VOL. LV. HARTER, AUCTIONEER, REBERSBURG. Fa. J C. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Next Door to JOURNAL Store, MILLHKIH, FA. gROCKERHOFF HOUSE, (Opposite Court House.) H. BROCKERHOFF, Proprietor. Wii. McKkkvbr, Manager. Good sample rooms ou first floor. Free bus to and (rout all trains. Special rates to jurort and witnesses. Strictly First Clan. IRVIN HOUSE. (Most Central Hotel In the CltyJ Corner MAIN and JAY Streets, Lock Haven, Fa. S. WOODS CALWKLL, Proprietor. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers on first floor. D. H. MINGLE, Physician and Surgeon, MAIN Street, MILLHKIM, Pa. jQR. JOHN F. HARTER, PRACTICAL DENTIST, Office In 2d story of Tomliuson's Gro cery Store, On MAIN Street, MILI.HKIM, Pa. C. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower. A DOTTEXt, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BRLLEFONTS, PA. Office in German's new boildlng. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLKTONTX, PA. Offioe on Allegheny Street. QLEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Worth west corner of Diamond. Y<>CUM A HASTINGS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. High Street, opposite First National Bank. C. HEINLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre County. Spec al attention to Collections. Consultations in German or English. F. REEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. All business promptly attended to. CoUeotlon of claims a speciality. ~J. A. Beaver. J W. Gephart. A GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Offlee on Alleghany Street, North of High. A.MORRISON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Woodrlngl Block, Opposite court Houae. S. KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA. Consultations In English or German. OClce in Lyon'a Bunding, 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. R AXES ON APPLICATION. lie pilllriw §®itril A MOTUEK'S UKAKT. A little dreaming, Huoh as mothers know ; A little lingering over daiutj- tiling*; A happy heart, wherein hope all aglow Stirs like a bird at dawu that wakes and slugs- And that Is all. A little clasping to her yearning breast; A little musing over future years; A heart that prays, " Dear Lord, Thou know est best. But spare my flower life's bitterest raiu of tears And that Is all. A little spirit speeding through the night; A little home grown lonely, dark and chill; A sad heart, groping blindly for the light; A little snow-clad grave beueath the lull— And that is all. A little gathering of life's broken thread ; A little patience keeping back the tears; A heart that sings, "Thy darling is not dead, God keeps us safe through Ills eternal years"— And that Is all. Til K BRAKKMAM'S STORY. A rough-looking man ? Yes, perhaps I am. We ain't all of us responsible for our outside husk, no more than a horse-chestnut or a hazel-nut is. The kind of life I lead can't be lived in white kid gloves and dress coats. I wasn't brought up with many advan tages, and I'm only a brakeman 011 the Rensselaer and Saratoga line. Old Jones was telling yon about me, was he, sir? He'd better hold his tongue. There's more profitable subjects of con versation than I am. But old Jones means well enough, and if he told you to ask me how that stripe of white hair came 011 mv black mane, I ain't the man to go back 011 him. Oh, you needn't beg my pardon, sir! I don't mind talking about it now, though the time was when I couldn't sjnak of it without a big lump coming in my throat. We hadn't been married long, Polly and me, when it happened. Polly was as trim, bright-eyed slip of a girl as ever you'd wish to see. She was one of the waitresses in the Albany lunch room ; and the first time I ever set eyes upon her I made up my mind to make that girl my wife. So, when they raised my wages, I took heart and asked her if she would have them with me, with a wedding-ring thrown into the bargain. "Do you really mean it, Jake?" said she, looking me full in the face, with tlifMA .lai-L- hliiA av*m of tiara, t.liut art* like the skies at night. "I do really mean it, Polly," said I. "Then," said she,.putting both her hands in mine, "I'll trust you. I've no living relation to advise me, so I can only take counsel with my own heart." So we were married. I rented a little one-story house, under the hill on the height, that overlooked the Hudson—a cozy place with a good-sized wood-pile at the rear, for winter meant winter in those parts, and the snow used to be drifted up even with bur door-yard fence many and many a cold gray morning. And everything went smooth until Polly began to object to my mates at the White Blackbird, and the Satur day evenings I spent with the boys, after my train was safely run onto the side track at the junction. "\Yky, Polly, girl," said I, where's the harm ? A man can't live by himself, like an