Light Will Break Tomorrow. What though our skies lip overcast And clouds of trouble lower? , Though disappointments orow.lln? fast, Seem life's ungrateful dower? Though trinla throng upon our way, Shall we succiini to sorrow? No! Let u gather hope, and say, 'I ha light will break tomorrow! Tliouzh fickle Foitune hide her fact) Our brave enilcavors scorning, And robs us of tome promised grace Without moment's warning, Let in not tremble nt her frown Kor care nml trouble borrow, Dut crush our dark forebodings ilowu The light w ill break tomorrow' 'eyonil thoahnd iws of llio til -lit Tile welcome tun Is shlnimr. The c'oucls lli.it loom upon our xllit Have nil ii ullvor lining; The darkest hour precedes the dawn, And joy succeed to sorrow The Interest niuht will yet be gone, And Unlit will brn:ik tomorrow! "-Helen Whitney ( lark, In Saturday Xlgli' EQUAL TO THE TEST. 'Oil, dear, no! llo-sio llitnl'll never amount to tniK'ii of nnylhiug. l'tolty ciiotigli, if mi v ono fancies mil hair and eyes thru Imve n yellow glint In litem like n tiger's, but Unit never win iny stylo of lieuuly ! (Ilvo mo it gill that has something moro substantial than muru good looks to fall bai l; on if the I lino ilionlil over come when it is necessary, instead of n girl who Iiat nothing moro tlinn some moulily classio on tlio cml of hor tongue, or somo frlttrry fancy work forever In ber fingers!" 'La, sakes, brother," feebly expos tulated Mm. Haul, "you look as If it worn really going to be! I know Bos alo I foml of her bonki ami pretty fominino fancies, but I don't blame, the giil. 1 mod to liko 'em whou I wit her ngct Hull know alio ain't any moro liko Jessica or Minerva than they aro like her." Abrain A'vcy was too deeply en grossed in his subject to heed t tie qitict sarcasm in the. lait portion of tier response. Illght, Emily," retorted, quickly, "no noio ho nin't! Jos or Min cottld take hold and do for themselves if they should ever huvo to, but Bessie there laugh!' Nobody saw a slender shadow flit across I lie window near which Abrani Alvcy sat, neither did they hour the footsteps which approached tlio open door, thou stole swiftly and quietly away, A tall, slender girt, with wny masses of red-brown linir clustering around a sweet, serious face, out of which shono llio wido brown eyes which had in them tlio "yellow glint"' to which Aliratn Alvoy objected. Unwillingly Itessio limit hnd over. hoard Hie whole of their conversation which alluded to her! Slio had n book in her hand, nud as alio turned away thore was just n suspicion of tears on the long, silken fringe of lathes around tlio brown eyes, a tremor iu the enrvod, sensitive lips. "1 wondo ," she murmured, as she went swiftly down the grass-grown path to her fuvorilo haunt under a clump of graceful, silvory lnrulics, "if I am so very useless? I'ncle Alvey coriulnly thinks so! But," with a sigh, "I never had tho strength to do all that Jossio and Minnie might ! I wish I hnd, though!" Poor child, she did not know, as alio uttered this vain wish, that it was literally liko grafting tlio, fair, frail orchid blossom on tho strong, hardy Northern rosol Tlio harsh remarks that the hud overheard rauktod deeply In lier lionrt Just now. lint "truili is stranger than fiction.'' Sunny skies mid fair promises stir, rounded My rllo Farm and its inhubi. tauts at present. Thcro was no fenr of casualties in tho lionrt of honest John Hunt, for, as ho said, lio'd "laid by a cousidorublo pllo to use on a rainy day," if tho timo ever cume. But they had no fear of Us coining, not (hoy t But, Ins for the consistencies of hu manity J Dnvu in tho progressive jown, near the outskirts of which stood Myrtle Farm, once a week John Hunt carried a goodly load' of farm ptoiluco; there ho hoard conversations which sot him to thinking. Men talked of making a lifetime fortuno iu some bold pociilnlioii; of gelling ('corners'' In grain, buying "low," then selling "high," unci, although lie did not just undurstiiud as clearly as be ought, lie would ponder these things as lie jultod homeward evur tho rough country roads, and the moro lie thought the moro fusciuuled and tempted lis be cm no. At lust, one bright morn in; he si art ol or the market us usual, but boucuili Ids cout, securoiy wadded iuto a snug roll