— EE a. REY. OR. ALMA. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun. day Sermon. Sabjeect: Trxr: “God Among the Shells.” “And the Lord said unto Moses, onycha."—Exoous xxx. 34. You may not have noticed the shells of the Bible, although in this early part of the sacred book Goad calls you to consider and y them as He ¢ liad Moses to consider employ them, The onycha of my text is a shell found on the banks of the Red Sea, and Moses and his armv must bave crushe{ many of them under foot as they crossed the bisected waters, onycha on the beach and onycha in the unfolded bed of the deep. ‘1 shall k of this shell as a beautiful and otical revolation of Goa, and as true as first chaoter of Genesis and the last chapter of Revelation or everything be- tween, Not only is this shell, the onycha, found at the Red Bea, but in the waters of India. 1t not only delectates the eyes with its convo- Jutions of beauty, white and lustrous and serrated, but blesses the nostril with a pun- ent aroma. This sheilfish, accustomed to eed on sovikenard, is redolent with that odorous plant —redolent when alive and re- dolent when dead. Its shells waen burned bewitch the air with fragrance. In my text Gol commands Moses to mix this onchya with the perfumes of the altar in the ancient tabernacle, and I prooose to mix some of its perfumes at the altar of Brookiyn Tabernacle, for, having spoken to Ta on the “Astronomy of the Bible; or, od Among the Stars;" tue **Caronology of the Bide; or, God Awong the Centuries” the “Ornithology of the Bibls, er, Gol Among the Birds,” the “Mineraiogy of the Bible: or, God Among the Amethyste)" the “lIchthyvolozy of the Bible: or, Gol Among the Fishes,” I now come 10 speak of the “Conchology of the Bible, or, Gol Among the Shells” It isa secret tbat you may keep for me, for 1 have never beore told it to any one that in ail the realms of the natural worid there is nothing to me so fascinating, so completely absorbing, so full of suggestive. ness, asa shell. Woat?! More entertaining than « bird, which cen sing, woen a shell cannot sing? Well, there vou have made a great misiake, Pick up the onycha from be banks of the Red Sea or pic: up abivaive m the beach of the Atlantic Ocean and listen, and you bear a whole choir of marine voices—bass, a to, sopranc— n an unknown | tongue, but seeming to chant, as [ put them to my ear, *'I'be sea is His and He made it)” others singing, *' Thy wav, O God, isin te sea.” others hymning, ‘“.1eruleth the raging of the sex.” : “What,” says some one else “does the shell impress you mors than the star? la some respects, ves, becauss I can handle the shell and ciocely study the shall, while | eaLnot handle the ster, and if 1 study it must study it at a distaace of muilions and millions ot miles, “Wha,” says some one else, “are von more hupressed by the shell than the flower?’ Yes for it has far greater varie- ties and far greater richness of enlor, as 1 vould show you in thousands of specimens, and because the soell does not fate, as does the rose ieaf, but maintains its beauty con tury after century, so that the onycaa which the hoof of Pharaoh's horse knoe tel aside in the chase of the Israsiites across the Red Bea may havo kept its Juster to this hour, Yes they srs so particolorsd ant many colored that you might pile them up | until you would bave a wall with all the | colors of the wall of heaven, from the ja per at the bottom to the amethyst at the top. Ub, the shells! The petrifiel foam of the ses, Oh, the shells! The hardened bubbles color, prism on prism, and their adaptation of thin shells for still ponds and thick coat- ing for boisterous sear, Thay all dash upon iba thought of the providential cars of 1 v +» hat iz tho use of all this architecture of the rhel!, and why is it picturad from the outside lip clear down into ita labyrinths of construction? Why the infinity of skill and radiance in a shell? What is the use of the color and exquisite curve of a thing so in. significant ns a shellfish? Why, when the conchologist by dredge or rake fetch s the orustacecus specimens to the shore, does he find at his feet whole albambras and coli- stums and parthenons and crystal palaces of beauty in miniature, and theses bring tolight only an infinitesmal part of the opulence in the great subaqueous world, Lisunmus counted 2500 