RECOLLECTION. Ttirousli tlie open doors of memory Float tlio IMonA of the past, Float and lade like; clouds of vapor Home on evening's tiiful Mn.sL Now tli pongs of childhood' mink Tlirill mid llll our hearts with pain; Paiti nnd pleasure strangely lilulidcd O'er Uiu hop k of Itlf i vain Can It t.e that once frcc-hrnrted, lunccviil nnd mire were we Aro the wrcnthn of lmpa thet frowned 111 Hut the withered leaves we sect Smiles", like gleam of pimslilnc mellow, When they o'er the meadows rha.t', Played among the childish dimple.", Gnvc to every feature grace. Where are they those marks of favor, Kvcr changing finger-prints, Left ly the ereatlng angel, Karthly trace of heavenly tints! Comes a pure iwrt exhalation, Gently wafted on the air; Tin the fragrance and the incense Of an Infant's lisping prayer. bright as de drops In the morning, Uleam of Imiotencc the tears, Ulcam In youth, hut !oc their sparkle And their he-Ire with the years. Thus the past flits, flits before us; Things are not what they were then; Bad and solemn Is the feeling, They will never bo again. Hut despair not of the future; The past, the past Is dead; To-day Is life, to-morrow promise bright the stars shine overhead. liOt us not th Idly dreaming; Hope for hotter things to come; Through the light of morning gleaming Klses our eternal home. - Alrx.auicr Coj eland JtiWir, In the Current. A fiLQUEL TO JI.VTWAS HAXDORF AM doui'or AViKuiirrr. X5y JfiiloB Verne AUTHOR OP "JOOHKKV TO Tni". OHNTItl OF TIIIJ HA1ITH, " TKIf TO Till! MOON, "AHOUND THE WOllM) IN HK1IITY DAYS," " MICnAKIi STHOOOI'I'," "TWKNTY TUOUHANIJ I.ltAIIUEa UNDKIt THE HEA," KTC, I.TO. lYawlatton copyrighted by (1. If. llanna, SSJ. CHAPTER XXVI -Continui:i. l$nt tho Fcrrnto I mil now como into position iiiul begun tiring on the flotilla. Her guns nml those of tho batteries thai could bo brought to hour were, however, insufficient to prevent tho pirates lnnd- iuf. Although great number had perished, although twenty of their vessels Iiiul heen sunk, in on) than ono thousand Borambled on to tho rook in tho south, to which tho calm son ren dared tho opproach so ens v. It was then found that tho Honouists woro not without artillery. Tho largest of 'tho zobecs luid several hold-piooos on wheeled carriages, nml thuso wero lauded on tho shore, whiuh was out of rmigo of tho guns either of tho town or tlio central cone. Tho Dootor, from his position on tho nearest wdiout, had seen all this, ami with his much lower men could not attonipt to stop it. But us tluiy wero sheltered by tho walls, tho assailants, liuinoroui as they were, would llud their task a difficult one. Tho KcnousistH, dragging their light gutiH with them, formed up into two columns, and came marching along with nil tho careless bravery of tho A rati and tho andnoity of tho f.inatios, who glory in their contempt of death, their hope ofpillogo, nnd their hate of tho Knropeau. When they wero within range tho butteries oponod on them. More than ono hundred foil, but tho others still kopt on. " Thoir fiold-pieoos worn brought into position, and they began to bieaeh tho wall in tlio angle of tho unlhiished our.ain towards tho south. Thoir chief, oalm amid those who woro falling at his side, directed tho operation. Sarcany, close by, was exciting him to deliver tlio assault, and hurl several hundred men at tho falling wall. From tho distance, Doctor Autekirtt nnd l'iorro had recognised him, and ho had reoogni'-0l tb"iT. And now tho mass of besiegers began thoir ndviuioo to tho wall, whiuh had been beaten in snfiloieutly to lot them through. If they succeeded in clearing this breaeh, thoy would spread them selves over tho town, and tho besieged, too weak to resist, would have to aban don it, and, with tho sanguinary temper ament of tho pirates, tho victory would bo followed by a genoral massacre. Tho hand-to-haiid struggle at this point won terrible. Under tho Doctor's orders, who stood as impassible in tho danror os ho was invlunorablo amid tho bullets, l'iorro and his companions per formed prodigies of valor, Point Pescado and Capo Matifou lent their assistance, and displayed I ho most brilliant audacity. Tlio Ilm-onlos, with a lcuifo in ono hand, and an axe in tho other, kept clear the spac around him. Go it. my Gape, go it I Down with them 1" Bhontod Point Peseade, whoso rovolvor, incessantly recharging and discharging, was going like a (lutling. But tho foe would