u WEEKLY CORY ALUS GAZETTE CORVAXLIS, - SEPTEMBER 19, 1879 DOLCINO TO MARGARET. The world goes up and the world goes down, And the sunshine follows the rain; And yesterday's sueer, and yesterday's frown. sweet wiiv, never come over aaiu. i fliAnoh man ho rli. nit thp nlirnL Will UUUUW tile uj , i iho hun which at even was weary anu oia (1 IL3 Mill K 1U j " ' ' Fi J ' JACK. A. mnrnin ' like this, with the sun a inin', and the birds a singin', and the sies a blossoming in those beds down a a " -TiA -m i erh fi 1 V n frn HKCUiB iw i tin it. vv -r j 7 tmw ftfti flirfii.c her dust racr vier- iuuii jl - t-' '.j .r be tip and get a peak at it. It d do you more good than medicine, 'cording to my notion. There's lots of folks gone by already, the kind that has little to do. Well, if I ever!" and Mrs. Zib's poke bonnet and the edge of her sharp nose seemed ia imminent danger of going through the shutter, she was so inquisi tively eager in her inspection of some 1 -rf- . . . , 1 i- thar r , 111.11 1 1 1 1 v siir nam 1111,0 withdrawing her head and pro- i a ' , . ... 1 .-, 1. Tna a rr T.na IflJ QCl All v "T declare he's a shaver to be his own pony, a black one with 11 ,1 A iv Knf tr .run Ml I I it dog cart; I don't see why there s any need of giving a decent wagon such an outlandish name. He ain't more than eight years old I'm sure, and is about as sassy as they mane em ; dui men some folks are able to make all sorts of fol-de-rols for their children, and others are put to their wits' end to get bread for theirs, and you can't help feelin' that lots is various. Some do seem to get all the plums in the pudding, and others can't e ven get a whiff at the crust. It's queer, but I suppose it's right." She gave me an interrogative glance as she spoke, then spying some uneasi ness in the little, week-old morsel of hu manity who was cuddled in my arms, she took him away and sat down with him in the low rocker. "You folks make an awful fuss over him," she said meditatively; "not that he is anything out of he ordinary run, either, as I can see, but somehow you seem to think he is wonderful. S'posing, now, you had ielt bad about his coming, not knowing how he could be fed or clothed, and s'posing nobody kissed or cuddled him, and wondered whether he looked like you or his father, or his grandmother, or all the rest of 'em ?" "Mrs. Zib, please hand me that baby right away. I want to kiss him." "I ain't going to do any such thing," said the nurse peremptorily. "He's just been fooled with enough this morning! All them big girls in the family had to have their foolishness over him before they went to school, and I hain't counted how many times you've kissed him. He'll take it easy enough on my lap for awhile. Yeller, ain't he ? Well, that's the jaunders; it makes 'em sleepy, too. I once saw a baby just as likely for' his age as this one; but laws, he was blinkin' and winkin' away in a miserable sort of a shanty, and nobody seemed to want him in the world very much. He was one of them kind that never gets a whiff at the pudding. He belonged to the Briggs, Dan'l and Melindy, and the be longing to them wa'nt much of a bless ing, for they were two of the shiftless, slack, always behind hand sort of people who never seem to know how to take care of themselves rightly. Their folks had been just so, too, a workin' a little on other folks land, doing an odd job now and then, keepin' in vittels and shabby clothes somekew, the women. Stettin' cold Tittles when they washed for m farmers wives nnrl some of the old ciatnesnt" wa nt no use to maKe over. IIWIII lUllli IBililCaO LtO LiVUVCIUCUi A U 1 Tl r tu A- J and never troubled his conscience neither, though perhaps he didn't have one to trouble. Sometimes he got a job in harvest or plantin' time, but gener ally folks were shy about hiring him; nobody likes to pay a man for settin' drummin' his heels agin the fence, or stoppin' to talk to everybody who hap pens to" go by. 'fhe women folks said he was a heavy hand, too, on the butter and the meat. He was a great one to go gunning. You'd see him slouching along regular, two mangy, ribby hounds a followin' after; such folks must keep a dog, you know, even if they hain't nothin for themselves. "Melindy used to say sometimes that she wished Dan'l was a little steadier at his work, but if you went to blaming him she always had some excuse for him. 'Squire wanted him to work too hard, or he had to take care of the baby.' "There was always a baby in the house, a little, half-dressed, generally miserable creetur, for they never got the right kind of fare, and wa'nt made the least of, though Dan'l and Melindy liked them in their way. I can't even say it was curious the little things died off after one another, but it did seem to me fortunate, for there wa'nt no gainsaying world than in it. Jack, though, he toughed it out, though he had all the drawbacks the others had, and grew to be a little black-eyed youngster, hang ing to Melindy's skirts, trottin' 'round after Dan'l, or lyin' in the sun and sand alongside them miserable dogs. Melindy went when the seventh baby come, and she and the child were buried together, and you wouldn't hardly think it, but one day when one of my boys went past the place where she was buried, if there wa'nt that forlorn little Jack a walkin' 'round and 'round it and pipin', 'Mammy, mammy!' "Misfortunes never come single, they say, and I believe it, and to prove it JDan'l's gun went off all of a sudden one xfay when he was climbing a fence, and somebody