VOL. LVJ. HAKTER, AUCTIONEER, REBER3BURG. PA. J C. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber. Next Door to JOURNAL Store, MII.LHEIH, PA. JgROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY STREET, BKLLKFONTE, ... PA. c. O. McMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room ou First Floor. IWFree Buss to And from all Trains. Special rates to witnesses and Jurors. 4-1 IRVIN HOU^E. (Most Central Hotel In the CltyJ Corucr MAIN and JAY Streets, Lock Haven, Ta. .8. WOODS CALWELL, Proprietor. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers on first floor. D. 11. MINGLE, Physician and Surgeon. MAIN Street, MILLHKIM, Pa. R.JOHN F. BARTER, PRACTICAL DENTIST. Office in *2d story of Tomlinsoa'i Gro cery Store, On MAIN Street, MILIHF.IM, Pa. BF KIKTFR, • FASHIONABLE BOOT Jfc SIIOE MAKER Shop next dr to Foote's Store, Main St., Boots, Shoes and Gaiters made to order, and sat lafUrtorv work guarantead. Repairing done prompt ly and cheaply, aud in a neat style. S. R. PKALK. H. A. MCKIE. PEALE Ac MeK EE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Office opposite Court House, Bellefonte, Pa. a T. Alexffbdet. C. M. Bower. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTK, PA. Offlce In Garm&n'g new building. JOHN B. LINN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTK, PA. Offlce on Allegheny Street. QLEMENT DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTX, PA. Northwest corner of Diamond, jQ 11. JIASTIINCS*, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTK, PA • Office on Allegheny Street, 2 doors west of offlce formerly occupied by the late flrui of Y'ocurn A Hastings. XJ^MTCTHEINLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTK, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre County. Spec al attention to Collections. Consultations In German or English, F. REEDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTK, PA. All bos'ness promptly attended to. Collection of claims a speciality. J. A. Beaver. J W. Gephart. . JgEAVER & GEPHART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTK, PA. Offlce on Alleghany Street, North of High. YOCTJFFHARSIIBERGER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA P Si. KELLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PA Consultations in EngH&h or German. Offloe in Lyon' -. Building, Allegheny Street. JQ H. HASTINGS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA Office on Allegheny street, two doors west ol office formerly occupied by the firm of Yoeum k Bastings. Sie pillleiu §®iwai AT THE LAST. The strsiun 1* rainiest when It neara the tide. And the flowers are sweetoxt at the evsntlU*, And bird* moat musical at the closs of da;, And saints divlnest whan the; pass awn;. Merntnn Is hot;, but a holier charm lies folded close In Kveuuijt's robe of balm, And wear; man must ever love her beat, For morning calls to toll, but night to rest. from lleaveu, and ou her wings doth bear A holy fragrance, like the breath of prayer. Footsteps of angels follow In her trace, Ta shut the wear; eyes of day in peace. All things are hushed before her as ahe tarows O'er earth and sky her mantle of repose ; 1 here is a calmer beauty and a power That Morning knows not, in the Evening hour. Tntll the evening we must weep and toil- Flow life's stern luirow, dig the weedy soil, I read with soft feet our rough snd thorny way, And bear the heat aud burden of the day. # Oh! when our sua ta setttug may we glide Like summer Kveutug dawn the golden tide, Aud eave behlad us, as we pass away, Sweet, starry twilight round our sleeping clay. J I'WT TOO I AK. "But I tell you, Lou, I can't afford it ?" "Oh, you stingy thing! You are will ing to have your wife go like a dowdy, just for the sake of a few paltry dollars?" And pretty Lou Falconer pouted her rosy lip, and turned pettishly away from her husband. "We are a young tirm, you know, Lou, and—" "Oh, say nothing more al>out it, if you please. I shall never ask you for anything again." And with a little toss of her head she left the room Falconer sighe 1 , and hi* brow con tracted with pain, as he looked after her. "Poor child ! It is so hard to refuse har anything." He was a pale young man, with a thoughtful cast of countenance and earnest gray eyes; habitually reserved and prudent, he accounted a sharp business man, and at the time of his marriage, two years previous, the old men predicted that he would eventually become one of the largest capitalists in B. His wife, a wilful, pretty creature, seemed to be his one weak point. Nor was she slow to avail herself of this ad vantage; her influence over him was un bounded,and even in cases where it was against his better judgment he invaria bly yielded to her wishes. The present object of these last named was a garnet silk drees pattern, which she had ttiat morning seen at C 's fashionable store; and poor