not yield. After being many times driven out of tho breaoh they had again swarmed on to tho utlttck, utul wero slowly lighting through it, they suddenly found them selves attacked in the rear, Tho Forrato had managed to got into n commanding position, within three eanlo-lo'igtliH of the shore, aud with her cannonades all brought to tho one side, her long chaser, her Hotohkiss cautious, and liar (lading mlUnlleiisos, sho -pouod such a firo on tho assailants that they woro mowed down as tho grass hsforo tho scythe. Sho attacked them in tho roar, nnd cannonaded them on the bcaoh nt tho same time, so as to dof.roy and nuiIc tho boats which h.ul beat, moored round tho rook. Tho blow was a torrihlfl ono, nnd mis quito nnoxpototl by tho Seuomists. Not only woro thoy taken in tho rear, but all moans of oioapo would bo out off it their voaaoLi wero knocked to pieces Sandorf's Reven tiii: i:vn or thk by tho guns of tho Forrato. Tin assail ants hesitated in the breach that tlio militia wero defending so obstinately. Already more than fivo hundred had met their deaths, wliilo the besieged had loat but few. Tho leader of tho expedition saw that ho must immediately retreat into tho sea or expose his companions to certain and complete destruction. In vain Sar cany demanded that thoy might continue tho attack on tho town. Tho order was given to rot urn to tho shore; anil tho Senousists drewofTas if thoy would bo hilled to the last man, wero tho ordor3 given them to die. Hut it was necessary to givo th3o pirates a lesson thoy would nover forget- "Forward! my friend! forward 1" shouted the Doctor. And under tho orders of Tiorro and Luigi, a hundred of the militia throw themselves on to the fugitives as they retreated to theshoro. Between the llro from the Ferrato and tho llro from the batteries, tho Senousistj? had to givo way. Thoir ranks broke in disorder, and they ran in a crowd to tho soven or oight vosels that still wero left to them. Pierre and Xiuigi, amid the confusion, endeavorod above all things, to tuko one man prisoner. That man was Sar eany. But thoy wished to havo him alive, and it was only by a miracle that they escaped tho revolver shots tho flcoundrol tired at them. It scorned, however, that fate would ngain withdraw him from their hands. Kaivuny and the leader of the Soiiou sist. followed by a dozen of their com panions, had managed to regain a small polaocn, which they had cast oil and wero preparing to get under way Tho Ferrato was loo far oil' for them to signal her to pursue, aud it looked as though sho would escape. At tho moment C'apo Matifoti saw a field-gun dismount from its carriage and thrown on the beach. To hurl himself on the still loaded gun, to lift it with superhuman forco on to ono of tho rocks, to steady it by tho trunnions, and in a voice of thunder to shout, "Come here, Peseade! Herd" was tho work of a moment, Pescado heard Matifou's shout, and saw what ho had done; instantly ho understood, ran up, pointed the gun at tho polaoaa, and tired. Tho shot went clean through the hull. The recoil hardly shook tho living gun cixrriage. Tho leader of the Sunomists and his companions wero pitched into tho water and, for the mojt part, drowned. Baroany was struggling with tho surf when Luigi throw himself into tho sea. A niiuuto afterwards Srcaii3' was safo in tho huge hands of Capo Matifou. Tlio victory was complete. Of tho two thousand assailants who had lauded on the island, only a few escaped to tho Oyrennio to toll tho story of tho disaster. Aiitokirtta would, it could bo hoped, for many n voar bo freo from anothor attack from pirates. CIIAPTICU XXVtt JUKT10U. Count Mathias Saudorf had paid his debt of gratitudo to .Maria and Luigi lerralo. .Madame Bathory, Pierre and Rava woro nt last rounitod. After tlio reward came tho punishment. l or some dii3-a following the defoat of tho SenousisUs, tho colonists wero actively employed in roparing damage. With tho cxcoption of a fow trilling scars, l'iorro, Point Pescado and O.ioo Matifou that is to say all thoso who had beon most intimately connected with the ovents of this drama woro safo nnd sound. That they had not spared themselves, however, needs no iitHrnm Unn. Great, therefore, was tho rejoicing whon thoy met togelhor in tho Stodtlmus with Sava Saudorf, Maria Ferrato, Mndamo Bathory nnd her old servant Borik. After tho funeral of those who had fallen in tho battlo, tho little colony