SINGING BIRDS. GROWTH OF THE IMPORTATION OF CANARIES, Mow They Are Taught—A Bullfinch’s One Fault -Other Cage Birds. In the vear 1842, when the first impor tation of singing birds was Germany to New York, cages conld not be found for them: the proper food could not be prog ured: and bird fanciers were so few, that of the thousand birdslended, the greater number perished unsold, The for them, however, was kindled and grew. In 1833 the same importer sold ten thousand, and in 1860 fifteen thousand. Last year one New York house alone imported from Ger many, between the months of September and June, forty-t and this number was equalled, if not exe Hed, by other houses, . A calculation has been made that proves the significant fact that enongh iron wire to belt the wlobe with a netting a yard wide is manufactured yearly for binds, The favor brought principally from the Harz Mountains—a land wre air and delicious spring They make their voyage of the Atlantic In little ca; [ more than a hand square, fast in rows and piled u ering of can four feet long tains two during the unfastened and the cay seed and t the poor | their gloom fort themselves, soutce of *‘gentl songs to sing Toussenel o« of the Canary Isl der of this golder ful, most intelli of songsters.’ gence by relati the canary is for his brain 7s one «four fi by this mod little biped man, and aff faculty for tude at su paragon tious canary has evening docile to In Both canaries native n pH part of a tune gale, the whistling from four. value: ar without its del ing varies as to the princi vary. [It the hil golden das securing re-iteration listening 0 by heart musical ear trusted to or to « made from one love wo thousand birds; nto ¢nges ite house-bhirds are canaries— vicinities of noted for waters not wrether cach under a cov jrou vas The ordinary package, and two feet broad, con invias sere supplied water, and Orreot his mod. tious task nid hi=s a the TOO i et musician's loved bn but audito who came the poor seized the flute strument disap tried for the the ment Time passed on, to a distant town pening i an evening t mirer of his art the evening was fi bull-finch tously as a flageolet one fault: one little airs by the missing One to rishi who whist musician recognized remembrance the exact fault, a boldness he could not from the tailor a tardy confession guilt, by exclaiming with all the empha sis of truth: “Now flute.” The buil-finch, gold fine h. the little brown linoet and speckled thrush, the black eap. the English robin, the nightingale, and the lark are the favorite songsters caged from north temperate climes: but the ni sine for liberty nr heart Parrots, paroquets, African “wax bills,’ “quakers.” interesting as they are wis, can hardly be classified with mg-birds,” but thes with the « anary the willingness to housed and the gr titude for their daily bread ; not ny of these little creatures are indifferent to the quality of the hospital ity they accept. The cage must be clean and canopied from midday sun; the bath and the water to drink must be fresh and pure; the sand and cuttlefish the seed the very best, To song and to keep the voice clear, the cage must not be large, and it must be studiously kept from droghts. The geod must be mixed of Sicily canary seed and German summer mpe.sced, A little hemp, millet, and maw seed should be added: and an occasional treat “surprise-dish” of ehickweed or lettuce, a bit of boiled carrot, a slice of pear or vith t restrain, wrung i know who stole ny the ghtingale and the lark ind sometimes die i A and those little Camaranths,' share one he ©" wail, anid in ample moved. [New York Post. ya Life In China, The singular conditions of life at Amoy, an interesting report of the United States consul at that city, Mr. Bedloe, Amoy, which is a city of about a million people, and the centre of a dewsely populated region, is perhaps the cheapest place in the world, Workingmen live and sup. and are said to be as happy as working { men anywhere, { The daily fare of an Amoy working ! man and its cost to him are about as fol One and a half pounds of rice, costing three cents: one ounce of meat | one ounce of fish, | fsb. one cent altogether; one pound of other vegetable, oil, one cent: total low 81 two ounces of shell cabbage or fuel, and cents, This Europe an laborers enjoy one cent sult i much better fare is than many fn what little s Of his toil, he flies kites, play « shuttlecock practical jokes SOUS (0 bed early, and indulges in mild He worries about nothing. The wife and children of the Chinese family wath rdriftwood, edible sea-meoss shell fish, mushrooms and dead branches Some of the things they pick up they barter rice vewetables, tines a woman and her cl in this way all the food of the family, his friends ano for and Some processions, nt weddings marching in religious | funerals, wakes, exorcisms, and other cerem , t eight vears of uge ring his life-calling, which usually is the same as his father's. Indeed, ch ain to work as soon as they « irl four od back” half an hour at a hoy beg children in China an walk will « VOAars irs it from dawn to dus) r EW O IY bedroom i 3 $80. Dynamite in an Indian Fight, bilan boys, began as fast i remnant of 11% (2labe The Italian Lithophagous, or Stone Kater, Francis Battalia, wophagous, or stone eater, Dr ‘Artificial Change This queer creatur i two small pebbles in his hands in ecch., He refused all ordi gary nourishment, would not suckle, only when small stones given hin ith the