species of shells, but conchology hat then only begun its achievaments, While exploring the bed of the Atlantic Ocean in preparation for laviag the cable shelled animals were brougnt up from depths of 1000 fathoms. When lifting the telegraph wire from the Mediterranean and Re Seas, shelled creatures were brought up from depths of 2000 fathoms. The Eng- lish admiralty, exploring in behalf of solence, found mollusks at a depth of 2435 fathoms, or 14,210 fest deep, What a realm aw,ul for vastoess! As the shell is only the house and the wardrobes of insignificant animals of the deep, why all that wonder and beauty of construction, God's care for them is the ouly reason, And if Gol provi ls so munifi- cously for thom, will He not ses that you have wardrobe and shelior? Wardrobe and shelter for a periwinkle! Shall there not be wardrobe and shelter fora man? Would God give a coat of mail for the defense of a nautilus and leave you no defense against the storm? Does He build a stone houss for a creature that lasts a season and leave with- out home a soul that takes hold on centuries ani sous? Hugh Miller found “the Footprints of the | Creator in tae oid red sandstone,” and | hear the harmonies of God in the tinkle of the ssa shells when the tides cone in, The same Christ who drew a lesson of providen- tial care irom the fact that God clothes with grass the f:ld instructs me to draw the same lesson from tha shells, In almost every man's lifs, however well bora and prosperous for years, and in al. most every woman's life, there comes a very dark time, at least once. A conjunction of circumstances will threaten bankruptey and bomvelessness and starvation, It may be that thess words will mest the ear or will moet the eye of those who are in such a state of loreboding, Come, then, and ses how Gold gives an ivory palace to a water animal that you could cover with a ten-cont piece and ciotaes in ar.aoragainst all attacz a coral I do not think that God will take better care of a bivalve than of ons of His own children, I rake to your feet with the gowel rake the most thorough evidences of God's care ior His creatures, 1 pile aroun t you great mounds of snells that they may Ssach you a most comforting tusology. Oa, ye of litle faith, walk amoug these arbors of coraline and took at these bouquets of shel’, fit to be banded a quesn on her ronation day, and gow theses tutlen rainbows of eslor, and ex- amin thess lili*s in stone, thess primroizs in stooe, theses heliotropss in stone, these cowslips in stones, theses geraniums in stone, thess Japon.cas ta stone, OQ yo who paras your telsscopts ready look. | ing out on clear nigals, Srying to ses waat iz transpiring in Mars, Jupiter and Mercury, kaow that witiin a few pours wal or rides of where you now ara thers are whols worids that you might explore, bat of whica you ars unconscious, an! among the moss beautiful! and suggestive of these Worlds is tascomncaniozieal world, Take this lesson of a providential care. How does that old aymn go We mar, like ships, by tempests be tossed On petiioas deep+, oul cannot be jos, Taoigh ss'an earagss the wind and the Lids, The promise sseures us the Lord will provide. of the deep, Oh, tae shelle, which ars the | diadems ows by the ocean to ths fest of | the continents. How the shells are ribbed, | ved, cviindered, mottied, iridescent! | hey were used as coin by some of the Na. | tions. They were fastened in belts by | others, and masie in handles of woolen im-! plements by still others, Moliusks not only | of the ser, but mollusks of the land, Do you know bow much they have had to do with the world's history? of God from extinguishment The liraelites marched out of Ezvpe 2.000.000 strong, besides flocks and herds, before it was leavened, their kneading troughs being bound uy in the clothes on their shoulders, of Egypt and conid not tarry; neither had they prepared for themsaves any victuals” Just think of it? Forty yearsin the wilder. news, Inddelity sriumpbantly asks, How could they live forty years in fhe wildernas withcut fooa? You say manna fell, Oh, that was iter a long while. They would have starved fifty times before the manna fell. The fact 1s, they were chiefly kept alive by the mollusks of the land or shelled creatures, Mr. Frouton and Mr. Sicard took the same routs from Cansap that the Israelites