BLUE RIDGE 111 IK. BLAD JIj. YOL. IV.-NO. 31. i , The. wild bird siius and the rivulet rnas . So cheerily round tbe spot Wheqt pe pbscefal shades of the towering t mum . ..Fall,&m.optn mother's oot. . .the winders are low and ths thatch is low, Andjta old atone walls are gray-' , Ph 1 1 see I Jot where'er I go, ,.; jThit ol4o-far awaj. ' . ' - the little olook ticks on the kitchen waU ; ' --' T To eil the passing boars. YmAnd thfc woodbind is climbing roand the oot, ; ' With ite sweet'y sdente i flowers, v.' . - - And the old arm chair, so cosy and low, : Where mother di 1 knit etoh day ; Oh f I see it, I love it, where'er I go, That old Bom, far away. My mother ; I see her before e now, With the sunshine tinging ber wrinkled brow That was onee so smooth and tair Her orimpled border, as wh te as the snow. And her dark brown hair turned gray Oh 1 1 see it, I love it. where'er I go, That old home far away. And there s the white cow on its homeward .. ' .path. ,. 7W As if cornea eo quiet along ; And the Hi tie maid with pail in her hand la singing that dear old song. And the frolicsome lambs in that barnyard .Are gathering ro ind to p'ay Oh ! I see it. I love it, where'er I go, That old home far away. '-'a. Not all the p easuree the world can give, N- r riches of land or sea. Or the wealth or rank of earth's proud lords Can e't-r estrange from me The roof that cover'd my dear mother's head, With tbe humble floor or day Oh ! I see it, I love it, where'er I go. That old home f.r away. But alas I she has gone where all must go, For we ail shall pass away I Tea ! even the oot that I love so well ! Will crumble and decay ; For this earth is only a resting place, It joys are oars f r a day All my pleasure of life has center'd in That old home far away. In the Gloaming. "You are the best judge of your own heart, but I do not think your future prom ises much happiness as the wife of Godfrey Hill. Remember who and what he is." 1 These were the words over which Alice Hill pondered as she walked slowly through the grove at Bellows Falls. It was her favorite walk, when she wished for solitude, though it lay at some distance from her home, the stately house that crowned an incline stretch of ground overlooking the village. Remember who and what he is ! "TSFoT'"'!!!'" UiiiJT'fi3the8e-- orris JU11 iiiuT r7Hre8e-wonts rrrr slowly, and with due emphasis, only a few hours before, when Alice had read to her a letter in which Godfrey Hill iad asked her to be his wife. Who was he, then ! . He was the second cousin of Alice, a man of about twenty seven, who had been brought up by his grandfather in the house upon Bellows Heights, and had supposed his inheritance of house and fortune assured. Alice and her widowed mother had never entered the stately house while old Mr. Hill lived, but had supported themselves bv keeping a school for young children", after Godfrey's cousin, Alice's father, had died. It had never crossed their wildest imagin ation that the old gentleman at Bellows Falls would remember them by even a trifling legacy, and they were inclined to think themselves the victims of a practical joke, when they received the lawyer's letter informing them that Alice was? the heiress of the entire estate of John Hill, of Bel lows Falls. t It was like, a dream, to come to the splendid home, to know there .were to be no more weary struggles for daily bread, to wander through magnificent rooms ana ex tensive grounds with the deliriously novel sensation of ownership, And it must be confessed that Alice at first thought but little of the dispossessed heir. But he introduced himself soon as cousin, and visited the house as a welcome euest. Fori in answer to the second clause of Mrs. Hill's question, what was he? Alice could have answered trulv that he was the most fascinating man she had ever seen, And Alice Hill, though a bread winner in the busy world, had moved in good so ciety, having aristocratic family connections both on her lather s and mother s side. She was no novice to be won by a mere ly courtly manner, but she had never met a man whose intellect was so broad, whose courtesy was so winning whoso face was so handsome as were those of Godfrey inn. And vet there was a letter in her writing desk written by the dead man whose heiress she was, warning her that, "because he is unworthv. because he has betraved the trust I put in him, I have disinherited God freyHill." . There was no specific charge, no direct 1 accusation, but the young heiress was warned against her cousin. Yet, in the many long conversations the two had held together, Godfrey Hill had endeavored to convince his fair cousin that his grandfather had been influenced by false .friends to believe statements to his discredit utterly untrue. He had almost convinced her that he was an innocent victim to unfortunate cir cumstances, a victim to a mistaken sense of honor. She was young, naturally trustful, and her heart was free : so it is not wonderful that Alice Hill was inclined to restore the disinherited man to his estate by accepting the offer of his heart and hand. Absorbed in her reflections, Alice did not notice that clouds were gathering, till a sudden sum mer shower broke with violence above tht; tree tops. The rain came through the branches sud denly, drenching through her thin black dress, and she ran quickly to the nearest house for shelter. The nearest refuge proved to be the cot tage where Mrs. Mason, who did the wash ing for the great house, lived with her daughter Lizzie, one of the village beauties. There was great bustling about when Alice presented herself at the doer. " Mercy sakes ! You're half drowned," the old woman cried, hurrying her unex pected guest to the kitchen Are. " You're wet to the stun, riarip -ww blessing there's a whole washine in the bas net to go home ? Yoa can go into Lizzie's room and change your clothes, and I'll do up them you've got on. Dear, dear ! your hot la 4tio .! . . J .