VOL. REST, Mv fwt are wearied, and my hand* are tired— Mr eonl oppteeaefl ; And with deeire have I lory; deaired. Rest—only rear Tie bard to toil when toil ia alnaoat uua In tn&voo warn ; -TV bard to ana. and never gainer grain Id baorveat tor*- TVe harden of my da a ia bard to bar. But God know* ba it ; And 1 have prayed.but vain baa beau my prayer Bur teat—aweet real. Tai hard to pbuA in spring, and uevei reap The autmnu yield ; *TBr tori to tilt, end whan \.a tilled to waop O'er fru.Ueaa field And ao I my. e week end human cry. So beexv-oppneaeed ; And ao 1 nigh, e weak and human sigh. Bar real—for reel My way baa wound acrtan the deeert years. And carve infeet Mr path; and through the flowing of hot toe a I pnie for real. Twee always an. when mil a child I laid On mother'a breast Mt weaned hula bead ; e'en than 1 prayed Aa now. far reet. And I aa rep-tlea* still ; 'twill soon be o'er For. down the Weal, Life's sun t setting, and I aaa the shore Where I atoll rash HAPPILY RUINED. Arthur lion on aa: in a room in his ho tel. He was a young man, six and twenty, tail and slim frame, with a face of great mTeliecttm! beauty, dressed in costly gar ments. though his toilet was but indifferent ly pttfinwd. As tbr youth sat thus, his door was open ed, and an elderly gentleman entered. "Ah. donor, you are moving early this morning." said Motion, as be lazily rose trout h teal and extended his hand. not early forme. Arthur."returned WefiKm. with a bright smile, "I am an early hod." "Wrfi. have you caught a worm this tiwel"* tope k wiD prove a valuable one." T tol know," ngtofi the youth. "I i fear a thousand worms will inherit this poor baefcr ere kmg. " "Noaaense. youie worth half a century yet,"' cried the doctor, giving him a gentle siap on the shoe*der.. "But just tell mo. Aa ihnr. how h it with Crosby f" "Jaw as 1 toid you. All is gone." "I dent anderstand it, Arthur. " Stttbcr da L~" said the ycsing man. ecrrowtulhr. ••That Matthew Crosby could ha** done that thine. 1 would not, could ML km bettered. Why, had an angel ap- { Twared to ma two week* ago, aud told me that Orodbv *n sbakv. I wooUi not have paid a mcenems att ent ion to iL But only I think. wb*j my father died, he selected Itcmy guardian ht best friend, and such I eve* now believe Matthew Crosby was. and j In hisdnnds be placed his left lor him to keep until 1 was of age. And when 1 did arrive at that period of life my money where it was: 1 had no use for iL Several times within three or four years has Crosby aa kei me to take my money and invest it, bat I would not 1 hade him keep iL and use iL if b* wished. I only asked that when 1 wanted money he would honor my demand. I felt more safe, in fart, than I should hcvt felt had ray money been in a bank cm deposit." "How much had he when he left I" -He should have had $100,000." —What do you mean to do t " "Ah, you base me on the hip there." "And yrt yu must do something, my son. Heaven knows 1 would keep you if 1 could. 1 shall claim the privilege of pay ing your debts, however." "No. no—doctor —none of that." '•But 1 tell yon 1 shall. I shall pay your drtaa but beyond that I can only help you to —"iff yourself. What do you my to go ing to sea r A faint smile swept over the yuith's pale features at this remark. "I should make a smart hand at sea, doc tor. I can hardly keep my legs on shore. Xa na I must —" "Mian what, Arthur 1" "Arts, I know aoL I shall die—that is aii r*: "Xoosrnae. Arthur. I say, go to sea. Ton couldn't go into a shop, and you would not if you could. You do not wish to re main here, amid the scenes of your happier iaya. Think of it—at an you would be free from all sneers of the heartless, and free from aS contact with things vou loath. Think of iL" "If I went to sea. what could I do f" "You understand all the laws of foreign •rede?* "Yea Yon know I had a thorough at that in my father's counting * •Then you can ohtaia the berth of a super-cargo." "Are you sure 1 can got one V "Yea." **Dr. Weston. 1 will go." Arthur walked home one evening to the hoaseef a wealthy mcrchanL John Mel burne. It was a palatial dwelling, and many a hopeful, happy hour had he spent beneath ia roof. He rung the bell and was •hutted ia the parlor, in a few minutes Grace Melburne entered. She was only twenty. She bad been waiting until that age to* be Arthur's wife. Some words were spoken and then many minutes of painful silence ensued. "Grace. you know all, 1 am going from mv native land a beggar, 1 cannot stay lon ger now. Grace, did 1 know you less than I do—or knowing you well, did I know you aa 1 do many—l should give lck your vows and free vou from all bondage. But I believe I should trample upon your heart did Ido that thing now. I know your krve is too pure and deep to be torn from your bosom at will. So I say—wait! There are other feelings in the heart besides love. That love is a poor, profitless passion which puts aside all other considerations. We must lone for tin nit v, and ao our love must he free. Wail lan i going to work—aye upon the tea *0 work." "Alas! must It be V "It must. You will wait?" "1 will wait even to the gates of the tomb." "Thai heaven bless and preserve you." The ruined youth was upon the ocean, bis voyage begun, his duties as laborer for GR DM! DIUVRN^ his own daily bread all fairly assumed. Ah 1 it was a strange life for him to enter upon. From the ownership of immense wealth to the trade books of a merchant ship was a transition indeed. But, ere he went on dock again, he had fully resolved