Falconer's ears were still ringing with the minute description of its incomparable loveliuesss. "It seems so cruel to deny her what she has sot her heart on," he said, lay ing down his pen, aud arising, took one or two turns across the room The re sult of his reflections was,that he put on his hat, went straight to C 's, order ed the silk, and had it charged to his account. "Who would hesitate to credit Falco ner and Frost? There was not a safer co-partnership anywhere, The sales man blandly inquired, "Anything else, sir?" wrote the address and promised that the parcel should be sent home "in an hour's time." Then the purchaser walked slowly down *o his business, not altogether satisfied with what he had done. "Oh, Edward, you darling!" words that greeted him whe_ he went home that evening, aud throwing her arms around his neck, his wife, literally overwhelmed him with kisses. "Oh, you dear love! how oiever it was of you to fei n the old Sbylock, and then give me such a delightful surprise!" "It was really a delightful surprise, Mignon," putting both hands upon her shoulders, and gaaing fondly into the fair, joyous, face, "I am simply reward ed for my trouble." "Wait until you see me in my new dress, and then you'll be rewarded in earnest. * "Well, suppose you let me have some tea now." "Cerrainly, as much as you want." Throughout the meal Lou was gay and garrulous, and afterwards went to the piano and sang to her husband till bed-time. "I can't make up this handsome dress myself," soliloquized Mrs. Falconer, as she examined her treasure next day; "I am sure that Edward would rather pay the dressmaker's bill than have me spoil it." So she forthwith took it to a fash ionable modiste and was fitted. When she reached home she found a letter from her mother in New York, saying that she would be with them by the following Tuesday, and immediately set about preparing a room for her re ception. "Dear, me," she said, "I must have some new muslin curtains; I should be ashamed for mamma to see these, all darned as they are. Edward must be an angelgain, and give me some." "Sweetest, dearest, and best of men!" she said to him at dinner, "I am in a worse fix than was the Princess Gra ciosa; wont you be Percient and come to my assistance?" "What is it you want now ?'" asked Falconer, beginning to get neivous. "Oh, love, my muslin curtains are so ragged as to disgrace the house, and mamma if: coming to visit me next week; she is always so particular about appear - MILLIIEIM, PA., THURSDAY. JUNE 1,1882. anoes, ami 1 want to get tome fri sh ones to put up iu her room." "Is it absolutely necessary to have rnnaliu curtains, Lou 9 Wouldn't dimity do just as well? I'm sure you must have a apart* sot." "Oh, but mamma is accustomed to muslin curtains, and I know she won't feel at home with any othei kind. There now, be a good darling, and let me got them." "I hate to refuse .you, Lou, hut—" "Oil ! you've turned into a monster sgaiu, you Gharou ! I mayn't even wel come my mother, and make her comfor table in our home. "You can welcome your mother aud make her very comfortable, without the aid of mu-ilu curtains," said Falconer, decidedly. "Savage !" cried Lou, beginning to pout. "This is unreasonable and childish!' exclaimed her husband, impatiently pushing hack his chair, lie had some perp ex ng business on his mind and was m time to see her dressed, but she could not keep her party wait ing, and she was obliged to go olf with out seeing him. Half an hour later Falconer came home. He inquired from the housemaid, who had been roused from a nap by the violent jerking of the parlor bell, if her mistress had gone out; and sleepy as the girl was, she was startled (as she after wards aijerred)"by the look of his face," as he dismissed her. He went to his own room where little Eddie lay asleep, but turned abruptly from the picture. The heavy ice of des pair lay or his heart. Falconer and Frost had failed, and he was a defaulter to the amout of more thousands than ho could hope to repay; his good fortune was gone; nothing but beggary and ruin lay before liirn, and tlia disgrace would be reflected on his wife and child. He passed to his dressing room, turned the key on the inside, and ten minutes later the neighbors were startled by the re port of a pistol. They forced the door, and found that to the name of "bank rupt" and "swindler," which had been applied to liini as soon KS the failure had been made public, he had added that of suicide. They were fearful tidings that reach ed his wife's ear in the midst of the fes tivities anil hurried her home and vain ly might she, iu frantic accents call on that lifeless form "only to speak to her once more" and she M ould be content to "live on dry crusts in a hovel lor the rest of her days." Then she called herself "his muileress," and wringing her hands incessantly, cried: "Just teo