-. juot.iuuieu crape won t bear wet ting and you've no shawL You must Inst f.,T " "" ol Aazzie s to go home in. j.i ucunjr uarK anyway.' 'Where is Lizzie?" Alice asked. -sewing at Mrs. Gorham's, dearie. She will be coming home soon. I allers make that a part of the bargain that she's to be let home afore dark, and it gats dark now by six fall days are shorter than summer ones, bo shell be home soon. It's clear ing up." . , It was clearing up," and it was also grow ing dark, 89 promising to send home the borrowed dress in the morning, Alice'started iar no me. She smiled at herself M she stand hpforp wc ""Tor, tot te had not worn gay color since her father's death five years before. Lizzie's blue dress, scarlet shawl and gay Sunday hat were sadly out of place upon mo eicuuer ngure, ana setting otf the pale. ivuucu lace 01 Alice 11111. -" veax me." said the old woman. T hmw juu 11 buuu cnn-K up a Pit. Miss Alice, and .A..m 1 1 ... ... 1 laae on your black. . The old gentleman has been dead a year, now. Them roses ao suit you beautiful. " Alice glanced at the starintr red rcnectea in the mirror and smiled, as she saia: "I will take great care of Lizzie's hat, Mrs. Mason. Good-by, and thank you. Tfr 1 J 1 , " "cany uusk. ana tnere was a quarter of a mile to walk before home was reached, so Alice hurried through the grove where the trees had already shut out the lingering daylight. Bhe had tied a small veil of erav tissue over the gaudy hat, as she left the cottage, and she hoped, if she met any acquaint ances, she would escape recognition. When she was half through the Prove she heard quick footsteps coniinsr from the village, and a moment later a voice said : 1 ou are punctual." and she was rcuicrhf for a moment in Godfrey Hill's arms. " one Knew his voice, and struirfi'led to fre herself, before realizing that he had mis taken her for the village beauty, i room" ne said, releasing her. ' "Don't put on airs, Liz. Were you going to the house?" " Yes," she answered, faintly, indienant and yet curious, her woman's wits auicklv soeing his error. I must go, too. before lone, thoueh I had far rather stay here in the woods with you, sweetheart." ! j our sweetheart is at the house." Alice said, trying to assume the jealous tone of an uneducated girl. What I That chalky-faced rirl in black ? Not a bit of it. Didn't I love you long before she came to take what is mine?" And a curse followed, coupled with her own name, that thrilled Alice Hill with "But they say you will'marry her," she persisted, calming her voice as well as she could "They say right 1 I will marry her, and have my own I Then, when she is dead, you shall have your old beau again, Lizzie, and come to the great house, my wife. It is only waiting a year or two. " But she may not die !" gasped the hor ror-stricken girl. : j "She will die! I ll have no; nne aay taking what is mine mine, 1 tell you. But what ails you ? You are shaking as if you had an ague fit. I've talked it all over often enough before, and you never went off into such shakes ! It is nothing new I'm telling you." "But you would not muraer her?" the poor giri gasped, drawing her veil closer. "Come now. none-of that,' was the rough answer; "you're not going back on me now, alter al. youve neara 01 my plans. Youve sworn to keep my secrets, or I'd never have told you them. But what is the matter?" And here Alice found herself shaken with no gentle hand, to her great indigna tion. But her fears overmastered her anger. Godfrey was heir-at-law to her newly acquired fortune, and if he suspected her identity, in those dark woods, she did not doubt, after what he had already said, that he would take her life. "I am not well," she said, freeing her self from the rough grasp oh her arm, and I must hurry on. Wait for me here until I do my .errand at the house and come back." "Be quick, then," was the gruff reply. And if she was in haste, the scoundrel might well be satisfied at the rapidity with which his companion left him. She scarcely knew how she reached her home, tore off her borrowed finery and wrote to Godfrey Hill, declining tne nonor h had nroDosed to her. but giving no other reason for her refusal than the state ment that she did not love him sufficiently. " Mamma," she said, coming into the drawing room, " I have written to Godfrey, refusing his offer, and sent the letter to him by James. I have remembered who and what he is." Mr. Godfrey Hill's amazement was un bounded when returning to his home, in the village hotel, to dress for his promised call upon Alice Hid, he found her note awaiting him. But he did not renounce his hope of shaking her resolution until the next day, when he met the true Lizzie Mason in the ahartwi ornvp- and in the course of their lover-like conversation, that dansel told him who had worn her gay hat land red shawl on the previous evening "An' she sent a five dollar bill with the dress, because it got wet," said the gut "Au" that I call real . handsome of her. Why, what ails you ? you're white' as chalk 1" . 