i - cm cm L. V. & E. T BLUM, FIT5LISHKRS AND PROPRIETORS. -. . THE PKISS JOB CEPARTMEICT 8 Terms: Cash, in Advance. One Copy, one year, . j ',. v . $2.00 " u six months, . . . . i.oo " three months, .' .75 EATJE, DISPATCH, miTtu I VERY LOWEST PRICES. VOL. XXVI; SATfeM, C, JULY 25, 1878. aa-Liberal Discount to Clubs. NO. 30. If Frrt to rmststrUlWfno rumm viOi , t . ' .... . . ... . ; : 1 I lit 1 PAT'S CRITICISM. There's story that's old, . But good If twice told. Of a doctor of limited skill, i' Who cured oeast and man. On "a new-fangled" plan. With the help of a stnmgaly-made pill. On his portal of pir.e Hung au elegant sign -. . . Depicting a beautiful rill, : And a lake where a sprite,' W ith apparent delight, Was'sporting in sweet dishabille. . Tat McCarty one day, . As he sauntered that way. Stood and gazed at that iortal of pine, Wlien the doctor with pride ' ' Stepiied up to his side, '. Saying, "rat," how is that for a sign ?" "'There's wan things" says Pat, "Ye' ve lift out o' that. Which, le Jabers, is quite a mistake : It's trim and it's nate. Hut to make it complate, . Ye sliud have a foine buxd on the lake.V "Ah 1 indeed ! pray, then, tell. To make It look well, What bird do you think It may lack?" Says lat, "Of the same, , I've forgotten the name, ' Hut the song that he slugs Is 'quack', quack'. THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER! Spring ruled in earth and air ; Thebreeze was soft and scented with the flowers ; ' 'Come, let us walk, re day away doth wear, 'T My friend said suddenly 'nitd studious hours "Whither I do notcare !",. , . . Together fortli we set s He led rue far along the river way All blue with flowers that whisier "ne'er forget," And, when I spoke of turning, answered "Nay, A little farther yet." Amid the meadows green i -s v f A frn-house nestled :a Ti4.uotvery far"-J ; ' My friend (ersuaded ' 'if you have not been I'll take you ; on a farm the chances are There'ssomething to be, seen." ' luce there my friend delayed ; And I, half piqued, could seehis glance go round Until it rested on a lingering;nvald, . .Who looked at him, and then; uxn the ground. And then retreat essayed. . - Homeward our steps we turned : "And who's the daniosel?" quoth I ; and he "Why. nolMKly," and looked! with eyes that yearned Tow ards where, alove us in Immensity, Love's planet faintly burned. WHO KNOWS? have very 'It's nice this hot weather to ittlft hair of onn'a -,,. t" - v g vnui "Don't scream so!" said noor mother. ookine toward the Hunters' sid win dows, i As if the Hunters didn't know all about my failing charms, and no doubt took an inventory of them half vearlv to send abroad to the eldest son, who had been away in China these five yeais and more, and would likely never come back again. At least he had written to me to that effect when he went away. ; 1 had the old letter yet in a secret recess of that same old bureau where lav the convenient switch of hair. Time was when I needed no curls shorn from maidens across the seas or manufac tured from home material. 1 had plenty of my own. Jack Hunter c t one of them oft with his penknife that night when we parted. . i "1 don t know," he said, savaselv. "whether I most hate you or love you': but I'll keen this to remember the cirl who flirted and. fooled away the truest af- lection a man ever had for a woman. ' He hacked the curl from my head with his penknife, and looked at me as if he was half tempted to do me further butch ery; ana uou Knows i aian t care then it he had drawn the knife across my throat; I should not have resisted him "Don't go, Jack!" I cried out at last, holding the edge of his coat. Don't go, anyway, so far as China; if you do, I shall commence to dig a hole when you get there. They say that China is right under us, and I'll begin with a. little pick and shovel as soon as we get news of your arrival. Then you can begin on your side, and we'll meet each other half-way." He flung me from him with something like an oath. "You would joke and laugh over my grave," he said, and went away, not to come back again. Who would have believed it possible? That the years could come and go, the The birds made such a racket in the honey suckle vine outside my window that I couldn't sleep. The. moon was siill in the sk, but a veiled yet luminous splen dor in the east ; told that , the day was breaking the day of June that began my twenty-seventh year. . "When I say that I was a woman, and add that I was unmar ried, and, worst of all, that I had lost for trood the requisite energy that held forth any promise in that direction, it will na turally be thought that I shall make but a sorry " heroine; and it is Just because of these discouraging facts that 1 want to jot down this little experience of a day; as a . son of consolation to that. suffering part of my sex who have latent hopes, long lin gering, unfulfilled, at times at the last gasp, then flickering; up again with a sickly tenacity most painful to contem plate. But who knows what a day may bring forth? "Who knows I went about on tiptoe, not to awaken mamma; and I took it as a pieceof ingrati tude that when she came down to break fast, and began to enjoy the toast I had so nicely browned for her, and the egg I had so