foox, and they ve this as their testimony. “Although the coildren of [srasl must have consisted of about 2,000,000 souls, with baggage and innumerable flocks and herds, they were not likely to experiences any in- convenience in their march. Several thou- sand persons might walk abrosst with fhe test esse In the very narrowest part of valley in which they first began to file off. Jt soon afterward expands to above thres leagues in width, forage they would be at no los. The y nd is covered with tamarisk, broom, clover and saint foin, of which latter a Ny camels are passionately foo !, be. slmost every variety of odoriferous plant and herb proper for pasturage. **The whole sides of the valley through which th dren of Israel marched are still tufted with brushwood, which doubt. Jess afforded tood for their beasts, together with many drier sorts for lighting fire, on which the lsraciites could with the greatest ease bake the dough they brought with them on small iron plates, which form a constant e to the ovaggage of an oriental wler, Lastly, the hecoage uoderneath trees and shrubs is completely coversd with snails of a prodigious sigs and of the ‘best sort, and, however uniisviting uch a repast ought appear to us, they are hers es- teamed a great del . They are so ti ful in this valley that it may be literally said that it is difficult to take one step without Jeraelites on the march to ths promised and the attack of infidelity at this oo itis founded and printing our has at the bottom a taark and over it a flourish like the p, and we put this ut the ead of a question, guage the interroga. 1 for each question, gustios tig ter nt is presen a of the up and down the earth, Israelites on their way to But walle vou get this pointed lesson of providential care from the sheliad cremntures of the desp, notices in their construction that God beups then to help thomselves. This house of stone in which they live is not dropped on deem and is not built around them, The Qaterial for it exu ter from their own bodiesRud is adornel wita a colored fuid from the pores of their own neck. It i$ 8 MOL interesting thing to ses these crus tacean animals fashion their owa homos out And all of this is a mighty lesson to those who are waiting for otaers to bulld their fortunes woen tasy ought to go to work the mollusks, build their own taeir own brain, out of their out of their owa industries. on all the beaches of ail the awa gweat, | Not a molinel Do sot wait lor others | to shelter you or prosper you. All the | erustacecus creaturss of the earth from | ovary flakes of their covering and from evary i ridge of their tinv castles on Atlantic and | Pacific and Mediterransan coasts say, yourself.’ Taose people whe ¢ for their father or rich old uncle to die an {leave them | a fortuns are as silly as a mollusk would be to wait for some other mollusg to drop on it a shell equipment. It would kill the mol. | jusk as in most cages it destroys a man. Not ons person out of a hundred ovir was strong enough to stand a large estate by inberit- ance dropped on him, in a chook. Have | great expectations from only two perions ~ { Got and yourself. Lot the onych: of my text beocoms your precsptor, But the more I examine the shells the mors I am impressed taat Golis a God of { emotion. Many scoff at emotion and seem | to thins that God is a God of cold geometry | and iron laws and eternal apathy and en- throned stolcism. No! No! The shells with overpowering emphasis deny it. While law aud order reign in the universe, you have but to see the lavishoess of color on the ernstaces, all shades of crimson from (aint. est blash to blood of battlefield, ail shades of green, ail shades of all colors from deepest | plac to whitest lizht just callel out on the | shel's with no more order than a mother i preameditates or calculates how many kinses | and hugs she shall give her babe waking up in the morning sunlight. Yes, my God is an emotional God, and He says, “We must have colors atd let the sun paint all of them on the scroll of that shel, and we must have music, ani here is a carol for the robin, and h Jism lof man, and a doxology for the ser m, and a Tesurrec- tion pi for the archangel” Aye, Hs showed Himself a God of sublime emotion when He flung Himself on this world in the d to would exhaust, or the sh out, Shen I ote