rtrf J-C Ffc$-JZ t 3 . v k THETEED CLOUD CHIEF. ' M; L. THOMAS, Publisher RED CLOUD, NEBKASKA. TM TWENTY-ONE TO-DAY, ..,,. . I'm twentjr-ono rears old to-day, An independent man: The lCln I hov longed to be Senec babyhood bejran. Oood-by to mother's cpron strings, -Peck tic I bcr outirrown. Til gladly leave my daddy'B wine To rail upon my own. CHOKUi A f ulj-fletlijed man, a tali younjr man, A'proul jo tug man am I: My youth la dona I'm twcnty-ono I'm old enough to lly. "N? I can vofo fur President t'pon election day. An' none will scold mo Sunday nights. When into I chance to stay. I've lert my irinffb-un aprons off, A long-tailed coat to wear. An en my chin I'll soon begin -let stow a crop o hair. Chorus A 1 uU-flclred man. n tail young man, A proud younjr man nm I: Below my noso my nwsische grows I'm old enough to lly. No more will daddy's raspln voter, Er. loud ez all outdoors, Sound up the chntnber utalri to roalto Me go an' do the chorea. The younger boys may milk the cows An' feed the stock ttac'r bay. While I will He till breakfast time 1 m twenty-ono to-djy. Chorus A xull-uodged man, a tall younj man; A proud 3'oumr man am I: . ."Below mi nose ray musiucao grows I'm old en-iugb to lly. '-Eugene J. J lull, m CIiIcoqo Inter Ocean. m THE TWENTY-FIVE HATS. A French Passenger's Story. lie was a Frenchman no doubt about that He was a very pleasant fellow no doubt about that, cither. Hut what his occupation nvght bo was a puzzler to us all. A sailor he could never have been, as any one could see by liis unsteady walk on deck, and his very poor performance at dinner the iirst day out from Lisbon. He was too polite for a Government official, too quiet and thoughtful for a commercial traveler, too wel' informed for a newspaper correspondent, too grammatical and refined in his language lor a popular author. From a certain jauntiness in his air and manner, and the semi-military cut of his short, gray moustache, some of our'party were inclined to set him down ns a retired army officer; but the sud den start with which ho clapped his hands to his cars when the signal-gun was lircd close to him, was quite suffi cient to knock that theory on the head. It was in a rather curious fashion that the truth came out at last. On the third afternoou (when we were already well down the African Coast toward the Cape Verd Islands) Monsieur - Cartier suddenly stopped short in a series of very entertaining anecdotes about various European celebrities whom he seemed to havo known quite wdllr and stared fixedly straight before him, as if he had seen a ghost. I looked somewhat anxiously in tho same direction, expecting to sec, at tho very Jcast, tho ship on fire or somebody falling overboard; but nothing was to - be seen more remarkable than a very sickly-looking saloon passenger crawl ing up tho cabin-hatchway for tho first time since wo started. He was certain ly quite pale enough to havo passed for a ghost but I could see nothing clso about him to justify my genial compan ion's excitement. In another moment, however, I no ticed that Cartier s eyes were fixed not upon the sick man's face, but upon his hat, which was certainly a very extra ordinary head-gear for the open sea. It was a genuine ".stovc-ptpo" as over blow off in a high wind, but all of a light mouse-color, and curving down ward both in front and behind, as res olutely as if some one had sat down upon it Cartier eyed it with tho startled air of one suddenly meeting an old acquaint ance in a very unlikely place, and 1 could hear him mutter: ."That's tho first of tho sort that I've seen since I mado twenty-live of them myself, tho j'car of the Paris Exhibi tion." "So," thought I, "the murder's out at last; this mysterious old gentleman is neither more nor less than a hatter. M. Cartier." I added, aloud, "I'm sure there's some good story connected with that hat, and nobody can tell one better than yourself. If it's not asking too much, would you oblige me by doing to?" "Well," said tho old gentleman, laughing, "I should have thought I hail bored you enough for one day al ready with my reminiscences. It's not every young fellow who would listen so patiently to an old man's rumblings." "If all old men 'ramble' like yon, my dear sir, I shall certainly make the ac quaintance of as many as possible. Now, will you oblige me?" "Well, it really is a curious story; so, if you're so gocd as to be interested in it, it's at your service: " In the spring of 18G7, a little be fore the opening of the Paris Exhibi tion, I had just moved into a new shop in the Rue Saint Honore, and was do ing a pretty fair business, though per haps not quite so good as I had ex pected. "But one day business had been un usually slack, and I was beginning to be rather put out about it, when, to ward afternoon, in came a fine-looking gentleman, dre&scd in the height of the fashion, saying that ho wanted some hats mado after a pattern of his own, to be ready by a certain day. There were to be twenty-five of them in all, - "and the pattern that he gave mo was exactly tho same as the hat of that gen tleman yonder. "It struck me at the time as rather - an odd idea, for although the shape "happened to be in fashion just then, the color certainly wasn't. "But, after all, it was no business of mine, so long as he chose to pay for his fancy; and, as he began by paying me in advance a good part of tho "price, I went to work with a will, thinking that most likely it was only some new club that wanted a distinguishing badge. "When the hats were finished, I hap pened to try ono of them on. and it suited me so well, in spite of the queer color, that I decided to make one for myself as well. And so I did; and a day or two after the others were paid for and. sent homo which was just about the time when Paris was begin- King to fill with the first rush of visit ." ors to the opening of the exhibition I pat on ay ew hat and went out for a walk. "The streets wero very crowded that day, and I hadn't gone far when I caught sight of a man with a hat like jovown. tie came towara me, and ? aid, am an undertone, as he passed. wilboat looking at me: " A e day for business, comrade, ad we pettee aboutP " I don't think I ever got such a start in My life. If the man wasn't crazy, there was only one possible explanation for his words, and that a very unpleas ant oae, indeed. But I wasn't left long fefdesbt, for as I turned into the Tui leries Gardens I saw several more of my hats' amoag the crowd. One of then sidled p behind me and slipped o-Mthing into say hand, whispering: Pocket that, quickH "How 'that' was a gold watch, a pvree amd several jewels, so it'was not vary difficult to guess for what kind of eaetomers my twenty-five hats had been made. In another moment I was run ,Jag. as if my life depended on it, to the earest