found him the same day lying there clean shot through the heart. Af ter he was decently buried no one knew what to do with Jack. It wa'n't to be thought of that anybody around should want him, and the only way seemed to be to send him to the poor house. I remember he sat out on a big stone in the yard, hiding his face from every body in his torn jacket sleeve, and cry ing for the dog that 'Squire Jones had took away 'cause he said he was a good bird dog, and somebody or other had hushed him up quite sharp when he called for 'pappy.' "Old Mrs. Fox asked me if I didn't feel to take him, but I didn't mean to fly in the face of providence by taking that child when I had tough work to keep my own. So Jack went to the poor house. I'm sure we have to pay taxes to keep it going, and it's fair somebody should be sent there once in awhile. "Do you know the Brones? No? Well, that's curious, for they live only a mat ter of four miles away. Likely as not you've heard enough of them to know that they are awful close, but I'm free to say that of all stingy, scraping, rich crea tures they are the very beat. I was sent for to come and nurse Tom's wife when she had her baby a couple of years ago. Tom came over beforehand to strike a bargain with me, tried to tell me the work would be light with Sainant.hu. her niece, there, and asked me right out to take off a couple of dollars in my priee. But I knew the Brones, and they kuew me, and I went for my regular wages or not at all. You see, there is a great del to do on a large farm like theirs, and they expected me to be busy every minute. "I often wondered when I was there what was the use of money if yon couldn't enjoy it. They certainly dulut seem to get any good, so to speak, ont of theirs. Their very table was mean, mean for them who could afford better- -sour rye bread, rusty pork and the small potatoes they couldn't sell. Though they had a big lot o poultry none of it ever came on their table, neither did eggs or such, for everything that could fetch a copper went to market and if they lived like that you can think what sort of vittles Jack got ! Yes, Jack, for I found Dan'l Brifirers' Jack there. "You see the first night when I see that tall, shamblin' erectur shuffiin, in with his head droppin' forrards I mis trusted that I'd seen him somewhares be fore, and I watched him while he eat his bread crusts and cold potatoes, and after he'd gone out I asked Samantha, 'Who's he?" " 'Jack,' she says. " 'Jack Briggs?' "And then I had it sure enough. 'Tom cot him out of the poor house some time ago,' she said, sharply: "he's half a fool. I hate him.' "Well, I wouldn't blame anyone for being half a fool living on such food as they gave him. Eat edges of pork with out a bit of meat on them, cold potatoes, and bread left to get hard and dry so he couldn't eat so much of it. Bless you, child, I'm not lying; I'm tellin' down right truth; I've seen Christian folks more than once play that trick on their hired folks. "I spoke to him next morning as he was washing outside on the porch. 'I knew you folks once,' says I. " 'Eh,' said he, looking at me with those dull, black eyes of his'n. "Yes, and I knew you when you was a little fellow ; you've growed considerable since. How did you get along at the poorhouse?" " 'I had fits sometimes, and they flog ged me sometimes.' " 'You don't say so,' says I, 'How long have you been here?' " 'Quite a spell.' " 'You look kind of peaked and yel ler,' says I, 'Don't you feel well?' "He stared at me and real tears came to his eyes. 'I've lots of pain here,' said he, putting his hand to his side, 'and my head hurts sometimes.' "Four days after I went there, Jane, that's Tom's wife, got word that her father and mother were coming down to see the new baby and spend the day. She was mightily flustered when she hearn it, for she hadn't a bit of pie or cake in the house and she wanted me to make some. She said though it must be apple pie and a cake that wouldn't take more than an egg or two, and but little butter, say a tablespoonful. I concluded to make it as best suited me, seeing I had a fair field, Samantha having gone to the village; and though Jane's bed room opened into the kitchen, her bed stood so she could not see the part of the room where I was at work. All the same, she made her tongue do duty for her eyes and kept telling me what to do -altthVtime till I clean lost patience, but you may be sure then I mixed things my own way. No stale drippings out of the old yellow bowl in the buttery went into my pie crust, but I put into it good, sweet lard out of the firkinin the cellar, and I didn't sweeten them pies with mo lasses sugar either, but good granulated went into them. "When I begin with the cake she called out, I guess, after all, it best be molasses; that only takes one egg, and shortening instead of butter. " Well, I said, smiling to myself as I stirred up a good cake which had plenty of eggs and butter for once. Her speak ing of molasses cake, tho' put me in my mind to bake a nice, soft one, for molas ses cake when fresh, aint to be sneezed at, yes, and I mean to tell you that I made a pie in an oldish saucer, and made it thick and good and sweetened it with molasses, and after it was baked I tucked it away in the woodshed. After dinner I looked to see if Jack had a piece of the pie we had cut, and that Jane had grumbled over because it was so good. But Samantha didn't give him any, which was just what I expected. So I left Sa mantha busy with the dishes, and