A Jitrnim Ere Song. Far off T lor* is lying ; hear it not ye xephyra, Scarcely fff.ro I breaths my thought, for shou 1 ff ye hea," it Ye would haste to woo h.r*~ehc is only mine. How fair ahs I* t Ye birds, hoar not, for awiftly Would ye fly to her, see her whom I may eee net: Ye would ring to her for * horn my lyre i* mute j IyO, whore she lie*! No, no, start uot no hastily Yo flowers—ah.uild ye know where my lore ie lying Ye would go mad with J< eloney, grow wen end die. She sleep*. Oh, cease. you amonreua clouds, whet, would you Rota through the trembling eir to And end lore her ? 1 dere not breathe her name mine ia ah* only. Maud Midler, Manff Muller on a summer's day Raited the meadow, with hay. Beucath her torn hat glowed the wealth Of simple beauty and rustic health. Ringing, ahe wrought, and her merry glee The mooh-hird echoed from his tree. But. when she glanced to the for oft town, White from ita hill-slope looking down, Tlie sweet song died, and a vagne unrest And a nameless longing tilled her breast A wish, sin hardly dare to own. For something better ihan the had known. The Judge rod* slowly down the lan*, Sni.sulung his horse's chestnut mane. He drew his bridle in the shade Of the apple-tree, to grv-ei the maid. And ask a draught from the spring that flowed Through the tuosdow, across the road. She stoop.nl where the cisil spring bubbled p. And 6lied for luni her suial! tin cup. And blushed as she gave it, looking down On her feet so bare, ami hor tattered gowu. "Thanks I" said the Judge, "a sweeter draught From a foirer hand was never .piaffed." He spoke of the grass and flow era and trees, Of the singing birds and hnmmitig U-,- ; Then h' talked of the haying, and won da red, whether The cloud in the west would bring foul weather. And Mand forgot her hriar-torn gown, And her graceful ankles hare and tirvwn ; And listened, while a pleased surprise Looked forth from her long-la shed hacel ayes. At last, like one who for delay Seek* a vain excuse, he rode away. Maud Mulier looked ami sighed : "Ah, me! Tha; I the Judge"* hnde might be! •' Ho would dresa me op in silks so flue, And praise and toast me at his wine. " My father should wear a broadcloth cuat; -My brother should sail a painted boat. '* I'd dress my mother so grand and gar, And the baby should hare a new toy each day. '* And 1 feed the hungry and clothe the poor, And all should bless me who left my door." The Judge looked hack as he climbed the hill And saw Maud Mulier standing still. •' A form more fair, and a face more tweet, Ne'er hath it been my lot to meet. " And her modest answer and graceful atr Show her wise aud good as she is fair. " Would she were mine, and I to-day Like her, a harvester of hay ; " No doubtful balance of rights and wrongs. Nor weary lawyers with endless tongues. " But low of cattle and song of birds. And health and quiet and loving words." But he thought of bis sisters proud and cold, And his mother vain of her rank and gold. So, dosing his heart, the Judge rode on, And Mand was left in the field alone. Bnt the lawyer smiled that afternoon. When he hummed in court an old love-tune; And the young girl mused beside the well. Till the rain on the unrated clover fell. He wedded a wife of the richest dower, *ho lived for fashion as he for power. Yet oft in his marble hearth's bright glow. He watched a picture come and go ; And sweet Maud Mailer's hasel eyes Lacked out in their innocent surprise. Oft when the wine in his glass was red, He longed for the wayaide well instead ; And closed his eyes on his garnished roams. To dream of meadows and clover blooms. And the proud man sighed, with a secret pain : "Ah. that I were free again 1 " Free as when I rode that day Where the barefoot maiden raked the hay." Bite wedded a mac unlearned and poor. And many children played round her door. But care and sorrow, and child lirth pain. Left their traces on heart and brain. And oft, when the summer son shone hot On the new mown bay in the meadow lot. Anel she heard the little spring-brook fall Over the roadside through the wall. In the shade of the apple-tree again She saw a driver draw his rein; And ganng down with timid grace, She felt his pleased eye read her free. Sometimes her narrow, kitchen walls Stretched far away into stately halla : The weary wheel to a spinner turned. The tallow candle an astral horned. And for him who sat by the chimney fire Dozing and grumbling o'er his pipe and mug. A manly form at her side she saw, And joy was dnty and love was law. Then she took up her burden of life again Saying only, "It might have been." Alas for maiden, alas for Judge. For rich repiner and household drudge! God pity them both! and pity us all, Who vainly dreams of youth recall. For of all sad words of tongne or pen. The saddst are these : "It might have been!"