oyster in its shell, and a social glass never yet banned any one." "No," said Polly, "not a social glass, Jake, but the habit. And if you would only put every five-cent piece that you spend for liquor into little Bertie's tiny savings bank—" "Pshaw !" said I. "I'm not adrank ard, and I never mean to become one. And no one likes to be preached to by his wife, Polly. Remember that my girl, and you'll save yourself a deal of trouble." I kissed her, and went away. But that was the beginning of the little, grave shadow that grew on my Polly's face, like a creeping fog over the hills, and that she has never got rid of since. It was a sore point between us—what the politicians called a vexed question. I felt that Polly was always watching me; and I didn't choose to be put in leading-strings by a woman. So—l shame to say it—l went to the White Blackbird oftener than ever, and I didn't always count the glasses of beer that I drank, and once or twice, of a particu larly cold night, I let myself be per suaded into drinkmg something stronger than beer; and my brain wasn't the kind that could stand liquid fire with im punity. And Polly cried, and I lost my temper, and—well I don't like to think of all these tilings now. Thank good ness tliey're over and gone ! That afternoon, as I stood on the back platform of my car, with my arms fold ed and my eyes fixed on the snowy waste of flat fields through which the iron track sSemed to extend itself like an endless black serpent, I looked my own life in the face. I made up my mind that I had been behaving like a brute. "What are those senseless fellows at the White Blackbird to me," muttered I, "as compared with one of Polly's sweet bright looks? 1 will give the whole tiring up. I'll draw the line just here now. We shall be off duty early to-night. I'll go home and astonish Polly!" But, as night fell, the blinding drift of a great storm came with it. We were belated by the snow which collected 011 the rails, and when we reached Earldale j there was a little girl, who had been sent on in care of the conductor who^ MI bid lEI M, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29,1 SSI. must either wait three of four hours for away train iu the colli and cheerless station, or be taken home across a snowy field by some one who knew the way. 1 thought of my own little children. •Til take her," said I—ami lifting her up I gathered my coarse, warm coat about her, and I started for the long, cold walk under the whispering pines along the edge of the river. 1 honestly believe she would have frozen to death if she had been left in the cold station until the way train could call for her. And when I had left her safe in charge of her aunt, 1 saw by the old kitchen time-piece that it was ten o'clock. 'Tolly will think I have slipped back into the Slough of Despond," 1 said to myself, with half a smile ; "but I'll give her an agreeable surprise !'" Plowing down amid the snow-drift, through a grove of pine trees that edged a ravine at the back of my house, I sprang lightly on the doorstep ; the door was shut and locked. I went around to the front. E>re I effected an entrance, but the fire was dying on the hearth, and little Bertie, tucked up in his crib, called out ; "Papa, is that you?" •'Where is mamma, my son?" said I, looking eagerly around at the desolate room. "Gone out with the baby in her arms to look for you," he said. "Didn't you meet her, papa ?" I stood a minute in silence. "Lie still, Bertie," said I, in a voice that sounded strange and husky even to myself. "1 will go and bring her back." And T thought with dismay of the blinding snow-storm outside, the treach erous gorges which lay between here and the White Blackbird, the trackless woods, through which it was difficult enough to find one's way even in the sunshine of noonday, and—worst of all —the lonely truck, across which an "express" shot like a meteor at a few minutes before midnight. Oh, heaven ! what possible doom might I not have brought upon myself by the wretched passion in which I had gone awav that morning. The town clock, sounding dim and muffied through the storm, struck eleven as I hurried down Eleven—and who knew what a length of time might elapse before I could find her? And like a fiery phantasmagoria before my mind's eye, I beheld the wild rush of the midnight express, and dreaded—l knew not what. For all that I could realize was that the storm was growing fiercer with every moment, and Polly and the baby were out in its fury! As steadily as 1 could I worked my way down toward the track, but more than once I l>ecame bewildered, and had to stop and reflect before 1 could resume my quest. And w hen, at length, I came out close to a ruined wood and water station on the edge of the track, I knew that I was full a half a mile below the White Blackbird. And in the distance I heard the