tuck ing that saucer-pie under my apron, I went down in the yard alongside the barn to look at some blankets I'd hung there that morning. I looked sharp to see Jack when he came along to go to the meadow, then I called him soft like. " What !" says he stopping short. " ' Here,' says I, ' take this and set down in the gate corner and eat it ; I'll wait for the dish. "It wasn't three minutes before he brought the saucer back, every crumb clean gone. " 'I'll never forget it,' says he, a cry ing. "It was the next day the old folks came. I baked good, sweet bread in the morn ing and cut . it fresh for dinner, too, al though Jane was hurt about it, and what with ham and decently mashed potatoes, chopped cabbage and the sugared pie, we'd a good dinner, which everybody enjoyed, especially Tom, who couldn t stop bragging about it. But I had a plan in my mind, so after we'd finished, I says to Samantha : 'You're tired; so you go set in Jane's room and hold the baby and talk to granny, and I'll wash up the things.' "She wasn't backward to accept, and Tom took the old man out to see the farm, and for once in his life I set Jack down to a decent meal. Nothing was sneaked off that table by me, and it gave me satisfaction to see him eat. Samantha screamed right out when she came in and saw him finishing the pie. ' Ain't you ashamed of yourself to let him make a hog of himself?' she cried. But I reckon that I set her down sharp for once. "What did you ask me just now? How they spent their evenings there? Well, how do you suppose ? Like you folks ; going into the parlor and lighting it np bright, and talking and playing ? I rather guess not. Yon don't think thev would ever sit in their parlor, do you ? If you do, you don't know them. They sot in the kitchen, burned one candle and kind of grumbled when they felt like it. I almost always sot in by Jane and the baby ; our fight came in from the kitchen, for she wouldn't burn an extra candle for herself. She was always hint ing at something I might do evenings, but I let her hint. Sometimes Jack came in, fearful, like a dog not in place, and sot down for a spell by the door be fore he went to bed in the loft over the out-kitehen, but Samantha was always finding fault and picking at him. One uight he oame up by the table and asked for a needle and thread to fix his jacket , but she never pretended to hear him. I was elean put ont with such meanness. ' .) .-ck ,' says I, hand me that jacket,' and I got my house-wife and put on my spees and sat down to darn it. ItV a dirty, miserable thing,' says I, workiug sway, ' It ought to go into the ragbag, and Tom ought to get you a deoent suit.' "Tow's ohair came down hard, and ho looked mad enough. ' Better dress a beggar in broadeloth." he growled. " Un no need of that,' says I, ' only give a man working for food and clothes, decent ones.' " 'I kuow uy own business, and I hate meddler,' said Tom. ' Here Jack, clear out to bed. "Of all the queer questions Jack would ask. though ; one day he said to me, 4 What's God?" " 'You poor creature,' says I, 1 ain't no minister ever told you ? Well, He's a 8perrit." 'What's a sperrit V says he. "Now I'm one that's satisfied with facts without pryin' into them. I never mud dle myself a wondering ; but I seen by his questions he was kinder stupid like, so I says, ' A sperrit is something that ain't flesh and blood.' "He shook his head backwards and for wards. " 'Where's God ?' 'Why, in heaven, you poor heathen!' "He looked down as if he was almost a crvinat. " 'If He was only down here, I might find Him,' he says as serious like as could be ; ' but I can't never nnd mm up there.' " Twan't no use for me to say more to him, you see ; he showed me he was lacking, and I wasn t no minister. "Another time, when I was by the well he came along to fill the water jug for the field. 'I'm a thinking, Miss Zib,' says he. "What about?" "Thinkin' if I got away to the edge of the world, would 1 fall on t "Of course," says I. "Fall where?" "The Lord knows," I says a little sharp, for his silly Questions pestered me. I did kind of wonder tho' to myself, where a body falling off the land would land, but I ain't a scholar and don't pretend to say, besides I never expect to travel to the worlds edge myself. "It was that very afternoon Tom came in the kitchen in considerable of a hurry. "Where's the liniment?" he asked Jane, who was sitting there, holding the baby. "In the right hand corner of the sec ond closet shelf. What do yon want to do with it.' " 'Jack fell off the mow and got hurt.' " 'What did he want to do that for ? Now don't waste that liniment on him for nothing.' " 'Guess I'll go and see if he's hurt ' says I, thinkin' a fall from a mow wa'n't no trine. "I found him all in a heap on the barn floor, and That was worse, he didn't know anything. 