NEWS OF THE WEEK ~Early on the morning of the 2d fire broke out in the toy warehouse ol E. A. Prior & Co,,on South Sharp street, Baltimore. An explosion of fireworks soon afterwards wrecked the building and spread the fire to the drug house of J, H. Winkelman & Co. and the hat house of M, 5S. Levy & Co. Scarcely bad the firemen en- tered the drug house when another terrific explosion caused that building to collapse and spread the flames throughout the entire block running from Lombard to Pratt street. Eight men are known to have been buried in the ruins of the drug store and of those only one escaped alive. The total lcss is estimated at $1,000,000; it 'is nearly or quite covered by Insur- ance. — William A. Stewart, L. H. John- ston and Elijah Beckler, respectively President, teller and solicitor of the saving bank at Rosalind, Illinois, are missing, together with all the funds of the bank, amounting to about $30,000. The village 18 a suburb of Chicago and has a population of 2000, nearly all Hollanders, Swart was one of the ssyoung Napoleons of finance,’ a street car line projector, ete, , and offered high interest for the use of his neighbor's money. David Niblack and seven others, one of them a woman, were ar- rested In Pittsburg on the morning of the 1st for robbing wholesale grocery stores. The robberies had been carried on for nearly a year, and 1t is estimated that nearly $10,000 worth of goods were stolen. The plan was for one of the thieves to secure employment as a would be carried off and sold to their customers, James HH. Miller, a brewer, Rawlin, North Carolina, was robbed of & wallet containing $7000 in the Cole- man House, in New York, on the 3lst ult. He caused the arrest of Patrick Reilly, a night porter, and Mary York, a chambermaid. Arthur White, aged 19 years, who recently absconded from Denver, Colorado, with $10,000 belong- ing to the banking house of Kittredge the goods toria, British Columbia, and $3500 of the money recovered, —Thomas Churm, a colored burglar, was shot dead by a policeman named Oidbam, while trying to escape arrest, in Birmingham, Alabama, on the morning of the 2d. William Sehrader, 58 years of age, attempted suicide by swallowing carbolic acid and cutting the arteries of his wrist, in New York, on the 2d. He is not expected Cover. A heavy storm visited Hot Springs, Arkansas, on the evemng of the Juth uit. deveral buildings were swept away, and Mrs, Mattie Fletcher and woman named Harrison was killed by the collapse of a building. Several others, whose names were not learned, were lost, The victims were poor the line of the Cincinnati and South- Flemingsburg aad Hillsboro, washing out trestling and bridges and causing the discontinuance of trains, fered great loss, tank in Cygnet, Ohio, exploded on the rections, Bert Weincke,who was hold- ing a lantern when the tank burst, was burned to death. ~Heavy rains throughout Mexico have greatly damaged the crops. Wash- road interfere with the regular running of trains, —An explosion of gas in Packer Col- liery, No. 3, near Shenandoah, Penna, on the 3d, badly burned Anthony Shaw John and Martin Burns, Joseph Dosen- nis and George Schlack, Thomas Moe- Kenney was dangerously injured on the 34 by falling out of a third-story window of the Iotel Windsor In Youngstown, Ohlo, while intoxicated. Henry Tanner, John Tanner and Alonzo Smith, all colored, were taken from the jail in Oxford, North: Carolina, on the 24, by a mob of masked men and banged. The Taoners were charged with marder and Smith with burglary and arson, a capital crime in North Carolina. Charles Rise shot and mortally wounded Mrs, Elizabeth Funk at Midaletown, Ohio, on the reputation, Richard Gordon was shot and fatally wounded in John Lovell's saloon in Chattanooga on the morning of the 34, Those who saw the shool- ing refused to say whodid t. Mrs Maggie Collins was shot and killed by some upknown person at her home, near Circleville, Ohio, on the evening of the 24, The woman was eating her supper, and the shot was fired through an open window, General Lopez Men- dosa was on the 3d, shot by a young lawyer on a train at Vera Cruz, Mexico. Capt. J. 8. lewis and IL. Johnson became involved in a quarrel in Woodville, Mississippi, .on the 3d, which resulted in the fatal shooting of Johnson, ~John Schaffer, President of the Jewett County National Bank at Agenda, Kansas, has disappeared, and been closed by the quantity of f paper. Receiving ‘feller Audy, of the Bank Nationale, uebec, has been missing since the —Tha accident on the Missouri cific Railway near Booneville, Mis souri, was not so bad as first reported, Three, instead of six persons were killed. They were Charies Hall, Frank McKinney and Frank McGonagle. Two men were severely injured, — Twenty-four new cases of yellow fever and two deaths were reported in Jacksonville on the 21, Total cases to ie date, 258; deaths, 34. —JIt 18 reported that on the evening of the 1st frost was disasterous to the wheat crop at various points in the Red River valley, Minnesota. A de- spateh from Whitehall, Michigan, says a severe frost has badly injured the corn and ertirely ruined the buck- wheat. A telegram from Montgom- ery, Alabama, says rains during the past week have done much damage to open cotton. Some corn is also ruined. 