long, shrill shriek of the midnight train ! Some one else had heanl it, too, for, as I stood thus, I saw, faintly visible through the blinding snow, a shadowy figure issue from the ruined shed and come out upon the track, looking with a bewildered, uncertain air up and down —the form of Polly, my wife, with the little baby in her arms ! I hurried down to her as fast as the rapidly increasing snow-drifts would let me, but I was only just in time to drag her from the place of peril, and stand, breathlessly holding her back, while the fiery-eyed monster of steam swept by with a rush and a rattle that nearly took our breath away ! "Polly !" I cried, "Polly ! sja-ak to me!" She turned her wandering gaze toward me, with her vague eyes that seemed scarcely to recognize me. "Have you seen my husband?" said she. "One Jacob Cotterel, brakeman 011 the local express ?" "Polly ! little woman ! don't you know me?" I gasped. "And 1 thought, perhaps," she added, vacantly, "you might have met him. It's very cold here, and—and—" And then she fainted in my arms. The long, long brain fever that follow ed was a sort of death. There was a time when they told me she never would know me again, but, thank God, she did. She recovered at last. And since that night I never have tasted a drop of liquor, and, please heaven, I never will again. The baby, bless its dear little heart, wasn't harmed at all. It lay snug and warm on its mother's breast all the while. But if I hadn't happened to be close by them at that instant the night express would have ground them into powder! And the white stripe came into my hair upon the night of that fearful snow storm. That's how it happened, sir. Professor Marsh , of Yale college, has recently discovered in the cretaceous de posits of Kansas the remains of a great number ot toothed birds Scientists aver 'hat the discovery and study of thee re markable extinct forms by Professor Marsh has thrown much light upon the derivation of the birds, and furnishes another very strong link in the chain of evidence in fa vor ef the theory of evolution, which is now almost universally accepted bv naturalists, to account for the origin of the existing form * nf organic hffc- Lmiio Subtitled. The lute John Pettit iu the years 18f>4 5 wa i the circuit Judge by appointment of Gov. Wright, and with all ins taulis was regarded as one of the best nisi prius J inlgea ever ou the bench in Indiana, lie was prompt and fearless, and if not always correct was at the least honest. Wm. F. Lane, better known as Frank Lane, was the Icadiug ciiuunal lawyer in Pettit's court. 11c was not a muu of muck ability bul could talk till day about nothing. On one occasion he defended a man tor steal ing, and on the coining in of the jury with a verdii t of guilty, Frank entered the usual motion for a new triaL The next morn ing after the clerk had read the minutes Judge Pettit, turning to Lane, remarked that he would take up the motion for a new trial made the day lefore. Frank re plied that the prosecuting attorney was not in court, and that of course the case could not he taken up in his absence. "Go on, Mr. Lane, it is the prosecuting attorney's business to be here," replied the Judge. But 1 am not ready, your Honor," inter posed Lane; "1 want time to look up au thorities," "No authorities are necessary in this case in this court, Mr. Lane," said the Judge, "and no other business will be taken up until this ease is disposed of. Go ou with your argument, Mr. Lane." Frank louud lie was in for it, and commenced talking, talking on very little that was relevant to his ease; the truth was he had no case. About the time he hail exhausted Pettit's patience the prosecuting attorney —the late Charles A. Nay lor—eutered the court room, and listening a moment at the* entrance to the har, and finding that Lane was talking about the cas tried the day before, inquired of the Judge what Lane was doing with it in his absence. " What does Mr. Lane want?" '1 don't know," responded Pettit; " 1 have been listening to him here for three-quarters of an hour, trying to liud out, and I don't believe he knows himself 1" Lane subsided, the Judge overruled the motion, ordered tne prisoner to Ire brought in, who was sent to the Jillerioiiville prison, and the case was at au end. KiilfluiMl'n (irrul Breni. Among those who have been for a long time at the top of fortune's tree are the great Brinish Brewers at Burton ou-Treui, but even they have now for some time been threatened with diminished protils Tne first tlrm which took to brewing "La*t India pale ule" was that of the Abbotts, of Bow, ne r London; but eveutually the Basses and Alsops, of Burton on-Trent, got hold of the trade and made it their own. Bass' grandfather was a carrier, residing at Ash bourne, in Dtrbyshire, in the days when Dr. Johnson used to pay visits to his friend the rich parson