his recognition of that fact the science of pakeantology may be said to date, remarks Professor W. B. Scott But the carnivorous nature of the mas todon was too fascinating an absurdity to be so easily killed, and it continued to appear at intervals. Aa late as 133c we find a Kew England medical pro fessor writing as if it were an unques tionable fact. The great theory lin gered still longer, and even yet cannot be considered entirely extinct among the unlearned. The dictum that the superstitions of the age are but the science of preced ing ages receives ample confirmation in the history ot this subject. Kot lon ger ago than 1846 a mastodon skeleton was exhibited in New Orleans as that of a giant. The cranium was made ol rawhide, fantastic wooden teeth were Gtted in the jaws, all missing parts were restored after the human model, and the whole raised upon the bind legs. It certainly conveyed the notion ot a "hideous, diabolical giant." and was no doubt responsible for manj nightmares. As a sad commentary on the state of the medical profession in the southwest at that time, it may be added that the exhibitor was perfectly honest, in his belief, and to support hit faith he had a trunk full ot physician's certificates that these were human bones. In 1S40 "Dr. Koch, a German char latan, created a great sensation by an nouncing the discovery of the levia than of Job, which he called the Mis sourium, from the State where it was found. It turned out, however, to be nothing but a mastodon preposterously mounted. Koch had added an extra dozen or more joints to the backbone and ribs to the chest, turned the tusks outward into a semicircle, and conver ted the animal into an aquatic monstei which anchored itself to trees by means of its sickle-shaped tusks and then peacefully slumbered on the bosom of th waves. Like the Siberians, he found interesting confirmation of his views in the Book of Job, that refuge ot nerplexed monster-makers. Koch took his leviathan in London, where it was purchased by the British Museum and reconverted Into a mastodon by Professor Owen, who at once recognized Its true nature. She Becomes a Public Benefactor by Raising the Standard of Egg Lajinjj. Mr. French, of Otlsco Valley, is the proud owner of a hen of marked abil ity. She is a hen which evidently has no taste ror the beaten path, atie de clines to be a mere imitator and echo of the routine hens that have preceded her. She is a ben which prefers to do her own work in her own way, unin fluenced by the prevailing fashion. Were Dr. Emerson living he would probably speak of her as having origi nal relations to the universe. At all events she is that sort of a hen. The ordinary hen lays an egg with a single yelk, the exceptional ben contribute: to an era of prosperity eggs with a double yolk; but the able Olisco Valley hen conforms herself to neither of these system of egg-laying. The out side shell of the egg which she place upon the market Is ample enough to accommodate two eggs, and does actually contain the white and yelk such as are found in tne familiar gro cery-store egg. "And in addition," we quote from the Syracuse Journal "within the yelk of the outer one is second perfect egg with a hard shell. The brilliant achievement of this Onondago County hen is not only nota ble in itself but is clothed with signal Interest regarded as a protest against the ultra-conservatism which charac- t-.r.zes hens as a race. Your average Leo, not only in Onondaga but in the rest of the counties of the State, hold ing fast to the maxim "It is good to let well enough alone, never attempts to lay what might be called advanced esgs eggs with modern improvements. Year after year from the beginning to the end of her career she goes on lay ing the same style ot egg that hei mother and her grandmother laid be fore her. She is without ambition; the spirit of progress which is the spirit oi the age is not in her. But the hen oi Otisco Valley is no such bird. Such is her conception of her duty to hei day and generation and such her confi dence in her own capacity that she lays two eggs where her fellow-worker lay: one an egg within an egg. In thus raising the standard of egg-laying she is a public benefactor. May her tnbt but not the price of eggs increase. Music as a Sanitary Measure. A correct education of the voice, in volving as it does, the proper exercise of the organs of the throat anl lungs, is a most important part or