'That s a high mow, says I, measuring it with my eye, 'and how in heaven's name do you know where he's hurt and wants to be rubbed with liniment? The best thing you can do is to get a doctor. " I want to get another load in before it rams, says Tom, in that aggravating slow way o' his'n, 'and it's no use run- nin' up doctors' bills when it 'taint no need. The liniment cured the old mare's leg last week, and by an' by when he comes to we 11 find out where he ails. " 'Tom Brones,' says I, 'I feel good telling you you are the meanest man a living. Look at that poor thing there! It ain't enough you've starved and work ed him to death, but you are going to let him die like a dog. I'm going to get Sam Lemarest to go for a doctor. " 'Hold on, yyu long-tongued Jezabel,' says he, 'and stop your meddling. I'll go for the doctor myself;' and with that he went to work saddling a horse, grum- blin and swearin to himself, and to me for that matter, but I was trying to fix Jack a little more comfortable and never minded him. "Samantha came up and looked in, and screamed a little, and went away again, Bull, the dog, came and smelled of him, and whined, for the dog always took to Jack, but nothing roused him; he breathed heavy and looked bad. "It seemed an age before Tom came back. He was slow always, and I needn't have expected he would put himself out of the way for Jack. "The doctor seemed to think some thing pretty serious was the matter with Jack. He worked over him quite a spell, examining, listening, growing graver every moment. He tore away his poor rags, even clipped away some of his shock of hair. Then he shook his head: 'I can't do anything for him now.' "An hour after it was all over. "Neighbors, hearing the news, came in and stood around, but Jack never knew any of them; never knew when I helped put bandages on his head, and his hair was so pretty, thick and brown, and with a curly wave into it. "Jane grumbled some when we told her he was dead. Me was a poor miser able creature, not worth his salt, she said, but hired folks was scarce just now in harvest, and asked such ridiculous wages. The town would have to pay for his coffin, though, and was that liniment left wasted in the barn ? "It was the next day, Mr. Somers, the old Methodist minister, came to the house and made a prayer over him. Ac tually, the first prayer I believe ever made by anybody on his account, and Tom and two or three of the neighbors took him up to the wood-lot to bury him. Jane had come to it, and let one of Tom's white shirts be put onto him; it wa'n't one of the newest, and really he looked as peaceful and calm as any baby could, and he wa'n't bad looking seen so, and I was glad to remember that I had been kind to him, in them little ways I told you of. "I just thought the last Sunday I was there that I'd put on my bonnet and go see where they laid him, so without say ing anythin' I tramped np there. It was a wild place enough, and of course there was nothing to mark it, but the Lord will know where he sleeps at the last dav, and that is enough ain't it? "I kind o' wondered when I stood there what had become of bis soul ? He was such a white heathen. It made me think of the beautiful sermon I once heard our old Dominie preaoh. 'No nut cared for my soul,' or some text most like it, and it did seem to me all of a sudden as if no man cared for Jack. "But I guess I had better put this lit tle fellow down bv vou now, for he's sound asleep, and I can go down and seeu whv nobody lias brought them lemons yet. Tut, tut don't look so down. I meant to chirk you up a talking." A Murdered Nation. In 1781, when the Empress Catherine stopped at Asov on a visit to the southern part of her domains, she was struck by the majestic aspect of the Daghestan mountains which interpose their snow capped ramparts between the Russian steppes and the garden lands of Tiflia and Georgia ; and on that day the conquest was first resolved upon which has since been accomplished at the cost of three million human lives. As early as 1783, General Lazareff made raid into the vallev of the Terek, but was driven back with the loss of 5000 men, and had to recruit his forces in the Ukraine till the spring of the following year, when he landed at Anapa, and attempted the same region from the south side. He was again re pulsed, but fortified the village oi Redout Kaleh on the Bea-coast ; and thus estab lished a base of operations, for all future expeditions, which year alter year were sent forth, and as often vanquished, though with greater and greater difficulty, bv that heroic resistence which mere butcher's arithmetic could foresee must cease at last. Lazareff and his successor, General Godolitsch, gratified the Czarina by a monthly bulletin of raids and mas sacres; and thereis something which seems inexpressibly revolting in their cynic admission of the superior strategy and valor of an enemy whom they hoped to subdue by starvation and rt that is, treachery, and the mas sacre of hostages and non-combatants. The passes of Western Caucasus were defended bv the Lesehians and Ossetes, who, in 1795, could still muster a force of 60,000 warriors in the Spartan Bense of the word ; but with the return oi every SDrine a fresh swarm of Cossacks, Cal- mucks and Muscovite serfs fell upon that devoted band standing at bay like a wild animal against a pack of buteher dogs. The valleys were devastated, domestic animals were slain the aute, or mountain villages of Western Le9thia, were burned and their defenseless inhabitants butch ered ; and in innumerable encounters the Dasses were strewn with the bones, and the mountuin streams of Circassia dved with the blood of her native sons. who, though almost victorious, found no time to repair their losses Deiore an im perial ukase sent a new horde of blood hounds against them. Yet in 1824, more then forty years after the commencement of hostilities wmcn naa aireaay cosi me lives of nearly half a million ot his sub jects, the Czar could not yet call a square yard of the Caucasus his own. unlets he kent within cannon range of his forts. Shamvl Ben Haddyn, a man whose name is almost unknown to America and Western Europe; has left a record in the memory of