resumed ils happy existence. Its future would bo freo from troublo. Tlio defeat of tho Senousists hid boen disas'roiis, and Soroonv, who had persua led them to undertake this campaign against Aiitokirtta, would no lunger be with them to fan tlit lame of hatred and vengettiiee. O The Dootor proiwM complotlnc hli system of 'ofonsa without data v. Not, only would Aitonak bo promptly ren dered mwiiro from a kitddeu surprint but tho island itswlf would nowhere IT il a Iniidiiig-phuM. And it whs intends! to invito thithur a few moro oolonlaU to conspiiiaioiis whom tho fertility of tho soil would prove nn attraction and a guaranteo of well-being. Meanwhile no fur her obstacle existed to tho marriage of Pierre and Suva, Tho ceremony had beon llxcd for tho 9th of December ; and it would toko placo on that dale. And so Point Pescado was particularly busy with tho prepara tions that had been interrupted by tho invasion of the piratei from tho Cyronaio. And now without delav tho fata of Saroany, ToronUml nod Carpona was tj bo decided. On tho tith of December, two days after the retreat of the Senousists, tho Doctor ordered them to be brought to tho Stadthaus. Tho prisoners woro unaware of each other's proseuoo in tho island, and for tho first timo foim I themselves together, whon under n guard of a detachment of militia, they como before tho tribunal of Artonak, consist ing of the chief magis'rato of Aiitokirtta. Carpena appeared uneasy ; but having lost nothing of his sneakish look, ho merely throw furtive glanco? to tho right and left of him, and dared not lift his eyes to his judges. Toronthal seemed quito cast down, and bowed his head, mid instinctively avoided tho touch of his old accomplice. Sarcany had only ono feeling ho was furious at having fallen into tho hands of this Doctor Autekirtt. Luigi advanced towards the judges, nnd lx'gan by addressing tho Spaniard. ' "Carpena," said he, "I am Luigi t ' Ferrato, tho son of tho lishermun of j ' ltovigno, whom you informed against and sent to prison at Stein, whero ho ! died." Carpona drew himself up for an instant. A paroxysm of linger sent the blood to his eyos. 'L'lien it was indeed Maria whom he had leeogniKed in tho lanes of the Munderaggio, and it wis her brother Luigi who thus accused him. ! l'iorro then advanced, and at first pointing to the banker ho said: "Silas Toronthal, I am Pierre Bath ory, tho son (if Stephen Bathory, the Hungarian patriot, whom you, with your accomplice Sarcany, most shame fully betrayed to tho Austrian police at Trieste, and sent to death !" Then to Sarcany he said: "I am Pierre Bathory, whom yon tried to assassinate in tho road at Bag usa. I am the intended husband ol Sava, tho daughter of Count Muthias Saudorf, whom ,V'Ut stole It I won yours ago from tho Castlo of Artenak !" Toronthal was struck us by a crowbar when ho recognized IVrro Bathory, whom ho thought dead. Sarcany stood wilh crossed arm?, and except for a slight trembling of lus eyo lids. retained his impudent immobility. Neither Toronthal nor S ireany said a word in reply. And what could they say to their victim who seemed to havj risen from the tomb to accuse them? But it wivs quite another thing when Dootor Anlekirtt rose in his turn, and said in a grnvo voice: "And I, 1 am the companion of Lvlis las ZathniaruudS ephen Ihrhory, whom your treaclierv oiused to be shot in the donjon of Pisiuo ! 1 am tho father of Suva, whom you stole to get possesion of her fortune 1 am Count Mathiaa Saudorf!" This time the ofl'eet of the declaration was such that tho knees of Silas Toron thal bent to tho ground, while Sarcany bent down as if he would sink into him- ftflf. Thou the throe- accused wero examined one after the other. Their crimes they could not deny, aud for their crimes no paidon was possible. The chief niagis trato reminded Sarcany that tlio attack on the islaml, undertaken in his own personal iuterest, had made mnny vie tims whoso blood cried out for ven geance. Then having given tho ucou.ed full liberty to reply, ho gavo seuteiico conformably to tho right given him by this regularly-constituted jurisdiction. "Silas Toronthal, Sarcany mil Car pena. you have caused tho death t of Stephen Bathory, Lulislus Zathmnr mid Andrea Ferrato I You arc son'.onuud to death 1" Whenever you like! replied Sir- cany, whuon tmpudtiiico ngittn uwtotl itself. "Pardon I" oriod Oarpoosv Toioutlml hail not tho etmigtlt to sponk, Tim