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UTM SEEKERS.
youth is poshing upward still!
la the load lighter from the toil of ages ?
Does it get near the summit of the hill ?
And will ye toil on ever, oh, ye sages ?
When to the top the giant mass is ta’en.
Will it faU back and crush you? nay to
know
Perchance were worse than this sad work
t and pain.
Pash on! Push on! Oh, mortals onward
l?o!
Immortal love is watching o’er each pang—
Though ye are blind—from life’s ob¬
scurity—
When on the verge the quivering mass doth
hang.
Lore will appear and your poor hearts be
free!
■ What
do we know—if’tig not love is near?
What hope have we—but that love will
awake
The sullen surges of life’s ocean drear,
A glorious sunrise ? Break, oh, morning,
break!
WASHINGTON AND TELL.
inr HABBIET B. WATERMAN.
Louis Gran ton was the son of a Swiss
watchmaker who, with his family, had
lived for a year in America, which coun¬
try Mr. Gran ton liked, because he was
paid much more for his work than at
home.
Granton was very homesick
Wfcfit of the time, and Louis did not like
Jnerica at alL To begin with, it was
Provoking to be obliged to speak broken
when be could talk faster than
®ny of the boys, only they were too
6tupid to know French, which was not
clumsy as English, and was, besides
his native language.
Then, too, the boys called him
\ “Polesky,” which made him very mad.
■ colony of Poles lived in poor little
tents near the river. From the sound of
1 ‘sky,” which ends many of their words,
the boys had contrived this nickname,
which it was the oustom of the school
apply to any foreigner.
But Louis had objected to It more fa
riously than any of the others, and, in
consequence, the name had staved his.
after he had a great many times ex¬
plained the immense superiority of the
Swiss over all the other people of the
earth, it was very provoking to have
them continue to call him “Polesky,”
simply for the sake of teasing him.
At the end of the year he had quite
mastered the language, which at first
seemed so difficult; but with the boys
he was still at enmity, and, therefore,
still wretched and unhappy.
At noon of February 22d the boys ol
the Madison school were assembled on
the playground'in solemn conclave.
They wei;e just out of school; for the
Board of Managers had broken the laws
of the United States, at least so John
Drew, whose father was a lawyer, de¬
clared; they had only allowed the after¬
noon of Washington’s Birthday for s
holiday.
The boys hod seriously thought ol
playing truant in a body; and nothing
but the assurance of John Drew, who
seemed to have inherited a great deal
of law, that they would lose the whole
of the next Saturday, which was not s
a national holiday, had prevented.
As they talked, Louis Granton joined
them.
“For your great Washington,” he
said, scornfully, “a half-holiday suffices.
He is worth but as little. In Switzer
land we have so many great men that
we have whole holidays all the time.”
“You better mention Switzerland in
the same day with America!” said
Archie Emerson, whom the boys called
the “Speaking Trumpet,” because he
was always ready first witii a remark.
Louis looked quite like a prize-fighter,
as he jammed his cap a little tighter on
his head, End said: “America in the
same day with Switzerland! I think not *
indeed.”
“^Switzerland in the same day with
America, I said,” responded Archie.
“Switzerland wonld be hardly big enough
to piece out a State with over here. We
wouldn’t take the whole country as a
gift” about itl” said
"Yon know nothing
Louis, still more angrily. “You have
no Alps, no waterfalls, no ohamois.
Your country has nothing but bigness.”
“Yes, we have,” asserted "The Trum¬
pet,” "the highest mountains and big¬
gest waterfalls; and just because the
country around here happens to be
rather flat, you think it all is. You
don’tknow.”
“I have seen Switzerland, and I have
seen America,” said Lonis, with a very
grand air. “You have not seen Switzer¬
land at all; then you cannot talk of it.
The people there are braver than any
others, of coarse. I have heard it told
many times, and you will find it in the
books written, how all the world once
fought age inst the Swiss, and tried to
conquer thorn; but the Swiss killed them
ail, except those that ran away.”
SPRING PLACE. GEOR V 1 A. THURSDAY. APRIL 9. 1885.
“Sot the Americans,” said Archie.
‘Nobody ever beat the Americans.”