'Vr.thinr nnthinir Youwere "not in the trove at all. then, yesterday? " Nn' I mil dn t m Oil UU hjiik ki dark and so I stayed all night I knowed you'd be mad waiting for me7 but I couldn't help it this time. Why" For her lover had started for the village without even the ceremony of a good-bye. Hp Ins nn timfi. on big way. Until he stood in tfie office of Jermyn & Jejinyn, hin crrsLnrifsf hei-'n lawvera White as death, with a voice hoarse and thick, he said to the older partner : "Yon told me mv trrandfather left me ten thousand dollars, upon certain condi Hons. ' " Quite correct. The conditions are that vou leave Bellows Falls and never return to it. and that you sign a deed relinquish ing all claims as heir-at-law, in case Miss MORGANTON, um cues before she is of aire. Mr Hill did not draw up this paper until his will was signed and sealed, and he was remind ed that he had made no'stipulation for the reversion or his estate." nemmded by yeu? " was the bitter re joinder. Kemmded by me! He was shown the danger that you might become a suitor to tne yonng heiress. w ell, that danger is over. I have been sincere suitor to the heiress, and she has reiusea tne nonor of an alliance " "Hum!" "So, having lost that stake. T Jim nrp. pared to accept the conditions, take th tn thousand dollars, and turn my back unon X) .-.11.. t: 11 jjcuu wb r aiis ior me. It was with a sense of great relief from a very urgent tear, that Alice Hill heard from her lawyer of the demand upon the GDutKs, ui maue Mr -poorer by tea thou sand dollars, and temtffiXt Godfrey ITOI from her path for life. She told no one of the walk in the gloam ing that had revealed to her the black treacnery of the man who wooed her so gently, and had so nearly won the treasure of her young heart. It made her shy of suitors for a long time, fearing her money was the magnet that drew them to her side; but there came a true lover at last one she trusted and loved, and who won her for his tender, faithful wife. And Godfrey Hill left his old home never to return. There was no thought of revenge in Alice Hill's heart when she heard of the death of her cousin, nearly three years after his departure from Bellows Falls ; but she could not restrain a fervent thought of thanksgiving, when she realized that there was no murderous thought hanging upon her possible death. And to her relief she told her himhAnd for the first time of that involuntary mas querade that saved her from the power of a villain. "It was at this hour, Will," she whispered and this is the first time since that dav that I have been able to sit, without a shudder, in the gloaming." Charmed by a Snake. For some weeks the parents of Rert.hu Miller, nearMt. Vernon, Ohio, had noticed that their daughter was showing marks of declining health, evidenced by an increas ing paleness and emaciation and accompanied by a melancholy mood. 80 marked was the change becoming that they began feel ing great solicitude concerning her and con sulted a physician about the matter. The physician visited the girL but was unable to explain the cause of her decline or to render her aid. It also fell under the ob servation of her mother that each afternoon. abeut three o'clock, the girl would leave the house and remain away from one to two hours. This factSbeing communicated to the other parent, it. was decided to watch the young lady and discover if possible the ciingly on the llay following when the hour had about arrived the father left the house and watched for the going of his daughter. In a few minutes the young girl was on her way through a wood and up a ravine lead ing from the house to a small stone quarry, some half-mile distant, reaching which she took a seat on a flat stone, under a small clump of trees, and remainea sitting there quietly for several minutes, her head held in one position, and eyes evidently fixed on one spot. The father had gotten up so near by this time that he could observe all that would happen. In a few moments, to his amazement, there proceeded from the direction in which the girl was looking a snake about four feet in length, and known to him as our common blacksnake or racer. 