VOL. LV. BARTER, AUCTIONEER, REBERSBURG. PA. J C. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Next Door to JOURNAL Store, MILLHKIH, PA. JgROCKERHOFF HOUSE, (Oppoaite Court House.) H. BBOCKJ3BHOFF, Proprietor. Wm. McKkkvkr, Manager. Good sample rooms en first floor. Free bus to and from all trains. Special rates to jurors and witnesses. Strictly First Class. IRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel In the City,) Corner MAIN and JAY Streets, Lock Haven, Pa. 8. WOODS CALWKLL, Proprietor. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers on first floor. D. H. MINGLE, Physician and Surgeon, MAIN Street, MILLHKIM, Pa. JOHN F. BARTER, PRACTICAL DENTIST, Office in 3d story of Tomlinson's Gro cery Store, On MAIN Street, Mili.hiim, Pa. C. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower. A BOWER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BBLLEFONTB, PA. Office In German's new building. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BKLLKFONT*, PA. Office on Allegheny Street. OLEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLE FONTS, PA. Northwest corner of Diamond. Y° cum a HASTINGS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BKLLKFONTB, PA. High Street, opposite First National Bank. c - HEINLE, ATTORNEY AT LA W, BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices In all the courts of Centre County. Special attention to Collections. Consultations In German or English. F. REEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. All business promptly attended to. Collection of elalms a speciality. J. A. Beaver. J w. Gephart. JgEAVKR A GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street, North of High. A. MORRISON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA Office on WoodrlngM Block, Opposite Court House. S. KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA Consultations In English or German. Office In Lyon's Building, Allegheny Street. JOHN G. LOVE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA Office in the rooms formerly occupied by the late W. P. Wilson. ADVERTISE IN THE Millheim Journal. RATES ON APPLICATION. Ike pitlkeiw jSomrnal THE OI.D FARMER'S KLVUY. On a tfreen grants knoll, by the banks of the brook, That so lonjf and O often has watered hlB ILK-W, The old fanner rests In his long and last sleep. While the waters a low, lapsing lullaby keep. He has ploughed his last furrow, has reaped Ills last grata; No morn shall awake htm to labor again. Yw tree, that with fragrance is rilling the atr, St) rich with Its blossoms, so thrifty and fair, By his own hand was planted ; and well did he say. It would live when its planter hail mouldered away, lie has ploughed his last furrow, has reaped his last grain; No uiorn shall awake him to lator again. There's the well that he dug, with its waters so COLLL, With its wet, drippiug bucket, so mossy and old, No more from its depths by the patriarch drawn. For the " pitcher is broken," the old uiatt Is gone. He lias ploughed his last furrow, has reaped his last grain; No uiorn shall awake him to labor again. "Twas a glooui-giving day when the old farmer died; The stout-hearted mourned, the affectionate cried; And the prayers of the Just for his rest did ascend, For they all lost a brother, a man and a friend. He has ploughed his last furrow, has reaped his last grain; No morn shall awake him to laior again. For upright and honest the old farmer was; His God he revered, he respected the laws; Though fame less he lived, he has gone where his worth Will outshina, like pure gold, all the dross of thu • earth. He has ploughed his last t\ rrow, has reaped his last grain; No morn sh.il' wake him to labor again. DAFFODIL'S HI SBAND. The sun had dropped behind the tall towers of St. George's twin-steepled church, the soft June twilight was set tling, like au impalpable veil of liquid amethyst, over all the little apartments, and Daffodil Grey stood at the window, carelessly toying with the geranium leaves, that gave out a sweet, pungent fragrance to the touch of her lingers, and thinking—thinking! It was just six moutlis, this day, that she was married —six months since she had left the old farm in Chester county, and came to the great city to live. "You'll be desperately homesick!" Aunt Jocasta had said, with a solemn shake of the head. "Not with John!" she had responded radiantly, "Just fancy," groaned Aunt Jocasta, all these fields and hills for a city fiat!" "Every one lives in fiats nowadays," Daffodil had retorted; "and John says I shall find tilings very convenient." "Humph!" said Aunt Jocasta; "I never was in love myself, but I've been told that people who are, would believe anything. I suppose John is law and gospel to von now!" "Of coiirse," said Daffodil, laughing. So she had married the young hero of her hopes and dreams, and gone to the great, crowded city to live. And the fiat had been Arcadia to her—that is, just at first, when