nicely poached for her,' and to sniff the fragrance of a bunch of honeysuckles that I had scrambled for at the risk of a sprained ankle and the cost of a shower of morning dew upon my clean calico I thought it mean of maihma to begin about that church festival before ,the day had fairly begun. ; '. i - ' : "I'm so glad it's "fine weather, Jane," said mamma, with great urbanity of tone and manner. -"J thought I'd get up early, so that you' could reach the church in good season; and I wouldn't waste any flowers in the house, dear r-I'd keep them alitor yotw tables'- . ; .' - i-i4 "you,. know, yery well, mamma"ll re ' pfiecC ."'that I'm not" going, to have a tab e. I've served my, apprenticeship at tables. Long ago," when I was young and fair, I wore 'White, with my hair curling about ' my. shoulders, and had the flower, table, and enjoyed it. Later on, I put my - hair up, and had a fancy table, and endured it with great resignation. Last year I had recourseHo a switch to eke out my scanty locks, and was compelled reluctantly to take the post-office. This year I sha'n't have any thing in fict, mamma, I'm not going to the festival.' ...... Mamma; pur down her bit of toast, and turned absolutely pale. "Not going to the festival!" she echoed, mournfully. " ; i : ' ; "No," mamma," I said, beginning al ready to plead my case. "Can't I have one birthday to myself? I'm twenty seven years old to-day." . j "Oh, hush, Jane," said my poor mother. "You scream so, the Hunters next door will hear you, and blurt it 11 over the place. I'm not deaf. If you choose to give up all chance of of society, and neg lect your Christian duties, and refuse to help the church along, why, of course, I have nothing to say, orily I must in that case go myself." 'Yor!" I cried. ' "You'll be sick for a month afterward; you haven't been able to do any thingof that kind for years." "I know it, Jane; but if you refuse to do these things, I must. I know I shall be prostrated with- the heat, and my nerves will, be shattered, and you are young and strong, and still attractive enough to com pete with any young lady . in the place, and might, I verily believe, if you were not so obstinate and headstrong, be sur rounded and admired as you used to be, ; and you might, for my sake, Jane at least attend these little entertainments." y Mamma put her handkerchief to her eyes, and I yielded; I groaned in flesh and in spirit, but 1 yteklea. ? Alter i naa tidied up the work, and settled mamma in the cool shady sitting-room, upon her favorite lounge, with a nice bookrftt her hand, and a? palm-leaf fen close.: by fo the day was growing hot I twisted up my hair before the glass, with many a sour mocking grimace; at the dark, thin, dis contented face therein, , put on an ugly brown lihen "dressj a calabash: of a hat, and went off to the church. My" mother looked after me with such misery in her face that I called back to her 'I would wear something nice in the eve ning. ' 'Will yoiL. wear -s your rose-colored crape?" pleaded mamina. "Will I wear spangles, and jump through a hoop??.' I said. "No, mamma; I'll wear my black silk." , - 'And curl your hair?", she coaxed. sweet summers bloom and fade, the heart of the roses lose strength and fail and fall sway, to come again as sweet, as strong, as fresh as ever, and Jack, my Jack, never come back to me? Yet he was not dead nor wed. That was one good thing. And he was out there among those women with narrow eyes and stinted feet, and he didn t as yet know a word of the language. He was growing fat, he wro e home to lus people next door, and bald, which didn't matter on the top of his head so long as he could keep enough to cultivate a pigtail. This was necessary, as he meant to set up for a Chinese mandarin, and was already embroidering a grown for the purpose on spare nights. And I felt, when they read me the letter, that it was Jack s turn now to make merry, when other hearts were sick and sad. If ne had only sent me one little line! He showered gifis upon other people chests of tea and parcels of silk, lovely bits of decorated china, big soft beautiful shawls of crape. He sent gew-gaws and gold to so many others: if he had only given me one little word! They must have told him I had been sorely punished; that my mischievous gayety he had whined out like the name of a candle; that even the be tuty of which he had been so proud and fond was gone every bit of it gone. Sleepless nights and useless repinings, long wearisome days endless years filled with wild yearn ing forthat which seemed forever hopeless, had robbed me of all. The old bloom of the heart took with it the crimson cheek, the laughing eye, and the light, elastic step. Lven my hair fell out. Alas! poor me, the flesb tell from my bones. As I hinted before, it was not a very alluring object that greeted me in the glass on the morning of my twenty-seventh birthday. "Aroint thee, witch! ' I cried, and wiped away with the hand-towel some salt tears that fell upon the dimity bureau cover, and upon the grave of sad, sweet memories. Then I put on my ugly brown dress, and the hideous bonnet to match, and went off to the church, pausing at the portal to look longingly over at the cool, quiet graves of some of our old