as to 'lnttingentr; .PUBLINEED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY H. G. SMITH & CO. SMITH TEEMS—Two Dollars per annum, payable all cases in advance. oFFlClE—SounrarseT CORNER OF CENTRE BOITARN. air All letters on business should be ad dressed to H. G. Stara & Co. fottrg. Fpr the Intelllgeneer 1 Wendel If She Loves Me RY JOHN GEORGE BEACRY. I wonder if she loves me 7 I'd give the world to know For though her look still whispers, Yea, Her lips still utter No. Why should she blush so when we meet, If I am not near her heart? Her tiny hand may tremble, when We undertake to part. -I wonder if she loves me? Last night we were alone, And I th. tight there was a coldness Unusual lu her tone; Yet, toying with her curls, I stole Ohl such a kiss! and though She looked unutterable things, She did not bid me go I wonder if she loves me? To wake her woman's pride, I feigned to love another, once— She neither spoke nor sighed. HULL though she seemed emotionless, I watched her blue eye well, And I'm certain that a tear drop From its silken lashes fell. I wonder it she loves me? - - - I'm sure I can't decide For sometimes she's all tenderness Anil sometimes she's all pride; In vain question of my hopes, My fears still weigh them down, „Since even her sweetest, sunniest smile, is cloude I by a frown! A MAIDEN FOR ME No Widow for me but a maiden, As fresh as the dew of the morn, Whose bosom with love ne'er was laden, Till for me the fond passion was burn. 'Tie bard admiration to smother, When a widow's bright glances we nee, But remember they've flashed for another, Then un innocent maiden for me. If roses we set forth to gather, 'I he sweetest, the best to be found, We pluck from the parent stem rather, Than pick up the flowers from the ground Then away with your widow—her tresses, And lip, are quite bright 1 agree; But then they have had their caresses, So au innocent maiden for me. Let fools be entrapped by the glances, A widow so cunningly Ilarts; Lu led asleep while she makes her advances, To capture the key to their hearts. Ilut give me my gem in new casket, ltly Irult, give me freAt 'rout the tree; The heart I would m Ize let me ask it, a sweet, blushing maiden for me! pioritantotto. The Birds and Animals of Brazil L Extract, from a Leelure by Prof. Aguaslz. I The animals of Brazil which inhabit the main land are low in character as a whole. They do not stand so-high as 'those of other continents. It is is a remark which has already been made by Leconte, and which is justified more and more by the closer and fuller acquaintance with the ani mals of that continent. Whether we take the bulk of the reptiles of South America, or the bulk of the birds and the bulk of the mammalia, whether we compare the one family with the other, through each of these classes, in differ ent continents, we Lind that there is a stamp of inferiority, unmistakable on the side of the South American ani mals. The highest type of reptiles is, unquestionably, that of the crocodile. Now the crocodiles of South America are small in comparison with those of Africa or the Gauges, and in their struc ture they have a character of inferiority even. What is the peculiar character istic of the crocodile is, that their jaws are provided with powerful teeth which interlock with one another, so that when the mouth shuts, the two jaws are brought very close together, and this' is the highest possible relation be tween the two jaws. Now the croco diles of the Old World, of Africa and Asia, have this peculiar form of denti tion, the crocodiles of South America, on the contrary, have all the teeth of the lower jaw so fitting on the upper jaw that when the two jaws are brought together, all the teeth of the upper jaw pass by the teeth of the lower jaw, and the teeth of the lower jaw fit on the in side of the teeth of the upper jaw, so tLat there is much less power and much less intimate relations between the jaws in that respect. And if you find the re lation of the limbs, you rind again the character of inferiority. In proportion as the lingers are free one from the other, the limb is more free. Look at the toad for instance, in which the fingers are entirely free when full grown; when young they have web feet, and In pro portion as they grow these webs vanish and the lingers become feet. All the embryo crocodiles are web-footed, even those of the Old World are web-footed In the beginning, but as they grow larger this web disappears, and the fingers be come free. The South American croco diles retain the web through life, and in some of them it is often disproportion ately large in comparison with the size of their lingers; so that, taking the highest among them to compare with the highest of other parts of the world, you see at once that the character of in feriority is on the side of America. And in the other families of reptiles, you ob serve the same. For instance, In the preponderance of poisonous snakes. The poisonous snakes are, by their structure, inferior to those that are harmless, and the number and proportion of this poisonous species is greater in South America than any other part of the world. One of the terrestrial snakes acquires very remarkable dimensions— it is the boa constrictor—the largest of all reptiles of that family. The dimensions of it—of the largest speci mens—extend to 15 and 18 feet and more. Specimens of 20 feet have been very rare, but not in our day, when hese animals have been hunted down to so great an extent that there are rare ly specimens of that dimension to be Mond. Among the aquatic reptiles we have a family which is very numerous in Brazil, and deserves especial notice— the frogs, and especially the tree-toads, of which there is such a variety that the forests are vocal with their noise. They imitate the voice of other animals to the extent of frequently producing a strange delusion. Some of them are barking like dogs, others are crying like children, and frequently your attention and sym pathies way be attracted by a voice that would di,tress you, could you not ratify yourself that it Caine from a cluster of frogs, and not from au infant in