. : : p ; ; HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher- " . NIL DESPEIIAKDTJM. . Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VIII. IUDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JANUAEY 16, 1870. NO. 48. I i 1 The Song or the Stream. Over the mosses and grasses The white cloud passes, Silent and soft as a dreatn t And the earth, In her sby embraces, Conceals the traces Of the secret birth of the stream ; Till my threads are braided and woven, And speed through the cloven . Channels, and gather and sink, And wind, and sparkle, and dally, With song in the valley' And shout from the terrible brink 1 Then the whirl of the wind divides me, And the rainbow hides me, As I midway scatter In air j And I bath with endless showers The feet of the flowers, And the locks of the forest's hair ; Till proudly, with waters wedded My strength is bedded By meadow, and slope, and lea; And the lands at last deliver Their tribute river To the universal sea. Bayard Taylor. A SLIGHT MISTAKE. To say that Harvey Frothingham was in a bad temper was to put the mildest form of words to express the savage mood in which he found himself one winter's evening, as he shot through the main street of the town of L , on his way homeward. Everything had gone contrary to his wishes all the week. To oommenee with, he had fallen in love with Josephine Ormnnd, whose pretty face was her only fortune, and who worked in a paper-box factory for her daily bread. Entirely ignorant of the fact that Har vey Frothingham was a man of standing and wealth in L , pretty Josie al lowed tho ruiuor facts, that he was in sultingly free iu his addresses, to in fluence her so strongly, that her digni fied reserve taught him the lesson he needed; and when he sought her for his wife she refused the honor. To add to this discomfiture, the heir ess, Miss Maude Chesterton whom he hod held in reserve, that his ambition might win a wife if his love would not had ocolly informed him that she was en gaged to Fred Holman. Now, if there was one man above another who was utterly detestable in the eves of Harvey Frothingham, it was Fred Holman. They had both been rivals at sohool, where both stood well in talent, appli cation and sooial position; and Fred was ever a little in advance in every study, carrying away the contested prizes far more frequently than it suited Harvey he should. In society, Fred's handsome face, ready . wit, courteous manners, and frank, sunny temper kept him ever in higher favor than Harvey Fro thing ham's sullen, cold disposition oonld gain. And now, when Maude had been ever gracious to the son of tho wealthy banker, Silas Frothingham, she an swered his love-suit by the tidings that his life-long rival had won the promise to be his bride. "And the worst of it is, it will be Just the match to suit his uncle," muttered Harvey, savagely. " No fear of him disinheriting Fred now." For Harvey knew that Fred depended entirely upon the good-will of his mother's brother, James Rutherford, a wealthy and eccentrio bachelor, for his inoome. He had been left an orphan when a mere boy, and his uncle had adopted and educated him, and would probably make him his heir. But the bachelor, having long ago put away sentiment, if he ever felt it, looked to Fred to make a match that would in crease bis fortune and sooial position. It was the wish of his heart to see Fred the husband of Maude Chesterton, and his wish was to be fulfilled. Harvey Frothingham, at odds with love, would like to see his rival refused, disinherited, humbled as he felt himself humbled, since neither love nor money would accept him. He strode over the pavement in a sav age mood, and started suddenly to see Josephine Ormund coming out of a shop a few steps in advance of him. In her hand were several small pack ages, and her face was pale and anxious. In a moment Harvey was at her side. " Let me carry some of your parcels," he said, lifting his hat as he spoke. " Thank you, I have only a few steps to go," answered Josie, hurrying for ward nervously. "You need "not be afraid of me," Harvey pni.l, ntin her nervous man ner. "I will not annoy youl Why will you not believe my respect is as great for you as my love t" And before he knew exaotly where his words were leading him, the young man was renewing the offer he had made before. At the door of a small lodging-house Josie stopped and faced him. 