the Louvres and the Luxzems oa d the Vaticans of Divine ti pric. wo the 8000 miles of ns pointing hearin 4 Loess on » Sumner ical academies ian as, I say God is a God of emotion, and if He observes mathematics it is mathe. matics set to music.and His figures are writ. toa not in white chalk on blaciboards, but written by a finger of sunlight on walls of jasmine and trampet creecer In my study of the y of the Bible con of the text alto a" , when H that religion is po Bp wi] bave meant Mowe, oie i unto thes sweet on stacte an Jo enrtain an and will have to get fixed up before thev there or thev will makes trouble hy pi Boni out to us: “Keep off thet gras!” “What do you mean by nlucking that flower?’ “Show your tickets Oh, how many Christian peopls nest to obey mv text and take into their worship and their behavior and their censociations sud vresbyteries and general asssmblios and conferences more anvein! 1 have sone. times gone in a very gala of spirit into the presenca of some disasrasable Christians and in five minutes felt wretched, aul at some other time I have gone depressed tuto the company of suave aod geninl souls, and ina few moments I felt exhilarant, What wag the difference? It was the difference in burned onycha; the other burned asafetida. In this conchological study of the Bible [ also notions that the molutks or shelle! ani- mals furnish the purple that you see richly darkening so many Boripturs ochaoters, The purple stuff in the ancient tabernacle, the purpie girdle o® the priests, the purple mantle of Roman Emoerors, the aoparel of Dives in purple and fine linen—aye, the purple robe which in mockery was thrown upon Christ—wera colored by tne purple of the shells on the shores of the Mediterra- nean, It was discovered by a shapheri's dog having stained his mouth by breaking ous of the shells, and the purple aroussd ad- miration, Costiy purple! Bix pounls of the purple liquor extracted from the shellfishes were used to prensrs one pound of wool. Purple was also used on the pages of books, Bibles and prayer books appeared in purples vellum, which may still be found in some of the na- tional libraries of Eurone. Piutarch speaks of the purole which ket his veauty for 19) vears. But after awhile the purple became easior to get, and that which had bean a sign of imperinl authority when worn mn robes was adopted by many people, and so an emperor, jeslous of this appropriation of the purple, made a law that anv one sxceps royalty wearing purple sbould be put to death, Then, as if to punish the world for that outrage of exciusiveuess, Gol obliterated the color from the earth, a+ much as to say, “If all cannot have it, none sbail have it.” But though God has deorived ths race of that shellfish which afforded the purple there are shells enough left to make us gia t and worshipful. Oh, the entrancement of hue and shape still left all uo aud down the beaches of all the continents! These creatirss of the sea have what roo’s of enameled por- celain! They dwell under what pavilions blue as the sky and fiery as a sunset and mysterious as an aurora! Asdaml not right in leading you for a few moments through this mighty resim ol God »0 peg. lected by human eye and human footstep? It is said that the harp and lute were in. vented from ths fact that in Ezypt the Nile overflowed its banks, and when the walars retreated tortoises were leit by the million on all the lands and these tortolses died, and soon nothing was Jefs but the cartilages and gristie of these creature: which tight - ene l under the heat into musical striaogs that when toucasd by the wind or foot of man vibrated, makiog sweel sounds, and so the world took the hint and fasuioned the harp, and am I not right in trying to make music out of the shells and Jiftin: them as a harp, from which to throm the jus ant praises of the Lord and the pathetic straios of human condolance? But I find the climax of this conchologzy of the Bible in the pearl which has this distinc. tion above all other gems—taat it requires Job speaks of it, and its sheen isin Christ's sermon, and the Bible, which opens with the onycha of my text, closes with the pearl Of such value is this erustaceous product I do not wonder that far the exclusive right of fishing for it a the shores of Ceyvinn a man paid to the English Government $6. 