“No, not the Amerioahs,” repeated
Louis, in a scornful tone. “There were
no Americans big enough to pay us for
the trouble. The Swiss do not fight
babies. Whom have you like William
Tell ? Who in America can use a bow
like that, to shoot the apple from the
head of his son? Who,” getting more
excited, “who that could stem a boat on
Lake Geneva,in.sBohfi**««rie,‘Wid then
dare to jump ashore—who—Ah i there
are none in America,”
“Now you just take that baokl”
screamed “The Trumpet,” whose rage
was also rising. “You don’t know what
you’re talking about. I guess you nevei
heard about Washington crossing the
Delaware, in a little bit of a boat, with
bis whole army, when it was just full ol
floating ice, where your old Tell darsn’t
stir, and cold as anything, lots eolder’n
Switzerland ever is; and standing up
every step of the way, with his hat off.”
In his haste Archie was drawing his
facts from the engraving of Washington
crossing the Delaware, which he had
seen at home, rather than from the
pages of history. However, as Louis
prided himself upon his ignorance of all
American heroes and heroisms, he was
not prepared to deny one statement more
than another.
At this instant John Drew spoke:
“There’s Professor Wilson motioning
us out of the yard, boys,” he said. “I’ll
tell you what,” and heturned to Louis:
“We’re going to skate down to Brandon
Point this afternoon, and you can come,
too; and down there you fellows can
fight it out. If you lick we’ll give three
cheers for William Tell, and, if the
‘Trumpet’ does, we’ll cheer for Gsrrge
Washington; only you fellows must
cheer, too, whichever wsy it is; and
we'll see fair play.”
This arrangement being satisfactory,
tho boys separated. Louis walked horns
feeling sure that William Toll's reputa¬
tion would lose nothing in his hands.
He attacked his dinner as savagely as
he meant to attaok George Washington,
and subdued it as thoroughly as be
hoped to subdue him.
He did not mention his intention to
liis mother; for, being a woman, she had
queer prejudices against fights; but he
kissed her good-by with a tragical air
which nearly told the whole story.
He said only that he was going on the
river to skate, and she, woman-like
again, kissed htm and said: “Ah t that
river is so wide and big; I do not love
it; but have a good time with the rest,
ray child," for Louis had been too proud
ever to speak at home of his school
troubles, and, of course, she never im*
agined him as other than a favorite.
When he reached the river bank he
found the boys all ready to start, and he
quiokly put on hia skates and joined
l^ em<
As was fitting, the representatives of
the Swiss and American heroes led the
way, Louis a little ahead of Archie.
They had passed the fine houses, and
were just opposite the miserable Polish
quarter, when Louis skated into a large
air hole, and immediately after him
Archie Emeraon.
The Upper Mississippi is frozen dur¬
ing five months of most years, and the
ice is so strong that the river becomes
a regular highway for teams and bur¬
dens of the heaviest kind. But, how¬
ever cold th8 weather may be, and how¬
ever clear and thick the ice may be,
there is at all times danger from air
holes as they are oalled—sometimes real
holes in the ice, but more frequently
places which only skim over with a thin
covering of ice which never hardens.
The air hole into which these boys
plunged, however, was due to the holes
whioh the neighboring Foies had cut
to serve as wells. There were so many
of these that the ice between was much
weakened, so much so that when Louis
skated upon it, it was very much as if
he had skated into open water.
Alas! The swift-running mountain
stream in his Swiss home, for whose
sake he so despised the Blnggmhness of
American rivers, had been no swimming
sohool, and Louis in the water bad been
perfectly helpless but for Archie, who,
though not far enough behind to keep
himself from going in, had seen in the
instant before that the hole extended
nearly to the shore. Otherwise the situ¬
ation wonld have been quite hopeless,
for, once under the strong ioe on the
other side, the beet swimmer oonld not
escape.
The other boys oonld only look on in
horrified silence; for to approach the
thin ioe meant only danger for them¬
selves, and added danger for the two.
How he did it, Archie never knew; but
he seized Louis, and made away with
him to the shallow water, from which the
two freezing, trembling champions were
taken, more dead than alive.
An old woman ( in the nearest cabin
called to them to come in by the fire,
and the whole shating party crowded
into the little room. Loais eat a little
apart from the others, though near the
fire. He and Archie looked very absurd;
for the woman had insisted on olothing
theta in some of her hnsband’s garments,
while their own were drying,
But Louis’s face, even above the
funny coat was very sober. At last he
said, slowly, “Three cheers for George
Washington f It was much to cross
the Delaware; as you say, your* rivers
are very big.”