'You have spoken so before, Mr. Frothingham," she said, gently; and because I believe you are sincere, I will tell you what I have kept secret for six months ; I am already married 1" "Josie I Be quick! Why do you stand there ?" oried a voice in the nar row hallway, and a man stepped into the bar of light thrown across the open door by a street lamp. "Fred Holman !' muttered Harvey, starting forward. "Married! and to Fred Holman 1" It almost consoled him in his own dis appointment to think of the hold he had upon bis rival. Engaged to Maude Chesterton, and married to Josie Or mund 1 Fancy the proud face when she knew she had been deceived for a girl who worked in a factory. And sweeter still was it to Harvey Frothingham to think of the wrath of James Rutherford when the news reached him. But in his triumph Harvey Frothing ham had resolved to be very cautious to have strong proof of his rival's marriage before venturing to accuse, to either his nnole or his betrothed. He had noticed the number of the house in the glare of the street lamp- No. 28 Ealph street." P" This waa the entry he m&dA hi. note-book, in case his memory proved treacherous. Vjt. seemed as if fortune favor! the next day, happening to go into a large fruit and flower shop, he saw Fred Holman selecting the contents of a large fancy basket of choicest fruits and rarest blossoms. ' Nodding carelessly to Harvey, he wrote the address upon a card and attached it to the pretty basket. " You will send this at once," he said, and then left the shop. And Harvey, taking the place Fred had just vacated, read the card: "Mrs. F. Holman, No. 28 Ralph street." What proof was needed now ? It was not in the nature of Harvey Frothing ham to work openly in any scheme. A blow in the dark suited him better. Feeling sure of hia position now, he hurried homeward to write two anony mous letters, that would, he fondly hoped, disinherit and utterly confound his long successful rival. One of these venomous missives found Maude Chesterton in her pretty boudoir, trifling with some embroidery, and dreaming sweet dreams of her love and Fred Holman's sweet devotion. She was a handsome, dignified girl of nineteen, fnll of all womanly sweetness, unspoiled by her great wealth. She loved Fred Holman with the whole strength of her young heart, and she was sure that her love was returned. The dainty work under the slender fingers progressed slowly, as Maude lay back in her deep arm-chair, looking into the glowing fire, and building castles of future happiness. From this tender reverie she was aroused by a servant, who handed her a squarely-folded letter, awkwardly ad dressed, and fastened with a wafer. Wondering who her unknown cor respondent could be, she opened the paper. The same straggling hand inside met her eyes. Only a few lines were written: " If you would have a proof of the falsehood of one you believe true, go at eight o'clock this evening to the second floor of No. 28 Ralph street, and you will find Mr. Frederick Holman and his wife." " Anonymous !" the proud girl said, her lips curling and her eyes flashing. "It is a falsehood 1" She threw the note upon the coals as she spoke, and watched the flames curl and blacken the paper till it flashed out of sight up the chimney. Then, with all the color stricken from her face, she took up her embroidery. Had Harvey watched her then, he would have thought that that poisoned arrow had missed its aim. But it was not so. The work was thrown aside, the piano rang out under her restless fingers, a novel was opened, a room was put in order; but while the calm face betrayed no secret suffering, the girl was tortured all day by the words of the anonymous note: " Frederick Holman and his wife." Could it bef Had the frank, brown ejes that had looked so lovingly into hers mirrored only a false heart ? Was she, indeed, so far deceived? Long before eight o'clock Maude Chesterton had resolved to prove or falsify the words that seemed burned upon her brain. Surely, of all the world she had the best right to test the truth of such a 'nonstrous charge against her betrothed lover. And while she was striving to hide from any eyes the tortnres she endured, James Rutherford was storming up and down his library, holding the second of Harvey Frothingham's communications in his hand. In the same awkward handwriting, the same facts were stated, the same hour and place to verify the writer's words. But the peppery old bachelor made no secret of his wrath. To have listened to him, one would have supposed that making mince-meat of his disobedient nephew was the least he intended. He called him all the pet names suggested by a furious rage; he used np all the abusive adjectives in the dictionary to describe Mr. Frederick Holman. He exhausted every threat that he could devise; long before eight o'clock he had wrought himself up to a rage that was frightful to witness. It was with a chuckle of satisfaction that Harvey Frothingham, seoretly hid den in a narrow courtway, watched a tall, stately figure leave a carriage at tho head of Ralph street, and walk to the doe r of No. 28. In the quiet of the street he heard a clear voice ask the servant who opened the door: " Does Mrs. Holman live here ?" " Yes, ma'am; second floor." " Is her husband at home ?" " Ob, yes, ma'am: you'll find them both there." Then Maude Chesterton entered the house, just as a short, panting man dashed np the steps, and, not pausing to make inquiry, also entered. In the passage, Maude Chesterton, turning, as rapid steps followed her, faced James Rutherford. "You herel" he said. "You have heard too, then, of the trick this un grateful hound has played upon us?" "I have heard," she answered, in a cold voice, "that your nephew's wife lives in this