* Ah, well! for us all some sweet hope lies beeply buried from human eyes, And in the hereafter, angels may Itofl the stone from its grave away. A HRF.AT OPERATION*. " Say, John.—didn't that woman go away crying I" " She waymffiing a bit," answered John Gleddin slipping around from behind his counter. •'lshould call it crying,' 1 said George Autin, the first speaker. " What was if?" " Why—fact is, old fellow, sbo pawned a brooch here a few weeks ago, and just now she wanted to redeem it; but the time was mure than up, and I couldn't do it." "Couldn't do it ? Why not V "Why—bless your soul! The brooch was pearl* and garnet in one of the finest settings I ever saw— tbe*pcaris pure orien tal, and th'e garnet like a crimson ruby." "And how much bad you advanced on it 7" " Ten dollars." " And it was worth—" " Fifty, at least." " And very likely, it was a keepsake." •' So she said. But it isn't safe to be lieve the stories of the pcor creatures that come to pawn jewelry. She had ber needs and I Lave my rule*. She knew the rules before she left the brooch, and abe had no business to come oack for it after the time was up." John Gleddin and George Austin were cousins. George's mother had been a sis ter to John's father; but the mother and the father were both dtad, and John and cieorge were orphans. George had learned the printer's trade, and was at present en gaged upon a daily paper, while John bad worked his way into a pawn-broker's of fice; and, though only five-and-twenty, had learned all the tricks of trade, that caD cxtoi t money from the poor and the needy. But John Gleddin did not do bus iness under his own name. The man be fore him had used the name of "Joshua Murr," and this same name John used. " JOSHUA SHJBB" appeared beneath the three golden balls over the door; and it was also upon the business cards; and fur thermore, all his receipts and pawntickets John signed "/. &Yu>r." "I don't know, John,"said George who was his cousin's junior by two years, after a season of reflection, " but I think I would rather plod on at my type-case than be* in your business." ♦'Pshaw! You're soft-headed. I tell FRED. KURTZ, Editor ami Proprietor VOL. V. vou, George, 1 em making money. You have no idea of the profit." " FW instance," said George, " vou have made isrliap* twenty dollar* oi; that brooch," M Ave, —thirty." "Well, I Wouldn't have the weigh b of that poor woman's cobs and tears ou my conscience lor ten times the amount. So yon can so* just ho% I led." " Pshaw I" Shortly afterward George Austin went away to the printing• other and as it \*a well into the evening John made prt>jara tb>n for closing up. He bad put moat of bis jew elry into the *a'e w hen the dour ol his office was opened, and an elderly gen tleniau entered—a pKtl looking man he was, and very leapretahly dressed, though his garb w as much worn, and considerably soiled, aud swelled strongly ol *alt water. "Is the proprietor in asked the gen tlemen. John nodded assent. " Mr. Slurr, I think I" John rvp>ated his asscntiug nod. " I am caught in a tight place," said the c< tit lonian with a grim ami ghastly smile, | as though a jwwnhrokci'g shop was about the IIKVNI uncomfortable place, he couhl hare selected in which to escape from his tightness. " 1 have just landed here in | your city, ami discover that mv lugvagc, bv the most ridiculous oversight mi uiv tut, has gone on to New York. In Lou | don I took a bill f exchange ou Boston, and not only that, but a few* five and ten lound mitts on the Bank of Knglaml, which had with me, are by this time in the dis tant metropolis. So lam forced (another grim, ghastly -mitt to have recourse to an establishment where credit may be laid upon a tcady collateral.'' John lileddntßPWed politely, and said he would le happy to lie of service, i Then the gentleman tek from his pock et a morrocco ease upon opening which ho exposed a gold watch. John took the watch, and tunics! to the gas jet, aud upon examining it, he found it to !