litre were tkt) nwny to th iwxuwUm and tlum) kopt uudur furd. Jiow moio tlio tjoouudittU to d!I Wi re they to be shot in fnmo corner of the island? That would bo to dellio tho Foil of Aiitokirtta with tho blood of traitors! And it was dociled tint tho execution should take place at Iv'tieraf. That evoii'iig ono cf tho Electrics, commnn led by Luigi Ferrato, took tho prisoners on board, and bore t em off to the island, where thoy wero to wait till Biiiiriso for the firing party. Sflicany, Toronthal an 1 Carpena saw that their timo hnl erne; and when thoy hud beon lauded. Sarcany went up to Luigi and nskod him: " Is it to bo this evening ?" Luigi made no reply. Tho threo donnvjd men were left nil alone, nnd night had fallen wluu the Electrio returned to Aiitokirtta. Tho island was now freo from tho presence of tho tr itors. That thoy could oci.po from Kencraf, which was twenty miles nwny from tho mainland, was impossible "Befo-o to-morrow," said Point Pc cade, "they will have eaten each other!" "Porrnh!" said Capo Matifou, in disgust. The ni dit passed at tho Stodthaus. Count Saudorf had not a mo no it's renose. Locked in his room, ho did not leave it until four o'clock in t o m rn ing, when ho do-cended to tho hall to meet l'iorro and Luigi, who woro immediately summoned. A lilo of militia Mas waiting in the courtyard of ihe Stadthaus under orders to embark for Kencraf. "Pierre Bathory, Luigi Ferrato,' said Count Saudorf; "havo thes.- traitors been justly condemned to dio ?" "Yes thoy deservo it,'' answered Pierre. " Yes," replied Luigi. " mid tho scomv drols deserve no mercy." "Then let justice ho done, and may God givo tho pardon that in in cannot'' Ho had scarcely finished speaiiinp when a fearful explosion shook tin Stadthaus and tho wlmlo of the island as if an earthquuko ha.l taken plaoe. Count Saudorf nnd his companions rushed out. and tho wholo population in terror camo streaming into tho streots of Artenak. An immense sheet of ilamo, with enor mous masses of rocks and showers oi stones, was blazing to a prodigioui height towards tho sky. Then Hit; masses of rock fell back round tho islet, ' mining hugo waves in tho sea, and o , thick ciouu remained suspended h space. Not a trace was loft of tho islet o Kencraf, nor of tho threo men whoa tho explosion had annihilated. What, then, had happened. It will not havo been forgotten that tho island had been mined in prepara tion for tho landing of the Senousists, nnd that in ease tho submarine cable which united it to Aiitokirtta wero put out of action, Certain electrical batteries had been buried in tho ground, so thnt tho wires had only to bo pressed by the feet to be brought in contact aud fire the fougasses of pancliistite. What had happened was this. By chance, ono of the doomed men hnd trodden on those wires. And hence the complete and instantaneous destruction of tho islet. "Heaven has spared us tho horrors of nn execution ! ' said Count Saudorf. Three davs afterwards tho marriage of Pierre nod Sava was duly celebrated at tho church at Artenak. On that occasion Doctor Autekirtt signed his real name of Mathias Saudorf; whioh ho wou'd nover again lay down now justico had been done. A fow words wili suffice us to finish our story. Threo weeks nf forwards Siva Bathory was recognized as the heiress of tlio Saudorf property. The hut r from Mndanio Toronthal nnd a declaration obtained from tho banker, in which tho circumstances and the o''ect of hor being stolon wero duly sot forth, proved sullicientto establish her identity. As Sava was not yet eighteen all that remained of the Carpathian estates in Transylvania came back to hor. Cnint Saudorf himself cmld if ho had chosen have entoro 1 into possession of this property, under an amnesty which had boen issued in favor of politi cal prisoners. But if ho returned to public life as Muthias Saudorf he could not remain cliiefof the great family of Anteku ttn. And ho wished to pass his life anions.' those who loved him. Tho little colony, thauks to his renewed efforts, began to flourish exceed ingly. In loss than a year it hail doubled its population. Scientists and inventors, invited lhithor by Count Saudorf, had come to make good use of discoveries that would have remained barren without his advice, aud tho wealth of which ho was tho master. And ho Antekirtto would soon becoaio the most important place in tho Syrtic Sea. and with the accomplishment of