house. I wish to ascertain if it is true." " We will soon see I we will soon see ! Second floor. Here we are. Now, then 1" And the old gentleman's raps proved the exoitement under which he was laboring. A very pale, sweet woman opened the door, her eyes showing that she had been weeping very recently, " Does Mrs. Holman live here ?" the old gentleman asked. " That is my name, sir." "Can I see your husband ?" The soft eyes, full of deep trouble, were lifted. " Is it on business, sir I". " Very important business," was the rather dry response. " Because the doctor said to-day he must not have any mental exoitement. He is so very mnch worse to-day; I I am afraid he is dying I" And sobs broke out again. "Dying!" Maude Chesterton reeled into the room, and sank dizzily upon a chair. James Rutherford, with a face white as death, said: ' Dying An accident ?" "No, sir; it is a fever from over work." - " Fever over-work !" " Josie Josie I" If ever Fred Holman spoke, he spoke then from an inner room, and the little wife, seeming to forget her strange visi tors, answered, qniokly: "I'm coming, Fred." She went at once to the room from which the voice came, and again the two, listening intently, heard Fred's husky voice. " Bring the last cordial, Josie. Ten drops I I am sure he knew me ; but he is faint" A moment later the same oheery voice spoke again : " Drink this, old fellow. Sol See, here is Josie! Don't yon know Josie?" Then another voice oh I so very faint I said : "Josie little wife!" A moment of utter silence followed, and then Josie said : " There is a gentleman and lady in the other room, Fred, who want to see Frank. Will you see them ?" And Fred, appearing in compliance with this request, found his uncle vig orously fanning Maude Chesterton with a newspaper to bring her out of a faint ing fit. Before ho could frame a question, his nncle said, quickly: " Get me some water I" And he obeyed. Then, Maude's blue eyes opened with a bewildered stare, the old gentleman continued : "We were sent here to see your domestic felicity, and we seem to be misinformed." " My domestio felicity ! cried Fred. "Read that," said his uncle, handing the anonymous note. And Fred com plied. " Humph ! yes," he said. " So you came to see Mrs. Frederiok Holman. Well, that lady has made me a happy man ; " and his eyes flashed merrily upon Maude. "But I will introduce you to my cousin's wife, Mrs. Frank Holman. Maude," he continued, with gentle gravity, " since you have come here, it will be an act of Christian charity to remain, for "and his voice sank very low " we are afraid the poor little woman will be a widow before the morning." " Poor fellow ! " said James Ruther ford. " What is the trouble ? " " Over-work. He thought he could increase his small salary by toiling over fine engravings in the evening, and he broke down, I never knew of his mar riage till last week, when he wrote me a painful note, begging me to care for his wife if he died. I came here at once, and was fortunate enough to win poor little Josie's : sisterly confidence and affection. Maude, if the great trouble we fear comes " "I will be her true sister, . Fred ! " interrupted Maude. Here was a deep silence of several minutes; then Josie, very pale still, crept softly into the room. "He is asleep I" she whispered. "The doctor said if he slept he would live I" And when she broke into hysterical weeping, Maude held her close in loving arms, whispering that she must let her stav and comfort her, for Fred's sake. Nearly eleven o'clock came, and still Harvey Frothingham waited, half frozen, in the dark courtway, to see the discomfiture of his rival. Then his pa tience was rewarded by seeing Fred and his uncle come ont of No. 28, arm-inarm, evidently the best of iriends, and enter Miss Chesterton's carriage and drive away. Not until the day of the wedding, when he saw Josie an honored guest, and was introduced to Mr. Frank Hol man, did Harvey Frothingham under stand the slight mistake he bad made. Clothing a Client. "Hie Eureka (Nev.) Leader is respon h i We for the following story : A young lawyer of Eureka, who has just been ad mitted to practice at the bar, had the tesponsible duty assigned to him by Jmige Rives, last week, of defending a criminal confined on a charge of robbery. Tlie budding Blackstone visited his client, and was shocked to note his shabby appearance and generally un washed and nnkempt appearanoe. As this was his first case, our legal friend was naturally anxious to acqnit his client, and in pursuance of this laudable ambition he concluded that if the pris oner presented a cleanly and respectable appearance before the court and jury, hia chance of getting off would be en hanced, and, acting on this idea, the lawyer not only sent to the jail his best 6uit of clothes for the fellow to wear, bat also dispatched a barber to the soene, with instructions to shave, sham poo and cut the man's hair. It was all done, and the thief came into court look ing as neat as a newly-elected candidate. But, unfortunately, one bad mistake had been made. The barber