A Spinning Sng. Owr and over, round end round. Like * gold -green top on a eryrtal ground, With DPvor whim or singing sound, The beentiful earth gone ■pinning. She rweepe in e nmle around the mn With Time, end the veer-long reoe !■ won By both —to e minute; 'tie ever done And ever again beginning. We olaep our hand* in ameer, and err. " * A time to be born, and a time to die.' I* giirn to meu, but the year* go by, rnending and nnbeginning. " But on New Tear'* morning the pesiple ing And wail in a breath: and the broad tendering With '• The King t* dead -long lire the King, But the earth goee on with her epinnlng ' Mivry A. JjMhlmry. in W'm- .itouAv. Hire Hope. There never wa • valley without ■ fa-law! flower, There never was a heaven without *ome tittle eloud The face of day may fl*h with light In any morning boor. But evening wo shall ocnis with her shadow woven shroud There never was a river aithont it* nii*l of *,T*y, There, never wa. a forest arithout it* fallen leaf i And joy may walk be>ids u* down the winding, of cur way When lo! there sound* a footstep, and e meet the face of grief. There never vat a seashore without Us drifting wreck. There never wa* an iwui without It* moan ing ware. And the golden team? of glory the summer aky that fleck Shine where dead stars are i-leeping in their aaure-mauUed grave. There never was a streamlet, however ccyUl clear, Without a shadow reeling m the ripple# of it* tida Hope'* brightest robe* are bordered with the sable fringe of fear— And ahe lure# -but atoe* gut her |r two barracks, a fort and a castle. Bat the eastern end was very poor, and •would have been quite lonely but for the fishermen and their boats. The house from which the yonng man came was beyond eveu this homely tunstle, and was little more than a wooden hnt, tarred to defend it from wind and weather. But the young man who came out was in the full dress of a military officer, though that was screened from a first view by the long gray cloak that the wild March wind made so necessary. He was quite young, and hia face was finely cut, and wonld have been pleas ant but for a look of stern and painful sorrow, not unmixed with bitterness, which seemed strangely incongruous with his years and his dress. He waUed on qnite through t e town. Wherever the houses broke apart one caught glimpses of a wild, flat country, dotted here and there with weird trees in Indian file; and the youth looked wistfully toward these desert fields, as if he wonld fain have struct, away across them inatemi of going cm, as he did, toward the grim old fort. Tet there, it wa clear, festivity was • going forward; and friendly voices greeted him as he passed the gray old portal. And then, over his stern, sad face he dropped a mask of gayety, and, though he relapsed into silence at times, he was as polite and oonver-able as the best of them. There was preparation for a dinner party in the fine, stiff, old hall, with its rows of military portraits, and its dingy, blood-stained banners. The castle] the barracks, and the fort itself, had eagerly furnished guests to welcome the visitor of the day, a grand old gen eral recently returned from honorable victories in the south of Europe. After dinner, when ceremony was fairly thawed, the good old geueral, in the kindliness and prieet it could be found. (His turn was the very laaL "Ensign Hanson." said the commandant, steadily. Ens:gu Hanson was certainly the first who required to be call npoii by uame. The youth arose, and, though the rest of his face was a deadly whiteness, there was a spot of burning red ou each 1 cheek. " I dout tiuuk any gintlciuan should lw> aidte-1 to do this,* he said. " I will i give uiy wotvl of honor than the box is not npon my person. I did not even k ep it in my hamis for a moment; I merely took it and passed it on." 1 "Too high-tmndt-d even to look at anch gewgaws," sneered a spiteful old major under his breath. " What won high in the service and old enough to be his father have already done. Ensign Hanson may safely do also," said the commandant, with a se i verity which was not unkindly, for young luiuson looke-i sttch a boy among the crowd of meu, mostly stout ami middle-ag-xi; and the very suspicion suddenly lowering over him made the old officer think of his owu lsds, grow ing up and not quite sure to do well for themselves after all. " I would never have asked it for the , sake of my box," observed the general, leaning back in his chair, and inwardly wondering what Lady EliaaWth would say of his carelessness. " But we ask it frir the sake of our honor, general," taid the commandant, testily. "Aud we do not seem to have asked it needlesslywhispered the spiteful major. " I will not do this thing !" cried the yonng ensign, passionately; and he looked wildly round the group as if he sought for oue face that would compre hend aud Compassionate liis misery. The face which looked the kindest was that of the old general himself, partly be cause it was not his hospitality that wa* outraged, partlv because- his genial na ture was terribly shocked at finding anything of his the canse of snch a wretched act of dishonor. "If tie general will come with me to the anteroom," said the young man, " I will convince him that I have barely touched his box. But this public ex posure I will not submit to; onr consent waa not asked, and " "Certainly not!" " Out npon you !" " Geueral, you mnst not think of in dulging his insolent request," w*re the only sentence* audible in the general hnbbnb that arose on every side. But the general rose. "Gentlemen." he said, qmetly, " I have never yet re fused to listen to au enemy's petition. If you can satisfv me, air, perhaps >< nr comrades will take mv wi-nl for vou." There was a murmur of very relnctaut