into his vest pocket, was a largo roll of bills. IU was going to try his luck. It would bo such a lino tiling for the borne folks, he argued to himself, If It happened to come out ahead. No thought of the ot hot' possibility scumod to troublo lil in. lie seemed unusually restless for tho next few days after his return. Ho was singularly anxious Is read tho dally papers. "A binly'd think you'd boon specu la! in', .l-din," observed Mrs. Hunt, one day, ns she repealed some remarks a third timo befuro he homd her. A queer look settled over his f:ico but lie made no response. lint nil nt iiiieo ho uticrc.l a stilled exclamation and started to his feet; his face had grown unusually pulo nud tlio baud which grasped bis lint trem bled witli nervous agitation. I must go up to town, Kindly,'' ho exclaimed, "at once! Whore's Bess?" Mrs. Hunt looked her a-tonlsh- incut. 'To town!" sho repeated, blankly. "Why, you was thorn only lnl Kuitir- day! Anything happened?" with n glance at Hie pnper, which hud flut tered unheeded to the lloor. "Xo. uut much, only well, never mind." Two, three hours pr.sl. Jessica and Mincrvn catun In, two strong, florid girls with loinl voices und blunt man ners, nud Immediately demanded tlml." Pior,myfi:illcd Mis. Hunt shook hot head. 'I don't know, girls, but ho said ho was going In town. Business, 1 guess." "Humph!" ejaculated Jessica "Where's Bessie? liono with him?" 'No. She went for something; l'vo forgot. But tiny rate, she's round somewhere." Tliu Mi-sos Hunt exchanged glances, but deigned no reply to thu patient, overworked mother, who was rather afraid of tlicse self-reliant daughters, preferring in her heart gentle, misun derstood llossle before cither. It was several hours past tho timo for thoir early tea when John Hunt canto homo. Abrain Alvev was with lilui, nud his lips woro comprcssod in u thin, hard lino. John Hunt himself, during the short timo he bad been absent, scemod to have grown years older. Ho was pale, restless, and tho hand which ho rested on the table shook as with pnlsy. His wife ctiino forward, seriously a'nrmcd. "What happened, John.' Anything? llo ymi sick? Just sit down and let me get you a good, strong cup o lea light oil, Il'il do you good," for Iu s,. lie of thu clouds which sometimes obscured their domestic horizon, Kini ly 1 1 it 1 1 1 whs loyal nud true to tho nan whom iu her earlier youth sho hud chosen for batter, for worse. He made a gesture of repugnance at tho suggestion of food or drink, 'I can't cat anything, wifo," ho said, ns ho threw his arms across tho tublo In a hopeless, dejected lashion, and hid his fuco upon I he in. "11 tell her Abrain." lie litis been speculniiu'," went on thai individual, the rigid lines in his face never softening, llio tones of his voice hard and metallic, ns old stool ; "speculniiu', I tell you, and has ended by ruining his family. That's all!" Mrs. Hunt sink helplessly into tho Homes', chnlr und slated, speechless, at her brother. Jessica and Minerva clung together on tho sofa, nil expres sion of almost ludicrous dismay on their faces. "Wotl, I never!" exclaimed Min erva, tho first to break llio heavy silence that ensued. "Fulhor, what ever possessed you?" Jessica suddenly burst into a violent (It of weeping. The bent tlguro besido the table never moved. "Father! Look up!" Without a ghmco in either direction, tall, straight, Willi u bright spot burn ing in cither check and a brilliant glitter in her eyes, Bessie suddenly crossed the room and knelt gently, sympathetically, boside her father's chair. "Fulhor! Don't Inks it so to heart I It cannot be so bad, and," in a lower (one, "I will liolp you now." Thou rfolm Hunt raised his bond, a gleam of hope stealing Into his dreary eyes as he placed his hand tenderly among the red-brown tresses cluster ing above the high white brow. "You, Bossio?'' "Yes, father," sho rcspondod quiet ly. "Try mo and seo." And so it proved. Tho test of which Abrain Alvoy hud oftou bousted had at lust come. But contrary to his expectations, Jessica or Minerva, the "self-roliant girls," did not oouio up to his stand ard. They "hung around," as he ex. pressed it, bemoaning ihelr unlucky fate and making the place almost un. boaralilo to the disheartened man. Ho bore up as long as ho possibly