PIRET VOIOR. Die Mu mit 20 gross and fat, flesh a great, nnwieldy mass; I would I were as lean as that ’ Thin fellow over there, alas’ SRCOND VOIOR. Oh, what a skeleton am ith scarcely skin to bide my bones! No wonder that I moan, and sigh To be as fat as neighbor Jones! IN UNISON, Oh, what a wretohed lot is mine, And what a hideous thing to view! No wonder at my state I pine! Ob, would 1 wore wg mt}. you! lean =~ Boston Transcript. Vale! On, the swilt yours Pleasure, dismayed, beholds them harry on; And love, strong love, looks back throngh passionate tears; Like the bright metcor that scarce appears, Soom aro they gone, Ch, the fleet honrs ! Why, what is man *—their puppet and their slave; At first his fotters wreathing with fair towers Then galled and worn and robbed of all his powers, Gaining a grave. Vale ! weery, Watching in youth the sweet June roses tall; They bloom again—small matter it they die Ah! yes, they bloom; but om worms will hie, Doubt not, in all. Vale ! The word Later has smitten us with mortal pain; Rung out the death-knell of dear hope, or stirred ihe lips whose earthly voices may be heard Never sanin. Then does it wake Sad recollections. haunting thoughts that grieve; We know the cruel wound some Bmrewells make, We loarn to dread the nothingness, the break Parting may leave, So the years run ! Vale ! we soon must bid this briel estate; Bat for that heritage which shall be won When the (reed soul with time itself has dove Trusting, we wait. ~The Argosy. HIS REWARD. “You are most unjust, Charlies, and I know the Lord will one day sting your conscience for your cruelty, and | your heartiesspess toward that dear child.” The speaker was a comely lady of | about fifty, tall slim, and upright, and neatly clad in widow's weeds. Charles Pemberton, her eldest son, a handsome, stalwart young man of eight-and. twenty. whom she addressed, answered impatiently: “ Confound the boy, I wish he was dead.” He did not mean that; for he loved his little brother, and delighted to make him happy. But his mother had a fatal facility of tongue, aud for the last three hours she had been attacking him on the subject with ageressive meekness, And now, out of his grief and his impa- tience, he flung forth those bitter words, angry with himself as he did so, and rose to leave the room, lest his over. wrought temper should betray him farther. His mother fSurgs parting shaft after him, “You may have vour wish sooner than you expect, Charles, and more than | that. He will probably not trouble you many years, for he is very delicate; and 1 shall pot outlive him very long Then I suppose you will be happy.” Charles Pemberton saw the cambric prepared for the shower, and shudder. ing fled; whereupon Mrs. Pemberton retired to her bedroom to pray that her son's hard heart might be sciler ed. And then, from a curt.ined recess at one cod of the room, there came a little | boy of twelve, with blanched, serious face, balf-parted lips, and wide dark eyes. Towara the close of Mrs Pem- berton's lecture he had entered the room, by an open window, unperceived, and, finding that he was the subject of the discourse, he had concealed himself. He had heard onlv the concuding | words, and they chilled his very life- blood. He stood now with one hand clatehing the curtain “80 Charles wishes | was dead, does | he ? And mother thinks I am going to die to pierse him. Bat won't. wonder what makes mother think I am going to die. Per. aps she only said it to aggravate Charles. Why should he wish | was dead ? I thought he was fond of wwe;” and here he was nearly | choked with a rising sob, which he gulped down with aifficuity. * I won. der why—1I'll ask him.” The next morning, after breakfast, his brother, who bad forgotten the inci- | dent of the previous day, taking a ball, | called out: * Get your bat, Teady, and | let’s have half an bour’s practice.” As they were walking down to the | field Edward suddenly startled his brother by asking: | “Would it be any good to you if I | was dead, Charles *" { “Good to me' Why, Teddy, what | are 3 thinking of!” i “ Well, ye.terday you said you wished I was dead; and you wouldn't wish that | if it would be no good to you, would | i 5 ANT INI 35 SAT VOLUME XIV. HALL, CENTR EB CO. PA, a a A NUMBER 4. oniy a lifeinterest in a moderate prop- i guardian of the boy, she had made some efforts to win over Charles to her views; but his honest, healthy nature, was absolutely impervious to these nar row notions; he was, according to the argon of her seot, ** given up to a re. probate mind,” and day by day the icy orust of reserve in whioh she lived be. came thicker and denser; and it was rendered more hard by the feeling of bitterness inspired by the provisions of { her husband's will, Charles felt ail thus acutely, He tried to be, and he was, a good son, but all attempts at filial con fidence were repulsed. The kind of fataiism which she had accepted made i her bow with resignation to the will which had decreed the eternal perdi. tion of her elder son. in common with that of the overwhelming majority of the human race; bat with something of inconsistency she prayed with passion ate earnestness that ber vounger son might be given to her, and might be gathered into the fold of the elect. The boy throve at school, His health, now tha he was freed from maternal coddling, improved rapidly. As was to be expected he did full justice to his brother's diligent coaching in athletics, and what no one had expected, Lie devel. oped 8s wonderful faculty for mathe. matics. Nothing could be more satis. factory than the reports of his conduct and progress; and nothing brighter and more beautiful than the ind's healthy confidences with his brother in his happy holidays, when he described his schoo! life and the young hopes and am- bitions kindling within him. When the term of Teddy's school was drawing to a close the head master of the schoo! strongly urged that he should go to Cambridge; and the iad himself, pleased with the idea, was en- couraged in his desire by the fact that the dearest of his school friends had just entered there. But this was an extension of tL educational course which had not beer conterapiated. By the will of his father, only a very moderate sum had been assigned for the boy's education, and this had airesdy been doubled by Charles out of Lis own limited means in order that he might have the advan- tages of a superior school. lf he went to the university, the funds must come entirely from his elder brother, whe wouid have to deny himseit in many ways to arrange matters, And it was especially hard to do at this time, for the opportunity had just occurred of purchasing on advantageous terms some fields on which he had long looked with an eye of rational aesire, Mrs. Pemberton bad been looking forward with hungry desire to the clos- ing of the chapter of Teddy's school experience. He was still young and impreasible, and she would have op- portunities daily and hourly of guiding bis thoughts in the only direction in which, according to her views, they could be profitably employed. Her na- ture, which hardened more and m to ail the rest of the world, concentrated all its tenderness and af- fection on this boy: and her dearest hope on this side of the grave was, that it might be through her instrumental ity that be sbould separate himself from the world, even as she had done. When, therefore, Charles ani ovneed to her his intention of sending the boy Cambridge, it was to her a croel and a bitter blow. For a few moments she sat in silence, the gloom deepening on her face, and her heart growing icier than ever within her. : “It will not be with my will or with my consent,” she said at length, ** that | he goes. But, I know my will and my wish have no weight with you, and that you delight 10 thwart them.” “Nay, mother,” said he, mildly, “1 am thinking only of Teddy's good. It would be far pleasant r for me to have & iE ie re + wi) has remarkable abilities, and that he ought t go. The boy himself is eager to go; and I know he will distinguish himself, if honest work can bring him distinetion.