<• a master piece ol one ot the meat rslsbrated Swiss makers—a stem winder. full ruby j - welled, of most etijutitt a4/mstmtal aud tiuish. He knew that the first anst of that watch ha I been not lees than thraa hundred dol lars in gold. " How much did raw want on this f" he asked returning the watch to the case. *' I waut enough to get me safely to New York." John started off upon the many and ex treme risks of Lis Irtudne**; but the gen tleman stopped him abruptly. " I ask you to run no ri-V on my ac count. I do not propose to sell the watch. I only wish to leave-t with you a- securi ty f<>r a very -tnall *\m. I have another just like it,—l bought theni as present* for two friends of mine, and would not sell thetu far ten times their value. Fifty dollars will answer." John tried to rough down the idea of advancing so much, but the cough stuck in bis throat. " For how long do you want the fiftv dollars f" " For—say—two weeks,* 1 Never mind the various dodges attend ing the transaction on the part of the bro ker. Suffice it to say that he at length counted out fifty dollars to his rustonirt aud took the watch; and the ,l trade,' 1 as he termed It, stood thus! at any time within two weeks the gentlemen eottld re deem the watch upon the payment of sixtv dollars. '* Rather steep interest,"said the elderly gentlemen, with a smile far more grim and severe than any which had preceded it. John would have again explained the enorxous risks of his business, but the customer would not listen. " What name/ 11 said John, holding his pen over bis entry-hook. " But it down Simon Smith*, it"you must have a name." So John |>ut it down, and then he put the watch away, and the customer depar ted with the fifty dollars. After the roan had gone John Gleddm took out the watch and looked it it again. Hi* eyes sparkled eagerly. Suppo-e any thing should happen to prevent the prompt redemption of the valuable pledge? The thought thrilled him through and through. The days passed,—and a week passed. The days passed again, and another week had sped by. At length the elderly gentleman re turned, and a*ked for his watch. " What name T'a*ked John professing to have forgotten. " Snihbs— Simon Suilbt." " Ah, ye. I remember. I*t roc see.'' —And be looked over his hook.— *• Really, Mr. Snibbs, von mint have made a mis take. I have no watch ol yours." * How, sir," cried the customer in blank amaxetnent. " Did I not leave with you a valuable gold watch as security for a cer tain sum which I borrowed of youf" John smiled blandly. " Not exactly as you put it, Mr. Snibbs. If j in will refresh your memory, you will recollect that I bought Ihe watch,—that for value received, you gave me a regular bill of sale, — with the proviso, however, that if, within two week* from the date thereof, you should pay to me the sum of sixty dollars in current fund*, the watch should become again your proper!v. The two weeks expired yesterday, sir!" " But—sir 1 Will you— John put up bis hand reprovingly. " There is no need of going into a pa-eion, my dear sir, you see just how the matter stands." From a tiwering rage. the old man de scended to argument and explanation. He told bow he had been detained in New Yotk hv an unavoidable accident, and how he had embraced the first possible oppor tunity to call for his watch. *' I had not worried much," he said, be came I had not thought that any man could he consumately mean and cold bloodedly heartless and vile a* to rob me upon such a pretext." At thi'John waxed wroth, and ordered the man to leave bis office. And the old gentleman, evidently fear ing that he should fie led to the commission of some foolish outrage if he remained longer withfti the villainous influence clo*ed his liptightly together, and went away. On the afternoon of that very day, John Gleddin Bold the watch to ar. agent of a Philadelphia house for two hundred and seventy five dollars. "Hiyah?" he cried, as George Austin dropped in during the evening. Plod on at your type case, old fellow, plod on!" "What's up, John?" " The greatest operation 1 ever made, — two hundred and twenty-five dollars in pocket at a single turn of the die -inter est on fifty dollars for two weeks ? What d'ye think of that?" "If money were man's chief end," said George soberly,—"if money were the sole source of happiness,—f should say you were on the road. But you know my sen timents, and we won't argue the point. And, besides, we haven't time, f came to let you knpw that Uncle Moses has got home.'' " Uncle Moses!" cried John, clapping L M hands. "Yes. He Las but just arrived, and called on me this altern sui. He wants you aul I to come and see hiiu at the Tre mont this evening." " (If course we'll go and see him," said John -tarling at once to put away his val uable-, •' The old fellow inust be rich as mud, and you and I are bis only relatives." " He is certainly rich," responded George quietly, " and we are his only near rela tives; but I don't think of that. I only remember how 1 used to love bim in the old days, when my mother was alive and be used to cheer and comfort her, and used to play with me under the great tree#." THE CENTRE REPORTER. •• And 1 remember." added John, " how lie used to till me that I ought to huve tnv ear* boxed U cause I robbed bird's nests, and itele apple* ami