police station, and there I told 4yatory- "To work went the Inspector at aad within twenty-four hours all iweaiy-nve nats were snn jr priso-. But their loss was my gam, ftrtbe ftfair made sac. a stir that ay IT shp became quite fashionable, and that year and the next I-'drorc a trade that enabled me to retire much sooner than I hail expected. There' the tint dinner-belL Shall wo go down?" Golden Dayu IlarvestlBg aad Ntorlag Aprl:. Tho ru!o with winter apples ought al ways to bepickingby hacd-nqsbaking down. With low-headed, properly trained trees hand-picking becomes quite as easy a matter as shaking off tho fruit and then gathering it from the ground. Beforo the harvest begins it is well to havo a suitable place prepared in the orchard or near at hand for the tempo rary storing of the apples, unless theso are to be assorted and packed as fast as gathered. Many of our leading pomol ogists employ two scks of hands at time of harvest one for picking the apples and the other for assorting and packing immediately in barrels. Others who have fruit-houses delay the packing un til the approach of cold weather. Apples should bcassorted according to variety. ize and quality, and packed so closely in clean barrels that they will not move during transportation. Fruit destined for a long distance will arrive in better order by being packed full, even to sliirht jamming, than if f lacked loose. With the rough hand ing that all packages get more or less, the contents are liable to become badly bruised unless packed solidly. A usual mode of packing apples is to take out one head from the barrel and begin packing by placing a tier of ap ples with the ends to the closed head of the barrel, then fill up without bruis ing the fruit and shrike down thorough ly and fill the barrel so full that the head must be pressed in with a lever, actually flattening the last tier of ap- Dies. The head and hoops are now nailed, tho barrel turned over, and on the head not opened the namo of tho variety in the barrel is plainly marked. App1e3 packed in this way show a fine and handsome face. Care, by the way, should be observed not to face the fruit more than it will bear; it must run uniform to givo satisfactionto the buy er and to create a demand another sea son for tho same mark of fruit It ought alho to be borno in mind while assorting tho fruit that a good.quality arriving in good order rarely fails to obtain a fair price, nlthough,tho mar ket may be glutted with ordinary and inferior cratlcs. In the first shipments of apples to Europe, the fruit w'as carefully packed by wrapping in tissue paper and iflimg in between the layers with buckwheat chaff. This plan did not prove satis-4 factory, for it was'found that the fruit, was liable to absorb the flavbrof the chaff. Tho plan of enveloping oach apple before it is packed in tissuo pa per that has been previousb soaked .i an alcoholic solultion of salicylic acid and dried, appears to have met with success. Apples for export should be permitted to snrink beforo tho final, packing, and' the shipments ought not, to be made antilxrisp, cold- weathcr.v Some growers practice lining the bar rels with paper as they pack the apples in, using, if the weather is cold, two thicknesses, and taking caro that tho apples do not come iu contact with the barrels. With this protection " it is claimed that packages undergoing long shipment, in extremely cold waathcr es cape having their contents injured. Once packed, tho barrels should bo stored in some dark but well-ventilated place and kept at a low uniform tem perature as near tho freezing point of water as is practicable. The tempera ture must be kept so low that the fungi that cause decay cannot be developed. Tho old-time practice, which added to the conditions mentioned the necessity of a dry atmosphere, is gradually giMng way to'thc popular opinion that tho air must be moist enough to prevent tho fruit from shriveling. Experiments by scientists and farmers appear to havo proven pretty conclusively" that while a moist warm cellar is decidedly detri-. mental to the keeping qualities of the fruit a wet, cold ono prevents los3 of weight and size by evaporation and consequently is conducive to the pres ervation of tho fresh appearance and natural llavor of the fruit Farmers of experience need hardly bo informed that winter apples designed for long keeping should not bo har vested until they have developed color and flavor natural to tho ripo fruit' It. is a worse blunder, however, to allow fruit to remain on tho trees until. over ripe than tho other extreme of picking while immature. Varieties that ripen irregularly ought to bo gathered ac cordingly! Apples must be harvested in dry weather only, for fruit free from atmospheric moisture when taken from the tree, other things being equal, keeps longest Once gathered, tho apples should bo securely protected from sun and storm3 until they aro assorted and finally packed. N. . World. Mutilated Coins. A reporter asked James N. Samp son, the veteran detective employed at tho Sub-Treasury, to what the Govern ment detectives attributed the sudden increase in the number of clipped and punched coins which has attracted so much attention of late. Mr. Sampson said that it was, perfectly well known that nine-tenths of the punching was done in this city by Cubans. A number of silver coins were clamped together. in a roll. -ana in less time tuan it taes 3r; liS." - ?! - value of the silver obtained by punching ..... .. a hole of usual size m a coin amounts to about one twenty-fifth of the value of the coin, so that 'for every roll of twenty-five quarter dollars tho value of one quarter dollar is obtained in a moment by running a drill through .the roll. Mr. Sampson says, also, that many of the punched coins come from Mexico and South America, where our silver coins circulate freely,' and rarely escape mutilation. - - SeVeral attempts have been made of lato years to break up tho systematic punching of coins, but with' little success Only two convictions" for the offense havo been made in ten years. m ' Mr. Sampson remarked that while the business of punching and filing coins was almost wholly in the hands of the Cubans, the business of sweating gold coins by shaking them up in a buckskin bag is attributed by "the, detectives, xy tho denizens of Chatham street" By shaking a bag containing one hundred' eagles 'for three hours the result in gold dust will be worth about twenty dollars. Mr. Floyd, the chief clerk in the Assay Office, said that the Government rules relating to light-weight gold coins wero defective, and tended to keep such coins in circulation. When a gold coin Jess than twenty years old; a abraded to more" than one-half per cent of its value, it is "stamped with an ',"L"J at the sub-Treasury and returned to whoever offers it, instead of being sent to mint The object is to force the holder to take it to the Assay Office or mint to be sold at its real value, instead of which it goes iato crc-tatkm again. The trouble is that Congress has never made any provision for redeeming mutilated, or even abraded coin. Many persons think that all pieces that have been worn down beyond recognition in actual service should be redeemed at par. The difficulty is to tell when a piece has been worn smooth through use or brought to "that condition by. sweating or other artificial means. Mr. Floyd considers that the mutilation of silver coins does not need Govern ment interference, because, unlike the abrationof gold, the mutilation of a silver coin can be dbtecftfd aoce,a-3 itrests. with the public' to drive such coins ontQicircolatK)-. 