“Three cheers for William Tell and
and the Swiss 1” yelled the boys, in re
Louis oould hardly believe that he
heard rightly.
When they told the old woman of
their dispute she straightened her form
until it wits tall and imposing, and her
eyes flashed until she was no longer old,
only terrible, as she said: “You boys,
yon do not know what courage is. It is
my people who have taught the world
that.
“To fight and keep your high snow
mountains, as did your little Swiss peo¬
ple, that is well; and to fight for your
bigland, and win it, as you Americans
did, that too, is well; bat to fight and
lose, and still to fight for the right be¬
cause it is right, though never to be
won, so my Poles have dons, and they
are brave.”
And the boys looking at each other,
did not deny her.
On the way home Louis said: “Boys,
you can call me ‘Polesky’ every day in the
week, if you like”; but “The Trumpet”
said: “No, I shall call you William
Tell” ; and the rest joined in with his,
“Three cheers for Billy Tell I Hurrah 1
Hurrah 1 Hurrah 1” by which name
they call him to this day.
El Hahdi’s French Lieutenant.
Oliver Fain, the Frenchman now in
the Mahdi’s camp, and to whose coun¬
sels muoh of the falBe prophet’s reoent
success is credited, is a brilliant Bo¬
hemian. He is about forty-five years
old, was born in or new: Paris and was
educated in the schools of tb^ -thy. .ft.
1869-70 he was pi-omujesi m that Oow
mnne and the attempts to overthrow
Napoleon III, writing for the papers
Kid taking part in the street-fighting,
He was tall, dashing and handsome,
During the Franoo-Prussian war he was
a captain in the French army and at the
same time newspaper correspondent,
Later, in 1873, Marshal MaoMahon sent
him with Rochefort, editor of La Lan
tome, and other Communists, to the
penal oolony at) New Caledonia. He
was one of the little band that escaped
from there in 1875 and came to this
country. Then he went to London and
Geneva, following a journalist’s career
until the breaking out of the Russo
Turkish war. Pain was among the first
correspondents on the ground, but soon
began to take an active part on behalf
of the latter country, both by counsel
and arms. He was taken prisoner by
the Russians, suspected of being a spy,
and condemned to be shot; but there
being great doubt that he was one and
the fact that he was a Frenchman saved
him. After a severe imprisonment he
returned to Paris on the granting of a
general amnesty to the Communists and
wrote for several of the leading news¬
papers, On the breaking out of the war
in Egypt he was sent there as a corre¬
spondent at his own request, as he
seemed never to be so happy as when
in the midst of turmoil and excitement.
While there he changed his mission and
formed the brilliant idea of penetrating
to the camp of the Mahdi, which he
alone succeeded in doing of all the cor¬
respondents sent to Egypt, and this in
the face of almost insnrmonntable ob¬
stacles and in spite of hardships and
terrors which wonld have appalled the
heart of any other man but Pain.—
Boston Pilot.
Two Heroes.
The Portland (Ore.) Nexus says: There
are some interesting side points relative
to Funk’s poor, starving babies, who
wandered away in the hills of Mebama
Sunday morning. They were not found
till Monday noon. A shepherd dog
which was a household favorite followed
and guarded them during the long,
dark hours when the rain came unoeas
ingly down. No doubt the faithful crea¬
ture protected them from the many wild
animals in the deep woods. But the
heroic act of the older child, whioh the
wires failed to correctly record, remains
to be added. He took his own little
coat from his shivering body and put it
on his weaker bfother, saving him from
freezing, while he endured, in a cotton
shirt, hours after hours, the keen blasts
of that mountain storm. Think of this,
from a child bnt six years old, and let
any who can say he is not as muoh of a
hero as any of the full-grown Spartans
of old of whom the classics so eloquently
tell, ' " ” '
• ■- '
Ti SILYER QUESTION.
HOW THE members of congress
STAND CONCERNING IT.
The Vote Analyzed and the Featured It
*ir Brought to I.laht.
-
I IFrom the New York Tribune.]