his countrymen about which coming generations may kindle into wor ship. Unless ultimate success alone be a criterion of merit, the exploits of Hanni bal, of Cromwell, of Kosciesco and Gari baldi anneai trifline in comparison with the feats of the Lesghian prophet-chief tain. There is a somewhat doubtful tradition about a Gothic knight, named Pelaeius or Pelavo. whose father had been slain with King Roderic, in the battle of Xeres de la Frontera, and who, when Spain was overrun by the Saracens, en listed a corps of volunteers from the Christian fugitives with their a undefended himself year after year in the fastnesses of the Pyrenees, till the power of the Moors was broken in the seven days' fight at Tours, and the little band ot patriots re ceived succor from their brethren in Southern France. If the story of Pelayo should be authentic, the achievements of Shamyl Ben Haddin are hardly equalled ; otherwise they stand altogether unap Droached bv anything the history of the world could adduce from the records of the last 4000 years. The Pass of Ther mopylae, though defended against greater odds, was only defended for twenty-four hours, while the followers of Shamyl maintained their ground for more than twenty-four years. Mithridates, King of Pontus and Asyria, resisted the powers of Rome for even a longer period ; but his resources were almost as vast as those of the Orbis Jtomanus, while the Circassian patriot, with never more than 20,000 righting men, defied the legions of the Russian Empire, which were increased under Prince Barvantnski to ninety-five of Regiments, forty of artillery, 1600 polks of mounted Cossacks together almost a third of a million. Frederic the threat, in the Seven Years' War, showed the same manful self-reliance, fortitude and heroic scorn of com promise : but would he not have surrendered Brandenburg and Ber lin as well as Silesia, if the four-fold nu merical superiority of his enemies had beeD increased forty-fold, the seven years protracted to twenty-seven, and his regi ment restricted to a diet of beechnuts and water ? Or, to take an illustration from the history of our own country, would the resistence of General Lee have been pro longed for. we will not say twenty-seven years, but that number of weeks, if Vir ginia bad been attacked oy a combina tion of the "Solid South" with the solid North, East and West ; if all the artillery, all the horses, all the cooking stoves, medicine chests, tents, shoes, blankets, flous, sugar and coffee, as well as all the cash had been monopolized by General Grant and Lee's own commissary supplies reduced to hickory nuts and wild berries of the Blue Ridge ? How few of our hardy ancestors would have undertaken for any for any temporal or eternal reward what the Lesghian chieftain bad done, and done in vain. His followers diminished from year to year and at last succumed, worn out, in the most brutal sense of the term, by an ungenerous enemy, who increased the terror of bis superior force by atrocities which make the conquest of Caucasus the blackest page in the history of the world. But to the Circassian themselves their untimely grave has, perhaps, been a refuge from worse evils, since the doom of Poland would have been the penalty of submission ; and in thus far, at least, they have still been the arbiters of their own destiny. Five successive generations have been called upon to decide between death and a Muscovite citizenship, and they have deliberately chosen death as the less horrible alternative. By a hun dred years' war, and the sacrifice of a million human lives the Russians have thus become the undisputed master of a graveyard, but they will hardly find it a renumerati ve acquisition. The tendency of the cosmetic regulations is adverse to cruelty, and we may trust that the same by law of nature which prevents the hunter from digesting the flesh of a tor tured animal will not permit the butchers of the Circassian patriots to utilize their victory. For alimentary purposes vivi section is an unprofitable business. Say ! look here. We've got a conun drum. What is the difference between a piece of mica and a fellow taking his nip of grog? One is Isinglass, t'other is nose-in-glass. Don't faint. Keep your spirit up. All Forts. Truth is mighty mighty scarce. "Have you a mother-in-law ? " asked a man of a disconsolate-looking person. "No," he replied ; "but I've a father in jail." A wife at Portland, Me , calls her hus band home by firing a skyrocket from the roof of the house. When the rocket goes up he goes for home. Religion gives you a creed as a kind of ladder up which you may climb to a noble life . Too many people, however, put the ladder up and then Bit on the ground. In the Sunday School picnic procession it is the graat stout homely girl that carries the banner. The nice-looking lit tle girl is kindly cared for by the Superin tendent. Little six-year-old was obliged to take a doee of medicine that left an unpleasant taste in the mouth. When asked how she liked, she said, "It is good enough, all but the end of it." A paper describes a young lady with hair "as black as a raven's." The ravens weren't wearing any hair to speak of last summer, but we suppose the style has changed this year. It has been said that an Italian queen bee got loose in the mail sack at Keokuk, and was sent to a distinguished naturalist of that city for examination. He classi fied thus : "Italian queen.bedamnedfit aintahossny." "Rash, sinful man." said upbraidingly the chaplain to the