THE MOOLID OF THE PROPHET. A* Kußtrrn OrfiiieMv, Parlßl wfcloli a ll*rw and Klairr Paaa Ow Ike IImIIn •I Pnairmr I>rrvlhr. Oar tent was close at ham!; wo sought it *tli tlio nonehaleno# of travelers who rather enjoy breaking the tables of the law. We were glad of the escape and of the occasion of it; likewise grateful for the slight shelter our tent afforded, for by this time El Erdekoeyeh was shroud ed in a fine, sifting rain that sparkled in the snnshine as the golden light shot I h rough it. Mnaie (plenty of it) grow aft louder and more loud, and the roar M' 10,000 voice*, swept down upon us, ami then the rush of heralds crying, Atake way. make way!" and the der vishes thus" ancouueed advanced to offer np their bodies to the l)oseh. They hastened up the avenue in groups; each group was clustered about a staff deoor at<\! with holy rugs and saints' relics. All faces were turned toward the relics— the haggard faces of the dervishes, who hung together with arms entwined, c m pact as swarming bees; sacred banner* fluttered down the whole length of s Srodtesiou made up of these grouped ervishea. Not one of the victims seemed in his right miud; the majority of them were idiotic. Their swollen tongues lolled from their mouths; their heads wagged wearily ou their shoulders; and their eyes were either closed, or fixed and staring. Many of them were naked to the waist, ttulnuilesa, bare footed, and barelegged to the knee, lu fact, they wore of the lowest orders of the East, impoverish ad, fanatical, for lorn. They hastened to the top of the aventtc, a part of those in each group running backward. When they had assembled to the unruber of 400, the friends who accompanied them separated each cluster of dervishes, and began paving the way with their bodies. They lay face down in the dust, the arms crossed uuder the tarahMd; they were ranged shoulder to shoulder, hip to hip, though the heads were not always turned in the same direction, but were occasion ally reversed. Friends gathered at the head of each of the dervishes, snd with the Tolominons breadths of their garments fanned the prostrate forma rapidly and incessantly. In truth the der vishes seemed faintiug with hanger and fatigue, and, as the crowd pressed close upon til em, ther would doubtless have become mseuaibie in a short time bat for the fitful breath afforded by tires* flap ping sails. 1 observed that the major,ty of the dervishes lay as still as death; bnt there were those who raised their heads and looked wildly about nntil their friends had quieted them, or, as in siime oases, had forced them to lie still, while the confusion increased, ami, the intense excitement at the lower end of the avenue announced the approach of the sheik. A few footmen then ran rapidly over the prostrate bodies, beat - mg email copper drums of a hemispher ical form, aud crying in a lend voice. " Allah !" The attendants, as they saw the sheik's great turban nodding aboTe the crowd, grew nervous, and some of them lost all self control; one man standing dose beside me went stark mail, and three muscular fellows had some difficulty in dragging him away from the spot. He came, the sheik of the saadeeyeh, swathed in purple and fine linen, "and mounted upon a gray steed. The bridle was in the hands of two attendants; two others leaned npon the hind quarters of the animal to sup port his unsteady steps. The horse was shod with large, flat shoes, like plates of steel, that flashed in the sunshine; he stepped cautiously and with some hesit ation upon the bodies, usually placing Lis foot upon the hips or thighs of the dervishes; sometimes the steel-shod hoof slipped down the ribs of a man, or sank in between the thighs, for in no case could it touch the earth, so closely were the bodies ranged, side by side. If any shriek of agonv escaped from the lips of the dervishes f heard it not, for the air was continually rent with the cry of "Allah-la-la-la-lah," the rippling prayer, a breath long, continually reiterated. The-sheik was stupefied with opium, for he performs this act, much against his will. in deference to the demands of the people - he rocked in his saddle until he had passed the whole length of that avenue paved with hnman flesh, and then withdrew into a tent prepared for his reception, where he received the devoted homage of snch as were able to force their way into his presence.— Charts Warren Stoddard, in Atlantic Monthly, The Story of a Fountain. Among the fountains of Brussels there is none that commands snch attention of the stranger as a diminutive figure (called "Le Mannequin"), and there is none that is held in such reverence by the people of Brussels. It is a droll curiosity, while at the same time it is a true picture of innocence and nature. It is the figure of a hearty and robust little boy, about six years of age, standing on a pedestal over a half-circle basin, and as he has been frequently stolen or de faced, an ornamental iron railing in closes both the basin and the statue. Bnt Le Mannequin is an historical char acter, and he has stood for four hundred years in his present position. The first statue was in stone; but two hundred and sixty years ago it was replaced by the present bronze figure by Dnques-" noy. There are various legends in con- i nection with it, the best accepted of which is that the son of a distinguished man had been lost for seme time,having strayed away. This part of Brussels was then a thicket, and it was on the spot on which the fountain was subse quently erected by his father that he was found, after diligent search. In gratitude for hi* recovery the fountain was erected, and has stood during all the vicissitudes of war and changes of government It has been from time immemorial an object of popular affec tion. On grand holidays it has al ways been the custom of Le Mannequin to wear a costume, and an officer is regu larly appointed and paid by the City of Brussels, whose duty it is to dress him on these occasions, and to keep him in repair an.J in running order. When Louis XV. captured Brussels in 1747, he wore a large white oockade on his hat. In 1789, he was dressed ont in colors of the Brabaneon revolutionists, and the empire girded him with tbe French tricolor under Napoleon. The | Dutch government imposed the orange colors upon him. The days of Septem- * ber beheld him dressed in a blouse, aud under the present reign, on grand occa sions, he proudly wears the tunic of the civic gnard. ■ This little inanimate figure has been • the object of several bequests, from which some idea of tbe sentiment of the people of Brussels in relation to him may be judged. The object of these bequests was to furnish a fund, not only to furnish him with dresses lor /etc, bat also to keep the fountain in good order, and repair and renew it when necessary. This is the fund which the city administers, and which pays for his chamberlain. Lost in the Desert. Says the Winnemnoea (Nev.) Sentinel: A man J?y the name of Rossiter, who is engaged in the wood business near Moore's Btalion. on tbe railroad, was visited by his wife and child, who re side at Humboldt Wells. While at the wood camp the child, a boy four and a half years of age, wandered off, aud was not missed by his parents for probably twenty ininntes after be left the camp. That day search was made tor the little fellow without finding him, and the next day a large party set out on his trail, which was followed with great difficulty. We are informed by Conductor Hopkins that on tbe third day fifteen men left Humboldt Wells on horseback to hnnt for the .little wanderer, among them the railr id agent, Mr. Watson. He had 1 found Iboy's track, but as he had take J of>' his boots it was very difficult to trace iL Mr. Watson tied the horse's iiglter to One of his own legs and followed the track ou his hands and knees for several miles, and at last found the child on the summit of a lone mound near the Independence Mountains, twenty-five miles froifi where he started. The child traveled Tour days during the intensely hot weather of last week, without food < or water, and was crazy when found i by Mr. Watson. He recovered rapidly, however, and when Conductor Hopkins , left tho Wells was apparently none the worse for his adventure. , i Earls Worth Knowing. As flies nre said to eat the animalcules 1 in impure air, thus removing tho seeds of disease, leanness iu s fly is nrima I facie evidence of pure air iu a house, • while corpulency indicates foul waU • paper and bad ventilation. Talking of fa foul aud freeh