tnern. • He owned the enormous vans, w.th lour horses, which then did all the traffic bttwixt that part ol ike (HHintry taid htudoiv ht 4 with suuie of his accumulated profits bis su went into business at Burtou-ou-TreuL The India trade in great measure made him, hut now it is fulling off, not only Iscaike people tiud light wines suit them belter, but be cause the Indian breweries are now doing a large business. ru Australia, 100, dour ifiling breweries are cutting into Bass' trade, while here lager beer is a serious competitor, iu Guinness' stout the fulling off is lar less marked, tiecause it Is so largely prescribed as a tonic, ami, more over, many persons can take it who cannot take ale. Air. Bass, worth some stt,ooo,- UOO, is a very public-spirited citizen ol muuiticeul character. lie has loug been iu Parliament, and may, no doubt, if he please, have from Mr. Giadstoue a Baron etcy, as his neighbor, S>ir Henry Alsop, had from Lord Beacousfield. There is a prevalent notion that the famous ale's ex cellence is due to the water of the Trent, hut as a matter of fact it is mude from sprimt water withiu the precincts of tne brewery. Tlx* Chestnut Harvest in (lie Apennines. The chestnut harvest, which takes place iu October, is the greatest event of the year in the Apennines, and fur nishes a recreation, rather than a task, to all classes of the population. The schools have their annual vacation in that month, that the children may assist in it; and it is difficult to find hands for any extra household work while a pleas ant gipsy life goes on under the trees. The steep woods are then alive with merry parties picking the mahogany brown nuts from among the fallen leaves, and dropping them into long canvas pouches slung at the waist for the purjiose. The boughs are never shaken to detach them, and the burs fall singly as tliey ripen, rustling through the leaves, and breaking the forest silenee with a heavy thud as they strike the ground. They lie till picked up from day to day, during the appoint ed time for gathering them, which lasts a month, and is fixed by municipal proclamation—commonly from Michael mas Day, September 29, to the feast of SS. enmon and Judy, October 28, but sometimes extending by special request, if the season be unusually late, for ten days longer. Any one wandering off' the recognized paths through the woods during that period is liable to be shot by the proprietor, as in the Swiss vineyard in vintage time, but this sanguinary law seems to remain a dead letter. After the legal term has expired, the woods are free to the whole world, and are in vaded by troops of beggars, gleaning any chance belated chestnuts which fall ing now, are the prize of the first comer. Those which drop at any time on a road passable for wheeled vehicles are also public property, and, as the highway runs through chestnut woods, the poor have a little harvest by the roadside. The proprietors of woods too extensive for the gathering to be done by the mem bers of their own household engage a number of girls to assist, giving them food and lodging for forty days, and to each two sacks of chestnut flour 011 her departure. After their day's work in the woods they are expected to spin or weave in the evening for the benefit of the housewife, who thus gets her supply of yarn or linen pretty well advanced iu thin mouth. The poor girls look for ward to being employed in thin way an a great treat, and will often throw up other oeeupatiouH rather than lose it. In a dry season it in indeed sufficiently pleas ant, for the lovely weather of a dry Oc tober among these Tuscan highlands conjure up a more dismal picture thau that presented by the dripping clieatnut wtxaln if the autumn rains have chosen that month for their own, when the sleeting floods of heaven thresh down the withered leaves as they fall, and the soaked burrs have to Ire fished out of the swirling yellow torrents that fur row the ground in all directions. Wet or dry, however, October, unless the yield be exceptionally scanty, is a sea son of abundance and rejoicing through the country, while the peasants consume the fresh chestnuts by the sackful, not makes open-air life unalloyed pleasure ; but, on the other hund, one can hardly roasted, as they are eaten in the cities, but plainly boiled and eaten hot from the husk. The great mass are spread on the floor of the drying-houses—blind deserted-looking buildings scattered through the woods for this purpose, and which in the autumn seem to smoulder internally, as the smoke of the tire lit to extract the moisture from the fresh chestnuts escapes- through all the interstices of the roof and walls. From the drying-house they are taken to the mill and ground into farina dolce, a tine meal of pinkish color and sickly sweet flavor, which forms the staple food of the population. From this they make