PUBLISHK1. EVERY FRIDAY MORNING BY Tie Comllis Gazette PiMishiog Association "W. 33. CAH.TEH, UtilNlSl Manaukr TERMS : (COIN). Per Year,' - 5 Six Month. ISO Three Month. - 1 OO Invariably in Advaiicj. IP VOL. 15. CORVALLIS, OREGON, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 11, 1878. NO. 41. Rates of Advertising;, 1 If In. 6 It. I YbT i inch, r ' i sun w i I oo i oo i 00 I a m I S 00 I 6 00 I 10 00 18 DP i Mm 4 ' I 4 00 I 7 00 U 00 X Col., I S 111 9 00 I IS 00 it ( a a I 7 50 12 00 18 OP 30 88 41 08 I 10 oo is oo i as oo i o oo i s oo i aooo i 40 oo i to oo i "ant 3t Notices In Local Column, 30 cents per lima, each in sertion. Transient advertisements, ner sauare of 12 Unas . Nonpareil measure, 2 s for (rat, sad $1 lor eaota sub sequent iueruonm advasuk. Legal advertisements charged aa traaaieat, apt nrnnt bo ud for upon expiration. No snares for paBUahar'a affidavit of publication. Yearly advertisements on liberal terms. Professional Cards, (1 square) $13 per aanum. All notices ana advertisements intended for publication should be handed in by noon on Wednesday. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. EGTABLISHEB 1857, JOHN W. SOUTHER, Druggist, Apothecary AND PHARMACIST, City Drug Store, Corvallis Dispensary Opposite Sol. Kixu's Stables. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY PREPARED AT all nours, day or night. Carvallla, Oregon, Jan. 10, 1877-tf F. A. CHEN0WETH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CORVALLIS, OREGON. raroKKICE Up staira In Fisher's Brick. J. W. RAYBURN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CORVALLIS, OREGON. OFFICE On Monroe street, bet. Second and Third. tySpeclal attention given to the Collection of Xole, and Aeeeunta. 6marl2:14tf iohn xm.vr Ion j (in T X. 8. WOOIll'OCK. 1857. 1877. CITY DETJ6 STORE, CORVALLIS, ORG EON, Opposite I4.1nKs raktaUles. JOHN W. SOUTHER, IMPORTER OF Attorneys and Counselors at Law, Corvallis, Benton Co., Oregon. Will practice in all of the Courts of the State. Collections promptly attended to. Special attention given to Real Kslale cases. Ornca in the Court House. febl!)-lf JAMES A. YANTIS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, CORVALLIS, OREGON. Drugs, Medicines, CHEMICALS, PAINTS, OILS. WINDOW GLASS, VARNISHES, PAINT BRUSHES, Hair Brashes, Englisn Toojh Brushes, Fancy Toilet Articles, FINE SOAPS, ENGLISH AND FRENCH PERFUMERIES, ALSO A Choice Stock of PURE LIQUORS, r'ofedlclnal and Sacramental purposes. WILL PRACTICE IN ALL THK COUKT8 OF the State. Special attention given to matters lu Probate. Collections will receive prompt and cure nil attention. OFFICE III the Court House. laielg 1-?S. 12:2911 JOHN B0SWELL, M. D COR VAX, LIS, OREGON W,P'.,ATrEN,P.PROMPTLY TO ALL CALLS in the line of his profession, day or night. OrrioK Graham and Hamilton's Drug Store. BcsiDiNca-Flrst bloek west of Dr. Graham's, on the street leading west from Oraham Htmilrou's urng Store. y ".(f G. A. WHITNEY, M. 0.. - radaale of HIIevu Hospital Medical College, U. If. Clry, Physician and Surgeon, PHILOMATH, OREGON. DISEASES OF WOMEN A SPECIALTY. RESI denc lu Westlake's Building, corner of First and Lyo . streets. I3:32tf G. R. FARRA, M . D., Physician, Surgeon and Obstetrician. o I TICK OVER GRAHAM 4c Airug otore, Corvallis, Oregon. HAMILTON'S ll:.Uyl DR. J. C. GRUBBS. Physician and Surgeon. 0FJK?BrfiT RESIDENCE, IN THE NORTHEAST 7 of l5e cl know n as tlie K riech bauin place. gJH'ter"nr. Obstetrics, and Female Dis eases. Will practice in city or country. Corvallis. May 12; lrj. ' 18-19-tf DR. F. A. VINCENT, DEUTIST, CORVALLIS, OREGON. OFFICE In Fisher's New Brick ove. Max Frlendly's New Store. All the lat est ltnnrnv.in.nt, L' 1 I ; . - complete. All work warranted. Please give ine a Jan. 18, 1811. 15:Stf DR. E. H. TAYLOR, DENTIST. Jf. . AVtltv, Asalatant. OFFICE HOURS- to 12 and 1 tos. OFFICEOpp Graham Hamllton'a Drug store, Corvallis, Oregon alote Work a Hpcclalty. Mot. 1.1877. 