80 astonished was he at the peculiar man ner of his daughter and the appearance of the reptile that he remained quiet in his concealment to observe what would happen. The snake crept slowly along towards the girl until it halted close to her feet. After remaining there motionless for a minute or more and gazing fixedly into the face of the girl it slowly and stealthily began creeping toward her, and in a moment lay coiled in her lap. The girl remained perfectly mo tionless, apparently not the least alarmed at the presence of her visitor, but gazing in tently at it. After lying in that. position for a short time it slowly uncoiled, crept down to the ground and back to its hiding place in the rocks. The girl remained sit ting motionless for a considerable time, and then got up and retraced her steps to the house. On the next day the father, at the appointed time, took his gun and proceed ing to the scene killed the reptile. The girl, startled at the report of the gun, sprang te her feet, but immediately recognizing her father, proceeded without further ado back home with him. She, when interro gated, could give no intelligible reason for visiting the spot, except that at a certain hour she felt strongly inclined to go and sit there. She has rapidly recovered ner neann, and appears in no wise affected in her mind. Experts can offer no solution to this strange . . . . 1 : ul un ,uA proceeding, tne mosi inieiu&uic, iu animal noseessed a powerful mesmeric' In fluence, and had bO "wrought upon the mind of the girl that bhe went automatically to the place. This, in connection wnu an mi cumulated inherited disposition to be be guiled by a serpent transmitted from our first mother, Eve oners tne omy rauouai explanation. The Pyramid. The Pyramids continue to puzzle man's ingenuity, not only as to their methods of construction, but as to the purposes for which they were built. M. Smyth, whose astronomical views imbued everything be looked at with his favorite science.endeavored to show that the pyramid was nothing more than an everlasting monument, with the beneflcient Intention of keepinr for ever fixed the unit of length a sacred cubit standard. The last idea is that the pyramid is simply a cairn, ana that as a cairn it will be resolved sohie dav. and will crumble to the ground. The labor employed on the Great pyra mid was equivalent to lifting 15,733, 000 000 of cubic feet ot stone one foe high.5; If accounts can be relied upon, it took 100,000 men twenty years to Pomnlete it. As a contrast, in con structing one of our earliest lines of railways there were lifted 25,000,000,- 000 cubic feet of material one roocnign The road was built by 20,OOU less than five years. men . i a . , - zz K. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1879. The Old Sekaol-nwaae. It stood by itself on the outskirts of the village, and had now fallen into decay. The old porch through which we entered was broken down, and no longer the honey suckle clambered over the aides. There was an air of gloomy desolation about the place, and the moaning -doves in the trees without added to- the gloomy picture. The desks and benches weqe still there, but cov ered with dust, and the spiders had hung their gray drapery over them. The teach er's table, raised on a platform, still stood, and the inkstand black and dry, had never been removed. -The Bible, from whose pages the exercises of the school were always opened, was in its accustomed place, but like everything else, cowered with dust and mold. ' - ; j Twenty vf-rs before, wjfea a Terr rdnn Iniaimtlu con- ums uij ieswf'?awgrjj)6ltt.R' was a different place then Tile warm sun light came through the windows, . and the balmy breezes crept in laden with the per fume of the flowers without The butter flies darted in and out of the windows, and the little humming-birds hovered around the honeysuckle which clambered over the porch. The stream that dashed over its rocky bed made a weird music which min gled with the rustling of the leaves of the tan trees without. The teacher was a pale-faced, dark, sad- eyea woman, not more than twenty-two years old, with a gentle manner that seemed almost hopeless. She had come to the village a stranger and opened tbe school. hhe called herself Mrs. Ray, and boarded with the wife of the sexton of the church, She evinced Jbut little inclination for socia bility with the villagers, and generally re fused all invitations to social gatherings. She was evidently a woman of culture and refinement, accustomed to moving in polite circles ; and how she ever came to drift into our quiet, little, out-of-the-way village it was hard to tell. She happened to come just at the time we needed a school, the old teacher having died, and so, in a short time, her school was full. She was very gentle and the puoils learned to love her. Her very gentleness proved a restraining force, and the roughest ooy pent readily to the rule of Mrs. Kay. It worried us, however, to see her fo sad. and we noticed, too, at any unusual noise, or sudden appearing ef the parents in the school-room, her dark eyes would assume an eager startled look, and her white face would turn still whiter. Twenty years had rolled awav since, as a nine boy, 1 had gone to school to Airs. Ray. 1 had left the village for the city, and now, for the first time, had come to visit the home of my childhood. "Well, John," I said to the old sexton, "let us take a walk now to the school-room." "Ah, sir, many is the day any one has been there.. It is never opened now, and is fast falling to decay, " said John. "And Mrs. Ray, John; what became of "flln. rin-1 T Yy- "11 - story' . w- I shook my head. "Ah, sir, that was a terrible thing. We