jxtfcnta or porridge, in other dis tricts made from Indian meal, and need, round cakes baked between chestnut leaves, which are kept and dried for the pur}>ose, with the result of imparting a slightly pungent flavor of smoke that the stranger will hardly find an improve ment. Other delicacies, too, are made from the chestnut flour, such as cakes covered with chocolate and sugar, but none of them are likely to commend themselves to northern palates. " He la Our'n!" One of the post-office agents who was making a trip through the northern part ot the Lower Peninsula, Michigan, this summer, came across a mail route through the woods from one hamlet to another, with a weekly average of two letters and one paper in the bags. The carrier wore a coon-skin cap and rode a jronv about as fat as a case-knife, and lie took things so easy that the agent saw tit to question him a little : "My man. do you realize that you represent the United States?" "Wall, I kinder reckon." "And you feel the responsibility, I presume ?" "Bet yer goggles I dew." "You know you must brave all perils to get your mails safely through ?" "That thar' boss an' me ar' good fur anything twice our size, I reckon." "If attacked by roblrers, what would you do ?" "Bury 'em !" "Suppose you were offered money to give up the mail bair ?" "No danger o' that, mister. I don't believe the hull county could serai>e up fifty cents." "There are awful fires in these woods sometimes ?" "K'rect I've seen b'ars roasted alive when they wasn't within a mile of the flames." "Well, now, if you were to find your self surrounded by a fierce forest fire what would you do ?" "Fire all around ?" "Yes." "No chance to burrow under or fly over ?" "No." "Wall, mister, it would be kinder tuff, but I'd remember that I represent the government. I'd kill my hoss, eat the mail, and die shouting: "We have met the inemy, and he is our'u !" .Pure Old Cojjnac. "Give me a little old brandy doctor," replied the reporter. "Very well, sir," replied Dr. Leflman, who is the state microscopist of Pciinsvl vania. "You shall have a bottle to put in your pocket. As you see, I take about half a pint of rectified spirit and mix with it a few drops of coloring solution and concentrated essence of brandy— that is, the brandy flavor prepared by the druggist, and by brisk agitation the mixture acquires the appearance of cognac. You like a little bead ? Very well; I add a little out of this vial, a preparation of nitro-benzoin or artificial oil of bitter almonds. Now, as I pour it out, the bubbles remain for some time at the top, However, it does not ripe or full-blooded yet, so I add a few drops of a preparation principally com posed of glycerine and called by the trade 'age and body.' Another good shake, and all I need is a label certifying that the article is 'ten year old Cognac brandy,' and there you have my brandy ready for market. Of oourse, the ex periment has been a very hasty one. I simply intended to show you the princi ple. In practice about half a pound of each of the substances I have just made use of would be added to forty gallons of rectified spirits, and a very respectable and by no means injurious brandy is the result. In brief, the adulteration of spirituous liquids—that is the artificial production in a few hours by chemical process of a similar result to that attained by nature in the course of months, or even years—has every claim to be regarded as a triumph of science.' Some of the samples of ice analyzed by A. Kudiger yielded large quantities of al buminoid ammonia. A Kouian Banquet. The following in a description of a Ro man banquet which took place about 76 B. C., on the ninth ( alends of September. This supper, winch corresponded more nearly with the dinner of modern times, was given by lieululus, to celebrate his inauguration as Flunieu Martiahs, an offl cer who ranked among the flanunes second only to the Flamen Dialis. The company comprised seven of the pontiflces, Q. Catn lus, M. .Eimlius L-pldus, D. Svllanus, P. Bca;vola Bextus, Cornelius. P. Volum nius. I*. Albinovauus, the rex aacrorurn C. C'teser, and L. Julius Ctesar the augur. The party, however, was not limited to men. There were present four of, the ves tals— Popiha, Perpema, Lirinia. ana Arun cia (the remaining two of their colleagues were probably obliged to rcmam at the temnle to attend the sacred tires), the wife of Lentilus, Publicia, the Aaminica, and Lis mother-in-law Bempronia. The pres ence of the vestals may occasion some sur prise, but their position was in many re spects anomalous, 'i he honors paid to ihem were very r markable. They were attended by a hctor wh' n they went out, and even consuls and governors made way for them. Like the peers of Eugland, they gave their ev : dence without taking an oatn. The duties of their office were re quired to be very strictly performed, and