14 :44tf f MM jftx mm business yon can engage In. m M $5 to $20 per day made by any C Wm k worker of either Bex, rit!ht in II their own localities. Particn mw mm 0 I lars and samples worth fS free. Improve yonr spare time at thia business. Address Stinson & Co., Portland, "i""' lfl:12vl AMKS IIRAKB. WILLIAM SKAXT DRAKE & GRANT, MERCHANT TAILORS, CORVALLIS, OREGON. ALL WORK IN OUR LINE NEATLY AND promptly executed. Repairing and Cleaning a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed. Shop opposite 3raham A Hamilton's. : v i. us. July 1, 1878. 13:27tf AMERICAN EXCHANGE HOTEL Cob. Front ihd Wamii.noto.v Sts.. PORTLAND, OREGON. L. P. W. QUIMBY, Prop'r. iar-Kree oach to the Honse. 13-ltf $66 portlaml, Maine. week in your own town. $5 Ont St free. No risk. Reader, if yon want a business at which persons of either sex can make great pay all the time they Work, write for particulars to H. Hai.lktt & Co., to OBJ PHYSICIANS' PRESBJPTIONS A S V 99 At T T . "Lot the Dead Bury the Dead." "Pis goue, witli its joys and sorrows, Its sunshine and storms of rain : Look not away in the distance, On relics of grief and pain : Look np, dear friends, instead : Let tlu- dead year. bury its dead ! What if our pride have suffered, What if the hour of need Have shown that the friend we trusted Was worse than a broken reed ? Look up, though our hearts hare bled : Let the dead year bury its dead. Let us count the abundant mercies Our one great Friend has sent ; The days of our light and darkuesa All gifts of one sweet intent. No id alter the tears we shed : Let the dead year bury its dead. Ah, youth has been taught stern lessons, And we of maturer years Have learned a yet keener knowledge Of life's vain hopes and fears. How surely God's hand hath led I Let the dead year bury its dead. And the new-born; year shall find us Courageous, alert and strong ; Girt up for the strife before up, Though sharp the trial and long. On, on witli a firmer tread, While the dead year buries its dead. The World Boiled Up. Farmers from the country will Had my stock NEW FRESH and PURE, and warranted GENUINE and of the BEST QUALITY, AT THE LOWEST CASH PRICES. CORY ALL IS LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE, Main Street, CORVALLIS, OREGON. SOL. KING, - - Prop'r. OWNING BOTH BARNS I AM PREPARED TO offer superior accommodation in the Livery line. Always ready far a drive, . Q-OOD TEAMS At Low Rates. My Stables are nrst-claaa in every respect, aad competent and obliging hostlers always ready to serve the public. Keostonable Cltatrgtra for Hire Paarliealatr mttontlon paid to Hoa.i-.Mnar Horses. ELEGANT HARE, CARRIAGES AMD HACKS FOR FUNERALS. Corrallia. Jan. I. 1877. 18-1-tf GUAM, HAMILTON & CO., CORVALLIS, OREGON, DEALERS IN DRUGS, PAIUTS, MEDICINES, Chemicals, Dye Stuffs, OILS, GLASS AND PUTTY. Pare Wines and Liquors, FOR MEDICINAL USE. And also the very best assortment of LAMPS AND WALL PAPER ever brought to this place. AGENTS FOR THE AVERILL CHEMICAL PAINT, SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHER. njr PHYSICIANS' PRESCRIPTIONS CARE FULLY COMPOUNDED. ljal:ltf H. E. HARRIS, One Door South of Graham A Hamilton's, OKVAI.UK. .... oiti:.o GROCERIES, PROVISIONS & DRY (JOObS. Corvallis, Jan. 1, 1878. 18:lyl NEW- TIN SHOP, J.K.WEBBER, - - PROP'R, Main Street, CorvaUis. STOVES AND TINWARE, ALL KINDS. PTA11 work warranted, and at reduced ratea. reblz:ltr Ucan make money faster at work for us than at anything else. Capital not required; we Will start yon. f 12 per day at home made by the industrious. Men, women, boys and girls wanted everywhere to work for us. Now is the time. Costly ontnt and terms free. Address Tbdk At CO., AiignKta, Maine. 15;121y On the outskirts of the city of Nor wich, perched on a bluff overlooking the New London Northern railroad , is a nondescript structure of plank, stone, upk and unhewn timber, looking as little ia a house as anything under the sun. v is a habitation however, and its torf,.t is a person whom the en tire districtooks upon with awe. His name is Ly&n Grinnell. He is an ec centric of te first order. For twenty eight yearne has dwelt in his curious abode? He was once a sailor, and to day is a henit with theories of a char acter as stn ge as he is himself. When found by a aercury representative last Wednesdajhe was seated on a boat in front of