trouble. [Laughter aud applause.] The family of turtles has very numerous and some very interesting representatives in South America, and in the fresh waters some of its largest, The largest turtles known are those of the sea, and the green turtle is one of the large kind, the leather turtle the very largest, but there are fresh water turtles on the Amazon whim • grow to a dimension of three feet, in length from three to four feet, and they are among the most delicious arti cles of food lu the country, and in such quantity do they exist that they con stitute one of the resources of the popu lation, furnishing them not only with meat, but also with another article very important as an object of diet. They manufacture butter from these turtles, and the number of eggs which are gath ered for that purpose is incredible. These fresh water turtles, when rivers begin to lower, gather in the main streamsi and may be seen in the eddies of the Amazon, in the bayous on the Amazon., in thousands and thousands clustered together awaiting the opportunity to go on the land when the water has subsid ed to itsminimum. Thenthey emerge from the water, go on land, and at a few hundred yards from the water line burrow their holes and deposit their eggs, covering them with sand, and then return to the water, having so effaced the marks they have made while laying that to an unaccustomed eye it would be impossible to detect the position of the eggs; but the Indians are 80 skilled in their pursuit of these eggs that merely walking over the sand, by the resistance of the sand, or perhaps a feeling of hollowness underneath, they immediately detect the position of the eggs, which are raised by uncover ing four, five, or six inches of the sand. In this way they lay bare the eggs, Which they gather by millions. Placing them in . tanks,. they break them, and in that way collect the fatty substance which the yolk contains, and from which they prepare a kind of butter, which is the principal article of that kind used throughout the valley of the -Amazon.' - It is unpardonable the mil lions of these animals which are de stroyed annually, thus -lessening the A. J. STEINMAN VOLUME 68. supply of meat in that whole region, and the animal is really the most valu able, as an article of food, of any in the whole valley. Besides these fresh water fishes, of which there is a considerable variety, there are a few terrestrial tur tles, some of which grow to the dimen sions of our logger-head turtle. From this class of reptiles:l call your attention to that of birds. I would say, that of aquatic birds we find chiefly small kinds of geese and ducks, and of these one which is very familiar to you of the domesticated animals among us—the musk-duck is a species quite common in the valley of the Amazon. Beside that, a number of a small kind of geese, remarkable for their elegant form and the rapidity of their movement. When ascending the river, you see them in small flocks, running along the shores, evidently more active than any bird of that family which we see about us in domesticity. Then the wading birds constitute a prominent feature of the aquatic birds of the. valley. There are very large flocks of gulls all along the great rivers, and cormorants are not rare. swans, on the contrary, are very rarely seen. Of wading birds the number is legion. They constitute one of the prominent features of all these exten sive swamps in the Valley of the Ama ''zon, and nothing is more beautiful than these immense flocks of red ibisses, and of gray herons alighted on the shores of the small lakes, feeding upon fishes and running upon the surface of the water. which is sometimes so densely covered with vegetation that the plants form a floor upon which these water birds may run; and nothing is more beautiful, perhaps, than ponds with thousands and thousands of the Victoria Regia in bloom, its immense leaves spreading out as the leaves of our water-lillies upon our ponds, and these ponds at the same time so covered with birds that when they are disturbed, and they arise, they literally obscure the light and appear like clouds in the atmosphere. I have seen on one occasion a pond which was covered with white herons mixed with red ibisses, that when we came to the shore we found fishes by the thousands which had been killed by the birds walking over them ; and when the birds rose it was literally impossible to see the sky there through the dense crowds which rose like clouds from the surface of the water. The most char acteristic bird of these regions area family intermediate between our gallinaceous bird and the waders. This family is characteristic of our prairie—the prairie hen, the grouse, and the like—and it is a family which is largely represented everywhere where ,there are extensive tracts of dry land. They have no natural home, and are known under the name of Jacana. Then we have of the climbing birds an immense number, and some families particularly characteristic of South America. The quantity of parrots, of macaws, of parroquets, and the like, which are seteveryw here in the forest, exceeds all escription. Not only are the species ry numerous, but the number of representatives of each spe cies is very large, and you see some times flocks of parrots as dense as the flocks of our crows or flocks of our geese, which pass over our heads at the time of their migration from the north southward, or on their return from the south northward. Their noise is intol erable, it exceeds all possible descrip tion. When you have flocks of these parrots in your neighborhood, it is im possible to go on talking with your neighbor, so loud are they, and so close will they come without being frighten ed. Hundreds of species are found throughout South America, and most of them are of those genera which have green feathers. While in other parts of the world we have parrots of a white color, with grey or black wings, those of South America are mainly of the green type. With them, belonging to the same family, we find the humming birds; another family exclusively Amer ican. There is no representative of that type of bird