that he would do his duty, come what would, short of death. He would forget that he ever did else but work for his live hood. ith these resolves clearly determ ined in his ndud. he already felt hotter. At that our supercargo wai too weak to do much. He was very sick, and it lasted nearly two weeks, but when that passed off, and he could face the vibrating deck with a stout stomach his appetite grew sharp, and his muscles began to grow strong. At first he craved some of the many deli cacies he had long been used to, but they were not to bo had, and ho very soon learned to do without them. The result was that his anpetite Ixx-ame natural in its wants, and his system began to find itself nour ished by simple fxxi taken in proper quan tities. For yean he had looked upon breakfast as a meal which must be set out and par taken of from mere fashion. A cup of coffee, and perhaps a piece of dry toast, or a seasoned or highly spiced tidbit, had con si tuicd the morning meal. But now, w hen the breakfast hour came, he approach ed it witli a keen appetite, and felt as strong and as hearty as at any other time of the day. By degrees the hollow cheeks became full, the dark eyes awumoil new lustre, the color, rich and healthful, came to the face, the breast swelled with* increasing power, the lungs expanded and grew strong, the muscles became more firm and true, the nerves grew strong, and the garments which he had worn when he came on board had to be let out some inches in order to make them tit. His disposition became cheerful and bright, and by the time the ship bad reached the southern cape of Africa the crew had all learned to love him. Through storm anil sunshine, through tempest and calm, through dark hours and bright, the young supercargo made his voy age. In one year from the day which he left his native land he placed bis foot again upon the soil of his home. But he did not stop. The same ship with the same officers, was going upon the same cruise again, and he meant to go in lier. He saw Grace Mclburne, and she would wait. He saw Dr. Weston, and the kind old gentleman pra ; sed him for his manly independence. Again Arthur Morton was upon the sea, anil again he assumed the duties of his of fice, and even more. He even stood watch when there was no need of it, and during seasons of storm he claimed a post on deck. At the end of another year the young man returned to his home again. He was now eight and twenty, and few who knew him two years before could recognize him now; His face was bronzed by exposure, his form was filled out to perfection, and ne was greeted with great affection by old Dr. Wert on, who would insist on his staying with him during his leave on shore. One day after Arthur's arrival, he suddenly burst into the room and said abruptly: "Well, Arthur, Mr. Crosby is here. Will you see him ?" "See him ? See Matthew Crosby? Of course I will. He owes me an explanation, aud I hope lie can give me a satisfactory one." The door was opened and Mr. Crosby en tered. He was an elderly man, hut hale and hearty. The old man and the young one shook hands, and then inquired after each other's health. "You received a note from me some two years ago," said Crosby, "in which I stated that one in whom 1 ti usted had got yeur money and mine with it, and that I could not pay you." "Yes sir," answered cur hero, not know ing what was to come next. "Well," resumed Crosby, "Dr. Weston was the man. Hs had your money." .* "How ? What ?" grasped Arthur, gaz ing from one to the other in blank aston ishment. "Hold on, my boy," said the doctor, while a thousand emotions seemed to work within his bosom. "1 was the villain. It was I who got your money. I worked your ruin, and I will tell you why ; I saw that you were dying. Your father died of the same disease. A consumption was upon liim —not the regular pulmonary affection, but a wasting away of the system for want of vitality. The min I was wearing out the body. The soul was slowly eating its way from the cords tlmt bound it to the eurth. I knew that you could be cured, and I knew, too, that the only thing in the world which would cure you was to throw you on your own physical resources for a livehood. There was a morbid willingness of the spirit to pass away. You would have died ere you would ha\e made an exertion from the fact that you looked u|x>n exertion us worse than death It was a Strang state of bothi mind and bcxiy. Your fortune rendered work unnecessary, so there was no hope while that fortune remained, Had it been a wholly bodily malady, I could have argu ed you into necessary work for a cure. And on the other hand had it been a wholly men tal disease, I might lrnve driven your Ixxly to help your mind. But both were weak, and I knew you must either work or die. "And now. my boy, I'll tell you where my hope lay. I knew that you possessed such a true pride of independence that you would work. I saw Crosby, and told him my plans. I assured him if we could con trive to get you to sea, and make you start out into active life, for the sake of a live hood, you could be saved. He joined me at once. I took your money and his, and then bid him clear out. You know th 6 rest. Your money is safe —every penny of it—to the amount of -150,000. Poor Crosby has suffered much in knowing how you look ed upon him; but I know that he is amply repaid by the sight of your noble, powerful frame, as he sees it to-night. And now, Arthur, are we forcgiven?" It was a full hour before all the questions of the