hpdoor, skinning and quarter ing the cartas of a large cat, with the gravity of tJbutcher dissecting a bul lock. The pivntive meous of live other cats confined a a chicken coop close at hand echoed sly on the summer air. In person he w a man of over sixty, bent with rheumafim, with a rugged and weather beaten fafc, scrubby white hair and beard. After VfiTRamJaJwi his feline victim and putting the frag ments in a pot, be built a fire, put the kettle on it, and signified that he was at the reporter's ser?jca. At intervals during the interview he interrupted himself to replenish a bowl in the cat coop with a strange looking liquid from a bottle. As long as this liquid lasted, the cats remained quiet ; when it was gone, they mewed, apparently for more. "I am glad to meet you," he said; "I frequently timl'the Mercury articles of a scientific and theoretical nature that are very interesting. I always cut them out and paste them up. as you see." His hut is papered with news paper clippings, among which a num ber from the Mercury figure conspicu ously. He went on : "None of them agree with me, to be sure, but they all predict a tremendous natural revolu tion to be at hand. So do I. They suggest various ways in which this re volution is to be broughtfabout. Now, I am going to tell you the true one. Between now and 1882, the world is going to be destroyed by a flood of hot water. The flood is to last exactly thirty days, from sunrise to sunset. As soon as it ends a new earth is going to appear; only instead of being like it is now, everything is going to be re versed. The poles, for instance, are going to be in the tropics, and the tropics where the arctic regions are now." "But what is your theory for this certainly remarkable change?" de manded the amazed reporter. "I haint none. Its on account of general badness, yon see. The world is rotten. Things is all wrong. I was told that in a revelation. It came to me while I was mate of the whaler Polar Circle, in the South seas, in 1849. I was at Tahiti, and went to look at the volcano there Mauna Loa. I slept on the edge of the crater, and I heard what I'm telling jou, in a dream, or rather a vision. It was a voice. I heard it afterwards down in Peru and Chili, and once it spoke to me in Per nambuco. Since I've been living here it comes once a month regular, with the change of the moon." "But what does it say?" "It told melfirst that the earth was to be biled up. A flood of hot water is going to come from all the volcanoes at once. A shower of hot stones and lava is going to fall into the sea and heat it, too. They will raise the level of the ocean, too, and a big tidal wave will sweep over every thing. Hot springs will burst out every where, and volcanoes will fill up the sea. So where water now is will be land, and vice versa. O ! I've got it down fine. Here's a map of how things will be." Here he pxo ducd from a battered sea-chest a very neatly executed chart on the Mercator projection. In it the outline of the present conformation of the earth has been strictly followed; but water every where took the place of land and land that of water. Cape Florida was a vast inlet, Gibraltar a large harbor; Great Britain, Ireland and Australia, colossal inland seas, while the great lakes fig ured as enormous islands, connect ed by three like causeways. The tropics of Cancer and Capricorn took the place 'of the Arctic and Antartic circles. The chart was not sealed in to degrees of latitude and longitude. Its author said: "I don't know exactly yet where the poles are a going to be. I only know that the North and South poles will be somewhere on the equator. The voice will tell me where soon, and wilt warn me when tu look ont for the flood. Then I'll just have time to scale my chart and so have something to steei a course ;by. There's my boat there, I've got water for forty days in it. That green paint is asbestos paint. I invented it myself. It will keep the seams from starting with the heat, yon know. Then, here's my cold air gene rator; it is an improvement on a porta ble ice machine which I made myself. With it I will surround myself with enough pure