anywhere else in the world. They are represented by similar forms in the tropical parts of the Old World, by a family which goes by the name of Nectarina ; but the humming bird proper with slender and compound bill, with small feet and very smalltoes, one of which is closely soldered to the other, as a type, with their wings mov ing so rapidly, presenting such a con tract to the mode of moving of other birds, which soar, as it were, in flying, while the flapping of the humming bird is a sort of vibration rather than flying —of that family America is the home exclusively. And their number is daily increasing in the catalogues of natural history. While a few dozen of species were known in the beginning of the ' century, now there are species counted by thousands; and it seems that they are so localized in their distribution that every valley has Its own kind, and that in closely adjoining districts you find entirely different species. You see at once that this innumerable multiplica tion of species l and this special localiza tion, leaving but the presence of one kind iu every little district, has natural ly led to the inference that these animals, wherever they go, are modified according to the dr. cumetances under which they live, That explanation is perhaps as plausible as that these animals have varied from the beginning to suit the localities ; but the interpretation which seems to pre vail now is that animals assume peen • liar characters wherever they go. An other type, which is quite American and South American exclusively, is that of the Toucan, another family of climbing bird, remarkable for the ex traordinary dimensions of their bills, the bill being about as long, and ap parently as heavy as the body, although it is not so heavy as it would seem on I account of its cellular structure. t is so cellular internally that its weight is slight; but its appearance is that of a colossal bill. These birds are remarka ble for the peculiarity of their• but instead of having those shining and c°l" reflecting tints which present all the variation of metallic colors, under differ ent influences of light, as in the case of the columbal, they have definite patches of colors, put on in the most striking juxtaposition, a band of. yellow put on by the side of a band of red or blue ; a band of white on the sides of the neck, the rest of the body being black, or a white breast with a very marked and well described ring of brilliant tinge, while the rest is of a purplish color. And so are all the representations of the family of Toucans, remarkable for this strange distribution of tints, and the disproportionate dimensions of their bills. The toucans, humming birds, and paroquets, form a character istic feature of the flying tribes of the class of birds in these tropical regions. Of the perching birds there are also in numerable species ; but they have noth ' lug very special. They resemble in a manner our warblers ; and among them there are some elegant singers; but there is no tribe of this family of perch lug birds which constitutes a character• istic feature of the continents as do those which I have already enumerated. Among the birds of prey there are some which deserve a special notice ; and it is particularly among the vultures that we find them. One black vulture, some what similar to that which is found in the Southern States, may be seen every where where there are animal decaying. There is a carrion crow like ours; and another species nearly as large as the, eagle itself, known under the name of the king of the vultures, which is re markable for the beauty of its colors, the feathers of its head being of ele gant white, yellow and red, with a sort of light hale of golden tinge over the tips of the feathers, which gives them a very elegant appearance. These are the largest of the birds of prey in the lower part of South America; while in the higher and mountainous regions the condor is found, which is the largest bird of prey known on the earth. In the flat countries of South America, which are south of the Valley of the Amazon, in the dry regions to the west of Buenos Ayres, as also to the west of Bahia, ostriches are found which re semble the African ostrich in every re sped excepting size, they being about one-third the size of the African oe, Web ; and differing further in having I .• ~..!.: ... ',. i ' ,„ •,..._ . : ,, ~.1 , ' , ., .. ..., .- ,: . t • .: • --,-.;..., ~ / AI 1- 1 .. ... - . : . . . ... . - . three toes instead of two. So that South America has its peculiar features in the class of birds, as well as in that of rep tiles, and in that of fishes ; for the great variety of gallinaceotu3 birds which characterize the Old World, the prepon derance of size of the ostrich of Africa as compared with that of South America, the large number and extraordinary di mensions of the eagle, and of the vulture tribe, and their preponderance in the Old 'World over the vultures of South America, show again that in the class of birds the type of Sonth America is inferior to that of the Old World. If I had time to present the subject in its fullness. I could show you that this obtains not only for South America but for North America also, that the animal World of North America is old fashioned and inferior in comparison with the animal world of other parts of the globe. America had attained geologically its maturity, and assumed its form as a continent, North America as well as South America, at a much earlier period than any other part of the globe. North America had its outline; It had its Canadian range ; it had its Alleghanies and it had its Rocky Mountains ; it was a continent long before Europe had as sumed those features which give it so much of its character. So it was also with South America. And in relation to this singular geological fact, we find that the animals living upon this con tinent resemble those of an older age in the Old World, and are inferior in bulk to those which are found on the conti nents of Europe, Asia and Africa. The large quadrupeds of the world— the elephant, the rhinoceros, hippopot tamus, and the giraffe—where are they