™ “and what good,” she flashed out, “will his distinetion do him? *Knowl- away. lhere is but one thing needful to know, and of that he is likely to learn You are willing to gratify your own small and whose homes are all of this world. boy's only true interest “Mother.” he pleaded, ‘I wish you would be a little more reasonable" **Ay, ‘resson!'’" she broke in. “Reason is the will-o’-the-wisp that leads you astray, not only to your own undoing, but that of others. You think yourself wise; and you may be wise in said, “I = ill destroy the wisdom of the wise, I will bring to nothing the under- itanding of the prudent.’” She was ready with quotations at | every turn to justify herseir, and to con- bliss? He was barely thirty-seven in years. and he was younger in that he had never been hackneyed in the ways of ove, and his heart had never bowed to a meaner passion. When he descended next morning, there was the light hope and love in his foe uy Why, Charlie,” exclaimed Teddy, "how young you look! if you grow backward at this rate while you are at Wilncore Court, mother will hardly know which is whieh.” He watched Teddy and Lilian in frank and happy Intercourse, and thought with delight that they were already as brother and sister, Her manner to him confidential, almost afte tionate He was sure of his ground; more and more sure each day until the very last, on the eve of which he sat in his bed room, musing much, for he had deter. mined that ne would know his fate on the morrow, There was a tap at the door. “Come in,” he cried, and, turning, Saw brother, with a brilliant fiush p Lis face and a strance fire in his eves “Charlie,” said he, in quivered with some deep feeling want to tell you something." ‘Yes," said be, kindiy, and scarcely noticing these signs of unusual emotion. Wns his voice that “i " you. What is your news?" Teddy walked tw the window, and stood there, looking out for a few seo. onds before he asked, speaking abruptly, and without! turning: ** Charlie, what do you think of Lilian Jermyn? Had the boy then discovered his secret, and was he coming to urge him to the step on which he had already de- termined? His agitation was so great that be could soarcely find ords to speak, but he began to answor siowly, in low tones: **1 should, perhaps, you earlier, Teddy The young man turned to him impul- sively. * AL!" Ie exclaimed, * you have seen itall. Imight have known that, dear oid brother. Charlie, bless me, con- gratulate me. make mueh of me; she has promised to be my wife.” He had thrown his arms round his elder brother's neck in the old childish way, and was for a moment or so inco- herent in his joy; be did not observe, ar, if he did observe, attributed to un wrong cause his brother's emotion, though he felt in every fiber of his frame a thrill of grateful recognition as his brother kissed his forehead and said: “God bless you, Teddy, ane make you worthy of such a treasure.” An hour iater, as Teddy was leaving him, he said: * Oh, Charlie, there was something you were going to tell me. What was it!” “On, that was a small matter, we will not mix it with your joy to-night.” A AS TA. have spoken to " Jamie's Good-Night, Ata late hour the other night & poor oid man, weak with hunger and stiff with cold, entered the Central station to ask for lodgings. While he sat by the stove to get warm they heard him groan like one in distress, and tie captain asked: e Are hart?” “It is here," answered the old man, as he touched his breast. “It all came back to me an hour ago as] passed a window and saw a bit of a boy in his night gown. would to God that I were dead I” “* What is it!" asked the captain as he you sick, or have you been “It is the heart-ache—it is remorse,” the old man answered. *' I have wanted to die—1 have prayed for death-——but life still clings to this poor old frame. I am old snd friendless and worn out, He wiped his eyes on his ragged sleeve made a great effort to control his feel- ings, and went on: ** Forly years ago I had plenty. A wife sang in my home, and a young boy rode on my kne and filled the house with his shouts and Isughter. I sought to bea called me such. One night Icame home vexed. I found my boy ailing and that ailed me to act so that night, but it seemed as if everything went wrong. night since he had been able to speak, he had called to me before closing his eyes in siecep, ‘good night, my pa!’ Oh, sir, and I hear those words sounding in my ears every day and every hour, and they wring my old heart until I am faint.” For a moment he sobbed like a child, “ God forgive me, but I was cross to the boy that night. When Le called to me good-night, I would not reply. ‘ Goodnight, my pa? he kept cailing, and fiend that I was, I would make no TRANCE TENTS, Strange Actions of Persons While in a Bate of Mesmerio Trance, Dr, Beard, an well-known New York soientist, delivered an interesting lec. performed a number of curiou experi ments with several subjects. In open. Ling, Dr, Beard stated at some length the theories regarding trance which he has { forméd from his experiments. Hisdefi. nition of trance was that it ia a concen- tration ol nervous activity in some one direction with a corresponding suspen. sion of nervous saotivity in all other directions, Dr. Beard described briefly the following forms of trance : Catalepsy, ecstacy, intellectual trance, epileptie trance, alcoholic trance, somnambulism, sellinduced trance, spontansons trance, mesmerio trance, or so-called™ hypno- tism,” or * animal magnetism," neither of which terms, Dr. Beard said, ex- pressed the condition as well as the term ‘trance or *‘ mesmeric trance.” In speaking of the sponianeous trance, Dy. Beard said there was po doubt that reat actors like Balvinl or omtors like jeecher gointo this sort of trance while before an audience, and have no idea of | what they are doing or saying. Mes { meric trance was of permanent value to the medical science, because those capa- bie of going into it could be handled | easily, and thus the phenomena might be carefuily stutied. Aher taking issue | with the positions of many of the Euro pean scholars in regard to trance, Dr, Beard entered into a series of very ip. teresting, and in some cases quite new, experiments. A small piace on one side ot the face of a subject was anmsthis- ed so that, although a needle was push. {ed into the flesh until it reached the { cheek bone, there was no evidence of pain on the part of the trance subject, | Dr. Post came out of the audience, and | satisfied himselt of the genuineness of i test Another