air to breathe, in spite of the hot vapbr from the boiling water. The thing is automatic. I ain't going to describe 'it ; it's my invention you know, and I haven's got it patented yet. It beats the Keel v motor all hol low." I Here the rceltiae ,went to give his cats a drink, and the reporter examined the machine, whlras simply a con trivance for making ice on the ammo niacle fume system ,;v i th a rubber tube attachment like a tangled boa constric tor and a bellows-like termination. The automatic attachment was a com plicated arrangement of ratchets, cog wheels and wire springs, which resem bled nothing but a clock factory after an explosion. Detected in an attempt to set the thing in motion, the Mercury representative hastened to apologize, but the inventor received his excuses with a grim frown, and it was only with difficulty that any further infor mation could be extracted from him. Allusion to the cats drew him out how ever, and he stated that salvation from the impending deluge is only open to people with whom cat meat is a steady diet? "The voice told me so," he said, '-ats is the only pure ani mals. All other meat is unnatural. Vegetables was only made for brutes. Cats are the thing, and they are sent to us in such numbers as a chance to save ourselves. But the world is blind. It won't learn, so it must suffer. When I first came here I ate anything I could get. For the last lour years I have eat only cat's meat. The boys bring 'em to me from town. I pay ten cents apiece for 'pm. What do I give 'em to drink? Well that's anotHwT secret of mine. It's milk and sugar and some thing else. They must be absolutely pure, you know. Every trace of the meat they have consumed in their lives mast be eradicated before they are fit for me. It takes me from a week to ten days to purify a cat. The supply hold out ? No, not exactly. I've had to get cats from New LondoiT more than once. Generally, however, the boys manage (to keep me ant on to say lf a very few Why They. Broke With Him. around here tacked." Thffioluse further that, with 'lAeHfA' people, he is the Vnly survivb iLSt---Jlcring chance for -i few scatte: have developed afondn But in the main the earth and its peo pie are doomed. New York Mercury. Some Facts to Remember about the San. The sun is 320,000 times as large as the earth. The snn is 400 times as far off as the moon. A lady who weighs 100 pounds here, would weigh 2,700 pounds if on the surface of the sun. The heat given off by the sun would melt 287,200,000 cubic miles of ice every second. The diameter of the earth bears the same relation to its distance from the sun as the breadth of a hair to 125 feet. A railroad train traveling without stops at th rate of forty miles an hour would get to the snn in 263 years. The snn is believed to become pme 250 feet smaller every year. This con traction would be sufficient to generate the enormOas quantity of heat which it radiates. Another theory is that comets and meteoric matter falling into the sun may be its aliment to offset the tremen dous loss which combustion certainly involves. It would require the combustion of thirty feet of coal over the entire sur facfijof the nun every second to generate the same heat. . The stars are supposed to average larger than our snn, and to have plane tary systems like this. The nearest star is 250,000 .times as far off as our sun. It takes light eight minutes to come from the sun, but it must have required 50,000 years for it to come from the farthest visible stars. When the eleven tear storms on the sun occuftlie fliftgtetic needle on the earth is friable anVl sometimes con siderablyrieilictcd. The earth is flying around the sun at the rate of 1,000 miles a minute. The suu and all the stars are moving through space, accompanied by their planetary.' systems, at a rate varying from 20 to 200 miles a second. Some of the snn spots (craters) are 100,000 miles in diameter, and one of them would easily swallow up the whole of the planets, Jupiter himself only making a mouthful. Some two or three weeks ago, a Lieut. Zubowitz rode from Pesth to Paris all the way on one horse, or mare rather, i.'t