atmosphere, there has r lately been adopted in India a novel r method of giving change of air to peo ple who cannot afford to leave home. i Patient* go tip in a balloou, which as* t eends to a certain height, and is there - made captive. It seems that a few days r passed m this atmosphere, which is , quite different from that on the plains , beneath, temporarily braces up the most • languid of invalids. The importance to r health of free perspiration no less than ' of fresh air, and what dangers arise from perspiration being suddenly • elwvked, lias been proved by the fact that a person covered completely with a compound, impervious to moisture, will not live over six hours. On the ooea ■ aiou of some papal ceremonies a poor i child was once gilded all over with var i niali and gold-leaf to represent the I Golden Age. No wonder that it died iu i a few hours, when we consider that the ■ amount of liquid matter which passes through the pores of the skiu iu twenty • four hour* in an adult person of sound ; health, is sLuit sixteen fluid ounces, or • one pint. Besides this, a large amount > of carbonic acid— a gaseous body—pass es through the tube#; so we cannot fail to see the importance of keeping ' thetn iu perfect Working ordt r by fre quent ablutions or other means. It Las often been stated that oenlar weakness and diseases in various forma appear to have beeu rapidly in creasing in recent times. l>r. lrering, in discussing before the New York County M<>hcal Soe cty the serious queatiou, "Is the huu. ni eve gradually changing its form tuidt the influence of modern civilisation ?" confirms the opinion, so far at least as ahort-sightcd ues-.s is concerned. Constant study, now incidental to the lives of so many, has, he says, a tendency to engender this derangement of the eye, aud it is often transmitted to descendants. Iu his 1J( opinion, nearsightedness is a disease of childhood, and rarely develops itself after the fifteenth or eighteenth year. On examining the eye# of over two thousand scholars in the New York pub lie schools, l>r. Loring found that the proportion of those in a healthy condi tion were eighty-seven |>er rent, among i children under aeveu years, while be tween that age and twenty-one the pro portion of normal eyes was but atxtv one; which shows, bethinks, that near sightedness increases directly with the ' age to which schooling is extended. Iu Kouigsbcrg, Germany, be found con siderably more than half the population were short-sighted; and iu America it is more commonly met with among the older Eastern cities than the uew ones ,of tbe West. Among the most prom inent cause* of the disease are, in his i opinion, a sedentary life, poor food, bad ventilation, and general disregard of hygienic requirements—all conducing |to a laxity of tisane, of which near sightedness is an indication. An unexpected friend to man has been discovered in a kind of animalcule en gendered by sewage, winch prevents the decomposing matter from becoming a dangerous nuisance. Mr. Angel!, the public analyst for Hampshire, naving examined the sewage-polluted fluid iu i Southampton Water, has discovered that where the suspended matters are thick > est there is going oo a silent destruc tion of the foul matters, through the agency of millions of the minute erea >' turea,*by acme held to be of animal, bnt ' bv Mr. Angell believed to be of vegeta ble origin. On examining the muddy > fluid through a microscope, it was found to contain myriads of little brown or ganisms, surrounded with a gelatinous 1 substance. Each specimen was found to be active in its movements and of peculiar shape, being furnished with a belt of cilia round the centre of the body, and with a long transparent and very flexible tail. After death, these tiny atoms give off an odor similar to ' | that of sea-weed and change to a green color. During life they evolve bubbles of oxygen gas, which servo to purify the water from the effects of the decompos ing matter ou which tliey themselves feed. It is a pity, however, that man, i by polluting rivers with sewage, should stand so much in need of these neces sary scavengers. The World'* Railway*. A French writer has been carefully collecting the railway statistics of all nations. At the close of 1876 the total railway mileage in the world was 183,982 miles, apportioned as follows: Miitf ill.". Earofs 89.49 C Africa 1.519 America 83.421 Asia 7,6T0tal .1*3,932 Australia 1,923', At this time the United States had , but 74.095 miles of railway. But at the close of 1877 the mileage was 79.514, and must now be about 82,000. Other nations are credited as follows: Mii't. Miles. Great Britain ...16 794 India 6.527 Frante 13,492 Canada 4,200 Germany 17.191 Pern 970 Hmxia ... 11,555 Argentineßepob. 990 Austria 10,852 Egypt 975 Italy. 4,815 Brazil 836 Turkey 900 Europe has a capital of $20,500,- 000,000 invested in railways, against $6,000,000,000 for America and all the rest of the world. The railways of Eu rope, in 1876. earned 1,140,000,000 passengers and 5.400,000,000 tons of freight, or about 470 passengers to every 10) tons of freight. It is estimated that 4,000.000 tons of rails are required every year to renew the worn-out stock on the mads already in operation, be sides what is needed to lay down new roads. The average wear of a rail is ten years. The rolling mil's of the United States have a capacity of nearly 2,000,000 tons, though our consumption of rails, iucluding imports, is not half that number. Mr. Bodie, an Italian compiler of general railway statistics, asserts that everywhere railways nnder State management are more oostiy than those nnder private management. The difference is in favor of the latter nearly twelve per cent, in gross receipts in Belgiam, nine per cent, in Prussia, and eight per cent, in all the rest of Ger- i ,many. The oowt of the construction of railways, owing to the advances in the wages of labor and the depreciation in tbe purchasing power of money, rose from $25,090 to $65,000 between 1850 and 1873 in Germany, and in a corres ponding ratio in most other European countries. In France in 1855 it cost an average of $80,003 per mile, and in 1875 $92,000 per mile.—.Van Francisco Chronicle. Fees of Pari* Restaurant Waiters. A Paris correspondent writes: It is an established rule in the cafes and restaurants of Paris that the waiters not only receive no salary, but pay a daily stipend to the proprietors for the privi lege of waiting npon customers. It is customary in Paris and all over En rope for the customer to give two or three sons to the waiter, which, in the course of a dav, amounts to quite a handsome sum. In aome of the restaurants an nm is kept on the desk of the cashier and eqeh of the waiters as he receives this gift money is required te drop it into the urn. At the close of the day it is taken ont and divided among till the waiters, tbe proprietor receiving one fonrth of the amount. Iti other estab lishments each waiter keeps the money he receives, bnt pays the proprietor from two to ten francs, according to the run of custom. A curious incident of the absurdity of this custom occurred a. the Paris Exposition the other day. The proprietors of the Duval resiaurant, oonoeiving that their waiters were mak ing too much money, raised the tax on waiter from one to two francs per day. A general strike was the result, but the waiters finally yielded. In Vienna, where the restaurants are larger and more extensively patronized, the waiters collect no money, bnt they huve j regularly appointed collectors," each having a dozen or more tables. These collectors pay heavily for their positions, ' sufficient to pay the salaries of all the I waitera in the establishment It is the general impression that hotel porters, who prey upon the guests, also pay the proprietors for their positions. TIIE FnH.lt' LANDS. Tltr Various si OIislnla I slleS Nlair. llsvcrsmesi I.aa3. Referring to the deoiaiou of Secretary Schurz directing thai all Die latnla do nated by the Government to the Pacific railroad companies should hereafter be opcti to pre-emption and private entry at the rate of $1.25 per acre, the Chica go Trihtiftr save: Thia will oiwu to private purchase slauit 28,000,000 aorea of lam! at $1.85 per acre. We give as a matter of information an alietract of the Laud law* a* they now stand. To un deratand thia the better, it should be Htuted that in all the granta of lamia to radrnadatha Government retained each alternate taction of laml, which eectious are now ami have always been open ti purchaae and pre-emption