neighbors. A soft wind stirred the long grass there; a few birds hopped lightly and fearlessly about. "How calmly, calmly smile the dead Who do not therefore grieve 5" "The Yea of heaven is Yea," I said, and went on into the church, where the ladies were grouped around the strawber ries that had just arrived. I took posses sion of a whole crate of these, sending the young and pretty maidens home to recruit for the evening. There were a few faint, polite remon strances when I declined to take any active part in the evening's entertainment. "We must leave that part to the young and attractive," I said, and there was a general buzz of acquiescence, I had the con sola tion of hearing several remarks uponf my extraordinary good sense and practical capability. I was graciously allowed, after I had hulled a whole crate of strawberries, to hold a step-ladder and some nails for Mrs. Smith, the apothecary's wife, while she hung some gorgeous drapery, and other wise deformed the cool gray walls of our little chapel, so that I was pretty well tired when I! went home at night-fall. Mamma met me at the gate, and looked at me so dolefully that I burst out laughing- , . "Never mind, mamma," I said; "I won't look so cadaverous after I'm rested and dressed for the evening." But I'm afraid I was rather a painful object for the gaze of a doting and once ambitious mother even when I had donned my black silk, and was ready for the eve ning. My hair was neither crimped nor curled. You" see, I had depended upon the switch, which was bought for purposes of that kind, and failed me ignominiously at the last moment. My head ached, and I could not bear many hair-pins thrust into my scalp; in no other way would the obstinate thing be induced to stay on. Mamma was heart-broken, and I was dis appointed; but even inanimate articles become perverse at times. I thought per haps the switch was grieving over a beloved and lost head of which it was once part and parcel, and I forgave it, and left it to its perverseness from that time on ward. When I reached the church I was im mediately seized upon for something they called "the grocery counter" an innova tion brought about by the advent of a well-to-do grocer in our midst, a widower, a stock-raiser, and a man afflicted with many maladies, of which he loved to talk. He had generously sent down from the city, in pound packages and tin cans, sam ples of his available goods, and had pro posed this "grocery counter" to the young ladies, which they despised and would Lave none of. The grocer himself found favor in their sight They flitted about him, filled his button-holes with bouquets. in his face, and tried to talk to him, poor children! as best they could. But they appealed to me to take the ugly counter, with its sordid pound packages for home necessity, and I took it with an ill-concealed avidity, i The truth was, a kind of heart-sickness seized me when I thought that the evening must be passed in making myself generally agreeable, and I felt that to wander about this place, distorted out of its sweet savor of godliness and quiet Sabbath rest so dear to a weary soul to wander about among the flags and wreaths and tents and arbors, with a smile for one, a nod for another was like the protracted and agonizing pilgrimage of a lost soul beyond the borders of the Styx. So J speedily put myself behind the counter, which comfortably hid more than half my tall, gaunt figure, and was so glad of the shelter that I found myself becom ing interested in these despised parcels piled up before me. I determined, ifl could, to make, my mission a success, o that l and other jtoor weary women might have this refuge to fly to in these gala seasons of misery. The successful grocer, who had not been very well pleased with the open ingrati tule for his bequest, look h 'art and brightened up when he saw me giving an air of smartness to his goods. He ex tricated himself from a bevy of young and fair ones, and came generously over to help me. In sheer gratitude I legun to praise his young colt that was pasturing in a field adjoining our- garden, and he remained with me. Shortly after, when he found that a queer feeling in his head agreed with the same discomfort in my own poor cranium, he brought a chair behind the counter, and in a low tender voice he detailed to me the interesting diagnosis of his pel malady. On the other side of me the minister's son. who was home from college, and suf fering from that period of egotism which Comes to young men of his kind, remained during the eulire eveniug, to show his contempt for; the young, the fair, the frivolous. A few old married friends, whose wives were sick or away, hovered about the grocery counter, so that it really did happeu that I was surrounded by men. The evening was passiug pleasantly enough. My dark corner was well patronized, and every woman who has to do with church entertainments will under stand my gratification and relief when I found it was nearly ten o'clock and all was well. At this time a letter was put into my hand by one of the little post- office messengers we always made a fea ture of the post office at our festivals, where pink and parti-colored missives, with doves and otherj doting designs upon the