Song. I wore your roses Tretsrelay j About this Ught rale's folds of while, Wherein their gathered sweetness tay, Rtill clings their perfume of delight. And all in vain the warn wind swr*|is These airy foWa lite vajxv fine. Among them still the odor sloops. And haunts me with a dream divine So to my heart your memory clings, So sweet, so rich, so delicate ; Eternal snmraer-nme it brmga, lie tying all the storm* of fate ; A power to turn the darkness bright. Till life with matchless beauty glows . Each moment touched with tender light, And every thought of you a rose 1 Hardly Earned. To her humble room at last returned. To seek for the reel so hardly earned. The poor little teacher haa come. She has patiently worked the long, long day. To reed and to spell alio haa taught the way, And unraveled many a sum. She has guided the strokes of tiny hands, Tracing winding rivers through foreign lands Til all the leesona were said . And the evening hour la here once more, That comes when labor at last is o'er. The weary struggle for hreed. The heights of knowledge are hard to reach, { And the tiny heads that she tries to teach. How stupid they sometimes seen;" Her heart is weary with toil and care. And the aching head lies helpless there. Watching the firelight's gleam. The shadows fall on the tired eyea. The hand of aleep on her eyelids lice— There is reel for the toiler now; The cheerful kettle its story speaks. The finghght plays on the pallid cheeks. Peace falls on the care-worn brow. No friend or lover is waiting near. No lips to kaas her. no voice to cheer, Only the angel of aleep; He comes to quiet the sorrowful moan Of the womandiear that is all alone. And his gentle watch to koep. CRIPPY THE CABIN BOY. Whatever were hia real name, sir, said the old sailor, a* he settled himself back comfortably in his chair after lighting ' his pipe, I never kuowyl; but the punier'* name we knowd him by were " Crippy." j Wherever the old man got him I don't know; some said a* how he come of some ' asylam or other, and some said he were a illegitimate son of the old man by some stewardess that he'd had with him, but that I don't believe, muse I don't believe it's into any man to treat hi* owu flesh aud blood as'l seen that boy treat ed; but, anyway, he were a moat miser i ble lookin' wretch when I first laid eyre on him, which were when the old man come on board in the arternoon. and we got under way and towed dowu and anchored in the Horseshoe, cause the wind was southeast and dead ahead. She were a big lump of a Rwk, bound from New York to Rio,and I had shipped inU> her muse I were hard up and times was hard, and 1 were glad to git a chance to go anywheres, and I didn't know notliiu about this here old man; hi* name were Thompson, and he were a infernal ras cal. I took my bag and hammock aboard of her, alongside of the dock, and uie and another chap by the name of Titn Walker was the only two that went out into the river with her; but durin' the day the other five wa* brang off—there was only seven of us afore the mast— and along about four o'clock the old man came off, and he brusg this atomy of a boy with him, and we got the anchor and towed down into the Horseshoe, where we anchored at a little harbor arter six o'clock. If ever there were a human that looked as if he'd just departed from a graveyard it were this here Crippy. He were as thin as the leaf of a psalm book in the first place; he had red hair, which prob ably had never been combed since the day he were born ; one of his eyes was clewed athwartshijw and the other were troubled with some kind of disease which kep' it a-runnin' all the time, tin grime from the eye constantly plowin' n furrow m the dirt ou that cheek, which give it a kind of a streaked apfiearauce on that side, oontrastin' oddly with the plain dirt of the other cheek. His nose were short and turned up at the end, and his mouth were so wide that when he opened it the top of hi* head seemed to be an island. Two of hi* front teeth had been knocked out by the old man in one of his tantrums, and he had one upper task that ought to have been knocked out, 'cause it stuck right out, and no amount of lip would cover it. His clothes were the cast-off dunnage of the old man, and fitted him like a purser's shirt on a handspike. Hi* breeches, bein' a good deal too long, WHS turned up at the botßm ; his weskit reached well down amidships, and the tails of his claw-hammer coat was only jist clear of the deck when he walked. As the old man came over the side, he waited until this Crippy came over, and then, fetchin' him a wipe alongside of the head which made the poor boy stag . ger, he piR-hed a bundle of pajx-r* to him, tellui' him to stow 'em away in his room, and to see everythiu' to right* there, "and mini you, young whelp," says the old man, "if I find anythiu' wrong there when I come below, you'll catch it; so mind how you draw your hair strokes." I bail the watch from ten to eleven, aud along about quarter past ten, as 1 were erittin' on the windlass end smokin'. I heard the most ooartbly screechin' alt, and I goes along for to see what were the matter. The bark had a half poop trunk cabin, and gittin' on to this, I looked down the skylight aud there saw this here Crippy strapped down to a settee, and the old man a givin' it to him with a small cat which he had made out of ratlin stuff, and it were him a screechin' that I hail heard. Well, sir. of course, it weren't no business of mine ; boys aboard of a ship must lie flogged, if you ever exriects to make any thin' out of 'em. and this here particular boy seemed to belong more to the old man than to the ship ; still, I must say, I felt a good deal like goin' in and liol lerin' " enough " to the old man, 'cause it seemed to me he were a-givin' him a little too much, no matter what he had done wrong. Well, arter whalin' him till he got tired, the old man went and turnec' .n, leavin' the poor boy strapped face down to the settee, and there lie were when I were relieved at eleven o'clock, and there ha remained, I were told afterwards, till the steward turned oat in the mornin' and loosened him aud net liim to work. Ho could scarcely Btaud up when the steward cast him loose, 'cause he were still from remainia' in one position aud sore from the wallopin' he'd had, and so the steward he had to cuff and best him a little to make him more spry. Well, sir, we got under weigh next day with a crackin' breeze from nort i west, and in two or three days was ont across the Golf and into fine weather. But their weren't no fine weather for na aboard that hooker; it were work all day and miserable grub and constant abuse from the officers. I come early to grief, cause I weren't need to snch treat ment, and when the second mate give me a chut side of the head for to make me move faster, I jist hauls off and lets him have one atwixt the eyes that laid him out senseless for a time. Well, the mate he came for'ard, and I jist told him for to keep his hands off of me; that if I had done any wrong I'd go in irons, and so be pat me in irons, and I were locked np in one of the staterooms. I weren't kep' long though, cause I were in the second mate's watch, and there were only three of ns, and takin' me out left but two, and the second mate had for to do my share of the work, which he didn't like, so he got me let ont after twenty four hours. The old man, he says: " I ought for to keep you in irons to the end of the v'yage, and then hand you over to the oonsul, but as I needs your services, 1 will let you turn to if you