prisoner. ''Suppose you were to die now, what sOrt of a con cience would vou die with, eh V "Ob, my conscience is as good as new, never used it a bit," said the prisoner, proudly. A Dresden man owns an old doe that has lately caught butting its head against the bucket as it swung over the well. The act was referred to once by a poet who wrote "The old doe can buck it. That hung in the well." A European writer asserts that acute coryza, or cold in the head, Is cured in half an hour by chewing the leas of the eucalyptus and slowly swallowing the saliva. Its action is doubtless similar to that of cubebs, which will produce the same effect. One of the private schools in Washing ton this year held its annual ex ercises and distribution of prises in a river steamer, which ran down the Potomac some thirty miles and returned. This is an improvement over warm, badly ven tiltaed halls. The last slave sold In the Confederacy was in 1865, near Richmond, a negro man, who was bought for nine hundred heads of cabbage. The cabbage at that' time were worth one dollar a head, which would pan out nine hundred dollars for the negro. Elmira Brooks thinks "the only differ ence between a young lady and a married woman is an offer of marriage." If it hadn't been for this kind of scribe we should have gone to our grave with the impression that it was eighty-five cents worth ot ice cream. The Patriarch of Turtles. We re ceived a turtle a few days ago on whose back was marked the date 1700, and also the Spanish coat of arms, indicating that this old resident was in existence one hundred and seventy-nine years ago. What changes this old fellow of the deep has seen. The rise and fall of empires, and the continent on which he partly lived, emerged from the thraldom of despotism, with the rise of a republic that has become the great conservator of freedom, the advancement of civilization, and the glory of the world. A few words in Spanish on the shell were translated, which say: "Caught in 1700 by Her nando Gomez, in the St. Sebastian, and was carried to Matanzas by Indians; from there to the Great Wekiva," (which is now the St. John's river). On Tues day, the 17th of June, the turtle was turned adrift in the St. John's river at Palatka, with the inscription on his back: "Eastern Herald, Palatka, Flor ida, 1879." It may be supposed mat by this time the old fellow has scented salt water and gone over the bar at high tide, and probably a few generations hence may take him up at a Spanish port on the other side. Palatka, (Florida) Herald. HALL'S 8AF & LOCK COMPANY, CAPITAL ... 91,000,000 (jeneral Cfficea nd Wanufactory CINCINNATI, OHIO. A Queer Georgia Wind Spout. William Langley, a cotton planter of Gwinnett county, was standing in a field on his farm. Around him were several men, a woman and three children, all breaking the soil for cotton. The sky was clear and the air quiet, there being about both considerable sultriness. The children had just stopped work, and had thrown themselves, tired as tired could be, on top of a pile of guano sacks, when a peculiar roaring was heard in the field. The sound bore some resemblace to that of an approaching train, but as no train was near, the workers looked at each other in amazement. In a few moments they saw a small column, not larger in circumference than a barrel, skim rap idly along the ground. The wind spout or column appeared to be filled with dust. The mother rushed toward the children, who crouched low in fright, but before she could reach them the pile of guauo bags, children and all were scattered right and left. In its course, always eccentric, the column struck a stump squarely from the butt to roots and tore it from the ground, the wood splitting into three pieces, and dropping twenty or thirty yards away. Mr. Lang ley was sucked in as the whirling thing passed and thrown into a ploughed gully some distance away. In the next instant the strange visitor had gone, passing np over the tops of the trees. It was seen plainly by the ladies at Langley's house, appearing ts them like the smoke that rushes np in circular volumes from the smoke-stack of a locomotive. Augusta, Ga News. Transplanting and Replanting Teeth. Can teeth be transplanted? If recent accounts of operations by dentists are trustworthy, the answer must be in the affirmative. But the question has been formally discussed at a meeting of the Odontological Society, and from this we learn that it was in replanting (which is not the same thing as trans planting) that the foreign dentists, whose names had been cited, achieved their success. Among them a French man, Dr. Magitot, has published full particulars of cases in which diseased teeth were taken ont, and the root, or a portion of periosteum, was cut away, and then were replanted in the same socket, where, after a few days or Weeks, they became firm and serviceable. Out of sixty-three operations in four years, five were failures; but some of the cures were painful and tedious, owing to local dis charge. In technical phraseology, Dr. Magitot holds "the indications for an operation to be the existence of chronic periostitis of the apex of the root, its denudation, and absorption of its sur face. The resection of this, which plays the part of irritant, is the essential aim of the operation. And the extraction having been performed with due care, if no other lesion be detected save the alteration in the apex of the root, the tooth is to be replaced as soon as this has been excised and smoothed, and the