peaehnw frnii the neighliors' g-ml on*. Hut (hat was a lung time ago. I have forgiven hiiu for all that. 1 say George, if he should take a faUtcV t" us, we're ill luck, ain't we f \ oil won t ->a\ an\ thing about aliOHl " " A limit w hat ?" "1 w a- going to svv about my business; but never mind. (July those who have been behind the socnos know the crooks aud t urns.'' '■ You nee.! not tear than 1 shall say anything to your disadvantage, John. You'll tind I nole Mow* just one of the jolhest and kindest hearted men you ever aw." And s John had locked his sale, and finished his todet, the two cousins ot I or lb. I ncleMosca (ileddin had In-en brother to John's lather audio Gootge's mother, and tor many years he had beeu away in Europe engaged in responsible agencies lor American houses ; an I it was known tha* ho had sum-scd a fortune, lie had war ties! iu youth ; but his wife had died leaving uo children, and he had never mar ried again ; tha the expectant nephews were not without foundation. At length the young moll reached the hotel, aud a, George had IKS-II there before he led the w ay. " l':K-le Alost--," he -sub upon entering the room where a genial faced, smiling, portly, elderly geutlciuan aro-e to receive him, " this is John.—John, this is Lucie Mo* 'i '<>t Slit?" "0," cried tieorge, thinking that By inc aov ident I'Dele M>>es might have-ceii John's face lieiieath the pawn broker's sign, '* that is the name of the man who was in business before him.'* "And,* 1 added I'nele Moses severely, "if I mistake not, it is the name under which he now does buslueas for himself.' 1 John Gleddin could not deny It, Ibr he saw, in his I nelc Moses, the nun from whom he had so meanly taken the valua able watch, lie tiled to say something, hut the word-choked hllU ; and he stood like a whipped car lietore his relative. Fi nally he mustered up courage to a-k the old man to forgive him. "1 in-.y forgive you,'' answered t'nele Moses, "out 1 ean nt take you into my confidence ju-t yet. 1 think you hud het ter go home ami sleep U|>n it. let us both sleep upon it. I would rather not talk of it now. The wound is tun fresh. 1 * John lileddin was no more anxious to stop than hi* uncle was to detain him; ami without further words he took hisde part ore. < Incc more at the office he thought of the watch he had sold, aud of the two hundred and twenty-five dollars profit be had made: ami the conviction was furred Upon him that his great operation wis likely to prove a very heavy settler upon his greater expectation. And so it ultimately proved, t ncle Moses Could not takr the dlb'mst, un scrupulous nephew to hia confidence, nor to tils lute ; nor could John muster the im pudence to claim the lender regard* of one whom be hail so meanly and so unmitiga ted ly wronged and aiiu-ed. The result was that the true-Siearted printer ere long left his tr|>e setting to assume the wealth which I oele Mows deemed him worthy and wcH qualified to enjoy. What the pawn-broker may gain in tfnie we cannot -ay ; but if he ever regains the confidence he has hxt. it will be when he has shown by his work* that he regards truth and honor a- of more value than the sordid profits of such operations as hate hereto fore suited hfs hands.— tsiiqtr. Fifiuxi. ronSroxpßfli —The sponge fish- i erv is actively carried on during De j eerabtr, January, and February, fur at ; other the place* where the sponge exist* are overgrown with se.nw eed*. The •tonus during November and December! destroy and sweep away the thick marine vegetation and leave the sponges exposed j to view. The collection of sponges is not i very productive in summer, twit is con i fined t> the operation* carried on with diving apparatus which can only be nsed on rocky and firm bottomed places, or to j the success of native fishermen who wade along the shores, and feel for sponges with ; their fe**t among the masse* of seaweed. The sponge* thus collected by the Arabs are also of inferior quality, owing to the small depth ol water in which they have grown. Sponges are either obtained by spearing with a trident, diving with or without the nssistenee of an apparatus, and by dredging with a machine some- j what similar to an oyster dredge. The Arab fishermen, principally native* of Marknah and .lerhah, employ boats railed sandals, manned by four or seven |>er*onr, one of whom only is the har|>noner or spearman, while the others "manage, the sails, dec. The depth of the sea in which the Arabs fish is from fifteen feet to thirty five feet. Although the Greek* are most expert diver-, the majority of them use the spear. They employ small and light bonts, just sufficient to carry a spearman and an oarsman. The boat is rowed