will promise to behave." Says I: " Captain Thomp son, I has been into ships to which this here bark ain't fit to be nothing but a jolly-boat, and I haa always behaved my- FRED. KURTZ, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. VIII. self aatiafaoßvry. The work aboard of this croft 1* hard and linnibuggin', ami tho grub is poor and abuse frequent; *ll tlu%t ! mn stand, wul tumn to, till aioh timm a* I mn change, hut blows 1 won't stand, neither frotn you nor your officer*, and if you eliooaoe to lot sue out of iron* onto Item tortus well and good, I'll do mv duty; and if not, not." So on that i worn lot out of irons, ami though tho second mate gave lue all tho dirty job* to >lo tluit ho could think of, ho liiiln't novor strike tuo no uioro. Well, air, it would take mo too long for t*> toll you of all tho crtolti a I aeeu practiced onto tlua Drippy. Tho old mail aeemxl to lie delighted if ho could tuily Uiruiout tlua }>oor txiy. Ho woro mortally timid, aud thoy uaed for to uiako htm go out onto tho oinl of tho M|*uiker-boom when alio were uitchin", and rido it for lioura. They called that " riditi' St. Anthony." Sometime* in wry light weather they'd head liini up in a laurel, cnttm' a hole for hia head to come through, and thou liallaatin' the liarrel aud cliuekin' it overboard, a mak in' believe thoy wa a goin' U> leave hiui for g'XH.I and all, and then, arter leavin' him away aateru, the old man would lower a boat and pick him up. Some timed when ahe'd on goin' two or ill roe knots the old man would have a whip rove at the maiu yardarm. and ho would bend tho end of it uuto Crippy jist uu dor hia arms and run him out over the aide. He'd first let him drop three or four times into the water, aud then he'd run him about half way to the yard arm aud leave him swingin . It weren't that there wore any thin' very laid in those deviltries, except for the mortal terror the* gave to tho lad, and hia acreeehiu'a wore jist awful to hear at these timea. I dou't believe any liekin' the old man ever giv' him were half as had as those frighta that he got Well, to cut this here abort, we got to Rio at last, arter a very lung passage, which I thought would never cud, and arter dischargiu' we hauled in abreast of the coffee warehouse for to git our load of coffee. I determined that I wouldn't go no further into that craft, but as Rio are a bad place for to run away in I had arranged it with a old chum of mine aboard of the hark Margaret, wliat had got her load and were bound to Balti mors, for to stow me away atioard of her. The night I went aboard of her I had the anchor watch front twelve to one, aud I got all my dunnage into my tiag and were jist a goin' over the side with it when who ahonld appear before me but this here Crippy. " You're goin' for to runaway,' says he. "O, take me with you, Tom; take me with you, for (.rod's sake 1" And the little atomy flopped dowu on lu knee* on the deck afore me, as if I'd lieen his guar dian all my life. I were completely took aback, for it were one of the old mail's rules that this here chap weren't never to speak to us chaps afore the mast, aud this here mite liad never had so much to say to me afore. However he got to know I ware a-goin' I can't say, but here ho were dowu on the deck afore me a beefcechin*, and I tell you what it is, sir, I jist felt that I'd stand to thst boy till the last drop of my blood if necessary. If I couldn't stand thst craft, how much more couldn't he, that had so much more to bear ? And I says to him: " Take yon with me ? Of course I will, my boy; and I'd jist like to see the man as would try for to stop me," and I felt uncommon like whaiw' somebody jist then. Well, sir, we goes aboard of the Mar garet, and we finds my chum, who were a wtutin' for me. He were rath-r Rok aback when be seed Crippy, but I telled him enough about the boy for to make it right, ond we were stowed away auug down inßi the fore peak. I were told arterwards that the old man liad all the Eilice of Rio at work for to hunt u* up. e didn't core so mnch for mo a* for the IIOT; he wanted him, and pro mi*.-d vome thin' awful in the way of whalin' if he caught him, which he never didn't do no more. The day arter we got R> sea 1 come out and 1 goes to tlie mate and says I: " I'm a stowaway alxionl of your ship, sir, but I'm a geod sailor man, and can oru my grab. I've got a chap with me that won't eat mnch, even if he can't do much work, and I'm williu' for to do hi* share of work a* well a* my own. We've left the liark we w. re in becau*i nhe were a hell afi. at," and I tips and 1 tella this mate of the way I'd seen Crippy abused. Well, wotlid you believe it, sir, I actually struck a noft spot into this here mate, and he cottoned right to tliat boy at once, and say* he: " You've done jist right, my man, and I'm glad for to have you atioard; I'U take that boy aft and let him take care of mv room, and that'll lie eay work for him." j The next time I seed Crippy, air, I hardly know'd him. He'd got hi* face washed clean, and the mate had rigg. d him out complete in a a. t of his Riggerv. It were rather large for Crippy, but it done hettrr than the rag* he had lieen a weariu'. The boy got Ri lie a great fa vorite, both with the mate and the old j man; he were snch a willin' chap, and in conseqnenoe of my tmngin* hiin I had good, cay times of it, and when we got to Bultimore the old man offered for Ri k ep Crippv and make a man of him; but the lad had suffered so mnch at sen that he were determined he would f-tarve Ri death on shore afore ever he'd go on blue water agin; so the old man he shoved him off ouR a panmn in Hal tirnore, and here I lost sight of him, 'cause I shipped in a brig that were goin' R> Montevideo for hi.l-, aud went away to sea. —iY'ei# York World. Oat Meal for Children. M. Dujardin bo* been experimenting with oat meal a* a food for young chil dren. He made use of a jelly prepared by soaking a tablcspoonfnl of the meal in a glass of waR-r for twelve hours, then straining throngh a sieve and bolting till the whole assume* the consistence of jelly, and adding sugar or salt to taste According to analysis, one hundred grammes of the m*al contains 8.7 grammes of waß*r. 6.7 of fatty matters, 2.5 of starch, 12.5 of nitrogenou* mat ters, 1.5 of mineral Knbatanoe*, and 7.6 of cellulose, dextrine and lon*. It* nutritious value, therefore, a* food for children, in regard Ri nitrogenou* or plastic element*, and such a* are respira tory, in analogous to that of human milk or cow's miik. Besides these, it con tain* more iron than do most of the arti cles of food. Four newly-born infants were fed with the preparation just de seriljed, and in every wui with satin factory results. In addition to its quali ties a* food, it act* efficiently against colic and diarrhea. It ent r* into the composition of the syrnp of Luther, which in naid R> lie mnch uned in Ger many. M. Gillette, surgeon of the hos pital of Meluu, has also given oat meal combined with cow's milk to nix children, and find* it to be a valuable food in cane* where the natural supply of milk is de ficient. Very IHrty. The English colliers must he a nice set of men. At a recent meeting of a local board the question of providing public baths wa* raised, when one of the members said he liad heard of a collier who boasted that he had not been washed all over for thirty years. An other gentleman said the colliers avoided washing, as thev thought it weakened them ; while still another said the men would rather pay five dollars on a dog fight han twelve cents for