acquiescence, as the ensign bowed and waite.l respectfully to follow the general to the ante-chamber. They had not dis appeared behind the heavy curtains be fore all sorts of surmise* were whis|ered round the table, guesses and hints so wild and so sinister aa to do credit neither to the beads nor the heart# which originated them. The general and the ensign stayed a longer time in the anteroom than would have sufficed to search the ensign's pocket# twice and thrice over. Not a sound could be heard. If any conversation waa going forward, it must have been in a very lflpr voice. The two gentlemen were away for nearly half an hour. All the military servants had been subjected to the commandant's rigid scrutiny, and then dismissed. It might be as well that none bnt the " gentlemen of the regiment" should know exactly what the end was. The delay grew first awkward and theu awful. Even the whispers and rumors flagged into an in tent and excited watching. At last the general and the ensign came ont. The ensigu's face waa still very pale; what flash remained npon it had now mounted to the eyes. The old general waa blowing his nose. "Ensign Hanson haa thoroughly sat isfied me," he said, in his most gentle voice. " Never miod my box. It has vanished by one of those mysterious ac cident# which will bappeu sometime*. It will be found some day. And now, gentlemen, perhips a# we have l>eeu thus broken np we shall not settle down again very comfortably to-night. I hope we shall see you all at the castle before Lady Elizabeth and I leave for London." " General," aaid the commandant, drawing him a little on one side, " may I say that I sincerely truat yonr great generosity has not led you to—" "Hir," cried tho old general, "can yon imagine tliat any mistaken idea of kiudnee# would canse me to make yon a oompauion of thieve*? Gentlemen," he went on, seeing that the company were not unaware of this little by-play, " 1 pledge yon mv word that I am sat isfied of Ensign kanaon's honor; and whoever dares to doubt him makes me to be hia accomplice." And the old general seized the yonng ensign's arm and marched with him from the hanqueting-room, while every one sat dumbfounded, till the spiteful major remarked that wonders would never cease. There was nothing more to be aaid. It was discovered that Euaigu Hanson was not only invited to the castle with tho other officers, bnt waa also asked there by himself, and actually was be lieved to have taken tea with the gener al and Lady Elizabeth in their deepest retirement. For the general's sake, .lather than his own, his brother officers continued on courteous terms with him; and be hail nlwas been so shy, an-l held himself so aloof, that perhaps he did not discover there was bnt little cordi ality in their courtesy. And presently he exchanged into another regiment, which went on foreign service. He was away for several years, azd in the fortunes of war he got rapidlv pro moted, so that when he returned Lome, thongh be was still yottug, he was no longer a poor nobody. When he landed in his own country be fonnd a letter awaiting him, written by one who hail sat near him at that memorable dinner- and who was now residing in the old castle where the general and Lady Elizabeth hail then been guest#. This letter pressed him, in the warmest terinn, to speDd some of his earliest days in England at thiH very castle, aud so give many old friends who were in the neighborhood an opportunity of meeting and congratulating him. En sign Hanson, now Colonel Hanson, smiled a little strangely when he read this invitation, but he wrote a very po lite reply and accepted it. Once more he sat in the stately old banqueting-room of the fort. This time be had not walked in from the bleak THE CENTRE REPORTER. hat was -t ? Wliat oonld it be ? It was the bleached skeleton of a chicken's wing. "Gentlemen," lie said, m that same quiet voice, which no longer sounded cold and stern, bnt rather f nil of strength and sweetness, " when I was here be fore, I was a poor, fatherless Lad. own ing nothing in the world bnt my poor little pittance of pay. 1 bar I w# an eyesore to some of you. I think yon felt that my appearance did uot do justice to the diguitv of onr regiment. I Itelieve I often looked rather shabby, but really I could not help it. " I had only one relation in the world, and that was my mother's sister. After my mother died she had been as a mother to me, but when onr home was finally broken np, there was nothing fur it but she must l-e a governess in a stranger's house. And she did her work courageously and cheerfully enough, till her health failed, aud nobody wanted the service of a sick woman. " Hhe bad always been good to me, and we two had only each other in the world. 1 conld not help her as ahe ought to have l>een helped, but my pay would at least provide her anch a home and snch a maintenance as a poor work lugman can give to a poor working woman . " I took my annt to lodge with the wife of the miller's man, in the little l-lack cottage beside the mill. She was a very kind, cleanly woman, though rongh and plain in her ways; and my {-oor annt used to tall herself very liappy there. Bnt she oonld not eat the simple food aiy scanty means could pro cure. And the good landlady used to break my heart by suggesting that her appetite might be tempted bv chickens or game, or such other luxuries beyond my utmost reach. " All the day of that memorable din ner-party my annt hail been very feeble and failing. When 1 left her I really wondered whether she wonld be alive when I saw her again. My soul revolted at the sicht of dainties which were no good to mc, and which I could not con vey to her who seemed dying for want of them. Suddenly a bright idea Seized mc. 1 took a letter from