far. too far!" Tain, vain lament ! lata Yurtkutlak. Lieutenant Dancnhowcr, of the Jean nette Expedition writes on the 30th of December, 1881, from Yakut ik,Siberia, us follows ; We are passing tile time quietly but mi] alieutly. It is daylight here at about Ba. in. We get up and have breakfast at a little hotel that is handy. The forenoon I spend reading a little, writiug a little and in attending to auy business I may happen to have on hand. About 2 p. w. General Taehernief's a'eigh arrives, aud 1 go to dine with him ; generally return aliont 4 p. ni., and if I do not have visitors 1 take a nap and kill time as well as I can until © p. in., when we have supper at the little hotel, and then go to bi d. As I have told .you before, I have found nice people in every part of the world that 1 have visited, and this place is by no means an exception. Last evening, for instance, we speut very pleasantly at the house of a Mr. Correikoff, an Irku tsk merchant, who entertained us very well. His wife is a charming lady, and it was very pleusant to see the three beautiful children. They have a fine piano, the first one we have seeq since leaving San Francisco. Yakut-k is a city of 5,000 inhabitants. Ths houses ure built of wood, aud are not painted. The streets are very wide, and each bouse has a large yard or court. The principle trade is in furs. In summer a great deal of fresh meat is sent up the river. During nine months of the year snow and ice abound. In the winter the thermometer falls to sev enty degree* below zero. Since our ar rival it has been sixty-eight degrees be low, and to-day it is only thirty-live de grees. or theroalM>ut*. lu the summer the temperature rises as high as ninety-five degrees Fahrenheit, but the nights are cold. There are many horses and cows in this vicinity. Toe natives, th Yakut**, cat horse meat, but the Rusaians eit beef and venison. Pota - toes, cabbage and a few other vegeta bles, a few berries, wheat and rye are grown in this vicinity. There are a few dieep and jioultry also. Tit* Mlurtlo I'aik IUMQ. Tliis spot in Colorado lias been called the hunter's paradise, from tlie abund ance of its game, and has been and will bo the resort of sportsmen for years to oome. But the Middle and North Barks are very fertile districts, and are largely made up of separate valleys bordering the streams, and separated from one another by long ridges, ranges of hills or mountains spurs that are covered with timber. The valleys are open meadow laud, with generally a good anil, which produoes an abundant growth of grass and othef vegetation. It lias proven an excellent stock growing region, and is sparsely occupied by bands of horses, herds of cattle, and flocks of sheep. The hills, ridges, and abundant timber afford good shelter, so that animals Buffer much less from oold than in level, open districts, where the wiud has unobstructed sweep. The altitude of the larger valloys ranges from 7,000 to 8,000 feet above sea level. Smaller valleys reach up 1,500 feet higher. Receut experiments prove that many crops of graiu and vegetables can be successfully grown up to 0,000 feet, at least, above sea level. While damaging frosts may occur im mediately along the large streams, the little nooks and valleys among the high h lis and mountains 1,000 feet above them are entirely exempt. Dairy pro ducts are especially excellent. Timothy and other cultivated grasses flourish wonderfully, and the consequence will be that it will in a few years become a district of little dairy farms, producing their owu hay, potatoes, turnips, Ac., and supplying the towns and iniuos of the State with the best butter, cheese, beef, and mutton in the world. Christian Collet**. There are in the United States accor ding to the latest report of the Commis sioner of E lucation, 364 colleges; of these 41 are Baptist, 53 Methodist, 36 Presbyterian, 17 Congregational and 10 Episcopalian. The total value of the property of these institutions is.iu round numbers, $80,000,000. The average value of college peoperty in the principal evangelical denominations is as follows: Methodists, $1.75 a member: Baptists, $3.82 a member; Presbyterians, $3.90 a member; Congregatioualists, $6.93; Episcopalians $13.57. Tue proportion of college student* to members is thus stated: Baptists, one to every 830 mem bers; Methodists, one to every 1,000 members; Presbyterians, one to every 600; Congregatioualists, one to every .413 Episcopalians, one to every 900. Exploding am Alligator. A hunter says that after having tramped many hours through the swamps of Southern Louisiana without finding tlio game he sought, lie seated himself upou a log to take a rest before turning his steps homeward. A few minutes after he was sealed he looked down upon the ground around him and was startled by the uppearance of a large alligator, which was lying upon its belly only