1t 1s still threatening rain. Heavy rains have caused serious damage to the crops in the Chattahoochie valley, Georgia. The Chattahoochle river Is now 17 feet above low water matk, and many large plantations are inundated. The Eagle and Phoenix mills in Co- lumbus have been compelled to shut down. — Labor Day was generally observed on the 3d, in New York City, DBrook- lyn, Buffalo, Albany, Boston, Chicago, Baltimore, Detroit, Peoria, and other places. In each place there was a pro- cession, followed by a plenic, speeches and games, In Chicago the United Order of Bricklayers and Stone Masons laid the corner-stone of their new hall, The paraders in Cleveland, Ohio, ad journed to a garden in the evening, when a few Anarchists appeared and displayed a red flag. They were al- tacked Ly a number of workingmen, and roughly handled and the red flag was trampled under foot. Five of the Anarchists were arrested on the charge { of riot. The others escaped. i i —There were indications at Havana on the 3d, of the approach of a cyclone, moving across the island In the direc. | tion of Florida, The edge of the | storm reached Key West on the 4th, | with frequent rain squalls and a north wind, having a velocity of 55 miles an i hour, ~The east-bound Chicago and | Atlantic fast freight train struck and | killed three laborers, near State Line, { Illinols, on the evening of the 3d, { John Mikus was one, but the other tw A freightipain on Alton two unknown men, Illivola, on the i | the Chicago and over and killed i near Jacksonville, morning of the 4th, | a gang of men were at work on a new Willlam McKay | Several others were —Willlam Mili {of Allegheny Cils, and killed by John ei tney, 8 Negro, early on the mornnc of the 4th, Demmey was on his way home from a ball him with a blackjack and that he shot | him in self-defense, ! lor, aged 27, shot and fatally wounded his step-father, Eli Dickinson, 38 years, in Wilmington, Delaware, on | the 4th. Tayler charged that Dickin- son was criminally intimate with his step-daughter, Florence Taylor, and | this cased the shooting. John Willis, Samuel Hare and three others engaged in a fght near mouth of Worthington creek, njured, ‘vnina., was shot West and Hare and Willis were killed. The were on their way home from church, bottom of it. then shot himself, in Louisville, thought both will die. on an almost continuous spree since his brother was killed in St. Paul, a month ago. the 4th. The lynchers are unknown. -—B. Frank Baker, aged 19 years was killed in Norristown, Penna, on the morning of the 4th, while sleep- walking. He climbed ont of a window to a fonrthestory roof and walked along the gutter, a distance of 60 feet, when he fell to an awning below, a dis- tance of 25 feet. —While a freight train was crossing a bridge at Halifax, on the 4th, a brakeman named Cummings accident ally ran against another named Chris- tie, and both fell into the trestle work and were killed. James Shaw, 73 years of age, a well-known citizen of Paterson, New Jersey, committed suicide on the even- mg of the 3d by taking landanum. J, C. Payne, of Covington, New York, committed suicide on the 3d by shoots ing himself in the bead. He was a member of the Assembly from Wyom- ing county several years ago, He bad suffered from mental troubles for three years past. The Lody of Maggie Rice, aged 25 years, was found in the river near Harrisburg, Peana,, on the 4th. It is supposed she committed suicide, ~—Jt has been discovered that Jules List, Secretary of the Duckworth Building Alsociation in Cincinnati, has stolen $20,000 of the money of mem- bers, List used the money in fast liv- ing, and is now in hiding, —1% has been learned that 8. O, Du- pree, Cashier of the Lyons Bask, In Lyons, Kansas, who is missing, and whose accounts are $10,000 short, stopped at a hotel in Montreal, Quebec, recently, and then went West, [is brother, who believes he Is insane, has gone In pursuit, «There has been another mail rob- bery between New York and Ohi cago. On the 81st uit. Blake Bros Co., of New York, mailed to agents in Chicago, three each. The letters did their destination. A rail clerk is reported as saying that a uable mail pouch was the line between Albany and In Chicago on the Sth Loujs Larsen crawled a short time the cylinder was filled with