0G for one season, Ho exquisive ls the pear! 1 do not wonder that Piny thought it was made i of a droo of dew, the creature rising to the sur- face to take it and the chrmistry of nature turning the Hguid isto a solid. You will see why the Bible makes so musa of the pear! in its similitudes if you know how much itcosts to get it. Boats with divers milont from the land of Ceyvion, ten divers to each boat Thirsesa ten gude and manage the boat Down into the dangerous dentas, anid sharks that whirl around them, pinnage the divers, while 60.00 people anxionsdy gazy on. After three or four minuts’ absmos from the air the diver ascends, nine saths stranguiated and bool rushiag from ears and nostrils, and Singing his pearly treasure on the sand falls into unconsciousaes. Ob, it is an awlol exposure and strain and peril to fish for pearls, and yet they do so, and is it not a wonder that to gat that which the Bible calls ths i of great price, worth more than all other pearis put together, there should be so little anxiety, so Jittle struggle, so little enthusiasm? Would God that we were all a% wise as the merchantman Christ commended, “who, woen be had found one ri of great price, went and sold all that he bad ani bought ie.” But what thrills me with susgestivensss 1s the material out of which all pearls are made, They are fashioned from the woun | of the shellfish, The exu ation from that wound is fixed and bar fenced and enlargsd futo a pearl. The rupturel vassis of tie water animals fashioned the gem that now adorns finger or earring, or sword bil or king's crown. 84 ont of the wounds of earth will come the pearis of heaven. Out of the woul of bereavement the pour! of soisce, Out of the wound of loss the pearl of gain. Out of the desp wound of the grave the pearl of resur- rection joy. Out of the wounds of a Baviour's fife and a Saviour's death the rich, the radiant, the everiasting pearl of heaven. ly gladness, - “And the 12 gates weors 12 pearls” Take the consolation, all yo who hava been hurt, whether hurt in body, or hurt ia min}, or burt in soul. Get your troubies sanctifisl. If you suffer with Christ on earth, you will reign with Him in glory. Tae tears of earth are the crystals of heavan, “Every ssveral gate was of one pearl.” lave Maria as Lesson, is the yonng woman mentioned below did not belong to it. thing happening to one of our own top. lofty servant girls! A German merchant very forgetful. This fault was especially annoying at meal times, when something table. One day the family were seated st the table, and the bell was rung as ususl. Toe girl hurried to the diniog room. v Maria,” said Herr Bow, *‘just rua and fetch the big step ladder down from the attic and it here.” Maria who had disturbed at her dinner, gave a grunt of dissatisfaction, but ran up three flights of stairs to fetch the iadder, In about five nioutes she returned to the room, panting with her exertion. “Now,” said Herr B— ‘put it up at the other end of the room and climb to have now a better view look around and teil ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS EVERY DAY LIFE, Queer Facts and Thrilling Adven- tures Which Show That Trath Is Stranger Than Fiction, A smuxenr, while ut work the other day, discovered a 'arge and well-formed frog in a mass of anthracite coal blasted from oF in the Mount Lookout Colliery, at Wyo. ming, Penn. Joseph Johns was timber- ing with another miner, James Otts, in a tunnel in the mine and had barred down a large lump of coal when the gleam of light from his lamp fell upon something in the coal, He stooped down and touched the object and was surprised to find it soft and yielding. There waa about a square inch of surface exposed at the time, and he saw that the thing, whatever it was, was in a cavity. With his pick he very carefully chipped off the coal all around it until tne cavity, or chamber, was fully opened, and there, nestling in the hard coal, he found a frog. Bome seventeen years ago, while working in the mines, he made a similar discovery, and had then taken the frog in his band, shown it to his brother miners, and taken it home. But, while it was alive and warm when he found it, it died before it had been exposed to the air half an hour, At that time a scien- | tist told him that if he had enclosed the frog in an airtight compartment imme- diately after