could, thou succumbod to the inevitable. It was thou that Bustle, the use less one," caino lo Hie foro. The "frit tery fancy work" Hint Abram Alvey hud so scornfully condemned, proved Its worth. Bill holy the bright steel ncodlo flew through gouo and silk, and for the dainty ci oat Ions turned out by iho deft Augers Ilessio re ceived a snug competence. Her time was almost tnkan up, but somehow sho managed to crowd In a few music pupils, m il so add a trltlu moro to their income. And It was after giving a lesson one day that she emtio In, and throwing asldu her hat, laid her flushed, bright fuse, on thu pillow bn-ldu her father's. Ha looked nt her fondly, but in a dep. rocnting way. "My dear," ho said, in a strangely weak voice, "you will kill yourself working so! If only Jess or Min'' She placed her hand on Ids mouth with a quick, quaint gesture. No moro ifs,' popn, please," sho said, lightly. "And 1 tun not going towoik so hard now. 1'apa, Ildph Dentin has nkcd me lo marry him und 1 said I would!" llalph Donne! John Hunt reinein beicd him. He belonged to ouo ot the best families In town. For an Instant Iho broken man gazed into tlio fresh, fair face, then drew her close to his breast. "(lod bless you, my daughter," ho said, huskily. And Jessica and Minerva? ' When Bessie was married sho took her father, mother and Iwo sisters homo ilili Iter to tlio linndsomo home her husband gnvo her, and they aro there, bemoaning their fate even yet. Boston (itobe. Beginning of Our I'nilcrdunilln? ol Storms. In tlio yctr 18a 1 a severo storm pre vailed along tlio Kagtertt coast, which for many yoars was known ns the "great September gale." It held that litlo until September, ISO!, when an other and mure remarkable ouo oc curred, which rather alsturbod its clulin lo the honor. It was a little timo after this Hist storm that Red Hold, whllo mnkliig a jmrnoy in Massachusetts, was struck by a some, whut curious fact. Ho noticed that in Massachusetts llio trees prostrated by llio wind, ull lay witli their head to Hie southeast, showing that tho gnlo thero was from tho northwest; but in ('.iiinecticiit the trees blown down iu llio sumo storm lay head lo Hie norlliwot, showing Hint tho galo hud been a southeast one. Ho ascer tained, moreover, that when the wind was blowing southeast iu Mid lie. town, his homo, it was northwest at n place not seventy miles from thero. It was then that tho ldoa fiished across his mind that the gnlo was a progressive whirlwind. That was a great thought. It was such a flash of percept ion as tamo lo Newton whou ho connected tho falling npplo with the planets In space. It was such mi insight Into the meaning of a fact as James Walt had when lie saw tho possibilities of tho force that was rattling the lid of iho kcttlo on his mother's (lie. Tho dovelopment of that idoa was dnstinod one day lo put Hoiltlctd in llio ranks of the great scionllllo thinkers of Ids day. He made this storm tho basis ot Ids in. vostlgntiotis, following ItU researches into its iiioveinontH by a careful col lection of facts in relation to others like it. For ten years ho studied, and examined and compnrod his facts, bo fore he published Ids theory of storms. I'opulur Science Monthly, (juoen Victoria's Uermaii Side. I hoard mi amusing story about England' (uoon tho other day. I don't think it litis over boon published, but tho authenticity was vouched for. It seems that an Kuglisli womun, whoso iiiiino was given lo mo, Is on quito intliimio tonus witli the royal family, though she is without title: Just a plain "Mrs," and from a country family. Ouo time she, with hor little child, Ihrco yours o d, wis lunching with the Queen. At tho table woro Princess Bcatrlco and several others. The Qaeon, in llio cutirso of tho lunch, took up a clilckou wing In hor lingers. Whllo sho was enjoying tho swoutucss of the meat next Iho bone tho little child lookod up and quickly said: "I'ig-eo! Plg-co!" Every ouo was borrltlod. Tho mother foil as It she would like to sink out of cxlstonca. Tlio Qitoeti went on for an instant with the morsel which sho was hold ing la her fingers and thou suidi "You are right, my dear. An English lady would not luko a chicken wing In hor Angora, but vou must boat in mind that J am a German wonun." And she calmly