a bath. THE CENTRE REPORTER. SKA SKIII'KNTS. The Ureal l'rkbllll itial Ike Mlorlea afceut Tkrtu are Mel all Sallara' V araa. The Philadelphia Rvetnny RitUctin publishes an account of a sea nerpeut seen by a geutleiuau whom it describes as " well kuowu ami reliable. ' His story is that while the steamer Roman was on her wav from lloston to Philadelphia, and was near the lighthouse UU the ex tremity of Capo Cod, lie aud oilier, had their attention called to what they at Aral supposed to tie s shark, as a small but short dorsal flu ams-ared above the water, hut afterward* had reason to be lieve was a sea serpent. Hoing attacked by a swordAnh, it raised its flat and tor- Rust -like head fully ten feet out of the water, vlius giving the party an oppor tunity of observing it more closely. It hail a dorsal and several lateral flu*, looked slimy, and was covered with large and tviarse" scales. About four week* before this occurrence tin* animal had first been seen near Cape Cod, and sev eral wlisle boats had been filß-d out to capture it. They estimated its length to tie about sixty feet, but the pilot said that it had ruu alongside of the lvowau a few weeks previously and that theu its length was thought to tie at least oue humlresl and tweuty feet. This account, which is evidently given in good faith, recalls the numerous storms of enormous sea oerpeuta which have long formed a large part of the stock of the old wilt when Bpinuing yarns in the forecastle, as well as of others who are naturally aupposed R> adlmre to the truth more closeiv tiuui sailors do. But the testimony which should lead R> the belief that sea serjmnts do in reality exist is not to be cavalierly set aside ex cept for very much better reasons than have ever been brought forward. It is not contrary to esperiaooe that enor mous marine animals should exist ; we know that they exist now, an I some gigantic foseils show that at one period of the earth's history they atwnuided in great numliera. There is much direct Rwtimony to their existence in modern times. On August 6, 1848, H. M. 8. Dwdalua, on her wiv from the Ca|>e of Good Hope to St. Helena, came aero** a sea serpent. Captain Medullar and the officers observed it witli glasses at s distance o: six hundred feet and distinct ly traced its eye, mouth, nostril, and form ; it resembled an animal of the lizard type rather than a serpent, and its movement wa* steady, rapid, and uni form, a* if projielled by this rather than by uudulating power. The size seemed to be enormous, but as only a part of the animal was out of wR*r no correct estimate could be made of its length. On the Pith December, 1857, the ship Caatiliau, honml from Rooilwy Ui Liver pool, and being twelve miles from St. Helena, passed a sen mounter which is tlias deecribed by Captain O. H. HOT ringUiu, Mr. W. Daviea, and Mr. K. Wheeler, the three chief officers of the ship : YVlnle myself and officers were stand iug ou tlie leiwide of the poop, looking R>wnrd the islatul, we were startlel tiv the sight of a huge marine animal, which reared its head out of the waR-r within twenty yards of the ship, when it sud denly disappeared for about half a min ute and theu made it* appeanuire in the some manner again, showing ns distinct ly its neck and head about ten or twelve feet ont of waß>r. Its head wa* sliaped like a long uun-baov, and I suppose the diameter Ri have been wveu or eight feet in the largest jart, with a kind of scroll or tnft of loime skin encircling it abont two feet from the top. The water was discolored for several hundred R-et from lb* heal, so much so that on its first appearance my impn*ion was that the ship was iu brokeu waR-r; but the six* •nd appearance ouuipleß-lv dispelled those fears, and assured us that it was a monster of extraordinary length, which ippeuiil to be slowly moving toward the bind. Tlie ship wa* going too fast to en able us to reach the masthead in time to form a correct estimate of its ex treme length, but from what we saw from tho deck we conclude that it must have lieen over two hundred f>et long. • • lam convinced tliat it Iwlonged to tli* serpent trilie; it was of a dark color about the bead, and was covered with several white spots. Bet ween 1814 and 1846 tliere were several reported aiqu-wranoe* of this monster in tlie seas fronting the United States and Canada, aud at almut the same period a similar creature WHIJ seen uear tho shore* of Norway, considered as identical with one depicted in Pon- Rippidan's " Natural Hisßiry of Nor way." Twenty year* liefore sneb a ser pent had Is-en repeatedly seen on the •-oast of the United Staß-*, aud also about 1806 and 1818. The accounts given of hucli sights are consistent, and there seems R> be no e-.ntlily reaaon for rejecting them, except Isswuse they sonml like sailors' yarns, which aro no Riugher than traveler*' tales, such as that of Dn Chaillu when be R>ld of the •lisoovery of tluU remarkable animal, the gorilla, and was generally disbelieved. Strictly speaking, the extsß-nce of enor mous marine " seriM-uta" is not im probahle, and this last report of one seen will add to he credibility of tlie older account*. Feter IMet. Dr. Jgiton, of Kheims, state* that for tlie last four year* he ha* treated typhoid by an ahsoluß' water diet. Nothing but good fresh filß-ritl water, occasion ally iced, is |M>rmitted to lie taken. At first, he says, it is taken with aridity, then in moderation, and at last with signs of satiety; it is sometimes vomited at first, tint i* soon Rilcrated; at tho be ginning of the treatment the bowel* may tie a little relaxed, but they soon liecome moderate and less offensive, and after a time constipation may ensue. The duration of this treatment depends u |ion the progress of the disease; tliat in, between four and five day* of waß>r exclusively may lie required, if the fever be treaß-d a* a whole, lint three or fonr days suffice if only the intestinal element of the dineose lie considered. A light alimentation may then lie allow ed—milk, unboiled, may lie mixed with the water and given hv spoonful*, and if well supported for a time, R> lie followed by broth and soup. Under thi* treatment the mortality is very low, no evil results ensue, and serious complications, incln ding visceral congestion* and bed sores at onoe disappear. Met hi* Death. The way of the transgressor is hard, but one of the most ntartling cases of speedy punishment for crime in found in the death of the supp the cabin of the lighter and, it is supposed, lit a match R> nee what plunder could lie din covered, ignited the gas from the crude oil and so sent himself and the tmat to destruction. Later in the day hi* charred and shapeless body wa* found floating in the river, a shocking spoetaele. There is something so horrible and swift in this sudden meeting out of justioe tliat, mayhap, it will have the effect of prov ing a salutary lesson for other thieves. ONE AT A TlME.