at $2.50 per acre. There are several modes if ob taining Government laml* (1) My pur chase, bv "private entrv" or loeatiou; pj) location l>v laud scrip; (8) bv pre emptions; ly entry nnder the Home stead law; (5> by entry under the HjKxual homestead provisions in the case of soldiers of the late sr. The proceed ings in these eases are is follows: 1. Any person having select.vl the land he desires makes written applies tion therefor, describing it. IX tlu* land be of the character open to private eutrv, his application is recorded and he pavs the purchase money, 1.25 per acre, and receive* a patent therefor. I'mler this form ihe quantity is not limited, ami there are no restrictions a to occu pation or cultivation. •J. Congress has granted, at various time*, land f# States for colleges and other institutions, and scrip has been issued therefor, which mar be located on any land subject to private entrv. The warrant or scrip is accepted in place of the cash at the rate of $1.25 per acre. 3. The pre-emption privilege i* re stricted to the head* of families, widow* or single men over twenty-one vears of age, citiseua of the United Ktetcs, or who have taken steps to te naturalized. Thia right extends to 160 acres at $1.25 per acre ou general public lauds, or at $2 50 per acre on the alternate secti >us of land along the railroad routes. The person must go upon and occupy the land, and within three mouths file a de claration of hi* purposes to purchase that quarter section, and within thirty months, or two years aud six months, thereafter, must die proof of his occu pancy and settlement, and pay tho priee thereof iu cash. Iu case the settler diea before maturing his claim, all Ins rights succeed to his wulow or heirs. Actual settlement is the essential feature of thia privilege, there being a credit of thirty three months for the purchase money. 4. Tbe Homestead law givea the right to enter, free of charge, on any laud open to purchase, 160 aorea; he or she may be tweuty-one years of age; the head of a family, a citizen or intending tr become one; he must declare that the entry is for his or her exclusive benefit, and for actual settlement aud cultiva tion. An the end of five years' settle ment and cultivation upon proof then of, and payment of the office fees, the per son ia entitled to a patent therefor. The applicant for a homestead can select 160 acres of any laud the cash price of which is $1.25 per acre; or he may take eighty acres of any of the reserved land, the cash priee of which is $2.50 per acre. 5. All the provisions of the Home stead law are extended to every soldier and officer of the army who served not less than uiuoty days during the late war and who wa--> honorably discharged; the dieffrence Wing that be may select 160 acres of any laud, in cluding the reserved lauds, the cash price of which i* $2.50 |x r acre, and the time of the service iu the army shall bo deducted from the period of five years, require.! in ail other ea*e of homestead, for settlement aud cultivation. The benefit of this law ia extended to the widow of a soldier, if unmarried, or in case of her death or marriage the minor children may enter the homestead. If the soldier died during the term of his enlistment, then tbe widow cr children shall be entitled to the Wneflt of the full term of tho enlistment. The total fees aud commissions te bo paid in case o( a homestead ia eighteen dollars, of which four dollars are paid whoa the final certificate ia issued. From these particulars it will be seen that any ad nit person may pre-empt any portion of the public laml to the extent of 160 acres of laud held at $1.25 an acre, or eighty-three acres held at $2.50 per acre, and pay for the same, without in terest, at the end of thirty-three mouths after taking possession. Or, under the Homestead law, every adult may enter 160 acre* of $1.25 laml, or eighty acres of $2.50 land, without cost, on condition of cultivating aud occupy lug the same five Tears. Or a soldier, or the wi.fow of a soldier, or the minor children of a soldier, can enter 160 acres of either descript on of land, and have the term of service in the army deducted from the five years'set tlement or cultivation. Land may be entered for homesteads by a duly ap pointed agent. Lauds acquired under the Homestead law are not liable for debts contracted previously. The Influence of Newspaper*. A school teacher, who had been a long time engaged in hm profession,aud witnessed the influence of a newspaper upon the minds of a family of children, writes as follows:"i I huve found it to be a universal fact, without exception, that those scholars of both sexes; aud of all agea, who have access to newspapers at home, when Compared with those'who have not, are: 1. Better readers, excellent in pro nunciation, aud consequently read more and understandinglv. 2. They are betterjspellera, and define words with ease aud accuracy. 3. They obtain practical knowledge of geography in nlmo at half tbe time it requires of others, as the newspapers hav ma le them acquainted with the location of the important places, of na tion*. their government and doings on the globe. 4. They arc iletter grammarians for having become so familiar with every variety of style iu the newspapers, from the common-place adverti a-ment to the finished and classical oration of the statesmen, they more readily compre hend the meaning of the text aud con stantly analyze its constriction with accuracy. 5. They write better composition, using better language, containing more thoughts, more clearly aud correctly expressed. 6. Those young men who have for years been readers of newspapers are always taking the lead in debating so cieties, exhibiting a more extensive knowledge npo® a greater variety of subjects, and expressing their views with greater fluency, clearness and cor rectness. Sagaeity of Ant.*. Professor Leidy, in a recent article, states that, in order to itscertain whether a house he hal just entered was (as he suspected) seriously infested with rod ants, lie placed a piece of sweet cake in" every room. At noon every piece was found covered with ants. A cup of tur- [ pontine oil beiug provided, each piece j was picked tip with forceps and the ants tapped into the oil. The cake was re placed, and in the evening was again fonnd covered with ants. The same I process was gone through the following two days, moruing, noon, and night. ! The third day the number of ants had greatly diminished, and on the fonrtli j there was none. Fie at tlrst supposed the ants had all been destroyed, bnt in ; the attic he observed a few feasting on some dead hoiiße flies, which led him to suspect that the remaining ants had bo come suspicious of the sweet cake. He accordingly distributed through the house pieces of baoon, which were after wards swarming with ants. This was repeated with the same result for sever al days, when, in like manner with the cake, the ants ceased to visit, the bacon. Pieces of cheese were next tried with the Hnme rrsnlt, but with an nndonbted ' thinning in the number of ants. When the cheese proved no longer attractive, dead grasshoppers were supplied from the garden. These again proved too :: mrrtdi for the ant*, bnt after a few days'' trial neither grasshopjiers nor anything ] else attracted them ; nor has tbo house been infested with them since. I What lie Was After. A strong, healthy-looking young man entered tho County Clerk's office ami gnaed respectfully around. llariy Thompson, the Chief Deputy, stspped up Mill blandly im|idred Of the stranger if he wished any business transacted. The voting man, when spoken to, started back oa though dreading mi as sault, but he soon recovered himself, ami said in a wliiaiier: "Yea, sir I called to sew—l wsnteil to have n little talk how much is it, anyhow?" He Held a soft cloth lint in lus hand, ami kept turning ami twisting it nhout a# lie spoke; his lace had grown tcrrd ly ml, and big dnqva of |ierspiiatiou were standing on his brow. "What ia it you want?" aaked the clerk. The man looked nt him pleadingly, tint struggled in vain for utterance. Ilia eye# bulged out, his face grew red dcr, mid the veins in his neck aud on Ins forehead swelled till they looked like great knotted cords, lie twisted the hat convulsively and then straightened it out ogahi, and theu he pulhsl the ucw lining out of it aud dropid it on the Door. Then he picked it up all dusty fn >iu the floor ami wiped his steaming face, leaving a dirty streak after caeii a ipe. Finally it seamed as though the poor