subject was! rendered stone deaf, A pistol was discharged within an inch of his ear, and every one in the audience started, but the trance subject remained firm as a statue. Another person tasted cayenne pepper and called it sugar while in the trance state. A slightiy-buiit, pale young man next sub- mitted himself to the test of actual cautery. With a red-hot iron his hand was burned unti: the flesh smoked, and gave to the leoture-room the odor of a biscksmith shop, but the subject did not wince, On regaining consciousness Le suffered aoute pain for a long time, but bore it bravely, having given his cons mt to the experiment. Six trance subjects were set declaiming in unison, and made a deafening din. Dr. Beard then, by touching the hack of the neck of each person, gave his audience the amusing exhibition of six living asto- mata. They threw their hands about, their lips moved, their eyes flashed, but no sound csme forth. A slight fillip on the cheek in any case brought back the power of s~eech instantly. Both aphasia, the loss of think. tog power, and aphonin, loss of power to speak aloud, were produced, the one condition in one subject, the other in a second subject, at will of the op- erator. A boy was set while in a trance 10 write his name. When he wasin the middle ol iret name Dr. Beard touched his neck. His pen halted nme- diately, For fully five minutes Le sat looking intentiy at the unfinished name with rigid fingers. Then with a touch onthe chieek he went on to complete his name. After experiments showing that trance subjects could ve converted tem porarily into * Maine jumpers,” so that they woud spring up wildly si sa smart stroke of the hand, Dr. Beard said tht there was one of his subjects who had teeth that needed drawing, snd he had consented to have Dr. Kings .ey extract them at one. Some of the ladies shuddered and ex. presse! their dread of the operation. The young man sat down fearlessly, however, and in few minutes the dentist had extracted three teeth with. out apparently giving the young man the slightest pain. Dr. Kingsley said that in thirty vears' experience he never saw any one who could sit without wincing to have one tooth out unless with the use of an anssthetic. th “ut Lis “ a A Dector’s Mistake, At some of the more primitive Ger- man and Bohemian watering places a quaint old custom prevails, in virtoe of which the resident medical or bath doctors take up their stations every morning at a fixed hour, under particu. lar trees, on the leading promenade of their respective Bade-Ort, so that their patients may make sure of finding them for consultation or advice at u particular time and in & particular place. A good memory for faces is a sine qua non to these sons of Esculapius, who in the height of the season frequently interview trom fifty to sixty invalids apiece during these receptions. Mistakes as to identity, however, will occur, and sometimes re- The Traflo in Dried Fruits, | The perishable nature of all kinds of {fruit has led to the employment of wany methods for its preservation, the | most primitive of which is probably that of drying. Although recent im | created an increased demand for canned [ fruits, the market for the dried artiele i# brisk every year, Many commercial [firms in New York deal almost exclu sively in dried fruits,or make this article a leading specialty, Besides the demand for dried fruits in that market, there is every year a large demand for export to foreign countries, Dealers also do a ‘arge trade with the Western States and Territories In many of these, es. pecially the [ater settled distriots, farm- ers have not had time to grow orchards as yot, and so must buy their fruit, both fresh and preserved. Dried fruit is also much used in the mining regions, being often take his choice between dried apr @ pie or none at all, Dried pesches, berries, plums and chervies, find a good market in the Western States, and are made into pies, puddings sand sauee. Few of these smaller fruits are exported, the foreign demand being chiefly for apples. Of these there were exported in October of inst year 1 853 044 pounds, and in the first ten months of the year, 4.498, 156 pounds, The export trade has ine creased largely, of late, as will be seen by the record of 1874, when only 1,902.792 pounds were exported. In 1876 the exports rose to 6,600,535 pounds, and last year when the apple crop was were exported 5 805 256 poonds. France, Germany, Belgium and England are all using more dried apples this year than Usa. failure of the apple crop in those coun. tries, and also of the unusually low | prices in this country. * Evaporated | fruit, which sold iast year from thirteen to sixteen cents a pound, now sells at | from six to eight eenls. Common fruit, which last year brought from seven to pine cents, now brings only trom four and one-half to five and one- half cents. i On sceount of the general failure of | the grape crop as well as the apple erop | in France, the distillers in that country | are using large quantities of dried ap- | ples for the manufacture of brandy. The i common grades of apples are preferred | for this purpose, especially Southern | fruit, which is said to yield ten per cent, | more nleobol than ordioary fruit. An import duty of one-half cent a pound | was to be levied on cried apples in | France after January 1. Previously, | dried apples have been on the free list in | that country. THE CENSUS, So s— Fopuiation of States and Clttes the following ns the relative popula ciuding 1860; Census, State 1880 Alabama . » 1. 963,344 Arkansas..... S02 564 Unllloraia Rod 686 Colorado 174 640 Connesticut, ., 621 683 Deawasie 148 6464 Florida , 268 566 Georgia. 1.688 983 linods....... 3.078 8358 Indo 1.9/8 3568 WH vee 1,004 463 K snsas P05 346 Kontueky.... 1.048 500 Louisiana 949,263 Maine... 648 045 Maryland . 935 139 Massachusetts 1,783 086 Michigan .....1.6%4 008 | Minnesota 180 BO? | Mississippi. ...1,181 805 | Missoun 2,168,071 | Nebraska 452.433 | Nevada ... 62,265 | No# Hamp. shire, 347,784 | New Jersey. ..1,130 202 | Now York... 5088 173 ! North Carolina 1,400 1 00 { Oalo 8,197.794 { Oregon. 174,767 | Pemnsylvania. 4,252 738 | Rhode lslaad. 276.4628 { South Caroling 985 708 | Tennessee .... 1,542 463 lexas. . 1,687 308 Vermont. ... 433 hd Virginia .......1 512.903 618,183 «++ 1,815 386 Census, 1860 Census, 1870, 986,003 484 471 b60, 247 35 864 537 454 135 018 187.745 1184.08 2.630 891 1,689 637 1,104 020 364 300 1.521.011 746 818 626 916 780 B04 1.457.861 1,184 0569 4307 6 827 933 1,721 206 22 953 42.481 379,004 1.711.851 1,851. 