— When Arthur wa* a very small boy his mother reprimand ed him one day for some misdemeanor. Not knowing it, his father began to talk to him on tne same subject. Looking up in his faoe, Arthur said solemnly : " Mother has 'tended to me." CENTRE HALE, CENTRE CO., PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1875. Anxiety with a Substantial Koundatlnu. A voting l*ly in Virginia writes the New York Isdyrr a long, confiding 1 t tar, exprmwive of deep anxiety springing from a source which is not only rational in itself, but which must l*< applicable Ui many oases liesnles her own. She is in love amt is engaged R> he married. Her suiß>r desinw that the marriage should take place the coining autumn. She has no well grounded objection R> this except one : She is afnud her future husliautl will le disappointed when he flints out how little she knows about hounekcepiug ; " aud " she seimihly adds, "if \ think lie is dissatisfied, of course that will blight my liappuiesa. There is nothing," site continues, " to prevent our beiug married at any time, with this exception." We tliiuk this is an obstacle of a very serious character, aud, a* agai.mt an iui mediate marriage, issufficieiit. No young woman ought R> get married until she understand* every department of house keeping. And "there is no excuse for any oue not understanding housekeeping in all its branches. The only thing in the way of learning i* indolence ; for oue opportunity or auotker r.iu always be found or made. The advice we give Ri our Hirre*|xii- Jent is appropriate ti all other young lodic* similarly situated. It i* to lenru all about housekeeping as soou a* |i"*si ble. it is a kind of kuowUnlge whieli every ine uiay well lie proud. There i* no art ii which woman eon (> iu-t.- u-< fuL Nor is it Ri be hxiked U|hiii as a mere ly hutßpiiU, matter of fact business, by any means. Far from it. Tln-re is good nature, amiability, generosity in a gs-1 dinner ; and ih-re is rest, there i* quiet, there is peace, tliere is contentment in s well ordered house. We would say to every engaged vuttitg lad v : If you wish Ri retain the love and admiration of your future husband, one ini|Hirßuit step toward it is to excel iu housekeeping. A Fearful Mean* of Sating 1-lfe. In the Fort Wayne Xentinrf mention was made of a difficult and painful sur gical operation jierformed upon the iwir *on of Mr*. E'rank Co*well. Mr*. Co.* well lias been troubled with symptoms of curvature of the spine siuo- she was fourteen years uf age- Ileosntlv th.-w- Hvmptoni* have become marked, until tLey excited the alarm of Mr. Caswell, who sent Ri Boston for Dr. Rioharl*ou to come Ri Fort Wayne and examine the ease. The doctor amv.xl there, and, U|h>d examinatioo, Statesi thst unless a cure could lie effected, either parol run or iu*auity would sjieedily ensue, ami jn-r hap* di-ath. The jwtient was prepar. d by projier applications *if medicine for the ordeal, and ou a recent ofR-rnoou the operation was accomplished by 1 (r*. Rieliardnon and Dills of tliat city. Just prior to this, cupping liad t>cru re*. >rt-d to, n.l a large quantity of blood taken from tin- spine. The operation coti*i*R d of the burning of *ix hole* iu the spinal column with red hot iron*, the conse quent suffering being a* excruciating juid ogoutxing a* could lie. Chloroform was not administered internally, through f.-ar that lockjaw might ensue, but was applied externally for the spine ; hardly sufficient, however, Ri diminish ajipreci ably the intense anguish. The patn-ist ha>l to be held tightly while the Invited irons were force*! into the quiveriug flesh. Mr*. Co*well is uow in sn favorable a condition a* oonld have been anticipated, although suffering, a* might be expected, from nervous prostration. Dr. Richardson remain* coustaiillv witli her, a* it will require a period of R-u days Ri deßr -mine whetlier or not a perf.-ct cure lu* lieeu effect.*l. The nperatiou is one of the rnreat and moat difficult and .langer oii* iu surgery. Cost of Kai*lng Horse*. Tlie agricultural department liavmg mode inquiries as to the cost of raising horses in each of the varioii* Staß'*, ro jHTts as follow* : In the Middle State the aiaximum cost of wintering homes i* S4B jier head in. New Jer- y ; n.-xt in 0r.1.-r stoiuls 1 Her lisv of Kansas and Nehranka is mostly made from the wild grass.*! of the prairies. Corn ranges from forty-three cents j*>r bushel in lown to ninety-one in Kan*a*. an.l oat* frotn thirty eight cent* jier bushel in lowa R> fifty throe cent* in Kansas. .Yew York City's Population. Tlie population of the city of New Y'ork hn* lieen enumerated fifteen times aiuce 17*J0, when the first oenau* was taken liy the Btate government. The following table give* the saocessive figure* at eaeh census ; the figures to the i ight give the increase or lon* lietweon each census : Fmk. Aipe'a/iso. /aereaav 17U0 X3.UI I*oo 60.4*0 S7.S&* I*lo 06 7M 88,264 I*ls* 08 510 1.384 I*2o 123.706 2* I*7 I*2s* 166,0*6 42.3*0 I*3o 107.112 81 026 1886* 263,0*0 70,077 I*4o 312.710 84.621 I*4s* 371.2A3 50.513 I*so 515.547 44.324 I*ss* 620.310 114,2 ft( I*6o *13,600 I*3 7*o I*6s* 726 36 *7,313 1370 942.202 215.907 I*7s* 1,018,622 76 330 *Btate cennua. In thi* table the return* from seven election districts are not in; they increase the Rital some 16,000. The population annexed R) the city since the last census is 36,466, so that old New York as it was does not yet reach a total of one million inhabitants. THK MODIUM GIOIUIF. WAMHWOTOK. — George YVashingtoti couldn't R*ll a lie, and that's what ails the average Vieks ! burg boy. Tlie other dny, when one of them accidentally broke a pane of gloss in a sßire window, it was R niching R> see him walk bravely into the sßire and up to the merchant, and say : "Mr. Blank, I broke a pane of glass in the window there, and yon can charge it Ri the old man's acconnt! Put it down as a pound of salerntim, and he'll never know the difference!" A Chicago poet upon hearing that Mile. Nilsmiti was about R erect cow *heds upon her Peoria lpis, burnt forth into the following verse: " Christine, Christine, thy milking do the morn and eve between, and not by the Jim re ligions light of the fitful kerosene. For the cow may plunge, and the lamp ex plode, and the fire fiend ride the gale, and shriek the knell of the burning town in the glow of the molten pail." PERSONAL EXTRAVAGANCE. Tk, Hauler**** 11* ll. lwlrrr*i. In* I' rtM*nl Mttrlrk *1 * H*hl*S H**r. Hon. Win. E. Cramer, of the AN miny irtscmiri'i. who knows jieneumlly of what lie writes, give* us the following very interesting skeßili of the prrmmtul of the founders of the Isßi Isuiking liouMo of Dunoan. Shermsu A Co.: Since the failure of Dtiueau, Sherman A Co.. and a* the firm willprolsibly pose out of exiHteiice a* s lisnkuig houi*', Home remiuiaoences of the |uuit may le iuteroHtiug oounedeil witli the founding of a bunking establishment whieh has bail brilliant career, aud whieh grew into a world wide prominence as rapidly as any private liankiug house ever ea- Ribliidied iu America. Five aud thirty years ago there was a very wealthr citireu of Providence, Rhode Island, by the name of Cyrus Butler. He was a quaint old man, and made his three millions of property by eareful saving* aud the natural rise of a vast real estate projierty which he held in Providence. He was very close, but st time* would perform exceedingly lib eral acts. The ladies of Providence conceived it would le a beneficent deed to establish a hospital. They besought it* cilioeus for contributions. Most of them gave them something. Thqy repeatedly went Ri Cyrus Butler, and he refused Ri give tlielii one Ceut. Nevertheless tliey com menoed their building. They were soon severely ptuched for fund* so carry ou the work. The women thought they would try Butler ouce more. They went R> the alii gentleman aud teas-l liim as UMual. At first he was otidurste, but as women know how R> Ixither and tease to }H-rfecliaU they did Uat give up the pur suit- At last he exclaimed iu rather a harsh voire, "(live me your pajier." The ladiee bonded it R> him, eij—oting that they wouhl jxweibly receive s.'