finished tho wlnir. o Tiie rest breathed a low s?gh of tcllof and the mother and child were, on taking their leave, invited to come awalii.rpiilejuro liitor-Ocesu. PENNSYLVANIA PICKINGS. SOXB IMPORTANT HAPPEN INO'I Of Intsrsst to Owsllers la ths Ssrstoss Stats. TIIK TltOtms rONOrtATtTLATKI). oovpnicnn mttimi r. s riir.si: sr-pnui-uTtoH or tiik militia's mi at iiomistkad. In relieving the Dlvhlon of the National Otiard from further service, tlovrrnor 1'at t'son, In a s-er!ul onlor issued from the Ad jutant (leneral's department, desires to ex press to the olhVers and enlisted men his appreciation und rotiRratiihitlous. lit adds: "The promptness with which ynn r sponded lo the sudden rail, the vigorous ex ecution of theenniniiincls, the soldierly con duet nl the place of ilMurbunen. ml demon strate that the ciiuimiind n thel'onstltutlon that 't lie freemen of this I'ointnoinveulth shall be armed, orpatiixcd and disciplined for Its defense' has been lalthfiilly obeyed. Vou hnve liuiintatiied the eonllilence, deserved the gratitude unit won the udniiriitniu ol your fellow citizens in your patriotic ser vices to timintniu the law of tho lutid and the liberty of the itt.eiis. ' KOVKI. OLI MIII AX rKIXIIR VrtnX. Mt. Pleasant opened a throo-duys' t.'olum blaii celebration Wednesday morning with a fantastic parade, the liko of which the staid old town never before saw. Tho First ward public school building tins been turn ed Int booths for the exhibition of every thing in tho lino of merchandise, art and the antique. (In the grounds In tho rear of the btilliling under Immense s' retches ol canvass, are the live sbs k ami machinery, end hero also ure held every kind of dash races. Thflw who attended the recent coun ty lair say it wasn't to be compared to this. To-morrow wilt be farmer's day, and on Friday the school children will hold forth. The attendance to-dny was estimated at 3,i"H). wants .iO,C(i iamoi:s. Mis. M. V. Taylor, thn wo!l known dealer In oil well supplies, und whose place of bus iness is In Pittsburg, has sued tho Pitts burg. I'inciuiiatl, Chicago and M. Louis road for ."iU.iiuo damages for injuries re ceived while traveling on the road. .She re sides at Washington, and was accustomed to go in and out of the city each day. Last June while the trainmen wero attempting to make a running switch here, she was tli row n across several seats by the force ot the cars coining together and received 8 se vere sprain of the burl;. A mi imrn at i-ottsvii.i.i!. At I'ollsville, .,sler, a ward constable and ex-ilepnty slierlll of .Schuylkill county, shot WiIIIhiu Kep'ey, killing him almost In stantly. Kepley, his wife and brothor-ln-law were on their way homo and met a party of Intoxicated younit men, who In sulted them. Zeigler ran out with his re volver, threatening to shoot some ono if they diil not nioveou. Kepley, It Is said, nude some remarks, w hen Zcigler caught and shot him. KATA1.I.V SHOT IIV 111 Itlll.tR'. Burglars entered the residence of Joseph IMskeat Wlll.esbsrro Mr, and Mrs. Disks were aroused und one of the burglars tired two shut-nt the former. One struck him In the hand and the other just above the heart. In kxm worn destroyed the larun barn on the . lames Kveilv farm, near (ireensbiira, together with tiiirses. feed Mini farming Im plements. A dwelling I se ut Staufler, on the Mt Pleasant branch was also burned bv lire liimdi. lws ",iM; slightly insured. ' New Casti.k physicians aro puzzled ovei the death of Marv Atkiu-on, aged 2:1, Mem day evening. She reliied Thursday in seemiliK good health, and Friday wits dis covered lo be Iu a trance. She died without having spoken u word, ulthoiigh she up imired to be coincious. Fiikiikiiu k Hakk. a well-known citizen of Herman Va ley, near Huntingdon while at tempting to board u Pennsylvania railroad train at Mount l'ni"ii fell under iho wheels and was iiistantlv killed, lie was OJ years of age und leaves a Itiunly. 