had shin gled the fellow's hair down to a close crop, and in consequence a worse-shaped head or a more villainous set of features never were revealed. The impression on the jury was so marked that they rendered a verdict of guilty without leaving their seats. It was time and coin thrown away; and not only that, but it is said that Blackstone had to get out a writ of replevin to regain posses sion of his clothes. After this he will rely on testimony, and let personal ap pearance take care of itself. Toad Poisoning, TIia fnllnwinir m'ncTilar account of the Af.n ff vmiostninff nn thei human body, is reported in the hist number of tne jjonaon vnemtsi : A child of six yeais old followed a Icvoa tntkA rat a tint mimmflr'a dav. throw ing stones at it. Suddenly he felt that the animal had spurted some moisture iiifsk Ilia Avd ThnrA unddenlv set in a slight pain and spasmodic twitching of the Blightly-injeotea eye, out wo umi after coma, jumping sight, desire to Innd and drink, consti pation, abundant urine, great agitation, manifested themselves, xouoweu vu mo sixth day by sickness, apathy, and a kind of stupor, but with regular pulse. Some days later, having become com paratively'qniet, the boy left hia bed ; his eyes are injected, the skin dry, the pulse free from fever. He bowls and behaves himself like a madman, sinks into imbecility and speechlessness, from which condition he never rallies. HOW TUB CHINESE MARK TIME. Naae Very t'arlaus Eaoerple frem the Latent Official Almaaar. The Chinese Official Almanac is is sued annually in December, and is care fully prepared by the board of astrono my, an important body, imperially ap pointed, presided over by a prince of the royal blood, and equal in dignity to any other government body in the em pire. The almanac is bestowed as a special act of grace by the emperor on tne Coreans, Looohooans, Annamites and other tributary states. As this publication is so highly respected by the Chinese, it may fairly be considered as the representative of the highest state of astronomical science reached by them. A large part of fe!ie astrological portion of the almanao is intended for a ".'practical guide in the common affairs of life." A translation is given of the admonitions for the first days of the current year, as follows : The first day is favorable for sacrifice and for entering sohool ; at noon it is allowable to bathe. It is unfavorable for starting on a journey or exchanging residence. The second day is favorable for sacri fice and bathing. It is unfavorable for starting on a journey, removing or practicing acupuncture. The third day : there are no indica tions. The fourth day : may receive or make visits and cut out clothes ; at seven a. m. may draw np contracts, barter and make presents. May not go on a journey or break ground. The fifth day : may visit, bathe, shave and clean up ; may not plant and sow. The sixth is favorable for sacrifice, visiting, taking on a new servant, start ing on a journey, removing, marrying,re pairing, breaking ground; at three a. m. may draw np contracts, open shop, barter, send presents, seal, test the soil and bury. The seventh day : may level roads, but must not start on a journey. The eighth : may sacrifice, memorial ize, enter office, assume ceremonial clothes ; at five a. m. may sit toward the southeast ; also favorable for conjugal union, visits, weddings, taking on a new servant, starting on a journey, erecting uprights and putting on crossbeams, building, removing soil and ' burying. The writer gives a few more items and comments as follows : And so it goes on for nearly every day in the year. Enough has been trans lated to show the excessive childishness and absurdity of this, the principal part of the imperial almanac On the seven teenth one may be treated for illness and open caches of provision. On the twenty-third it is allowable to pull down old houses and walls but drains must not be opened or wells dug until the twenty-seventh. Arrests should be made on the fifteenth ; this is the only favor able day in the month a very satisfac tory arrangement for criminals. There ere four days in thirty on which one may cut ont clothes, and the same num ber on which one may sweep and clean np. It is advised to shave on the fifth, twenth-third and twenty-ninth, and to bathe seven times in the month. Un fortunately, the intervals between the bath davs are unequal, and the believer in the almanao must wait from the fifth to the thirteenth and from the fourteenth to the twenty-third. Besides, on the first, bathing is favorable at an incon venient hour viz. , noon ; the hour on the twenty-ninth (five o'clock) is much better. These indications seem too silly to af fect sensible men, yet while the China man is not only Bonsible, but actnally shrewd and keen, he guides moBt of his more important affairs by the almanao. The poorer classes watch the almanao carefully, and marry, bury and do other things only when it advises, and it is to be feared that the better educated do not start on a journey nor enter office except on favorable