its ' defen ive system ito security would become absolute. I Ot Madame Bathory, Maria and Luigi Forrato. and of Pierre aud Sava, wo ; need uy no moro ; who doo. not feel ' that their lives wero happy ? Nor need we say more about Point Pescado and Matifou, who wero now, perhaps, tlio most famous colonists of Autokirtta. If they ifgro.ted anythiii. it was that ' they had no more occasion to display ' their devotion to him to whom they , owed their happv oxistonoe. Count Saudorf had accomplished his task, and had it not Iwen for the remem brance of his two companions, Stephen Bathory and Lidisdas Zathniiir, ho would havo been as h ippy as a generous man can bo on this earth when ho is doing good around him. In tho whole Mediterranean, in nil tho other sens of th globe, oven in tho rortuunto islands we may soak ui vain for an island whost prosperity rivals that of Antekirtto! And when Cipo M it i foil, iu tho ex ibrtnineo of his ood toriuue, thought lit to say: " Do you think wo deserve to bo ao happy i ' Q Poiut ILtsMd replied : "No, lrty Gnuol 1 don't! But what euu yatt do? Shall wu itiguf" Ituk um. i 1 Jilleu'sss in German Universities. The following is nn extract from an open 1 tier by Prof. Schmollcr. one of tho most infiucntiiil men m the law fa cult, of the Univcrsitx of Berlin. Its publ cation has tailed forth a storm of controversy in the German newspapers. The fact that German stutleuts fre quently spend tho first half of their uni vers ty course in idleness is not denied, oven by those, who oppose the views of tho learned prof ssor. and thoir ch cf argument of tle.fon.'o is that these years of dion.'ss make up the only season of romance .n tho otlnrwiso unbroken life of examination nml positon-huntin to wh ch German outlis arc doomed: What I want to sec done away with is tho officially organ Z"d untruth, which exc.t. s my mdignat on every tunc I have to caVrv it into execution. Every professor twice a year test lies that dozens of students have been present at his lectures, who, he knows, have nev or set loot in his room. It has hap ponod repeatedly that students guile less I y presented to me Prof. Eek's pan tlecls for me to s yrn, thereby admitting that they did not know that either Prof. Lck or mo by sight. 1 don t want to forco am body to hear tctl.ous lectures; I've cut many a letiuro myself, anil know well enough that hard reading ami industry in his own room aro in tho end more important, perhaps, to a .student than hearing tho university courses. But 1 can not pursuade my self that this industry is to be found in tho easo of thoso who attend no lec tures tho first two or three snmcstcra and calculate from tho very beginning on tho ability of the paul "coach" to cram thcni ifp for examination. The number of these men, however, is very large among tho law studenU cortain lv from one-fourth to one third; and so tho question simply is. Can not a sys tem of mat king, without compulsion, be employed? To all industrious stu dents this would be a matter of inditler onee. Would it not save the major. ty of the lower layer of our future govern ment officials from that "bumming" which niiist occur when one wastes from ono to three years of his life? Tho aca dem c freedom would not be affected in the least by lh:s plan, only the right to conceal laziness from parents, guar dians, aud the univoristy ofiiccrs would bo put an end to. 1 'added that the carrying out of such a change would not bo easy. If it be deemed unworthy of a student to bo thus da ly controlled, let nic merely call attention to our great military educational establish ments. The ofiiccrs in the war acade my and in tho artillery school, who arc on the average much older than uni versity students, who are in possession of offices anil rank, and are man)' of them married men, must daily put up with having their attendance at courses of instructions marked. The llaiin Jlvicisbolr, commenting editorialh on this letter, is much sharp er in its criticism : If any form of life has remained in tho rear of reform it is the academic, and only the romance of student life, and tho easy-going partiality of wider circles in the outer world, havo kept tho public eye closed to this fact. There is a mistaken idea current as to the po sition of the better and more capable class of students in regard to the ox. st ing state of affairs. Tho general opin ion is that th s class would bitterly ro sent