In the vote of the House on the silver
question some curious features are
found. Counting the pairs announced,
285 taembere were recorded, 125 for Mr,
Randall's motion, and 159 against it,
while the Speaker did not vote and 40
meittbers were absent, 20 of whom were
elected by Repnblican and 20 by Demo¬
cratic votes. Though no pairs were
specially announced for those, probably
most of them were paired on political
questions, but not on the silver bill.
Two of the Republican absentees were
from'Massachusetts and 3 from Ohio,
with 6 others from the West and 7 from
tiw Sonin, Tho absence of Mr. Dor
aheimer of New York State, Curtin of
Pennsylvania, Hurd, Jordan and Paige
of Ohio, and Morrison and two other
members from Illinois, was noticed
among the Democrats.
Reckoning Maryland and Delaware
with the Eastern States, their vote was
thus divided: For Mr. Randall’s motion,
48 Republicans, 38 Democrats and Mr.
Lyman; total, 87. Against It, 2 Re¬
publicans and 8 Demoorats, includ¬
ing M t. Bayard’s representative from
Delaware; total, 5. The other Southern
States, including Missouri, voted as fol¬
lows: For the motion, 4 Republicans
and 10 Democrats; total, 14. Against
it, 7 Republicans and 77 Demoorats ;
total, 84. The vote of the Solid South
was thus oast almost unitedly against
Mr. Cleveland’s first expressed - desire."
In this computation, Messrs. York and
Ochiltree, who were elected mainly 6y
Republican votes, are reckoned with the
Republicans.
Tlia Western vote shows ourions
streaks. The entire vote of the Paoifio
Stated 7 Democrats and 1 Republican,
was recorded for the coinage of silver
and agr-imst the motion. Kansas/ Ne
brwfefc and. Colorado voted solid iy
against the motion, and 6 out of the 7
Republicans of Iowa, with 3 Demoorats,
voted the same way. Bat in the north¬
ernmost States a different division pre¬
vailed; In Miohigan 3 Republicans voted
for the motion, and only 1 voted with
6 Demoorats against it; in Minnesota
3 Republicans voted for the motion
and only one against it. But, cu¬
riously enough, in Wisconsin Demo¬
cratic confidence in Mr. Cleveland seems
to have been developed, possibly by
Cabinet hopes, for 5 Democrats from
that State voted for the motion and only
1 against it, while 2 out of 3 Republi¬
cans voted against it. In Ohio, 10 out
12 Demoorats voted against the motion,
ail the Democrat! of Indiana and all bat
one of the Democrats of Illinois. Thus
the vote cf the West, including the Pa¬
cific States, stood as follows: For the
motion—15 Republicans and 9 Demo¬
crats; total, 24. Against it—28 Repub¬
licans and 42 Derqpcrats; total, 70. Thus
with the immense preponderance of sil¬
ver worshiping Democrats at the South
the majority against the motion was 34,
Speaker Carlisle not voting.
It will interest many to know that of
122 Demoorats who were paired or voted
against Mr. Randall’s motion, 78 have
been re-elected, and 44 have not. But
of the 58 Democrats who voted, or were
paired for the motion, only 20 have been
re-elected, and 38 were not. The Re¬
publicans who have been re-elegted were
more equally divided, 38 for the motion
and 24 against it, while 11 Republicans
and 12 Demoorats (including Mr.
Carlisle) who were absent without de¬
clared pairs were re-elected. Of the
members of the next House, therefore,
23 did not vote, 102 voted against Mr.
Randall’s motion, and only 58 voted for
it. But some of the Republicans who
voted against Mr. Randall’s motion
would have supported a direct and
straightforward proposition to suspend
the coinage.
The Rev. Elijah Kellogg, the distin¬
guished author and preacher, spent,
says the Boston Courier, his early life
on Harpawell Island in Casco Bay,
where he still has a beautiful summer
residence. Instead of spending his
time in play with his companions when
a boy, he devoted every leisure moment
to the somewhat arduous task of drag¬
ging a heavy ox chain all over the island
to hear its musical rattle on the stones
and its soft “chink” in the grass. *
It is said that owing to the wat
among druggists and patent medicine
men, tho people will soon get pills at
their own value. There are pills and
pills; aad when people get a certain
brand at theiz cwm value, a man may go
to the drug store with ten cents and
a market basket and return home laden
down | with the pellets .—Norristown
Fferalc
VOL. V. New Series. No. 9.