2. Y. Evtm Test, Where the PrrsMeats Are Barfed. The body of" George Was-iSgtoa M sting in a brick vault at Mount Ver- resting non. in a marble coffin. John Adasns was buried ia a vault beneath the Unitarian Church at Quin er. "The tomlfts walled ia with large blocks of rough'edged granite. 4 John Quinsy Adams lies in the satee vault by the sue of hit father. In the church abq on either side of the pul pit arc tablets of clouded marble, each surmounted by a bust and inscribed with the familiar epitaphs of the only father and son that ever held the high est office in the giffof the American people. Thomas Jcfierson lies in a small, un pretentious private cemetery of JOOfoet square, near Monticeuo, James- Madison's remains rest in a beautiful spot on the old Madison cs- tate, near Orange, Va. . .Ir.mM fnnrruikodi MDOttS in Ilol- lywood Cemetery, Va., on an eminence, j country scramble through matted commanding a beautiful view" of Klch-' underbrush, swing dawn by tho hag raond and the James Kivcr. Above tho " jn boughs, foil over fallen trees, slide bodv is a huc block of polished Vir- -racufnfiv-down a "bark chute: tamble. I ginia marble, supportinga coffin shaped bloctoijjranile, on wtncli aro orass plates, suitably inscribed. The whole is surrounded by a sort of Gothic tern- pic four pillars supporting a peaked rof, to which something of the appear- ancc of a bird cage is imparted by fill- ing in the interstices with iron grat- ings. Andrew Jackson was buried in the corner of tho garden of the Hermitage. cloven miles from Nashville. The tomb is eighteen feet in diameter. surrqohB- cd bv fluted columns and surmounted by an urn. '.Tho tomb is surrounded by magnolia trees. V Martin Van Buren was buried at Kinderhook. The monument is a plain granite shaft, fifteen feet high. William Henry Harrison was buried at North Bend, fifteen miles from Cin- innatL - John Tyler's body rc3ts within ten yarus oi tnai oi dames .moiiiou m iiouy- wood Cemeterv. lucbniojid, it js marked by no monument, but is sur rounded by magnolias and flowers. " 'James K. Polk lies in the private garden'of the family rcsfilc'rice""in If ash villc, Tenn. It is marked by a lime stone monument with Doric columns. Zachary Taylor was buried in Cave Hill-Cemetery, Louisville. .The body war subsequently tb'bor'- removed to Frankfort where a suitable monument was to be erected, commemorative of his distinguished services. , Millard Fillmore's remains, lie rin tho beautiful Forest Lawn Cemetery of Buffale, and his grave is surmounted, by a lofty shaf t of Sc6tch granite.' ' Franklin Pierce was, buried in tho Cqncord N. IL Cemetery, and his grave is marked by a marble monu ment. James Buchanan's remains lie in tho Woodward Hill Cemetery at Lancaster, Pa., in a vault of masonry. The mon ument is composed of a simple block of Italianvmarble. Abraham Lincoln . rests' in Oakridze LfJeniiLary,. Springfield, 111., inclosed in a sarcophagus of white marble. Tho monument is a great pno oi maroie, granito and bronze. ' jAndrcW Johnson's graVo. .is on a cone-shaped eminence, half a mile froni Greenville. Tenn. The monument is of marble, beautifully ornamented. ' The body of James A. Garfield has been placed in a tomb at Cleveland. Albany N. Y.) Eveviiuj Journal; m , White Elephants. A sure way to gain the favor of either tho King of Burma or tho King of Siam is to present him with a white elephant Hence, whenever thcro aro reports of such an animal having been discovered anywhero, there are always prospect ing parties who set out from bath Burma and Siam to determine whether it is really what it is represented to be. It is, therefore, somewhat surprising to find that tho agents "ofa inchagerio havo mauaged to step 'in before the fv izilant Orieutal 'elephant-seekers and carry oQ what is asserted to be the lirst whife elephant 'over landed in Europe. Scientific observers will no doubt in spect tho 'now arrival and determine his right to the description given to him. Pending thoir verdict, it may bo worth while, perhaps, to consider the Burmese test points of an albino elc- tUo prostrate sequoia and slowly paced PS" , t. 1 is entire length. Our progress was not Trt hito crows, rats, mico and hares impeded bv limbs, of which this mighty aro common and easily distinguished: reWood was free threo-fourths of its but it is different With a white elephant ienth. and those that had grown near Ho is not to bo considered as snow- 5t3 top had becn whipped off and splint white; very far from it All the .whito crcd into frazmenU bv its territic mect- cwphants now existing in aiara ana iui aim lor, some- the pale trunk of ' lmrma are of a light mouse-color, some what of tho same tint as freckles to be found on the trunk ordinary elephants. This light gray is uniform all over, the spots on the trunk bn'ng white. The depth of tho color, however, varies greatl, and there aro often blemishes inTthe shape of darker patches which would seem to ruin an otherwise eligible candidate's claim. It has been, therefore, found necessary to determine some infallible test points, which will demonstrate the right of the animal -to his title. Tho Burmese skilled men fix upon two of these tests a3 superior to all others. Oae is that the elephant shall have five toes instead cf four. This'is a' good way ormaking .certain; but occasionally there are in dubitably black elephants, which have tho sacred number of toes. These are white elephants debased by ip, labor g&? ?i!!5': SJ?3 T, 5iS.V: .. -i i-. -- ? ti;i. m.inA tn th .nrniml. I inn nunars accuruuu iu uic ruai um. i Vi .1 . I - -j j ..1 I The other test is considered perfectly nn;.;,. - m.l TO!,nf tl,o ;. tint of -tho skin.maVfbe. It is this: ifJ yoit pour water upon.1 a ! "whito" ele phant ho turns red, whilo a black ele- phant only becomes blacker tfin cvjjr. This ufthefiniit test al wajr's" Jresprffd- to in Mandalay. It may bc hoped vlHat theSinimal recently 4andcd will -pass these two tests triumphantly. If he $oei Thbcbau w.ill tremble for his throne, and will take no more pleasure In the.monopolies he has been institut ing so lavishly of late. ." James's Gazette. ., . Felling the Sequela Gigaatea. When the woodmen pointed out the tree ho was about to fell, our party j looked about in vain for some place whero its three, hundred feet, of trunk ' coiua siretcn ouv wuiiqjv? suomut ng u th&Mcessity foteed upoa Jke man ia a . . . ! m I tA etritr irYiriei font worn t-ri 1vriflp and the" bed was 'too sbdrfc' It could not be .done withtat first cleariag a path for it we all agreed, but the trood' man smiled a' knowing, "superior smile. We looked again; when he pointed down a slender path, fern carpeted, but clear of trees that we bad named " Par avenue. 