the honey-moon was in its first glow, and all the world was transfigured with the light that shines through the halo of a wedding ring. But, of late, Mrs. Daffodil had not been quite so happy. She had been crving, one night, when John eame homo unexpectedly, and there was no time to dash away the tears. "My darling," he had cried aghast, "what is the trouble?" "Nothiug, John—nothing!" she had answered. "Only—only it is so long since I placed my feet on a sod of green grass. And I was thinking that the old orchard would be in blossom, just at this time; and the meadow under the sassafras tree would be all blue with early violets." "Daffodil, are you homesick?" "No, John—indeed, no!" she cried. "Get on your things," said Grey. "We'll go and walk in the park, and lis ten to the rolun at the bird fancier's, and try to imagine ourselves back in the rural districts again." But Daffodil trying to smile as she tied her pink bonnet-strings, did not tell him ot the long visit she had from old Mrs. Mudge, who declared that "she had al'ys loved John Grey as if he had bean her own son," and had pro ceeded to edify his bride with a circum stantial account of all the mischief ho had gotten into, all the love-tangles in which he had been involved, all the half-ougagoniauts into which he had been drawn, until poor Daffodil felt as if her John Grey and tliis gay Lothario must be two quiet different beings. "And we all supposed, my dear," said Mrs. Mudge, comfortably taking snuff, "that he was to marry Olive Dod worth, the actress, when he up and brought you home. Dear, dear! what flirts men are! Ain't they now, my dear?" "I—suppose so," said poor Daffodil, intent upon the stitches of her strip of embroidery. "I hope you'll come and see me often," said Mrs. Mudge, setting down her tea-cup and Baking up her big red shawl. "I shall be very happy, t' said Daffo dil. "And we'll have ever so many nice confidential chats," said Mrs. Mudge. "Yes," said Daffodil, faintly. And after Mrs. Mudge had gone away poor Daffodil sat and wondered what made her so wretched. She could hear some one moving about overhead. Some one had told her that a young artist had just rented the top floor of the Fontaine Flats. She wondered vaguely what he was like, and whether, he too, was a human butterfly lighting on every flower and constant to none. She asked herself whether fat Mr. Smith, who went out from the suite of apartments below every day with a silk umbrella under his arm,dyed mustaches and a smoothly-shaven chin, had his amiable weaknesses likewise. "I almost wish," said Daffodil to herself, "that I had remained unmar ried. Nc I don't either! I—l don't know what I do wish! So, woman-like, Daffodil had begun to cry. . , But the pleasant twilight walk in the park, and the melodious whistle of the robin at the bird fancier's, had cheered her up again, for the time being. MIMJI KIM. PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1881. But she could not be blind to the fiu't that John was not with her HO much as during the five weeks after their mar riage. Now ami again of an evening he woiUd be absent without a Huflieient ex ouse, iuid, with a smothered pang at her heart, Daffodil had thought of Olive Dodworth, the brilliant young actress, even then playing at one of the minor city theaters. "Does he care for her yet?" Daffodil asked herself; and there came 110 satis factory answer to the query. And so it happened that to-niglit, as she stood among the geraniums, looking out at the sunset, she was not quite happy. "In old times," said this bride of six months to herself, "John was always home to take me for a walk in the twilight. He never thinks of it now. Were Aunt Jocasta and Mrs. Mudge right, after all? Was man a delusion, and life a dreary series of disappoint ments? As these dispiriting reflections pass ed tlirougli her mind, she was startled by the unexpected sound of a footstep 011 the floor—a footstep too light and elastic to be that of lier husband. She turned, and was amazed to see, in the indistinct light, the tall figure of a beautiful young lady, richly dressed, and wearing such a Parisian'bonnet as poor Daffodil had never seen before. "Pardon me for intruding," said the lady, with a royal air, "but are these Mr. Grey's rooms?" "They are," said Daffodil, summon ing all the dignity at her control, and secretly wondering if this might not be the tnte noire of her thoughts and fan cies—Miss Dodworth. "But I did not hear you knock." "I did not knock," said the anony mous fair one, with hauteur. Daffodil colored: "I am Mrs. Grey," said she quickly. "Pardon me," said the lady, "I am Mrs. Grey. I suspected something of tliis new order of things," with a con temptuous curl of her hp, "and I have came on from Chicago to counteract it." "Madame," said Daffodil, standing very erect, although she could feci her self trembling all over, "you must l>e insane! I was married to Mr. Grey 011 the flrst day