had to shut up the school-room because the children refused to go there, and so we built a new one. The building fell to decay, and the flowers around it died, and the weeds grew apace. It is very desolate there, sir-" "And what became of Mrs. Ray ?" By this time we had reached the old school-house, and , having entered, were looking around. ! "We'll dust this Bench, John, and sit down,Jand you caaiill me the story of Mrs. Ray." 4i The sun was jwtfnnking bfehind the hills when we took our mts amid the dust and cobwebs of the old khool-room. It seemed to me that I could fe the sweet, pale face of Mrs. Ray clearlypefined against the dark background of the iwmy place, and hear the gentle tones of fcr voice. Well sir, ' said Be old sexton, "it was a terrible day whentve found Mrs. Ray lying dead in the stool-room, ner throat cut, and her dress lrered with blood. The children ran home d told the news, and the villagers hasten 1 there ; but she was dead, sir, and all v sould do was to pick her up and carry h ito my house, where she boarded. " "Did she cut herjwn throat ?" "Oh, no, sir ; it lkst have been done by a stranger who spenW night in the village, and who was heard jt inquire if a person answering to the detription of Mrs. Ray lived here. You se sir, her name was not Mrs. Ray at all, but? Irs. Mandeville. The man was not seen tbi next day, and was never heard of again! ' 1 "What reason coull b have-for murder ing her?" "Mrs. Ray told her rtfoy to my wife. She had been engaged to be married to a young man who was poor, and who her to marry. He father did not wish net wanted her to mferry Colonel Mandeville, who was rich ifd influential. Then the story reached Mr that the one she loved had married a My in England, where he lm l L -1 r -Tf" VttsT felt desperate when she sw? in the news papers. ' She marriel Colonel Mandeville, but she was not hap' ' with him because she did not love him and he was a fiery- tpmnpreri man. and le was afraid ot nun. Tn n of hi raires M told her one day that the vounir man she Wed was not married at all, and that he ana ner iainer uu caused the marriage iotice to appear in the and had intetepted all their letters . . , 1 A I 1 -F . ... . ,J to each other. Thei Jura. jjianaevme wiu him that there was 10 forgiveness in her heart for him ;-that be never wished to see him again, or her faher either, for they had broken her hear, wnen tne young man had heard of he-itreachery in marry ing another when s had promised to marry him, he wrote her a terrible letter, upbraiding her. He jrew a sort of melan choly, and one day he was found dead in his room ; he had shot himself. Mrs. Man deville stole from her louse one nigni wnen her husband was out, d made her way here, because she kne that it was an out-of-the wav place, and aone would be apt tn find hpr. She lived in this village two years, and we all learned to love her, she was so gentle and so kad. But my wife says she looked terrible, so white, and her eyes Cashed whenever she spoke of her father and husband, aad she used to say. "I never can, I never intend to forgive them, Mrs. Morrison; no, never 1 never 1" We can form no idea how her husband hpre for we supposed that the man was her husband--lthough we had no S -.!.. n h; .ft t ipft the village. Tbe in children had left Mrs. Mandeville putting I . ... .1 u inn 1 on her bonnet to leave uw - that was the last time she was seen alive. Her bonnet was lying beside her when we found her dead, all bioody and crumpled. Poor young lady 1 It was a terrible sight to ee her lying there, her eyes wide open and filled with an expression of fright and agony. I think, sir, that it would have been better if she could have forgiven those who did her the great wrong ; Jbut she said there was not one atom of forgiveness in her heart, that she would rather die than to say the word forgive to her father and her husband." I The sun had fairly gone down behind the hills when the old sexton finished . his story. The shadows enveloped the old school-house in dusky dimness; we quietly arose and walked out, glad to leave behind a plsce haunted with such sad memories. No doubt as the old sexton said, it would have been better to have been forgiving, for forgivenesa, like charity, covers a mul- -Sr The Kew "Annlhllator." Bright and early, before one-tenth of the citizens of Detroit had shaken off the ef fects of the glorious Fourth. Professor James K. r. Bnrhngame made his appear ance on several streets in Detroit almost' at the same moment. You would have known him to be a professor, even if you had seen mm tangled up with a butcher-cart. That tall plug hat, tarrying the stains of years U. i l: j . . i . . , 7 iui uuen uusier ginea at tne waist his wag hair hanging down to keep his shoul ders warm, was a dead give-away on his title. The Professor came here to dispose of individual rights to use his "FJy Annihi lator," and he didn't let thoughts of the next Presidential ejection set him down on a bench. His piccolo voice inquired of a waman at the front door of a house on Congress street east : "Madame, have you ten seconds to spare this morning?" "No, sir," was the prompt reply. "Very well, then ; you will miss seeing my Fly