days, though it is to be hoped they bathe, shave and clean much oftener. American Journal. Mining Nomenclature. Names of mines, like one's emotions when eating Limburger cheese for the first time, are peculiar. The locator of Dry Hash probably showed his prefer ence for a dish which is a prominent feature in a boarding-house, and has a large oircle of acquaintances. Little Bilk leaves one to infer that there is a Big Bilk; in fact, on consideration, we concede that there are a great many of them. Mollie Darling shows that, al though she is getting to be an old maid, she still has admirers. The Fraud is no exhibition of human nature; the locator wanted to pique the pride of the vein and spur it to belie its name. On in quiring of one minerwhy he had named his claim " I Enow All," he explained: " When I left the East I left my girl there, and and some trouble I had with another lady. When I got out here I wrote to my girl that Isvas doing bully. That wasn't so; but yon know how a fel low will write. Wrote! that I expected to return soon and cage her in a palace. She answered: 'I know all. Yours no more, Jane.' " Asking another why he chose to name his " Terror," he replied: "For a lady." "Howl Didn't know that was a female name." " Well, yon see, that's my wife; she's a terror. Left in Gold Hill? Ton Tom Pike being ques tioned as to his naming a location Joab Johnson, said: " That that was my name in the States." I asked the pro prietor of the Last Chance if he really considered this his last chance for a for tune; if he failed would he try again ? " No, sir; no, sir; will go to robbin' the stages." To the man whe was showing me his two claims I remarked: " From "There's nuthin' in it." "And this second one, Heotor. You admired the valiant Trojan ?" " Named for my dog Hector.' He's dead now. Buried over thar. Come an' see his grave." Salt Lake Tribune. To the perfection of true friendship it J HUH. MMVtUlt w VUG particular individual selected from the ,.A xl 1 V. t . tce ui iimiiainu, vuu iuaj u considered ma a.nnt.hAv utlf an whom w. nun nnkAM our most serious tnougnts; Deiore whom we are not ashamed to lay open our wettaneeses ana ioiuibb; or, in the ex pre?sive phrase, to think alone. the name, the Treasury, you must have high hopes of this?" . " That isn't why I named her that"' "Why. then?' The Octopus. Though all the ootopods, large or small, can swim freely at will, such is not their habit; they prefer to lie con cealed, or partially so, on the side or in the clefts of rocks. There the ootopod's body is protected from the attacks of other animals, while it can extend its long feelers in search of prey, of which fish, mollnsks, and crustaceans are the principal objects. Its movements, when an object of food is perceived, are mar velonsly rapid, swifter than the flight of an arrow from the bow of an experi enced hunter. The long, flexible arms grasp the victim; its hundreds of suck ers, acting like pneumatic holders, make escape impossible; and, as the long arms draw the object nearer and nearer, the other shorter arms add their multi plied disks, forming " a perfect mitrail leuse of inverted air guTis, which take horrid hold, and the pressure of the air is so great that nothing bi t closing the throttle-valve can produce relaxation. " This throttle-valve is the neck, as we have before described. Those lengthy appendages, the limbs, are rather in the way when the animal is swimming, and would act as drag-anchors if left pen dent; but the octopus usually draws them close alongside, whence they ex tend in a horizontal position, acting the part of a tail to a kite. It propels it self by drawing in and expelling water through its looomotory tube. The oc topus swims backward, and it has been remarked that it changes its color to a darker hue when it starts out for a swim. This change of hue, apparently at will, is one of the most peculiar charac teristics of the octopus. It may be con sidered the chameleon of the sea. Its ordinary color when in repose is a mot tled brown; but if irritated it assumes a reddish hue, approaching to purple. Nature seems to have been almost su perfluously careful in furnishing this ani mal with protecting elements; for this coloring matter, which resides between the inner and outer skin, enables it even to assume the color of the ground or rocks over whioh it travels, so that one can hardly say what color it is before it may have changed to something quite different. When exhausted after a bat tle or a straggle to get out of a trap, it turns pale like a human being. utners oesides victor .Hugos hero have had a chance to test the strength 01 tnese devil nsnes. Major Newsome, R. E., when stationed on the east coast of Africa in 1856-57. undertook to bathe in a pool of water left by the retiring waves. He says: "As I swam from one end to the other, IwaB horrid ed at feeling something around my ankle, and made for the side as speedily as I could. 