at home ? In Africa and Asia. There are no representatives of these families in South America. The large carniver ous animals—the lions and tigers— where are they athome? In Africa and Asia. And if, there are panthers and red lions, so called, in South America, they are inferior in size, inferior in strength, and inferior in structure to those which inhabit the Old World. But let me state more in detail these animals; and we shall satisfy ourselves that the type of this animal kingdom of South America is perhaps inferior, even more in reference to its quadrupeds than in reference to any other class. In the first place, among the aquatic quadru peds—among the aquatie mammalia, because they are not quadrupeds prop erly speaking—we have in the ocean the whales or porpoises. In Brazil we find that a certain number of por poises are found in the Amazon; but they are small kinds, and kinds which differ from the others in the extra ordinary uniformity of their denti tion. The beshueboy, theso-called sea cow, is one of the lowest types of the class of mammalia, and it preponderates in the rivers of South America, and is even found in our Southern fresh waters. In Tampa Bay, in Florida we have one representative of that family, which is found in rivers emptying into the Gulf of Mexioo. It is found in the Orinoco and in the Amazon. It is an animal which may well be compared with the hippopotamus; but it is, as it were, a hippopotamus without tusks and with out legs, but only with a pair of short paddles, the tail of which is broad and long, and constructed somewhat like the tail of the beaver, and serving as an oar to raise the body easily to the sur face of the water, in order to breathe. Among the terrestrial mammalia, prop erly, we have deer of small kinds, but nothing to compare with the elk or reindeer, nothing to compare with the hart or antelope, which are found all over Asia and Africa, and some of which are even found on our Northern conti nent. There is not a single wild bull, while in all other continents there are species of that family. In North America there is the buffalo ; at the Cape of Good Hope another kind of buffalo in Asia several kinds of wild bull, and in the primitive forests of Europe before they had been depopulated, two kinds of wild bull were known, one of which is still found in one forest in Russia; so that everywhere we find the bull fami ly represented in the different conti nents, except in South America. The largest ruminants are small deer. Africa has especially a variety of wild horses ; Asia a variety of donkeys, and Africa another species of that animal; but America has no species of that animal, not one to compare even in any of its characteristic features. Asia and Europe have dromedaries and camels, instead of which South America has only the small kind of that family known as the Llama, the Vigona, and the Alpaca, which are mountain animals; while the larger species in the Old World in habit the desert. Then of the family which embraces the elephant, the rhi noceros, the hippopotamus, and the like, which are characterized by the thick ness of their skins, and by their heavy hoofs, which are known under the name of pachyderms, of that family South America has only tWo small kinds, the tapir, and a kind of wild hog of small dimensions; while the other continents have large kinds of wild hogs, and the larger quadrupeds to which I have al ready alluded. Then South America has a family almost of itself, of low quadrupeds, which are hardly repeated in any other part of the world. Natural ists call them edentata. They are re markable for their lack of dentition ; there are no front teeth, hardly any eye teeth, and the grinding teeth are of a very simple structure. The ant-eaters, the tatouhous, and the armadillo are of this kind. Now there are only one or two species of this family in Africa and Asia, while in South America they are really numerous, and not only are they numerous now, but were numerous in former ages. Large numbers of them ex isted in former ages which were remark able for their colossal size. You may have heard of the curious animal dis covered first by Jefferson in the South ern States, the bones of which alone have been found among the fossils of the Southern States, which compares somewhat to the sloth in the structure of its fingers, but which was animal of about the dimensions of the horse. The megatherium is another, some bones of which have been found in Kentucky and in Georgia, and quite a number of them have been found in South Ameri ca. That continent was essentially in habited by gigantic sloths, and ant eaters, and armadillos, during the period immediately preceding ours. While our continent is much earlier in time, the mammalia of the Old World had already attained a superior standing. We see by all this, that the forms of animal life which character ize South America are really of an inferior standard to those of other parts of the world. I need not, for the present, compare the monkeys of South America with those of other portions of the globe, as I shall make that com parison the subject of a special lecture next Tuesday; but it is a curious fact that the carniverous animals even, which occupy the highest position next to the monkey, are of an inferior stamp. Instead of bears, as we have them even in the Northern continent, and every where else upon the globe, there are badgers and smaller kinds of the bear family; and the large carniverous ani mals of the tropics are represented only by the ounce and panther. That being the case, you see that we might establish a sort - of standard of relative position between the continents, as far as their animal population is concerned, just as in each continent we may establish a standard between the different animals as they occupy a higher or lower posi tion, in accordance with the element in which they live. And these facts ac quire a greater importance and a higher significance when we examine the mode of growth of these animals, when we study their formation in the egg, and their changes there, and their trans formation up to the time when they