of last January." The lady laughed—a hard, mirthless laugh." "Indeed!" said she. And I was mar ried to him cm the 6tli of Octol)er, two years ago. Poor child!" as the pallor overspread Daffodil's countenance, "I don't suppose you are to blame, but in this hard world we have to suffer for one another's crimes. Where is he?" "I—don't know," faintly admitted the bride. "Humpli!" said the lady compressing her lips. "He is at his old tricks, I see. Wall T can wait. Y to be seated, but I shall take that liberty without your permission." And she sat down, flinging back the folds of her rich India shawl, while Daf fodil watched her with silent dismay. Was this true? Had John Grey really deceived her? He whom she had loved so entirely, trusted so infinitely? If this was really so, there was 110 truth in all the world! The shadows gradually deepened; the clock on the mantel ticked as busily as if it were running a race against time— and still the two sat there, silent,speech less, each dreading, yet longing, to hear John Grey's footsteps 011 the stairs. At last he came. Sitting in the dark, pet?" he cried, merrily, as he crossed to the mantel and lighted the gas-jet. "I ulust see your dear little face, for I have something to tell you which—" He checked himself abruptly, for at that moment he caught sight of the pale beautiful stranger in the Parisian hat and glistening Indian shawl. He turned to Daffodil. "Who is this lady," he asked. "I do not know her," she answered. "Do not you?" "Never saw her before in all my life!" said Grey, in unfeigned amazement. The lady rose a little nervously. "Is— thin gentleman your husband?" she said, the color varying on her cheek. "He is," Daffodil mechanically re plied. "There is some mistake," said the stranger, with visible embarrassment. "This is not the Mr. Grey I mean. My Mr. Grey is short and dark, with a heavy beard—Richard Richardson Grey—and The young husband struck his hand on the table, as if an idea hud suddenly occurred to him. "With a slight cast in one eye?" said he. "All artist, is he not?" "Exactly!" cried the India-shawled beauty. "He occupies the suite of rooms di rectly "above lis," said he. "He moved in last month." "Then, said the lady, "I have mis taken the flat. Pray, pray"—to Daffo dil—"forgive me!" But Daffodil oould only laugh hysteri cally, and hide lier head 011 her hus band's shoulder. And not until the door had been closed behind the stranger, did John Grey ex- claim: "Poor fellow 1 I have heard some thing of this. She torments the life out of him, with potty exactions and un founded jealousies. She follows him ground the world like a Nemesis. I'm glad you are not like her, my pretty Daffodil!" And then he went on to tell his wife how he had been working busily all this* time to earn enough, by extra labor at his profession to buy a little one-storied cottage, in the suburbs of the city, with a tiny garden attached, where there was an apple tree, a thicket of moss-roses all in bud, but a little summer house all braided over with glossy woodbine. "I signed the papers to-day, Daffodil, ' said he. "We can move in next week, just in time for the roses and straw berries. Dear one, I know you have been-homesick for green grass and bird songs all this time, and have longed a score of times to tell you of all that was in my mind; but it would have spoiled this glad surprise." And all that Daffodil could say was: "Oil, John—dear Jolin—l am so happy!" From Seriau to Waterloo. From Sedan, the grave of the Third Empire, to Waterloo, the grave of the First, is but a short day's journey. Having left Sedan at 8 A. M., this morn ing, I have already reached Les Quatre Bras with four hours of daylight before me. Leaving the railway at Charlcroi, 1 there took a carriage and followed the poplar-lined highway which leads from Charleroi to Brussels, through Quatre Bras and Waterloo. It washy this road that Ney advanced, while Napoleon, also starting from Charlcroi, took to the right, that leading through Fleurus to Ligny. At Les Quatre Bras the high road from Charleroi to Brussels cuts that from Nivelles to Namur at right angles. Already 011 the evening of June 15, Ney's advanced guard commenced the attack 011 the allied position at Quatre Bras, which at that moment was defend ed by a single battalion of Orange Nas sauers, commanded by the gallant young Prince of Weimar, who did such good service on the English left at the battle of Waterloo. Had Ney continued his attack he must have carried the position, but his men were tired, and he believed that the post was defended by a strong force, When the attack was renewed the fol lowing morning the Prince of Weimer was strongly reinforced by Dutch and Brunswickers, whose Duke, as all the world knows, was killed here at the head of his troops. It was not till the early part of the afternoon that any English troops reached the scene of action, the first to arrive and stem the tide of the