After in his vas born w One were nursing bottl Battal was in f Ea I professionally ex the ture” after *'it” had been kept on a stone diet for about thirty vears He thus de seribes Battalin's manner of feeding, ‘He thre spoon, swallow to manhood he prine ipai citi had a chance t i grew exhibited ill the rope Bulwer RIN Hgueer crea or four st in a down, and then drink a glass of beer after them. He de would put ones them voured a half peek of these stones evers day. and when he shakes his bods they ¢hink in his stomach. In appearance ho is a black, swarthy looking fellow, and having been a soldier, made good use of the {oud allowed him by it selling An aibsisting on dirt ined pebbles,” Who Samed “The Empire State 27 The above question is often asked, but seldom properly answered. Genera Washington ix the man to whom that and many other honors belong. In his reply to the “Address of the Common {Council of New York City” the great | General said: ‘1 pray that heaven be | stow its choicest blessings on your city: { that a well regulated and beneficial com | merce may enrich your citizens, and that your State (at present the scat of em | pirey m v set such examples of wisdom | and iiberality as shall have a tendency to | strengthen and give a permanency to the | Union at home and credit and respect ability abroad.” Thix is of course ap inferential atlusion, but was the origi {of New York's popular name, neverthe. legs, St. Louis Republic. Keep flowers fresh by putting a pinch of soda in the water, HL FOR THE CHILDREN, THE BIRDIES FAREWELL. “Oh, birdie, birdie, will you, pet? Diamond stones and amber and jet, I'll string in a necklace fair and fine, To please this pretty bird of mine.” | “Oh. thanks for diamends, and thanks | for jet, | But here is something daintier vet, i A feather necklace round and round ! That I would pound i yh, birdie, birdie, I'll buy vou a dish of wl ver \ golden cup and an ivory ses And carpets soft beneath ye not sell for a thousand won't y mir feet Sian running water be drunk from gold? i Can a silver dish the forest hold? A rocking twig is the finest chair, And the softest paths | e through the al Farewell, {i i ir!” wewell to my lady fair. POLITEN] had a wed so A Manchester go it sh ntieman beh once sry demure ( well ‘ ¢ : sled was allowed to sit at table nnd at she a napkin round her neck and a plats ent Lies inished her nn y s her finished . it 3 : Lei i from when to had conld not te} d M« frighten faery ho them?’ was lane, and couldn't go down, ‘Oh my!” with candie In basket apples IT other An awful mother, and he lox shed AE Ne Didn't jump, did he?” No, indeed, he tid when 1 screamed I don't,” saved your life and mine How! When I" asked Tony “(det my knife to pare the apples, and IH tell vou alittle baby, father w aked very suddenly ‘Po yon hear that rat?” said he. believe he'll eat his way right into this room before morning. So he got up to throw his boot at the place where the sound came from, and all the moket he could to scare the creature away. And then, I never knew why, he opened the door that led downstairs, and puff! puff! come smoke right into the room. ‘Fire! Fire! he eried out, “Oh, Martha, quick! quick! Wrap the baby up and follow me: we haven't a moment to jose?” And we hadn't, indeed, for we no sooner got down and outdoors when the stairs were all in a blaze, If it hadn't beets for that rat, none of us would have been living today. 1 confess 1 don't like ruts; they are sly and mischievous, bit the good God condesconded to use that one ae his messenger to waken us and save our lives, Do you wonder that ever wince that night 1 have had a friend. ly feeling toward rats?" “Does God use such little, good-for. nothing things to do his errands?” asked Tony. in u tone of surorise, sther Yor op eriedd Tony, serambling up hand and the went for in the thie one of was he still yg ane right and stood i IRENE BW I hate rats ent mother a lod made all things and ean nse all things,” said mothe; No ereature is beneath His notice, | Sunbeam, AND ITS THE BODY HEALTH. Tae Cane or tHE Boopy. Civilization ia the mother of many arts It the the telescope and the w heavens with ater drop with devices, senrchoes something all lands and seas after some diet. And it It ranges through rare article of it a French invent and every drink bold adventure has may concoct, t man the thing, viz., how Every day world's thought or But civilization while of himself. of the falls i“ of the aw heedlessness SONG leader martyr to his own ddth or to his Ivers work strikes thousands down into ners 1Roran of hes of these laws ois prostration, aod mong these ar | many of our most int ul tured gence of thi Ligent and « minds, Irregularit ind indul apy thoughtiessly of improper food, { tite partaking Are CAUSES countle iseases and of many sudden “att of the hea ii he by ample ok anda cureq anoii uporary but Vie Lg adie «1 dynamn : pend doing work Ten of brain-work a day srk than this steals il from at organ, If is the heart, it HH give ont If it i« the stom ach. it will not digest the food if hax a broken bone works too hard, i} i one and bone will not unite So when people to ai on their sys. overeat, or eat food that is hard gest, they put a like strain 3 tem The love of the beautiful in eating kills many by making poison, or things that aet like in the blood i have seen fatty degeneration of the heart Fcansed by which kills in twenty minutes, Again, it is said that shakes lates the blood more or less, and t may