have completed their growth ; because then it appears that they are so closely related to one another that the idea of the transformation of the higher out of the lower seems perfectly natural, and were it not for other changes we might remain satisfied with that explanation which is now prevalent among natural ists, as in reality the true explanation of the mode of origin of all animals. And that you may see how far the facts go to support that idea, X will now proceed to LAN - CASTER PA. WEDNESDAY MORNING, .11!LARCH 6,1867 show you how great is the resemblance between all animals of this type during certain periods of their growth. I will proceed to show you that all vertebrates, whether fishes, reptiles, birds, or quad rupeds, not excluding man, when they begin their formation, have one and the same type; that all arise, like all other animals, from eggs, and that the egg has the same structure, in all animals, with out exception. And that egg is a simple bag in its infancy—microscopically small—so small that when itis first form ing it requires the highest power of the microscope to detect it. But that egg will grow larger, and as it grows larger it is noticed that there are dots of condensed matter appearing inside, and one of them may acquire a greater prominence than the other , so that the egg appears like a bag containing fluid in which swims another bag. And when that egg has grown to still greater dimensions, a third bag may be found inside, which is full of condensed mat ter, as this itself may be fall of sub stance which is somewhat condensed, and itself present other indications of condensation going ou [draws an egg]. Now that would be a perfect egg, and yet it may be so small that it is not visi ble to the naked eye. The egg of the rabbit or dog, when complete in its form, is so small that the human eye cannot see it ; but with the microscope it does not differ in structure from the egg of a quadruped, as the egg of the bird does not differ from the egg of the reptile, or the egg of the reptile does not differ from the egg of the fish. The principal dif ferences are in the size which the egg acquires, and in the substances with which it is surrounded as a protection. Only that constitutes properly the egg which we ordinarily call the yolk. The principal and essential part of a hen's egg is not the shell, or the white which is within immediately below the shell; but the yolk alone. And that yolk has grown out of a bag like that, becoming finally so bulky, that the eye perceives it easily, and it becomes In fact a bulky mass of yolk, around which is then formed that mucosity, or that viscous matter which we call white, which coagulates under the influence of heat and becomes white, and around which is formed the shell. Now this is prop erly the egg, and when that egg was small, neither the white nor the shell existed, and the yolk itself was very small ; at one time it was so small that it was hardly visible to the naked eye. So that, really, we have eggs of one and the same structure throughout the type of the vertebrate, and, I may add, throughout the animal kingdom. In the bird the yolk is suspended by strings of albumen, so that the yolk cannot move except to rotate around itself. Now, from this yolk in fishes, in rep tiles, in birds, as well as in the mamma lia, the young is developed in the same manner; and the formation of the young begins on the surface of the yolk—there are fissures forming, the surface of the yolk becomes indented and these fissures grow deeper and more numerous, until the whole surface of the yoke is, as it were, kneaded—it is, as it were, cut up into small pieces, and these pieces cut up again and again ; and that process penetrates more or less deeply ; in fishes at once about one-half of the yolk is in that way kneaded; in reptiles, about one-half also; in birds, only the surface; in the mammalia, the whole egg is out up in that way until it is reduced to most minute particles, and then becomes a sort of uniform layer resting upon the surface of the yolk. Now, that layer is the basis from which the young is developed; and the first step which takes place in the formation of the young upon that even surface of the yolk—now become even, for it has been so cut up that its particles are re duced to a minimum dimension—the first step which takes place is the for mation of a depression—asort of furrow —and that furrow grows deeper and deeper until on the two sides of It rise, as it were, a ridge. The swelling of the kneaded substances of the surface of the egg upon the two sides of the furrow, constitute now all there is of the ani mal; and a young fish, or a young bat, or a young dog, or a young bird, or a young turtle, or a young snake, at that stage do not differ one from the other; except, perhaps, in the size, or, may be, slightly in the color. But there is this one mark between some of those ani mals. Suppose we have here the tur tie's egg, and here is the yolk—the young turtle will have its furrow formed in any position, either so, or so, no matter. And in some species, when opening a turtle's egg, you may find that the furrow of the young is in any attitude ; while in the bird it is always crosswise, I have opened thousands of eggs with the view of examining the growth of the chicken and its first for mation, and you always find that the first mark of the young is a depression in the yolk, in a position which is cross wise to the long diameter of the egg; and now, as that goes on, this change takes place; the furrow becomes broader and deeper at one side. That side which is broader and deeper is to be one day the head, and that side which is narrow is one time to be the tall. But there is not yet any indication of difference in substance ; we have no skeleton ; we have no flesh • we have no skin ; we have no bloo d; it is all uniform sub stance, very delicate, almost trans parent, somewhat like Jelly, but having yet a sort of creamy whiteness about it which is very peculiar, and a degree of softness which makes manipulations exceedingly difficult; and in order to examine such eggs to advantage they