428 674 913 1.155 684 78.03 528.274 687,049 1,281 08g 749,113 173 45438 701,308 1,182,012 98 841 6,867 S18,8300 S06 098 4.382.750 1,071.36) 2.265 268 84,923 8,621,846} 217.363 T86W 1,268 625 KiK 519 334,651 1,225,163 442.014 1,064,670 326,078 672 G36 3.880.785 2.580.011 bd 465 2.906.216 ud 748 1.108 Bol 604 215 1,606,318 | Wisconsin 775 881 Bome very remarkable changes will In 1800 Virginia was the leading State in population; now she is New York came to the position ever since. Pennsylvania be- gun as second in 1800, then dropped to 1830, and there she remains, Ohio be came third in 1840, and has not increased in rank. Illinois is fourth, which posi. tion she reached in 1860, but is not likely to keep it more than one more deoade. The New England States show a tendency to retrograde reistively while Michigan, lowa, Minnesota, Kan. sas and Texas are advancing. It must be said of Virginia that a large part of Lier joss was occasioned by the setting off or West Virginia, Returns of the population of sixty- WINTER INCIDENTS. A Thrilling Adventare-Only Ons Man Saved How a Herder's Cattle Were Last, Representative Beymour, of the Mich. igan legislature, Collector Casadler, of the port o« Sanit Ste. Marie, and three French woodchoppers recently found themselves on the Ignace side of the str its of Mackinae, waiting an oppor- tunity to cross. Being anxious to reach the Slate capital, Mr, Beymour urged fils companions to attempt the passage at once, though a severe storm was driving the snow in great clouds down the fields of ice. Three guides, Louis Ryerse, Jack lasley and Simpson de Forest, voiunteered to lead the voy- agers over the straits, and so about noon the peril us undertaking was began. When more than half way over the squn.ls became terrific and the ice was felt undulating under the feet of the skaters like the low, long roll of waves at sea, Mr. Seymour was thoroughly alarmed. Ryerie, the bold est ad most intelligent of the guides refused to give any further satislaction than to utter reneatediy: *“ A first-class eakeofi e." What Bras meant was understood fifteen minutes later, when, | on approaching the shore, Mr, Seymour { saw that the field of iee upon which the | party stood was sweeping down the | straits at a speed not less than five miles ian hour. Between the party and the { shore was R00 feet of open water. The situation was alarming. To return was | impossible, and there was nothing to do bat stand still and await developments. eastward just below, and the voyagers saw that the head of their icefieid was | being driven by the wind against the I shore. The force of the collision was so | great that small eakes of ioe were thrown | twenty feet into the air, and great | masses were ground to powder, Going [through this line of iee surf was no | child's play, but every man of the party | at last succeeded in reaching the shore. | They had been three hours making the | passage, and had traveled fifteen miles. | Daring one of the recent snow storms { on Lake Ontario the Canadian schoon- ers Zealand and Norway went down | with all on board, and of the crew of { the schooner Belle Sheridan only one i man, James MeSherry, was saved, | McSherry gave a Toronto reporter s { graphic recital of the wreck and Lis | miraculous escape. The Belle was ten miles from the Canadian shore, just | abreast of Thirty Mile point, at eight | o'clock in the evening, when the storm | enme howling up from the West. Cap- {tain McSherry, the survivor's father, { put the Belle belore the wind, and she firm, and dealers are generally confident of good prices. The English market | will take little except evuporsted apples, | and it is only within a few years that any have been shipped there; but the demand vow is steadily increasing. For the German market fruit dried in quar. ters is preferred. ‘Sun dried © spples are about the only kind shipped to Con- tinental Europe. The “evaporated” apples are dried very quickly, by artiticial heat, in a carefuiiy-constructed apparatus, After being peeled, cored and sliced trans. versely into shin rings the fruit is sub. jeeted to the fumes of sulphur, which causes the white color to be retainet in drying. So effectually does this fumi- | gation arrest decay that quantities of the apples may be left several davs be- | fore drying without injury. *‘' Evapo- rated’ apples are generally packed in wooden boxes containing about fifty pounds The common grades are | packed in barrels. All of the older States send more or | leas dried apples to this market. New | York State takes the lead. and Ohio and Indians comes next. Tennessee and other States in the Southwest also send | large quanties, Dried peaches an | bh sckberrie: come in large part from | North Carolina. Peaches nrealso dried hy the evaporation process, and there is market. Aithough there was a very | inrge yield of applies last year, dealers | say that there was not a correspondingly | large amount dried. The reasons given | are, that driers generally anticipated ! that large quantities would bedried and that prices in consequence would be low; accordingly they were afraid to | engage in the business very largely. It! i= also stated that the cold weather | coming so early in the season destroyed many apples that otherwise would have | been dried.—New York Tribune. i | The Banana. | The Cuba correspondent of the Bos- | ton Commercial Bulletin writes: The | manner in which the fruit is developed | is quite interesting. From the midst of | the leaves and at the top appears a large, | smooth, purple cone hanging down | gracefully at the end of a sialk. The | flowers are all wrapped up in this cone, | i results, as compared with 1870 and 1860: 1880, 1874, vw 1,306,580 943,291 . B46 954 674022 Hub, 689 396 009 , B03 3 4 208.977 Boston .« S02 A385 250 826 St. Louis...... 350 622 310 564 Baltimore , 352 190 267.354 Cincinnati. .... 265.708 216 4 San Fracciseo. J53 v6 148.473 Now Orlane... 216 140 191 418 160, 143 ¥i 819 « 156.381 86,076 165 137 17.714 « 147 307 100 199 « 186.400 106 056 123 646 100 7563 Jersey City... 130.728 83.546 Daroit....... 116 342 9.677 Mitwaukee.... 115.878 71 4%) Providence. ... 104 850 ER] Albany 00.83 69.432 Rochester. ... 89 363 61.380 Allegheny, Pa. 75 681 53 180 16.074 45 244 63 83 81,038 Gl 882 § 840 59 485 40 98 68 29H 41 10d 56,747 46 465 B56 X13 32 260 52.740 39 634 51,791 43.051 1580. New York 8 § 651 Philadelpuin 266 661 109 260 177 812 160,773 311.418 161.044 56 8nd 168 676 43.417 48 217 81.129 61,132 71.814 68 033 0.226 Chioaa. Pittsburg Baffslo .... Newark.... Loven] 18 611 87.910 39,267 36.827 24 960 Richmond. .... New Haven. Lowell... Tro Kansas City... Camb'ge, Mass, Syracase Columbus ’ a0. «uu . 51 665 50.887 50.143 49.909 49.06 46 887 45.850 43 461 43 280 42 563 42,490 41,658 41,498 38,178 38.677 38.284 35 630 34.566 34 398 33 913 33.810 33,683 81.974 33,679 31,684 48 956 26 766 13,066 3582 25.865 33.930 a7 .180 30,841 20.045 20 030 28 921 30 478 28.233 4768 10,500 21.789 28.8.4 31.413 40,226 18,604 19 586 13,786 $0,578 14,006 5.822 9.213 16. O88 Toledo . Charleston. ... Fall River.... Minneapolis. .. Seranton Nastiville.... Reading. ... Hartiord .... 