and the man was enveloped iu flames, which filled the entire cylinder. His fellow -workmen were unable to get at him to help lum, and enough water could not be secured to quench the flames, so ‘his companions could only stand helplessly by and listen to his ories until they were stilled in death. ~The expected cycione Blruck the tsland of Cuba, near Sagua, and reached Havana about midnight on the 4th, Several vessels foundered off the coast sno swere injured, Walls, trees, fences and street lamps were blown down and much damage was done to the wharves at Havana. A telegram from. Key West, Florida, says a hurricane passed to the westward of that place on the evening of the 4th, —Forty-three cases of yellow fever were reported in Jacksonville on the 4th, Fifty new cases were reported on the 5th, with five deaths. — A premature explosion occurred in Collins Brothers’ stone quarry, in Bel- lefonte, Penna., on the bth, Patrick Dillon was struck in the face by a stone, and it is feared that his sight has been destroyed, Another man was injured, though not severely. —In Clinton, Iowa, on the afternoon of the 5th, while James M. Ordway, an inoffensive old man, was standing In one of the principal streets, four toughs came along, and one of them, without provocation, struck the old man a blow under the chin, which caused instant death. The murderer, who has disap- appeared, is supposed to be a youth ramed Golden, — Anthony Maher, a carventer, in Newport, Rhode Island, shot himself and his wife in a fit of jealousy on the morning of the 6th, At last accounts they were still alive, but in a critical condition. They have four children. A despatch from Forest City, Ar- kansas, says that at Millbrook, on elec- tion day, the negroes attempted to steal the ballot-box, but finding the whites on guard, fired a volley and fled. John MeMath was fatally and six others severely wounded. Joseph Walker, colored, of Marietta, Penna, died on the evening of the 5th from the effects of a blow on the head in- flicted by his brother Wallace, James Dear was killed by a negro named on the Oth, Coleman then induced Mr. Grant's housekeeper, Mrs, He ~Fire in Baker City, Oregon, on v Ne Loss $260,000, partially Almost the entire business section of Jennings, Lousiana, A great mine fire 18 raging in the Latimer colliery, op- erated by Pardee Brothers, five miles north of Hazleton, Penna. [Dart of Whe became ignited on the As it was impos n Bth. t Black creek into the The water cided to tdrn mine and drown it oul. half a mile inside the slope Is at the Should the fie get be- will spread to adjoining workings which boneycomb the enllre district. The colliery employed 350 A despatch from Elmira, New York, says there was a heavy {cost throughout that section on the night Tte tobacco crop is about in and the remainder was somewhat injured, s8 alo the buckwheat. There was severe frosts in the northern and eastern parts of Rensselaer county, New York, on the night of the bth, Farmers report —1n the town of Bayard, Florida, a small settlement near St. Augustine, the bodies of a woman and her five children have been found. They had evidently been dead several days. The house in which they were found was supposed to be vacant, It is thought the unfortunates were refugees from Jacksonville. —Near Madison, Indiana, on the 6th, a vicious horse bit off the top of the head of a three-year-old son of Albert Bant, causing instant death. By a gas explosion in the Reading Coal Com- pany's Monitor colliery, at Mount Carmel, on the 6th, a boy named Dyran was fatally injured, and Superinten- dent Charles Brecker and a miner pamed O'Neil suffered dangerous in- juries. Much damage was done to the colllery, James Ford, a farmer, living near Columbus, Indiana, while suffer. ing from delirium, caused by fever on the evening of the Oth, killed his ten- year-old son and baby and fatally in- jured his wife, —THog cholera 1s reported by a United Press despatch to be alarmingly preval- ent in Cumberland county Penna It is said that about 2000 hogs have al- ready died. ’ A telegram from Havana says the cyclone of the 4th was terribly destrocts ive to life and property in Cuba, The gunboat Leaitad foundered at Bota. bano, and her captain and nine of her crew were drowned, At Sagua 50 per- sons lost their lives, and the neighbor. ing village of Pueblo was “literally wiped oul.” The telegraph wires beir broken, no news from other parts 2 the island has been received, ~The danger of further floods at Leon and Villa Lerdo, Mexico, is over, the waters having begun to subside. Two freight trains collided near issouri, injured. Five other employes wers in- jured, but not severly. The boller was old and worn out. The boiler of Goulette & Letson’s threshing outfit at Ellendale, Dakota, exploded on the