'V-j , , - , : "But can yeaireck the fall ol that mighty redwood so that it will lie hi that path and hot erush -other trees ia its fall," we asked, wonderingly. "The tree will fall between,these two stakes, without disturbing' either of them," the woodman said, driving two stakes fif teen feet aputandrene tywdred and fiftrfeet fn X--bltt of.th tree. Jeiweo4m f-ajMBistants framed a scanblcung around, tne buttress 01 me stately pillar of .God's temple, upoa which" they stood, raised ten' or fifteen feet above the ground, aad .together sent their kee-edgeF; axes into the rourh. spohcv hark. !. the shade of thatgrand grove they-looked Hke pig mies, ana ineir uuu-ments oc mmimmMr tiouUke children's toys, yet J a" few hours they .woald prostrate whjtrjatwre load.tkut-thoa yerPrai No ardent lover of art ever witnessed the destruction of his moat admired marble, no heathen ever saw hie idols shattered by invadiag CsijjjiM, with more poignant grief thaitMM when woodauui'swc first bw4 itself ia the patriarch of all our aoble Seqaoia he ladies Insisted upon retaraiar to" ciup, and said some unkind thing about the woodmen, and were savagely severe upon tho unreasonable railroad contractor who had deprecated their suggestion toTfun ike track aroont-thi tree instead of orer its Toots. How ever, s the tree was downed whether they pouted 5a thejr tents or not their grief subside suQIeicntfy ia an b4ar to allow them to betaken to a point where the overthrow of the monarch could bo safely witnessed. Wc climbed up a trail to a hill on one sice of the tree. but found the Intervening braaches too closely woven to allow of more than a ! doubtful view. Ignoring the trail, we descended, aad; ; in view of the I handicap of skrts and ' ladies, your correspondent did make a- -jot lady, who 1 rnarfy desccjit Jloyr, a I in the city require, to b be i helped ;n ..! ni nf Mrrin f mti In thn jump; fail, and finally land at the bot- torn of a hill, cool and collected, though Uuxhed, is a problem she" will probably never explain, if sho can. When we took our station, only klittjo-way from h tn(J woodmen, wo found,tllaf they had finished the worV tfceir axes' bad to do 0y cutting ncarfy half way through tho j tree on the side toward which it-was to faj( ami wcro thQO driying a long double-handled saw into the tree on nlc opposite hide. Although the lower portion of the tree still stood -linn and motionless, tho graceful, lofty top was already swa) ing. as though . conscious of, and silently protesting against, its j fa,t approaching prostration. It was a beautiful picture beforo us, stretched in i a frame of circling forest Tho fern brakes nourishing in almost tropical luxuriance; trees fallen ages ago. some blackened by fire, tho decay of others hidden; tho vivid green of the baby sequoias. A half score oi our party scattered about in their picturesque camp cos tumes.and all were llecked with the light quivering down through tho interstice! of the leafy dome far above us, tho light which "stolo its colors from tho glow of Mars, the skv's dccpizure. and tho ocean's emerald." But suddenly all C3es weru directed toward tho doomed tree. Its protect was no long er silent A rattling report a-s if a ritlu volley had been lired. gave warning that the woodman's work was nearly done. It sounded Hue a desperate an guish cry,-. which ,chan"od;aguin to a helpless groau." nc'ffclu Vur breaths. The towering head no longer swayed in blow, solemn protest, but moved convulsively. Then another cry. Tho woodman jumpcil from tho .scaffold. Thin steel had entered the giant's heart, for a stream of its life blood spurtd out through tho cfuul cut The tree fM: a moi-ent stood motionless to its 'lighte.str furthest branch, then slowly bowed its head, the whole trunk shud dering; then wt h,an. awl'pl crunching. j crushTug iioifoh4ttjllci the wood wi dismal echoes wails of the dyinz mo th mon arch's mourning comrades it plunged drowned then.JThere was 'a torrific crash of wrested limbs as a ragged rent was tonf through the" woven branches of the trees,"- whirl fng."sh rick ing rush of air, a thundering,, deafening boom and shock that shook tho ground liko an earthquake, and lifeless, bleeding, and scarred the giant lay low. It was some lime before any of us moved, or scarcely breathed, and when wo did one might havo thought us Pagan wor shippers drawing nigh the smoldering ruins of a devastated temple. Wc i found the end of the trunk thirty feet from the stump. This was explained 1 by tho woodman, who pointed out that the bark uuuerncatli the tree- bad mi-bedded-its rough surfaco in the ground and broken off for some distance. The insido' of tho bark, when freshly cut is as "slippery as a school-boy's fa vorite ice-slide, and the tree, with its terrific forward motion, had slid along on its own bark. As wo stood by tho stump, showers of light green branches continued to fall from the trees on cither side of the fallen trunk until its naked ness was covered with the soft green shroud, tenderly laid on by pitving hands. We climed up on the back of jnjr wilh tne cartu When we reached , With tne earth. lien we reached the end of its unbroken and symmetri- Cal length we turned and looked back, rctlectinr that on tho morrow tho wood- rctlectinz that on tho morrow the wood' man would cut the trunk into fourteen foot sections; on the next day ox teams, with their shoutinz drivers, would drivo these sections, stripped of their bark, to the nearest saw-mill; onthc morrow after that grimy men would lay iron tracks where the giant had fallen, and then greasy, smoking, and shrieking, tho locomotive would come, desecrating tho spot Cor. 6m Francisco Chronicle. A SelftNh General. One night in the spring of '62 Gen eral Richardson, who then commanded a brigade, took it into his head' to in spect tho picket line. Coming upon a reserved nickct of about thirtv men un- ' dercoramand of a Captain of the Second uurcoin Michigan Infantry, tbe General saw fit interogate.as follows: "-aprain. in case oi-an aiarm oy 1110 .1 L :A-f -., m ,. .!, .. ... .. t .1 uaii. y-i, "..