happy friends could be asked and an swered, and when the doctor and Crosby hail been forgiven and blessed for the twen iethtime, Mr. Melburne said. "Wait!" He left the room and when he returned the led sweet Grace by the hand. Late in the evening, after the health of our friends had fairly begun to grow tired with joy, Arthur asked Grace whether he need wait any longer. Grace asked her father, and the answer may be easily guessed. —Rowell made abeut tnree dollars \eiy minute ol his walk. MILLIIEIM, PA., THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1879. lluriiewueM in Florida. On approach of autumn the Floridian quakes with apprehension. It is the dread ed season of hurricanes. Tearing through the West Indies, they often strike Iheeoast with deadly effect. With scarcely a note of warning houses are overthrown, sail txiats blown from the water, and orange groves swept bare of leaves and fruit. Some of the old settlers say that they can detect signs of the storm a day before it breaks ujx>n then). "You feel it in the air long before it comes," says one. This is, however, an indefinite sign.—The devast ation linging its track certainly proves that "you feel it in the air when l comes." One of these typhoons visits the coast every year.—The day may be bright and beauti ful, and the flowers heavy with bees and humming birds. The mudhens of the mar shes pipe an ;,'arm. Not a blade of salt grass moves. The blue sky grows hazy, and the eastern horizon is milky white. Fitful gusts begin to ripple the water and handle the green leaves. A low tnoan comes from the ocean. Smoky clouds roll into the sky from the southeast, and a strong wind whitens the ruffled water. Every minute it increases in fury. An omi nous yellow light tinges the atmosphere. The sun is gone, and great drops of rain are hurled to the ground. Within fifteen minutes there is a gale, anil soon the full force of the hurricane is felt. Groat eagles and pelicans are swept through the heavens utterly powerless. Sparrows and other small birds are lashed to death by leafless twigs, and the torn bodies of snowy herons and wild turkeys lodge in the branches of the live oak anil cypress trees. All living things disappear.—Tall pines are twisted asunder. The little limbs of willows ami oleanders snap like cow whips. Lofty ' palmettoes bend their heads to the ground, their great fans turned inside out like the ribs of an umbrella. The force of the wind keeps the tress down until ever}' greeu fan • pops like a pistol-shot. Orange groves arc ripped into shoe-strings. The leaves of the scraggy scrub on the beach are wiped out, and their stems whipped into little brush es. The tough saw palmetto Is blown as flat as a northern wheat field, and the dead grass of the savannas lashed into fine dust. Boards in the surf are struck by wind, and sent spinuing hundreds of feet into the air. The sand dunes are caught up bodily, and I silted through pine trees miles away. The | foam of the sea is blown beneath the houses on the main land, and comes up between J the cracks of the floor like steam. These hurricanes last from seven to eight hours— even longer.—Dining the lulls rain falls in torrents. The tide rises to a great height, carrying away wharves and boat houses, and flooding the low country for miles. The ocean leaps the sandy barriers of the coast, and floods the Indian nnd other salt water rivers, involving great damage. After the storm centre-boards and jib stays arc found in spruce pines, oleanders are loaded with cordage, and dead eyes and peak blocks drop from leafless orange trees. Gardens are destroyed, fences swept away, and the tormented Floridian lias three : month's work and no pay to repair dam-! ages. t'aeful l'lauta. i ; Often has a lake or stream been dragged and cannon tired over the water to cause a dead Ixxly to rise tlfat lay quietly on shore, j Just so it is with many who are constantly buying patent medicines at high prices, i when they could get the same thing at their own doors almost To commence jost here. Not ten paces from my door prows the plantain, a universal companion of tho tiller of the soil, usually destroyed as a mean I weed, which it is, but "give the devil his due," as tbey say, and let us take out o ■ this plant what we can. If a shoe has . rubbed a foot (and it often happens with us poor clodhoppors.) just slip a clean fresh plantain leaf between the sore place and the leather and then think of this. I>ay the plants on a hot stove until wilted and lay j thein as a poultice, on a sore or Inflamma tion and it will give relief. Not far off is the detestable Jamestown with its showy, trumpet shape flower, into which the sphinx , tobacco bird, delights to poke its long pro boscis in the shade of the evening. Bruise j its leaves and pour a little whisky on them, strain it and you have a wash for nibbed shoulders or back of a horse, and no other wash can excel in the way of healing. The seed of it fried in lard and the grease used as an application for the piles will give re lief equal to anything that can be bought. The burdock and nettle both abominations to the husbandman, have their good quali- , ties. The roots will make a tea that will i purify the blood, and put a stop to the big gest nest of boils ever batching on a man's Ixxly. The tea is bitter and not pleasant to take, but this is the case with nearly all medicine. The leaves of the common privet are a sure cure for sore mouths, simply by chewing the leaves and letting 1 them rest on