must be opened under water, and the water must have the same temperature as that under which the egg is growing. And then it must be opened so that the parts exposed shall float in the water; and then you may take them up on glass and place that glass under the microscope to examine the structure, when you will find that the whole of this yolk is a mass of cellular tissue—a mass of little cells of exactly the same appearance, and the same structure throughout. There is not yet any difference In the substance. But next the following dif ference will be found, that here the cells grow larger and assume a peculiar character. The cells on the surface here will be smaller than those below ; then this ridge will grow higher and higher, and perhaps gradually the two sides of the ridge will come near together; there will be a sort of canal instead o f a mere depression on the bag, and the canal will grow gradually nar rower by the greater approximation of the two sides; and in proportion aa that goes on this edge will grow lower and lower, and gradually come nearer the lower side, and in the end we shall have them closing up. We have here the first indication of what will be a back bone—the first indication of what is a spinal system—the cavity for the spinal marrow, and the cavity for the princi pal arch of the body, and what is the formation of the lower cavity, which is now one cavity without organs yet; but in course of time organs are devekm ed within, and so the animal is formed. The part which consists of the larger cells becomes more solid, and the first indications of the bones are formed in the shape of cartilage here—soft cells are formed which will be flesh. Cells atthe surface are,formed which constitute in the end the skin, and in that substance, which is at first perfectly homogeneous, there are gradu ally parts isolating and assuming pecu liar structures, which end in forming the whole system. Here and there particles will become fluids, and in those fluid particles others will roll, and these particles rolling in the fluid will follow a certain track and that will be come a channel, which will be in the end a bloodvessel. Conceive that you had a building, which at first was one mass; suppose that an edifice of con siderable-tilmensions was now put up of one mass of clay, and that there was no difference throughout, but that, by a singular process, by a singular agitation within that clay it should work itself, and that here and there it should be come softer, here and there it should become hollow, and here and there particles fall into these hollows, and in these hollows accumulate fluids, and the walls around became hard and solid, and in other parts there should be fibrous structure forming—suppose here a beam and there a tube, and all the different elements which constitute a perfect edifice, should grow out by Bielf of uniform clay, so that you should have in the end, an edifice consisting of Wge stones, of beams of every kind, with tubes and water canals, and gas.pipes, and every thing else, and that all tbst should have grown of itself—you would have something like what takeis place in this egg when the animal body is formed—first a homogeneous mass which is hardly differentiating with in itself, and the pipes and tubes which are formed will be vessels and air breathing organs—the masses which will become solid will '- be the beams, they will be the skeleton the mass which remains contracted and flexible will be the fiesh, and some ex ternal covering, adorned in one ease with hair, in another with feathers, in another with scales, will form the outer cover, and here the animal is formed— all arising from eggs of the same identical character. Rio that it appears as if all animals could grow in that manner from any kind of egg. But the peculiarity is this, that one kind of animal only grows from one kind of eggs, and that, since the world existed it has never been known that out of the egg of one animal there has grown another, any more than out of the seed of one plant there has been another plant grown. The similarity is in the plan—in the idea. The execution is the very thing which I cannot conceive otherwise possible than by the Interven tion of mind. Hareem• Life In Cairo. Europeans seldom know anything of what really passes in hareems, as the Turks are exceedingly jealous of their domestic life being talked about. Many intrigues and scandals take place, and are known to the ladies in other ha reems, but rarely transpire beyond their walls. The two following events took place not long ago at Cairo, and rather interfere with our ideas (chiefly taken from the Arabian Nights) of the poetry of Turkish life. On the road to Old Cairo lives a Bey, whom we will call Hassan, and whose wife had been a slave of the viceroy's. It is deemed a great honor to receive a cast-off slave-girl of the viceroy, or of one of thelprlnces, as a wife, and the lady usually gives herself airs, and gen erally leads her poor husband a miser able life, by threatening to complain to the Effendina's mother, unless all her whims aregratified. Hassan Bey's wife at some fantasia heard the celebrated singer Suleiman, and was enchanted with his voice. She sought every oc casion of seeing him, and one day he rode under her windows while she hap pened to be looking out from behind the musharibieb. The lady from that day refused to eat, became melancholy and sullen, and at length one of her old slaves ventured to ask the cause of the Khartoum's sorrow. On being told it, the old woman reflected awhile,and then proposed to her mistress to marry Sulei man to one of the girls in the hareem who had a line voice, and was rather a favorite in consequence. The lady ap proved of the idea, and charged the old woman with the direction of the affair. Suleiman, thinking that out of so good a house as Hassan Bey's he would get valuable marriage-gifts with his wife, accepted the proposal. The marriage was celebrated with some pomp; and Zeeneb, the slave-girl, was envied by her less fortunate companions at having made so brilliant a marriage ; for Sulei man earned large sums by singing