Annihilator, '' he remarked, as he walked off.1 "Thousands have missed it, to their everlasting sorrow thousands have accepted it and been made happy for life." "It's some kind 0' pizen!" she called after him down the street. "Warranted free from all drugs or chem icals dangerous to the human system, and recommended to people troubled with sleeplessness," he called back, as he briskly retracted his steps. "I've got screens in every window, and yet the flys get in," she continued, as he opened his satchel on the steps. "Of course they do of course. A fly is like a human being. Bar him oat and he is seized with a desire to get in at any. pnee. leu nun ne can t and he will or break his neck. Fling away your screens and depend entirely on my fly annihilator, warranted to kill on sight, and can be worked by a child four years old. This is the application." .. IT . ,1 r tnvl.li.l,. nlLht n.inn vided with a small brush, and holding it up continued : "One twenty-five cent bottle does for twenty doors, and I give you directions how to make all you want. No poison here nothing in this bottle to trot little children up to the cemetery." "Why, you don't put it on the flies, do you?" she asked. "Not altogether, madam. Any child can use it, as I said before. Just watch me a moment." He swung the front door open, and with the brush applied the mixture to the back edge, giving it a thin coat from top to bot tom. "Now, then," he said, as he swumr the door back, 'flies like sweet. This mixture is sweet. The fly alights on the door, and you swing it shut, and he is jammed against tne casing ana crushed in an in- stant. Every door is capable of killing 1,000 flies per day. If you have twelve , aoors, your aggregate of dead flies will be exactly 12,000. When you have crushed aoout z,uw on a door, take an old knife and scrape them off, and begin over again. " "Do you suppose 1" began the indig nant woman, but he interrupted with : "Don't suppose anything about it, except that it will mash flies and never miss. All you have to do is to open every door, apply the mixture, and shut them in succession. If you have twelve doors and twelve children, you can leave it an u, ltoo children. And only twenty-five cents a bottle." Do you suppose 1 want my doors dftiihed with flies and molasses BCSt made a cuff at the bottle. "Just as you prefer, madam," he quietly replied. ''Some do and some don t. some won't have it at any price, anu uiucio r" set up extra doors in the back yard in order to use lots of it. I'll warrant this liquid to draw 'em, if youH only open and snut tne rtrvira " "I won't buv it I won t have 11 1 sne shouted, as she jammed the broom against at-wt mtiifliTWTerr wen. xx yvu prefer a fly on your nose to one on me aoor I can raise no objections. Remember, how that this is mv farewell tour previous .,.., - j 1 j. tn annparinff before the CTOWneu ucnua ui Europe, and you will not have another rhunce to secure the annihilator. All you have to do is to take your sewing on your lap and open and shut the door at regular intervals." . "If my husband was here he d he d "He'd buy the right for this county and oirfi in two months : but, as he is not here, we'll bid you good day and pass S7ilV. JW u - ' on. oorry msusiu, um r - j u... falka nrpler to kill their flies with a pitcniorK, anu u man with pitchforks will call here in- fif teen minutes. The Boy Barn-Burner. n,p hnir Blood on the back-yard fence, whence all but him had fled; the flames .t i;t fathpr'a harn shone lust above the shed. One bunch of crackers in his j hand, two others in his hat, with piteous j accents loud he cried, " I never thougnt of that 1 " A bunch of cractters to me uui one small dog he'd tied ; the dog in anguish sought the barn ana mia its ruiuu mcu. The sparks flew wide and red and hot, they lit upon that brat ; they fired the crackers in bis hand and eke those in his hat. Then . hnrat of ratttin sound the boy! vi i , hp mnet Ask of the winds th.t f.r .mnnd strewed bits of meat and bone, scraps of clotn ana oaus, cloth and balls, ana tops and nails and hooks and yarn, 1 tne dreadful boy that burned his iainer a barn. Bank'a Itobiae. I was detained over Sunday in Barns bury, and on Sunday morning I resolved to go to church. The first church I came to, a small frame structure with a wooden steeple, had the doors and windows tightly shut, but there was a man sitting oa the front steps whittling a stick, and I said to him: "Are you connected with this church ?" "Yes," he said, T the sexton." "What is it closed for f" "Well, mostly on account of Bank's babies." "Babies?" f8it down, and Til tell you about it. Yon know Banks, be come to this town to live a few weeks ago, a perfect stranger, aad he rented a pew in this church. 