my ixjckct and spread it on my napkin, an-l then, by an adroit movement, transferred the wing of a chicken from my plate to the paper, and thence smuggled it to my pocket" The listening gnest# l-egan to look at each other with enlightened eyes. The spiteful old major feit that very full explanation waa being given—and he was glad he was deaf, that he need not hear it " Gentlemen, yon can all imagine my feelings when sncli nnlookcd-for cir cumstances threatened to ex{Kj#e my poor little plan. Gentlemen, there nre some of yon who were, like myself, yonng then; whom it would have been aa hard to meet, after snch a discovery, as it wonld have been had I really stolen the jewels." "Heaven forgive ns, Hanson; but I can't say yon are wrong." said one brave gentleman, who had been a fash ionable dandy in those days, but who bail a wife and six ohildren now. "Gentlemen, I did not fear the old man honored aud enriched by a grateful country. The men who have fought the best buttles of life have ever a piti ful respect for the poor and friendless. To him I could lay bare my poor little secret. Bnt my place then wu# among the young—the young, who, having never conqnerwd, alwavs despised the defeated —the vain, giddy youths, ex travagant with their fathers' money, and " " Oh, come, Ranson," cried one offi cer, "it is your turn now, with a veu- CENTRE HALL, CENTRE CO., PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1870. gvatuV, I'letuH' to remember that to iiight we are the abject and Jefeateib 1 and le merciful." 'ltn- x>loiiol taught#!. Anil thev could uol tell whether it was Willi good (ruth or nubile irony that he rej-Jiutst, " You are right," mid then went ou: . "lu that liKlc room, yonder, 1 told my sad story to that goo-1 great man who is gone. Aud I folded up my queer treasure again, for I could uot leave it liehiud to I-ear Witness ; amt, bennies, having paid such a terrible price for it, 1 dtd net see why my auut should not iisvs it- Aud she ate it for her supper that very night; and next moruiug, almost as soon as U was light, there was the geueral hammering at the cottage door, with a basket of (owls and fruit carried in his owu bau-1. Ami, then and there, I took this little chicken boue, and vowed that I would keep it till the snnff-box was found, and 1 my self was f-uoli a man annftig saeh uusu that uoue would ainde at my poverty, or even despise my weakness." I'rtJuble Among the Telephones. The telephone occasionally g- crazy. A reporter of the World happened into a shoe store l-etween whlcli and its wholesale manufactory a telephone has lieeu Constr -.eted, was sn.arist to he boid the geina! propm-lor, with face atlnttie and eyes dilataag, dan- lug a horn pipe, whils to his s*ra ha in-id the jH-akitig-tubcol themsUiUuenL "What the blank, blank, blank -lue the idmt mean ?" he exclaimed U> the clerks who amiably clustered around him. One doe* not always get a chance to see a shoe manufacturer dance. Hndilenlv changing the tul>e from his ear to hfs moutii he shouted out: " Ihnici) take your salt fish; 1 tell you to have those shoes made to bttttou." Au interval of aiUittce. "No, uot mutton; button," he shriektsl. More silence, during which the shoe dealer kept the instrument to his ear ami secnied to llie l the oar tramp't and was at once sslutcil with the startling question: " Have yon got those fish I sent up packed in ice t" " Who the dnece are yon ?' safil the voice. " How alsjut th-aie shoes?" "A No. 1, lid-7 preferred. Take all," said somebody, softly, as if mur muring to himself auioug the pyramids of Egypt " How many case* have you sent lo the Anchor line?" was the thundering response. "Cases of what—small-pox ?" came urn He red back, dreamily—sad then the tolephun# quivered tuider a storm of wicked words. '• When- are you ?" said the reporter. " Nuue of your busincas," replitsl the flrst voice, and there was a laiug as if somebody ha.! alammts! down the cover of a piano in a harry, after which, mi-re faintly than before,'the same mysterious wbi-penng of myshe nnmliera went on fr a few momenta ami than •-..wd. It was all >cry puxalmg until nn agent of the telephone company called lu explain tliat the shoe store wire had f-Il athwart wjges leading re*{w-etivelj ti Fulton ff' !i market and the st.-ek exchange .Vn • York World. Ecoaoialriag fuel One of the great objj-oticms to ordi nary flreplae. * is tlist too much of the heat goes up the chimuwv, aud innumer able have heen the attempts to obviate that loss. Regiat.r stoves have l-een invente.l, and various contrivauce# adopt ed to regnlate the draught an I re.hice the size of the flue. One method pr*>. (kwosl was to light t!w fire on tlw lop, and, after the that lew m.oaten, as UMJ heat spread downward, all the smoke {tassiug through the upper ncaudes.-. ut layer cunvamed, and so much the mure heat saved; but the moment the fire Lad to be made up again all the ad vantage* were lost. One of the latest sugg cjl u-ler with the vitiated atr of the r-*>m, it is supplied by a pipe communicating with - the external air. And further, we are informed that if camphor or any other disinfectant ia hnng on the cylinder, the ' scent is driven into every corner of th ipartment. So that a roam roav be p#r ttimed, disinfected or vcnulatod by this ixjntrivauce when properly mauag#.!. A Festival of Wa*herwomen. Greenville Murray, in a now " K -nnd About Franco " naper, tells how Paris is washed, starched and ironed every week. He says that French laundresses have an awkward trick of pnttingon the flue liueu of dicir lady ctiNtomers to deck themselves withal ou festive occa siona; and this they do epecilly at the yearly festival of washerwomen which take* place on the Thursday of Mid 1/eut. On that day the laundresses of each