voung man had quite recovered himself, for he looked ehcarfully amuud tiie room, and theu turning to Mr. Thompson, remarked in a pleasant ami confidential toue: " Well, it is real warm for this sec tion. isn't it?" " Very warm, indeed," replied Mr. T. " It is a good deal hotter than we have it down in tho valley, and somehow I've always had just the other uotiou about it—that tho higher up you got, the cooler— " "Yes," said Mr. Thornjwon; "bat about that business of yours." Another firry blush that h>okrd aa if it wotlld scorch the collar off his ucck, followed tins remark, but the stranger held up bravely. He leaned on the desk in an easy, careless sort of way, ami began to toy witb a mucilage brush. " The fact of the matter is, that 1 wanted to " Here he paused again, and medita tively jammed the tuucilage-brush into the ink stand. " What the deuce are you doing witb that brush?" asked the clerk, somewhat impatiently. " Oh, by George—excuse me," stam mered the man, as bo ha>ti!v withdrew the brush, spattering the ink ail over the clerk's shirt bosom, and a* if it had been molasses dripping from his linger#, thrust the brush tulo his mouth, daub ing himself with luk and mucilage, and then bolted from the office. "That's about the worst case I have ever seen," remarked Mr. Th>m|>son, as he wiped a big ink spot from the star board side of his Roman nose. " Gray as a loon," said Alderman OrudortT, who had been au interested s;Mvtator of the whole scene. " You ought to send a policeman after tnat man." " Xo; he's not exactly crazy," replied Thompson. " I knew from the start that he wanted a marring" !icuse, and 1 thought 1 d have a little quiet fun; but he's broke the line now and gone off with the hook."— l iryinid < Vty (.Wr.) Chronicle. FdUun and the Fit seeu Initer-e. Hitherto man's kuuwltslge of tlie ex tent of the universe has been bounded bv the until* of vision. During the day, when the range of sight is narrowed by the sun's excessive brightness, we see but s minute fraction of the little world we in habit. At night a wider reach of vision is possible, and some thousands of stel lar and planetary bodies are added to the domain of jKw-itive knowledge, thus enlarging enormously man's idea of the magnitude of 'he universe. But the in crease of knowledge which darkness re veals is almost infinitesimal compared with the wider view of the universe opened up by the telescope; and every addition to the telescope's penetrative power bring* a larger and larger universe within our ken. That the most powerful of telescopes enables us to reach the limit of the uni verse no one imagines. See a* much a* we may, more—perhaps infinitely more —lies bevond. So, at least, ail experi- I ence lends us to infer; but our positive knowledge ends with the limit of VI.MOC. Must this always lie so? Hitherto science has given no hint of the possi bility of exploring the vast and uivsteri ous beyond, from which no visible ray of light has ever been detected, or is ever 1 likely to lie detected, by the most far reaching and sensitive of optic aids. But now there cornea a promise of nu i extension of positive knowle lge to fields , of space so remote that light is tired out uud hist before it can traverse the inter vening distance. A new agent or organ of scientific sense for space exploration has been given to the world in the taai rnoter, by which it is possible not only to measure the heat of the remotest of visible stare, but, Mr. Edison believes, to detect by their invisible radiations stars that are unseen and unseeable! Mr. Edison's plan is to adjust the t.isi raeter to its ntm >st degree of sensitive ness, then to attach it to a large tele scope, and so explore those parts of the heaven*, which appear blank when ex amined by telescopes of the highest penetrative power. If at any point in such blank space the toaimcter indicates an accession of temperature, uud does this invariable, the legitimate inference will be that the instrument is in range with a stellar body. Cither non-luminous or so distant as to be beyond the reach of vision assisted by the telescope; and the position of such body can be fixed and mapped the same HB if it were visi ble. Seeing that the taaimeter is affected by a wider rnngo of ethcrie undulations than the eye can take cognizance of, and is withal far more acutely sensitive, the probabilitities are that it will open up liitherto inaccessible regions of space, and possibly extend the range of our real knowledge a* far beyond the limit attained by the teleeoope a* that is 1h yond the narrow reach of unaided vision. Possibly, too, it may bring within human ken a vast multitude of nearer bodies— burnt-out sunr or feebly-reflecting plan ets—now unknown because not luiuin oua.—Scientific American. Peat Men and Women In Shetland. The lives of these people are simple and uneventful enough. The chain is a very short one and the links are not mattered. They go forth to their daily work and return to their daily refit, and have no thought or ambition beyond. Their aspect. I have said, is picturesque. They are of all ages, some young, others bending under the weight of years. There they go, one after another, with their baskets, or kishes, as they ar:* call ed. fastened upon the back by means of a strap over each shoulder, rising abovo their bends, nnd piled up with squares of black peat. This naturally gives them all a stooping position, snggestive of hard work and feminine weakness, that quickly appeals to the sympathies. Many of tiiem wear'ahoes made of cow hide, strong and choup, perhaps, but without form, and with small preten sions to neatness and cleanliness. And these they often "save" by carry tug them in their hands. Many, too, are without stockings, and they trnilge along bare-footed and bare-legged, aud only look in consequence the more pov erty-stricken. Their petticoats are short, and generally of some dark, coarse ma terial, with the color of which tlie peat getting sufficiently harmonises. Upon their heads they wenr the inevitable ker chief of thick Shetland wool, generally gray, but sometimes rod. Their fares are sunburned and weather-beaten. Those of the old women are often strangely and wonderfully wrinkled, which, with their bent attitude, gives them a look of extreme age, and almost decrepitude. The younger women are many of them handsome; I saw a few really beautiful faces. As they goalong the road nearly all Hro knitting stockings or some other article of wear. They appear to knit by instinct—an hereditary gilt. Their heavy loads and somewhat difficult progress in no way seem to in terfere with the flying needles. These never arrest their motion as their owners for a moment raise their heads as you pass and wish you good day; or, it may be, turn round to look after the stranger to the gun—no doubt the gun.— Argosy. , A UOIJF MI>K IN NEW YORK CITY. \\ itnl i* n California tflnnr* PMRII IN Ik* Kiilna of m llMinrd Jrwrlry Htorn. The Appleton building m Itoud street, then rilled with jeweler'# wares, wan burned on March fl, 1H77. Nearly all of ' the immense property in gold and ailyer ware and jewelry waa n total loan, the precioua metal* having been melted in tiie tluiuea and Moaltered aliout unioiig the debris, The entiinated loan in tile deatruoUon >f gold aud ailver ware, watches, uild jewelry alotie wan estimated ai more than $1,000,000. The p|erty \ and merohandine being heavily insured, the loan fell heuvieat pmtiahly ujuiii the I insurance eontpamea. These, therefore, had the privilege of remunerating them- Hclve# by gleaning from the debris the precious metal# that had tweti melteil. The ilrat gleumuga were an easy mat ter, and great nugget# of melteil gold , aud ailver were extracted, and a large attm waa realised, lint when the nug get# were all extracted the insurance companies retire<|, and then the owner# of the building, Meiutrn ltoliertn A Apple ton, overturned all this muss, aud sub jecting it to what they deemed a thorough washing, obtained many tbouaaud dol lars' worth more. The tnuoh-waahed debris waa then allowed to rent tindi studied until about three months ago, when it waa deter mined by other |ieraotia to give it another ami more thorough washing than it had aver undergone before. These person# were the miners. Peer & Roberta. Ptfr began life early a# a miner, i |teuf twenty-seven years in the buai | neaa in the Pacific alope, and ba# ' reduced mining to such a alienee that he believe# he can extract every ' particle of the predion# metals from the moat refractory ore# aud