a few feet distant, with its mouth wide open and its eyes closed. At first impulse he sprang to his feet and started to change his resting place to a safer distance. But he observed that the auimal remain ed motionless as though he had not ob served his sudden movement. He at once surmised thut the alligator must be asleep, and he resolved to have some fun with him. After bea Jug around the bushes iu order to reassure himself that the Minimal was really unconscious, he stealthily crept up by the side of the immense jaws aud poured a horn full of powder into his mouth. Then taking up a number of percussion caps from his hex, he placed them in opposite posi tions on the ends of his teeth. And the alligator continued to doze with his mouth wide open. "Then," says the hunter, "I walked to his other end, and alter preparing myself for emergency 1 just stuck a pin in liis tail. Instantly the great jaws went down with a crash, which wus followed by an explosion and a flash of fire, and from the volume of smoke which enveloped the head I saw pieces of flesh and jawbone flying übont among the trees. The great lx>dy first recoiled from the terrible force and then bounded forward against a tree. Then it floundered about in the most terrific convulsions, beating down small saplings and tearing up the ground. Thus it coutiuuod for a quarter of an hour, and then at last it became still. Then there was one last lash of the tail, a quiver through the frame,and my alli gator was dead." I'aTfl a CiKar?" When the Atlantic express train over the Central road reached Niles the other day a Detroit commercial traveler boar ded the train to find every seat taken. In the centre of one ooach one seat was occupied by two satchels and another by an overcoat, while the owner of the articles wan in the smoking car. The IJstroiter gathered up all the baggage and placed it on the wood -box and oc cupied the seats with his own,ami lie had just got comfortably seated when the late occupant returned from his smoke. He saw what had trauspired.aud he was white with anger, when he began: "Who moved my baggage:" "I did," was the reply. "Sir, I represent the wholesale crock ery house of Blank and Blank, of New- York, and I—" "I knew it—saw jour name on your baggage," interrupted the other, "Have you seen the papers to-day?" "No sir." "I thought not. Well,your house has failed for $288,000 —can't pay 20 oe its on the dollar—bad bust—no tune for you to swell over two seats—crowd ID somewhere or stand by the stove, and when we get to Detroit I'll help you to get a pass home. Sorry for you and all that, but our house is lated A 1. has a reserve of $75,000 in mortgages, and the survival of the fittest is a priucipal older than the hills. Have a cigar?" . m a i Hlutrd Glhks Oudiuot, tlie famous French paiute on glass, has been summoned to New York to mount the seventeen windows which he designed and painted for Wil - liam K. Yanderbilt's house. Sixteen, of the windows are of uniform size but the seventeenth fills the end of the dimug room and is twenty one feet high. It represents the meeting of Henry the Eighth and Francis the First in the Field of the Cloth of God. The magnificent picture is divided bv five horizontal and four vertical sashes, but its mtiity is well preserved. Henry is represented full face mounted on a great whi f e horse and Fruueis is seen in profile. Each king has a following of knights, squiies, pur suivants, lanoe, spear aud battleaxe men-at-arms, falcoLers, bowmen, whip pers-iu, jesters and amusing dwarfs. There are dogs for the field sports of their majesties, and splendid creatures they are. The ladies represented aro Queen Claude and Auue Boleyn and in all there are one hundred and thirty-three figures ou the big window. The other sixteen windows are decorated with ar morial bearings of eight English and eight French lords who were present at the meeting of their k ; ngs. The sub ject was chosen for the painter by Mrs. Vanderbilt. A Dead Copper. "I'm a dead copper to a country, and no mistake," said a seedy sidewalk lounger recently. "I went to Maine, and the ice crop < ailed; 1 went to Florida, and the frosts killed all the gardens and orchards; I went to Mississippi, and they had a flood; I went to California, and the people began to die with small-pox. Since 1 struck this State the Comstock mines have never paid a dividend, and if I go to Oregon I am willing to bet they will have a drought." "Now, see here," said a Comstock vet eran; "if 1 thought you were the Jonah or this camp I'd lake you down and drown you iu the Jacket swamp." Before he could be captured the ragced tourist had started —presumably for Ore gon. A German Stove. On going to bed that night we got enr first insight into the mysteries of Ger man stoves and beds. German rooms, are Jas all well-regulated foreign rooms are, sold in winter. In the