two weeks, which was re garded &s a considerable feat. And now he'is going over to England for the purpose of drowning both him self and the mare in the British chan nel. He thinks that by means of an apparatus be has invented, which is to be fastened to the mare's chest, she will be able to swim with him from Dover to Calais. As the probability is that the body of neither of them will ever be fteovered, it is really a pity for the mare. Loi'isville Courier-J 'ournttl. Ten millions of hairpins are annually manufactured in America for the hold ing of hair on the female head. As not one wot lan in a hundred has a half supply, Jt he figures give an idea of the immense area of female hair in this conntry Mr. Busby was sitting upon the par lor sofa, in the dusk of the evening, holding Miss Lazenby's hand, which she was trying to draw from his grasp. He had just proposed, and she didn't seem to respond very heartily. "Oh, say you will accept me! Say you will have me, Tilly! You don't know how much I love you. I never loved any other woman but you." "Never any but me, Mr. Busby?" "Never, never, never ! You are my first and only love!" "Why, Mr. Busby, I have heard that you have been engaged eight times al ready." "Eight times, darling ? Eight times ! What a wicked slander! I have been engaged only five times, I pledge yon my word of honor." "And didn't you love any of the ladies?" "Well, now, I'll explain to you how it was. The first, you know, was Mary McCosh. I was young then; didn't know my own mind. After I was en gaged to her I used to go round to Mc Cosh 's at night, and just as soon as I got in the house they would want me to help them move the piano. I helped carry that piano up stairs one night and down stairs the next night, right straight along for three weeks. I thought it was mighty strange how ec centric they were about the situation of the piano, and one night, when I dropped the corner on my toe, I went into the parlor suddenly to rest. Who should I see there but Mary, kissing young Ferguson. And when I pro tested, they both laughed, and Mary said her pa had persuaded her to change her mind about me. and to take Ferguson. So I saw stie didn't love me, and I broke the engagement on the spot." "That was the first?" "Yes. The next was Henrietta Pea body. I think Henrietta was fond of me. But she said one evening that her mother was resolutely opposed to a man with light hair. I offered to dye mine, but Henrietta's mother said that she hated it worse when it was dyed than when it was light. I told her I would think what I could do, and I went home to reflect. When I called next day they wouldn't let me in; so I wrote to Henrietta to say that our en gagement was at an end. Subsequent: ly she married a man named Johnson, in the stove business." "And who was the third ?" "The third ? Let me see ? Why, the third was Julia Dobson. You've met her, I think ? I was deceived in J ulia Dobson. After we'd been enerasred onlv ne who-fijLAiiree days she told me she'd had an jaOS- iTTV. id U i -iav'tiI . '. j'-r.o i 1 " n'trn, r:" doarrtv people WUO dreamed that I was a tattoooetl for cat s meat. bad. with wine's, and that I broke into the house one night, and after flying from the hat-rack to the up-stairs entry, and froiii there to the garret, I came down and ate her ma, and her pa, and her Aunt Louisa, and the twins, and the colored girl. She said that the dream haunted her; she couldn't get rid of it. I asked her if she didn't think it a little unreasonable to dream that I ate the colored girl, and she said she couldn't help it; the bad impression was just the same. She could not bear the idea of marrying a man whom she would never see without thinking of that cannibal with wings, so I broke off that engage ment, too. Hanged if I believe Julia Dobson ever really loved me!" "Who did yon say the next one was?" "Let's see; McCosh, Peabody, Dob son Dobson oh, yes! The next was Bertie Magruder. I never knew ex actly what to make of that girl. She declared that she was fond of me, but she insisted that I ought to help her and her mother with the house clean ing. So for the first three days