advancing French being the Reserve Division under Pietou, from Brussells, consisting of Pack® and Kemp's Bri gades. About SP. M. Cooke's Division of Byng's and Mai Baud's Brigades of Guards arrived, with Halkett's Brigade, all by the Nivelles road. No English cavalry arrived in time to take part in the action, during the earlier part of which the French Lancers galloped clean through the allied ]>ositiou at Qua tre Bras, and nearly captured the Duke of Wellington, wholiad arrived at atniut 10 A. M., in Picton's division. The action not having commenced at that hour, the 1 rode off by the Namur road toward Ligny to consult with Bluclier, who mounted with the Duke into a windmill, whence they sur veyed Napoleon's of his forces just before the commencement of the battle of Ligny. From alsmt noon, June id, to nightfall, the battles of Ligny and Quatre Bras were fought simultane ously, resulting in a French victory at Ligny, and a drawn battle at Quatre Bras, where the English passed the night on the field of battle, the French retir ing 011 the village of Frasnes. Had Na poleon advanced on Quatre Bras at early dawn 011 the 17th, and had Ney renewed his attack simultaneously, the English must have been taken between the two fires and the position carried. As it was, Napoleon failed to put his army in motion from Ligny till the afternoon of the 17th, which gave the English ample time to retire leisurely 011 Waterloo. Captain Siborne, in his well-known his tory of the Waterloo campaign, relates that so high was the rye at the battle of Quatre Bras, that the English infantry were completely concealed by it. I have just measured the height of the finest crop of rye I ever beheld growing 011 the Waterloo road, and found it to be seven feet high. 11l another letter from the field of Waterloo, written on the following day, our correspondent says: In his admirable lectures 011 the Wa terloo campaign, Colonel Cliesney is, as far as I know, the first English writer who does full justice to the importance of the part played by the Prussians at Waterloo. As you approach the field from Quatre Bras, about a milo before reaching La Belle Alliance, you perceive on your right, lying about 1000 yards oft" the high road, a village half concealed iu a wooded hollow, from which the church spire emerges conspicuously. The name of this village is Planeenoit, and round that church took place the fiercest and bloodiest fighting which June 18 witnessed. Between 4.30 P. M. and 8.30 —/. r., in four hours—the Prus sians lost more men than the English during the whole day, the Prussian loss in killed and wounded being about 0,300, that of the English, exclusive of the allies, 6,100. There were, in fact, two battles of Waterloo—the battle of Mount St. Jean and the battle of Planeenoit —and Na poleon liad to do with two distinct armies. It is commonly believed in England that the Prussians merely came up at the close of the day, and assisted the English to crown their victory ; but it is the fact that Bulow's corps came seriously into action by 4.30 P. M., and that twelve out of the twenty-four bat talions of the Imperial Guard, besides Loban's corps and several other divisions, were detached to Planeenoit, on the French extreme right, at the very mo ment tliey were most required to take part in the assault of the Allied position on the ridge of Mount St. Jean in front From that ridge of Mount St. Jean, where I am now writing in the calm of ail early summer's morning, the village of Planeenoit is quite invisible, and on the day of the battle the English were quite unaware of the earlier stages of the Prussian fighting there. It was not till i Ziethen's Hussars coming from Wavre ! touched the extreme English left 011 the i Chain road, at about 7 P. M., that the Duke of Wellington received the wel oome intelligence of the arrival of the Prussians on the field. Compared with that of Bedan, the battlefield of Waterloo is on a wonder fully small scale, and easily to be appre hended. At Sedan the circumference of the field is at least fourteen miles, com prising about a dozen villages, completely hidden from each other by intervening heights. At Waterloo the whole fields, exclusive of the village of Planeenoit, may lie taken in at a glance. The French position on the ridge of La Belle Alli ance was but 1,2(10 yards from that of the English on the ridge of Mount St. Jean, and the extreme length of both positions, from east to west, #'. e., from Smoham to Hougomont, was about 2,500 yards. The intervening valley, which is but a slight depression, was converted into a quagmire by the tre mendous rainfall 01 1 the afternoon and evening of the 17th, the ground being impassable by cavalry and artillery in the early part of the day of the 18th. The state of the ground wus extremely disadvantageous to Napoleon's uttack, which was thereby delayed till 11 A. M. That the French, with a total force of aliout 70,(MX) men, should