*lo or sl,l>t)->. Rut he sat down aud dehb eraß-ly wrote: "Cyrus ltutler, $40,000. Great was the jov iu lVoviJeure at this princely gift. T*be benevolent institu tion wa* completed, and a* ou evidence of gratitude it wa* named the Butler luwptUl. That institution has survived, and will survive in honor of the memory of old Cyru* Butler far loug-r than the millions of bis "property which ultimate ly went into the bonking house of Dun cau, Sherman A Co. Cyrus ltutler hod u j eons, but he liad one* dsughß'r who married Alexander Duncan, and they inherited the whole estate of Butler. About the same Um<- there was a citizen of Albany named Watt* Sherman, the caslner of the Al twnv citv lsuik. He wns a great fa vorite o\ Erastu* Corning, tlien the railroa>l Sgig of New York, whose atlopted daughter he marr-.ed. Watts was considered one of the *horj>e*t louik er* in the Slaß* uf New York. Though the lsuik bod a capital of ouly $500,0C0, it become a notable institution under his management. It enjoyed the vast de l>osits of the Central railroad company, and wa* known a* a " little monster." and exreedmgiy profitable Ri its sßvk holdera. But Watt* was not content with living in Allianv. He sighed for other and larger fields of commercial power, and N<-w Y'ork wa* then, a* now. the metro polis of America, whither men who M-k commercial distinction naturally fl-wit- Watt* could not lie called a wealthy man, there lore m order Ri succeed iu New Y'ork in the hanking buaineo*. it was mnmwrj R> connect himself with a man of large fortune. He lieoame oc quaiuUxi with Duncan, of Providence, then a gentleman of leisure and of great wealth, ns tlie inherißir of Buth r s estsß-. Their arrangement* were soon jwrfceted Duncan was Ri lulvamai the money and Sherman the financial brain*. Sherman, of all men, knew how Ri make a gisal impreaaion at tlie start. So the new firm bought the lot on the sonth west corner of Fine and Naasau ntfeaia, and thereon erected one of the mo*t solid, oubetautial and elegant s.one Isuiking hoc"*-* in the Uuit the public what amount of capital Duncan contributed to the con cern, but it was supposed R> 1*" from one to two million*, ami upon thst capital they usually had afloat aimut six million of liabilities ; and, of course, as only two millions of thi* wa* backed by cash, and four millions by credit, when busi nc*a vim large and remunerative, their profit* must have been enormous. Sher man lived in grand style and so did the Duncan*. and the individual expenses of the firm could not have lmen less than $120,000 per annum ; and j*rhft|i* it will lie found that not only tln-ir loss upon ootßin bills, but the corroding cancer of jirivnß' extravagance has consumed their capital; for it ha* lieen discovered iu New Y'ork and elsewhere when individu al* have failed, who were enjoying great income* and had large wealth, that the nx of extravagance in personal expendi tures ha* been *teadily cutting at the root of the tree. The lowa Ice Cave. The remarkably natural curiosity known a* the " ice cave " can now lie seen at it* best. A party of gentlemen who lately visited it, say* the Docorah (la.) Republican, say that thoy never liofore saw anything like the quantity of ice formed within it As proof, they brought to our office a cake of ice twelve inche* long, ten wide ami lx-twoen two and three inclien thick, notwitliNtauding the waste of carrying it a mile on a hot afternoon. The psoas go-way inßi the cave is three-quarters filled up with ice, and there is a fiooriug of the some for twenty feet. At one spot i a oone of ioe fasßmed to the wail which is throe foet in diameter at the base, eight Ri ten feet high and twenty inches across at the top. A boy living at Drownod IJAIKIH, N. Y., gave a horse pari* green "just R> see if tho animal would die or not." He wa* gratified, as the horse lived but a ahort time after eating the poison. In the Harvest Held. The moat frequent imprudence in the , harvest field is the coustout drinking of cold water freali from the well or spring iu copious draughts. Tliia induces ex- ( ooaaive perspiration, which iu its turn j produces excessive thirst, and the result , is a serious weakeuiug of the nervotia system. Life, even without labor, tie- j co in us a burden when every |*>re gives out a stream. The salts of the blood are rapidly washed ill the flood of per spirution, and the syaleut is depleted of that which it can sjiare the least. This . can tie obviated by simply avoiding ex cessive drinking. A man may ride upon a reaper or follow it binding for ten , hours without ueediug R> drink more than twice, if he will simply determine R> do eo. We have done this rejeetedly without driuking, except at meal timea. It is well to avoid the use of toboooo while ill the field, and by all means no drop of spirituous liquor should pass the lip* of a harvest laborer in our cli mate while he is iu the field. If one must drink, cold coffee or Us without sugar or milk is the best. This can be I drank wheu moderately warm without nausea wheu wuw cannot. Hot tea or coffee after dinner is both cooling and refreshing. At leaat two hours rmt , should l>e taken at uoou, and from half pat eleven until half post one is the (mat interval. When the body is heated by labor it is perfectly safe to cool it by l*>unug cold water upou the wrista, by which the temjmrature of the blood is slowly lowered; but it is not safe to cool the tssly by sudden exposure R> cool sir in a" shady barn or a cellar. Such a course would De the greatest imprudence, and almost certain R> result in .boaster. To cool off slowly is saf, and if one should exiHise himself to coot draughts he should put on extra clothing and walk about meanwhile. At night, after the work is done, and before retiring to rest, the whole body should lie bathed in water slightly tepid, or at least as warm as the air, and pure soap, and then briskly nibbed dry with a coarse towel. This will bring comfortable and reatful sleep. Then a clean undergarment for the night ahonld be put on, and the .lav worn garments placed to air and dry ready for the next day. cieanhnres of person is one of the beat preservatives of lfllalth and jiroductiv® of the greatest comfort in the liar vest reason. I>og la England. The wealthy people of England pay jnurh attention to the breeding of dogo. A c<>rreap., agxl five years, was labeled £IO,OOO stei ling. I counted six retriev ers at £I,OOO each, and very many from £SOO to £l5O. Among the Irish water *laniel*, Mr. N. Morton'a Shamrock was held at £I,OOO, the other* at prices rang ing from £IOO to £SO. Siwof the apan- j lets were lalieled £I,OOO rech, two or three £SOO, and a large variety from £IOO to £2OO. Ten pound* were re garded as a very reasonable charge. Th<-re were two hounds at £SOO each. The licaglrw, hot exceeding fifteen iuch- M high, ranged from £IOO to £2O. I"bere were nearly two hundred (ox ter riers, h Id at extraordinary rates, at h-aat lialf a dzeo at £I,OOO, and alwut j twenty at £SOO, the other* rouging from £10(1 to £la The sheep dogs were also vcrv high, a dozen commanding £I,OOO i-ach, ami other* £9OO, very few running a* low a* £2O. A Dalmatian, belonging U Mr. R. J. L. Trice, known as Crib, nine years old, wa* beld at £IO,OOO ster ling.' Another, owned by Miss Julia Barney, called Kaneho, three y<-ar* and fire mouths old, price £OOO. The bull ' dog* ranged from £250 R> £25. On* bull j R-rrv-r, Young Put, was held at £I,OOO sR-rluig , another, belonging R> the same owner, YV. Grant liavi*, st the same price. This avmel to l* tlie favorite lirecxl. Many command-*1 £IOO each, and a few ran as low sa £5. Block and tan terrier* exceeding fourteen pounds weight commanded £IOO each, very few ns low as £5. One of the drop cored blue Skvc terriers, named Sam, belong ing to "Mr. J. W. lierry, was held at £IO,OOO sR-rling. There was a Dandy Dinnuint terrier, called Toper, price £I,OOO, and another called Macbeth, price £S"W-general rate* from £SO to i £5. A Yorkshire terrier called Mozart, lielonging to Mis* H. AUierwon, price £I,OOO. The Redlington terriers com mnnded from £IOO R> £5 ; of one spe cie called Dachshund, black ami tan. three commanded £I,OOO. and the rest ran from £IOO down to £5. Style* for Elderly Ladles. Elderly Ladies ding R> polonaises in preference to Imsques with overekirta. These jiolouaires are of simple princess.