wash-house clod a queen—gene rally the prettiest girl who washes in the quarter; she in turn nominates a king, some fascinating young fellow who drive* a laundry cart, and the pair lieing tricked ont iu their I-eat are driven nbout all duy in a carriage iuiurse with tnf-c>ed ports is j>eruuttd. The monster will survey the whole Southern coast, and pounce only on Hsvauuah. It will deliberately pas* by onr imperi al etty, move np the riverii, and attack Biisfve|airt ami Mempl i*. There is no aooountiug far its movements, and no pcodictiug the in. It ma., become epi deaui- throughout the Southern States: it tuny be retrugadc lo riuladslpbia and New Yi of it exist in the highest degrms It s>ein to b# an Af rican powou ungrafte I UO the white race of the two Americas. A humorous friend suggests that from its yellow color, its black vomit, and its sporial ravage of slavehohling conntriwi, we might have known long ago that the uegn* waa at the bottom of it. The na tive African han no such fever. The Afi.oau brought tu the West Indian nev er has yellow fevor. The Weal Indian urgr.'hr -iight to the United btatos is uol liable to it. The alsvra cf the Southern States ba| tiiis JU-OPM- very rarely b-fore IHfri Sfnce then they have been 1-ecoming more and more snbj-ct to it, YalUw fever is a groat turn-o>st, and henceforth w- may ex jv ,-t it to b<< hyal to tli# constuutiona! amenducata. and tunke it* attacks " without regard UJ race, color or pre vfons condifion." Who ran give any '{•lansit-le rca*-a why the n*rive-tm |ir-}*|!ti,.n cf this slat#, e#fi-iaily th-aw- of Prvnrh origin, huold hurt) been aimoat entirely ex ampt from ydlpw fever for a httndred yeara ? And who can account for the change going un during the lad thirty vpara, h-w!y, but ao that uow the dill- Jlton l*>ro here Jutve had little xeiap ticn more than the chilffrru of the stranger ? Now. who do y>-n sapptsie are lmst liable uf all the people to be with yallow fever? The neat aud cleanly? These who handle silks ami iaee*. or deal in perfumery ? Those who live in salutary -pots, qci-upy fine house*, witli l-aUi-ixoni faoiiilies, ami am oia.l iu snowy litiea? No indcc.l! A groat many writers agree oti the curioua fact that" sean-tigvra. farrier*, tanners, dis aocUug- room p#..jHe, gravo-ligger* am! thoae wis- iiAadla Use offsl and offensive J weaving antraai tuaitor sru remarkably eUTupi from tins diaeacti. Why d-eay ing vegetable matter should cause it (?) and decaying animal matter prevent it, ia a ant for the sanitary philosopher* to crack. Yellvw fever nrwtetfmro attacks the animal kingdom. Wl*toi hrwnl of a hle haf-y dying of IwIKHIS RO mittout? Thaaa/Trou ea-urge • nn-rv diffusive m its uative, and haa been koowu to visil aQ kunia of animals. Irum the horse and cow down to the rat and canary bird. !>r.' Rrtslt **rw thst ft! 1793 over five thi usai.d eato diail of yellow faver in Hiiiadalphia. In twi #pdenne which ▼iaitail (libndtar in 1812, every monkey, parrot, dog, cat, rat and canary bird in that place perished by tlli* diaoaae. Perhaps the vollow fever oommiasioti will cxplatu why the file# disappeared ao otyaUtnoualy this summer. Why the moequituea vaniMiod from some locali ties altogether: aud why ai on# time it wa# impossible to get rid of the ants, afld at another time impossible to find oue. Yellow lever ia MijjposeJ, oo vcrvalen dcr grouuds. to he contagious, aud some people are aakviiahmgly afraid of it It shares wfth AM stir cholera th* glory of being able to get np a first clan* panic iu the bnauin race. Smallpox haa some reputation for generating a scare, bnt it will alwuys stand third in the panic mar- | ket. Yellow fever is unquestionably Hnt. It# contagion, however, like everything alx-nt it, is very queer. It ia j very ftrtitagious to some people and uot j at al! contagion# tootliflr people. If one man Joeka out of a window at a yellow fever fu ral he will catch it another person may live in a yellow fever hospi tal aud breath# the poison day and night and keep in rubicund health. ff you ilont want it vou wHI be apt to get it, but if yuu aoeV ft yon can't find it. Des perate wi-ineU, nocking death, have of- Uui sought it in vain by die utmost ox- j I asm re to yellow fever poison. Uuao cl:muted doctors, sciciwie blind or crazy, have elspt with yellow fever patient#, disaectod thetr toslien. Injected their blood into their, owu veins, and eveu drank tho li)tick vomit(l) with perfect • impunity. Feor ha# 11 good deal to do with it, as with many other diseases. The vol low feier ia sometimes likea mean yellow dog. If yon far* him ami defy him he will slink"away, but if yon recede from him lie wiU porta* and attack yon. He hahffieen known tfltfilin#e{*ople a# far as tflnoinnati or New TfiKjk. Tliere is an immense deal of pioffMruing done by doctors and nurse* and fnwadu to keep tip the hope and courage ofy*flow fever {jatients. A doctor ami an tiffin with a panicky faee are as mean a (Kitfible of portraits a# ypn oouUl display jiff a sick room. Pleasantry aside, a bad oaae of yellow fever ia well calculated to make • think ing man nfraid. It ia not only a severe malady, bnt a fearfully treacherous aud deceitful one. It is the oiwssnm of : diseases ; it pretends to l-e sleeping or j even dead and gone, when fit is more i alive than ever ; uot only are it# aymp- ' turns of the most distressing kind, lint the sudden tnrus it take# are absolutely appalling. What are yon to think of a disease in which you leave yonr patient at nine o'clock in the morning express ing himself perfectly well, and actually looking ao, sending dispatches to his wife, couveraiug cheerfully and ration ally, and whom you find dead and laid out a few hourn afterward ? Thews in explicable change* are tne cauae* of a great many