tailings. One -lay ROIKTU told bia partner. Peer, who had just returned from California, about ' tbe g >id mine in Iloud street, and the j utauy waahtug* it had undergone. The ; next day Peer wn# scraping about and overturning the remains of Jhe worked out iiond street gold mine. The oonae qnanee waa a bargain with the owners of tiie ruins, in which they agreed to pay them ten |-<-r cent, of their net glean- I mg. A gold washer, concentrators, flume r flies, and s small engine were quickly put up, anil the miners set to work with * much energy as if they had mad'- a rich "find" in the gold regions of the West. None hut a-cluan observer would imagine that the half doaeu quiet work ' uien and noiseless little engine in the excavation IHJIOW were the operators and , machinery of a gold mine in full blast. The habit of secrecy i so gieat with the 1 old miner that but a few people in the city are aware of what a rich "find" the : Bond street uiiue is. The la>>t cradleftil of the debris wis I rocking in the washer, and therefore the miners had no objection to telling how much money they hail made and the procena of mining. In the first place, the debris is submitted to a thorough washing in flumes. These are long laxes, twelve inches deep, fourteen wide, and any length that may be de sinil. There are one hundred feet of flume used 111 the Bond street mine. The water used is pumped in by the engine and then elev.-.ted to the washer, after which the same water is again eon ducted to the flumes, thus economizing it and catching the smallest }atttole of the precious ineUiL Fortv tons }-r day of the debris were WSSIKHI in the flume#, turning out one ton of concentrations. This in turn was submitted to the gold washer, and re duced to lutae metal, turning out three hundred to five hut: in 1 pounds Ui the ton. The base metal r then taken to the refinery and reduced to flue bars, 900 tine. From the refinery the bars go b> the mint, ami are there turned into bright gold piece*. "How much Jiave you made in your two mouths of city mining ?" was asked. "We hare got about IBO.UOO," Mr. Robert* said. "Here arc SIBO in bright twenty-dollar gold pieces tlist 1 have just drawn, being Uie proceeds of £34 Cuds of the base metal. We have on .1 forty or fifty aaeks of the Idee metal to go to the refinery. Each siu-k weighs one hundrel pound*. Breide# there are eight or ten tone of tailings, old bita of rusted iron with particles of precious metal sticking to them. Theae are to undergo a process of pickling, and the precious metals separated from the base. We expect to realize a con siderable amount from these." The exjiense has not been much as anticipated, and the net proceeds are handsome,—„Vrir York Sun. * 1 weather. leather has a long history. If it ia a too exclusive motto that " there is nothing like leather," few manufactured things are older. It was probably the very first bit of mnuufacturo—rude, yet suites! to its purpose, the una of bark for hardening and preserving skins having, no doubt, i >eeu practiced in pro-historic tinns, Even our prugeuitor —the ancient Briton—used a strong hide thong to throw his stones with, and was scantily clad in leather—antici pating the odd daaira of George Fox, the founder of (Quakerism. Within the period'of autheutui history, leather has iieeu legislated for and protected, and ban ofteu been included in sumptuary regulations. It is very odd to reail that in England in the aixteenth century oouiplamts were made that skins were tanned in three weeks, (thus uncon scionably shortening the period of use ami wont, which had been about one year,) and that in consequence an act was paaaod in IMB prohibiting tanners from selling hides that were not attested to have been nine months in the tan-pit. And the jealousy of rival guilds, which did something in old days to secure the division of lalior, if nothing more, is also seeu ill the history of leather. In 1439 tanners were prohibited from 1M ug shoe-makers; while in 1562 butchers were precluded from beooming tanner# under a penalty. Home of the restrict ions which snrrounded the leather manu facture Bctnally remained until 1890, when they were completely removed by on act of George IV. Free trade in tanning, then introduced, gave an im mense impetus to the application find extension of the chemical discoveries which had been made by Heguin in 1795, and bv Sir Humphry Davy in 1803.— Hood Words. The poison so freely used by the Ital ians in the seventeenth ceutury was railed "aqua tofnna," from the name of the old woman Tofania, who made and mold it in small flat rials which she called maimn of St. Nicholaa, on one aide of which was an image of the faint. She carried on this traffic for half a cou taiy and eluded the police, but on being detected confeasel that she had been a party in poiaouitig 600 people. Numerous persons were implicated by her of all rnuks, and many of thm were publicly executed. All Italy was thrown into a ferment, and ninny fled, while persons of distinction, on conviction, wore strangled in prison. ft appeared to have been used mainly by married wo men who were tired of their husbands. Four or six drops were a fatal dose, lint the effoet was not sudden and therefore not suspected. It was as clear as water, but the chemists have not agreed about its ;T al composition. A proclamation of the Pope deaerilied it as aquafortis dis tilled into arsenic, and others considered it as a solution of crystallized arsenic. The secret of its preparation waa con veyed to Paris, where tho Marchioness de Rrinvalirrs poisoned her father and two brothers, and she,with niaiiy others, were executed, and the preparers of it were buried at tho stake. I'eets ahtl Taverns. It is a enrions fact that BO many dwell ings, onoe the homes of poets, should have been public lionses at one time or another. Rums' native cottage was a house of this description ; the house in which Moore waa born was a whisky shop ; and Shelley's house at Great Mar low, a beer shop. Even Coleridge's residence at Nether Sftiwey, the very house in which tho pot eomf>sed his sweet " Ode to the Nightingale," be came an ordinary beer house. A house m which James Montgomery lived for 40 years, at Sheffield, was a beer shop, and the birthplace of Kirke White is now a house tor retailing intoxicating beverages.— Chambers' Journal. Form* of Address. Herl>ert Hpeneer, in hi® trMktiM of tha •' Erolntion of Ceremonial Govern ment," give# some interesting illutr tions of formii <>f address and modes practised I>v various people aud nation# of Uio earth. These he uanuiuea to be mainly Uio expression of the relation of (lie ounquered toward tho conqueror. Tim* when the Turkish nourtier ad dronaea the Hultaii oa " Center of the UDIHIW, your slave's head ia at your feet," or tlhe Huuueae who saya to hia superior " lord ftenefaetor, at vhow feet 1 ain to a I'riuoe, "I, tho aolra of your foot' 1 ; to a King "I, a dust-grain at your sacred feet." In ltuaaia, even tu these days, petitions twgin with " Ho and ao strikes hia forehead ("on the ground") and petitioner# are called •'forehead strikers." In France, aa late a 1R77, it waa the onatom to aay " I ka your grace'e handa," "I kiaa your lord ahip'a feet." Even to-day in Hpain wliere orientaliaiua atili obtain it ia the euatom on taking leave of a lady, to aav " My lady, 1 place uiyaelf at your feet.' Her reply ia, "I kiaa vour baud, air." Among the eaunlbal l'upia a wairior ahouta to hia enemy, " May every mi fertuue eome upon thee, my meat." The captive on approachmg, exclaim#, " I, your food, have come." lu other plain-a ouly a verbal aurren der of life take# place where the subject profehaiw to live only by pcrmiaaion of the superior. Thi# ia aptly expreaaed in the old Kuaaiau aou : My KIUI ia God'*, My land t wine, Mr bead the ('ear'*. My back l* Ihluc." Wlieu a at ranger eutera the houae of a Karcelot (inland native) he goea out and aaye, " White man, my houae, my wife,my children belong to tbee," which, it may lie presumed might lie aa em bar running to au explorer aa the Hpiuiisb customs waa to A. Ward esq. A sand wich lnhunh r asked aa to the owuerahip of a canoe replica " It'a mine and youra," and in Hpain where politeness requires that everyUiing admired by a at ranger aliould be offered him the cor rect way of lieginuiug a letter to a friend ia " From Uiia, your houae." Biblical narrative# are filled with the word "Servant " a* applied by a subject t<> a superior and in th<>e time* the ser vant* wore the captive# or prisoners uauallj taken in