afternoon of the 5th. An old man named McLean was killed and several others were injured, four fatally, ~ Seventy-seven new cases of yellow fever and eight deaths were reported on the Tth in Jacksonville, —Igaae Wooley, ome of the proprie- tors of the Curryville Coal Company, at Shelburne, Indiana, died suddenly on the 6th, A few hours afterward his wife suddenly expired, although she had been apparently well. One of the children is now at death’s door from the same mysterious disease. The wile of Rev. ¥. W. Anderson, of Uhriesville, Ohio, was struck and killed by a train at Bloomfield on the evening of the Oth, as she attempled to sross the track, Nellle Donovan, 22 years old, died in New York on the 7th, from the effects of carbolic acid, which her friends say she swallowed in mis- take for cholers mixture, John Bath, plumber, was caught in the elevator in the Park Avenue Hotel in New York, on the 7th, and crushed to death, Ie was 24 years old, Frederick Taylor, a miner, was killed on the Tth, by a fall of coal In Hillman Veln Colliery, Wilkesbarre, Penna. ~Miss Ada Flynn was murdered on the 6th, at the home of her grand- father, Alexander Traxell, near Glas- gow, Penna,, by robbers, The murder was committed in daylight, during the absence of the family. Deputy Sheriff Reilly, of New York, who allowed a prisoner named King, charged forgery, to escape from Lis custody on the 5th, was arrested on the 7th, on a charge of malfeasance in office, and was placed under ball for trial. Henry Adams has been remanded for trial in New York on the charge of stealing diamonds from jewelry stores in John street and Malden Lane, It is sald that he has served a term in prison in Philadelphia for theft, A telegram | from Corydon, Indiana, says the county Commissioners have made an investi- | Jolin C, Graves, and report that he is a defaulter to the amount of 814,000, | ago, and made a full seltiement will i his successor, —During the last two n unpre cedented frosts have prevailed in New { Hampshire and Maine, doing great | damage to vegetation, particularly | corn and potatoes, In Sullivan county, i & ighis early frost if covered with snow. The cranberry crop at Sharon, Massachiussils, been injured by frost, excepti in meadows protected by water. The frost on the evening of the 6h will have a serious effect on the canning eetablishments in the vicinity of Med. way, Massachus:its, show bard frosts on the evening of the 6th, and a large loss to corn and to- | bacco, The thermometer marked 24 | degrees in varios places. lee formed | the thickness of window glass, was a killing frost In tselaer and Washington counties, Ice formed, and great damage was done ons, The frost was especially disast- | ous near Saratoga. | Middlesex, Norfolk and Worcester, in | the night of the 6tb, and farmers lost | such crops a8 CuCUMUErs, squash and corn. grape crop is injured. Ice has formed In many places, A heavy frost on the night of the 5th | damaged potatoes, corn and tomatoes in tbe vicinity of East Tawas, Michi- A cold wave passed over New Brunswick on the night of the Oih, doing much damage to the crops, par- ticularly buckwheat, «The City of Mexico was visited on the evening of the 6th at 8.44 o'clock, by a slight earthquake, The oscilla tions were from northeast Lo southwest and lasted 24 seconds At Orizaba the oscillation lasted 9 sec. onds. No damage was done in either place, Shocks lasting 15 seconds, with oscillations from west to east, are re ported In the State of Gunero. «Reports from west of Aberdeen, Dakota, state that prairie Ores are doing great damage in Edmunds and McPherson counties, A large number of farmers have lost their crops and buildings ~The post-office at Newton, New Jersey, was robbed on the evening of the 6th of $1200 in postage stamps and money. The post-office at Cutler, In- diana, was blown up with dynamite on the evening of the 6th. This is the fourth occurrence of this kind in that town. On the morning of the Oth a quantity of dynamite was found under the hotel, with matches half burned, «A despatch from Charleston, West Virginia, says that a floed in New river on the 6th carried awhy the big fron bridge of the Chesapeake and Ohio Raliroad at Grand View, involv ing a loss of $56.000, A great deal of damage in other quarters was also re- ported. Additional particulars of the eyclone in Cuba on 4th, show that were killed at Matanzas, Much damage was done in Cardenas . ~A boiler in Adam Keyser's brick yard neat Dodgeville, in Herkimer county, New York, blew up on the afternoon of the Tih, killing Keyser’s ee vy. larch bad eyser was y ured, Keyser himself had both legs broken. Two horses were killed. The explesion wis caused thoughtiessly outa CONGRESS, ~r'irar session BENATE, Inthe U. 8B. Benate on the Sd, Mr, Vest offered