envelopes, were distributed at extravagant rates of postage. I had just been favored with a liberal offer from a customer, and, elated with my bargain, proceeded to put up my bundles, not giving much heed to the love-letter from the neighboring booth. Truth to say I felt a little tingling of the blood as the idea of the mockery that might be concealed therein by one of those witty village! youths, and the letter lay there for a fulfhalf hour, when somebody said, in the most commonplace way. "So Jack Hunter is back from China." In a moment every thing was black be fore me. 1 dropped my hands and my eyes to the counter, and when this sudden dizziness was gone, I saw upon the little tawdry envelope Jack's scrawling hand writing. Here was the little line 1 had coveted all these years, and this is what my half-bunded eyes made out: "I came home because 1 was mad to see you because all these years, and your old perfidy, couldn't kill my love for you. 1 find you just as I expected to, in a space small enough to be tilled outside and in side with men. You are as beautiful and fascinating as ever, and as fond of ad miration. I hear that you are about to be married to the grocer ; your elbow, who so engrosses your attention that you do not care to look at the passers-by. God help him, and God bless you! I have had my lesson. Now I shall, perhaps, be satisfied. Good-by." Five minutes after that I was running home, without my hat, and with his note crumbled up in my hand. The people at the festival no doubt thought that mamma was taken suddenly ill. They could not have fancied I was running after Jack, because he, had been there at the church for an hour, and I had been totally un conscious of his presence. Dear Heaven how could it be that 1 didn't know, that something didn't tell me, that 1 didn't fu he was near me? But I didn't I went on talking to the grocer about a remarkable operation for an ulcer that he had undergone, when Jack must have been only a few rods away! 1 ran down the road, my heart in my throat Fortunately the village street was deserted. - Every man, woman, and child were, at the festival, except those who could' not be out at all; so I ran on unchecked, a dim fear gaining weight with me that Jack had not unpacked his trunk, and was off for China again within the hour. But when I reached his house, which was next door to my own, I saw him sitting out on the balcony smoking a cigar, with his feet perched upon the rail ing. But his face grew very pale in the moonlight and his feet clattered quickly down upon the porch when he saw me run in at the gate. The cigar fell from his lips, the ashes tumbling over his broad white waist-coat "Why, thank God," he said, "this must be my own dear little girl. Now, see here, Jenny," he began, scolding, a minute after; but he kept tight hold of me, and trembled fully as much with happiness as I did. ! Nothing can persuade him that I am not a desperate flirt, as beautiful as an angel, and irresistibly fascinating.' I have not the' least doubt that half the village are laughing at Jack's ridiculous devotion and jealousy; but the well meant endeavors of his friends and lamtly to convince nim that I am a plain,' faded, unattractive, and neglected old maid he laughs to scorn as conspiracy of envy or jealousy. And how can 1 wonder at his delusion? Mamma says Jack lias terribly aged during these years of loneliness, and exile, and looks older and not so comely as our neighbor the grocer; but to me he is still the hand some, alluring, in every way adorable Jack. He is walking up and down the little balcony next door at this present moment and, hidden by our odorous honeysuckle vine, I am listening to him trill out the last words of his favorite bal lad: "So girls be tru while your lover's away, ' For a cloudy morning, for a cloudy m o o ruing Oft prove a pleasant day." EDUCATION IN INDIA, DIFFICULTIES IN THE WAT OF TEACH ING THE YOUXO IDEA. ; The young idea Is not very easily taught how to shoot in British India, where the alphabet presents vexation of spirit undreamed of in the philoso phy of the European or American schooT-boy. The immense assortment of simple and conjunct letters requires the Uife of five hundred dUtinct types in print ing the most ordinary Sanskrit book, while the complicated symbols employed even for the dialects in ever)' day use surround tlie process of learn ing to read with a thorn fence, so to sieak, bristling with crooked strokes and tortuous lines. .The art of reading alone requires the toil and practice of u hoary scholar for its ierfect mastery. "Writing about the facts of Indian Pro-, gress in a recent - number of the Co temporary JlevUicy I'rof. Moniex Wil liams holds mat one of the first reforms necessary for the spread of education among the Indian subjects of the Bri tish Empress is tlit application of the llomau alphabet to the Jmliau vernacu lar, an experiment which seems feasible enough from the recent succtsful em ployment of the 1 Ionian letters, supple mented by dots and accents in the printing of Suiu-krit books. Since talking is so easy and reading Is so hard in that country, it is not strange that the women there have a supreme contempt for learning, and hold a know ledge of reading