1'oi iitki:x men were burled bv the cuvIiof In ot a sewer nt llurristuirtf. Two were Killed ami twelve wero rescued alive. A suootixo accident nt f lynlhannn will result In thodeiih of tvS moil. Three Italians niiiued '. llavouia, II. Sessi and Lawrence .Muslim went out hunting. In in tern tiling to cross a fence both barrels of Muslim's shot kiiii were exploded and the shot struck I he other Italians, Muslim's companions, who had Just erf used over. Hit three light rains liavo fallon in Cen ter county, since July 4, ami tho st renins oud webs are rapidly drying up. Typhoid lever is epidemic In many places, owing t-j Hie Htaguuiit water peopla were cotupvlUd to drink. TuiiKKnyn oniployid nt a miles near tVilkesliarre have been wounded ut different times by being shot utiu a mysterious man ner wniie passing uloeg a lonulv place on their way to work, Kriink llurd-ning was wounded in thethlgh, John Kverhart in the foot und John Fremont in the breast. At Trent, Jacob Iteinminger was killed in a runaway, II. T. Kri.i.v. al'.'yesrold bov living near I'nioniown, fell irom a Ireo while gathering nuts, and was Insluutly killed. TitRpeoploof Huntingdon, are being tcrroiizcd by burglars, Scurcely a night bss iussed of late but lint one or more places have been robbed, N'KAn Mccliiinlcsburg, William Reed was smbu-lied and murdered by guul Stone Hitnduy night, and the latter is atill at huge. Itolli men were courting tho same girl. J. T. Kki.i.kv, a brukemnn on the South west IVnnsylvunin road, was fatally Injured st ruioiitown wMIe coupling cars. Ji sr.ru 1)om:iii p, a Baltimore and Ohio brukeman, tell from a trulu ut Tuyiorstowu, and received fatal injuries, Tiik full of some broken machinery in an Altoona fewer which wus being repulred, in stuutly killed John Young, Aiui'Takt (ienkiiai, HhiiKM.AXn denies thut the l ulling out of the troops for Homo s ead will cost thn State SiHhi.iioo, Ho guy, tho totul will be u bout tlno.oix), I'fthii Hallux, of rhitudulph'a. who has been an Inmate in the House of Correction 30 times, in attempting loesiute from there by means of an improvised rope, fell 45 feet and was killed. Mikf Itirii and Antonio Csrletto were in stantly killed and Archangel Rich was futully injured by jumping from a runaway train on the Sugar ltuu ruitroud, neur brad ford. Kkward Raxkix of Uniontown who stole a Hock of sheen recently, fa again in tall i.,r tteuling Djvid Ulenu's vuhss ut ituiikiu. A MtsEn named fieorge Levis fell from freight train at I'liillipsburg and died of his injuries. William Miti ur.i.i.,of New fastis. ha the honor of catching a uiiis alonge in the river opposite lani pmce. inn iisli weighed !M uoumis. and is the first of lLa caught in the witera neur (bit place. SOLDIERS' COLUMN OAPTtfRK Or TJI34 CtXIPXO.T An Ancaunt of ths buttle of 9e.t.!e Pass If o iMrttjI-.isat. t would like jr'.vo my rccilltc tion f the battle of Habinrj pass, Tecin which tho ';. s. s. ci i non was ilistoyed and hor crew and one "nmrmnv ol Toth K. ". taken jirlsoners. I would nlso like-to -.'eiurect a I'.ils.lttko i ti'ioir the number ' nf tho Confede rate forces that wtm In nt,, I Xar ...... ''"'around Sabine '" Puss unit tlcnti- l.iont. Tho "Avnlanche-Appeal" snld thero was only 49 men on tnu cnnfcilc rato side, and they wero out of ammu nition. That paper ran tell thlj tale to tho Marines. Tho men who manned the fort wore called tlio D ivics (luards, sn artillery nranlz ition recruited in Houston Tcs., und wero always un derstood by me to number 110 officers und men. Cspt. Davics was the commander, but somehow he never showed up when theie wss any llghtim,' on band. On those Interesting occasions ho del egated his power to Lieut. Kichard Dowlinp;, becauso Dick I ottpposu could handle an Irish compnny in a fight better than he could; and if Dick was killed, what matter. It wus like the other Irishman that was going to be hung he was us'td to it. About the "ammunition ijiviiit; nut Just as tlio Clifton surrendered, and about thero being no one in the fort but 40 men, let us go down and sec how this was, and give you some f icts. We had a deserter from the rebel army on board, ho was second-class llreman and his name was Jon Dowers. When he ssw the white flag was going to be huiited, lie made, a break tor life and liberty. He jumped in to the Ar izona, as sho was tho nearest ship la the oiling. When the rebels saw him they culled out to hiiu to conio back, and u company of infantry that, lay concealed came cut and fired ot him, but the tide wan going out and soon took him out of mttskct-rano. Then ihe 8-incli Colttnibiads that tlio fort was armed with