have failed to force the strong jiositioii on which the English, nearly equal to themselves in numliers, were jnisted in front, having at the same time to detach about a third of their strength to meet the 35,(KM) Prussians who fell on their right fiank and took part in the fight of Planeenoit, with 40,(MX) more Prussians arriving later on the field, cannot surely l>e con sidered any reproach to French valor. A I.ecrh Farm. In 1841 Mr. Witte, established a small leech farm in Kent Avenue, Wil liamsburg, L. I. In course of time this small establishment was abandoned, and one of thirteen acres was established near Newton, L. L. and to him the writer is indebted for the following in formation and description of the only leech farm in America. The breeding {lends consist of oblong squares of one and a half acres each. The bottoms of these ponds are of clay, the margins of peat. In June the leeches Wgin form ing their cocoons on the peat margins nt tliv jfUilOl. The greatest enemies to the yunug leeches are musk rats, water rats, and water shrews, who dig the cocoons out of the soft peat breeding margins. Next to rats and shrews is overheating of the peat or the water of the pond. In fact, nothing is so fatal to leeches as a too high temperature. Mr. Witte says he has had leeches frozen in solid ice, but bv slow ly dissolved the ice and gradually increasing the temperature of the water the leeches sustained no injury. The depth of the water iu the ponds during the summer is three feet; in winter time the depth of water increased to avoid freezing. The leeches are fed every six montlis 011 fresh blood placed in thin linen bags, which are suspended in the water. The leeches, as soon as they smell the blood, aseemhle from all parts of the ]>oiid, and attaching themselves to the outside of the bag, suck the dissolving coagulated blood through the linen. Digestion pro ceeds very slowly with the leech, during which time the blood remaing undigest ed in tin* stomach of the leech is in a fluid state, as if taken in. The exere mental deposits are of a grass-green color. The best substance for packing leeches in is the peat of their natural ponds made iuto a stiff mud. Water containing tannin, tannic acid, lime,salt, or brakisli water, must lie guarded against always; iron is not objectionable, but is an advantage in small quantities. The demand for leeches in the last few years has somewhat fallen off in the Eastern and Southern States. The Western States and California are now the heaviest buyers. Mr. Witte's sales alone average a thousand a day. The number of leeches imported into the United States amounts to about thirty thousand yearly. The custom of stripping and salting leeches, to cause them to disgorge after having been applied, has passed away, as many well established cases have oc curred of infectious diseases having been communicated on the application of the same leech to a second party. A very popular error exists that a leecli when applied takes only the bad blood (what ever that may be) and rejects the good; this is a mistake. With a leech blood is blood, be it the cold blood of a fish or the warm blood of a human being, no matter how diseased that human being may be. So long as blood is not tainted or putrid tlio leech will thrive 011 it. A friend of mind, who was the proprietor of a large leech-breeding establishment at the foot of the Hartz Mountains,when wishing to feed his leeches, was in the habit of hiring poor laborers, at six cents per day, to stand in the water for half an hour nearly up to their thighs, that the leeches might obtain a full gor ging of human blood. In the marshy lands of Roumania the wild leeches are captured by means of men entering the water and allowing the wild leeches to fasten on to their naked bodies. The leech fishers then strip them oft' after reaching the shore. In Olden Times Paj>er-liuiigingM were originally just what their name indicates —viz., strips of paper suspended from the ceiling in such a manner as to cover the imper fections of the walls. They were used exclusively in the houses of the rich ; the poor inun in his hut had no such device, but must needs patch a hole to keep the winds away. The carpets of our forefathers once consisted of rushes, among which the dogs hunted for the bones that had l>eeu thrown upon the floor. 