everv change as an a. tack "upon their traditional privileges, w o should like to cinphas zo the fact that, on the contrary, a deep desire to reform the present" evil circumstances hits long been making itself felt in ucadem.o c ivies. Thi re is great d seontont and inipat ence, especially w th the extra ordinary arrangement of lecture cour ses, the" lack of .system, the indigot b I itv aud oven tho partial absence of spir.t of tho great mass of information oil'cred in tho universities. One of the most alarming features in the complete irresponsibil ty of the professor for tho intellectual progress of his hearers. From this resint tho willfulness w th which every instructor, according to Ii s personal inclinations, chooses and handles his subject, the dry, uninter ested tono which makes most lectures an alioni nation to the useful ferment ing spir.ts of the auditors, and tlio re markably slight, personal relations which nowadays exist between profes sors and students, in scientific matters. One can boldly say that if a student really does any good work, he owes this to h s own si lt-teaching industry, a good school pioparat on, or per haps to the personal interest of sonio professor, but least of all, to the in4i stitutions of tho university. When one 1 adds to this tho evils in tho system of salaries, which have turned tho ollico of private doccnt into a money speeu hit on. In tho ono-sidod education of wholo profess ons, as of the philolog ians and theologians, who receivo from tho university a good as nothing for thoir practical calling in life, in tho had arrangement of examinations, in tho social life of the students, as in tho ' dueling abomination, tho awarding of scholarships, and so forth, ono is forced I to w sh with all his soul that at last 1 some (Edipus might anso to uinlertako ; tho solution of these complicated rid. ' dies. It is only a consequence of the want of earnestness with winch, owing to nil sorts of sentimental rein nis ccnccs, th s subject is usually dealt I with, that in no walk of lifo does an equal number of persons morally and , physically go to ruin, as in tho student world, before they have done anything for tho good of the coininunin. Sta I tistics on this subject would bring some surprising facts to light facts that would open the eyes of tho blindest. Wo bebevo that wo are within the truth when wo say that not half of our students reach that degree of attain ment which they could through a quieter and more earnest development, and that a largo proportion actually go to the bad. This is not a question of lini ting academic freedom; th shall ent iiuo iu its noble sense; that is that the stu I dent have the gro.itct possible amount of opportunity ami time to form him belf and his intellect iu ail indiv dual way, but not nut 1 he luin p. ilorm-d ' those duties which I fu with iu n ossU t os iemaiio of him nfi a scholar. Only frtHMlom bed on fulMlhul duty bits am worth, but not u frulutu ;io cIm'm1 wiih inactivity ami pricking ui eotucicne which uf( n unniliihtUM ihs uubieti povrur in litu wry genu. THE LAST RESORT Sweet Cnnadn ! Pnto thy horc I tt For rest ami recreation; Long branch and Saratoga I pass bv. Fur. far removed from style iinU fai'lilon I Will spend my long vacation. Cnne Mnv nnd Old Point Comfort have for me Ko longer their attraction: No more 1 1 llml-on landscapes do I fco The Ilnest In the world, and unto thee 1 humbly make retraction. From trouMe. toll, and tr!fc lliey say PII llnd Thv bre 7. disinfect ves; f turn all thouchlsof businw from my mluil, I skip to thee nml leave all eareo behind, Also U. S. detectives. Loved Canada! nneonred Iu thy coo! clime. With lliee for my protector. I'll eperd in weet Vecurilv mr time. Some phel.el, loo, think I'll sx.'ud, for I'm A defunct bank director. -Ufe. The Peppermint King. This potentate was born in Oneida county, Xow York, on Juno 10, 1S10, says The Farm and HowcloUI, and his name, which has for many years been kept standing in typo iu tho chief mar ket journals of the world, is Hiram G. Ilotchkiss. Now 7o years old, ho is ro bust and plump, bustling with activity among his peppermint bottles during the season of oil production, and in ev ery wa ' master of his speciality. Whon ho was 7 ears old h s parents removed from Oneida county to OnUir o county, which adjoins Wayne, and settled in tho town of Phelp. At tho ago of IS ho started a small country