- "..,-. - - "Send off a reinforcement at once." "And if the firinz continued?" "I shou'd move up with the remain der of my force." " And suppose a whole company of the enemy should press forward?" " We'd whip them." "But if it was a regiment?" "I'd form a lino of battle and check them until I sent back and got orders to charge and capture the whohvlot" "Well, supposo a brigade should move down on yon in battle line?" I'd order a charge, split the col umn in two, and whip both halves in detail." At midnight the bravo. Captain was relieved from further "dntyon picket He was very indignant and considcra- blv puzzled, but after thinkinz the mat- .t . J . . ........ tecQver for awhile he said to a-bcother oiEoer: -. " Say. I've struck it! Old Rich was afraid my company nrght gobble the Whole Confederate army and throw him out of a summer's job! U thatam't selfishness, then I'd like to know what is?" Detroit Free JYess. On the premises of Colonel J. EL Tatum, on Mobile Bay, is a mammoth fig tree, being nine feet six inches in circumference at' the smallest part of the main trunk. Its. top is nearly forty I feet high, presenting to the beholder one' vast dome of foliage and fruit It bears at the rate of from one hundred to three hundred bushels of fruit per ynnnm. She said he had a flattcrkur tongae. As to his arms sbe fondlr cloaue. And lore's sweet roundelajr he so agtk "Forth-U said he. -ta 7 lore. I g-eas You eaanot, cannot tore Be lueas; Glr ie the little h-sd i-yracSBr "Tis thine," she said, with gtaaco oblique, ; WMieNuahiar-Ttvcsdjnedhec tiq-e -The twaia wui b2 aude oae aext wiqae. Joseph Stoves, aged tea years, aad Jaaes Salherlasdaged twelve, helped themselves, the other' day; to three pea-tea' .worth ofL apples frost the garden of Tho Anderson, iaDcr haxa, England. They were sentenced respectively to two moaihs' aad oae north's iaaprisoumeat at hard labor. The Jc WBcltr. TTnff ot ihm JnneU. 1.IT- 1 tcry that may ere lon bo accom-iafed bv tie a-ne fccbn ox public upooe which followed the dwappearanre of Sir John Krankl a. Two years hare pacX inc the gallant little xcsvel pjMxl from hntnaa ken. It a 0,1 ibe S1 of September. l.k7. tbt she Was Ixst 4olcn by a whilcr. S1j was tken bcadtag north In the dwttka . of Wrahgell lnd. well prorlMul for a cruie of three icar. mtnocd br a picked crew of tbirty-two men. and conimaaded by an oSlcer who had had ctperiaaco in Arctic cxplorat on Tbirc hii bcea ao Aigu since thl day. The two mistng wha'crs. which were sn abxjp) the same tiui, were driven by thefee tlbc toward tle -l5ian coi, onf reck9d and the other aban loneO. There U still good ground forbelievin" that tho Jcanncttt; rearhed Wrangeil lind. The Corwlu, foliuwlng Tier course so far a tho reconls ran. ap proached that myteriotu coast a velr aao without catching a gl mpc of her. and now the news comes that the at tempt has been repeated and a landing effected, bnt that no trace of tho missing steamer havo been found. The coatwa.i toextnive to bo thorough ly, explored, and the Conrin Uh fmgt'e a crilt to bo detained in such dnugt-r jus waters, so that the evidence that the lennnette did not reach her lirt desti nation pj by no tnaru conclinv. Sho may havo wintered there and then headed northward. The preiiitnpt on that sho was conipllcl to look else where for winter tpiartcrs is. however, rreatly strengthened by the Corwin's fruitle searc.'i. While it wan Lieutenant Do Iongn expectatiou that he would bu ablu to skirt the eastern edge of Wnugell Land and winter there, it was also his li.xed determination to tike advantage of open water ami to push northward. The Corwin hs descried ou thU latest voage an open sea leading no ono knows whither, save in the direction of tho 1'o'e. It is possiblo that the Jean nctte's commander was tempted by the clear water to puhaheadand to search for a harbor in tho unknown sea near er to tho l'ole. If he succeeded In forc ing an entrance ami iu finding an pn chorago novotid the horion which closes in upon Wrangoll Land, hewou'd have had tlie opportunities for explora tion of which he was in quest So open a season as the present ono would, however, have enabled him to set his face homoward. and tho Corwin would naturally have seen traces of the Jean netle in'the vicinity of Herald llnud. Tho safest conjecture that cau uu made .under the circumstances is that the lit tle vessel was carried by tho ice toward the east, and tint her commander, find ing that it would be impossible to push north, has directed his energies to mak inghis way to the Atlantic. The fact that the Siberian eoast ha? been toler ably well explored this .reason dimin ishes the chance that the .leannelto wai swept away with the whalers ami wrecked 111 tho quarter where thovhtvo been found. It is certainly prematura to assume that the fate of tho. lennnette is already sealed by the Corwin's dis closure. Wrangoll Land, it must bo borno in mind, is a coast line of undutermiticd extent The Admiral whou name it boars never caught a glimpse of it. but merely lcportod its existence- from statements made to him by natives of the main'and. Captain Hooper, of tho Corwin. who was so fortunate a year ago as to approach it on a very clear day, described it in his official report as covering at a distance of ttventy-fivo ui'Ios an arc of the horiou of about fifty degrees. At tho southern extrem ity "were three mountains apparently :l,000 feet high and entirely covered with snow, whilo northward was a chain of rounded hills gradually ap proaching tho sea level. It was 'Cap tain Hooper's opinion that Wrangoll Land was a large island, and possibly one of a chain of islands pass'ng en tirely through the l'olar regions to Greenland. That thcro are other isl ands lying north of it in tho direction of tho open water which he has himself descried this season there can bo little doubt. It is possible, therefore, that tho Jeanncttc, while umiblu to land in tho quarter which has been visited by Captain Hooper, went forward beyond the reach of any relief ship, and that sho will yet reappear bearing tidings of remarkable discoveries. The expedi tion under Payer and Weyprecht re turned a few 3cars ago from the Far North after its existence had been despaired of. and although tho ship had been lost very high latitudes had been reached, and an entjrely new group of islands and a stretch of coast lino ex plored. y. Y. Tribune. ilcoTlL One of the most touching things wc have read ina long-time is that "story of a robber and a poor lone woman near Franklin, Ohio. The robber came to her house at night and demanded her money or her life. Sho hadn't much .money, or life either, but she preferred giving up, the former rather than the attcr; so she broui;ht her little store and placed it in his hand. He looked it over