- *hn)H not elalxindoly drajxxi. Their - most dr*s*y summer Rulettes, a fashion journal savs, are of black grenadine trimmed with folds and knife plaiting*, or el*.> summer silks in black and wlnU' checks, I tar*, or stripes, plainly ruffled, ; with bias 1 ninds for bemling. These dressea are for church, afteruoon, and dinner. For morning and .lay wear they cluxise wliiß- linen lawn*, batistes, and half-opaque cambrics. A long Iwianue, no ovemkirt, and a flounced lower skirt is the popular manner of making; there are from one to three flounces on the lower skirt. Their cap* for afternoon aud evening are large squares of lace for the Rp of the head, with flowing ends behind or or the sides. Those are not large enough to conceal the coil of lieantiful grey hair worn low behind, or the long lightly rolled puff worn on each aide of the face. The lace used is thread, Valenciennes, or dnehesse point, ltlaek lace liarties an- used alone, or are mixed with white lace ; large caps en- ; tirely of black lace are uow seldom worn, as tlu-y cover up much of the gray hair that is now the fashion Ri display, and ! hove a drenrv, somber appearance. Morning caps are of snowy white lawn with large bag crown*, and plaited fronts trimmed with purple, violet, or blue ribbou, or else black velvet; jiale blue j ribbons are pretty with gray hair ; pink utul buff are seldom beoomiug to faded complexions. The Louisville Lottery. Colonel Blanßin Duncan haa, as attorney for the ticket-holders, made a demand on the managers of the Louis ville lottery for the Isdauce of sixty two per cent. o*f the prize* ntqiaid, declaring that the consent of the ticket holders was not given to a reduction of the amount of the prizes. He ha* also renewed his applieutiou, previously unnoticed, for an official list of the prize* drawn and the unsold numbers, also of the approxi mate*, and stnß-s in hia letter that the offloe has issued at lea*t two lists, both purporting R> lie official, whieh do not accord with each other. The Secret of Wealth. My success is owing to liberality in 1 advertising.— Ronnrr. The road R> fortune is through print- . era' ink.— P. T. Rarnum. Frequent and constant advertising brought me all I own.— A. T. Stnrart. \ Success depends upon a lilieral patron- j age of printing offices.— J. J. Attor. My son, deal with men who advertise. Yon will never lose by it.— Ren J-Vank j lin. How can the world know a man has a geod thing unless he advertises the pos session of it f— Vandorbilt. Term®: $2.00 a Voar, in Advance. A FORGOTTEN GI.OKY. The Kirs Wsrivrs I* KspsMtraalMa I* A aisiira. One hundred aud six years ago Ave citizens of New Orleans pah! with their Uvea for their disloyalty iu trying to *- tabliah a republic upou the soil of North America. Their fame Imm long since (•ecu forgotten. Their namne are to be found ouly in the musty records of Taris and Madrid. Their* was a gal lant, but a hopeless struggle. Ou oue side, five men; on the other, France and Spain. The New Orleans Rrpubli can gives a full sooouut of this first or gauized attempt to found on American republic. Louisiana ouet France more thou it iraid her. Louis XV., seekiug ewajre from his load of debt, gave the province named afR-r his grandfather to Spain. The h'-li ines intiabitants protested in vain. Twice tlnj sent a delegate to Taris, and twice the king refused eveu Ri see him. The Spaniard* formally ac cepted the gift November 13, 176*2. The first Spanish governor, UUoa, did not arrive until 1766. The colonists mode up their minds to dislike him, and they •lid so. He seems Ut have been a gay, good humored, not very diahonoKt ruler, who tried to suit his "uuruly subjects, and found that he had act himself an im jroaaible task. They were scandalized trecause he married With the consent of " Father Ihmobert," aud hurt because lie sent to Havana fur a nurse for his child; was not Louisiana able to fur nish a good enough uurse I The colon ists complained <>f his pre* nee st New Orleans, bat declared that be had insult ed them when be stayed at Baliz- for eight months. They shut him and hia wife out of auciety and then accused them of haughty exciuaiveneaa. Oue of the serious charges against him was that lie made the inhabitants of New Orleans go six miles out of town in order to whip their slaves, because, forsooth. Mine. UUna's nerves were disturbed by the shrieks of the victims of the lash. When he saw that the colonists had agreed to disagree with him in every thing be gave up trying to please them and secluded himself and studied sei cuoe, to which be was a devotee. Mean while the popular diaoontent grew apace. Twelve prominent citizens funned a plot to overthrow the Spanish authority aud establish a republic under the protection of the British officer then commanding at Tcnaooulo. October 45, 1768, the crisis come. Armed tiands occnuied the Ktrects of New Orleans. Ujlua fled to a frigate which lay off the city. The su perior council met, xpUed, in the *tyle of mare recent his call for troops. O'Reilly landed undisturbed. Four days afterward the twelve leaders were arrested. A mouth of torture and trial ended in tb sentence of five of them to death. One had already been killed while speaking to his wife. The lack of a hangman saved the five from the scaffold. Thy were shot on the morning of Ocßiber 26, 176H—the first martyr* R> American independence. Egg* and Financial Wiodein. She said ahe'd take a dozen of eggs, but while the grocer was counting them out she asked the price. He told her and she shrieked : " Seventeen cents ?" "Yes, ma'am." " Why, that'* outrageous " Weft, it'a hard times and everything is up." She oat down on a sugar liarrel, sighed several times, and asked if eggs were likelv Ri be lower or higher. " I don't claim to be a prophet," he replied, as he twisted a sheet of paper into the shape of a funnel, " but I dare say that they'll be dowu to sixteen and one-half cents in leas than a week, and perhaps go lower. Trade, which is naturally depressed during July and August, is looking up a little. Our ex i torts of gold are now equalled by our imports. The coiling in of bonds puts more ready money afloat, aud capitalist* are much more hopeful this week than last The trope are about ready to move, navigation prospects are brighter, and public confidence in financial meas urea is rapidly returning. One thing moves around another, you see, and though, a* I said before, I am not a financier, and mv predictions are not en titled to any greet weight, it seems clear Ri me that eggs have got R> come dowu. A great current of eggs is setting toward this ]K>int from s doacn direc tions, and even if the calling in of bondi aud the sale of surplus gold don't pro duce lower prices, I cannot see why figures should go np." She reached into the pickle barrel, nipped s encumber, and went away won dering why her husband never knew anything. —/Vfroi/ Free Pre**. YY hat a Saloon Keeper Thinks. An Irish saloon keeper of Detroit, who say* " be like* Ri live up Ri the laws of his adopted country," would like to oee the law* regulating hia traffic arranged as follows; Finit—That each saloon keeper !