unearthing it the animal might have lived. When he made his pecond discovery on Wednesday this fact | ut once recurred to his mind, and, as goon as he had recovered from his sur wise and realized what he had found, PE ran to his dinner pail and got an air- tight fruit jar, in which he had brought | the tea for his lunch, Into this he put the frog avd closed the lid, and the jar has not % en opened, The frog at first | showed no signs of life, although it was | 2 4 = { warms, but after being io the jar six hours | it began to move, and when it had bees | ex posed to the fight ten hours it was quite as lively as soy specimen which can be found around the ponds in sum mer, Since then it has continued to be fully wide awake, and stares in wender at all who lock at it, In appearance it is not very different from an every-day frog, except that its back is nearly black, and there are two rows of little hilly protubs ances down side of its spine. Its legs also are peculiarly long and its feet very delicate and tender. 3 each Ervis R. Sarrm, the only Republican | Sheriff Pettis Mo., has the war, and the only Sheri has ever executed a criminal d er f County, had since sinal history of that county, was re- Weer fon Louis, “1 wit thing in tho jai 1 his party of { £ Xperit noes riends in St, nessed quite & pe uliar at Sedalia last year,” had Bs an remarked ae] very uopleasant duty off offi he Lhe of Tom Williamson, who had been con- vieted of a triple murder. About two months before the day of the execution | the old man asked me toget him a young kitten to raise. 1 did so.” An attach ment grew up between the two that was certainly remarkable, happened to lock the old man up in a cell without the cst she would raise such a disturbance that | would have to lock ber up with him, They were together day and night, When the day of exe cution rolled around the cat appeared to be the chief mourner and brought up the When the trap was sprung the cat walked back into the jail and, after walking up and down the corridor for an hour, pounced upon old man Williamson's cot, where it remained for a week, re fusing to eat or drick. days afier, the executioner determined to remove her. When [1 attempted to was dead, 1 actually believe she grieved herself to death.” Oneptan Banner, killed, **The bears are numeros since the canal was begun. They have left the middle of the swamp and are staying near the edge of it. They frequently go in droves at night to the farms near Ly and devour the hogs. I went into the swamp, accompanied by a young san, to hunt the bears. Our guns were single- barrelled. Presently a noise was heard. We followed, and soon came upon a bear ss she had reached her cubs. We were within about ten yards of her and fired our guns. The bear was shot in her lower jaw. She made for us. The young man ran and left me to fight it out. [I had a butcher knife, and as she reached me plunged it into ber breast. bear was closing upon me. 1 felt her hot breath in my face and gave myself up to die a borrible death. Fate inter. fered, and 1 was pleased to hear the cubs making a noise. The bear turned and looked at her cubs, Being satisfied that they were not in danger, she came at me again, 1 had my kaife again and used it in different parts of her body. Bhe was getting a hold on me when I plunfed my Knife into her heart to the hilt. hear fell to the ground and after a fow struggles died. The cubs were de- spatched with a pine limb.” “Ser this pearl?’ said Clifton ks, as he held aloft to view a beautiful spec- imen from the sands of the Indian Sea and twirled the gold in which it was set to show off ita superior value to a St Louis reporter. ‘That pearl is worth $300 in the market to-day, but the oir cumstances under which it was discovered make it invaluable to me, It's a gift from my mother, who received it t my father, and ho got it for My father was a Captain in the army, and was stationed in India. bis homeward vogue after twelve years in i this pearl. [fle bit aught two ls and he imagine that the gull Lad not long swallowed it. I don't know of a similar instance, and that is why [ say it is in valuable to me.” A woman appeared on the streets of Canton, Miss,, who attracted much at tention. Bho hax a perfectly white face and hands and short kinky hair, with the features of a negro, The woman suid