and writing to be an unwomanly accomplishment. This prejudice, however, has been gradually wearing away under the influence of the British government and of mis sionaries in the cause of education. Sixty years ago it was estimated that of forty million Hindoo females, only four hundred could read or write. In 1872, out of aliout 1,1U0,U00 children in government and nou - government schools of all kinds, fU,0UO were girls Still the demand for female education is mainly restricted to the lower classes and most of those who attend the schools leave them with very little learning, since they quit school to be come wives at ten or twelve years of age. Male education, on the other hand, h:is, as yet, not extended beyond the aristocratic classes of the population. THE MONEY OF OUR FATHERS. The expression of "A bit piece" is often heard in t lie southwestern section of the United States, where the term is used to indicate the value of twelve and a half cents. For example, a huckster tells you his price for a melon'is "two bits" (quarter of a dollar), "four bits" (half dolIar),or "six bits" (seventy-five tents). It is seldom used in estimating any other fractional ivirts of currency; that is; we never hear the term three bits, or five bits, or seven bits; but "a bit apiece," or "a bit a van!" is used constantly in making sales, purchases and estimates. During many years, the word "bit" was a provincialism, ' the same as a "York shilling," in New York State, or a "levy" in IVnnsylvania. It doubt less originated in the English name of eleven-ienny bit, as applied to the Sinish,or old style carol us or pillar shilling, which was once in common use in the States, long after they ceased to be colonies. In many tortious of New York State, rennsyivania, and some of the Western States, the terms, "levenpenny bit,' or levy (value twelve and a half cents), and tippenny bit, or lip (value six and a fourth cents), are often used in reckoning. In the south west eleven-ienny bit became contracted into the word bit, and is now more commonly used than the name shilling was in the olden time.! The coin, how ever, to which it refers has almost ceased to circulate, and sjecimens are seldom seen, except in numismatic col lections. The fact that the silver in a lerfect bit is worth at le;ist twelve or more cents, but does not iwss for more than ten cents, has caused them to be that white people made a temporary couldn't stand. History says that tl auoue wun me Indians, and had the I Scotch bra was 1UAMJ and the Enrlish head of the lodge of which they 1-ecame nominal members certify to their bogus claim, and thus secure a large si tare of the iiayments. After the lists were given, to the agents, the amounts of money due to each representative were placed in convenient piles on tables. Tlie Indians stood iu line, and when the Individual name of each was called, be took his pile of shiners, swooped them into a blanket, twisted the cor ners together, flung the load ou his kick and retired to distribute the shares to those w ho were entitled to them. . Tlie bucks (warriors) then gave to eacn squaw a few dollars, with which they purchased ornaments, gewgaws, and other articles of dress and useful ness tluit were brought to the agencies for 'sale by hordes of traders, thieves, gamblers and swindlers of every class, who swarmed about the osts at t-uch times. Many of the shrewdest and most prudent of the squaws, old braves, and children, upon receiving their shares, immediately departed and hid away ia the distant fastnesses, where their lodges were located. After the bucks liad received their Iiy and presents, and had provided tlie squaws with allowances they deliber ately proceeded to indulge in a gaming spree and drunken debauchery, tlai was concluded only when they were fleeced out of every dollar they had, after which they returned ltome in a worse condition of degradation than before they came to the agency. Thou sands of these cut coins were taken away by the agency thieves and carried to the towns, cities, and countries, far away from their normal scene of circu lation. . 11 Itagki in ikribner for July. 2U. History lira, probably. The Go vernment Uld the lop!e wliat to be lieve. If they did .as they were tohL they must ay taxes for their ldief. If tliey didn't do st, tliey were rrcistrl. Things were ml hot. Someloly told stories about the Protector, and so he wai taken to the Tower and had his head chopped off. It was not much of a head, but he hated to part with it. Then there was a rUing of common lop!e, but they did not know what lor. Most of them got ra on to trees with ropes around tlwir necks. Some very fat men were burned, thus making light or vntir complaints. .Nu I iruess it H time for the little King to die He was only sixteen when I rave up the crown and the ehosL Eng land is not yet dr.; sq I cannot finish the history yet. Finis. Erie Uazrtte. ALFONSO AND MERCEDES. "There's a whole switch already curled for nie up in my bureau drawer," I replied. his pockets with bonbons; they looked up Street boys in Landon get arrested for " playing at Turks and Russians," which seems to involve some hearty fightiug. melted and assayed into modern coins and used for other purposes. There