au|>eratitiou*, false theories and alxttird regulatioua of the sick room. The energetic minds of nurse* and friends must find a cause for these changes, aud they generally seize UJMIU the last thing taken or done as the true "Oh, the patient was getting on sph-u didly, but the d'-ctor came in ami threw off oue of the blankets, and she went right Into a congestive chill," "The doctor gave him two taldespoonful* of chicken tea and it brought on the black vomit." "The doctor let him change hi* ahirt on the fifth day— and,of course-, he died on the sixth !" " Tfiey allowed him a drink of ice water, and lit- had seven convulsions the next day." " The doch-r had one of the windows o|>eutid, ami t!M- patient went out of his miuu in fifteen minutes." A thousand such stories are Iteing wufh-d to and fro upon the air of New Orleans to-day. To all of which we doctors may relate the story of Mr. Hmilh, who fell dead whilst shaving himself at his looking glass one morn ing— aud the editorial comment—" and yet, notwithstanding this appalling ca tastrophe, men will continue shaving theiuselve* at their lookiag-glasses every day I" • It i very queer that yellow fever should have spread ao extensively in all directions, wheu there are ao many aure and wuty ways of preventing it. As soon as it ap|amt, hew many genuine philanthropic*, retired nurses, retired missionaries, etc., came to the front and told us how to ettcape it ! lam eclectic in my principles, and take the good out of everything—ao 1 made a compound prophylactic prescription f.-r mv patient* which never failed to prevent the disease in ei cry case in which it was trie#!. It WIUI this : Wear a oatuphor lag on your breast, a cspaiciue plaster on your back, iioltuan'a pad ou your stomach, flowers of sulphur in your stockings, the rat tles of a rattlesnake in yottr pocket, and take a pill of quinine every morning, pulverized charcoal at dinner, Wmalow'a Boothuig sirup at bed-time, taimon'# liver regulator twice a week, and go off at once UJ the White mountains 1 It is very queer also that the board of health sln-uld have persisted in report ing so many deaths when we doctors were so nntlorndy successful. Ask any doctor if he was not sneormful. Ask the friendadf any particular doctor if be wn n<>t very successful. The answer will always be in the affirmative. It logically follows, therefore, that we have all lwen successful—and as Dr. Smith la dead, there is nobody left to father the epidemic. To achieve success, however, the doc tors ere put to Lheir metal. Old allo path, venerable with years and honors, viucrged from hi* office radiant with cobwebs, and pli*l hi* purgatives and emetics, aud sweating# and blistcrings, and calomel and quinine and morphine, and succeeded, just as he did in 'AS and '47 and 719, and one or two hundred yours away bark 1 Yourg aik pathy, wiiL hia clinical thermometer and hypo dermic syringe, hta scientific inrreda lay, his small doac* and new remedies, hi* i-ejicbuit for fresh air and cold a ator, made a groat many friend* and a pretty p-svl rec-.rd. Homeopathy, with his •nhbtne faitJi in the minuter opera tnms of natnre and of medicine, his #cientitle precis u, his {mcket drug su re under hi* arm, at-J a friendiy lean tug toward young allopathy, sncwd#it —well, tot hi* friends toll how he anc ccvlfvl. IJ&MIJ, and the queerest thing of all, there:*'a prophTlartio against yellow fever, not hkelv to l-e discovered or in dorsed by the present yellow fever cntnmisMou. Tlist is. the verv cautious and iduUfal itabulation with tbe txiiaou of the rattieauake, ao aa to produce a alight artificial disease resembling ▼el low fever. This will prove more effica cious than tH>lladonna against scarlet fewer; it may even rival in value the u#e of vaccination against smallpox. But a* th measure is luued upon and cou tlnuatory of the homeopathic law of cure, it will hare to wait npon the sure but gradual evolution of bomwopalLy itself; upon Uu- happy time# when allo pathy and quarantine# are alike extinct. Dr. W*. li. //u/cornhc, in .NVir iklran* /V'flytme. How to lake * Saner kraut," The proper way to maae sauer-kranT, fcccirdingto the recipe given by a N w ' York paper, if a* follow*: The reeij-e is for the manufacture of one barrel, i Take si-ont thirty or forty bends of cab bage (the numlior will dej#od ou the tutMol the baada), and first clean them and cut them tip fine with a slaw cutter or sharp carving knife. Next mix the cabbage well with salt; for thirty gosl sired heads two quarts of salt will lie sufficient. Hack the cabbage m the bar. rel i t wine or hqnor barrel, well-clean ed and scalded, is perhaps the I-est), and altar-it is {jacked, put a clean inuaim cloth on the top ol the cal-ljage, ejitircJ.T covering it. Then put a wooden cover on the cloth, and ou the cover place a clean atone weight (an iron weight wonld rust and flavor the saner kraut). I hit the oar rel in a dry place, and everT week be careful to wash the cloth, tin- weight and the wooden cover. ! The cabbage will uot be transformed uito good sauer kraut in loss than throe w>eks; it would be better if it oonld remain in pickle for two months. When 1 .