carefully, to sec that she didn't palm off any twenty cent pieces for quarters, and facetiously told her that he could credit her for only ninety-four cents on the trade dollars, chid.ng her for taking them at their face value. "Haven't vou anything else of value?" inquired tne bold, bad burglar, looking about the scantily-furnished apartment "a child's bracelet, ring, anything will bo thankfully received." Sho had nothing more, she replied, with a sigh. A thought struck bim. "Your husband was a soldier, was he not?" She acknowledged that he was, and was killed in the war. " Then he must have had a revolv er,'" he continued, searching her countenance. "Ah, you grow con fused, you stammer; your manner has betrayed you. Get that revolver at once and give it to me." In vain the woman implored him to spare that harmless trinket almost the sole memorial of the husband she had lost She had pawned manv things when in distress, but sho had always hung on to that But the robber was unrelenting. Sobbing bitterly, sho went to a bureau drawer and removed the precious relic around which clus tered so many tender recollections. "Must you have it?" sa;d she, as she advanced with trembling steps toward him. "Yes, I must." said the robber, ex tending his hand. ' "Well, then, tako it" said she. gently pressing the trig ger zor tne lasiume. nere wosa iouu report, and the robber tumbled over dead. The conuaunity ought to pen sion that woman. Cincinnati Saturday m Aa America) Gejser. The Helena Herald says: Tourists who have visited National Park will remember the large, beautifal spring in what is known-a "iiiU's Acre, T lying midway between the Upper and Cower Geyser Basins. The second largest spnaghas quite recent- turned itself into a spouting geyser- It was first dis covered by JackBarnette. one ot the oldest settlers, guides aad scouts t Eastern Montaaa, and it has. beea &ated the "Sheridan" ia hoaor of Geaeral Phil., Sheridan. Its crnptioas are yet irregalar. OaSoaday Hwcalar, Augott 23, the day Sheridaa left the basTa with his party, this remarkable geyser' spouted ap a solid body of water frost aixtv to seveatv-five feet ia diame ter to aheiglt closely estiaatetf at 300 feet v The dtapliy lasted aem-bev of minutes, aad it ia proaouaced by those who witaessed it to have aeem oae of the grandest sights ever witaessed ia that wc4er4aad. TERMWAt ASD LtTEURT. M-ta-e Patti rdL rtje ,rt Hjr a hsodrvJ and twtpatv-a tbonad dollar for hr concern here. Dr. OUwr Wcadll iflns. lwy chsrmlar. .erHt? a- wtire. Cl bu I tctcalT-tTnialj ia a si'pbt dtf- bcmti,- N , The "Bn of th SeoUjh afyn." which W? M to b t tlr-t printed KatlU- bafcad. U ooa to be rr prtsred la tao .!. Norah Perrv's homo li la PrutU dcocc. It I. lUt! bou hdrd by branching e?as. he faror ofi. . d'ed bght or en wood dm- pnr -pictures eTrry where The Londoa JlKaxtumicMkXx dowa Java euTtxia fxc!Ut the orhairr sot-'- k. .t ! I .1 . tbr-l.:Btt"-tit! rl twter-g iiras quality than lhyr esiytvalenu prvdutJ over then. - A ie-f at vis-tor to Longfellow sys that th Hwt U not so while, fix ace s hu jMjrtrait tepreeat hlta. lit hair and beard hare drk linct. aad ht tnoutdm hxt a tawny amber shadfc of the vanished chestnut of youth. Hi blue eyes- ar bright aad. his cheeks ruddy. A monument to Victor lingo I to be erected jn hl ulaad home of tiaeru ct bv the inhabitanu. who are much attu'ficd to him. It w to Guemev that the novelist dctltcatcd hi Toiler of the Se,,"that ftuall portloa uf Konuan ground, imrere yrt klad. n.y present asylum, erbapa my tomb." Copyright laws are vo InruorabJe in Great Bnfiin thit no one can tng any selections from a composer work utthoul paving ryalir. Krea thn organ gruulcts are5ubocl to thn law, 'i he heirs ami assign 01 Offenbach de mand roralty from thoo who alsg any of tho tunea of tho gnat comiwser until - It wan fifty veaw ago that Johann Strauss composed hi Unit waltz He was then six yrara of ago, and no one thought of preserving the music Ho had a sister, however, whose tuomorv retained it ltita-1 and ha now made it po.vdblo to reproduce it in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of itj concop t.on The wife of tho conijKor has just had it published under the title of "First Thought" by a Vienna mtuic firm. It is .aid to bo marked by a nun. ny, if juvenile spirit tout to display In. dtctionof a true musical temperament. Mr. Harrison Ainswurth. the noTl 1st, who has just been entertained al a banquet by hit native citv of Manchester. Is now evonly-4"x yearn old. Among his paternal ancestors aro Kobert Alns worth, a dlstinguishod xehnlar, and Henry Aimworth. thj Brownlt. whe was one of the most learned Hebrew scholars of It's time tho eommenee meut of tho seventeenth century. Tho father of Mr. Ainsworth wan Mr Thom as Ainsworth. who was a solicitor, bav in, an extensive practice in Manches ter, lla wiihed that his son should be come a lawyer, but tho oune, man's tastes led him irresistibly "in the direc tion of literature. nuxuKous. 1 When a woman scot a new fall style bonnet on another woman's head, hhe declares it to bo hideous. The uext day, when she gets one also, shu sud denly discovers it to be as pretty as It can be. lloiton Jranscript. Managers of church fcsth'a's. hav ini; heard that the oyster crop was in jured by the drought, are preparing to give each oyster plenty of water as soon as opened. The water will bu served hot at tiic usual rates. I'hdude'phta cwt, .Marvin's fifteenth wife reports from Minnesota. 'J he returns are coming In slowly. A few districts in Honda re mains to be heard from, but it is proba bly safe to say ho is elected to servo a good long term in the Penitentiary. Oil City Derrick. When you sec two young women slowly meandering up the street talk ing attentively to each other, you can make up our mind that there s soma thiug mighty important about to bo tie velopcd. Just as liko n not they aro going to buy a ard anil a half of rib bon to "match a new suit Sew Haven Register. An exchange says: " Learn to say no. If a man makes a request of you which ou cannot grant tell him so at once. Don't deceive him. It may make him havo unpleasant feelings toward you at first, but ho will subse quently respect your straightforward ness." Wo know a man who tried tho "no" business. He said it worked nil right up to the "unpleasant feelings' part but he did not wait lon enough for tho "subsequent respect" to oper ate, as tho othor fellow said he had been put off long enough, and if the bill wasn't settled in ten minutes he would receipt it by thrashing tho overlastlng lights out of him. lexas Sif tings. Drlria? With the raratel. -- J i The other evening tho Jester was bathing his eyes in cold water, and sus pended tho operation long enough to remark: "If a woman can't take her parasol to Heaven when Bhc dies, she