gently along, while the spearman searches the bottom of the sea by means of a tin tube of fourteen inches in diameter by nineteen inches in length, at one end of which is placed a thick sheet of glass This tnbe is slightly immersed in the water and en ables the fisherman to view the Imttom nndistured by the oscilationa of the sur face. The spear* used by the Greeks are shorter than those employed by the na tives and Sicilians, but with wonderful adroitness tbey are enabled to reach the sponges covered by sixty feet of water. They hold in their hands from three to four spears, and dart them so quickly and with sncli precision, one after the other, that before the first has had time to dis appear under the surface the second strikes its tipper extremity, and thus gives it additional impetus to reach the sponge aimed at. A new s|>onge is repro duced within a year whenever one has been removed. BK CAHKFV —The fatal RESULT of taking an overdone of hydrate of chloral, in the case of the late Mr. Jacob Pecare, a law yer of New York city, should act AH a warning to physician* not to permit pa tients to have such a deadly drug within reach daring moments* of great pain. Several instances nre on record in which death ha* occurred from oversights of a similar nature. The direct effect of hy drate of chloral, even when taken in small quantities, is to produce a sort of reckless aess as to consequences, which no effort of will seems able to control. Particular ly has this heen noticed in the treatment of neuralgic patients. There is renlly no reason why the sale of this drng should not be subject to the same restrictions as arsenic or strychnine; for although it is not likely to be used to so great an extent as a tneans of committing suicide, it is altogether too dangerous to be obtainable without the order of a regular medical man. THE IKON FAMlNE. —Notwithstanding immense mines and facilities for work ing them, the production is infinitely less than the demand. It requires fully one-half of all the American iron pro duced to build our railroads and keep them in repair. The United States has now 65,000 miles of completed railroads. There is one thing that can always be found—and that's fault CENTRE HALL. CENTRE CO., I'.V,, FRIDAY, Jl LY 12, 1872. Tlir lirdrr of ll ltuftnlo. Few person* probably know how rapidly the American bison ia disappearing from the Western plains. At one time it is said they were to ho # l\nind everywhere West of l-nke Champlain and the IGnlsou River, but for many y*ars they have been extinct east of the Mississippi River. The war of destruction, however, appears to go on more bravely iu proportion as the* are driven into narrower and narrow er limits, ami it is not unlikely that the late of (he European bison, which once abounded in the woody wilderness of (kriuiny, north ern tiau! and neighboring parts of the Con tinent, hut which is now to lie found alone and rarely in the forests of Lithuania, will soon be theirs. Some idea of the extent of this ruthless daughter may he formed from the fact that twenty-flve thousand bison were killed durum the mouth of May south of the Kan sas Hlui I'nellic Railroad tor the sake of tlieit lode* alone, W bieh are sold at the paltry price of $- each on delivery for shipment to the eastern market*. Add to tilts the thousand --a small estimate shot by tour- | ist* ami killed by the Indian* to supply hirat to the people <>ll the frontier, aud w* have a sum total of thirty thousand a* the victim* for a single month. If the bi*ecll correspondent*. It is doubtful, however, whether e*en a royal ' freccdent ran justify this kind ol *O-called luntiug. However this may be in the ; Eastern fttatiu. tiie following paragraph j from the letter of nu army oflirer shows that in tiie Western States this kind Wt •' *| Die dodo: "' To hrt in shooting ' a buffala than in shooting an ox, nor *0 much danger a* there is in hunting Texas 1' ttory of an English Aristocrat. The Marqi i* of Huntington is HOD of' the Duke of Devonshire, one of the richest oLa>ur nobl< t. Thev wv that thr Duke allowed hi-> imn. when the latter wns jet under IUU-, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars a y< or lis College iHK-k't-money. The Marquis developed early s fine arishirrat 10 taste for pleasure, nnd for acquaintance of tb>'o|>porilt' sex. To ain him from these occupations he nu mrutr a tnetnher of th' ttovernnn ut, and 1 believe that while playing at statesmanship he haa really sown his wild oat* ; indeed, he is nosr nearly fortv years old. The story i, that in a department of which at one time he was chief, the employes petitioned for in crease of pay. The Marquis, who is very good-naturrd, received • deputation and heard their complaint*. He inquin d the amount of each man's Kalnry. lie ' counted it over mentally, so many linn dnsls n year, and estimated the cost of so mnnv |iirs of shea's, so many cigars, so many Itonqnetn, etc., in the season, lie saw that the thing really conld not be done for the money. The exprension that began nooverspread his face encour aged one of the deputation to judi whether Ids lordship did not think it hard for n man to have to li\e and sup port a wife nnd children on such an allowam-e. The Marquis starbsl and looked puflslcd, nnd the <|uestiou w is re pea ted. "flood Heavens," exclaimed the Marquis, "you don't mean to say that you live on your salaries ? ' A new light had broken in uiion him. He had thought lie was addressing the scions of wealthy families, who complained that their official stipend would not i|ioot their requirement* in gloves and opera tickets. He learned iu utter ninar.ement that they actually were rcsjiectable and educnt-A Englishmen in the public ser vice, who were eoinpelled to live on their weekly pay.— London lstt- r. A JEWISH FRITH VAL. —The Jewish fes tival of Bhatraoth, the Feast of" Weeks, ia a noted season among the Isrcalitcs. All the synagogues and public places of worship are decorated with flowers, in accordance with the usual custom. Orig inally this watt a festival of thanksgiv ing for the abundance of harvest, which lasted seven weeks and closed at this time, ami, therefore, also called the feast of firstlings,'' lias lost its origniil Biblical character, but is now enhanced by being regarded as the memorial dny of the revelation on Kinni. Though the public confirmation of Jewish children on Klinbnoth is of recent growth, and has yet been instituted by the reform school, yet its impreasivencM and lust ing influence on the youiig mind has been go terally recognized. F.ARI.T IIATMAKI.NO.-—••Rural," of tli Chicago Tribune , ya there ait? at least two reasons for cutting hay early, I M-I ore the seed has matured so a* to gcrminstr, for then we have the manure lull of grass seed, whirh is not always pleasant, and the hay will lie lens nutritious. We may not get a* many pounds of liny to the acre, but ttiis is more tlinn made up in quality. Then the roots have not spent all their forces, and an altcr-growth springs up to protect the grnas-rools from lieing dried up by ex posure to the sun and wind. Many mead ows are spoiled in this way. The afb-r - gives a large amount of antumn pasturage that is most desirable. PUBLIC DEBTS. —The public debt of the United States is about three-fifths that of Great Britain, jet the two nations paj about the same amount of interest. The receipts of the United State* thr last fiscal year were $3H3,000,000 ; those of Great llritnin in the same time $572,- 705,000; a surplus of Bttl ,ooo,ooo— six times that of Great Britain. The U. S. government annually costs $100,500,000 beyond Interest charges, Great Britain's costs $224,600,000. All the pensions of the British government amount to $5,- 000,000 ; U. S. pension accounts foots up $34,000,000. Josh Billings says there seems to he four styles of mind: First, theui who knows it's so; second, them who knows it ain't so; third, them who split the dif ference and guess at it; fourth, them who don't oare which way it is. The Texas Cattle Rambus. I had an o]i|MM°tUuity to study a little i the man Dors and customs of the Texas I cuttle drivers, say-a letter writer. They f do everything >m horseback ; and tin , Inxao - or rinhi, UN it is more commonly I culled hero, lasso being jirojK-rlr a verb, I I tind. is a sort of thud arm to tiicui. it i uaa desired to single out u half dogeu horm-N from u herd of 25 or .'hi eoutiued ill u sta'd -yard. So the horses were let i; out of the yard, cornered by two herad , men in a fetus- cornet, and then one man, living Ilia fljvisoiitlio horse lie wanted, dashed into the herd, (lung Ins ri.ihi, and unfailingly secured the jiri/.e. In | j one ease, the horite, uacd probably to the o|ierution for these animals were , broken—saw when In- was ''wanted," and | actually stood still to la- caught. A vae qucro cstuo in, after a night's watch over cattle, slipped off his horse at the door, tied the atiimul. and iu u minute was fast asleep, standing up and leaning hi* head on the Huddle. His nap lasted half au hour, and wu* not hrokeu apparently by the noise about lnm. A horse not thoroughly broken hud nttaehed to its headstall a broad leather hand ; when the owner wanted to mount, lie *lip|*-d this band over the horse's eye*, ami rctnovi <1 it all soon aa he w as securely HI the saddle The cattle range 1* divided into r.iuehos, each of which has a fore man, responsible to the proprietor for the cattle on the place. Theae men re j ccive, i am told, fro in 51,200 to sl,Hot) l*-r annum, au be miking strong effort* to iiuivert the Jew* to (jiriffmnttv- On I Sunday, the nth of May, aeeortling to the IST >nt llcTti ii, a party of drunken (Greek* s , *t*.'l 111*111 a |*>or |Miish Jew, ill an obscure pari of Oalwta. smeared hi* Ward am! hair with tar, mid act fire jto tliem, luthcting cruel mid prolwbly fatal Injuries UIHIU their victim. At Smyrna there lius been a display of (.'hristianity on ail uuwonta*n the principle of puttiugsandinsiigiur. (in MS HTORAOE.