THE FACE OF THE GLOBE.
How Much of It la Water and Hew Mach
l,aod—Interesting Notes.
It i« estimated that the proportion ol
the surface of the globe covered by
water is to the land surface as 278 to
100, and that the average height of
land or continents over the world above
sea-level is somewhat less than 1,000
feet. The great mountain chains by
which the continents are more or less
traversed form mere narrow ridges,
which rise in no case more than 29,000
feet, or about miles above sea-level,
and add but comparatively little to
the mass of ground above the sea-level.
On the other hand the contour lines
of the oceanio basin tells a very different
tale of the great submarine depressions.
Soundings recently made in the North
Pacific Ocean have shown that its mean
depth » not less than 15,000 feet, and
that of the Sonth Pacific about 12,000
feet, while the mean depth of the North
Atlantic is found to be 14,000 feet, and
of the South Atiantio 13,000 feet. It is
only in high northern latitudes, in the
North Atlantic and North Paoifio, that
the soundings give evidence of shallow¬
er seas—of a mean depth of abont 8,000
feet.
Thus it is seen how small the mass of
land projecting above the sea-level is,
compared to the mass of water filling the
depressions below that level. Taking
the average depth of the seas and ocean
at 10,000 feet, and the height of the
land at 1,000 feet, the mass of the laud
above water compared to the mass of
waters filling the ocean troughs is
nearly in the proportion of 1 to 30.
It is ourions that the deepest sound¬
ing recorded in the Northwest Paoifio
registered a depth of about five miles
and a quarter—a depth which closely
corresponds with the elevation above sea
level of the loftiest known point of ldnd,
namely, the summit of Mount Everest,
in the Himalayas, which is 29,000 feet,
or very nearly five mites and a quarteh
We must remember, however, that the
one measurement is that of a mere
the depth of an extended trough.
We may thus realize how irregular
are the contour lines of the globe, and
how deep the depressions and abysses
concealed from our view by seas and
oceans. Oould all these waters be
drained off from the surface, our earth
would present the aspect of a solid
sphere, everywhere wrinkled and deep¬
ly pitted. Nevertheless, its actual di¬
mensions are so great that mountains
five miles high and ocean troughs five
miles deep bear no greater relation to
the bulk of the globe than the irregu¬
larities on the skin of an orange.
A Parisian Newspaper.
When the late M. Villemessant, the
proprietor of the Paris Figaro, died he
left the paper to the three men who had
dono the most to aid him. But there
were many old contributors on the pa¬
per-men with well-known names, who
made an outcry at this division of the
property. They insisted that they
ought to have been consulted, and they
threatened to found an opposition
Figaro. This alarmed the three prin¬
cipals, and they made a proposition to
the effect that they themselves should
take each $35,000 out of the concern
yearly, and that the other men should
each have a salary of $7,500 for the
work they were to do, and at the end of
the year draw a like sum otit of the
profits, thus insuring them $15,000 a
year each. Yet these men do not write
an average of more than half a column
a day each—if, indeed that mnch, so
that they have a very easy time of it.
It is one of the conditions that when
any one of them dies his share goes to
the others, so that the last survivor wifi
have an enormous income.
A Single Term. —Representative Mil¬
lard, of New York, said to a Washington
correspondent that he had no doubt
that in time a constitutional amendment
would be adopted limiting the Presi¬
dential term. He is not very hopeful
that a resolution offered by him on the
12fch inst. will pass at this session.
This resolution proposes au amend¬
ment to the constitution whioh provides
(hat the President shall hold his office
for six years, that he shall not be re
eligible, aad that during the residue of
his life, after the expiration of his
• •fHml term, ha shall rooaive $10,000
,M>r year as a pension.
£s-8enator Bcokalbw, of Pennsyl¬
vania, relates that he once heard the
famous Governor Ritner calling over the
roll of prothonotaries by eounties in
alphabetical order. He had gone
through the A’s and was among the B’s
yhea an impatient man from Centre
county wanted to know how long he
would have to wait. * ‘Zen ter gounty ?”
replied the governor; “vy vay down et
de ent of de list, of gourse, mit de zets.”