the most terrible punishments awaited any violation of their vows. They enjoyed a fair amount of liberty, and were allowed to walk about the city, to attend theatres and gladiatorial exhibitions, where the best places were reserved for thein, and they were, as we see, scmetiu.es present at so cial entertainments. They were even able, after thirty years' service as ve>tals, to uuconsecrate themselves and to marry. The company at banquet was ar ranged in three triclinia, with ivory couch es. The pontiflces occupied two of the triclinia, and the third was given to the ladies. From the recumbent positions of the guests, who wen; said to lie in the bosoms of each other ( alicujus in sinu cubare\ it would not have been decorous for the ladies and gentlemen to occupy the same couch, and it was, indeed, only in the later days of itome that the ladies adopted the custom of reclining tu table. The re past generally commenced with the ante carna, for which it was usual to serve horn ifceuvre* for the puqxwe of stimulating the appetite, bnt on this occasion the menu of the antecaena or gustatio contained some dishes which were tolerably solid. Raw oysters a discretion (ostrea cruda quantum rellent), several kinds of shell tish ("echini, peleridea, spondyli, glyco msndes, murices, purpura;, balani aibi et uign urticse"), thrushes, asparagus, fatted fowls, oyster patties, ortolans, haunches of a goat and wild l>oar, and rich meat made into pasties. For the catna there were pork, wild boar, fish patties, pork pies, rlucks, tee! soup, bares, rich meal roasted, wbeaten cakes and rolls. The conversa tion is not recorded, but it is to be hoped that the company (following the advice given in the •'Attica; Nodes ' of AulusUel lius) avoiced painful and involved subjects, and limited their discourse to the common topics of every-day life. The CeuMU of Great Britain On the uiglit of April 4 the population of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, including the islands in British waters (the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands), together with the army and navy and merchant seamen abroad, was found to be 35,246,562, an increase of 4,147,236 as compared with the returns of the census of 1871. The females exceed the males by a little over 700,000. The percentage of population for Eugland was 69.8; for Wales, 3.8; for Scotland, 10.6; for Ireland 14.6 The remainder, 1.2 per cent, was dis tributed between the Isle of Man (0.2), the Channel Islunds (0.3), and the army, navy, and seamen abroad (0.7). The density of population in England and Wales is 440 to the square mile. The greatest density is in the mining and manufacturing counties. Lancashire has over 1,700 to the square mile, and Middlesex (outside of London), 1,364. Six oounties in England and one in Wales have over 500 to the square mile. London has 486,286 houses and a popu lation of 3,814,571, having increased over half a million in the past ten years. The density of population in London is now 32,326 to the square mile. Liver pool ranks next to London in England, with a population over 550,000; Bir mingham has over 400,000 ; Manchester and Leeds each exceed 300,000 ; Shef field and Bristol have over 200,000 in habitants each. Curiously the popula tion of Manchester has fallen off" 10,000 since the census of 1871. Blonde Hair Changed to Black. A recent paper from Prof. Prentiss, re cords a very remarkable change in color of the hair of a lady patient who had been treated several months for blood poisoning with jaborandi, a Brazilian plant used in medicine. This medicine, which is given to produce sweating iu certain rare cases, was first riven to the patient in subcutaneous in actions in December last. At that time, md previously, her hair was a light blonde, but within about two weeks a ;hange toward a darker color was a perceptible, which increased until, in the uiddle of January, the hair became of a 'hestnut color. In May the color was learly a pure black, which it still re ams, although there is a slightly appar ent tendency to return again to a lighter •olor. At this is the only recorded case >f this plant (which is not, however, in •orumon use) having produced any per ceptible change in the color of human hair, it becomes a matter of interest to know how this change was brought about and how often it might accompany the use of this remedy. A microscopic examination shows the hair to contain a greatly increased quantity of pigment matter, and scientists now await with in terest the results of future growths to ascertain whether they will retain their old color or retain that newly acquired. —The rose gardens of Adrianople cov er 14,000 acres. —Coaches were first let for hife in Jjondon in 1625, FOOD FOR THOUGHT. What ought not to be done, do not even think of doing. If you do not wish to trade with the devil, keep