hemorrhoge has ceased." Officious Friends. The London Truth, peaKitig of officious friends, says: "Friendship among them means alien, not a loan ; possession, not exchange ; and they will not amend their record. With such friends as these, at those mo ments when you take stock, as it were, of your life, yen are forced to ask your self what do you get out of at all ? You are snubbed, tyrannized over, rebuked and set down ; you are always in disgrace, and you may not call your soul your own; your life is regulated for you, not accord ing to your own desires, nor even for your own best needs, but according to the fancies of those you do not understand what they are about. Your.time is taken up, your pursuits are interfered with, your sympathies restrained, your affec tions chilled and all for what?" How can you best illustrate the differ ence between the French and English language? The French say, "Host mort." The English, He is no more." Pact pic BpAircH, No. 210 Sansome St., S. F- Agency for Oregon and Washington Territory, with HAWLEY, DODDJfc CO., Portland. HALL'S PALEST CONCRETE FIRE-PROOF SAFES. Have been tested by the most disastrous confla grations in the country. They are thoroughly & re proof. They are free from dampness. Their snperiorily is beyond question. Although about 150,000 of these safes are now in use, and hundreds have been tested by some of the most disastrous conflagrations in the country, there is not a single instance on record wherein one of them ever failed to preserve its contents perfectly. HALL'S PATENT DOVETAJIED TENON AND OROOVB BURGLAR-PROOF Have never been broken open and robbed by burglars or robbers. Hall's burglar work is protected by letters patent, and his work cannot be equaled lawfully. His patent bolt is superior to any in use. His patent locks cannot be picked by the most skillful experts or burglars. By one of the greatest improvements known, the Gross Automatic Movement, our locks are operated withont any arbor or spindle passing through the door and into the lock. Our locks cannot be opened or picked by bur glars or experts, (as in case of other locks), and we will put from $l,(Kj0 to $10,000 behind them any time against an equal amount. The most skilled workmen only are employed. Their work cannot be Excelled. Hall's Safes and Locks can be lied on at all times. Tney are carsfully and thorughly constructed. THEY ARE THE BEhT SAFE Made in America, or any other country. One Thousand Dollars To any person who can prove that one of Hall's patent burglar-prooi saies nasever oeeu broken open and robbed by burglars up to the present time. 8. N. WILLIAMS, Agent for Oregon and W. T. Ofllee wltb Hawlcy, Dodd '-. 28fcbl6:9tf. Portland. Bees Hamlin. Emmktt F. Wbknn. DRAYAGE ! PRAYACE I Hamlin & Wrenn. Propr's. T-TAVING JUST RETURNED FROM Salem with a new truck, and having leased the barn formerly occupied by James H.g- lin, we are now prcpa:ea to ao an Kinas oi DRAYINC AND HAULING, either in the city or country, at the lowest living rates. Can be lound at tne om trucK siana. a share of the public patronage resjetfully solicited. Corvallis. Dec. 27. 1878. 15:52tf JOB PRINTING. THE Gazette Job Printing House IS NOW PREPARED TO DO Plain and Ornamental Printing, As neat and Cheap as it can be done by any Office on the Coast. bill Heads, Letter Reads Mote heads, Stm emeots, P. ogramnes, Ball Tickets. Invitations Circulars, UuKlue-s ards. Visiting; ards, Label. Dda;era. Biaall Pesters, Kn ve lp-s I eical blanks' Bank Bates, Milnplas; Receipts, Order ISoaks, ituaa, Tags. tie., Kte Orders by mail promptly filled. Esti mates furnished. AUGUST KNIGHT, CABINET M AKE tt, AND UNDERTAKER, Cor. Second and Monroe Sta., corvallis, - . Keeps constantly on hand all kinds of FUBN1TIT3E COFFINS ANP CASKETS. Work done to order, on short notice, and at reasonable rates. Corvallis. Jan. 1. 1877. lf , BOOKS WHICH ARE BOOKS. " Good Books for Jk.ll." Works which should be found In every library within the reach of all readers. Works to en tertain, instruct and improve. Copies will sent by return post, on receipt of price. Jfeto Phyognomy- or Signs of Character, as manifested throuirh T,m , -c... -. .....wil, omi .exter nal Forms, and especially in the Human Face more man une Thousand Illus trations. By Samuel R. Wella. 7a Heavv muslin. SS5.0. F - Hydropathic Encyclopedia ; A system of Hveiene r " b r3 " au"7i rnysioiogy f the Human Body ; Preservation of Health ; Dietetics and Cookery ; Theory and Practice of Hygienic Treatment; Special Pathology and Therapeutics, including the Nature, Causes Symptoms and Treatment of all Known Dis eases. By R. T. Trail, M. D. Nearlv 1000 pages. $4.00. miock; or The Right Relations of the Sexes. A Scientific Treatise, disclosing the Laws of Conjugal Selection. Showing Who May and 81 00 7 N' Ma""y' BySalnuel R- Wella- Sow to Read; and Hints in Choosintr the, Rout. Books, with a Classified Lst of Works of Bio graphy, History, Criticism, Fine Arts, Poetry, Fiction, Religion, Science, Language, etc. By $iTo Petitt' 220 page' 12 mo' musli- How to Write; a Manual of Letter-Writing. Muslin, 75c How to Talk; a Manual of Conversation and Debate, with mistakes in Speaking corrected. 