111 England, one end of the hall was the kennel for the hounds, and above it the perch for hawks. In the reign of Queen ElizaWth, the-host at table used to hold the joint of lieef with one hand and the carving-knife with the other, transferring the meat to the plates of his guests with his fingers, as forks were not yet in use. Those who first adopted forks were much ridiculed. Some said the Bible was opposed to it, and it was an insult to the Almighty to use a fork when He had given them fingers. The art of making glass is of high an tiquity, but it belonged to modern in genuity to develop the value of the in vention, and to apply it to a multitude of important, and in some cases indis pensable, uses. Not many centuries ago, window-glass was only found in the houses of the very rich ; its use began in palaces. For a long time it was so scarce that at Alnwick Castle, in 1567, the glass w as ordered to tie taken out of the windows and laid up in safety when the lord was absent. There was another luxury, so expen sive that for more than two thousand years it remained completely aliove the reach of the poor, and none but the wealthy could indulge in its use. We mean eottoi clotli! The material of which the clotli was made was both plenty and easily obtained, as is the ease with glass ; but the cost of manu facturing made it very dear. If a Grecian lady could awake from her sleep of two thousand years, her astonishment would be unbounded to see a simple country girl clothed with a calico dress, a muslin kerchief, and a colored shawl! Within the past one hundred years, machinery has lieen invented which has made printed cotton so perfect, so plenty, and so cheap, that the humble servant-girl can wear a better calico gown than Cleopatra ever saw ! When the whole stock of a carpenter's tools was valued at one shilling, and consisted altogether of two broadaxes, an adze, a square and a spoke-shave, we must expect to find rough work and none but rough dwelling-houses ; when there were no chimneys, and the fire was laid against the wall, with the smoke to issue out at the roof, the door, or the window, and the people slept on straw pallets, with a log of wood for a pillow, we naturally expect rough manners, unwholesome food, and a great lack of tidiness. This was the condition of the English people in the reign of Edward 111. Even the nobility went without sliairs and tables, and sat upon the j chests that contained their clothes and 1 linen. The skill of other trades was 011 a level with that of the carpenter, and agriculture was as low in the scale as any of the arts. The first sawmill in England was built by a Dutchman, but the opposition of the men who worked by hand was so great that he had to pull it down. 111 1767 another was erected, but a mob tore it down. So progress has everywhere liatl to overcome obsta cles. 111 1390, some friars iu Switzer land wished to build a windmill, to save the labor of grinding corn by hand ; but a neighboring landlord, who had bought the country around, forbade them, be cause, lie said, he owned the winds, j The bishop was appealed to, who said that the winds belonged to the church and could not be used. A writer, of good authority, speaking of the times of Henry VIII., says there is 110 doubt that the average duration of human life was, at that period, not one-half as long , as it is at the present day. The kings j and nobility of a few centuries ago possessed their crowns and liigh-sotlnd ing titles; but there is not, in the United States, a prosperous mechanic, Ijossessing a fair degree of refined taste and education, who would desire to ex change his manner of life and living for theirs, so far as the conveniences of life are concerned! Thus it is that art is ever at work, breaking down the barriers which stand between the rich and the poor, and bringing both classes more and more toward a common level—not by degrading the wealthy, but by exalt ing both classes to a higher standard of morality, refinement and education. Skull Measurement. Professor Flower, the well-known En glish anatomist, has published some fur ther results of his researches with refer ence to the human skull. He states that the largest normal skull he has ever measured was as much as 2,075 cubic centimeters; the smallest, 960 cubic cen timeters, this belonging to one of those pecular people in the center of Ceylon who are now nearly extinct. The larg est average capacity of any human head he has measured is that of a race of long flatheaded people on the west coast of Africa. The Laplanders and Esquimaux, though a very small people, have very large skulls, the latter giving an average measurement of 1,546. The English skull, of the lower grades, shows 1,542 ; the Japanese, 1,486; Chinese, 1,424; modern Italian, 1,475; ancient Egyptian, 1,464; Hindoos, 1,306. Table Htlqnette. There are a great man j people who be* hare well otherwise, bat at table they do things that if not absolutely outre and en semble, are at least pianissimo and sine die. it is with a view to derating the popu lar taste and etherealizing, so to speak, the manners and customs of our readers, that we give below a few hints upon eti quette. If by writing an article of this kind we can induce one man who now wipes his hands on the table cloth to come up and take higher ground, and wipe them on his pants, we shall feel amply repaid. if you cannot accept an invitation to dinner, do not write your regrets on the back of a pool check with a blue pencil. This is now regarded as ricochet. A simple note