at marriage-feasts and burials. The old woman now explained to Suleiman why her mistress had given him one of her favorite slaves, and that he must manage to come often to the hareem on some pretext or other. For some time things went on smoothly, until Sulei man became fonderof his own wife than of the other lady, and neglected going to the hareem as often as the latter wished, and also gave less baksheesh to the eunuchs and slaves. Hassan Bey, sitting in his divan one day, overheard his people talking of Suleiman, of baksheesh, and of his fre quent visits, and summoned the chief eunuch, demanding what all this meant? The Aga hesitated, but threats soon loosened his tongue, and he de nounced the old slave woman as chief authoress and abettor of the intrigue. Hassan Bey had her brought before him, and gave her the alternative of bringing Suleiman to her hareem with in an hour's time, or of losing her head. Thoroughly frightened she went off to Suleiman's house, and implored him to come to her mistress, dying, as she said, from longing to see her heart's beloved one. Zeeneb had her suspicions aroused by the evident trepidation of the woman's manner, and besought her husband not to go. The old woman threatened to destroy his livelihood through her mistress influence in the vice-regal hareem, and Suleiman at last yielded, but promised Zeeneb that this should be his last visit to Hassan Bey's hareem. Unfortunately for poor Sulei man, his words turned out true, for Hassan Bey cut him down as he enter ed the door. Zeeneb waited for her husband for some hours, and then sent her mother-in-law to inquire after him. Hassan Bey himself received her, and, showing her the dead body of her son, bade her begone. She burst forth in a torrent of reproaches and bitter lamen tations, which so enraged him that, drawing his sword, he killed her too. By his orders, the corpses were flung into the Nile, close by, after small black crosses, such as the Copts wear, had been hung around their necks to divert suspicion. Next morning the bodies were found, and were buried in the Coptic burial ground by a priest, on the supposition of their being Christians. The disappearance of Suleiman caused some wonder, but it was soon forgotten, and it was no more talked of, until the viceroy's mother gave a fantasia at the marriage of some slave girl in her hareem, when Zeeneb was summoned with other gazialis, or singing women. When it was her turn to sink„ she rose, burst into tears, and, falling at the Valide Khanoum's feet, declared she could not sing, and implored justice. The princess stopped the fete, and in quired what she meant. Zeeneb then related that Suleiman her husband, had had an intrigue with Hassan Bey's wife, had gone one day against his wish to her hareem, and had never returned ; that his mother had gone to make in quiry for him, and had never been seen since . and that she suspected foul play. The Vallde Khanoum promised thatjus. lice should be done, and kept her word; for the viceroy summoned Hassan Bey before the council, interrogated him, and sentenced him to banishment at Fazoglou (the Egyptian Cayenne). Since then, nothing has been heard of Hassan Bey's wife. Whether she was kill by his orders or by Ismail Pasha's, or is still alive, imprisoned in some dis tant hareem, is a mystery ; but it is ira probable that Hassan Bey would have dared to touch a woman who came out of the vice-regal hareem. The second tale is more tragic and touching. Osman Bey, so we will name him, had two daughters, Fatme and Elmass, whose mother had died young; the Bey had not married again, and left the two girls very much to the care of their old nurse. kyoung Turk, living doge by, had seen Fatme as a' child in the doorway with the eunuchs, and had observed her pretty face; he by chance caught a glimpse of her at the open musharibieh, and demanded her in marriage of her father. Osman Bey answered that he was honored by Sha heen Bey's proposal ; but although there was nothing to object to in point of fortune, or so forth, yet he declined to give him his daughter, as he lived much with infidel dogs, and was there fore no true Mussulman. " Pique au jeu," and deeply smitten with Fatme's charms, Shaheen Bey contrived to bribe the old nurse, who introduced him into the hareem dressed in woman's clothes. No Turk, it should be-observed, can enter his own hareem when a lady is there on a visit; and even should he have strong reason to suspectthe visitor to be a man in disguise, he would never dare, to touch the seeming lady. Woe betide him should he unveil a woman! and he can, of course, never be sure of his suspicions. Fatme, of the mature age of fifteen, was much delighted at the impression she had produced, and soon her love for Shaheen Bey became as strong as his passion for her; but Elmass grew jealous, and threatened to tell her father, quoting at the same time an old Turkish proverb: " Who. ever does not beat his daughter will one day strike his knees in vain." Fatme, in great alarm, took counsel with her old nurse, who suggested that Shaheen Bey should bring his younger, brother to amuse Eames% and that,' being then equally culpable with her elder sister, she would say nothing. The two brothers paid frequent visits to the hareem, and all went well for some time, until Shaheen Bey commited the extreme imprudence of going into the hareem undisguised. Coming out he met Osman Bey, who recognized him in spite of his efforts to cover his face; a tremendous struggle ensued, in the course of which the old father was thrown down, and Shaheen Bey got away. By dint of threats, Osman Bey made the eunuchs con fess that they had long suspected the sex of the two visi- tors, and, by a vigorous application of the whip, he got the whole truth out of the nurse. In a towering passion he went direct ly to the viceroy's secretary, who, more civilized than the Turks usually are, tried to persuade the Bey to hush up the whole thing, and marry the two young couples. Osman Bey would listen to nothing, and insisted on theaffair being laid before Ismail Pasha, who con demned the two brothers to be sent to