-th cover and weight are washed each week the brine on top of the cat-bag*- should be tasted, and if it jis rathor fn-ah, more salt should be sprinkled on; the cabbage must always be covered with brine. If by evapora tion or uoakage the bnne booomea low. it will l>e ueoeesary to make a brine strong enough to float an egg or pota to, ami poor enough of it on to oover the cabbage. Before it is ready for nae it mnst be thoroughly washed several time* in clear coin water. To be oaten raw it mnv be mixed with vinegar and sjuoee. to prepare it for cooking, boil it tu clear water for teu minntea, then put it in a colander, squeeze the water out of it, and it i# then ready to ok and serve with meat. Saner-kra it is particularly gd in connection with pigs' jowl, pig's tail, and pig*' feet Germans like it with the smoked sau sage imported from Frankfort, aud other* find anch a mixture very palata ble, Forest l-and* of Europe. The proportion of land covered with forest* throughout Europe is twenty nine per oont., of which Huasia and Hweden furnish the greatest part. In Russia, forty per cent, of territory is cover oil with woods, and of this some 200,000,000 acres are covered with pines and other cone-bearing tree#. Hweden and Norway have thirty-four per cent., chiefly birch, maple, pine, fir and wil low. Austria haa twenty-nine per cent., Germany has tweuty-zix per cent, and Franco seventeen. Far Inflow these cornea Spain, with its cork woods and evergreen oak forests, eoveriug seven per cent, of the land, and Holland and Belgium with the same. Portugal comes next with five per eent., and Great Brit ain fojlow# with four per cent. The percentage annually decrease# in all countries rapidly. As far back aa 1838 it waa estimated that timber waa cnt down yearly in Great Britain aud Ire land alone to the value of ff10,000,000. TERMS: a Yoar, in Advance. "A MAS FIMH." Tlir l arteas SSMIs* *1 a,Tall •**•**<• ■■■ lima* TSSSNMS, A abort Urns hum the Teauaaae* and Kentucky iiewapapereemitßinwd • aUrt ; bug amount of a wfid man lately captured, with great difficulty, in the Cumberland mountain#. He wa* feet ten incbea high, extraordinarily fleet of foot, and exrasuovely aagage. He feout their limbs and belly. Hi* arms and leg* remind one of the •kin of the buffalo porch, the carp, or or other large fish. The cuticle every where is dry aud harsh, and never per spirea. There seems to be an absolute absence of fat, and the man la shrunken and withered, of a dead ashen-gray ap pearance, except here and there, where Le is brownish or blackish. Though only about fifty years of age, he im presses one as a very old man. The stun of the face is red and shining, and tightly drawn abont the cheeks, pulling the lower lids down to such an extent as to perfectly evert them, making* horni caae of ectropion. In some places his scales are silvery, in others dark, and again in other* are small and tjrauoy. Hi# hair is very thin auJ Jead-luuking. The backs of Lis baud* are fissured, and on his palms and solsa the cuticle is grcsllA thickened. Thp fingers and toan seem shorter than natural, and the akin ia drawn lightly back over both feet and lianas. The septum between the fingers and toes seems to extend much further down than usual, thus suggesting the webbed appearance before alluded to. He IN considerably over six feet in height, ana is a man of a low order of intelligence. He is married, and is the father of several children, none of whom, fortunately, inherit his malady; and as icthyosia is almost, if not always s e world's production nf gold k ooa third lest than in 1880. In the United HUtea alone, in 1877, 100 deaths per week were reported from accidents by keroaeoe. A resident of Washington, Kj., took a vow that tf ever be got drunk again bo would whip himself all the way borne from the tavern. He got drnuk, and fulfilled his vow with sueb vigor that be could not stir out of bed for two weeks. From the rethar imperfect ►Utiatina at hand, it ia estimated that the total amount of honey produced in Hie United HUUv, ia not ICM than 38.000,000 pounds for the year 1878. In 1870 the returns gave 1i.70-i.BBI. and 681,129 of boos wax. Luia Gardens, an artist of Quito, Bonth America, baa seat to the da partmeut of at ate at Washington a fall length portrait of General Wash ington. It is considered an excellent hkeu*s, anJ will be framed and bung in the white house. At a r**ut fashionable wedding is London the bridegroom requested the bride to order her own jewel*. TWa •he did; and bills have now eomc in to the trusting brtuagroom MB on b ting to over Shou.OOO. He is unable to psy. end the jewels'* decline to take beck their wares. The Ilural New Yorker says: *' An intending purchaser should Us re the horse brought out before him, and watch the animal as be stands at rest. If the owner is ountiaoallf starting the horse into motion, and urging him to " aliow ofl," something may be a aspect ed, because it is when the horse is at perfect rest that his weak points sre divulged. If the horse be sound, be will stand right square on his limbs, without moving auj of them, the feet being flat opon the ground, and all his legs plumb and naturally posed; if one leg be thrown forward, with the toe pointing to the ground, and the heel raised, eg if the foot be lifted from the ground, and the weight taken from ft, disease or tenderness may be . ins pected." China has a governor-general by name Li Hung Chang. Be is at the head of the progressive party in that country, whose great aim M to avoid the course pursued by the Japanese in leaning so mnch upon Europeans, snd to develop Chins bv Chinamen. With this view a variety "of great undertakings are in contemplation— a steam navigation com pany, extensive mining operations, the gradual introduction of railroads snd telegraphs, snd s postal system on the ordinary model. With a view to at tracting investors, the competitive sys tem of selecting employees, which for some 2,000 yean has been rigidly ad hered to, is to be at once laid aside, snd any contributor to the stock of certain of the new schemes will have the right of nominating a clerk. Xo attempt at improving the poatal communication with the capital ia immediately contem plated, but during the summer, cor respondence between Pekin and Tient sin ia to be carried on daiiv by donkey or horse mail, and m winter by a route