to your host informing him that your washerwoman refuses to re lent is sufficient. On seating yourself at the table draw off your gloves and put them in your lap under your napkin. Do not put them in the gravy, as it would ruin the gloves and cast a gloom over the gravy. If you have just cleaned your gloves with benzine, you might leave them out in the front yard. If you happen to drop gravy on your knife-blade, back near the handle, do not run the blade down your throat to remove the gravy, as it might injure your epiglot tis, and is not considered embonpoint, anyway. When you are at dinner do not take up a raw oyster on your fork and playfully ask your host if it is dead. Remarks about death at dinner are in very poor taste. Pears should be held by the stem and peeled gently but firmly, not as though you were skinning a dead horse. It is not boa ten. Oranges are held on a fork while being pulled, and the facetious style of squirting the juice into the eye of your hostess is now au i e voir, Stones in cherries or other fruit should not be placed on the table cloth, but slid quietly and unostentatiously into the pocket of your neighbor or noiselessly tossed un der the table. if you strike a worm in your fruit do not call attention to it by mashing it with the nut-craker. Ibis is not only uncouth, but it is regarded in the best society as blase and excedingly vice versa. Macaroni should be cut into short pieces and eaten with an even, graceful motion, not absorbed by the yard. la drinking wine, when you get to the bottom of your glass do not throw your head back and draw in your breath like the exhaust of a bath tub in order to get the last drop, as it engenders a feeling of the most depressing melancholy among the guests. After eating a considerable amount do not rise and unbuckle your vest strap in order to get more room, as it is exceeding ly au fait and dishabille. If by mistake you drink out of your fin ger bowl, laugh heartily and make some Tacetnms will chance the course of conversation and renew the friendly feeling among the members of the party, Ladies should take but one glass of wine at dinner. Otherwise there might be diffi culty in steering the male portion of the procession home. Do not make remarks about the amount your companion has eaten. If the lady who is your companion at table, whether she be your wife or the wife of some one else, should eat quite heartily, do not offer to pay your host for his loss or say to her, "Great Soott! I hope you will not kill yourself because you have the opportunity," but be polite and gentlemanly, even though the food supply be cut off for a week. If one of the gentlemen should drop a raw oyster into his bosom aud he should have trouble in fishing it out, do not make facetious remarks about it, but assist him to find it, laughing heartily all the time. Broad Tires for Wheels. Moderately broad wheels are prefer able to narrow tires for use of heavy wagons. To run in narrow ruts a wagon with broad tires would not be desirable, yet in our opinion tires three and a half inches in width would prove of easier draught than those measuring two inches wide. Of course the load is no heavier with the use of the wide tire, but is dis tributed over a surface of three and a half inches in plaoe of two inches. The resistance would be about the same in * both cases, though in the case of the wide tire distributed over nearly double the surface. The depression caused by the broad tires would not exceed one half that caused by the narrow ones. This cutting made by the narrow tires increases the draught to an extent far beyond the common estimate. As the cutting up of the roads is lessened through the use of broad tires, the cost of their maintenance is considerably di minished. This important principle is so far recognized in England that a less rate of tolls is exacted from teams with broad wheels than from those with nar row tires, thus paying a premium on the use of broad tires. For farm purposes broas tires are decidedly preferable to narrow wheels No one cares to have his grass lands cut up by wheels if it can be avoided—an injury which is more likely to be inflicted by broad than by narrow wheels. A team supplied with the broad tires will draw a load of ma nure with far greater ease over fallow ground than that with the narrow tires, by reason of the diminished amount of cutting in the ground. The question of broad and narrow tires appears simple enough at first sight, but it has long been our opinion that whatever will tend to improve the condition of our roads without increasing the expanse, that will reduce the labor of horses, and thereby lessen a very serious co st, ought to en gage the attention of men capable of solving such a problem. A year ago an attempt was made in the legislature of this State to regulate the width of the wheels of heavy vehicles, but the bill was defeated by those who should have known better. NO. 37.