is one form of bit, which was once in common use in the South and West, which lias disappeared so com pletely that my earnest and irsistent efforts have not enabled me to secure a siecimeu, or find one in any of the nu merous collections which 1 have exam ined. In the early part of this century, nd up to about thirty years ago, the form of bit to which I refer was made by cutting a Carolus silver dollar into eight pieces, or a half dollar into four pieces, which were triangular or wedge shaped, and had a recognized value of twelve and a half cents each, in United Ufntiui jl..rriMiAW A 1 -i t ol- tiurliwl American coins were cut and circulated in the same manner. Tlie use of this kind of coin arose from the scarcity of small change, in frontier countries, and especially about the government agencies. When an Indian or trader wanted change of a smaller denomination than a half dol lar, he placed a coin on an anvil or stone, and, with a tomahawk, cut a dollar into eight pieces, with which he met the emergency and the demands made on his exchequer. These wedge-shaped bits were freely used as a circulating medium, and I saw them in use until about the year lto0, when the decimal currency of ten and five cent pieces hurried them out of sight. Their inconvenient shape, rough edges, ragged points and cutting corners made them very objectionable, and they soon fell out of use. Tlie method by which these bits were forced into circulation and used as money will be best understood from a description of distribution or pay day at an Indian agency. At such eriods the tribes were paid exclusively in sil ver dollars and half dollars, large quan tities of which were sent to the stations and posts for this purpose. I have seen at an agency several wagon loads of silver coins used to make one regular payment. ! On these occasions the heads of fami lies made up in regular form scliedules of the members, and these were certi fied to by the chief and the sums paid by the disbursing; agent. It often oc curred then, as at the present time, A WESTERN WOMAN'S PLUCK. her rnosrERors career as a ne- URASKA HERDER. A letter from Chicago to the Madison (Wis.,) Journal contains the follow ing: Six years ago a gentleman who had been a war governor of an upper Mis sissippi state, was afterward tniubter to a European court, andsulnequently, at the head of one of the most import ant departments of the government, and a member of the national cabinet, died, leaving a wife from $ir,tj to J-M.UUO, and Ihis mainly in au unpro ductive homestead in southern New York. Through the advice of a atij losid friend of her husband, this lady was induced to sell her property ami put the proceeds in a herd of cattle in soutkwest Nebraska. She came out to look after her investment, and finding the condition of the herd unsatisfac tory, assumed f 13,tU) dollars of liabil ities, and luught out and took the man agement into her own liands. In a few months the herd was in a good and thriving condition. But at the same time she found herself suffering from lecunlary embarrassment, and apt,-aled to her eastern friends for aid. They looked upon her-venture as a visionary one, and declined to assist her, but ad vised her to give it up, save wliat she could from" the wreck, and return to them. She did not believe there wm any such word as fail, and applied tier self all the more diligently to her busi ness. She rode to the herd every day, except Sundays, sometinu in a buggy, but generally on horseback 1G miles each way and gave the most minute instructions to her men. Her troubles she kept entirely to herself. Her help or her neighbors did not know but slw had a bunk to draw upon for all the money she needed. " At the end of the year she nent for the father of her late partner, and Uwy divided the herd equally and settled, with a loss to her of over $3,UO. which she aid to get the partnership dis solved. She then borrowed o) to enable her to paj some small debts, and make some improvement in buil dings, and start afresh, entirely disem barrassed. 44 At the present time her liabilities are only $3,UU0. She has a herd of over l,uxi head of cattle, lias an abundance of conveniences for them, and no stock farm or range within lUU miles is pro vided with as good l urns, sheds, corrals, and ranges, for cattle. Her herd is IXC1DEXTSOF A CALL TIT M)MK AME RICAN VISITOR. A (OIU)IAL WEL COME AMI rXCUXVKNTlOXAL TREATMENT. The following extracts ar from a letter frotn an Americau in Spain, who paid a visit to King Alfonso and hw wife a short time before the sad death of the young Queen : "Turning to tlie right there were two figures standing in the doorwav Alfonso and Mercedes. They Uu h shook hands with in. and he seated Aunt M. by him, while she rave me a clatr beside her. At first 1 did not think ler very pretty, but as I watched her talk I changed my mind. She dressed in an Indian silk, very idtuple. It was cut Muar neck, with a muslin tucker imdde. Around her jeck was a garnet-colored velvet, with gold lads on it. She wore gold ear-rings, and her hair which is black was simtfv braided, and had one or two gold pins in it ; white stockings and go. J com fortable, large slippers ; no glove. He wore a black frock ct, lrownuh