what we call physical education. No organs will do more and better work under proper training and care than those ot the voice, and none break down earlier under bad treatment. Trained voices last longer in healthy condition: than any others, and the reflex of clear tones and healthy lungs on the vigor of the whole system is worthy of consideration. Dr. Rush declares his conviction that the German people are largely indebted for their exemption from pulmonary diseases to the strength and volume which their lnngs acquire in the practice of vocal music, which is well nigh universal among that peo ple, extending from childhood to old age. When American life is so sub ject to the ravage of the diseases of the throat and lungs that Zo.ouo per sons die annually in iew England alone from these causes, it is well worthy of consideration that music be practised as a sanitary measure. A Queen's Ball Dross. At the last court ball before Lent Queen Marguirite of Italy wore a skirt of very palegreen faille, embroidered with gold, the train of a somewhat darker shade, being trimmed with a raised brocade of leaves in varied shades. Her Majesty was a perfect blaze of emerald, which harmonized perfectly with the dress, and on her head she wore a diadem of diamonds and emerald. Her long gloves were of pale cafe-au- lait shade. AGED WOXDEH-VrORKERS. Old Dutch Women In Pennsylvania Who 1'roresn to Practice Witch craft. In the old Dutch villages of Penn sylvania, are many old women whom the people believe to possess super natural powers. I v Lai ted two of these witch women, as they are called Bar bara Fisner and Mother Roske. Bar bara lived in the Dunkard settlement, in a rude cabin in the mountains, six or seven miles from Reinholdsville. She must be now eighty-five years old. She was active and apparently physi cally strong when I saw hsr, but much bent and wrinkled, with hair as white as snow. Cunning and shrewdness were plainly pictured on her face, and her eyes were as keen as a hawk's, and not much larger. She, like all of 'he "wonder-working" women ot the re gion, has an ancient volume printed in the German language, containing many fantastic signs and symbols, and known as a "mystery book." Some of these curious volumes are said to be over two hundred years old, and were brought from Germany by ancestors of the present wonder-workers, who were themselves adepts in witch-doctoring, Ko alien hand is allowed to touch these sacred books, and but fen persons have ever seen inside thei heavy covers. Barbara Fisher con Ones her ministrations to hernelghbors, and they go to her from miles around. Husbands take their wives, fathers their children and young men their sweethearts to Mother Fisher for treat ment for all ills and the removal of evil spells, and to obtain charms that will be potent m love and business. She will, for a fee, give an applicant a charm to ward off lightning from his buildings, confound his enemies by bewitching them, making their wells run dry, forcing their cows to give bloody milk, prostrating their families with sickness, or bringing any dire punishment upon them that the appli cant will pay for. She will undertake the Job of stunting the growth of a baby, destroying a rival's beauty, separating man and wife, settling lover's quarrels, laying at rest a lover's doubts as to the faithfulness of his sweetheart or convincing him that she Is false,procurlng desired marriages, or doing anything equally absurd either in the way ot scattering blessings or calling down evils, according to the desires of her customers and the size of the fee. Old Mother Roske is said to be ninety years old, and she looks it. She lives alone and her most ambitious feat in wonder-working was the seeing of a gold mine In the vicin ity, and collecting a fee from every farmer in the neighborhood for the privilege of digging nightly for the precious deposit. After pretty much the whole of the ground in the com mumty had been turned up, and no gold was found, .Mother nosKe an nounced that the work might as well cease, as it was evident that some one among the diggers had a cow with blood In her horns, and utill the cow could be found and killed, and the blood drawn rrom the horns and spilled on the ground at mid-night when the moon was in its first quarter, it would be useless to look farther for the treasure. The farmers sient much time trying to find such a cow among their stock, and, although that