4 It seems that Banks had three little bits of babies, triplets, not more'n two month old. &nd then, fcridM jheearl twins about a ew aborf th nsv bies, but Banks wantedthe nwnr (tama baptized, and he allowed to Mrs. Banks that to rush the whole five babies into church oa one Sunday might excite remark, you understand. So he settled it that he'd have em christened gradually, so to speak Ac cordingly the next Sunday he fetched little Jimmy, one of the triplets, and all went off well eneugh. On the followin' Sunday he came a promenadin' up the aisle with George Washington, another triplet, and Dr. Binns, our preacher, he fixed him up all right People thought it was queer, but when on the next Sunday mornin' Banks and his wie ceme into church with another baby, William Henry, crying like a Pawnee war-whoop, some of the folks couldn't help snickerin'. "Howsomdever nobody complained, and all might have been well if Banks had'nt come along the Sunday after with Elijah Hunsiker Banks, one of the twins. Every body laughed, and Mr. and Mrs. Banks they were furious mad as anything, you know; and when Elijah Hunsiker Banks hauled off accidently with his hand and hit Dr. Binns, who was holding him during the ceremony, a wack in the face, and the doc tor dropped him in the water, the congre gation just fairly roared with laughter. Mrs. Banks turned red as fire and looked as if she would like to murder somebody. Well, you know, we all thought this was the last, and public feeling kinder simmered down on toward the end of the week, when who should come booming up the asile on Sunday morning but Mr. and Mrs. Banks, with Tecum seh Aristotle Banks, the remain ing twin! Well, you ought to 've heard the congregation laugh I I never seen nothin' like it in all my experience. Even Dr. Binns had to smile. And the Bankses, they were perfect wild with rage. Anyhow, they baptized Tecumseh ; and after meetin' some of jthe elders got to jokin' about it. One, they'd have to apply to the town su pervisors for an extension of the water works ; another allowed that arrangements ought to be made to divert Huckleberry Creek and run it down the middle aisle of thfi CllllWh- another msue onma IrinH nt many banks were in town ; another said that uanKS would need about twelve pews when his family grew up. Somebody must have told Banks about it, for what does he do to revenge himself! He sends down to Cla non county to his tws sisters to come and bring their children. So they had a uple of babies apiece, and as soon as they arrived uu" "e oegins to bring them to church gradually, like the others. Yon never seen dui.u uiociiuta oa mem i i ne cnumn wna jammed full, and people lust roarin. Ana wnen Hanks came m on Sunday with mc luunu ana last 01 his sister s babies, mo irusiees inought It wai tnu tr interfere. Getting' to be a farce, yeu know! So Deacon Smith he stepped up ouu oaiu Houieinin or otner to Banks, and Banks, quicker'n a wink, laid down the baby and banged the Deacon with his fist. -ana so, 1 dunno how it it was, but in a minute there was Banks and Dpiunn Smith and Deacon Hubbard, and Ranks' itpr' ! oaoy, and me, all a rolling and a bumpin' joer the floor, hittin' and kickin' and woopin' in a manner that was ridicnlona to behold. And when we all come to, and got straightenerj out, Banks picked up the bat tered baby of his sister and quiet, and the trustees held an informal meetin' and agreed to close the church for a month so's to kinder freeze Banks out, and now we've shut ui; but I reckon is is no use, for I hear Banks has got his Itack up and gone ojer and joined the Baptists." So I said ??d day to the sexton and went in aparrh another sanctuarv - The h'ge Meticn ADtm1 with stately bigmvJBio Fuerte are lined saw for the first time the-eand here I tile which the Spaniards call iguan-. the Portuguese tayman do motto t. 'tree-alligator.' The latter name may have been suggested by tbe formidable appearance of an animal which atttalns a length of seven feet and a weight of sixty-five pounds, and jumps from tree to tree with the impetus of a tiger-cat; but there is no doubt that the iguana is the most harmless creature of that size Which ever jumped or flew or swam on this nlanet of ours the most harmless creature of its size, we might say, for the little goldfish and the robin red breast are beasts'of prey compared with the tree-alligator : tbey will hurt a fly, but the iguana is a strict vegetarian, and like an orthodox Hindoo endeavors to prolong his life without shortening that of a fellow-creature. Still, with lu saurian beak, its preposterous claws and the row of bristles along its back hone, this riant lizard is a scandalous phenomenon. The Two Will. There are two pasjages in the will of Chlselhurat and the will of Long wood which may be contrasted and read with curious interest. The First Napoleon writes: , , "1 die prematurely, assassinated by the English oligarchy and its The English nation will not be slow in venu me. The Fourth Napoleon writes: "1 shall die with a sentiment of pro found gratitude toward Her Majesty the Queen of Eagland, toward all the f,mliv. and toward the country where 1 nave rccenwu i years so cordial a hospitality. WHOLE NUMBER 187. NKWS IN BRIEF. There are 1,800,000 marriageable kTirla in France. During tbe month of July the New York police captured sixteen runaway boys, from Boston and vlclult.7. The consumption of coffee through out the world has increased durlnr the past forty year from 19O.0OGLO00 to 850. COO.OOO pounds. D vi lei Lawrence, a rich distiller, who died at Medford, Mass, recently left $7000 to the town of Tyngsboo, Mass., for a poor fund. Fourteen caps of Sevres china will be offered In competition by the French War Office to the societies of carrier pigeon breeders. r It is estimated that the Minnesota wheat crop will yield an average of fif ten buKhels to the aore-r altogether 44 .. baa hp 1 IrtthfiihM.. T . 