the sore in the mouth, and is j not half as nasty as a chew of tobacco. If this is not on the grounds, a piece of peach leaf w ill be often quite a relief. "Soila." Soda water is simply carbonic-acid gas soaked in water. The carbonic-acid gas is obtained by pouring sulphuric acid over marble chips or dust. The gas is passed through water several times to free it from : all trace of the sulphuric acid and is then pumped into a strong steel receptacle, in which i i pure water. The soda fountain is ' generally un elaborate marble affair, costing from SSO to $5,000. Generally a soda fountain in a drug store will pay the rent of the store at least, and sometimes much more. Fountains are fed from one draught tube and Ave sirups to six tubes and twenty-two sirups. At some places they have pure fruit sirups, and at others—they say they have. The first patent for soda water was taken out in England in 1807, yet the soda fountain in all its glory is only to be seen in America. In this country there is at least $12,000,000 invested in soda-water manu factories, fountains, etc., and yet you can get a drink for 5 cents. The tariff used to he 10 cents, and then a young man with a party of ladies dreaded the sight of a foun tain or the sound of its sizzle, but bard times had the same effect on soda as on every thing else. If the price were further low ered to 3 cents there is little doubt but a great increase of consumption and profit would result. M. do Beaumont, the president of the geographical society of Geneva, pioposce that longitude, instead of be ing reckoned from Greenwich, .Paris, Ferro or Washington, as at present, shall be reckoned Irom an initial meri dian passing through Beliring's Strait* between North America and Asia. I'liiiiilhmii* of I is Walker*, Nine cots with excelsior mattresses, stand beneath the tents at the side of the track. Weston and Ilowell sleep in nxms at the eastern end of the Garden. Guyon rests in the Putnam House, near the Fourth avenue entrance. All the other walkers i sleep in their tents. The hours of uncon sciousness ore few. Up to midnight Mer j ritt had slept only seven hours since tho ojM'iiing of the tournament. They can hardly lie called hours of rest. The weary , pedestrian is sponged or has a bath. He I pitches in his cot. He is wrapjied in his | blankets. The lights in his tent are extiu : guished. He closes his eyes and enters a I world of phantoms. The cheers of the crowd, the music of the band, the clapping ) of hands, the murmur of a vast hive of 1 bees, and the tread of many feet flit through his sleep, llis Ixxly is racked with pain. There is an appalling heat in his feet. His temples throb. The blood becomes stag nant and frequently nightmare follows. The dreamer is still on the track. He sees his competitors passing bim one by one, and is unable to increase bis own speed. O'Leary says that during his walk for the j belt in London he never went to sleep with ! out the shadow of Vaughn before him. It would follow him around a phantom track j with looks of exultation in its eyes. At times it would bar his way. It would j stand fating him at the curves, making J grimaces and contortions. Up to the mo j inent of walking Vaughn's shade never left • his sleep. Guyon lias a similar experience, j On Wednesday night he slept the sleep of the damned. The pain in his feet was so I intense tliut it had turned his stomach. Weston was ever before him. When he | turned In Merritt had passed him and taken I second place. Weston was doing splendid work, and rapidly overhauling him. A ghostly Weston pursued liim in his dreams. Whichever way he turned Weston was at | his heels. Nor was Weston the only phan tom. The dials assumed the faces of the other contestants, and taunted him as he passed. A spirit Krohne fifty feet high was walking over him. Although he was in the Putnam House, far removed from sight or sound of the garden, he heard the murmur of the crowd, the roar of brass in struments, the tread of a thousand feet, and peals of laughter. When he awoko toward morning he found a tumbler beneath his pillow. The pillow was drenched. He was unable to account for it until he re membered that in his dreams he had a spirited contest with Weston. The dreams of the pedestrian are based on the condi tion of his stomach. When the stomach refuses nourishment threatening apparitions frequently appear. In one ruse a pedes trian fancied that he was rolling among old logs covered with thousand-legged worms. In another case the pedestrian thought hini se'f on the track, but unable to walk. Upon glancing at his feet he was shocked to see that they had turned into hickory saplings, and the saplings grcwjpjth such rapidity that they raised the air. The agony of these hours of unrest is in creased when the hapless walker awakes. His blood is still stagnant. There is a prickly heat ujxm his skin, lie feels as though he was lieing pricked by a million of needles. Neuralgic pains throb through his muscles. His joints are stiff. His eye lids seem paralyzed. Worst of all, his feet and shinbones are numbed. Every move ment sends a thrill of pain tlirough the Ixxly. He is oiled and rubbed. A swallow of warm beef-tea, or some other decoction, puts him into a little glow and infuses him with a painful energy. He hobbles upon the track, and the noise, the lights, and \ the dark shadows of his competitors confuse him. The cold air strikes him unpleasant ly. He makes one lap, and the impulse to re-enter his cot is frequently