which at beat tnvulvea ten days. The Sea Vrpeat Again. Captain William SL Ne'aott, of the ship Sacramento, ha* seen the aea ser pent. " I have never had any confidence in the yarns which have been told from time fc' time by seamen about the aea serpent," be said to a Hew York World reporter, "for you know water dogs have a faealtv tar stretching things • little, but 1 must confess my opinion ia changed since I saw Una monster. Whether it waa the nasi aea serpent or ta* I don't know, but call it that or whatever else yon have a mind. U waa certainly a very * range creature. I never saw anything like it before in all my fortv-eight years' experience at aea. We left New York on July 16,1877, and sailed for fifty-eight days with fair winds and no nnusnal incident*. About uoou on the fortv-ninth day, the man at the wheel—J *8 Hart was his name— no ticed an immense motionless body lying on the surface of the sea only a abort distance from the ship. The sea at the time waa quiet and the object waa tn plain sight. The animal had tfaeap (Hwrance of a very large snake of from fifty to aixty feet in length, and lay per fectlv motionless upon the surface of the water, with its tail only, and a small ¥>rtion of the body near it, submerged. he body of the aerjieot waa about the six# of an ordinary flour barrel. The head was like an alligator's, and the mouth contained rows of teeth. The color of the beast was a yellowish brown. About ton feet from its heed waa a large pair of flippers. When first seen by Hart its bead was raised some three feet shove the surface of the sea. The man must have been wild at the sight, for he howl ed down to roe that there waa a sea ser Cent near by. If he'd said anything else nt aea serpent I'd have gone right up, but that word staggered roe, and I sim ply sat down and laughed. I went up in "a few minutee, though, and saw the creature a short way astern. Ever since that daT I'm satisfied that the sea-serpent exists. * For the rest of the voyage the sailors were on the look out for more. The t haage* in tke Frog. Nowhere in the animal kingdom is there so favorable an opportunity for peeping into natnre's workshop a* in the metamorphoses of the frog. Tlus ani mal is a worm when it oomee from the egg, and remains soeh the first four days of its life, having neither eyes nor tars nor nostrils nor respiratory organs. It crawls. It breathes throngh iU skin. After a while a neck is grooved into the flesh. Its soft lips are hardened into a a horny beak. The different organs, one after another, bnd ont; then a pair of branching gills, and last a long and limber tail. The worm has become fish. Three or four days more elapee, and the gills sink back into the bcily, while in their place others ooma, much more complex, arranged in vascular tufts, 112 in each. But they, too, have their day, and are absorbed, together with their frame work of bone and cartilage, to b© succeeded by an entirely different breathing apparatus, the initial of a second correlated group of radical changes. Longs are developed, the month widened, the homy beak con verted into rows of teeth; the stomach, the abdomen, tlie intestineAprcpared for the reception of tmimal fotf in place of vegetable; fonr limba, fulljfkq. ;>ped with hip and shoulder bones, wnh nerves and blood vessels, push ont through the skin, while the tail, being now sup planted by them as a means of locoaM* tion, is carried away piecemeal by the absorbents, and tbe aoimal passes the balance of its days as an aik-bresthing and flesh-feeding bstraohian. Perm Monthly. ••1 say, Pat," said a philoeopher, •'can you be doing two things at the same'time?" "Can't I?" answered Pat; " I'll be doing that any day 1" "How?" asked the philosopher. "Why," replied rat, "TUpe sleeping and draining, too, at the tuns, don't yon see?" Item* • latfmi The INK IRMIWHII paper-Grea baek, Hnnbtwa* should bo naed in build ing a tig OflM to cufttepUte-The ooutente of tho garbage mi . Tbi OfMb'4 of tbo motto* wua tliot bo Ared hi* pistol in tbo air. Tbo flrot temperance society in tbio country was organised in 1808. A man foola tbo nood of a Rood char aetor moot a/tor bo baa toot ono. Always build a pigety with great de- Hbaratidn, and tn the aowweat corner •A your lot. Why io it tbot people boot dog. and •boo a boo, and foot a biD, and oap a climax, and atoal a glanoo f For o*ol7 looa there io auao gain Wbaa you leee jour balance yo* gain a boneb on tbo back of your bead. American atroot oara ar now running la nearly every large oily it* the world, and boraoa continue M be exported from tbia oountry to Europe. Man may bo tbo aofeloot work of oree tiou, bnt bo doMu't think about it. and bo do mat look it, wben, oa bearing bi* tame called in tbo street, bo turn* and ftuds that it io only somebody Oallmg hia > dog. It* Kngonia, Eugenia, will yon atill in uat on waahng tbo bair of another woman npem yew boodr* " Alpbonae, Aipboooe, do yow Mil insist spue wear inn tbo akin of another calf upon your fotr * A jAfrnjmm tn Bocklaod, 111., baa I found thai 00m a paralytic stroke baa ita (nn|MMi*ati<.:.n Thou ,ij disabled t b* it, tle shuck BWiopMd bio oara and ' opened bia oyoa, for bofOwo ho waa botb deaf and blind. "I'm a rutabaga, and ban's where I plant myself," said a tramp, aa be eo i tared a farokboo*- near Passport, Hi., and seated himself at the labia. "We • Xm bile .mm," said U farmer's wifa and aboaouacd him with a diab panful I oi boiling water. An exchange gi*ea a *jipefor making a Ituaaian name. It ta a* fullowa : Take three alphabet* tad ahafce thri* up in a hat : throw on a table, Uh m dine ; pick outtboaothat fail nght side up, stick ;m a line and add either the ! " itch " or " km," and you bare a gen uine. full-fledged Bosnian general's •• Tcung