1 tnougnt at flrst it was only sea weed; but as I landed and trod with mv foot on the rock, my disgust was heightened at, feeling a fleshy and slippery sub stance under me. I was, I confess, alarmed; and so apparently was the beast on which I trod, for he detached himself and made for the water. Some fellow bathers came to my assistance, and he was eventually landed. As the grasp of an ordinary-sized octo pus holding to a rock is not less than thirty pounds, while the floating power of a man is between five and six pounds, I believe if I bad not kept in mid-cban- nei it would nave been a life-and-death struggle between myself and the beast on my ankle. In the open water I was the best man; but near the bottom or sides, which he could have reached with his arms, but whioh I could not have reached with mine, he would certainly have drowned me." Popular Science Monthly. A Model Xew England Farm. Mr. Burnett, the owner of the three hnudred acres in Sonthboro, Mass., known as Deerfoot farm, makes a spe cialty of breeding, raising and fattening hogs, and converting them into various articles of fond, and of the products of the dairy. The conversion of the car casses into hams and bacon, and the manufacture of sausages and lard are carried on in the most systematic man ner and on an extensive scale; extra pains being taken to prodnoe for the private consumption of customers in Boston, New York and Philadelphia, the choicest and most palatable articles. Mr. Burnett raises about 350 hogs an nually, and purchases from the farmers cf Vermont 1,500 fat Berkshires, whioh make the best pork. After being dress ed, the hogs are kept in a refrigerator for forty eight hours, when they are cut up, the hams and bacon cured in the most approved manner, the lard tried out and canned frte from adulteration, and the pork packed in kegs of fifteen and twenty pounds weight; the sausage meat chopped by machinery and sear soned with the best quality of sage and pepper that can be obtained, and then made -into sausages. Mr. Burnett's baoon has taken the place of imported English bacon in the Boston market, and has become so popular in Philadel phia that one dealer has offered to take the entire product of Deerfoot farm, which amounts to 800 sides a day, while 3,000 hams are cured annually. The product of sausages averages about 1,000 pounds a day. Another specialty of Mr. Burnett is the canning of pigs' feet, whioh are sold largely in the sea son to yachting parties. The piggery at Deerfoot farm is an extensive affuir, located at some distanoe from the main buildings, and consists of a building eighty by forty feet, with a wing sixty by twenty feet, containing pens, in which were seen about 250 swine of all ages, from the sucking pig to the hog ready for the scalding vat. The animals are fed twioe a day, on a cooked mixture of two-thirds corn meal and one-third ground oats, which Mr. Burnett has de monstrated to be the most profitable food for fattening hogs. In the dairy, the Devonshire process of producing clotted cream is used. New milk, .scald ed, is placed in long, large pans, which are placed nnder a refrigerator, where it is cooled rapidly, the temperature being reduoed in three hours from 100 degrees to thirty-two degrees, and cream raised to the thickness of three-fourths of an inch, whioh ordinarily re.Jred forty eight hours. This cream will keep sweet several days, and is sold for sixty cents a quart to Boston families. Mr. Burnett also manufactures from 250 to 800 pounds of butter a week from the milk of fifty cows, of whioh twenty-five are thoroughbred Jerseys, The butter readily sells at seventy-five cants a pound. Boston Transcript. ASSASSINATION. Mrs la lllah Places Whs Were Attacked Daring Ike Past Year. Four times within as many months were attempts made on the lives of three sovereigns of Europe. The German emperor was twice in danger. On the afttrnoon of May 11, as he was riding in the Avenue TJnter der Linden, Berlin, with the grand duchess of Baden, E. H. M, Hoedel, a tinsmith and a social ist, shot at him with a revolver. The ball did no damage, and on his trial Hoedel asserted that he did not aim at the king. But evidence to the contrary was overwhelming, and, in accordance with the sentence, he was beheaded on August 15. The second attempt on Kaiser Wilhelm's life was made just tbree weeks later, and as he was riding through the sam3 street, when K. E. Nobiling, from a window in the third story of tho house No. 18, discharged a double-barreled gun at him and lodged forty shot in his head and neck. In spite of a desperate resistance Nobiling was immediately arrested, but not until he bad succeeded in inflicting upon him self a dangerous wound, from which he died on Sept. 11. He was an interna tionalist, ana, nnlike Hoedel, was a man of good education. The emperor's wounds were so serious that he was obliged to resign the government into the hands of the crown prince, until he reaf sinned his power on Dec. 5. On Oct. 20, ns Alfonso, king of Spain, was riding in the Calle Mayor, Madrid, J. O. Moncasi, twenty-three years of age, a cooper by occupation and an in ternationalist in political belief, shot at him, but only succeeded