75c. How to Behave; a Manual of Republican Eti quette and Guide to Correct Personal Habits, with Rules ibr Debating Societies. Moplin 75c. How to do Business; a Pocket Manual of Practi cal Affairs and a guide to Success, with a col lection of Legal Forms. Muslin, 75c. Choice of Pursuits; or What to Do and How to Educate Each Man for his Proper work, de scribing Seventy-five Trades and Professions, and the Talents and Temperaments required. By N.8izer. $1.00. Expression, its Anatomy and Philosophy, with numerous Notes, and upwards of 70" illustra tions. $1.00. How, to Paint; Designed for Tradesmen, Mer chants, Mechanles, Farmers and the Profession al Painter. Plain and Fancy Painting, Gaild iisg, Graining, Varnishing, Polishing, Paper Hanging, Eaisominingand Ornamenting, For mulas for Mixing Paint in Oil or Water. By Gardner. $1.00. Combe's Constitution of Man. Considered in relation to External Objects. $1.50. Combe's Ziecturcs on Phrenology. With an Essay on the Phrenological mode of Investigation, and a Historical Sketch. By Andrew Board man, M. D. $1.50. How to Read Character. A new Illustrated Hand-book of Phrenology and Physiognomy. With 170 engravings. Muslin, $1.25. ' How to Raise Fruits. A Guide to the Cultiva tion aud Management of Fruit Trees, and of Grapes and Small Fruits. By Thomas Gregg. Illustrated. $1.00. Betters to Women on Midwifery and the Diseases of women. "With General Management of Childbirth, the Nursery, etc. For Wives and Mothers. $1.50. Science of Human Life. By Sylvester Graham. With a Copious Index and Biographieal Sketch of the Author. $3.00. Phrenological Journal and Life Illustrated. De voted to Ethmology, Physiology, Phrenology Physiognomy, Psycology, Biography, Educa tion, Art, Literature, with Measures to Re form, Elevate and Improve Mankind Physi cally, Mentally and Spiritually. Published Monthly in octavo form, at $2.00 a year in advance, or 26 cents a number. New volumes January and July. Inclose amount in a registered letter or by a P. O. order for one or for all of the above, and address S. R. WELLS & CO., Publishers, 737 Broadway, New York. Agents wanted. RUPTURE CURED! From a Merchant. Dayton, W. T. Feb. 10, 1879. W. J. Home, Proprietor California Elastic Truss Co., 720 Market street, San Francisco Dear Sir : The Truss I purchased of you one year ago ha i proved a miracle to me. I have been ruptur ed forty years, and wore dozens of different kinds of Trasses, all of which ruined my health, as they were very injurious to my back and spine. Your valuable Truss is as easy as an old shoe and is worth hundreds of dollars to me, as it affords me so much pleasure. 1 can and do advise all, both ladies and gentlemen, afflicted, to buy and wear your modern improved Elastic Truss imme diately. I never expect to be cured, but am sat isfied and happy with the comfort it gives me to wear it. It was the best $10 I ever invested in my life. You can refer any one to me, and I will be happy to answer any letters on its merits. I remain, yours, respectfully. D. D. BoifNELL. Latest Medical Endorsements. Martinbz, Cal., Feb. 17, 1879. W. J. Home, Proprietor California Elastic Truss Co., 720 Market street, S. F. Dear Sir: In regard to your Cal. Elastic Truss, I would say that I have carefully studied its mechanism, ap plied it in practice, and I do not hesitate to say that for all purposes for which Trusses are worn it is the b st Truss ever offered to the public. Yours truly. J. H. Ca both ebb, M. D. Endorsed by a Prominent Medical InstI tme. San Fbakcisco, March 6, 1879. W. J. Home, Esq. Dear Sir . You ask my opinion of the relative merits of your Patent Elastic Truss, as compared with other kinds that have been tested under my observation, and in reply I frankly state, that from the time my at tention was first called to their simple, though highly mechanical and philosophical construction, together with easy adjustibility to persons of all ages, forms and sizes. I add this further testi monial with special pleasure, that the several persons who have applied to me for aid in their cases of rupture, and whom I have advised to try yours, all acknowledge their entire satisfaction, and consider themselves highly favored by the possession of your improved Elastic Truss. Yours tiuly", Ba blow J. Smith, M. D. Proprietor of the Hygienic Medical Institute, 635 California street, San Francisco. A Remarkable Cure. Sa Francisco, Oct. 26, 1879. W. J- Some, Proprietor California Elastic Truss, 720 Market street, San Francisco Dear Sir : I am truly grateful to you for the wonder ful CURE your valuable Truss has effected on my little boy. The double Truss I purchased from vou has' PERFECTLY CURED him of his pain i , i . n .r,ih afileo in a little over six months. The Steel Trass he had before I bought yours caused him cruel torture, and it was a hap nv dav for us all when he laid it aside for the CALIFORNIA ELASTIC TRUSS. I am sure that all will be thankful who are providentially iA tr, (irivp vnur Truss a trial. You may refer anv one to me on the subject. Yours truly, " J TIT,. T OOQ CArtMmantA ftf YT M. X Bni f ujo kM.ioiticuvv jv. ri j.a irfiTu fVtof T finvA pvnm i nfv t hp son fITF IB HU v J vmmv m. . -" -r w Porii. and find him PERFECTLY CURED of Hernia, on both sides. ij. l'RXTEK iJIfUBII, 1M. if. Surgeon and PkMBcian. Trusses forwarded to all parts of the United Slates at our expense, on receipt of price. Snd Stamp tor Illustrated Catalogue SHU r 1 , "-, Giving full information and rules for measuring ELASTIC TRUSS COMPANY, California 720 Market Street, 8. F. E. H. BURIMH M, HOUSE PAINTING, 89AINING AND PAPER HANGING. ALL WORK IN MY LINE PROMPTLY attended to on reasonable terms. Paper hanirinir a specialty. Orders may be left at Graham, Hamilton and Co.'s drug store, or S. 6 McFadden's carpenter snop. Corvallii, April 1, 1879. litf