after we were engaged I was washing win dows, scrubbing floors, and mashing my fingers with the tack-hammer, try ing to put down carpets. It struck me as a mighty queer way for a girl to ex press her tender feelings for a man; but they were a peculiar family. One day I stepped in a bucket of soap-suds and upset it on the parlor carpet, and old Magruder, her father, you know, was so mad that he said if I didn't leave the house he would pitch me out of the window. Bertie said it would serve me right if he did; so I concluded maybe her love-light, so to speak, had flickered out, and I handed in my res ignation: ' "How about the fifth?" " Oh, that was Nancy Bannister. I flew to her in despair, because I felt so badly about the Magruders. I was never reaUy engaged to her. She ac cepted me conditionally. Said she would have me when I made a fortune. I began boring for oil in our back yard the next morning, but before I'd got down ten feet she sent me word that she'd accepted another man; some kind of an officer in the marine corps, I think. Anyhow, my affections were blighted again. Now I've come to you. You'll say yes, won't you? I never knew what love meant until I met you." "I'll tell you what I'll say," observed Miss Lazenby. "I'll say NO! And I'll bid you good evening." As she walked out of the room Busby looked sadly after her; then he picked up his hat, moved slowly to the door, and went out. "That," said he "is the sixteenth girl I've proposed to, and she throws me over! I'll try a seventeenth to-morrow, and if she fails then'tl I'll try sui cide." But he is a bachelor and alive yet. Max Adeler, in 2f. Y. Weekly. Josh Billing's Philosophy. Allmost enny phool kan prove that the Bible ain't true; it takes a wize man to beleave it. I beleave one apple iz sweet, and the one on the next tree iz sour. I will bet soveighns on this, but will give enny smart professor a span ov match ed mules who will tell me what makes them so. If yu settle with a man for 50 cents on a dollar he iz full az apt to call yu a phool az a philanthropisst. Funny, ain't it? . I don't allow enny man to beat me in politeness; if there izone who thinks he kan do it, let him try it on. Thare are but fu men who lire az phoolish az they are thought tot be , and less who are az wize az they think they are. The best way to tell a good oyster from a bad one iz to eat it. The man who kant toll the difference in this way ain't worth convincing. What a man iz the most afrade ov he sez he don't beleave in; this may ackount for sum men's unbeleaf in hell. "Natur abhors a vacum," tharefore she fills sum beds with sawdust. The wizest man that the world haz ever produced died ages ago, and the biggest phool hain't been born yet. Buty iz a risky prerogative, it haz no posative merws ov its own, and iz alwuss surrounded by dangerous para sites. "It iz only a step from the sublime to the ridikilous," and it iz only the very wize who kan take the step, and get bak agin. The humility that prosperity arrays itself in, iz allwnss suspishus. The hardest dollar for a man to git, iz too often the one he needs the most. Az a general rule i judge ov a man's virtews, or vices, bi hiz opinyuns ov other people. When a dimokrat gits ritch he iz quite apt to wear hiz politikal princip les az a kind ov elekshun hollyday suit. I kno now that i am . gitting old i kno it bi the grate spatters ov soft biled egg that i find on mi fresh shirt buzzum after brekfast, and the chunks ov sassage, and loose pieces ov bred, and potatoze, that are froliking around on the krumb-cloth at mi feet. The man who dies the ritchest iz the one who leaves the least here, and takes the most with him. Tru philosophy, like tra philan thropy, iz a work ov deeds, not words. The vanity ov mankind iz enuff to dam them, even if they waz angells in every other respekt. Tharo iz lots ov people in this world who takn a inke just az nhildren do l.lr.atA. I .-lOHS , - jr.-i, i-eiYu.u.e Lliuy iuul null' ir lHllIll- I ; . -" . -, .