2568 Camden St. Paul .... Lawrence Mass Dayton .... Lynn Denver .... Oakland, Cal Atlanta Ution Portland, Me. Memphis... .. Springfeld, 10,401 17 20,081 19.083 9,664 21 539 26,341 23.643 33,5480 26,708 15,109 Mauchester, N H St. Joseph, Mo, Grand Rapids, Moh 32,630 32,484 23,5636 19,6656 20.47 8.082 32,0156 16,607 8,08 Ling. The intense cold and ssvage in. | yrusion of the waves prostrated the whole crew. At three o'clock in the morning Edward and Thomas Me. Sherry, brothers of James, dragged | themoelves into the Istter's arms and | there died. Captain McSherry shortly iafterward was swept away bya wave {that cleared the deck, and at six in | the morning tue msainmast, to which four of the crew had lashed themselves, fellnmong the billows. James clung to | noon. when some people on shore res ipoble effort. Stockpen on the Missouri river, near | Benton, Montana, have been puszied | this winter at the disappearance of so many of their cattle. A few davs ago | one of! the herders who was stationed i at a point on the river bank where the cattie have been in the habit of drinking, soived the pussle. At that point ice i had formed while the river was high, | and after the water had receded there | was a long slope of ice—~an ice-chule~ which ended in an air-hiole in the chian- Mel of the river. The herder saw sev- i hel I'he leaders of the herd stopped at the ‘head of the chute, but they were | crowded forward from behind, started { down the chute, Jost their feet and dis | appeared in the air-hoie. Before the | herder co.ld interfere nine of the herd | had been sent into the river. | Should a Baby be Fat! | While there is a measure of truth in { the assertion that al babies are no | necessarily healthy, the following much quoted extract from a physician's letter to a Boston paper is likely to do mischiet | by its extravagant condemnation of iat. | Speaking of fatty degeneration the phy- | sicians says: { “Most infants do become thus dis- | eased before they are three months old. { This stops the growth and leaves the | poor deceived parents nothing but in- crease in weight to boast of; and when the poor little victim to his own greed and his parents’ folly gets to the end of his tether he melts away like butter in a hot oven, and then it is sean how x (in flesh) he has been all the time. Few comprehend the broad flerence between flesh and fat. The first i RELIGIOUS NEWS AND NOTES. The Protestant Episcopal church is asked to contribute $158 000 to foreign missions this year. The Bishop of Peterboreugh recen declared that the English agricu depression was a divine punishment for national unfaithfainess, A floating church on Hemlock lake, Ontario county. N. Y., is to be towed from one group ol to another on successive Sundays, The Wesleyan Methodist for 188] gives a summary of charch mem- bers, 98 527, with 10585 on trial. The Wesleyan body sustains 519 missionaries, and raised for this purpose last shout $500 000, including $180,000 the Thanksgiving fand. Bishop E. O. Haven (Methodist) Las removed to San Franciseo, where he is to reside, and Bishop Hurst to Des Moines, lows, A curious and interesting tablet has been found in Sheusi Province, China, whose inscriptions shows that Cliriste anity was introduced into China A.D. 636, and sanctioned by imperial decree In the Jour 639. The tablet was erectnd There are fifty six churches in Rich- i mond, Va., of which thirty are Baptist | (eleven colored Baptist.) ten Methodist, | ten Episcopal, four Presbyterian and five Catholic. Tue nomber of members is 31.7.8, of whom 18.390 are white and Solar Baptista. Tue later number 14,118. The Protestants of Germany are be. | ginning to prepare to celebrate the four | hundredth suoniversary of the birth of | Luther, which occurs November 10, 1883, The principal celebration will be | held nt Warthurg, where Lather com- pleted his transition of the Bible. A general committee has been formed, of which Dr. Kuster, burgomaster of Eisenach, is chairman. The meeting of the Methodist in London next September is now fully provided for. There will be about 200 delegates from America, the Methodist Episcopal churel; béir g entitled to about eighty, half of whom will be la The bishops are iutrusted with the power of naming them. The Year-Book for 1881 of the New York Sunday-schoo! association gives { the number of Sundav-schools in that [oily ns 415, with 115.826 scholars and | 10,550 (eachers and officers, and =n average attendance of 82.461, Of these schools seventy-five are iscopal, ssyenty Presbyterian, fifty-seven Metho- dist, fifty-four Roman Catholic, forty- four Baptist, twenty Reformed, fifteen Lutheran, six Congregational, five Friends, five Hebrew, two Moravian, ten Universalist and Unitarian, twenty- six Union and twenty-fivem SOUS. The sssociation, by its various classes institutes, social meetings, snd its library and reading.room is doing an important and efficient work. Pt onside tists Words of Wisdom. No man is wise or safe but he that is honest, | Without earnestness ons cannot even jest to effect, Even the weakest man enough to enforce Lis convictions. Do what good thou canst unknown; and be not vain of whist ought rather to be felt than seen. It is not only arrogant, but is profli- gate for a man to disregard the world's opinion of himself. In certain souls, more tender, euphemism of contempt. Look on sianderers as direct enemies to civil society; as persons without hovor, Lonesty or humanity. The law can never make a man hon- est; it can only make hin very uncom- fortable when he is dishonest, The essence of true nobility is neglect of self. Let the thought of self pass in, and the beauty of great action is gone, the bioum from a soiled flower. If men would spend in doing good to others a quarter of the time and money they spend in doing harm to themselves misery would vanish from the earth. To protect one's seif against the storms of life marriage with a woman isa harbor in the tempest; but with a bad Roma it proves a tempest in the har . { The Member from Macomb.” Half an hour before the train left for Lansing Sestertay morhing, a battered- looking man about forty years oid whose breath gave away his drink and whose face was anything but pretty, appeared at the Union depot snd intro- duced himself to one of the officials of the Central road with: “Sir, my name is Jones. I am the member from Macomb. I gotleft here, have been robbed, and I want to reach You will find in blade and blossow., Now| kaow bow dear she was,” — EE ————————— True to One's Self, Speak thou the truth, let others fence And trim their words for pay; Z In pleasant sunshine of preteuse, Guard thou the fact, the’ clouds of night] We were not made to sit and dream, how thou the light If conscience gleam Set not the bushel down, The smallest spark may send abesm er hamlet, tower, and town, Woe snto him, on safety bent, Who ereeps from age to youth, Failing to grasp his life's intent Deoause he lears the roth. Be true to every inmnst thought, And ss thy thoughts, thy speech, What thou hast not by striving bought, Presume not thou to teach. Then each wild gust the mist shall clear We now ses darkly And justified at last sopesr The true in Him that's true. % & Ap gentleman out on the piatiorm of an elevated rail- road car in New York the other mors uiitiinlisg the rest air, observed to the brakeman: his. jnvigorating 7" “No, sir; it is Harlem." said the conscientious em. player. The pleasant- looking g ntieman “Do you love me for asked, as she gaved through the isingi~ss windows of the “ Glory ™ : 4 face. * 1 do, hands | ane “ Ah! ing 0 heart," she m . "T'was Sunday eve and the small boy stood With bis eve 10 the keyhole pressed, And he saw his sister bead Oa Absalom vest. a ee ¢ ser : “ There ain't no harm in a vest; slide out,” Bat the! © | refused to slide i # There am { Do harm in the vest. I know,’ . | demn ler son. He would gladly have |8tswer. He must have thought me | however, wi Fd pC | avoided giving her pam, had he known | asleep, for he finally cuddled down with | Suit in singularly comical compiications | how to do so, but having made up his | 8 80b in his throat. I wanted to get up | Recently one of the moet popular phy- | mind as to what was best