won't be happy there. She will come back after it An impressivo quiet followed this dogmatic statement, and the parasols of the court knew some of them Were in for It We were driving this afternoon." the aggrieved Jester resumed, "and the Princess kindly shaded my head with her parasoL It was very kind, indeed, it limited my view of the country, at times, to my knees and the dash board of the wagon. Whenever we met a team, especially if the road was very narrow, the Princess lowered her parasol between myself aad the passing wagon, so that 1 turned out by faith, or stood on my head to catch a glimpse of the colliding wheels. When we started down a steep hill, she dropped the parasol between me and the horse3. and I trusted to the good sense of the animals to keep out of the ditch. When wc met any acquaint ances to whom I wished to bow, she knocked my hat into my eyes. When she would point my admiring gaze to some exquisitely tinted autumn leaves, she jabbed a projecting parasol rib iato my eye. When she turned to speak to any oae in the rear seat she rasped the back of my neck. Oft as the car riage struck a'stoae or lurched over a rut she prodded my long suffering head' with vicious little jabs. I drew my head down between my shoulders aad sat crouched aad bent bat the remorse less parasol still penned me. I have been pelted and rasped aad prodded, and all from a mistaken sease of kiad aess. A wo-tan's uasel-shBeM aad kindness of heart always prompt her to hold her nanuol over the xnaa who drives. And if the sua who drives is allowed to choose for himself, he will choose sun-stroke ia prefereace to the parasol every time. I do met eemp-ua, mind you. I merely make a simple statement of plaia fact Any asaa who has had to drive a pahr of horses while tome gentle-hearted wemaa held a parasol over him knows what 1 have suffered. Aad whem she holds aa ma hrella. it ia iaSaitely werse. The- the man is aiteriy aad hopelessly extta-gak-ed. aad the material world is to him oaly a wild, bleak eases of alpaca aa4wakbeee." Bet here her little sense mi closed the debate hy deckflag that the eee caaghtit. hat the e;.es-had k. aai wkhet appf alfag frees the adsie ef the chafe? the bo-te-adjem aed. Jte---aVKs, im3urligfn Bmekeyti A meadicaat woald be apt to a poor tailor. Oar Young Renders. .t sn&tTxn tsax. Tkmt t fc- ? "" 1 'A ia Jaser" . 1 Tut kw ) ? t1 t k-lS W IU Urt lht r tfai m I ttut. U f-te fc - U ttt ot " Oo t ht f ?S JTW l,-?SiBJKT l? - . I'wr ii - n - n gtt4nS Uwi tiMr iwn Jit tUJ tk ''r T sttt Tw ttfttTk, fl --. l rt .t4 tM tat JtAftt " "irlVts lt ot m 4 ttfA. tVA0 I'AXriM) OCT. Tho twins sat on a boeh la the b-wk tne bye poreh. lookias otoinalv at v- oihr. l'laaoa tMlehrt. or sail. when sho saw ihetu frni the MU'-eti window. t TheV lookel v ry nttteh altkn Itrth ' had tousd healthv facet. wlh Itt I luthtighair. and the wore blot wrk crtnclLer mueh soded at th ke Ti )uhv.l r.'rv miii'h atttrt. alwV I Otis sild tUfi Were twm ail bat 000 u,T:..,r ,s r rrrt ci -,.-.., i was wren ears eld. Otb White was 4lhi, The Ixiy wth the long name Invrnt rd mischief, antl tho othrr wx a lorn. roit'ee of Way aad Mean As an Ksecutir officer, he swawm. pi etc success. It was understood that they were neoiiei on r na i a ur mr imTHinim. and. tok dinner -they were opcted bv the other much t eudurta fatuily i the afternotm. I don't feel Vert' tlrwd." said Oils. tt .,11 rtit. but your papa told inn wo had worked wi hed 11',. 1 rnoii1'-. for oo MimvTor, ami tie wo wititd rxt at l-asl it w ek Hut I iloit'l know how t rest ' Ubr. I do." sild Alivt Urc! Jfd 1 did It last minimi'' at Hanger's Lake Tlialt M'far nw.v they have not be gun to ha e Sunday s yet papa said. i.nein .'ei was i.reii ou nnii no vtcni ,.!., to t iha. r ,n .pW, 1 dotVt "ft VS JS.1 ,0 u., think they had breakfast or dinner, he 0f doing nroi at lirst. and r only sa d supper, and I know thoy ate a , h J he Amtw wh.l xrwuJZ, great deal, six lih somotmos. no,? . , ,, ' , , , ,,. ., ., rnild not g. there, but wo might sleep ! cause. . thai Mr. " T " on the hay In our bam. If juu'caa get mM l 'at. lU" 'L tt r. r 1 1 camp awd nimn Im.ne Mirt l 1 V.P,mmo Nora would give ma any- ""' "LV'trK .Tl thing If we would go.' said Olw. -She T 'Hn,verd t U,r . ft. il sntif wlten I .ulM.t her beat egtf and "T"1',!" !' "" W hh fam", forgot to take thu shell ofTone, she wished wo were in Halifax." Did she Where Is Halifax?' In- quired Ally. "1 don't know: a good ways, 1 guess, for Nora said sho would have time to clear up for onco before wo could get back.' 'Weil, ask her for the things now." Two pairs of feet clattered into tilts' Whites kitchen, and two voices cried at the ssme time " Nora, will you give us provisions week? Wo want t enough to lost a to camp out anil rest" Hut Nora was talking with Mary In thonixt house, and d d not hear them. 1 can't nsic mamma, because she t has gono to see aunt Jetinle." salt I Oils; "but I think shu would let us go. and give us things." I know she or Nora would let us havo the things if sho was here." said Ally. "We might taku them, then," said Otis, "and tell about it whvn wc comu b.iek.V - So Otis took up the market basket anil went into the pantry. "I don't see :uiy fish." he called, "but 1 like chicken belter." The nice slices of chicken which Nora bad ready for tea wero laid in the basket with biscuit cake and cook ies. A small pail of milk Otis look in b a hand. No one saw tre little liandlta as thoy lcf Jho kitchen and went over into Mr. Greene's barn. They climbcil Into the loft and nut the basket in a safe place whilo thoy scooped out a hollow in tho hay for a bed. This bed looked narrow, and thev lay down to try It The hay was toft and frnsrrant It rustled drowsily under their heads. They seonw remembered that they were camping out when thoy awoke In the hay just before dark, feeling as If they were very far from home. It was delightful. Why hail they never thought of this before? Antl the supper .was iiencmuf- In the cdtro 01 the erenin. when X-tl-r.V A-.n. .. Ulf mlr. .I.U .l. . wwv ..w.M nu "MKiun wim miij Greene and White fathers, iho two houes were in a stale of commotion not to be uescrtoed. Now the twins were as well known as J plied by the publisher? the postman. Ihey had been lost and j And farmer, who Invented your ci'wk. returned so many times that their f price one dollar and fifty cents' Who aftxlmri mothers had cea-od to fl found out h.m to wake tour boy's ae anxions during an absence. Hut this coniioe. and' who composed th., i'.k thTic they Bad not corao back nor had' of Inmimrtlr,- -dt. L- tt..