- i il. J-lii: UlLFOI, UlBgUBLlUg SlllbOi IF V IUC whole lot to me iz the one who will fill A Mother's Hard Lof. Twenty-five years ago, beginning on Aug. 11th, and continuing until the 14th, a torrid wave swept over the United States and Canada with terrible results. The thermometer registered 100 degrees in nearly every locality, and in the city of New York there were 400 deaths, of which 200 occurred on the 14th of August. Ennui is the ghost of murdered time. ; himself haff full ov cheap whisky, and then insist upon being konfidenshall to yu in matters ov no earthly impor tance thus intensifying hiz natral dam phoolishness. When i see a man who iz over anxious to provo ennything, i am very apt to think he ain't very certain about it himself. I sumtimes indnlge in profanity and i wonder at it, for there iz nothing that i so mutch regret in miself and despize in others. If you want to roduso a child's genius, set him to turning a grind-stun or weeding out onions. The clever phellow who don't know how to pla a game ov whist, even if it iz a poor one, iz here'on earth under fake pretences. Men will admit that they are growing old, but never that they are growing phoolish. I thank god that thare iz one thing that money won't buy, and that iz the wag ov a dog's tail. No man ever bekum grate simply bi acksident: acksident haz often opened the way. Men ov moderate abilities make the most plezant company mis; men ov grate wit mite be kompared to a grate fire you kant git near enuff to it to git warm without gitting burnt. The multitude gaze at the epauletts, the few at the man who wears them. Yung men, what yu git in this world yu hav got to win, and mankind are hard taskmasters and slo pay. The grate mistake that menny folks make iz, they are kontinually betting on to-morrow and letting to-day go bi default. The majoritv ov the virtew in this world iz negatiff it iz in the hands ov people who, while they don't do enny hurt, don't do enny good neither. Most ov us. are happy, not so mutch bekauze wo hav got a horse and buggy to ride in az bekauze the other phellow haz got to go on foot. I hav seen hipokrits who had reached sutch perfekshun in the bizzness that they could cheat themselfs, but could not cheat enny boddy else. If people will only spend their time in doing their duty in this world, Heaven, and Hell, and hereafterj will take kare ov itself. It iz eazy enuff to learn bi experi ence, but to profit bi it iz what's the matter. I hav seen men who had worn out their vices, and suppozed ov course that they waz living on their virteus. ' I am not astounded when i hear that a man haz fallen. Adam fell, and he waz nailed down, compared with the slippery ground that men stand on now days. It seems to me that wimmin are conquets bi natur, and prudes bi neces sity. He who allwuss tells the truth in the fewest possible words iz a natral orator. Among the returns in the Coroner's office, New York,- recently, was the re port of the death of Anna Noye.s, aged 10 hours, at 620 East Seventeenth street. The house at 620 is one of a block of low tenements, running almost to the East river water front. In front of the en try of the house a grop of idle men stood the other day. On the reporter's inqniring for the Noyes family some of them followed him up the stairs. Un der the pilotage of one he reached the fourth story front room. Its furniture consisted of . a chair and a table. The dead babe lay on the table near the window, nobody being willing to buiy. it or even take it awaj' ' James NoyesA a si eamtng pilot, and. until recently-ti nlo..l tin ooard th.. Hittii L ''.'.-auefai'" his wife and 5-year -Old c.iild in the room for two. weeks past, alone on Friday evening the irsvH i ,1 ii.il in a I ill ill- nne inv l 1 -, , 1 1 - . V i ol . ... women oi ute UBifuouruotrj it ten iu care for the mother and her babe, but at noon the child died. The parents of the young woman Noyes live in the same story, but will do nothing for the daughter. The father said that he had buried two children for his daughter, and that he would let the babe remain where it was before he would spend a cent. He had spent $200, he said, for the family of his worthless son-in-law, and now some one else must pay the. bills. The man who hires Noyes, he says, should pay the