thit she was born black and re. mained so uatil she was fifteen years old, when she suddenly turned white, remain ing so for one year, when she turned black again. Since that time she is al ternately white and black, not alone in spots, but changes color entirely Bhe is fairly intelligent, and says she has never taken a dose of medicine, Bhe lives near Sallis Station, on the Canton and Aberdeen road. She says she cannot stand the sun at all, and a double veil and heavy gloves. miuute it causes it to blister at once. who are unable to account for the change in her color, Here is a pointer on wol@killing. In kill a goat for cating Juiposcs, Mexican took his gun and shot the goat, which did net die immediately but ran where little basins in the solid rock, one of which became fille with blood. The Mexican conceived the iden of putting poison in bait for wolves, which were very trouble. there were BITY Next morning there were fi coyotes, one lobo and a wildeat dead near the puddle of blood, he Inost attractive bait that can be used, A rocar paper tells how Albert Smith, of Milford, Penn be A party of oil prospectors, having decided to bore a well in his or- Bmith objected strenuously be- would destroy an apple-tree for he had a particula iinly endeavoring to have Smith his pr wpectors re : w feet beyond man's chard. cause it which fondness, CHR mind, he moved their apparatus a {« fis on the edge of 3 i i Ran ha £3. ety iid in 8 few dave oil was Sowing of Far. rec, 3 # rats 100 barrels an hour mer Smith saved his apple-tree and Quesx Vicronia is { raisers bye f 01 Be paintings, * own hand Chica of which private The *to the from the wall x 3 Wind ec include 3 “ONE dining room of ictures will Indian Secretary, « and some She will also send a sachet whic favorite she worked, also “with be Princess Louise and Princess Beatrice will send pictures, while Christian will Ee oil sone Me ime ns of fie edie WOrK, in this fic most summate skill and ingen Ix M. Dybowski's Molbsnei to the ard recent 3 RIND Princess case ‘executed with Con from the ribed at a meeting Geograph- oo ety, he one sd tribes which This tribe, known as the Bonjos, have only one ob- ject of pur hase slaves eaten They refuse to sell food or any other f their country for anything and the surrounding tribes capture lode of slaves for this French expedition difficulty in obtaining food among a people who have no desire lea of trade, Cally Cann beea described, to be clue, The ex A ounrtovs scene is witnessed during the winter months in the parish chur h Capel-le-Ferne, Kent, Engiaud, There are no means of lighting this church, so that the worshi quired to carry their own lig is no uncommon sight to see a rs sia 3B, hand sad a candle or lamp in the other, Wire Ssrrs snd Frank Nethery went into D. A. Jackson's store at Trenton, small greenish frog, slive and abie to jump. Several were present in the store and saw the frog taken from the can, and saw it jump along the counter. The frog was evidently put up with the oysters, no saying how long Packs of wolves have also appeared at Belgrade and other towns in Servis. At Pozarewatz a girl was devoured by the famished brutes, and stories of similar tragedies have come from various parts of Burope. The cold in Bohemia and Bervia has been extreme. Speaxixe of remarkable longevity, how's this: Mrs. James Polly, of Green Jounty, Ky., is one hundred and seven yesrs old and the mother of {fourteen children, of whom thirteen are living, the youngest being fifty-nine years oid. ws ee Two Words Otten Confused, “Gourmand” and “Gourmet” are two well known French terms which are fre. queatly used, but not always with suffi. cient discrimination, confuse them and to use one in lieu of the other, although the difference be- tween the two Sevag is wo great that they may be regarded ss complete opposites, The “gourmand” is a ea who eats as much as he can at a meal, devour. ing ove plate of food after anther. In nacontrolled appetite, feeding much as a dog feeds, with this exce in the do's favor, that the gourmand is more omuiverous than thedog. He isa sort of man who would not omit any one dish ata table ote, and whe Mould, iu al proba , wind up the grumbling assertion that he cannot dine y at that hotel, Ia fact, whether dining at home or abroad, bis animal ature moderation; and even values the