so great that he finds it irresistible. Before coming on the track he lies upon his cot in a semi-un conscious state while he is rublied and clad. He hardly appreciates the situation lief ore he finds himself upon the track. If his shoos have been changed during his rest, his feet feel like lumps of lead. The soro spots smart more than ever, and It is with the greatest difficulty that he can lift his feet from the track. He occasionally feels a nausea about the stomach, and his nerves are strung to the utmost tension. The snapping of a whip, a deformed face, a wide-brimmed bat, or a peculiarly-shaped Ixmquet excites his mind, and ho becomes in a measure insane. Weston lias a peculiar abhorrence of tobacco smoke. It probably affects bis stomach. At times the sight of a pipe or cigar throws him into a nervous spasm, and ho becomes so'excited that he frequently leaves the track. Tea Culture In America It is an established fact that the tea plant will grow in the United States. Specimens were flourishing in a Charleston nursery as early as 1812, and in 1848, Junius Smith, of Greenville, S. C., made an attempt at cultivating the plant, which was, however, abandoned before any conclusive evidence was furnished for or against this industry becoming a profitable venture. In 1858, our Government, through the Commissioner of Patents, imported 10,000 plants from China, which soon increased to 30,000, and these were distributed through the Southern States. In 1862, the Department of Agri culture continued to propagate plants and furnished them to all who applied for them, but under the prevalent lielief that so much manipulation was needed in the manufact ure of the article that we could not compete with the cheap labor of Asiatics, no special effort was made to disseminate the plants. Reports of the success in India now began to arrest attention, and the Department was stimulated to secure more seed and begin the propagation of the plants in earnest. In 1867, it was found that an abundance of seed could be obtained from the plants al ready growing in the South. Since 1868 from 10,000 to 15,000 plants were distribu ted every year until 1876, when encouraging assurances from planters led to still more extensiveo perations, so that 1,000,000 plant s have been sent out during the last three years, and the Department has some 120,000 now on hand. All this has been done with the intention of rendering the cultivation of tea popular as a domestic product, and with the hope that public interest would be ultimately directed to its cultivation as an article of commercial value. One more fact has been established on undoubted tes timony. A good quality of tea can be pro duced here. Even with the imperfect knowledge of planters as to the proper time for picking and the proper means of curing, an article has been produced which experi enced dealers pronounce very good. It has been tested in Washington and other cities with the same result. One lady in Colum bia, 8. C., reports that she has obtained five pouade of good tea from one plant. Another lady makes an article which sells readily for $1.50 per pound, and which experts pronounce stronger and of superior flavor to the imported article. The remaining question to lie solved is: Can tea be grown in this country as a pro fitable market crop? The cultivation of the plant is as sjinple as that of the gooseberry. The plants only need to be set In rows, thoroughly tilled and properly pruned to induce a low, compact growth and ahun dence of shoots. No leaves should be picked until the fourth year from planting, to insure a robust, healthy aud well-estublished growth so that tliey will endure the strain of successive strippings, for under the lx*st conditions tho leaves are picked several times each year. What ars these condi tions? In the first place, a rich, loamy soil is indispensable, and the strength of the ground should be sustained by fertilizers. The climate must be warm, for although the plant will endure a zero chill, it thrives best where tlio summers are long, anil where the temperature is never lower than six or eight (legs, below lreczing. The last necessary condition is abundant moist ure. In India the rainfall is from 80 to 100 inches per annum, anil it is doubtful whether the leaves would form with suffi cient rapidity to make this crop successful in any part of ths country where the annual rainfall is less than 00 inches, and even this should be diffused pretty equally over the spring and summer months. Of course where irrigation is possible the rainfall is of less importance. There is only one way of learning whether these and other essential conditions, if such there be, exist together in this country to a degree which would insure success. Per haps the Governmant might occomphsh something if it would cease to rely on in direct methods of encouraging experiment, which can only be desultory Hnd unsatis factory, and begin some persistent trials of its own on a scale of sufficient magnitude to settle the question conclusively. An appropriation of $25,000 would be sufficient to purchase and stock a farm of ample size in what seems a favorable location, and it would cover all needful expenses for a scries of experiments for a term of years. It would then lie found what quantity of leaves an acre would yield, and what would lie the cost of picking and curing. Until some satisfactory data on these points are established, private enterprise will hardly ] grapple with such an uncertain