a resolution instructing the Committee on Civil Bervice Ileformd to inquire whether an employe of the Senate has been preparing campaign partisan literature, “with his official character printed thereon,” and what legislation is necessary to prevent and punish such conduct. After a discus- sion, in which the subject of political assessments and contributions was ven- tilated, the resolution went over. The bill for the admission of the State of Washington was considered. A mes sage was received from the House with the Scott bill for the absolute exclusion of Chinese immigration. The latter was immediately taken up and Mr, George moved ils reference to the Committees on Foreign Relations. Mr, Sherman stated the course of the Com- mittee on Foreign Relations in regard to the Chinese Treaty, and advocated the passage of the bill on the ground that apy nation had the right to pro- vide for Its own preservation, even in contravention of existing treaties An Interesting and Instructive Article About this Wonderful Bird, “Curkoo! Cuckoo! Oh, welcome, welcome noted Fields, woods and waves rejoice In that recovered As on the wind ite fluty music floats.” Have you heard the cuckoo!’ How often have we asked this ques- tion in spring! We can hardly believe that dull, dark, dreary winter bas real- ly gone until we are assured of it by the familiar notes of the *‘plain-song cuck- op gray,” as Shakespeare calls him, His song is certainly monotonous, very like the echo of something else, In some districts the country people be- lieve that it is a voice from ihe spiril- land, and emigrants tell us that there are few sounds they miss so much, Like other birds, it is the male cuc- koo that is the songster, When he first makes his appearance Lis note is full and clear; but as June progresses his voice begins to crack, becoming worse in July, and dwindling down to a hoarse croak in August, by which time he thinks it expedient to carry his “onck-cuck-cuck!’? to other regions, Most of you are doubtless acquainted voles, After further debate the Senate, with- out acting on the bill, adjourned, 4th, Mr. Cullom which was referred, declar'ng trusts unlawful and providing for their sup- | pression, The House nll to prohibit Chinese immigration was taken up, and Mr, Teller spoke 1n support of the bill, When went over without action. In the United States Senate on the Sth, Mr, Sherman offered 8 resolution, which was adopted, | the recent treaty with China aad the | amendments adopted by the Senate peror. A conference report was pre- sented on the Army Appropriation bill, showing a concurrence in all fortifications. The report was agreed | The Chandler resolotion in reference | with the old rhyme: “In April the cuckoo st In May he sings both ni In June he altereth his tune i in July be prepare 3 { Come August, go he must | According to some accoutits the cuc- koo sets off on his journey southward | earlier than this, foi Lancashire folk say: “he first cock « $ & 10 f hay Frights the cuckoo awa) | And the Bretous give as a reason, thal i when the cuckoo first ¢; y Brittany { he built a nest, like birds, and was mightily proud of it, too; but a wagon of bay bLappened Pass over | him while he was hopping about ihe | field, so that he was badly crushed. A burnt child dreads the fire, and for a similar reason hence- | forth endure the sights The Swiss have the cuckoo can it { eaten a bird's egg; 1 bas which killed itself by i swallow ¢ 10 10 CUCKOO Cal 3 on that | the subject. At the marks, the consideration of the Chi- nese Restriction bill was resumed, | After some discussion, | taken, and stood: yeas, 32; nays, 0. As &£% 110: § SLAF him, iad What I A ‘ 3 GOW as si probability of getting one within leaving the Lill undisposed of, cussed and 37 to 0, but no quorum voted. agreed, by unanunous consent, that the vole should be taken to-day, and the | Senate then adjourned. man and Hoar refrained from voling because they thought the Senate, be- fore acting on the bill, should ascertain really existed.” in the U. 8, Sepate on the Tih, Chinese Exclusion bli] was again taken up. A message was received from the President enclosing a the American Minister at [DPegin, { dated the 6ih, saying: “Treaty post poned for further deliberation.” Gorman moved to refer the Chinese Committee oa Foreign relations, vote resulted, yeas 17, nays 19-—no quorum. A call of the Senate showed 48 Senators present, a quorum being 30, | motion to recommit stood yeas 19, nays { 20, so the motion was Jost. The bill was then passed-—yeas, nays, 3. After several roll calls, there being no quorum, the Senate adjourned. HOUSE, In the House on the 3d Mr. Seott of 7. Ey duce for present consideration a bill for | the absolute exclusion of Chinese immi- { gration. There was no objection, and | passed without a division. The rules were suspended and the Senate bill rel- ative to the detail of army and navy officers to educational lostitutions was ous members, to procure suspension of the rules in order to call up a free col- ton bagging bill, to have a day appoint- ed for the consideration of the Okiaba- ma bill, and to secure some labor legis Jation, but they failed for want of a quorum, and the House adjourned. In the House on the 4th, the confer- ence report on the Army Appropria- tion bili was submitted, and a new conference was orderaed on the disa- greeing amendments. The Retaliation bill was discussed by Messrs. Belmont, McCreary, Hitt and Chipman. Ad- journed. In the House on the 5th, conference was ordered on the Fortification bill Mr. Stahlinecker, of New York, made a personal explanalion in conpection with the proposed investigation of the new library building business, Ie de- pounced the charges against him as false in every particular. Mr. Oates of Alabama, Introduced a concurrent resolution for the final adjournment of Congress on the 20th Inst. It was re- ferred to the Ways and Means commit. tee, A bill was reported and referred to the Committee of the Whole, ap pro ng $200,000 to suppress infec- tion in the inter-State commerce of the United States, A Will was passed for the exchange of worn or mutilated subsidiary coin, at coinage value, for new and unworn cols. The considera tion of the Retaliation bill was re- sumed. After speeches by Messrs, Phelps, Belmont, Seott and others, pending action the House adjourned. In the House on the 6th the bill to increase the efficiency of the Medical Division of te Pension Bureau and the Poataltation bill were discussed, Mr, Scott, of Pennsylvania, concludes his ; in support of the latter bili. At conclusion of Mr, Scott's remarks The only i | the female cuckoo does Perhaps she is too much | wondering where she for, you know, a cuckoo mother nb | dreams of building a house an up her children respective ‘ no She avoids all dropping nest of some sx | row, a water wag taken up " 211 las shall lay t ing { AE Gear, the —f hedge-Spar- a titlark, ora t particular mpiished this, o be hatched rightful own selected. the worst or an poo by 4 as 18 fy 8 3 wii ; Si ith ih0 lowhaminer not and taken care of by the er shment she has eans of the establi Nor is this by any of the story. No sooner is the young iwekoo out of the shell than he sets to work to jerk | and toss out of the nest any little birds | or eggs that ma) to be there, { In a very short space of time the in- | terloper is completely. “king of the castle.” and as his appetite is insatiable, his listle foster-mother has enough to | do to keep him supplied with food. | The Germans have a proverb, “an grateful as a cuckoo;” and, gladly as | we welcome the herald of spring, we ican not help feeling that there are | points in his character the reverse of commendable, : The country folks in Sussex say that all the cuckoos are taken care of by an | old woman, who, when the winler is | over, fills her apron with them. If she is mn good temper she lets a large num- ber of thers loose on the 14th of April; | but if she happens to be cross only two | or three are allowed to fly away, So if you do not hear the brown bird’s cry as soon as you expected you will know that something must have occurred io ruffle the feelings of the old dame in Sussex! The French say that the cuckoo is such a vain bird that he will never re- peat any thing but his own name; and the German children have a piece of poetry which relates how a cuckoo stopped a starling who bad just come from town, and asked her what people thought of the nightingale. “The whole town is loud praises,” said the starling. “And what about the lark?" “Half the city is talking of her.” *“And the blackbird?" “A few people say they admire bin.” “Well, what do they say about me?” *‘Nothing at all.” “Oh, then,” said the cuckoo, “1 must praise myself. Cuckoo!” Another reason for the bird's mono. tonous cry is given by Bev. Charles Swainson, whe tells us the old Bobe- mian Jegend: “In early times the cue- koo had a crown, but the hoopoe has de- prived her of it. It happened in this wise: When the birds were about to celebrate a wedding, the hoopoe—Dbei selected to give nway the bride, therefore anxious to add to the dignity ' its appearance-—asked the cuckoo to lend him his crown, The latter kindly consented, but when the hoopoo dis covered how well it suited him, he kept it and never returned it to its ownerl “And ever since the cuckoo lins been calling ‘Kluku! Kluku!' (i, & ‘You knave! you knavel}; while the hoopos SSW: Jadu! Jdut* (L & I'm com ingl 1'm coming!).” A MONETROUS NOTION, =Browt-—I1s in her heavens, old what put monstrous notion is (puff) cigar you've just given