Philosopher " would like to inquire what "safety " nlatch is, and why mm catted. A safety match is one in wturh the voting man owns a pair of inuraes, a tlirwe-storr bouse and a seal ring, while the young lady's father is the possessor of aiity tbonaami dollars in ha"k and a whole square of brick blocks. The little folks wanted the head of the family tct apend the evening with them, bather said he thought of attending a meeting. Various measures were dis mayed for keeping father at home, when Tommy,aged fivsLsddir*-*od his brother, aged seven, as follows: " 111 tell you what we'll do. Well put a sign on the front door—' Ho admittance to go out># this bouse nights.' " A natural palpit exists in North 1 Htonington, Coup., formed by a cluster i of Urge rocks, apparently thrown to gether in some upheaval of nature. The earlT settlers need to meet there ' for religious worship, and among the eminent preachers who have occupied the palpi tare George Whitfield, Gilbert ' Tennett and Simeon Brown, to# latter two being the eminent " Separatists." , A young man from the country was in town snd entered a photograph gallery to hare his picture taken. After seating 1 him, the operator told him to assume a *r' - expression. " Think of some thing cheerful," he said ; *' think of Tonr girl." A terrible scowl took txiaaeeeion of the young man's face, and lumping np, be exclaimed : "Think of the deuce' She went home with 1 another fellow last night, and she can !go to thunder, for me I" He evidently f thought of her, bat the pleased expnm i lion was not forth 0.-miag. Someiow*. Herald. When Leitcli Ritchie was traveling in Ireland, he passed a man who was a painful spectacle at pallor, squalor and raggednem. Hia heart smote him, and he tart,ed back. "If you sre in want," said Bitch i* with aome degree of peev ishness, " whvdout von beg*" "Sure 1 it's begging "I am, yar honor." " You ' didn't my a word." "Ov coorse not, ' ret hotair; bat see bow the skin is , speakm* through the boles of me troos j era! a *" ( the "boue* cryin' out through 'me skin! Look at rae sunken cheeks, ! and the famine that's ataa-in' in me eyes! Man alive.' isn't it beggm' * 91(11 * hundred tongues f" Thoae writers who think that ihoagbt h™.td spring into the mind fully armed and equipped, and who oon*ider it be neath their dignity to correct and erase, should see Tthnjrscn at work writing ■ snd rewriting his poems over snd over, 4 or rather printing them, for the poet ' laureate rarely uses a pen. He keeps s printing prem, snd baa his poems set in type, l ine by line. Imagine what a nice, leisurely time the poet must have strolling about an hia Uwn smoking cigars, with that eooentrio Texan hat of % his slouched over hia moody brt.w, com posing a verse ever) day. i The artnluH made of taper at the late Berlin exposition comprise the roof, i-oiling, cornices and interior walla of a house, the eiterior wall* of which were of pine wood; bat nil the furniture, blank, curtains, chandeliers, carpeting, ornamental doors, mantel and table or naments were of paper, including a stove made of asbestos paper, in which a lire was burning cheerfully. There were also exhibited wasli bamms water * L a full-rigged atup, lantern-, bats, shirts, full suits of clothes snd under clothes, straps, handkerchiefs, napkins, bath tuba, buckets, bronaea, flowers, urns, jewelry, belting and animals, both for ornament and for toys. TH* OTHF.B sn>t " Two 4daa Uwrs sre to every tabs' Aud every proverb, too : And I have soegkt to here prosed Home troths in aapeot* new. " The early bird win catch the worm. We in oar vosths were tooght ; Bat while the late worm deeps in pesce. The early worm Is caught. "Hie rolling stone collects no moss. Another fact that's buried At many a tooth who feels inclined To roam about the world : But there's one troth that seems to be Bid from oar elders eyee ; The stone tbat changes not iU place Can never hope to riee. - •" A 'j nail that's caught, Ive beard It said. " Is worth two pheasants free. " Bat just reflect, the osptnred one WIU sooner eaten be. * Secure the pence. '' the sages say, •' The pounds will beeecure ; But if von have the dollars safe. The dimes will be. I'm sure. "Tie well to look before you strive To pierce the silken shield, ! If what is on the other tide Will Just as quickly yield. Just so hi well to see, ore you Ihseeminate your lore, ! If those whom vou would strive to teach Were not as learned before. Alien to Faint. One who has had experience writes t hat '' paint applied to the exterior of build ings in autumn or winter will endure twice as long as when applied in early summer or hot weather. Li the former it dries slowly, and becomes hard like a glased surface, not easily affected after ward by the weather, or worn off by the beating of storms. But in very hot weather the oil in the paint soaks into the wood at onoe, as if into a sponge, leaving the lead nearly dry, and ready to crumble off. This last difficulty, j however, might in a measure be gnarded against, though at an increased expense, Iby first going over the surface with raw aid. Furthermore, by paint ng in oold weather the annoyance of small flies, which i ■variably collect during the warm season on fresh pain:, is avoided. 1 A* ao offset to this, there is a trouble vlfttn stottoirjuig paint—it is the dust, which altftys will collect upon exposed surfaoes, wijl keep collecting as long as i the paint isltot dry, and stick to it, so | tbat to obtain a smooth surface free ' from adhering dtist, it is necessary to secure quick drying Thi* is especially the ease when varnishing. I lmve often been disappointed, and no doubt so have many others, that the varnish used dried ao slowly that durt had time to settle on H before it became hard."