for the lad he and kiss him, but I kept waiting and | Heians or 3 Stowdea o Bade po yas i | did not shrink from carrying it out; and | Waiting, and finally I tell asleep.” | visited under Lis tree by an American Aud «ver since [ have been wondering | a8 he walked the fields alone, month at. | ** Well?” queried the captain, as the fentlethan, A Tove RIYIVS!, ho SO "n, {ter month, he was oppressed bv a du'] | Silence grew long. pained Lia the wars (augec AiR sol Charles Peuiber ton flung away the bat | scrton ia he I tobear | ' When I awoke it was day. It was | terrible headaches that~ be thought he | th re AIT YIDE: and clasped | i; uiter solitude, for to ro living soul | 8 shriek in my ears which broke my | had better drop them and depart to the } fr ® pia, issing him, and | ould he complain of his mot er. His | Slumbers, and as I started up my poor | Other climes. The doctor unwilling hugging him, like a girl with a new wife called: *Oh! Richard! Richard! | thus promptly to lose his patient, looked ! which consists of a large number of | Wheel closely packed spathes. By-and-bye the | © 28° 0K» | uppermost of these spatlies disengages | ,, + o8F “% itself from the rest, curls up ang Gis | Hobokas,.... closes a row of three or four long blos: | yerrigharg ... | soms, with the young fruit of each be- | syvannah. | ginning to form. | Omaba While this row of fruit is tender the | spathe remains hanging oyer it like a | roof, but when the fruit has acquired i some size and strength the protecting | i shield drops off and the next in order | Charles stopped abruptly, and said, with sternness: * Who told you that?” “Nobody. 1 justeame into the room as you said it, and you didn’t see me. lansinra enter upon my duties as a legislator. Wishing won't do much for The official looked up from his wri but made no reply, and after a Joing in the world. Ther are a ence the man said: A “ Suppose I should ask you how I am toenth Lansing, what would be your re "a tell you to walk,” was the quie Answer. “Can't I get a pass? “ No, sir.” is Jemn meat—muscle—thé result of growth; while fat—I don’t care how hard and solid it may be—is the product or scoumuiation of unex. cretial excess. This is why no one bets a dollar on a {at horse or a fat man-— they are ‘soft’ and ‘osn'tstay. It is every whit as true of a fat baby. The only wonder is that any infant lives sixty days from birth. Fed before birth but three times a cay, he is after birth 31.966 31 206 30 099 30,762 30 681 30.518 Totals....8,234,030 6,030,184 4,177,323 The above, nas will be observed, are all cities of over 30,000 inhabitants. 1f i the smaller cities were included it 18,270 32.034 20,207 23,104 48,236 16,083 14,083 20,268 9,962 13 405 22,202 1,883 : : E By igi g : i 1 Y 3 3 n doll. | only consolation was, that in his college a . hi £1 air iver $e . . | our Jamie is deac in his bed! It was | Over him hastily and, perceiving that he Oh, Teddy, Teddy, Teddy,” he said: | 80. ile was dead and cold "There were | Wore a fat sombrero, told him it wai ** 1 wish my tongue had been torn out | ) | career Teddy fully justified every expec- by the roots before 1 had said such a | thing; butldidn’t mean it, Teddy. You never thought I meant it, did you? Why, Teddy, I wouldn't lose you for all the world, my little playfellow, my brother. It isn’t right for me to com- pinin to you of mother and when I have justtold you how it happened that I said those cruel words—tuat [ didn't mean, didn't ever mean, you know for woment, Teddy—then you must forget all about it. I had t 1d mother that 1 wanted to make a man of you, and that it was time you went to school, and learned to stick up for yourself: and then she said 1 was cruel to you, and that I didn’t care for you, and “Jectured and scolded me all the afternoon, and then I forgot myseif—which I ought not to bave done, for I know it is only her love that makes he over-anxious—and I said those hateful words, that I never, never, ncver meant, Teddy.” ‘1 thought you never could mean it, Charles,” said the little fellow. He had borne up with wonderful stoicism till now, but the overwhelming sense of re- lief was too much for him, and he began to weep and sob convulsively. Shortly, he sprang up and :lasped his brother's neck. saying: _ “I'll go to school, Charlie, and I'll do just as you like, #nd you'll see it I won't be a man, and I'il win the Greek and Latin prizes, too, if I can; but you know I'm not etever, Charlie, so you mustn't be disappointed if I don’t do that all at once, will you?” * I'll trust you, Teddy, my boy, to do the best you can, and none of us can do more than that. I shall missson sorely, Teddy, but there'll be jolly long holi- days, you know, and we shall have pleasant times together then. And now come on avd let's see how you'il guard your wickes. If you don’t do me credit as wericketer, I'll git on you.” The lady's heart was very sore when her poy had gone, and she felt herselt alone, and many and dread were the misgivings that darkened her mind. And Charles, too, felt himself alone. Mrs. Pemcberton’s married life had been outwardly calm and uneventtul; but she was out of sympathy with her hus a man of easy, jovial tempera- ment, who scarcely noticed her cold- ness, and never troubied himself abou: t; and she had sought conso.tion in religion. She had fallen under the in- fluence of certain meek persons, who held that “the world,” and thi 0 the world, were forbidden to When her tation that had been formed of him His last lone vacation had come, nad | hie was to spend it with his old school chum, who had been his dearest friend also at college, but had left the univer- gity in the previous year Turenne Jer- myn was a young man whose friendship | was worth having, clear-headed, sound- hearted, ot exuberant vit.lity. He had often heard from Teddy of “dear old Charlie,” and in arranging for this long | vacation an earnest invitation had been | given that he should join them. It | offered a tempting break in a dull, | monotonous life, and was accepted. i Sir Frederick Jermyn's seat iayon the | slope of a lovely Berkshire hill, shut | round by woods, butoveriooking a wide | and charming landscape. Pemberton passed the lodge gates, and | saw on either side the evidences of | wealth and social station, he began to | regret his acceptance. feeling that he would scarcely be at his ease amid sur- roundings so much above his own homelier state. The cordiality of his welcome, however, soon chased away these misgivings, and he had not been many hours at Wilmore Court before a new set of feelings took possession of his mind. He had exchanged greetings with Sir Frederick, Turenne, and his brother, was reading, with their assistance, the noble view from the window, when he was suddenly conscious of another presence in the room, and turning beheld Misy Jermyn, concerning whom, curiously, Teddy in his letters had said nothing, but whose presence, as he thought, made of the hall a temple. Not that she was a beauty. A falr-haired girl, with large gray eyes and rather blunt features, there was nothing of classic grace about her; but in every line of her fair face there shone the light of a beavtiful soul. There was a faint flush on her face, snd two good little dimples marked her pleasant smile, as, looking straight into is face, with frank, clear