—Some idea of the magnitude of our trnde in grain may lie gathered from the following figures, rep resenting the capacity for grain storage ia some of the most important cities. I'rior to the fire, Chicago had aevcnleen granaries, with an aggregate capacity of 11,680,000 bushels. This uumticr ha* I wen reduced by the tire to eleven establishments, with facilities for elevat ing and storing al>out 8,580,000 bushels. Milwaukee has fifteen elevators, one, the largest in the world holds 1,700,000 bushels. Buffalo has thirty one gran aries, capable of holding 7.416,000 bushels. Brooklyn, representing the jmrt of New York, lins at its Atlantic docks and elsewhere, a storage capacity for 12,760,000 bushels. The foreign ex pert of flour and grain from the |*>rt of New York for the four years from 1867 to 1870 inclusive, amounted to 5,711,409 barrels, a sufficient quantity to sustaiu for a year a population of more than 18,000*000 persons, ami if spread to the depth of one fot it would cover more than 2,600 acres. Cnt'Ei. Son. —A ease reported in Bir mingham (England) papers says that one Histin was brought Iefore a magistrate in that city, charged with habitual drunkenness and treating bis mother— who supported him, u* well as herself, by her lainir—with such violence as to eti danger her life. On the particular occa ensiou complained of ho had cotne homo furious with drink, and after threatening to shoot her and to ruu In r through with a knife, hud stabbed her in ihe arm, and thrown her into the flm The mngistratc sentenced linn to thr.w months' imprisonment only for this rough recreation. Tiir. WOMAN SLACOIITXR. —We knew n man oueo, (he lives yet: we hope he will lead this paragraph) who prayed night and morning, preached on Sundays, and was a rich farmer besides. His wife milked the cows in all sorts of weather, cut most of Ihe wood, built the fires, churned and "economized," and died.ea into play. 1 have taken an annual, oaiottuoi, paralyael by beat, apparently dying, ami plung.d it into a bucket ol void water. The temperature of tiie aulferer at once rapidly tell until it reached the normal point, and just in proportion that of the water in the bucket rose. As the animal cooled, it respiration became inure regu lar, the unsteady whirr of the heart was sttiled, by and by the eytlids were lifted and out from the glassy eye came the beams of new life. If the (teriod of uu- ColiseiotisUeM had been short, the ani mal was in a few hours apparently as well as ever; if long the auimal would recover sutKciently to recognize its sur roundings and to atruggie for release but when allowed to escape, the para lyzed limb* and the slow imperlect pro gression indicated the profound injury j the nervous system had received, and iu a few hours the animal would be dead. The lessons of these experiments ; are too plain to be overlooked. What 1m er is to be done in this disease i to lie done quickly. Clinical as well as experimental observation enforces this doctrine. There should in such canes, iie no waiting for the doctor. The rem- I ody is so simple, the death so imminent that the g.|ien his shirt bosom, am) lay the hand u|Kn hit cheat; if the skin be cool, you may re-t assured that, whatever may be the trouble, it is nut sunstroke. If, on the contrary, the skin be burning hot, the case is certainly sunstroke, and no time should le lost. The patient must he car ried to the nearest pnmp or hydrant, strip|>ed to his waist, and bucketful! alter bucketful] of cold water be dashed over him uutil consciousness liegius to return, or the intense heat of the surface decided ly abates.