war. Thia not only eipreeatxl the relation of jtemoua but also ouwwuniiie* and subject*, tribe# aa where David addreaaing Haul describes huufw-lf and hn father an Hanl'a servant*. Three expressions of aalf-aliaaement originally made to a Hnpreme ruler came to be applied to thuee of subordin ate authontr, a# when Joseph'* bretheru were brought before bun in fear spoke of themselves and of their father as his sen ants or slaves. This forui of addreaa also i xtetaded to equals where favor aas sought t* witness, Judge# XIX 19, when the Levtte, addressing the Ben* janiite, soliciting a night's lodging, re irt U> linnself and hut wife aa "thy servants." lu Hebrew history men are described as servants of God just us they are described as servauts of the Ktug, and the parallel between the visible and in visible Ruler, in such expressions as, "'Hie King hath fulfilled the request of bis servant." " The Lord bath redeem ed his servant Jacob," has a history parallel to all other elements of religious oereuionvaL To the victorious Ramose* 11, his de feated foes prefaced their prayers for nti-rcv by the laudatory words : "Prince guarding thy arrcv, valiant with the ■word, bulwark of lii* troop* in day of battle, King wigbty in strength, great Sovran, Son powerful in truth, ap proved of Ra, mighty in inctunes, Ilameses Miatnou." The King of Siara is addressed by the plorvfyinp works: "Mighty and August Lord," " Divine Merry," " The Master of Life," " Sovereign of the Earth,' etc.; and the Sultan as "The Shadow of Chid," "tiloryof the Universe," etc.; the Emjieror of China, "Sou of Heaven," "The Lord of Ten Thousand Yeara, "and but few years since the Czar of Russia by Bulgarians as "O blesses! Czar," "Blissful Czar," "Orthodox powerful Czar." The Freneh courtiers of tlie 16th cen tury used to say, "1 am your servant and the perpetual servant of your house." .And among ourselves in the pas! were used such indirect expressions of servitude as "Yours to command," " Ever at your worship's disposing," " in all serviceable humbleness," while u our day, made orallv only in irony, we still adhere in writing to "Your olxslieut servant," " Yonr humble ser vant," etc., and these generally made nse of where distance is to be maintained between the jiartios, and therefore like too many of onr other formalities have an inverted meaning. Bonders of the Atmosphere. Tlie atmosphere rises above us with its cathedral dome arching towards heaven, of whieh it is the most perfect svuonym and symbol. So massive is it tlint when it tiegins to stir it tosass alvout the great ships like playthings, sn I sweeps cities and forest like snow flakes to destruction before it. And yet it is so mobile that we have lived fori years in it before we can tie persuaded that it exists at all, and the great bulk of mankiud never realize the truth that thev are lathed in an ocean of air. Its weight is so enormous that iron shivers before it like glass, yet a soap ball sails through it with impunity, and the tiniest insect waves it aside with its wing*. It ministers lavishly to onr senses. We touch it not yet it touches tt*. Ita warm south wind brings tack color to the pale lace of the invalid ; its cail west wind* refresh the fevered brow and make the blood mantle to our cheek*; even its north blasts braces into new vigor the hardened children of our rugged climate. The eye is indebted to it for all the magnificence of sunrise, the brightness ol mid-day, tlie eluisteni'd radienoe of the morning, and the clooda that cradle u< ar the setting sun. But for it tlie rainlaiw would want its "triumphant arch," and tfce winds wonld not send the fleecy messengers on errands around the heavens ; the cold ether wonld not shod auow foatber* on the earth, nor wonld drops of rain gather on the flowers. The kindly dew would never fall, nor hail, storm, nor fog diversify the face of the sky. Our naked globe would tarn its tanned and unshadowed fotehead to the sun, and one dreary, monotonous blaze of light and beat daz- zle and burn np all things. Were there no atmosphere, the eve ning ann wonld in a moment set, and withont warning—plunge the earth into darkness. But the air keeps in her hand a shwif of bis rays, and let* them slip slowly through her fingers, BO that the shadows of evening is gathered l>y degrees, ami the flowers have time to bow their heads, and reeli creature in spnrei to find a place of rest and to nestle to repose. In the morning the garish son would at one bonnd buret from the bosom -if the night and blaze above tlie horizon; but tlie air watches for his coming, and stnds first but one little rny to aunotinoe his approach, aud then another, and tlieu a handful, and so gpntly draws aside the enrtain of night and slowly lets the light fall o the face of the sleeping earth, till her eyeiida open, and like man, ahe goea forth again to labor till availing. A Hlrl who Could Throw Stones. A Nova.la man write* to the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise, as fbllows ; "The writer once knew a family in which there were *ix bonncing girls withont a break. Being very poor, tbe father hail taken the eldest to assist him in out ol door work. To this ahe seem ed to take naturally, and eventually be came an adept in mowing, reaping, tree felling, and eveu snow-shoeing— ne of the most difficult of things to acquire command rf. Although fully equal to the boys of her age in doing the above work, there WHS only one thing in whieh she showed a decided superiority, and that was in stone-throwing. The pre cision nnd velocity with which ahe could hurl one of those missiles was to me, who was a year or two her junior, a source of never-ending wonder and admiration. As a proof of her skill, she brought home three partridges, (ruffled grouse,) killed in one day with stones." NEWS SUMMARY. East win and Mldrtla Statwa Anot tier wlavatwd railroad - ths Nw York Klnvatnd Railroad, running along Uia Ka.t •id* of ths city- -ha* hern ujwuod to travel ia New York. Thr Jnnr lookhig Into ths mnrder of Pollow man Hnitth. of Jrr.nr ben and hut water. A man named Winder line was morthliy hurt. The cause of the disaster was, dearly, ignorance or negligence on the part of the engineer. Work had been stopped to change the sieves of the •r pars tor, and the engineer neglected to ebut the dampers and open the vaires. The fire hurtled fiercely in the furnace, and the unused steam ran up quickly, causing an explosion of tremendous farce. The holler was lorn to niece* and the fragment# burled among the laborers with the fatal effect above deoenbod. The thrasher was thrown W0 feet by the force of the eaoai-ing steam. The Kansas Itepublicana, in convention at Topeka, put a State ticket in the field and adopted a platform favoring greenbacks in place of national bank notes, end declaring that all the obligation# of the government should be honestly discharged. Mary Dean, a poor widow living near Hills barn. Mo . murdered her two small children by cutting their throat*. When arrested she said that she was too poor to give them food; that she murdered the baby first, and then wheu she undertook to put the utile five rear old boy on the bed to ktllhtu. be clung to ber and begged ptlootuly for his life, saying, "Oh, mamma, don't kill me, don't kill meßhe heeded not the appeal, but threw him on tha bed. and after cutting his throat, struck hun on the side of the heed with a piece of iron to complete her work. Trots Washington. A scbooner captain who recent]* arrived in Wssliington from Pan, Brest], report* that the workmen smployed on the railroad in that rvuntrv, man* of whom went there from the I'mlad Stale*, are in a terrible condition for want of food and medical attention. Nearly oil the 500 men who left Uu# country to work on the road are sick and disabled. Kearney, the California labor agitator, has hod au iu'ervtew with the Prr-idant at the Wbita Houoe. Hie revet!D receipts at late are baan de rreasuqi. being much amaller li.au they were during the same period last year. * Foreign News. The Itnttah cooaul at Adnanople reports that the Imlgariaiui continue to plunder and out rage the Muwuloiau*. The Greek archUaljop ha# eomnmcated to the conenl details of the firmwl humble atrocities Severe shook* of earthquake have been felt in different pert# of Germany. It ia announced In an Important article in the Loudon Tiinrt, which baa twwn sent by irleg'sph to th# Toronto L'loV. 