out of his shop. An idle reason lessens the weight of the good ones you gave before. All women wish to be esteemed—they care less about being respected. It is easier to suppress the first desire than to satisfy all that follow it. A man who don't know anything will tell you the first chance he gets. A gilded frame makes a good picture in the eyes of nearly all the world. While learning adorns a man, let us remember that truth ennobles him. It is right to be contented with what we have, but never with what we are. Nothing can constitute good breeding that has not good nature for its founda tion. A man's own good breeding is the best security against other people's ill man ners. Blessings on the head of him or her who lauglis the blues out of a weary heart. Virtue requires no other recompense than the tribute of self-approbation and respect. A man looks at a woman from head to foot—a woman looks at a man from foot to head. No reproof or denunciation is so po tent as the silent influence of a good example. We are acquainted witii the justice of God, but know nothing about his juris prudence. Good intentions are the seeds of good actions, though they do not always pro duce them. Education is the proper employment not only of our early years, but of our whole Lives. As the prickliest leaves are the driest, st> the pertest fellows are generally the most barren. The smaller the calibre of the mind the greater the bore of a perpetually open mouth. Never attempt to oonvince a woman of anything by argument—you must re sort to emotion. If you wish that your own merits should be recognized you must recog nize the merits others. Advice is liks snow, the softer it falls the longer it dwells upon and the deeper it sinks into the mind "Heaven made virtue ; man the ap pearance ;" and, very naturally, man prefers his own invention. He that does a base thing in zeal for his friend burns the golden thread that ties their hearts together. God would have been very illogical and cruel if, having made Life what it is, he had not made Death. One of the most important rules of science of manners is an almost absolute silence with regard to yourself. It is easy enough to make a man laugh, but to gain his respect, at the same time, is not so easy a thing. The man who cannot take care oi himself is about as safe among wild beasts as among his fellow-beings. The wealthy miser lives as a poor man here ; but he must give account as a rich man in the day of judgment. Almost anybody oan send a boy on an errand but only the wealthy have leisure to spare to wait for him to get back. There is no better reward than the approval of our own conscience. It is worth more than all others together. To form true men, it is indispensable that this precept should be engraven on their hearts- -Fear nothing but remorse. Those whom we nave loved and lost are no longer where they used to l>e, but, ever and everywhere, where we are. The reputation of a man is like his shadow—gigantic when it precedes, and pigmy in its proportions when it follows liim. Style is the only frame to hold our thoughts. It is like the sash of a win dow—a heavy sash will obscure the light. Deathbed repentance is burning the candle of life in the service of the devil, then blowing the snuff in the face of Heaven. • Good temper, like a sunny day, sheds a brightness over everything. It is the sweetener of toil and the soother of dis quietude. One reason why the world is not re formed is, that everybody would have others make a beginning, and thinks not of himself. Women who love are always afraid they are not loved. Women who are not loved always flatter themselves that they are loved. The winter frost must rend the burr of the nut before the fruit is seen. So adversity tempers the human heart to disoover its real worth. Wickedness can be seen through the thickest fog, but virtue has to have an electric light turned on it before it will be recognized by the world. Exclusively of the abstract sciences the largest and worthiest portions of our knowledge consists of aphorisms, and the greatest and best of men is but an aphorism. When a man is dangerously ill, the law grants dispensation, for it says : "You may break one Sabbath on his be half, that he may be preserved to keep many Sabbaths. A thorough-paced antiquarian not only remembers what all other people have thought proper to forget, but he also forgets what ail other people think it proper to remember. An apology in the original sense was a pleading off from some charge or im putation, by explaining or defending principles or conduct. It therefore amounted to a vindication. I never work better that when I am inspired by anger ; when lam angry I can write, pray and preach well ; for then my whole temperament is quick ened, my understanding sharpened, and I all mundane vexation# and temptation# depart. NO. 39.