>e required to give from 42,000 to $5,000 bonds that he keep a respectable saloon. Second—Not to sell liquor of any kind ! to drunkards or habitual drunkards or to minors. Third —Close up every place where liquor is sold each night at eleven o'clock, and not R> open before five o'clock the following morning, except Ri sell liquor for strictly medicinal pui^ DOMH. Fourth -Cloze UP the entire Sunday. Fifth— For the violation of the alwve law first offense SSO fine, second offense SIOO fine, aud so on until the law is re spected—half to go to the informer. Gloat Cuttle Fish. Some time since was mentioned the lisoovery by the Rev. Mr. Harvey, of St. Johus, Newfoundland, of a giant cut tle fl*h off the coast of that island. We now learn from him that a still larger one was cast ashore near Fortnne bay in | December last. The larger arms meas ured twenty-six feet each, with a circum ference of sixteen inches, the short arm* 1 eing about one-third that length with the Hame circumference. No portion was preserved excepting the lieak sud one sucker, which is sn iach in diameter. The fishermen carried it off as food for their dogs. The specimens preserved will probably be sent to Professor Ver rill, of Yale ( el lege, for comparison with what he has of tie first one. NO. 34. KiCUO OS THE HlMMHirri. A Nkrlrk ■■ Ik* OMn Tt*i* mm Ik* ■!***— A Heal KidWeeH. Mark Twain, in one of hia sketches, say*: In tlie "flush times" of steam lecting on the Mississippi river, a moe between two notoriotiMy fleet steamers waa au event of vast importance. The dale waa net for it several weeks in ad vance, and from that time forward, tbe whole Miaaiaaippi valley wan in a state rinueed Wsmbo*tmau would Mick I to tbe center of the boat and tort hia hair in the middle with a spirit level. So way {might* and no way passengers were allowed, for the racers would atop only at the Urgent towns, and then it would be only •* touch and go." Coal fists and wood data won* oootnetal for beforehand, and these were kept ready to bitch on to the flying steamers at • moment'a warning. Dogble crew* were carried, au that all work otmld be quick ly done. ' The cboaeo date being oome, and all things in madineaa, the two great steam ere back into the stream, and lie there jockeying a moment, and apparently watching each other's aligfataat move ment, like sentient creature*, flag* droop ing. the pent attain shrieking through safely valves, the black amoke rolling and tumbling from the chimney* and darken ing all the *ir. People, npople every where; the shores, the house-tops, the steamboats, the ahipe are packed with them, and you know that the border* of the broad Mississippi are going to be fringed with humanity thence northward twelve hundred mike, to welcome thaw moan. Presently tall columns of stbam bunt from the 'scape-pipes of both steamers, two guns boom a good-bye, two nsd skirted heroes mounted on capstans wave their small flags above the massed crews on the foreaastlea, two plaintive solos linger on the air a few waiting sec onds, two mighty cboruiiM bund forth —and here they come ! Brass bands bray Hail Colombia, huxza after buna thun ders from the shores, and the stately creatures go whistling by like the wind. These boata will never halt s moment between New Orleans and St. Louis, ex cept for a second or two at large towns, or to hitch thirty-cord wood boats along side. Too should be on board when they take a couple of those wood-boats in tow and turn a stream of men into each; by the time you have wiped your glasses and put them on, you will be aon daring what baa become of ail thai wood. Two nicely matched steamer* will stay in tight of each other day after day. They might even stay aide by side, but for the fact that pilots are not all alike, and the smartest pilot will win toe race. If one of the boats has a " lighten R " pilot, whose " partner" is a trine his in ferior, von can tell which one is on watch by noting whether that boat has gained ground or lost some during each four hour stretch. The shrewdest pilot can \ delav a boat if be has not a fine genius for steering. Steering tea very high art. One must not keep a rudder drag giug across a boat's stern if be wants to get up the river test. A Cheap Fashion, 1 observe, nays a Paris correspondent, that white, and if not white the nearest j approach to white, is everywhere the rage. White veils, white bonnets, white dreuses, white flowers, white ribbons, white fans—all must be white. Fashion has not been no lightly inclined for very many years past. The black that was so universally patronised last year and the year before last is entirety discarded now—black barege, black grenadine ia no longer seen, unless, of course, in | cases < f mourning—and the lighter the hue of your dress the better. All sorts j of cheap cotton materials, cheap in them selves, but excessively dear if made up by the fashionable dressmakers, are enormously worn. There is s particular style of coarse linen known in Paris as Oxford, which is sold there at five sous a yard, and this is the stuff which all Pari* is trying its hardest to buy in great quantities, and make up into moat elaboratelv trimmed seaside dresses. , One of the most elegant women in J Paris appeared at a garden party the other day in a bewildering costume of Oxford, and slie was telling every one who gathered about her to admire its multitudinous developments of frill and flounce that it coat her seven francs and a half only ! She had Imnght the staff at five sons a yard, and her maid had made it instead of the dressmaker. Reducing Obedty. Mr. Philbert proposes an improved svstcm of mincing obesity, the basis of the regime resting on the prevention of the introduction of carbon mto the body, or on favoring its transformation, and augmenting the amount of oxygen—the food, therefore, to be non-nitrogenous, varied with a few vegetables containing no starch, and some raw fruit The temperament of the patient is also to be kept in view; the lymphatic to have a red diet, such as beef, mutton, venison, hare, pheasant partridge, etc., and the aangniue a white diet, like real, fowl, pigeons, oysters, etc. Vegetables, not sweet or farinaoeous, are allowable; also grapes, gooseberries, apples, etc., bnt sugar, butter, cheese, potatoes, pasty, rice, beans and jieas are proscribed. The hygiene consists, in this system of treatment, in favoring the action of the skin, in wearing a tight roller to support the walls of the abdomen, in taking plenty of exercise on foot and on horse back; also, playing at billiards, fencing, swimming, gymnastics, and kindred di versions. In some slight respects only does this method of M. Philbert differ from others brought forward of late years, but great merit is claimed for it Manufactures in the United States. The substantial growth in the products of the manufactures of the United States from 1860 to 1870, illustrate the indus trial prosperity of the nation. It is safe to assume that the increase of products of manufactures to June 30, 1874, would bo upward of 83,000,000,000. The fol lowing table shows the increase from 1860 to 1870: r r*OOCCT OF MAUL*rAOTt „AT*..j - —: I*C*EAM. ISM. | 18TC. EMttra 8858,599,387 i "$1^009,116,773 Middle 798,926,390 1,788,813,938 98M87.65S Wsrt'rn 888,676,<0; 1,073,888,858 TW, 368,088 SouthU 198,483,521 158,618,488 80,115,915 Pacific 71,339,9801 89,540,482 18,110,598 Total. 