'hat Bacretary Evarti ha# proposed to a dispatch, which be wnt at the inelance of Congress, complaining of the injustice of the Halifax sward, that Canada shall farm s custom* onion with th# United Bute*. He deuree that abe ahali adopt the American tariff. Martial law baa bran declared In Kuseia tem porarily. cm account of the increase of crime# *g*m*t the State. The international monetary conference in Tans adjourned without any definite action having been taken T*e Vellww fever Mrawrne. Up to the twenty-fifth the total number of yellow fever can-* in New Orleans waa over 2.000 and the deaths o|. In Mem phi# there were 100 new caee# and fifteen death*. The •conrge continued to sfirnad in the Miwumippi Valley. The following dlkpatch from Jackson, Mi**., will serve to show the re-gn of terror inspired by the dread dt#ca*e : " Not a case of yellow fever ha# yet *|q-eared in Jacfcaon. and our authorities arr working with the cuergy of despair to keep out the grim deatroyer. All wagon* and railroad# are watched day and uight, and the town'i* patrolled by oilmen*, both black and white, who have constituted them#clvee detective#. All stranger* who are unable to give a good account of thrmaelve# • are marched to the city limit# and warned not to return. The fire bell# are rung at 10 o'clock al night, and all perron# found In the street# after that hour are arrested. A maa# meeting ha* I-ran held which pledged to tlie mayor the morel and physical *np|-ort of the citizen* to carry out all measure# which he may inaugu rate! The Vickaburs and Meridian railroad discontinued #ervicr by train* to-day." A duq-atch from Grenada, Ml##-, on the same dav waa to tlie following effect ; -'The appeal# fur nurse# U>dy. which could not be answered, were heart rending Whole families are down, and without a soul to aid Ihetn. Tba fifty bravo nurse# on dutir have more than an average of two patient# apiece; yet thev do not flag in their dntv. Abundant supplies of provision# from neighlsiring town# oomc in daily, and fnnd# are m-w being received rapid ly. ' Good nurse# are the great need." A Washington dispatch give# the following summary of Surgeon-Geueral Wood worth'# * uitary report for the week ending on tha tweuty-fourth: New Orleau#— During the w ek ended Friday noou there were 771 caws- of yeiiow fever and 395 death#, making in all l,6<:t caeee and 554 deaths. Viokabnrg -At least 400 case* of yellow fever from date of comuii-uccmrnt Augustl '2, to Friday evening, and sixtv-niuo deaths. Dr. Uootli, in charge of tbe Marine Hospital ser vice at Vicksburg. telegraphs : " I am sick ; impossible to procure accurate data." Memphis - One hundred and forty-fonr case# of yellow fever and fifty-three death- curing six day# tectfully requeat you to nxarriee your dla cretlonary powrc* In the appointment of a ■tneial nomuuaaton of the ableat übytoetaua and rbemiata In tha oonntry, for the parpoea of •dent ideally Investing the oaueaa, nature and treatment and future praventtoo of the fearful epidemic now raging. Ootigtwaa will ondciuUt adly mate a suitable appropriation to reward the oomjniesluo for earvtoaa eo valuable to the country." Another Memphis diapatab aay*' "It la eetlwalnd that nearly 600 poraooa are down with tha fever. Bitty additional nttraea have hewn telegraphed fur' te coma from fle vmnnah and Char Moo, and a number bare arrived from Mobile. Poverty and dtitraai prevail to an alarming extent, and many beva been aiek for aereral day* without being able to aeenre the attendance of a phyaictan. nearly ail the lueal pbyaMana pea* tit* nights beyond theiffiy huuuaud eume in only during tha day. Haver. 1 bav ahaentnd themselves, and do not eometn at all." At VicksOurg. Rise., advice* on the twwnty m-vet.U, aay the fever there wan spreading with fearful rapiditv. The fotkiwlng dupatdh waa received bv Hunarvuing Hurgaoo-Oenaral Wood wurtb, at Waahtogton, from 0. £. bent, deputy collector of cu*toma et Vickabarg: " Twenty three death* yaatswdey, via hundred race* undrr Unattnent, aud the plague spreading with fearful rapidity. (Irtnt suffering and desUrmion among the poorer einaee* tie# tha I*uited but* authortUea. and urge the Impera tive tI mi dtp for Government aid. JleUuus required tmuird.ately. Weather unfavorable." Anntlier diapeteh frum W. O. I'aitao grand commander of Knight* Templar, rnya* " Dimmer and deetitutloo walk hand in hand In ttb et;. Eight hundred ceeea are under traatmant. Tba weather la very unfavurabl* We need every thing. Trains and steamboat* alt stopped " In New Orleans tha yellow fever report on tb - twenty seventh abovrwd on* hundred and utnety-ftmr caeca and forty-nine deaths. Soma bop* waa aroused by (be anamaafui traataaant of a patient in the last throaa of death by a new Method- Tha swmedi euUalateJ in sprink ling tit* dying man with ice water fur two hours, when the fever disappeared and tba patient fell into a gentle sleep. At Grenada, Mi**„ the aiuiahon of affaire on the twi-ul v-aeveuth was somewhat better thai, t heretofore, a number of peraona who bad boon prostrated having rwaovered; end aa tbey were tha first who had not succumbed to the dread disease, it waa thought that a change far the natter waa coming. Phvasaun* aud nurae* from other etUea continued to arriv*, and all were working hard to check the tern bit pUfiMi A dispatch from Canton, Miaa.. aay* "baud u* two nurse* Immediately; fever increasing." The New Orleans IWi'i oorrvapoodgM at Canton. Mies., ander dale of lbs 47th. my* "1 arrived bare Sunday Last. iYetty tough Uiom Not a single buatneaa hones open ei cwpt two drug stores Ones a pupuiattooof l.iW, but now unll seventy five white* ara to be found here. Mayor and faaaily ate*, and board of aldermen find Court bouse locked up, and officer* gone to -one safe place. Noth ing but hearer* and coffins to be seas on the street*. Home Uurtv-five or forty eiaas of yellow fever her*. Many colored people have died within the peat few dava. Tba few whites now hers era scared, because not a stogie case of yellow fewer has been doctored successfully. No parson attacked baa recov ered." A dispatch from Port Gtbaon, Miss.. to the Hairud AwMUtua, of New Orleans an: "Fever vcrr feiaL and no abatement. Two hundred and thirty ram and thirty five deaths U> date. lea is vialsd acira than anything else. Norm doing well. Our vipomas are tUO tar day. Sew York, Hi. Loot*. Jaoksoa and Columbus are aiding. Hat one or two ooo vaiesomt persons ao far." A Bt. Ixkuk dispatch of the twenty-eighth aaya: "Hi. Louis is swarming with refugees from the fever infected districts of the Houtb. and every Southern train that arntrea brtop fresh addition a So fear* are fall thai the scourge will lake bold tore. St. Lows waleomaa ail who coma. Amour the arrival# to day from New Or loan* was w. H. Kslla, a prominent and intelligent eitiaan of that city. In an : Litem w Uiu aflarnoon ha staled that when ha left New Orleans the streets were almost deserted. People confined themselves to thair honses, seldom leaving them except whan absolutely necessary. Whole families wen swept down by the voeuiga. Maid be t The worst ravages of the fever are confined to those purtiona of the city where the lower classsi live. The higher clmni have not suffered ao tunch. The coty undoubtedly brought the i fever upon herself through not taking MAdnt sanitary precautions. The impression preva lent a)-.ronUy'ail over the North, and evvti in Nve Orleans, that tha disease did not originate In that city, is erroneous It is commonly sun posed that the germ of the fever eae brought to the city by a ship from Havana." TTben the scourge began in Nee Orleans, the loenr por tions of the city were reeiung with filth. In Memphis the plague was still on th increase, and it was feared the horrors of starvation would be added to the terrors of the situation. The physicians and nurses were overwurfced and all were fleeing from (be city who could get away. Forty thousand rations were sent by the Secretary of War to Vteke borgh, and relief (boat ah parte of tha oouatry came pcunng into the afflicted cities. New Orleans dispatches of the twenty-ninth I say . " The board uf health iliawal the progress of the epidemic, and the mdmbers were n atumous in the belief that it eae utter ly beyond human control, and would hare to run its course. Unless some great and rare meteorological change takes place, the proba bility is strong that the city will be swept throng beat. Many of the beat phnuetans in Ibe city are now refusing to visit new cases, having their powers already taxed to the ut most- This situation of affairs Is far from hopeful. The number of nee oases of yel low fever reported to dsy