eyes, she held out her hand to greet him, and made a captive of him forever. ** Your brother,” she gaid, “is already one of the family, and he has made you 80 well known to usthat [ 1eel as though 1 were welcoming an old friend.” hip you very much,” said he, “I hope I may yet be privileged to give you batter reason for regarding me as such ” That night, as he sat in his room,lon after the household was asleep, Le cou but ask. him elf, with a beating heart, whether it were possible that there was in store for him a com tion for much weariness in his life hitherto, so shed when he had ealled: ‘ Good night, my pa!’ and 1 had refused to answer! I was dumb. Then remorse came and [ was frantic. [did not know when they buried him, for 1 was un- der restraint as a lunatic. For five long {oars life was a dark midnight to me. hen reason returned and I went forth into the worid my wife slept be- side Jamie, my home was gone, my friends had forgotten me, and 1 had no mission in life but to suffer remorse. cannot forget it. It was almost a life time ago, but through the mist of years, across the valley of the past, from the little grave thousands of wiles away, night: * jood-night, my pal’ Send me to prison, to the poorhouse, anywhere that I may halt long enough to die! 1 am an « ld wreck, and 1 care not how goon death drags me down.” He was tendered food, but he could not eat. He rorked his body to and fro and sleep came to him, they heard him whis per: * Good-night, my boy my Jamie!"—Detrott Free rg s————— Yan Amburg’s Eye. A good story is told of Van Amburg, the great lion-tamer, now dead. On one occasion, while in a barroom-—for he drank so much that, to use his own ex- ression, ** If you cut me open the whis- y will run out,” although he was rare- ly drunk—he was asked how he got his wonderful power over animals. He said: ** 1t is by showing them that I am not in the least afraid of them, and by keeping my eye steadily on theirs.” He had a good deal aboard, and said: “I'll give you nn example of the power of my eye.” Pointing to a loutish fel ow who was sitting near by, he said: ** You see vhat fellow? Hes a regular clown. I'l] make him come across the room to me, anc I won't say a word to him.” Sit ting down, he fixed his k en, steady eye on the man, Presently the fellow straightened himself gradually, got up and came slowly across tothe lion- , good night, Press. drew back his arm and struck Van Ame. burg a tremendous blow under the ehin, knocking him clean over the chair, with the remark, “ You'll stare at me like that again, won't you?” I —— The latest thing in shoes adopted b iashionable ‘women is the og > bly rich ns the lov not the waters that made his head | ache, but his unconscionably heavy | hat.” Swiftly the American betook ! him to the nearest hatter, of whom he | | purchased a straw fabric so light as to | { be all but impondersble, and went on | i diinking the waters ns before. His | | headaches, however, growing "worse in- | | stead of leaving him, he again called | {upon the medica: adviser a few days | later, and told him that his head was | still so bad that Le really must try some | other cure. The doctor, within the | | meantime had forgotten all about his | previous prescriptions, and was as re- | luctant as ever to let patient depart, | | again cast a comprehensive glance at | him, and espying the straw hat, ex. | claimed : | ‘You cannot expect to be free from | headache if you wear such preposter- | ously light head-covering. A man of your sage, nearly bald, in ¢his hot weather, must protect Lis head from the sun's rays, by a stout, solid hat!” The American gazed at his interlocu- | tor for a few seconds in blank astonish- ment, then, after bowing profoundly, | he sardonically replied: “Thank you, coctor; I am off to the railroad station!” turned on his heel and departed i BE Pet Names. Bishop Elder, of Cincinnati, has been giving parents some advice, which is an improvement upon some previous sug estions snd worthy of general attention Fie advises parents togive their children tall Chrisvian names, and not abbrevia- tions or pet names. If they please to make use of these familiarly in the family, it is well enough. But when a young girl is growing up it is not well to allow every young man that speaks to her to use a pet name as if he were as intimate as her brother. Although this is only a little matter in itself, it contributes its share toward lessening the maidenly reserve which is so beau- titul and so serviceable an ornament. It likewise detracts from the Christian dignity of womanhood for one to be all her life addressed as if she were a pet child, instead of a lacy owning a Christinn name and entitled to the respect of having io used. The Northern Pacific railroad has now completed, or under construction, about 1,000 miles of its main line. Ahout 1 400 miles additional require to be constructed to complete the system, which will require the expenditure of rises up with a similer row ol young fruit over which it stands in the same watchful attitude till it also drops off, to be succeeded by another. When one circle of fruit is completed another is commenced below, and in due time another, while the common stem around which the fruit is disposed grows constantly longer, and the cone of spathes diminishes in size, till it is all unfolded, and a monstroas bunch of bananas is finished, which seldom weighs less than twenty or thirty and sometimes as much as seventy or eighty pounds. Of all kinds of vegetable nutri- ment the banana is perhaps the most productive, and most easily raised. After a plant has produced its bunch of fruit the stem is either cut or is suf- fered to wither and fall on the spot. In the former case it is good fodder for cattle; in the latter it torms good man- ure for the young shoots which have been springing from the root, and which are soon ready to bear fruit in sheir turn. From these shoots or sprouts the plant is propagated. The Sand Blast, Among the wonderful and useful in. ventions of the times is the common sand blast. Suppose you desire a piece of marble for a grave-stone, you cover the stone with a sheet «f wax no thicker than a wafer; then you cut in the wax the name, date, ete., leaving the marble exposed. Now pass it under the blast and the sand will cut it away. Remove the wax and you have the raised letters, Take a piece of French plate glass, say two by six feet, cover it with fine lace and pass it under the blast, and not a thread of the lace will beinjured, but the sand will cut deep into the glass wher. ever it is not covered by the ince. Now remove the lace and Jou have every delicate and Leauiiful figure raised upon the glass. In this way beautiful figures of all kinds are cut in glass and at a small expense. The workmen can hold their hands under the blast with- out harm, even when it is rapidly cutting away tLe hardest glass, iron or stone, but they must look ous for finger nails, for they will be whittled off right hastily. It they put on steel thimbles to protect the nails it will do little good, for the sand will soon whittle them away; but if they wrap a piece of soit cotiton around them they are safe. You will at once see the philosophy of it. Tne sana whittles away and destroys any hard subsStancé—even g but does not affect substances that are sort was urban. 