undertaking and wait several years for results. Many j acute observers have faith that the United j States will j-ct produce its own tea, and ; better tea than is now consumed here Starvation In the Arctic Sea*. If to the present time whale fishing in the Arctic Ocean has been insuccessful. Fifty- ; one whales have been taken by the fleet, , against thirty-two at the same time last year, and the whales have run large, averag ing alxmt one hundred barrels of oil, and, I say, eighty thousand pounds of whaletxine in all; also about eleveu thousand walruses, against twelve thousand last year the wal ruses making leas oil than usual, as fewer fe males are killed, and a larger proportion of male walruses than in years past. Not a whale has been taken iu the strait or the Arctic ocean, and only one whale has Ix-eu seen, and that by the Helen Mar. Four ships and several brigs and schooners got to the eastward and missed the chance. A great many w hales were seen, nnil more than usual were struck and lost. The Helen Mar struck fifteen and saved seven; the Pro gress five, and saved two. Not a whale has been taken by the natives of the whole coast, and the whaling party, with their rocket guns, which wintered at Plover bay got nothing. The natives on Diomcde is lands report seeing large numbers of whales going north in May and early June last, east of tha islands, and they struck over to Caj>e Thompson and Point llope, where the na tives took five (one one-huudred-barrel whale —one of alout forty barrels, and three small ones, without whalebone). There is more ice, and further south this year, than usual. Ships havifhccn in 69.40, and re- ' cently four or five ships were thirty-five i miles east of Cape Lislmrnc, stopped by ice j C'apt. Tom Williams started some days ago with his little steamer, the Bouquet, toreaeh Wainwright inlet, Point Belcher or Point Barrow, if possible; he will trace the shore around; his steamer draws only three and a half feet of water, and can steam one hun bred miles a day. Tho trading-vessels have about six thousand pounds of whalebone and a small quanity of ivory compared with former years. Alxmt half the fleet are in the West; the other half are all over to Cape Seege and West walrusing, de stroying them by the thousand; about eleven thousand have been taken, and thirty or forty thousand destroyed this year. An other year, or perhaps two years, w ill finish them; there will hardly lie one left, and I advise all natural history societies anil mu seums to get a specimen while they can. Fully one-third of the population south of St. Lawrence bay perish the past winter for want of food, and half the natives of St. Lawrence island died; one village of two hundred inhabitants all died excepting oue man. Mothers took their starving children to the bury tag-grounds, stripped the cloth ing from their little emaciated Ixxlies, and then strangled them or let tho intense cold end their misery. It is heart rendering to hear them tell how they suflered. C'apt. Cogan Ims taken very few walruses, he says that for every one hundred walruses taken a family is starved, and I concur in his opinion. The season, or rather the ice, does not look favorable to the success of the Bennett expedition, for they can not pene trate the pack with that or any other steam er, as it is now packed by the constant strong south,winds; but before long the I whole ice-pack may be pushed north or : east. Ventilating Bedrooms. A simple device is within the reach of every one having an ordinary window in his room, by which fresh outer air can be admitted in small quantity with such an upward current as will prevent its being felt as an injurious draft by the inmates. It is particularly adapted to sleeping rooms when the weather is to" cold to admit of an open window. Thus, start both top and bottom sashes of the window half an inch, which is not quite enough to clear the re bate or stop-beads at the top and bottom, but which leaves au opening of an inch be tween the meeting rails, through which a current enters, but diverted upward by the glass as it should be, so as not to fall dir ectly to the floor, as its coolness might otherwise induce it to do. It thus becomes well mixed with the air of the roem with •ut being felt as a draft. Outer Willows. | To grow osiers successfully a deep, rich soil is indispensable. The ground should also bo moist and low, but not too wet. The deep, moist black lands are good, but the "made lands" arc the best. What I mean by made lands are lauds made by soil deposited by changes In the flow of streams or rivers. These soils are the nat ural home of the willow. The land should be broken as deep ns possible (say ten inches;, as late in th fall as the weather will permit, and also thoroughly harrowed before freezing commences. Planting should commence as soon as the frost is out of the ground and while the ground is still very soft. The slips should be ready pre pared. They should l>e about ten inches long; tied up in bundles, with the buds all one way, and eittier set in shallow water, covered with earth, or placed in the cellar until needed. In planting I think it l*est to have a long cord and stretch it across the plat, pushing the willow slips into the ground alongside the cord. In this way the rows are made perfectly straight Af ter planting one row move the cord thres feet and plant the next row. This can be done quickly by having one person at each end of the cord to move the pegs and stretch the cord. The rows