com monest articles of diet if they are excel lent of their kind. A French gourmet once remarked, ‘1 am very fond of oys- ters, but I never exceed one dozen, be- ing convinced that after that quantity the palate has become incapable of fully appreciating the flavor.” A ‘réal gour met preserves the palate in the henitiest and most natural condition. He would pot smother an oyster with pepper, nor even squeeze un lemon over it. Plain things are often preferved by a gourmet to the richest sorts of food, Persons in different to niceties of flavor will drink wine and eat cakes at the same time, Not so the gourmet, unless the wine were good quality he would rather eat a plain crust of bread, A gourmet prefers the simplest meals, such as s beefsteak or mutton chop, it really well cooked, to an elaborate banquet badly or unsuitably To sum up, it may be said Tennessee Onyx Caves, “What I believe to be the largest and 4 * said B. Shepard, recently been {iscovered in some cavesin the Comber West Tennessee, It 3 have but the mines or caves have ion of large roof brought to the existence Anderson County, the are bristling with stale and in some cases the the four of the cavern. one column. fourteen feet in length, the top of which is more than four feet in diameter, and, } believe, an onyx slab four fect wide by six long be from it. The onyx in s of whi tities of onyx could sawed is more richly colored than any 1 ever and to exist in unlimited quantity 1 as you may know, is formed by the drippings of Hmestone, and in early stages looks like prisms of glass or frosted icicles banging from the roof, and must elapse before even the smallest eone of omyx while the large column 1 have described must bave been growing since ng of time. When the value of these stones becomes known to the on onyx will widely known than Italian marble, ily a few samples have been Si. bouls Globe Domso- S/W, HOCINS fhnvy, { tion . COUnVIeES aye # could form, the beginn world th Teanesscs he more Dut os yet on OU, ee taken Sounds We May Not Hear. here sonuds that are in- Certainly the sounds that give the keenest pleasure to many animals - cats, for example—are seldom capable of ing pleasure to us. We of course, that sounds may be too low or that is, the vibra- Animals may asdible to us. too high- be audible 14 the human ear; but it does not follow that they are equally inaudi- The limits of audible sound are pot invariable even in the homan ear; women can usually hear higher sownds than men, and the two esrs are not, as a rule, equally keen. A sound may be quite insudible to oue person and plainly by another. Professor Lioyd. Morgan mentions as an instance of this a case in which the piping of some frogs his friend The same thing possessing heard absolutely nothing! may. be oliserved by any the -Hitle instrument The sound until at last it ceases to persons. Some still higher even they cease to hear. the whistle is causing the air atill to first shown by Professor Barrett in 1877. —{ Chambers’ Journal, “The Garden of Eden.” There is a spot in Hawaii called “The Garden of Eden,” and it has been most appropriately named. The place is on the sugar plantation of James L. Dawsett, near Honolulu, The beautiful garden is situated near the big house at one end of the plantation. Here the Northern palm and the sunny orange. Rosos, whose pame and variety are legion, are ever in blossom, and that bloom no diminutive, occasional flower, but abundant as tea roses in June in New England. The number of different varieties of flowers at Ulapalakua, the name of Mr. Dawsett's beautiful home, cannot be less than 900; nor oan the varieties of fruit trees be less than 50. One peculiar feature of Ulapalakua is the entire absence of springs or streams of water. Clonds, rain and dew in sil the seasons fornich crops, flowers and trees with their needed supply. — [New York Tribune, A ——— Novel Anchors i ———— The British steamer Ba disohnrging coal at Mission No. 9, novelty aboard in the shape of a less anchor. la fact has them, and they are hauled up * block” to the hawseholes in a make a sailor feel like kicking Mmunif for all the risks he has run in eatting and fishing anchors in the gono by. The new anchor consist metal now has a slock- and no flukes, 1 semi-circular mam of rectly to the chain two aMachmenta time flukes, but swisted