5 How Our Cities are Growing. We have now the returns of the popu- ation of all our cities which contain ten thousand inhabitants and over. There are 245 such cities, and their total population in 18580 was 11 106.201. In 1870 we had 184 cities with a popu- lation of ten thousand and over, and their aggregate population was 7,672,933 These cities have therefore increased in number sixty-one within the ten years, and they contain 3,497,968 more inhabit- ants. Our total gain in vopulation since 1870 has heen 11,694,188, and pearly a third of this increase has been in the cities. If we included all the munici- palities, those of between eight and ten thousand inhabitants as weil as those of greater size, we should probably find that our total urban population in 1880 was over eleven and a half millions, and toward three ind three-quarter millions more than in 1870. This would make the increase in the cities fully one-third of the whole increase of population in the Un'on. The cities contained about 8.000,000 in 1870, to 11,500,000 in 1880. They there- tore have been increasing in inhabitants far mote rapidly than the rest of the country. hile the general gain has been only about twent: five per cent., that in the cities has been forty- .ve per cent. And this growth of the cities at the expense of the country generally Las been becoming more marked during the whole of the last fifty years. In 1830 our total urban population was only about one-sixteenth of the whole. In 1850 it had grown to be one-eighth, In 1870 it was one-fifth; and in 1880, out of about 50,000,000 of inhabitants, more than 11,500,000 lived in the cities. 1f the cities go on increasing during the next ten years at the same ratio which the last ten years have sho n, and the country, as a whole, advances in population at the same rate, we shall find more than sixteen millions in the cities, to about forty-eight or forty-nine millions in the rest ot the country. A like tendency to buiid up the towns at the expense of the country appears in the figures we are obtaining of the Ger- man census taken late last year. Itisa modern tendency, and shall we not cali it a modern evil likely to have vorten- low fiat about $40,000,000. and yielding, like wax, cotton, or fine lace, or even the human hand. tous consequences P— New York subjected to ten or twenty meals in the twenty-four hours. Before birth he grows { at the rate of about ten pounds per year, after birth he is permitted to fat at the rate of filty pounds per year until chronic dyspepsia or some acute disease interferes. Feel of a kit. ten, calf, coit or a young robin —they are apd remain while grow- ing but little more than skin and bones and fur or jeathers, because unable to get enough to fatten them, and they never die—rarely have any sort of djs- ease Children are never fairly ‘out of the woods’ until they reach the lean age and have pipe-stem legs and arms, with no rolls of fatty tissue anywhere about them. Could they be kept so from birth and not permitted to over- indulge, so that their appetites would always be reliable for piain food, they would have no infantile diseases to enrich our pockets.” Why should the kitten, the colt, or the young robin be taken as a model of infantile fo rather than the puppy, the hear cub, the pig, or the young pigeon t is the nature of some young ani- mals to be lean and healthy; of others to be fat and healthy: and there is as marked a difference 1n the natural ten. dency of young children. Infants of the same parentage and fed at the same breast wil differ in this respect, and both be heaithe. Fat laid off al the rate of ** fifty pounds a year,” is quite another matter, and one not liable, we take it, to be a common cause of anxiety, Injudicious feeding is more apt to show self in Inck of fat, and lack of popular muscular tissue as well. That sort of leanness is much too common in young humanity. Scientific American. Just in from the klats, A disgusted-looking man with a double-barreled shotgun came wearily up the avenue. * Well, vones,” said & friend, “just in from the Flats?” “Yes,” said Jones, dro~ping the butt of his gun heavily on the pavement. *‘ I'm in from the flats. Six of us have been sittin in the rain in a wet boat for two days, looking for ducks. Not seeing any sport in this, I left. [he other five are there yet, and I am of your opinion that they're flats. Yes, sir." shouldering the Shoteun again, *‘ I'm jnst in from the als. According to Kolb's * Universal Statis- tics,” the average length of life g those in comfortable circums 8 is fifty, among the poor thirty, among min s sixty-five years. ** Let me inform you that the member from Macomb is a man of few words,’ said the applicant, as he drew a long ureath. “1 will charter a locomotive and proceed to Lansing. I wili at once go to the State house. As soon as | am in my seat I will introduce a resolution to repeal the charter of your biamed old road and sell the rails for scrap iron.” The impostor did not wait to be coax- ed not to do so, but walked out as stiff as a poker, made for asaloon over the way, and placing a bogus nickel on the bar commanded : * Gimmesunthin® to brace up." — De- troit Free Pres:. Nautical Terms. An “oid tar " has recently prepared a hand-book of nautical terms the use of persons who intend to follow the sea. In order to correct popular belief our author Jaye asserts that the berths on board ship do not necessarily add to the census. The hatchways are not hens’ nests. The weigh of the ship is not the extent of her avoirdupois. boatswain does not pipe all hands with a meerschaum. The ship does not have a wake over a dead calm. The swell of u ship's side is not c.used by dropsy, nor is the taper of a bowsprit a tallow candle. The hold is not the vessel's grip. The trough of the ship is not dug out of the ship's log. The crest of a wave is no indication of its rank. The buoy is not the captain's son. Themen are not beat to quarters with a club. Ships are never boarded at botels. The bow of a ship is no evidence of polite- ness. A saor’s stockings sre never manufactured from a arn of his own spinning. Ihe sails of a ship are not made by an auctioneer, nor are the stays constructed by a milliner.~San Fran- cisco News Leiter. EE —— Egyptian Obelisks. There are thirty of them at the present time scattered over Europe. Rome has eleven, four of which are higher than our New York obelisk. The highest of the Roman obelisks, which is also the highest in Europe, stands before the Churen of St. John Lateran. The obelisk in the piazza of St. reter'sis eighty-two feet nive inches high. Both. obelisk is forty-four feet h obelisk is a lessthan ity fo of these were mounted on high pedestals. the entire height of i The making the whole heignt maine feet two inches. The pedes al of the St. John Lateran 0 king 150 feet. es st 3 £ | * & W: F i 5 g : 3 1s rich; he was energetic, like an express train, it : This boy's ; e shed tears, and say: ‘Oh, how | wish that castle were once more mine!” No, he didn't do that, because Lie knew tears of regret would not he'p him in the his pleasant dreams least. He Pp : . as 1 have told you, but he set H over his himself to work. brooded 5 vision, and it gave h to bis brain. his will, his hand. He knew that i thing depended on himse t, a self he relied.