tired a least two rounds pur gun nt him. Whether . loo ever reached liberty or was shot 1 don't know. Tlio rebel steamer rioebuck came up at this time, and we wero ordered aboard by tho Captain of this infantry company that (li l tho shooting ut Joe Ilowers, and this company guurdud tia to Iieatimont; so there wero 149 iiimi who wero at Subine Pass on thu Con federate sido thut wo know of. When we prisoners arrived nt lieattniont wc were put on a train and sent to Hous ton, where we arrived that night. Next morning tho daily paper came out tlio ''Telegram" or ''Telegraph," I forget which name it was that gave an account of the fight nt Sabine Pass. After giving a putT to the Davies Guards and Lieut. Dick Dowling, the articlo in the newspaper went on to say: "After tho (Instruction of his gun boat Gen, Franklin pit his tail be tween his legs and went in n dog's trot back to New Orloans, like 111 whipped cur that lie was. Hut it it to be regretted that ho did not laud his blue-coated invaders on Texas soil, for they had a wsrm reception for tliotn, The com m it tea which was appointed to receive him was Gen. Sterling Price, (Jen, Tom Oroen, Oon. Dick Taylor, a jetachment from (Ion. Kitby Smith at ilirevepnrt, and two brigades from 'Jon. Clrillin's army; all these wero to bo under the command of our CuMir dc Leon Uen. Magruder." Now listen to this. According to their own account they could have had ao less than HO. (10(1, the wjiolo Confod irstc army of the Transmississippi, to oppose Uen, Flunk I In if lie had to land (iu lexus soil. I distinctly remember lieuring tho Confodorute say: "Wo :au support tho sky with bayonets, tali !" And now alt this grund army .s cttfdown to 41) men. Tlioy might huvo mado it fifty men just for even numbers, llut I suppose thn i-x-Con-federates would not toll a lio for one man. As to the Clifton, sho was a double tnder; that is, alio had a rudder fore tnd aft, i nd she could buck or go ahead without, having to mako a cir cuit. All told, bercrcw numbered 17. men; but at thu battle nf Sabine Pass we had a company of Sharpshooters from the 73th N. Y. She had 10 guns eight (13 -pounders, broadside guns; ono QO-popniler Purrott ride, and one il-inch Dahlgren smoothbore. The Duhlgren and Porrott wero pivot-guns; the Duhlgren on the forcastle or for ward, the l'arrott on tho tiuarter-deck. By turning tho pivot-guns on port m starboard butteries, we had six guns in a buttery. Tho day of tho tight we fought Iho port battory, There" is the Clifton as sho stood manned and armed, snd her gons in position, the 8th day of September, 1S03, when sho got or ders to go up and take the fort ut tlio mouth of Subiue Pass. After gotting signals from somebody, and we ans wering, "AH bands up anchor" was called. Then, after the anchors were up and fast, "Nigger Louey" beat "General quarters," and right merrily did we respond, for the old Clifton and her crew were vets, snd had bad many scraps with the robs be;'nrc, in which we csmn out victorious. Tho Clifton steamed to the fort st half speed. Our guus opened with shrapnel shell and five-s?cond fuse. During this time you could hardly see the fort for the smoke of berating shells, so rapid did we Are. The rebs answorod our fire at irrcgulsr intervals. They made good line shots, but all to high. Wo oot close to the fort, snd the Bharpslmorers opened. Then the signal boll is given, and the old Clifton goes ahead at lull speed; wo are now sbreiat of tho Tort, the guns rosrlng snd muskets rattling everything is going our way. Hump, bump; every- Douy tans lorwsrd the old boat is j aground right under the nose of tho 1 t)l.ll!.l i illumines. When the rebs saw this they gave one yell, and how they poured it Int.i us was a caution, It was their Innlrg. and they kept in until the gamo wus over. When the vessel grounded she slew ed her head towards tne fort, which only left us three guns for use. Soon thn muzzle w is shot ofT; but wc fought on, and those that were not wanted to man the guns, fought with Knrleld riflis. Soon (,ur other brondsido sun ths knocked otT the carriage; but we fought them with the 9-inch gun, and you could pat. your arm down in it; and of course it was useless tf fight longei; besides our Knfleldi were so slogged with powder tint w