12 Conservative * Iii a. wild new A JFA11LK OF EXPANSION.reg1011' OUCO ft youug man started oat in life , poor as a bird , but with a large estate , to which by hard strug gling ho had got a title ho could hold. For a while the chances seemed against him ; but ho was able and resolute ; and he had married a splendid wife , so often the making of a man. She was young and poor in the world like himself , but of even a more ancient and honored family ; he had known her since he knew anything , and never cared for another. Many along the way had shaken their heads at the impulsive match ; they said ho could never main tain her , and both would sink to poverty and ruin ; but holy love and hard sense knew better , and well was their wisdom justified of its children. She proved the very help he most needed from the first , and afterward , mother of a mighty race. Our hero did not long continue poor. By tireless energy and brain , he soon improved the estate he set out with , and then began rapidly adding to it. Deal ing skillfully with his landed neighbors , he took in hero a field and there a forest , now a stream and then a cabin , ever building greater and finer , till in a mere trice , while still in the prime of his years , he was known for one of the big gest landlords in all the territory. Everybody wondered at his growth , and congratulated his prosperity ; perhaps those the most who sneered at it. He was generally respected , and especially sought after by the poor , from his known liberality. He was not univer sally popular among the higher classes , and it was partly his own fault. A bumptious way of talking and behaving , no doubt born of his well-earned success , went against him ; and they disliked his habit of even-handed and all-round tobacco squirting , kept up from rough pioneer times , when he had hardly any thing but tobacco to keep him company. But it is to be said , that those who knew him well seemed nearly always to like him , and some of his warmest friends were the more intelligent of the circles who had been his severest critics. At least that noble wife was true to him , up to all record ; her tongue did grow a little sharp at times , but the "old man" only said that it never hurt him , and it seemed to do her such a sight of good. Once in a while this airy confidence did lead him into some questionable proceedings. He grew so used to taking in land , that on one or two occasions he seemed a little unscrupulous as to the methods. Over and above a perpetual fracas with some gypsies who had simply occupied without improving the soil , with whom there was some buy ing , some driving and a great deal of cheat ing , the right and wrong of the general matter standing in a good deal of doubt he hod once been known to eject a poorer neighbor from many a broad acre by sheer violence , though after ward pretending to pay him something for the seizure. He put forth many high claims of justice , but everybody know he took the laud because he was ablt > , and no one could call him. to account. That is , from without ; his best friends , and many among his own now flourishing household , protested loudly against the act and loudest of all , it is said , that very wife of his youth , to whom ho owed almost everything , and whoso principles were most ex pressly outraged by this act. It is related also , that a terrible retribution overtook him shortly after , for neglect ing her counsels , in the shape of an intestine spasm indigestion from too much laud-gulping seemed the im mediate cause which threatened his very existence for years ; but that is a family matter. He recovered , and his growth went on apace. Acquisition , and increase of splendor , continued as of old. But after a time , one day when he seemed to have been taking a little too much , internally at least his utterance at the period sounded very much like it he once more assaulted a weak old neigh bor , some of whose proceedings had indeed been a nuisance , and to the same old purpose : "A little more land , if you please sir my hand is well on your throat , my pistol right at your temple , and my heart is magnanimous ; I will pay you a consideration. " As before , his true friends had been remonstrating. And now arose a curious discussion. An agent , who had acted and was under stood to speak for our hero , stood before the family and enumerated every one of those extensions in their order , giv ing date , location and area to the square foot in each case , exhibiting the great ness they had led to , and recalling that in almost every instance there had been some of the household who opposed , for one reason or another ; to the very clear conclusion , that all was right now , as all had been before. Some of the listeners did not indeed find anything very extraordinary in what was de livered , as they could remember hearing it many times before ; but the oration did seem to them a little remarkable for what it omitted. They found no men tion or suggestion of the vital fact , that every ono of these absorptions from the neighbors had been by the way of peace ful purchase and bargain good for both sides , with the single exception of that one aggression fifty years before , now for the first time repeated ; that this in vasion had been felt as a brand of indelible disgrace upon the record ; that those who opposed it then were now regarded as the conscience and intelli gence of the family , and those who now opposed the violence were doing exactly as these did then ; above all , their sacred mother , who had made them all they were , gave counsel now as before. Parallels , it would seem , if they exist in the actual world at all , and are not a fiction of the mind are decidedly re versible ; they extend in opposite wayt alike. * A BENEFACTOR. ' . , Smith , the Chicago millionaire who died recently in London , became a benefactor by dying. His estate has contributed $2,000,000 to the treasury of New York as its share of the iuheritanco tax , in addition to the sum of $5,000,000 deposited in the ex chequer of England. The fee of the comptroller for making the collection was $20,000. Including the share of the United States government , amounting to about $5,000,000 , which has not yet been apportioned , the total amount re alized from the estate under the inherit ance tax will be about $12,000,000. We are tired of hearing of Mrs. Pot ter Palmer. How do you feel about her ? Mrs. Potter Palmer's husband has con siderable money , a large part of which she seems to devote to advertising her self. We are also tired of hearing of Bishop Potter of New York. He rushes into print very frequently , and is never interesting. Atchison Globe. H.W.dft HNS' ROOFINGS PURE ASBESTOS NO COAL TAR WATER & ACID PROOF REQUIRE NO COATING ONE QUALITY MANY [ STYLES LOW PRICES ] APPLICATION SIM PLE 8t INEXPENSIVE [ ASBESTOS ROOFINGS Ai FULLY GUARANTEED H. W.JOHN 5 M'F'G GO. NEW YORK-CHICAGO PH ILADELPHIA BOSTON MAKE ! RS OF ASBESTOS MATERIALS , LIQUID PAINTS & STAINS IPIPE & BOILER COVERINGS ELECTRICAL MATERIALS iyjp -K *