was several years ago, whenever a cow is killed to this day in that vicinity her horns are sawed off in hopes that the blood may be found and used as Mother Roske directed, in order that the gold mi do may be discovered. Some of the charms prescribed by these witch women, and faithfully use J and believed in by the credulous people among whom they operate, it is mild to call ridiculous, in the potency of j witch-hazel, the wonder-makers rely greatly. Young women are instructed to carry its leaves in their bosoms as a love-charm; so long as they are there worn no rival can win their sweet hearts from them. If they would dream of their lovers, they must sleep with witch-hazel leaves under their pillows: but, in all cases, the charm must be prepared by the wonder-maker. To make an enemy's well run dry, ashes of witch-hazel must be forced into the mouth of a toad over which the witch woman has held an incantation. By dropping the toad thus prepared iuto tha enemy's well the water will leave it. One ot the worst things that cau befall these superstitious farmers is t j have a cow give Dioouymuk. mat is regarded as the genuine work of the devil himself. Consequently, if one man ?s pining for vengeance ou another be wreaks it to his satisfaction by obtaining a toad which has been fed on witcn-nazei Dy a wonaer-worxer, and placing it where the enemy will step on It. That will turn his cow's milk into blood with neatness and dis patch. Oue of the jobs that requires nice work on the part of the wonder-worker is the separation of a man and wife, which seems to be another favorite way these farmers have of seeking ven geance for wrong done them. The de signing and be i rt less person who would tear man and wife as under must first get a hair from the head of a woman 1 whose feair is tne opposite in color to that of the wife of the man in whose family the separation is desired. The hair, however, must under no circum stances be red. Then the simple fact must be ascertained as to which was born the nearest to running water, the husband or the wife. Whichever one it may be, that is the one who must be operated upon. Something that the husband and wife have both worn at the same time in their lives must be se cured and burned, and the hair held in the smoke that arises. The smoked uair s mission 13 uiea 10 oe ourieu at tun omo ui Mi nuc.c "oifrom the thousands of dollars he doomed couple live, so that water from 1 for nj3 cuttle. me eaves may arop on ie spou me name of the person who is being oper- AtrA nmn ia then written on a Diecn of l - atea upon is wen wruien on piece or. tl paper and burled where the shadow of something cast oy the light or the moon will fail upon it. If the man and wife do not immediately quarrel, and the quarrel is not followed by the wife packing up and returning to her fa ther's after that, it is prima facie evi dence that the operator was a little short ot faith in the infallibility of the spell, and he can not hope to succeed in his fell designs until he stands In an east wind for three successive days and prays fervently for abiding faith iu Ute power of the witch women. Envy is fixed on merit; and, like a fore eye. Is offended with everything that is bright. Little troubles wear the heart out. It Is easier to throw a bombshell a mile than a feather. . Sow good serviies; sweet remeni-; btances will grow from them. j NEWS IX BRIEF. In Gerard, Kansas, the druggists have refused to sell liquor. Fresh water is soil in Hurler, Wisconsin, at 25 cents a barrel. The Penobscot ice crop is estima ted at 102,000 tons this season. People In Barber County, Kansa3, will cultivate Russian suntlowers for Tuel. Chicago has 11 or the 37 oleomar garine factories found by the revenue officers. Seattle, Wyoming Territory, has already six volunteer fire companies orgmized. The prevalence of glanders out that way ha3 lately been exciting Mon tana horse owners. Henry Botel, a "phenomenal" tenor, contemplates spending next sea son in America. Mine. Sembrich has been appointed a Prussian Court vocalist by the Em peror of Germany. A bull fight, a Texas authoritj stales, is now taken to Include a tussle with a tough steak. About one hundred boy3 are In the plumbing class or the Kew York Trade School engaged in studying tie art. In an area of 100,103 squire miles in the northwest province of India there are said to be 41,000,000 Hindoos. A pipe of beaten gold has beet found in an orange