corner of our room stood a china or delf-ware concern which the waiter was pleased to imform us was a stove. It was at least seven feet high, and two feet and a half square. The monotony of its white, glistening, glnzed exterior was relieved by an attempt to deaeive one into the belief that it was built of seperate bricks, while for ornament it bore around its top a border of impossible raised flow ers, aud half wav down one side an im possible raised angel, with outspread wings, surrounded by a wreath ot im possible raised flowers, in much the same style of art one sees on the old-day tea pots in the familiar illustration of "Re becca at the Well." Well, the waiter opened a polished door of sheet brass on one side of this monolith, about a foot from the floor, aud exposed an iron door, bearing a peg, from which peg de pended a key. With the key he unlock ed this second door and brought to view a third door of barred iron. He opened the third door aud we gazed into a little chamber about a foot square Into this chamlier he put a piece of paper, a small handful of wood and aud a still smaller handful of coal. He touched off the paper, closed the the inner door, and proceeded to open the windows, for that stove smoked most infernally. We went down stairs until the htove had gotten through with its smoke When we went up again the waiter had shut all three door* not forgetting the middle one,and hail left that little smothered handful of coals to warm up that great stove aud our great room. The Germans claim, that they get a maximum amount of heat out of these stoves with the expen diture of a minimum amount of fuel.and that there is no danger of fire from them -economy aud safety, two Germau characteristics. I can vouch for the miiiimun amount of fuel, but ou the questien of heat I am inexorably ailent. They must be safe, for it is a physical impossibility for a little, smothered fire to get out of a stove with solid walls half a foot thick aud defend 1 by three doors, one of them locked and the key on the outside. Food for Infant* aui Invalids. It may be questioned whether there is any subject which comes more closely home to the people of all chisses than the character of the toxl supplies spec ially provided for iufaute and invalids. The increasing demand for this class of preparations has led to a great num ber and variety of such competitors for public favor. Put up iu ornamental boxes, they appear on the counters of every grocer and in the show cases of every apothecary shop; and not unfre queutly their acual value is in inverse ratio to the pretentiousness of the pack age and the price. As a rule, purchasers are obliged to tak9 the virtue of such articles upon tru&t, few having the means or the know ledge requisite for au analysis, micro scopic or chemical, ot the preparations which they are advised to trv, perhaps by the family phjfsiciau, ana yet a mis take in this connection may be fatal. For all young infants, ami for adults in many cases of sickness, starch food is injurious; sometimes iu beiug a source of iutestinal irritation, sometimes, as in the oase of very young children, in fur uishing a semblance of ailment witliont the reality, such ohildren being as una ble to digest and assimilate starch as gaud. Henee the usual olaim with re spect to prepared foods of the cereal class is that they are free from or con tain very little si arch, while they are rich in gluten ami other food elements c pable of nourishing the sick and the young. Giyeerlue in Brer. The following method of quantitative ly testing for glycerine in beer may bo found useful; The beer is mixed with powdered slaked lime and an equal bulk of fine quartz sand, and evaporated to a paste ou the water bath. When cold, the residue form a hard mass, which is pul verized and extracted with 80 to 100 c. c. of a mixture of equal volumes of absolute alcohol and ether in a small stoppered flask. On allowing the extract to evap orate, the glycerine is obtained free from sugar. If two drops of it are put in a dry test tube with two drops of phenol (previously liquefied), and the same quantity of sulphurio acid, and heated very cautiously over the flame, but so as to reach 120 deg. the formation of a sol id brownish-yellow mass is perceived. When cold a little water is added and a few drops of ammonia, when the brown ish- yellow solid dissolves with a splend id carmiue red color. The detection and estimation of gly cerine aud the other bye products of fermentation in beer etc., would teud to throw further light on what is at present very obscure. Good taste rejeots excessive nicety; It treats little things as lit.tle things and is not hurt by them. The hardest rotk is made of the soft est mud. Don't allow the sentiment of habit to harden into vice. The Mugnlfleenee of Neio. It was to Nero that Tacitus applied the expression, incrcdibilium