in slightly wounding a soldier. On Nov. 7, an old soldier unsuccessfully attempted to kill the Spanish ex-minister of war, Bregua . The last of the four attempts was on the life of Hnmberto, king of Italy, and was rendered possible only by his com mand that no guard should surround his carriage as he entered cities in the course of a tour which he was making through Italy. His intention was that the presentation of petitions should be entirely free. On Nov. 17, as the car riage containing the king, the queen, and Prime Minister Oairoli was entering Naples in this unprotected manner, Giovanni Passante, concealing a knife with a red banner, mounted on the steps and aimed a deadly stab at Humbert's heart. But the king defended himself with his sword, and before the blow could be repeated, Cairoli, at the cost of a severe wound, had grappled with the mnrderer, and in a moment he was in the custody of the police. He was twenty-nine years old, a cook by trade, aud, like Hoedel, Nobiling End Mon casi, a socialist or internationalist. More sensational, and even, perhaps, scarcely lessimportant than theseorimes, was the unsuccessful attempt, on Feb. 5th, at St. Petersburg, of a young woman Vera Sassulitch by name to kill Gen. Trepoff, chief of the St. Peters burg police. Her motive was personal rather than political, but an idea of the detestation in which the Russian police is held may be gained from the fact that, though she fired the shots in broad day light, as was abundantly shown by proof and not denied by herself, she was acquit ted by the jury amid the applause of the large and even brilliant audience in the courtroom. Two high Russian police officials were killed during the year Baron Heyking, of Kiev, and Gen. Mezentsoff, chief of the czar s private police. These were political murders. This mania for assassinations extended even to Peru and Japan. In the latter country Mr. Oknbo, minister of the in terior, was almost hacked to pieces on May 14th by six men armed with swords. He was in reality the power behind the throne, and was somewhat known in this country as a member of the Iwakura embassy of 1872. His assassins were of the Samurai, or privileged class, and professed, probably honestly, to have acted from patriotic reasons.. In Lima, Peru, on Nov. 16th, Dan Manuel Pardo, ex-president of the re public and acting president of the sen ate, was shot by Melchor Montoya, the sergeant of his guard. The crime was to be the first act of a revolution, but Montoya was deserted by his confeder ateB. Trichinosis. This is a parasitic disease, caused by eating pork infested with minutest hair like worms, called trichinae. It is ody since 1860 that the disease has been fully investigated and understood, but it can now be traced back, under other names, at least Iwo centuries. Since the above date it has been recognized wherever pork is eaten raw or imper fectly cooked; and there have been many epidemics of it. The trichiufe, after passing through the 6tomacb, rapidly multiply in the intestines, and thence they work their way into the substance of the muscles generally and of the internal organs, where they soon roll themselves up into coils, like worms of the earth. If comparatively few trichinae are taken into the stomach, either because the pork is but slightly diseased, or is eaten sparingly, or the meal is not repeated, the disease is light and soon over. In severer cases there is vomiting; diarrhea, followed often by obstinate constipation; profuse sweating; fever; great pain in the limbs; difficulty of ohewing, swallowing and breathing; hoarseness, oiten with entire loss of voioe; neuralgio attacks and sleepless ness, except in children, with whom the ujjpuono uuuuiuun oi stupor prevails. xu me muaer oases the patients begin to recover in five or six weeks; in severer forms, convalescence is deferred for four months, while the full strength is not restored for a muoh longer time. A fatal termination is very common, gen erally from paralysis of the respiratory organs. In children, recovery is the rule. No means have yet been found to destroy the trichina). American hogs seem to be especially liable to the disease. They should be sold for the market, home or foreicn. only after legal inspection. But thorough oooking kills the trichinee. Lard, of course, having been subjected to a hish heat, cannot contain them,- Youth's Companion, Instead of leaving flowers and wreaths on the graves of dead friends, custom expects the people of Madrid to leave visiting cards. Items of Interest. " Anti-fat remedy" Killing the hog when young. Winter is the season best suited to freeze speech. A hotel bill may be called inn-debted-ness. Why is a healthy tree like a dog? Because the bark is sound. Look out for the girl who throws her whole soul into a rair of slippers for the parson. George W. Matehett, of the Arhansat Traveler, has been sticking type fifty eight years. Woman's capabilities are great, but hardly sufficiently developed to allow of her driving a nail without hitting her finger. A man who bought a box of