— Itr. If 9&iim The Tt li gruph When the trie-graph lirtl invriitfd, Mr. I'omat'll *oufht an interne* with Mr. lit nuetl of the Herald a* I wilicited hi at tention. He #i< met by the ttry (tank atotement fiom Mr. iknroett that be up(nM('(l t the aKWMuI the telegraph. In Mr. Bennett'*own }Jf, h '•hail at great ri|niii nlabliilinl lu< rl|imM < k nucb manner that brciuld teat all ( hi* rivala. ami if Ihe trl-graph w ere once aueceaalolljr <-#tablihed he would !fe hit advantage.' Within two year*. Mr. Cornell hd the proud #ati#lartion id (k-ntom.li at ing to Mr. lieiroelt th value of thi then new mode ol transmitung imporUtot new*, I lining tin year 1f45. mainly by the rtfort* of l'beo .lore 8. Faxtoo and bit aaanciatr-a id ( tiea, a roth pray DM organised for building a l"legßi|d! line betnem New York and llutialo. The aeetion Iwtwi-. n New York and Albany wa# built under the wuprrln tendency ol Mr. Cornell, and wa# opened lor btiai ne*a at the end of 1 Ml'.. ♦ •••v. Young'# annual me-ag wa tran#- mittcl to the la-nUture the fir#l Tue day of January, IMT, at mem. At thai hour a HcrnjJ mra. JKAiorsT A*t POISOM so.—There is something very touching in the details of the Harriaonburgh, Va.. poisoning case, now on trial at ihatT !w '- There waa love and apprehension and jealousy on the part of Mrs. Cameron, the deceased wife. Outraged by her husband's atten tions to another woman, she had on many occasions prophesied nn early death to herself, and the defense will attempt to show that she threatened suleide and car ried her threat into execution. Oppressed with some mysterious foreboding, one month before her decease she purchased a quantity of white cambric and had it made into grave clothes for herself. Her conduct when taken sick seems to entirely negative the theory that she poisoned herself. She did not want to die; prayed earnestly for life, and rhowed the greatest regret at parting with her children. With her last breath ahe chnrged her husband with having mixed poiaon with the salts which she had taken. From the testi mony of the witnesses who were present when aha died, she showed every symptom of strychnine poisoning. SHARP.— An illustration of the sharp Yankee's propensity for bargaining, and ever-ready inclination to settle a question by a " swop," is given by a Connecticut man's proposition for the settlement of the Alnhama claims and the Cuban diffi culty, as follows : That the British Gov ernment give to the United States in satisfaction for the indirect damages the fortress of Gibraltar, and that, the United States then offer it to Spain in exchange for the fsland of Cuba. A WELL-CONTESTED pigeon-shooting match between Captain Bogardus, of Illi nois, and Ira Paine, was sliot at Fleet wood Park. Paine staking $1,200 to Bo gardus' SI,OOO. The match was at a hun - dred single birds, and was won by Paine, with a score of 80 to 79. At alifornia farm. ft was my privilege while at Kanta Bar bara, says a letter writer, to visit a repre sentative or model farm. Perhaps an ac > | count of the visit may not be uninterest • I ing, and at the same time may convey • 1 better idea of the resources of the country than any general description, tiuided by a New York lady who has (bund renewed health in this genial clime, we drove up the beautiful valley tett or a dozen Utiles, to wbete a wide opening in the coast range of hills gave au extended view of the hay. Entering a large gate at our right. We passed along a well-made avt-uuc at the side ola grove of magnificent live oaks to the residence, visible milt * away, of Colonel W. W. Hollister, and one of the great wool-growers of this region. His huge barn with cupola iiad afar off sug gested to me the idea of another " mis sion." This I found to be a raiaaion of comfort and modern convenience to the domestic animals its *p lou* room* ael cotued, contrasting strangely with the low adobe cells, the worthy padres provided at their missions for their domestics—the untutored Indian. The house wa em bedded in a mast of rose*, carnations, ver benas, geranium*, calls lilies, fuchsias, gladiolus, and oilier rare flowers, while iu interior indicated the culture and taste of the occupants. We were cordially greeted by Colonel Hollister, the millionaire of Hants Barbara County, whom I found a plain, hearty, earnest man—a gentleman iu fanner's dress, lit* cheerfulness and enthusiasm won iusUut respect, and his frank hospi tality made us perfectly at home. Pass ing out to the site ol the mansion soon to be erected on the crest of a beautiful knoll, a charming view of sen and valley and mountain, he remarked: " Nine teen year* ago, driving my herds across the plains, 1 left them, came up and sat on this s|Hit for an hour. I then resolved some day to possess it. I had to wait six teen years, never once losing sight of iL Three years ago it came into market, and in fifteen minutes 1 bought it!" This spirit is indicative of the man, and he evidently intends to make the farm an illustration of what California can produce. The present house proving too near the hay for his children, a rammer residence has just been completed two miles further hack, near the bead of one of the l