is 140; death*.l9. In Memphis a frightful condition of affairs existed The following dispatch tells tha melancholy story " The scourge is increasing in virulence every moment. To-dsy the deaths numbered seventy-two; nee pass's, 140. There it hardly a bones in tne etty not entirely vacant which does not contain one or mora persons down with the iltsaaaa. or lying dead, awaiting banal. The increase of the malady among the colored population to-day is fright ful. while it does not seem to relinauish its bold upon the white people. Every hour in the day new victims are reported, and physi cians go from house to boose on the run. The county Jail, which in 1873 was in the heart of the infected district, yet was frea from the fever, now coutains seven races The prisoners numbering 1 early 100, are now Iwtng r- moved to the Forrest Prison Farm, on l'rtidt nt * Island, where hey will be kept iu dr a strong guard The atmosphere is thiei with the pestilential poison, and aa the number of victims increases there is a corre sponding increase in the alarm among the well ones who have thus far escaped, and large numbers are moving into the country, some preferring even to take np their abode tn fraigh' ars on tha lines of the railways, rather tba.i risk their lives here. There are plenty of thieves at work. Not a dav or night passes fiat number* of burglaries do not occur." From other points the >< ports on the teenty nioih showed a continual increase in the num tier of victims to the plagae and a spread of the disease. At Canton. Mil#., the fever was incrvasing and four doctor* were down with it, one baring died. In th* vicinity of Grenada, Miss., it was also spreading. At Vick-burg, Miss., then wore one hundred nee cases of fever and twenty deaths. Meauehtie contribu tions for the sick were being taken np all over the e wintry, and even lu Liverpool a meeting to devise means of aid for the sufferer* was held. In New York citr boxes were placed in many of Ui-i hotels ant restaurs Is. ao that the charitably-.nclln d of limited means might contribute small sums, and thus swell the beavisr eoattibutiona of merchants and basi licas men. . A Tried llMMlf l#p KlltolMrM. Those who setter from disorder or inaction of UM lircr eill never get the upper hand of the unrnty org an so long a* the; use ouch irrational remedies aa blue pill, calomel and podophyllum. But from the triad and popular medicine. Hosteller's Stomach Bitten, they mar expect relief rdh a certainty of obtaining it The influence of the bitter* iipuu the great biliary gland la direct, powerful and speedily felt. The relief afforded ia not spasmodic, but eomplote and permanent. The aallowoeea of the akin, furred appearance of the tongue, indigestion, eneUwnes*. headache, uauaea, paina through the right aide and shoulder, to fact erery acoompauime.it of the obatinate complaint are entirely and promptly removed by a conrae of thia meatimable medicine, in behalf of whioh teatimony ia ooostantly ema nating from erery quarter and from all daaaee of eociety. To develop healthy and harmonioua action among the organ* of secretion. digestion, and evacuation, take Dr. Mott a Vegetable Liver Pills, which healthfully stimulate the liver, give tone and regularity to the liTer, counter act a tendency to cotitiveneas and purify the blood. Their cathartic action i unaccompanied by griping and ia never violent and abrupt but always gradual and natural. These pills are of the greatest aeaiatance in overcoming scrofu lous tumors and eruptive maladies. All Druggists sell It. To Housekeepers. The attentico of heads of families ia respect fully invited to the superior quality, in every respect, of Dooley'* Yeast Powder. It is en tirely free from adulteration of any kind, and every package contain* absolute full weight. Consumers should bear in mind the fact that a strictly pure, full weight baking powder, al though it costs a little more than the adulter ated, cheap, light weight or bulk powders, is by far the cheapest, both in purse and health. Amy Anthonv, wife of Mark Anthony, resid ing at No. 6 Locust Street, - Pall Kiver, Mass., was afflkhsd with a severe Felon on her finger and was ludueed to try- Grace's Salve. Almost instantly she experieoc -d relief from the pain which had been almost unendurable. Every other remedy proved unavailing. CHI* The Pete bra tad "limnne" Wood Tag Plug Toeeroo. TUB Piowun Touaoon Oeamjrr, New York, ltoatoo. and Obiaago. For upward* "f thmy year* lira WIMSLOWW HOOTHTNG HYBCP baa bean oaad for ablldyun with never failing suncuaa. It uiuPatoa acidity :of the etomaeh rwbevae wind ootid, ragatakaa the bowels, curat draawtory and toanhmu, whether arising from latohtng or other auuaau. 4n old aod wau-trted remedy 86 ata. u bottle. A gentleman ta~a ntoghborioff towu wbo bud suffered two year* with chronic dharfccea and we* so reduced that be could not wtok. ww curod and ruttored to sound baultb bt J ibu eon * Anodyoa Liniment. Tbt* Liniment w worth it* weight in gold. The blighting effect* of Impure bbmd are aadf ,u> 1-bold to those we meet day by. day. This ofiaht not and naud not be an. I'm ami*' PUT mKSTmw rich blood; # ubc S .a night for twelve week# will change the Maud ha the entire system. _ To cleaoee and whi tenth* toattoto sweeten the farcatb. use brown a Camphorated Hepona mx.o* Dentifrice- Twmrty-five cent* a bottle. IVfPOUTAWT WITH K- rscwav*. *■- lim AAd IHiMVMi pttfVOMißff "iwm Tba lartetks gsi cam* ■*U**!^l—" 2 u* TeseaeadUhaswUae 64 ♦ " Bile* Oewa S m O#N l*iiM iit _ ggliv* Mk • ri auae-rstr te 0k was. Ik •• f! ItutrMi.swfvt. ..... I# f J ~u Wbvai -ksvS Waatem. 1 2 V I*^ lie.# Mihmakea •• wa JJ j MtoflMl J U J Ueto-Miaadhl JJ Oorti—Mjiak Ws**u * • Bay. perewt < * UUaw, par cwt,.. #n . ' J I ftMMl x■. . . ...at a rrawit 1 • JJJJ 5152 Dff Wt*ao tii nai i®J g i J* rornmSafcfiSSta 5 Waw -Osttforal*rt**aa..* J" vm *• -- jo a* a—ratkm " •! * *J mateXX •*" , as WmunT*lik'uaa""" ■■ ■■ J* f 2 Wsemi y sir t ffiUwi. . <* m m Wmma Pima*. ;® * m 1 1 S am ttl hiSiiS 1 . 1 .. " t S MVTAIA wt^>m*nSmiahml.™ 2 11 S Oars—lßaad 4 to a I.TT7T.'. m 2 ■ Barlay... M . ~,, . * ■ iwar lall.ws.wHMussi • • ■ Bear OaWle-Ktara ■ - - M • SB* Bat*—?mmir*!rrnrjrrniir."! * • Hen* bmaailnali 1tk.... w .„ 6 m i Wheal - By* to I Of Ooru— • { ■ K|mi A Ok ijei*—UiaaU. ...w.mm. S • Wwlaaa OnaUs JUtttoOK Bta*d. ...U Wool—Oolerade mm. to • to Tuaaa 16 S Oaaforula.MM. to # to BearOMUe . to to 46M knaap MM. MM..MM. b< I oa ■ma. MM.. MM. . MM. .MM. ■ . MM. ( M* Oerw-Mln* ' U I M Uata— * tr ( I to wset—Otoe a*to bawguOa XX- to < > to Oalltomu fkil. to • Beto Oitoa.„M. .mT, to • MM \ S I T Ha*dam Addvaa* Baxrxm A Qu*lr-.. ITWsirfc.. n. r. T\R- roomi HKII TH .wp.vrn z s=2 ft* fc ItAKftiMeowrtoM NkOi ,l<6t.atUtt. (iTftfrc UilUtlko "iorTWMiA to. SIO£S2SEA r flavtn Novelties 85fi62S) a Outfit Free Z J. B BCrroUITB BOWL Maawfasawria* ftbKakafa, 141 ** 147 Pvaakha WMea*. Bosme. Meat. maeMlahsC n saity Bfly ysrs __ Cores Dyspepia. IndLigwstioii, Sour Stomach. Sick Headache, BRACE'S SALVE. Jwnviur. Miek. . Dse T. tm.-a—n fhwlsa: I aaaA fee M aka. tar Pee txam ol Oram's Halv*. I kase had twa sod hsvs aesd Itaa oe so alasr on mj fnol.se4 It slmast ealL yewta. U J Vxs Nam Plies BA oswts a box at all drsaaWla or **M tar asali on ivwm et SA oant* Piipetki BKTH W. FWWIJt 4k IQQ WW. g HariCe Ave.. Bnaane.llam Paints Ready for Use For Formers end Maaafkctarar*. fl># am Dnifnro in shads, aed tba color eaa ahvafa be vale hod. Saw on* as* paint with Mam. Thar have v*o>apariorcov*rint properties sad do sot. Ilk* (bo **sllad pstom pais**, soatain sitfcev watar. baaaies or alkali. Tha** pemia in la liaoid Form, aed am sold u* Gallaa Oaea end Baevala. Tb** am also pvi p la swmJl nans of on* to S*s pooods B*nd for **mpl# card akownw d.*r*vt shades F. W. DXTOB A 00.. oer_ Fnltoe sad Wtlluua St*_. ft*w York. HSTII TRAJSCIIPT Daily and WeekJy, ftuartfi, ItoHton, Usee. Tho harwasl. Oboatmal and Best Family lfswsnapar la New Knalaad. Boiled with ap*ci*J rafsvaoa* *a Ike vartod taatos sod mqalmmonti of lb* boms allele. All ths for*wo aed toej Daws pobliahsd promplly. Ilai.v Transcript, • IO par aaaaa if advance. W *" '' ' (I oopMS to oo* sSdmss.) g7 JO p*> • Annum io eiwAßCto. SKTTP FOR SAMPLE COPY. WHO WANTS A FARN WHERE FARMING PATS THE BEST? FOR SALE. 200,000 Swpfesaa tar Sand for lhustrstodVamphhit, tall of (Seta. J0 U. M. BARikK*. Lead Oeaamtealeevr. hewet—. Aleb, .. Tlt P * peu.au* asms uses I* *mr so*i v aa.eee pssfls. eoaS Mmsas, mil, w*>w, sad bsudlss nm. so* a~d ss da*. Sddrsm. BJ. bllmsm Laod hai, Bsliss. rum 1