bills, and make Noyes' work it out. Noyes gets good wages when he works, but has been drinking lately. The mother lay wrapped in a single blanketon the floor in one corner. She had drown the quilt about her head, so that only a stray stress of long bbick hair that fell between the folds indicated that a woman was concealed there. Several women walked about the room, ap parently unable to do anything. They tried to soothe the sick woman, and to remove the blanket from her head, but she only clutched the covering more tightly. Soon a Limbering sound was heard on the stairs, and with many groans and curses Noyes was tumbled in by a friend. Ho was decently dress ed, even to a collar and white tie. He fell into the only chair in the room. Then he renewed his curses, and if any one spoke to him he smiled idiotically. He took no notice of his dead child or sick wife. The latter had become hys terical. Her mother entered and up braided her son-in-law, and then retired to an empty back room to weep. Two weeks ago, it is said, the young moth er's father turned her out of his home luyiWlfhe liatrdeiiMev m 1 1 1 More tons of iron and steel were rolled in this country last year than in that during which the panic fell upon the country. Everybody isn't ont of work after all. Moreover, millions of acres more of wheat and corn are being cultivated this year than in 1873, so everybody can't be starving. The A Wankearan vouncr tention to a fair young o , '! ... 1 . , . . ,.,1 ,,,.. I .,, . II..., ...... I . . . . tut it v ut it niiuv i u witu uuypi iu it. thought that the folks were-fools, and had never experienced "love's young dream." He had heard that the "course of true love gathers no moss," or some thing to that effect, and that it was a "long lane that has no buil-dog." Such was not the case" here. The old man had a speckled bull-dog. Of course the young man was "so ed" with the dog, for had he not been a caller op Medina? He determined to go to her window that night, and in the light of the pale moon beg her to fly with him to some distant clime where irate fath ers and speckled bull-dogs are un known. Providing himself with his mother's clothes-line, whioh, in his im agination, he wove into a rope ladder, he hied himself to the spot. The moon was shining down through the maples in front of the house. As he approach ed he softly opened the front gate, on which he and his love had so often swung; never did it seem to creak so loudly; would she be looking for him; would she heed his voice; he would strike up that little song in which they had oftentimes joined in tuneful melo dy. He got so far as "There's a land that is fairer" "Sic 'em Maje," came from behind a clump of lilacs. Maje sicked-, and the young man sickened as he climbed for that fence. It was nip and tuck, resulting in a "nip" in the rear of that "tuck" the seat out of his unmentionables, along with a portion of hi t oat-tails. How he got over that fence will never be known except to the dog, who smiles in a ghastly manner whenever his young mistress strikes up that memorable tune, "The Sweet By and By." A Doomed Boy. Some of these beau tiful evenings a man with a wilted col lar and a sprinkled coat will mutter an old fashioned bit of profanity between his teeth; he will ecud swiftly across the sweet; he will P'ck up the boy" that is manipulating the side-Walk hose; he will twist his head aronndiii'e times; he will jam his head into a crack in the fence and kick his whole body through alter it, and then the boy will leaiTT that it is not right nor safe to glue his eyes into the top of a tree while he sprinkles the streets, the sidewalks and the citizens, indiscriminately: and par tially. Mind, we do not advocate the reckless, extravagant or wanton killing of boys, but these are revolutionary times and the temperof a down-trodden people is restless and unsafe. Hawkeye. The cuckoo doesn't steal nests from other birds. After 200 years' of mis apprehension, naturalists have placed the bird where it belongs. It has no nest at all, but wanders around like an A mtiri'iin mrl in Hen.rili nf n tilted I HH. 1and, Detroit Free I'ress. ti