cigars, when asked what they were, replied, " Tickets for a course of lectures from my wife." Nothing can exceed the intenso affec tion which a girl deals out to her father for a day or two before the time when she's going to ask for a new dress. Old buttons are in demand in Paris as articles of parlor ornament, and large prices are paid for those in steel, jasper, silver, pebbles or Alencon diamonds. He that is found reasonable in one thing is concluded to be so in all; and to think or say otherwise is thonght so unjust an affront and so senseless a cen sure that nobody ventures to do it. In Belgium, if a candidate dies be tween the day of his nomination and the day of the election, his name still re mains on the list ana must be voted lor. At Ste. Mary, Luxembourg, a dead man has thus been elected to the communal council. The St. Louis Republican says: The correct way to pronounoo the name of tnis state is as though it were spelled Mizzouri, and that of its southern neighbor as though it were spelled Ar kansaw. Dictionaries and gazetteers often give other pronunciations, but these are the ones which the people of the respective States generally follow. Uoud Resolutions in Chicago. The Inter-Ocean bestows the follow ing good resolutions gratis cpon its sub scribers. Every one can easily be a little, if not a good deal, better than during the preceding twelvemonth. Set the mark high, and live as nearly np to it as possible. Resolve, among other tilings, tnat during tne coming year: 1. You will curb your temper and your passions. Violent pleasures, arti ficial excitement, or a free rein to a temper easily provoked, consume life as well as render it nnhappy. 2. That, if addicted to profanity, in even the bmallest degree, you will aban don it. Aside from moral and religions considerations, swearing is degrading and vulgar, and betrays a poverty of ex pression. 6. That for a year to come, whatever the temptation to do otherwise, von will tell the truth. Lying grows upon a man, and is a contemptible, as well as odious, habit. Reform it altogether. - 4. liesoive to speak ill of no man or woman, except under proper provoca tion, and to the person's faoe. The slanderer deserves a place in that lake which burnetii with tire and brimstone. 5. Swear off from alcoholio drinks. and put the dimes, quarters and halves you have been accustomed to spend for liquid lightning into a savings box. You will stand on your head with surprise and gratification when you come to count np tne accumulation at the end of the year. 6. Bo industrious, keep your promises, pay your debts, be charitable; in short, take a big stride ahead in a wiser, better, more intelligent and nsefnl life, and the year will not only prove a happier one to you, but you will emerge from it more successful, more honored, and richer in everything than on the day when you began the work of reform. Try it. Hats Ancient and Modern. How few of ns ever trace the history of the hat, says Forney's Progress. ine leit nat is as ancient as Homer, The Greeks make them in skull caps, onical, truncated, narrow or broad brimmed. Tho Phyrgian bonnet has an elevated cap without a brim, the apex turned over in front. It is known as the cap of liberty. An ancient figure of Liberty in the time of Antonius Livy, A. D. 145, holds the cap in the right hand. The Persians wore soft caps; plumed hats were the headdress of the Syrian corps of Xerxes ; the broad brim was worn br the Macedonian, kin era. Castor means a beaver. The Armenian captive wore a ping hat. The merchants of the fourteenth century wore a Flan ders beaver ; Charles VII., in 1469, wore a felt hat linel with red, and plumed. The English men and women in 1510 wore close woolen or knitted dtps ; two centuries ago hats were worn in tne nouse. Pepys in his diary in 1664 wrote, " September. 1664. cot a severe cold because he took of his hat at dinner," and asain, in January, 1665, he got another cold by sitting with his head Dare to auow ms wife s maid to comb his hair and wash his ears ; and Lord Clarendon in his essay, speaking of the decay of respect due the aged, says : "That in his younger days he never kept his hat on before those older than himself except at dinner I" In the thirteenth century Pope Innocent IV. allowed the cardinals the use of the scarlet cloth hat. The hats now in us 3 are the cloth hat, oork hat, embossed hat, felt hat, fur hat, leather hat, paper hat, silk hat, opera hat, spring-brim nat and straw hat. Cost of the Yellow Fever. Loss of life by yellow fever in the South last year is estimated at about 15,000 persons, and of money and trade at from 8175,000,000 to 8200,000,000 as great as the loss from the Chicago fire. But some good is likely to come out of this calamity. It is thought that henceforth quarantine regulations will be more thoroughly established than they have ever been. Apart from death ana human suffering, negligence is the worst una oi political economy. Hjx. penditure of one-twentieth part of what the fever has cost might have prevented it altogether. Soieniiflo American,