grove at Apcpka. Florida, by the owner or the property. A Mexican has been selling to th unwary at San Jose (Cal.), nuggets ol Unroil, representing them to be ol silver. "Eyesolngy" is now chronicled as fashion's latest fad, and il means th telling ot character from the color ot the eyes. Exclusive of Bostonese, there are spoken in Boston, a local authority tells us, soma thirty different lan guages. Out of 35G women registerel as entitled to vote in Burlington, Ver mont, only one availed herself of tin privilege. The use of coal grows more ar.i more common "down Est," even among farmers who have ample sup plies of wood. Vito Cercelone, who Aied recentlj at Milan, has left by will his entir: fortune, amounting to SiGO.000, to King Humbert. Wild honey, to the amount of over 300 pounds, was found by twe men in a hollow tree, near Utica, Penn sylvania, recently. Walt Whitman is said to have re ceived a letter from Lord Tennysoc lately, in which the laureate addresses him as "Dear old man." A new license schedule adopted for Lawrence, Massachusetts, sets ilJO as the figure innkeepers are to pay, aud cl for druggists. It Is lelieved that thousands will be added this year to Alaska's popula tion, as miuiug and exploring axe to be energetically prosecuted. A steam tug of TOO tons burtbau is under construction at Bangor, Me. It is claimed that she will be the largest boat of her kind iu this country. A syndicate of Amsterdam bankers has purchased 'X'Q square miles of timler land iu western Florida on which to found a colony of Hollanders. K. O. Sbolnutt, who was hanged until he was almost lifeless, recently, " in Jackson county, Georgia, says he suffered very little pain by the opera tion. The Spanish iron ore trade is re- nortpil til f ilenresPfi hv tliA Aarinii, delays to which steamers are subjected at the port of Bilbao. The orei much used in England. An edd biriary occurred at a Chester, Kew York, recently, where thieves stole the forms of paper which were ready for the press. Kewspaper rivalry is the supposed cause. Dr. Riegler, of Pesth, Hungary, is said to have succeeded in photo graphing a pro;ectile fired from a gun during its passage through the air at the rate of 410 metres per second. The Canadian fishermen are trying to buy enough clam bait in Maine to supply them tl.e entire fishing season, so that retaliation, if decided on, will not harm tliem iu this particular. (Quarantine against cholera in Chili, established on the Isthmus of" Panama and in Peru, makes it neces sary to despatch the United States malls to Caili via Rio de Janeiro. The committee of the British soci eties of Bostou which has in charge the proposed observance of Queen Vic toria's jubilee has selected a3 the pro gramme of tnu day a picnic, banquet and ba.l. The Mechanics' Institute of San Francisco received last year $00,580, of which $31,01.10 represent the profits of the industrial exhibition. The in stitute holds property to the value of ?o,5.Si Two prisoners at Tippeanoe, O., have been discharged from custody on a point made by their counsel that the crime with which the commitment papers charged them, "burglarizing," was one unknown to the law of the State. It sounds tunny, dug tna name or the new Consul to Mexico, a Missouri gentleman, is Elizabeth Caroline Moore. He was name! for his two grandmothers. His grandfathers seem t have beeu neglected. A Montana man. who recently . arrived in Chicago and sold five car ! loads of cattle, brought up a little i later in a police court, after "doing lne tovn wita a balanca 0f 75 cent3 got In a trial before a justice ot the . ...ww of T n,,l T T .. .. 1 ! 1" - " uuiuni ,tm,w,r..r ohn r th. nrf the plaintiff whipped the defendant while the attorneys keut the crowd back. The Court then returned and the trial proceeded. Free ferries are being established across the Thames, at Woolwich, (London). The first is expected to go into operation in the spring, with two steamers large enough for the convey ance at one time of several vehicles and horses and some hundreds of passen gers. A false bottom was accidentally discovered in a case of Italian wine at the Boston Custom House a few days ago revealing several eld paint ings. An examination showed that the whole consignment of fourteen cases was similarly fixed up. Ta ' persons who were about to receive the wine, upon which the duty had been paid, disappeiued. f si i. - 15 . iu. V: ir- m iff: t-r iKr-l .J: 1-..