cupitor. What he not only desired but achieved in the incredible in Roman history had he not already shown what revolting atrocities may be conceived by a dis - eased imagination and executed by ir responsible power. After the burning of the city he gratified his taste, in en tire disregard of the proprietors in re building it. Re at once appropriated a number of the sites and a large por tion of the public grounds for his new palace. The porticoes, with their ranks and columns, were a mile long. The vestibule was large enough to contain that colossal statue of him, in silver and gold, one hundred and twenty feet high, from which the Colosseum got its name, The interior, was gilded throughout,and adorned with ivory and mother-of-pearl. The ceilings of the dining-rooms were formed of movable tablets of ivory, which shed flowers and perfumes on the com pany; the principal saloon had a dome which, moving day and night, imitated the movements of the celestial bodies. When this palace was finished he ex claimed—"At last 1 am lodged like a man." His diadem was valued at half a million. His dresses, which he never wore twice, were stiff with embroidery And gold. He fished with purple lines and hooks of gold. He never traveled with less than a thousand carriages. The muliS were shod with silver, the muleteers clothed with the finest wool, and the attendants wore bracelets and necklaces of gold. Fiye hundred she asses followed his wife Foppcea in her progress, to supply rniik for her bath. He was fond of figuring in the circus as a charioteer, and in the theatre as a singer and actor. He prided himself on being an artist, and when his possible deposition was hinted to him, he said that artists could never be in want. There was not a vice to which he was not given, nor a crime whioti he did not commit. Yet the world, exclaims Sue tonius, endured this monster for four teen years, and he was popular with the multitude, who were puzzled by his magnificence and mistook his senseless profusion for liberality. On the anni versary of his death, during many years, they crowded to cover his tomb with flowers. The Tower of Bologna. Four suioidea during the present oen tury have been committed at Bolognabj jumping from the top of .the famous leaning tower, Asiuelli, the climbing of which involves a toilsome journey up more than 400 worn and daaty stairs. The first case occured in 1833, when a shoemaker, while sitting astride one of the battlement, drauk a flask of wine as he was siug'ng, and then allowed him self to fail backward into space. The second was in 1874, a young man, aged 43, allowed himself to fall, with a hand kerchief tied round his eyes, leaving his coat, hat, sleeve cuffs, aid two letters behind him. The third happened two ye are later; an old man went with his boy nephew, and waile the boy was obeying his directions to write the word "infamy on the wall, threw himself over the battlement The fourth suicide has just takeu place. A young man, who had failed in a certain examination, as cended the Cower with the keeper, light ed a cigarette, and while the keeper was showing him the bell, jumped off. Two ladies and gentlemen cam a up just after he hail jumped and found that the keep er had fainted from fright Libert*, Africa Las as many square miles of territory as the United States and South America. Liberia has a sea-ccast of 600 miles, extent 200 miles inland, and had from 18,000 to 20,000 A nerican Liber lans, who governed about 1,500 000 na tives. Because of the elimate Liberia was no place for a white man, yet its mortality had never equaled that of Jamestown or Plymouth, Mr. Morris in a recent lecture, exhibited a large and interesting collection of Liberian pro ducts, of whioh, he said, none were more vaulable than coffee. In a pecun iary sense ooflee was Liberia's backbone. Coffee grew all over the coun ry. All the Lilieriaus had to do was to tickle the soil with a hoe and it fairly laughed with a harvest. The lecturer shewed specimens of Liberian chocolate, cayenne pepper, spices of all kinds, lime juice, cotton, &c. Indigo plauts, he said, grew as thick in Liberia as the huckleberry bushes in New Jersey. Atrica's great product, however, was palm-oil. Li beria possessed one remarkable thing, a mountain of natural steel ore, believed to be the only instance of natural steel ore in the world. To acquire a few tongues is the task of a few j ears; but to be eloquent in one is the labor of a life time. The proper way to check slander is to despise it; attempt to overtake and re lute it, and it will outrun you, It is woud rful to note the number of men who see the value of a thing after it is beyond their reach. Brair.s cannot be measured by the size of the head, nor eloquence by the extent of the mouth. Each man has an aptitude born with him to do easily some feat impossible to any other. WO 22.