STRAY BITS OF HUMOR
FOUND IN THE COLUMNS OF OUB
EXCHANGES.
The Fireman Rodeoed — On the Roller
*kaie»-Pat an Reeord-He woo IwU«
nnnt - Found hid Hoes. Ele.
'kAiA- "
A FIREMAN WHO RESIGNED.
“What caused you to leave the fire
department, Jimt”
“Oh, I got sick of it”
“What was the trouble?”
“Well, I’ll tell you. I worked four
yean to get op, and then I got right oil
again. It wasn’t what I thought it was.
I’d watohed the boys working lots of
times, and I’d been around visiting them
at their houses. I kinder thought I’d
like it. When I got my appointment I
felt that I was fixed for life. The sec¬
ond night after that an alarm came in
for ns abont eleven o’clock, and out we
went When we got to the fire, which
was in the cellar, the captain made xae
go down and hold a lantern. The ther¬
mometer was abont twenty-five below
zero, and just as I started to go up the
back stairs a stream hit me in the month
and knocked me down so quick that I
couldn’t tell what struck me. I lay
there senseless with tire hose playing on
me for a little while—long enough for
me to freeze fast, any way, and when I
tried to get up I couldn’t. I was all
covered with icicles, and the whiskers
of me were frozen so stiff that I couldn’t
get my mouth open to yell. I began to
think I was done for, when one of tho
boys stumbled over me, and getting a
lantern, found out who I was. They
had to chop me out with axes, and when
I walked, off I looked like a snow man,
That sickened me of the fire department,
and Iresigued the next day Chicago
Herald.
FARES OF THE FAIR.
When two lady friends enter a street
XWSK /
J - o{ eaol other . 8 oredit im gemsrosity .
’ rally. “Now
a for I've*got ai>pearanc e8 geBe
mind, Wl tho change,”says om as
they the car. “Have you? Well,
so have I. I can pay the fare, , a
answers the other. By this time the*
ladies are seated, and both begin to
fumble leisurely in their satchels for
. that ohange. “Now, I’ll pay,” exclaims
one, and she fishes ont a dollar bill and
looks helplessly around for some man to .
pass it up. “I want change, anyhow.”
The money is passed up to the box, and,
in the meantime the other lady quietly
deposits two nickels in the box. “Oh,
yon mean thing!” cries the street-oar
guest. "Never mind, I’ll pay ooming
home,” and then they fall to talking of
some absent one .—New Orleans Pie
oyune.
0!f THZ SKlTJES.
I want to be a skater,
And with the skaters glide,
A pair of rolleVs on my feet,
A sweet girl by mj^side.
He tried to be a skater,
And bravely he struck out
. Tbe doctor says: "In three months
Again he’ll be about.” ’
—Rorristoum Herald.
QUAIttTIES OF SOUND.
Mrs. Minks—The nurse seems to have
trouble with tbe baby to-night. He is
crying yet.
Mr. Minks—Yes, bless his little heort
I wonder what ails him ?
Mrs. Minks—Oh! nothing serious.
How sweetly shrill his voice is! So clear
and musical.
Mr. Minks—Yes I—but hark! Those
sounds do not corns from our nursery.
They come through ihe walls of the next
house.
Mrs. Minks—Mercy 1 So they do.
Why cau’t people have sense enough to
give their squalling brats paregoric or
something, instead of letting them yell
like soreeoh owls .—Philadelphia Call.
HE IS PBEFARBD,
“I understand your son is about- to
enter college, Mr, Derrick 1”
“Yes, oh, yes; Arthur will take a col¬
legiate course.”
“Is he prepared ?”
“Well, I should remark 1 He’s been
a captain of his home club for over a
year, and they tell me that he’s as good
a foot-ball kicker nearly os a profes¬
sional. He may be a little backward in
rowing and climbing greased poles, but
be’U soon pick up, you know.’’— Pitt*
burg Chronicle.
ANGTHUB ONE POT ON RECORD.
When I was at Washington P said to
tho engineer of the little bnilding at the
foot of the Monument:
“You have a mighty tall ohimney for
such a small factory. ” jM
He silently chalked a mark on
board wall behind him.
“What’s “You that the 176th for f I inquired. who iH Mg
are person
that Free remark,” Press. was his answer. — DwEllf