-,t..i ..t tt-Vurf ft-rtHi! yrsr mnlil iliK.i.i ..... . . . . fquud. t nam noi seem prooaoie iney woeio; walk three miles to -BHnt Jennie's bot ould be likely as I'atric- saui. " vou Jr to fiml them where Jthey were not likely to be." He drove away In search of tho two colors while the two families rcaewed their efforts in vain- The clocks were striking nine whea rat nek returned alone. Taking care of the tired horse, aad lamenting over the poor little chaps. Patrick started so suddenly, whea a voice front the loft above called bis MSR, that he dropped his measure oi cats oa the floor. Patrick," -d the small voice 0fcia. " we forgot the blanket. " --What are yoa 4on p there. Ally?" "Otls aad I are camping out aad we ea4J4ankets toaightn Ally replied. Patrick left the bara la sack haste .that he forgot to close the door. he hds of the UmiUm id a htioa. At the close. Patrick retaraed with blankets, aad made the pair eeas tfertabie. " It was a disturbed sight for alL Patrick oa the hay btlow was sere their toegaes never stepped at aU. TW I sleep ia the after&ooa aad the sapper meat taem reses aad A ah-ost aMraisg whea they fell iato a All w still ia the hara whea they awoke. Fvea the horse was rnai Ally took ap a paU of fresh mUk which stood aear theav "They dea't expeet as home, hat I aheaU ftfciak weei mlm ue," -ttJri-1eirJ-rybed. they draak the mMrmsd ate the remai-e of last airhi's feast It was qaite aalike the cheesy h a breskfeHs. They did mk fee aava it was aa pleasaaC Ca-to XeeTs eUthee amie hiaa tkad aightsrv aaked Ofiar " fad m thgh they WmgW to seme atbar her- I aas more tired th wk f eejcaa to L Uj papa says that erarv- - - - M m m v SNlUUUwt There lapaKef met aaiat eei the shelf, "Uieto jSeerafcrtbe hara theeer eff act steed eaeei wkare Ptrdr lrt -u , v - - - - - t OiiK t ltsl rUkfc jvitlf w!M t w hefsi to ti - pf ttHH4 i w trH 5 : . l ft ! I tfttH fsfCe ?i rt r. ii t thfak I )tl t H ta H ti lc TW ait Kf4 rtr tfmf 1 vris l J pm : t & r - Tom v rarnt iwnKt f ft. iXlS41 VuI t . naa gBtlsi r " 9- Vr pU irI 4 lr V ia I rvn ! t raM l be h j2rt. Waar vi . -Y. V M jif wIwk4 t W "Now i4 Hik thsVite mt Mr. WkM. t Jotfc4 1It wp uv'l dsww K U a t4i, tt Het lfc-t -H ttt.JVr " ? vThSUC f if- lhe ot Jfl ! -VAttbi sir fhf. i4 -oM . Wi He Utto. cMtiaiU-t Mrs- WJ rvfsd tfc t tUfh-, frt-! tfr !. ! ' irrl f the cmi w ! ! Ult ihv tp frs! ! $ h nf wvmm J iw n - irac wmgVOUtmnto mutlwani turpritsHt t iV lVro4i 'tnuttf. tUtr .... ,M ., - i. tii i. I j-yn-Jth. rKlr,Jhri ". Jcnop hl U k ul l ami bitlR V.44 o - '4 ura sno to t 4t th a at for Mr Jil-. aa-l, h f Vi Hhtplr VtJ thmU m ' tlx btfle cwwjrs .mM Ww l , httfcr. . j Ally pol W hat -' 1 p f JH JJ, Ad he, l if .& . itttt Mr. t.t-n h4 r"" tm th dV nd thofw w t JWr 'llw U) wvat laiK tt asatu. Your fth-r tMm U innmmwn oM pU(M-. ' Al4UUs-, -'ji- ltk a t phan nibttn-' Whr t thatf" ui'infrel AH. A plat nhtnwthiy ahulMp tlrt4r 1 wJu n- wbIM ... . . .. rsia(M Uh-, bnnor 4 h ! rd. Wk lh, , , , , 1 Ui..:. -J,J. . u .... ' "" " WW" "" "' t I - .. . I- ..... I.. .llu l hlta ajrnla ,l H3,l!n,m( n,,t w,Joh Mr " raiee into tho rampliu rnjjta. "4 Aliv btntntlfMl ilosii Us lnf, ln. Mamma, van ww en ht. 1 un Uroil uf thi tdd DAtitp.' I hanlty know hw ti r t tut dear, r3p! ed Mr. (Jrven -- went nA w thottt ."vKitf tmrn If i ..''. Nora received llictu with open arw Sho made qttde a Ilttlo featln lir at their return, aad they both ipfd t the Whites', hho augyed them arately and In a bunch. Thoy are still trjtng to help, ainl tU the story of their ono nls-lil In oantf. a old SiiMiers tell the htWirr ot htttUfi from which they barely eoajKl ita tife.-rM ill, in U'e.lKMi. The Tw KlotU f Aide Mm. Thorn are still jxmple whothlnV tfct nothing is of tnueh aeeouiii uii)r t brings iu hard cah. A tMrripeiiUet mot one of these a short lime ago. a ! WM inquiring till way to the famMt j School of 1'hilosophy. held every wm J niv,r at Concord. He was a suHliuraod fattuor work n in a Held near the rwd To ou belong tlown hero nl ho to the eorreKndetit jKlnt1ng U the place whtsro tho sdicxd was I10M. No," was the reply; 1 am no phil osopher." ijticerlot, they ore. contiinii thi i farmer. ! wonder how nmsh t whole lot could earn, put em right down to good solid work. JJul I t they've got their bread ami tattler readdy provided, ami I don't support ' they It-tvejo litid out how muoh lit? I are really .wort a," , We haro known better Informed mn than this old farmer who held in m slderablo contempt the jrenler lioss,d were uisjiosed to say, with the cobbler of oil "Thero U nothing like lealhnr," Moil pisn hare their leitthcr. It fliar be (lrfnti It mar hn 1 metaphysics; It tnav be pop-eurn. !hI whatever It Is, there Is nothing like It ! for them. There are two kid of valnabb jor wm Those who make lift? m.IM. and thfsrt who make If wortli having The sun-burnt farmer belwnjs u the indispensable who mak life p sible. Uesieess men. manufactupH. merchant. s$ockaRic. all who tio, and lf lm .tlri ti -,.,!.. .11- -..,v . . ... . ' " - ' ' - ' - -w --- m--m -.- .- u on? to Utn taran ! lint tt tun burnt fanner, who made Tour Karmort' Alm' thai k t . r ..(.- hv n in,fi ,,r !., ....,t.-.f.iv. .... V8P- imssi iieccs oi Muir. mat oms with the Instrument without cla cbiroa) WVir .l,...l (. ,...... picture of "Knm. aad wbomd the granchcomeof Washkgtn eruln tne Delaware Uial bangs on yoofwalls? Aad who will preach vour sermon next Seaday moraiag' and h'w wouhL you gi, W) rough the 3ady afinm'wa wUhrtfourtfsojintS0nal wecklyjo, uoM orer?" Th people who p'rovSIe these things could not earn much money boeieg corn: but ther belon to the cfeiM wba make k worth while for corn to bo hoed. They make life worth baviag. YwiUCt Cumjnion. The .Siberlaa Plarae The fiiWrian pest that hs trn rag. ls ia Hussia is described as aa inain. matioa of thsplfest. that first attacked came al feoncs. The die-I aai afa.wHlKWt riviag aay pr-jMoaJtory staiptomi of ilfaes. would suddenly fall fa their tracks aad expire The spread of the epidemic to bomaa being b aUribated W the igaoraace aad eare teasaeM of the popeUce aad pettee aa thonte Aithoogh with sufCdcateri deace that the pet U coaUgioue. the owaers of asim&U dfiwe of it were al lowed toskia them aad use or t rtf the We This spread the coatagJoa both wsthSa aad hefoad the coa&aee of the pre-mce of Xovof-il. Sa whkrh H & maaUested Hs4 The peataaUseeght to cheek the epidemle by formiegie ligiomi proeaMh aad aMrchtag aboat with haaaers aearmg the t gave of the irgSc aad reeHiag prarerx. This cmly helped tm distribet the mv& of tkee-se-se mm fartWr, Large aam berf 4emx aamsals hare fallea a Prey to k. af ak jmt haawa live. Oae circa Wn that hM te Its de stractivMi ae the dtferemwi tkat exisCetTfer a time ae-g the phWd-a toB heet mode ef treatiag fe. their aFIJ""f aeertarfy serrtag to hefght e she astacal temnr al the ee-atrr . The lateraat'eaaJ Fareel ftt mto easratioa', aa Oetfar 1 Imim Frac, (iirm-er. Pslgiem aad Dea- --- - The lata SUay Laaier left two waist ad weeks whlah an vet to be vs. t A rf- k$-. ,-?; &- 5fc"