will be three feet apart at every point, and it will be straight enough to admit of easy cultivation. It will be necessary in pushing the slips in the ground to have n thick leather pail for the hand, and no slips should be used except j ! those that are large enough to be shoved into the ground without bending and break ! ing. The slips should lie set about ten inches apart in rows. Closer planting would not hurt, but they are easier culti- I vated when at tliis distance apart, and will ; get thick enough in a few years. As soon as the buds commence starting, and the ground gets dry enough, cultivation ought to commence with hoe and cultivator. This 1 cultivation should be repeated through the j season often enough to keep dowu the weeds and keep the ground in a gixxi con dition for the slips to grow. The slips will probably grow about three to five feet high 1 the first season. Borne willow-growers cut them off in the winter of the first year, so ] as to secure straight shoots the next season, but I think the best plan is to let them grow two seasons before cutting, as the roots will be stronger and the third year's crop (which ought to bo the first market crop; will be better. Besides, if not cut the first winter after planting, the second year's cultivation will be greatly lessened. The first cutting (the second winter after planting) is of little market value, and < might as well l>e thrown aside, or what is i letter, the best of it might be cut into slips for planting more land. The cutting can i be done at any time from the Ist of Decern- i l>er until the buds start in the spring; and tliey sliouid be cut while the snow i? off so | as to cut as close to the ground as possible. | A long hawk-bill knife, made for the pur- j pose, is the lx?st to cut with. After cutting, j lie up in bundles and put int shocks, in order to keep the sun from the huts until they are hauled to the ditch. The ditches j should be made convenient to a spring ■ or small running brook, so as to lead the j water from the spring or brook into them, i The ditches should be made perfectly level I on the bottom, and should be no deeper 1 than necessary to hold about three inches of water. There should be forks or stakes j J driven into the ground on both sides of the ditch, opposite to each other, and about ] five feet apart. Poles should extend across ( the ditch trom each fork to the one oppo- ; j site, about four feet from the ground. The willow bundles should be set in between these poles as thick as they can be placed, j and care should be taken that the huts are even, or some of them will be out of water. ( If the ditch is wide, there* should aiso be cross slats to keep the bundles from falling over in case of wind. The object iu hav ing the ditches so shallow is so that the roots that will come out as the sap rises ( will be at the very ends of the cuttings.— If the water is deeper, the root 9 will come out near the surface of the water, and that port cf the willow below the roots would be hard to peel. The peeling should J commence as soon as the buds put forth, and be persisted in faithfully until all are done, which should be in u month or six weeks at the farthest. The willows should be placed in the sun as soon as pos- ' Bible after peeling. If it is a rainy day spread them thin until the sun comes out. ( One day's sun will generally be sufficient, if not packed in too large quantities for some few days after. Be sure tbey are dry be fore bulking, or they will lose their bright white color, and will also lose greatly in value. Never let them get wet after peel- ! ing, or they will turn black, unless imme- j diately dried. After they are thoroughly dried, tie them up in seventy-five to one hundred pound bu.idles for shipping or hauling to market. The profit depends upon how cheaply you get the work done, 1 and upon the demands of the market. Good lands ought to produce five thousand pounds of marketable willows per acre. They are now worth about four cents per pound. They ought to be put on the mar ket at a cost of two cents, with gixxl man agement, which would leave a net profit of $ 100 per acre. Our Kohln. Our robin lives our of doora, but ho is so tame that he enters the house at all times and seasons. When Henny's duties keep her at home robin shows himself a most devoted husband: he carries her plentiful supplies of oatcake crumbs, butter, bits of caudle, and other delicacies of the same kind. And when he has to cater for the little ones as well, he is really to be pitied; so busy is he that he neglects his toilet nearly altogether, and we have to be satis fled with hurried scraps of song. He gets quite fearless in his anxiety for his family, and will join us at breakfast and help him self to buttered toast without the slightest hesitation or invitation. It is no use to break off a piece for robin; his way is to hop on the plate and pick off for himself what he considers the dainty bits. I have known him to come in Ave times during breakfast- At night, a window is left open that he may come in for crumbs when he pleases. Should all the windows be shut, robin has a very pretty "Open Sesame; " he sits on the window-sill and sings loudly. Nobidy can resist that appeal, as he knows from experience. And when he wishes to get out, he has a very effectual way of managing that point, too, by fluttering from room to room, uttering a little fright ened "Chick, chick 1" And as we know the cat often lies in wait for him, some one rushes to the