trousers, and a dark blue scarf, with a ring on It of gold, a snake with a tiny diamond heatL We talked on various subjects, lie speaks English a littK and so does she, but neither of them like to. While he was talking, the Queen sat and looked at him as if hi words were diamonds. SIm was con stantly opening and shutting her fan, which is the way all S.unish women d w The room was a small one. I cannot tell wlat was in it, except some very pretty pictures. We commenced talk ing about the gallery here. He, it serins. Is interested in paintings; I everything, in fact. When Aunt men tioned muue Stunidi art bis w!mm works she lud hod to s, he juml up, saying : There Is one of his ; and then he sliowed her all the pictures in the room, telling the names of tlie ar tits. He found we were interested in i-irccUin, pictures and Ut-try. and so took us from oue thing to another, ex plaining the merits of various tables, chandeliers, pictures, and cabinet. The Queen followed. miU n and an x hnis to pica.. It was like calling on some very cordial neighbors in the country. The King explained things to Aunt, and then came lack and explained again to ns. We went first from the little room we were in into one fur nished in blue satin light. There were all sorts of little knickknacks In all the rooms, and lovely pictures. From the blue room we pastwl into a music mom. There was a grand piano with a cover of black satin. There was a taUe covered with fresh flowers. As the Queen and I paw-d she went to it and pulled me a big bunch of Marecha NIel ro. The others had gotten on aliead ; but w:en saw my flowers ., .' . . ... "f- 1 TIjc antidote of tpiam is mflee. . No l.ie-lall c!ul in (iermsiry. Tlie magnet J the jower to kill small IievtU and pUnts. '.s An unusual amount of flat will this year 1 raised in tlmVrprS, j You should forgive many this; In others, bat nulling in yours If. ; a Tlx-re U but one thing that U sure here on earth, and that is death. ! The Iwauty of the emerald Is l--t by an exrure to strong sunlight. He titat ly the plow would thrive, hituarlf must eillter Ix4d or drive The weakest spot in every nun it win-re lie thinks him If lire wimt, All sorrow and Joys ate lct temporary, so aim higher than tlirm. He that cannot l-ar with lotlr 'plea icuaions, cannot govern Li own. . Arijr UliVeafiill-liot bore, wlio, lMi;g allotted his way, slf-mttJe tins him. Have one ett!M purpose fa life, and if it be honor! je it will brirg y ou reward. J Mommen l In Italy, conr.f.etln? his historical and arcldioloicjJ iatei gat ions Think not of faults committed In theuAt, when one lias reform! his conluct. j lie severe to yourself, and in lul- gvnt to others; you thus avoia au re sentment. Man believes hintwlf always greater tlian be U, and Is tn ail "lm ttian lie is w orth. Wliat I desire that oilier sJt"uM not do to me, 1 equally desire, toot to do to tltem. Wisconsin lias W,f rr-s land which haTe never lm broken felt Ue plow. All nature U but art unknown of r to direction which UhU ! thee ; all cliance cans't not are. Over 4Vn tulips were In 14vm at one time In tlie ILon public garden tlie t.tlier day. j If lou listen talk nil J to calumny. you are only a tmle Icjm guilly tlan tin- actual calumniator. he a&ked me to give him one. where upon she rushed Uuk and got him a pink rone. Next to the music-room came one lurtiUbed lu tapestry. All along outside tltese rooms ran a covered terrace, on which were fresh flowers growing, wi uie Litry room we E"-ven foreign jnimals luve aj Iared in Japan, if which leu are Eng lish, and one Ervwlu j There are many m-n wboe tongue might govrrn muUiludea, if lie-yrouU govern their tongu. f i Wliat Is neoKMary to make one fr laring? A great iW-al of pl stf joined to a Itltle pity. If anrvr Is not rwdrainM, it l ' fmpicntly more hurtful to us tlian ibe Injury tliat provoke it. j When tle sun of virtu U rt. tlie Mush tf jdiaiue is the twilighLj When that die, all is darknrv. j Tlie manner In which a command Isolvyrtl U f more imiitaice titan the mere fu'Jilmrtit of it. j Hall fights have jut ln Intro duced fnun Sjialn to Maixrillrs Fraor and attract Immens crowd, j The silver wedding of Hie King and Queen of IVUictu l U b cele brated on tlie 2 of August, i Of the 41 yonnggir!wbi were ajw iilicatits for admisMon to llbi .at in S1k4 for liirU, I tit oe faiJM to ulss examination. j A genlns In Vermont ha si floating saw-mill, wntcn lie scuis aiong i. Champlain, doing a good tusinras with the farmers along the tanks. Parisians are tired of l ing Heir ujcket-handkerchiefs at the wash, and turned a comer, and, to my amazement, I now they have their pboUtgraphs eie- waikea into the Queen's Lrd-ruom. The Kng apologized, but be wanted to clearing over fi,0UJ a year, and con stantly increasing iu size. At a railway station where she resides, she has a farm of 140 acres, on which are a good dwelling, barns, sheds, cheese factory, corral, etc, in perfect order. The farm is all under fence; she buys all lumber used herself, and has every improve ment, large and small, made under her own ey e, and as she directs. In truth, she is her own superintendent, ami personally looks after everything both on the farm and at the cattle rauche. At the ranch she has a comforlaMe