msdo poor headway firing them. Wc had to J.im tho ramrod nguinst the side of the ship to forcetho bullet home. About this time every one was look ing for Franklin's troops, which he had promised to land below tho fort; but nary a troop came, and somethfns had . to bo done or wo would bo nil killed. rhcre was grape and shell from the fort, splinters irom the ship's side, hot water and steam, all pressing the ques tion, "What's to bo done," and wo sur rendered. When the white flag went up a great many of the boys crie 1 Ilk babies at thu Idea of being trapped in s mud-hole In Texas. Curses loud r.nd deep went np gainst Franklin and his expedition. My opinion is, that if Franklia had made a show of Iinding troops, the rebels would h ive run. und would not have stopped in til they struck tho Hio Urando. "There ore gutiboaii In tlio river, with ev erything serene; We wih niake they pay somo other day for tlio battle at Sutiine." But wo didn't mako them pay any thing; for, according to another prison poet. Col. Duganno, I think, "We huntod the small doer they call gray backs in rebel prison until the war was over." Jons Caridv, in Nation al Tribune. wherecolumbus"dieo. The Boas Still Btumls, Although Crumbling Into Decay. On tho Callo de Colon, a dingy, narrow old street la Valladolld, i bout 201) yards long, stands th tiotise Id which Columbus died, ilthougn fast crumbling Into decay. The fact that tt does stand Is not iue to any effort taken for It preservation, but rather to the solid ity of its construction. It Is of con siderable size, and was, no doubt, originally constructed fur somo per son of rank and position. The en trance is through a great Norman archway of stone, and the entrant hall is spacious, while the stalroast Is broad and Its incline so gontla that one might almost drive up It The basement of tho building is ol itono, though the upper stage is ol brick, covered with stucco or at much stucco as has survived thi ravages of time. The outer walh aro massivo, and their interior is, nc doubt, compossd of a species of con crete, or mixture ot mortar, pebblei nnd fragments of stone, which figuret strongly in all old Spanish struct ures. No nation In the world, perhaps, has less respect or appreciation foi tho antique and time-honored than havo tho Spaniards. The house whore Colmubus died Is now used ai 1 cow-stable. Above tho stone arch way Is a tlmo-stained medallion, bearing a man's head, standing out In bold relief on the stucco. Un derneath Is the engraven Inscription "Aqul murlo Colon Ano 1506." (Here died Columbus, year 1308.) Close to this hangs a small sign board, with the following inscrip tion: "New milk sold here; yon maj leo it milked." An old woman liv ing there gives tourists some info inatlon. Upon entorlng the ancient struct ore one steps into the spacious en trance hall, which is pitched with mall pebbles. On cither side is a large door-way, but the doors hav been r?movr.d, and through the open ings ono can see tho cows standing Id rows. Twenty cows aro stabled in the lower part of the house). Ths cowman and his family live uj stairs. Ono is quickly led into i largo room overlooking the street the room where Columbus died. Th windows are furnished with masslvs Iron gratings, as, indeed, are all th windows In the house. A thin par tition, running half way across ths room, forms a small recess or alcoba, la which is an old wooden bedstead, with a wretchod straw pallet and I canty covering of old clothes. On such u bod, probably, died the great discoverer in poverty and desolation, In the middle of tho partition U i little square window, through whict anyone sleeping in the alcoba might see If any one entered the room. The walls, bare and discolored wltn age, look as If they had not been whitewashed for at least a century. The floor is of square earthen ties, the same on which Columbus trod four centuries ago. In this room h was for a long time a prisoner. Ii that alcoba, where the cowman and his wife sleep every night, the great discoverer died. Near the head o: the bed the form of a cross hat been scratched with some sharp la itrument deep la the plaster of thi wall. Tradition says that Colunibui made the cross. rOirdot the "easiest' things to be f,e.TA!i- pleaalny He about ourselves.