rescue at once. He is a very Mark Tapley of a bird—cheery under all eireurastaaees, and a universal favorite. FOOD FOR THOUGHT. I ' I Human life is everywhere a state in which much is te be endured, t Lvery child walks into existence [ through the golden gate of love. A hopeless person is one who deserts himself. Ignorance has no light*; err©** follows a false one. A fine coat may cover a feol, but never conceals one. There is no grief like the grief whioh does not speak. He who Slackens others does not whiten himself. Genius is sometimes arrogant; know* ledge is always diffident. We are never so proud and so hum* ble as when we are praised. He only enjoys his passion who cam make no use of his reason. The pleasure of doing good is the on ly pleasure that never wears ont. Surely half the world must be blind; they can see nothing unless it glitters. If a dunce is short of some faults, he only did not know how to acquire them. Virtue pardons the wicked, as the sandal tree perfumes the axe that | strikes it. To be in love is nothing else but to love more what we loved before we were in love. Heaven's gates are wide enough to admit every sinner iu the universe who is penitent. Calumny and detraction are but j sparks, which, if you do not blow them, will go out of themselves. —The wealthy miser lives aa a poor man here; but he must give account as a rich man in the day of judgment. How contagious is the laugh of some people, how jarring that of others, like play'ng on a worn out plane. What is styled timidity is probably nothing but the fear of showiug too little merit. A good constitution is like a money box—its full value Is never known till it is broken. Good taste is the modesty of the mind: that is why it cannot be either imitated or acquired. Iu general, there is no one with whom lite drags so disagreeably as with hiss who tries to make it shorter. You cannot dream yourself into a character; you must hammer and forge yourself one. The heart that is soonest awake to the flowers is always the first to be touched by the thorns. The miles to Heaven are few and short and the glorious end will come soon. If the shoe of a monarch could do aa much as the monarch himself, the court would be divided between his majesty and his shoe. Without a belief in personal immor tality religion surely is like an arch - resting on one pillar, like a bridge eud iug in an abyss. The sweat of one's brow is no longer a curse when one works for God; it proves a tonic for the system and is actually a blessing. Charity toward the weaknesses of human nature is a virtue which we de maud in others, but which we find very hard to practice ourselves. Memory and hope are set like stars above the soul—the one shining dimly through the twilight of the past, the other lighting the archway of the fu ture. e can easily manage if we will only tak -, each day, the burden appointed for it. ljpt the load wia be too heavy for us 11 wo add to its weight the bur den of to-inorrow before we are called to bear it. He that will put time aiid eternity before him, and who will dare to look steadfastly on both of them, will find that the more often he contemplates them the former will grow greater and the latter less. A young oUlcer thought to puzzle an older one by asking him when two uien of equal age and rank met, which should be the rirst to bow. The elder calmly replied, "The more iwllte of the two." \ : . *. r Want of goods Is easily* Repaired; po verty of soul Is irreparable. Socrates, seeing a great quant ity of riches, jewels and lurniture of great value carried in pomp through ihe city: ''How many things," said he, "do i not desire?" Men may as well expect to grow stronger by always sitting, as wiser lyr always reading. Too much overchar ges nature, and turns more Into disease than nourishment. It is thought which is mental digestion, which makes books serviceable, and gives health auk vigor to the mind. God led the Israelites to and fro, for ward and backward, as in a maze or labyrinth; and yet they were ail the while under the direction of the pillar ot cloud. He ltd them about, and yet he ied them by a right way. His way •n bringing his people home is always the best, though it may not be the near est. Thou hast a double nature. Choose betweeu the worse and the better that is within thee. Thou hast it in thy power to become the slave of passion, the slave of luxury, the slave of sen sual pleasure, the slave of corruption. Thou hast it in thy power to become the free master of thyself, to become the everlasting benefactor of thy coun try, and the unfailing champion of thy God. 7 Habit is the deepest law of our nature. It is our greatest strength and our greatest weakuess. It can seise all pre sent advantages and-blessings; appro priate every particle of spiritual manna that comes from heaven, eauslng the soul to grow in g.ace and in commun ion and in the knowledge of the Lord; or it can put them away into the fu ture, and let the soul get on as it may in its low and starved condition. As the snow gathers together, so our habits are foi rued; no single flake that is added to the pile produces a sensible change; uo single action creates, how ever it may exhibit a man's character; but as the tempest hurls the avalauche down the mountain, overwhelming the inhabitant and bis habitation, so pas sion acting upon the elements of mis chief which pernicious habits have brought together by imperceptible ac cumulation, may overthrow the edifice of truth and virtue. NO. 46.