2Thpr mr . aArA bd7 deutisw m im vw . t i three times as many learning the busi ness. The number of convicts In, 1878 tn all the State prisons of the Ujslon was 29,197, of whom 13,186 were employed iu mechanical industries. The amount of lumber on hand at the different points on the Susquehanna is represented as larger this year, at this season, than for years past at the same time. The Pennsylvania Railroad baa erec ed gas works near the Union De pot, Pittsburg, for the manufacture of gas to be used In the depot and on the cars. Gadshlll Place, Hlgham, the resi dence of the late Charles Dickens, and which has been for a Ions: time in the market, has at length found a purchaser in Captain Austin Budden, of the Twelfth Kent Artillery. ; The export of American beer was valued at $150,(00 last year, against $50,000 in 1874. The Importations, on the contrary, have fallen off very large ly, being 2.167,251 gallon in 1175, against 767,709 gallons in 1878. In recognition of the labors of Pro fessor Greist, of the Law Faculty of Berlin. President Hayes has transmitted to the Professor, through Mr. Everett, a collection of volumes on the history of iuregprudence. A woman was drinking milk from a cup in Paris on the 28th ot Juue, at 6 o'clock in tbe morning. Tbe light ning knocked - he cup from her hands, but left her unhurt. The cup could not be found. Three of the surviving descendants of Massasoit, th noted Indian, Mrs. Mitchell and her two daughters, are passing the summer in camp at Betty's Neck, a tract of land up the shores of A88awampett Pond, In Massachusetts. The national debt Is now about $2, 304,000,000, which bears interest as fol lows, In round numbers; 3 per cent., tu um nm,- rourjjXx-eot..tn5J.QflQ,QW : , tcui., fwv.wu,uuvj no interest. $4W,000,000. Ten years ago the exportation of leather to Europe was first stilted as an experiment. Slijce then the trade has grown to 25,000,000 pounds (valued at $4,000,000) per annum, with an In crease tor tne first six mouths of this year of 1,000,000 pounds The Chicago elevators contain at the present time 2,535,273 bushels ot wheat, 2,958,576 bunelui com, '154 ,219 bushels of oats. 50,070 bushels or rye, and 76,960 buiiucla ot barley, making a grand total of 5,775,098 bushels, against . 1,570,055 busheis at this period last year. In Parts and iu suburbs there are more than 18,000 people who live by ,n:. 1 iiihi. h r.i ..,, r ri nnii iuui. ' ....... ' ' ' v" mXJlJ , " f .T. 11 ragipickiiig or rag-selling. There are 10,000 chiffon uiers who go about collec ting scrap of rags or uauer. and 3.000 old clothes dealers who buy rags, and who again employ 2,000 workmen. In New South Wales last vear the sum of $1,708,485 was expended upon primary education. Teacuers' salaries absorbed $719,320. There were in oper ation 1,187 schools, attended in tbe ag gregate by 12i,125 pupils, blnce 1877 there has beeu au increase of seveuly ' si-ioois. Ten years ago -Jxem were onl v 642 school!. J Tne Boston Fish Bureau has lust completed statistics of the catch of mackerel, the receipts and imports from January 1 to August 1, The New England eaten of mackerel for that time is 61,763 barrels, of which 19,414 oarreis nave been packed out at Boston. 12,490 barrel at Gloucester and 29.941 at all other New ugland ports. A mile Is 5.280 feet, or 1.760 vards in length. A fathom Is six feet. A ' JpKfrup iilhrMmlliu 1 ll.kh.ti. 32JiTI,w M86 yards less tbsn two tiaud (borseift. A day's journey Is A palm Is three iuc1n4two feet. A inches. A space is three lew-ipcbes. Of 17,000 guns constructed byfKsl,. Krupp at hi work at: Essen during """" the last tweniy-vnree years ouy have burst, aud nvarly ail 01 ie were destroyed during trial undertaken to test their power 01 resistance or tuum auce, and when, consequently, they were loaded with cnarge. neavwr they we designed to lire. Thirty-two American horses arriv ed at Havre recently for the Jf rencn cavalry. They were Inspected by French omcers aeiauea ior me w aud were all accepted at prices ranging irom$220to $270, which are 'ne up prices lor D'reuc-n remounts. iuu. ses were in splendid condition after their voyage, no accident wnaiever bat ing occurred on board snip. Th immigration statistics at Vas- tle Garden, New York, give the number of arrivals of imigrants during July at 12.408, against 8KB in Juiy, i, total arrivals since January 1 re8,JUO, an twrease ot 21,550 over the same per iod last year. Tne records of each month show an increase.pa iu being tbe greatest, wnen w.r. 1S.328 arrivals, against 11,450 In Xay, 1878. v -Mrs. Dam Sri Boutelle has iut oie at Fitcbburg, Mass.. at tne " agr of 99 years, longevity -ioeristicot her family. 'fwo of her brothers died a few years since, on the 8th day of August, at the ripe ageof 82 and 8 reiietlTeiy A Urge u um ber of tbe lamily nave died at age Spying from 80 to 92. Mr. Boute 1 l"rl brother, Mr. Dvid Bouwlle, oHFVicbburg. now 88 years old, aod twin sUters, aged 81. v