said { improper food il poison, ph wphorus, venom coagn he same In os “Barbara Freitehie, Whittier which based But It has been supposed that his Freitehie” was N. Southworth, “Barbara D. E i poem from Mrs. E that he eanght the conceit in this way He was waiting for his mail at the Ames bury postoffice one day, and while thus detained listened to the narrative of a soldier, home on leave, who had been wounded at Monoeacy, and who wit: | nessed the flag-waving episode, but could not tell the womans name, Thereupon the poet wrote to the post master of Frederick, Mr. Wm. D. Jenks: and the latter replied : “In all probability the heroine's name is Barbara Feeitchie,” There was one clrenmsiance which Whit. tier never cleared up to his own satisfac. { {ion described the heroine as a young woman Mr. Jenks described her as four.score years and ten. ‘I never saw the soldier again,” said Whittier, ‘‘neither do 1 know his name, All 1 could learn of him wis that he wae ‘a member of a Massa. chusetts regiment. 1 have given Mr Jenks’ reply from memory, feeble to look through mg accumulated { batim.” MEMORY OF ANIMALS, The proof that experience is the guide | of life mong the lower animals may be | anisms, Tie the tide retreats buries ften to the depth of sew ishermen who hunt them uke od at the end, or they sprinkle t little salt ale to drive woupant, razor shell or mollnsk, ns goon 0% ftuclf in the sand, eral feet, The a long. thin hooked out its in the ti This generally succeeds; there movement in the and, and ure appears nent iM th 1x hil ION him, eunishes into hi iid Limi sperience, hich can the resul ary CORE temperat $ 1 i * guen dul not Mean was Li degrees fhe The swallows appeared when pase To 0 deg 4 3 the when it fell 1o 53 degrees ‘hie Inst notes of 1 cuckoo t 51 degrees, peared at an average of 53 From grains it appears that the sum of the {ot and the mavbug ap degrees the $ obeervatl an ne temperature over $1 degrees required be :.% of : v reached the different stages 0 {59 degre h fore the rowth was thew to flowering viesl winery flowering Tees es ar wheat, 1.273 Freee 1 ang | for ami 2.261 degrees to for spring barley, 1,81 deg These are number of observations ent porte of France, aeesd On taken averages Fear and Cholera, A striking example ol th fear in times of cholera is the authentic fact, which 1s recor of that time In 1853 or 1854, 1 now forge! wii h we had the cholera in Wien (Vienna), The at the general hotpita Alsersirasse had their hands {uli the name of Franz Holrieg awaiting the sentence following fed the in ex Spa = % roi essors great in thu A man by then was o hospital presented just been remo ed. The Emperor grant dition and the condemned man was onl hospital and ordered to lic down at one in i ence the corpse was removed, The na undressed and went tobed. In less thar half an hour he began vomiting and six hours Me died from cholera, The man died from cholera, wich took from fright. The corpse removed from the bed was not that of a cholen victim, but of a man, who met his deat! from a gunshot wound. The experimen did wot take pleco in the cholera wing but inthe ward fore kin Cis tases, —[ Was ington Star, PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS, Epitome of News Gleaned from Various Parts of the ANDELSON tate. the Delaware County leper, by visiting several stores and ore Good citizeos declare that they w if from him by the authorities ill take the law into thelr own hands Thue effort to organize a cholro in Wyoming i to } Wilkes-Barre » Usxpen the dec os Westis will make sxes cial Ine York and Northampton pened at York and Nazareth, resp with large crowds in attesdunce Tne Commouw:alth's testimon owed in the Bwengel murder case lieburg and the defense opened Tae town of MifBinburg, Unio its elebrate | centennial in Wells, whick ine of Mexica. it was eve -~ . NCAT SACKeLL's the ribs ax id prow of an the sand. “i noe we within hun miles of the in the neighborhood of Ousduisos Monntain a shallow cave coniaining the skelctons of ten Indians was discovered. The Lagunas, a local iribe, have a super stitious dread of 1} pening, dDacause the Indians wie bnnos thore deposited were killed DF 2a he of lightning While { prospeclors were searching the desert rth of Mountain Springs Ia the sod of Fel» ruary they experienced in one day ne less than shocks of earthquake. At another time, while they were resting under a mesquite tree the ground cracked opea almost un. der them, so that they wore able i« seo down twenty feet inlo the sarth. The same shock that caused this crevice destroyed the hot springs af en flowing fo orers found old boat half: buris in i{fow it came th no stream of is of mystery water are Snot. in #1 ¥ 14s RO ary al gtr fein «00 i 4 Jacomba, which had ! a great many years, EE ————————— Flossie's Fancioos. . * Flossic was spending a month in the country, and the second evening after her arrival she was taken out to see the milking. “Well,” she said, when a glass of warm milk was handed her, “that's the first time | ever saw a milk wagon with four legs.” Hens and eggs were objects of ine terest to her also, but she did not see a turkey until she had made the rounds of the heanery, and then she frightened up a great old gobbler in the melon pateh. He made a rushy for the fence and she fell over a wats ermelon. “What's that, her mother. “I don't know.” she said, as shel brushed her dress, “but 1 guess it is the kind of hen that lays watermel-| —- - 1 Flossie?” faquired| 3 *