house, which she occupies when her business confines her there. She visits the ranch about five times a week, gen erally on horseback, and goes and re turns the same day. No business man in Nebraska is a better credit than this enterprising and excellent lady." A BOrS HISTORY COMPOSITION. EUWARI) VI. ENGLAND. Henry VI. died one day with great success, lie leu tnree cmiaren wno did not care to go with him. Their names were Mary, Ellzal-th and Ed ward. Tlie bust was tlie 'Ed of the family. He was a boy. Ills sisters were not. Their father also left a Will. His will was stronger than all Ids chil dren. By will Karl Hertford was to boss the State while Edward was young. Hertford loved the glass so much that lie became a tumbler, and was called the Duke of Summerset. He wanted the King to take the Queen (of Scot land), but the trick was lost because the Scotch refused to assist. Tlie Duke was called the Protector because he protected his own family and put every body else away In the Tower. The border men of England and Scotland were those who boarded on tlte frontier and bored each other almost to death ; so they liad a fight about Edward mar rying their Quern. The English at tacked them by water; which they show us a chandelier in her bath-room. wnich ojneU out of Ue bed-room. The chamber was f umUhnl in pink cre tonne, and tlie walls were hung Willi the same. There was a cover on tlie bud of pink cretonne, and a canopy over it ; a sofa by the side of the fire place, and a rug of fur or feather in front of it. The bath-room had a mar ble tub and a big ash-basin. A toilet table stood between tlie windows, with vases of rosea in it. The chandelier which he spoke of was beautiful. It Is of glass SpunUh work. The King kept saying, 1 don't show you that, be cause it is not Spanish, pointing to Sevres, or Chinese, or some article. In the tapestry room was the Quern's work-lusket. She was knitting some thing in ugly brown. In order the letter to show us some pictures site opened a window and some shutters. We returned to the room we went into first, the King apologizing all the time for leading us about so, and descanting on different objects as they haiinM to come before bis eyea. Then carpets next took his attention. He ushered us out another way, ami bowed us. with pride, a room lie had crmstrrrted where there used to be a staircase and two rooms. Everything but the lea ther on the walls was Sjaih. Tlie chairs are of beautif ully-carved wood. covered In red velvet, embroidered in gold and dark colors. The curtains are of the same, and there are curtains at all tlie doors. The carpets were Span ish and very beautiful, ami, as tbeKiog told roe very confidentially, they were very cheap. The carpels in the two rooms we next entered were perfectly exquisite, tl colors were so fresh and delicate; tlie King said they would wear forever. Next to this room was the King's study, a small room, with some lovely little terra cot la figures from Grenada in it. and some amethyst roam and this leautiful carpet. There was a writing table and ever so many books. From this ojned another bd room and another, remark aUe carpet. We went back to our starting place and took our leave, baring staid nearly an hour. ruled in tlie centre of each. A oartv of English engineers and mining managers are I ay lug a visit to the coal fields of tlie North ef Kranoe, tbHr ot-ject being to examine tl gw-l-r-lcal trala and ascertain whether the coal bnl l not the conti&ualmn of that in Simersetahire. S i It Is announced that Mr. Tlawrn ha found at Nin-veh, itnlMM In a ' wall of the palace fcf Aur-iUtil-Ialo, a round clay cylinder dlvVlrd Into ti . compartments, and containing nmrly 1.3 J line of Cue Inscription. What the lu-riptkn mean ha yet to I de terra ineL i The recent growth of I'aris U ia mnarkaUe contract w i:h former j ear. . lathe reign of Henry II., Curing th sixtemlh century, it contained about U.'iM hou-a. About 5W fear UtT. , in IT the number had only incrra.l to ZHQh In aner a u;e i forty-four years, tbre are IWZll. " TtoJdwin Smith says thai it l most J, prohuble that the private buildings ef H-jiue under the king were roof! ; with nothing letter than shinsle, and t it is very likely thai they -re mean and dirty, as the rivate UilMing of Allien appear to have borrt. and a Uu of most of the great cils of the : Middle Ages unquestionably were. A curious scene recently occurred during the proloction of a new 4rx at a IWlln theatre. The prologue opened tn the box at the risht of ttw stag, in whkh a humber of actor quietly ensconced thcmsrltcs btiore tlie performance b-gan. Pmwt.iiy a comic actor ajp-ared anj ordered tbta to vacate; tlry refund and a fry war of words foUowed. which oaght to have bren mJnl by another artor. dnwd as police o5ctT, coming up and turning them out. On lte night in question a green rl Iceman, who had never swti the play, danced to I In charge of the house, and, hearing tlie vociferous crk and tuj posing the wb4e thing to be In earnest, he a!i anlly roM to the !r and tumKM the actors out. Deck and heels, l-fore th matter could l eipUined to his comprehension. . V. ,1 I ' I - 1 - -1 t- . . . : t . 4 I f ii -1 1 -1 : I i i I I : H; : , - . I '4 ; I 4 .... j -1 i t 1 1 j