81,878,898,817' (teas of latere*!. Yon make your moony knrt by getting nomebody else to make it flrat. Being threadbare is Mbb benr to a proud man. The great feature at seaside resorte— The big bIU-owe*. (Vl*!<•'recommendation was; *'Make yourself an hottest man, and then yo may be aum thai there la one rascal leaa in & world." A flock of bona in Fairhaven, ft, have Iwen fed ao much on raw meat that they kill and eat all the young chicken* that oon* among them- An enterprising New Englander give* away hymn book* oaotainirig on alter j iwtr pagaa clever notice* of hia clothing ' store. A woman named Adelaide Itobin, fifty year* of age, threw herself from an tttitc window fat Flris not long ago, being a victim of unrequited love. ' There ia ao piece like home. Kal la ctone. I f your hpme be to a row of v 1 houses, it ta probable that the homea of . : yon. neighbors will be like youm, A Southern farmer aaid that carpet* looked liandflome on a floor, but be . couldn't afford to fake aome one to carry s a carpet oat doora tmrj time be wanted i l to apik B ! Ho large www the hailstones which ' fell at Damascus in a tempest which j viitd that rity cm the lt of June, that 1 three men were killed by them and eight | wounded. k We see through it at last. The butcher " Mick* tboae miserable little pina— which t no amatenr carver ever can contemplate i without profane impulse—into the roast ; piece to make it more aekewer. It ia an old saying that ** It ia never r too late to mend," and the men who * makea hie wife ait up in a hot night toft* t hia old datim while be aaorae under the mosquito bar, in the kind at person to r ;aay ii I The number of deaths in the English " mines laet year averaged one to every 510 person* employed, end nearly all were attributed to catslaaatiees. The to * I*l number of persons employed wae t SMJMI The Mennonttoa settled in the north vest of Canada have met with dish-ait -1 ening yiTMi Their crepe have been k mom than half destroyed by the grass a hoppers, and a good deal of destitution : w the result. " If a ftirt ia a fool who delights in fooi , ing fouia, and the fool who ta fooled by j sueb a fool la the fooiSaheat kind of a , tool, then the girl that gwstaa " taken in ? : by that fooUabaat kind of fool rnuat be a fool, indeed. e According to the United Htetoa oannus > reports the average value of the hay crop for the Ave years up to and indodi: - a 1873 amounted to 13*0,080,000, which ta i- :n exom of any other product of the soil a except corn. f The Ijeevenworth (Kansas) people are afflicted with flying makes, that crawl L, through the air four feet above the , ground. They are little things, about a foot kmg, wdh •" l * r 8® A sister of exLJovernor tieuter, of Tenneaaee, fell into a trance au closely wambling death that abe waa prepsrwi for burial. Upon revival she aaiu abe had baan with bar father, who had beau dead many yaara. Mr. Cleveland, on leaving the Con necticut Houae after Ma speech on woman suffrage, mat a man who aaid "ba wouldn't vote to make a man of his wifa.' Mr. Cleveland responded: "I hope your wife will euooeod in making a man of you." A party of belated gentlemen, about a curtain hour, began to think of home aud their wivea' displeasure, and urged a departure. " Never mind," aaid one of the guttata, " fifteen minutes can make no difference; my is as mad now as •becan be." A woman of Indianapolis baa shown that she oould be as murderously b -utsi a* almost any mac. She pursued her rival in love into a dbset, shot her Mtal Iv, and then, patting her revolver giee fullv, exclaimed : "Oh, quiver! That's right, die hard! I enjoy this. I do!" * The Warwickshire (England) miner* are wise in one wy. Tliey have been on a strike for a long white, but instead of remaining "D* they have gooe to school, vt an now improving tte tame by re u ii uii iii li ainrw in arithmetic, leading and writing, in rooms which they have hired for the purpose. A Sooth Boston lady was recently in terrogated by a Benedick aa to why she did not get married. She replied: " I prefer hi be an old maid. " He said he did not believe it, aa tea felt sore she envied his wife. " Oh, no! that would be breaking the commandment—'Thon •halt not covet thy neighbor's ass.' " At Dolmen the Germans pointed four of Krupp'e cannon, loaded with balls that oolteetMQr weighed twelve ban died weight, against a target made like a section of the skin of the best English iron clad, and the cannon were then dis charged simultaneously by the electric wire, and the target was annihilated. A curious instance of the cheapness of wheat and the deaniem of provender at the same time is given by an English farmer in a London paper, as having come under his own notice. A fanner sold the wheat grown on one field for £56 sterling, but for the straw which produced this wheat be obtained £6O. An officer of the French arav wore lij uniform about the rtreets of Eooe the other day, and was cm the point of being mobbed by the indignant citterns when the police' took him under their protection. That uniform is not vary popular among the Bomans, owing to Napoleon ULk military occupation of the dty. If men are the salt of the earth, women are the sugar. Salt is a necessity, sugar is a luxury. Vicious men are the salt tieter ; hard, stern men the rode salt; nice family mea the table salt. Old maids are the brown sugar ; good-natur ed matrons the loaf sugar ; pretty girls the fine pulverised white sugar. Pass the sugar, please! A mudent of Pottirvilte, Pa., baa a coin which has been decided to be a Hebrew shekel of the date of 335 B. C. It bas on one side a representation of Aaron's budded rod, and on the other a priest's censer with incense. The same gentleman also has an old Saxon coin, an Elizabethan shilling of 1691 and an English coin of 1693. A young and newly married couple passed along the line of the Chesapeake and Ohio nulroad, both traveling on free posses. Some years ago the groom granted right of way to the railroad company through his tends on condition, among other things that when he married he should nave two free wed ding excursion tickets. A M"'"* man has preserved the follow ing curious legal document: "Hancock, as Novr 11th 1800. Hien personally appeared Ibrook Eddy -of Eddington, and acknowledged himself guilty of having uttered two profane oaths on this dav and ban paid a fine for the same as the' law to mcv-O, Leonard, Justice of the Peace." While a party of fifteen men were en gaged in running a thrashing machine tefleorgte a heavy cloud and rain came 1 up, and a bolt of lightning Struck in the i midst of the crowd, killing three men outright- and injuring to aon}e extent the entire party. Two of the men were brothers, and were standing one on each aide of their father when killed, the father miraculously escaping unhurt. Caused His Death. M. T. Bowden, a schoolteacher at St. James. La., filled a pocket with advertis ing imitations of greenbacks, and when somebody at the village slope offered to 1 bet on something, he drew out a hand- I ful, saying : it #SOO, and I'll take you. The most of the bystanders saw the character of the supposed money, and laughed at the joke. Not so Karl Ahlbesrg, an ignorant Swede, who regarded the bills as genuine, and the amount as a fortune. Ahlberg en ticed Bowden into a stable, murdered him with a shove!, secured the worthless roll of paper, burled the body, mid fled. i •• -..itt