store, to which later ho attache I a llouring-mill, thcrel). becoming a general furnisher of food material. About 1837. ton to twelve years after Burnett had put a practical appraisement on the value of the now famous Wauio county weed, Mr. Ilotchkiss began to huv "pepper mint oil of the farmers about Lyons, who took it to him as tho most enter prising merchant they know. Ho also got into tho business of buying tho raw meter al, as it would bu offered to him in connection with wheat taken to his mill, and d st lling the o 1 himself, lie presently saw a future for Wayne county peppermint, and, disposing of his business in Phelps, removed in 1811 to Lyons, here gradually to assert dominion over tho peppermint-oil busi ness of the world. There aro two or throe other dealers in tho county, but tho bulk of the crop goes to market through tho hands of Mr. llolchkiss. The muit is raised chicily in the towns of Huron. SodiH, Galen, Marion, Arcadia, Williamson, Lyons, and Hose. The loam soil of the fiat lands of theso towns is naturally adapted to it, but tho richness of the plant in oil varies so greatly that producers can not mix their crops for distilling, taking a pro rata share of the oil, as dairymen mix their milk in a common pool at. tho cheese factory, and take a pro rata share of the cheese. The mint acreage of the county this year is estimated to bo about four thousand acres, and this area is said to he only about one-half what it would have been if the season had been favorable. Mr. llolchkiss estimates the total product of oil this year to be worth .S'lL'0,000. In a fairly good season it rises much hcond this amount. The crop is now, of course, all in, and much of it has been sent on its way to the candy factories, the bakeries, and the aching stomachs of the world. P pperniint long ago ceased to be looked upon as a weed n these parts. it is a legit mate agricultural product, planted and attended to as systematical ly as a crop of wheat or potatoes, Tho oil is sent to market Iron. Lyons in wholesale (pianlities bill a small part of each ear's product is put up in phials "to gie away to my colicky friends-,'' as Mr. Hote'hkNs says. The bottles for commerce contain twenty ounces, and eighteen bottles are packed in a case, the current worlh of a case at first hand being jf'JG. Mint fanners, who duri.ig the season of shipping ami packing frequent Mr. Ilotchkiss' fac tory, say that peppermint-raising; is considerably more profitable than wheat raising, and is a surer crop, the average of seasons and tho market considered, than almost anything olso they could produce on thoir available mint soil. A Lost Papa. Tho following true story is sent us by a correspondent in Ithodo Island: Three little children rode down to tho station with papa, who was going "to town" for family supplies. Papa had always worn heavy wh skers ami mous tache. Ho visited thobaibor and oamo homo with closelv-croppod looks and closely-trimmed moustacho only. Tho loss of tho luxuriant beard actually transformed him, so that his bwt friends" would havo scarcely known him. Tho children, being accustomed to strangers, chatted with him on his return, and nothing strange was notion! until they began to worry lost papa was not coming home that night! "Why, papa has come home." said mamma in wond uing tonos. "Why don't he como to tho house?" "Why. he has been in; don't vou re member he t roughtyou sonio poanuts." That gentleman? VioTi company!" In vain mamma explained, and when pupa came into the hoitso again ho was told the children's grief at his 110:1 re turn, lie tried to convince them, but it was not possible; tho positive tem perament they had inherited from him was not to be argued with successfully. Gravely they noticed that ho actually received all papa's prhiloges, anil seemed scandalized tha he put them to bed, and occupied papa's room, and waited on them just a papa used to do! Gradually thoy fcl' in the habit of call ing him papa," but to them he was tho "new papa," and they sadly wondorol for months if the "old papa" wl. wotit to town" would never, never come homo any moro. Iinbyhood, Wlmt They Died Ot Mistfos (to applicant to cook) "WliKt expor.enco have you had as cook?" Apid'cant "I wuz seven months in me lushl place, mum." MUtrws "Why did yon leavo Hiiro?" Applient "Tho mimthar and mU ihreoa both tliotL mum." "Mtre "Wlmt did thev tl'o of?" Applionjit "liidigojtiou, mum."