Fazoglou. The youngest, luckily for himself, died soon after passing Thebes. The two girls and their nurse were sen tenced to death. Horrified by so severe a decree, Osman Bey threw himself at the Effendina's feet, and after many prayers obtained a commutation of his daughters' sentence to imprisonment for life among the female galley-slaves. To keep order in the numerous har eems, it is necessary to strike terror into the hearth of the women who are shut up, without interest, education or occu pation. Doubtless many events quite as sad as the foregoing occur within the high walls of the hareems, of which we Europeans have no Idea. A Gourmands' Club It is announced that there has just been established in Paris a Gourmands' Club, the members of which dine to gether at stated intervals on the rarest dishes. It is presided over by Baron Brisse, the author of the daily bill of fare which has become so popular a fee. Lure in one of the Paris papers, La Liberte, and which is looked for eager ly by all Paris. The club has its office and paid secretary, and notifies that it will give advice Emd reply to questions on the great art of dining for a fee of one dollar paid in advance. Before the institution of this club the Baron was beset with inquiries as varied and nu merous as those which are addressed to the editor of a popular journal. Cer tain old gourmands who had ruined their digestions and lost their appetites made pitiable appeals to the Baron.— "It is all very well," said they, " for you to give us artistically arranged lists of choice dishes, but tell us, we beg,you, how we are to and the requisite appe tite for their consumption." Where upon the Baron seizes his pen and is sues the following directions : " Take," says he, "a bath the first thing in the morning, after which, while walking" about your room, drink two or three glasses of mineral water: that of Nied erbrunn on the Lower Rhine is the. best. A couple of hours afterwards take a basin of soup with some bread in it, and a glass of good wine. Then go out and visit your friends. At four o'clock , eat a biscuit and drink a glass of Ma deira, resume your walk, and at seven o'clock dress for dinner, when you will find yourself able to eat an entire leg of mutton and more." The Baron's pre scription will perhaps be as good out side of Paris as in it. Honey Ant of Texas. A Texas paper of a late date, speaking of the Honey Ant, says : We have often heard of the " honey ant" of Texas, but the account seeming so romantic, we have hardly been able to credit it, but as we - now have a specimen before us, furnished by our friend Leo Smith, of this city, we can no longer have any doubts on the subject. These ants area medium size between the large and small red ants, and are of a reddish and brown color. Appended to the rear of each one, is a translucent sack or globe filled with pure clear honey of a most delicious flavor. These sacks vary in size on different ants—ranging between the size of a buckshot and a navy pistol ball. On this sack, at short intervals areattached thin layers aboutthe length and width of half a grain of rice, and of a dark color, evidently to strengthen it and keep it in shape. These interesting animals when they crawl, draw their delicious load after them, and if the sack is full the honey runs out and they set themselves to work to replenish it again. Whether they deposit this honey in their great general reservoir among the rocks, to draw from it as oc casion may require, hold and use it as individual property we are not informed. Here is a curiosity that we believe has heretofore escaped the eyes and pens of our celebrated naturalists. - On the Coarse Again. As was generally expected, the unique Shiliaber, having harnessed Mrs F'ar ti ngton and Ike to the car of the Amer ican Union, 'trotted them out as a tan dem team last week in the following style : " What's the matter, dear ?" said Mrs. Partington, as Ike threw the morning paper, that he had been reading, down upon the floor, and stamped on it. "What makes you so abstropolus, Isaac ?" " They're goin' to stop the Importa tion • of firecrackers," replied Ike, with a flourish of his stupendous fist. "Well, well," said Mrs. P., as soothing in her tone as a poultice • " I don't see anything harmonious in that. And you need not be so pugnascent about it, either; because it doesn't infect you anyhow." " I'd like to know how they're going to keep Fourth of July," cried he, wiping an Indignant tear from his eye. " Didn't John Quincy Adams tell us to burn all the tar-barrels, and ring the bells, and fire all the crackers we want ed to? And now Mr. Fessenden, only because they burnt his city down last Fourth of July, Is going to stop their importation. • I wish I was a member of Congress " "Don't Isaac," the old lady inter rupting him ; " dont wish such a wick ed thing as that; remember you have got the family virtue to maintain." She looked up, as she spoke, at the picture of the corporal of the " bloody 'Leventh," on the wall; a sigh raised the white kerchief on her breast at the sight of that Spartan embodiment of virtue ; and t giving Ike a new three cent piece that she mistook for a one, she relapsed into the stew then pend ing. The End of the World. Carleton, the obliging publiaher, has as- slated the Rev. Dr. Cumming to sound his warning cry in this country. The follow ing are two of his most alarming notes . As the great transformation draws nearer the groans of creation rise louder, and man feels less seems anchorage ground on earth. Our cattle have been smitten as with the re turn of the Egyptian plague ; pestilence has decimated great capitals, and tens of thou sands have fled as from the destroying angel ; the last phial, as I have elsewhere shown, was poured into the air, and the lamentations of the bereaved, and the terror of the fugitive, and the graves of the hasti ly burieddeed, cry aloud: "It is done." I stated in a previous work that if the last phial was, as I believed it was, poured out in 1848, and still runs on, we might ax. pact those destructive blights on vegetables, on animals, and on men, which this very year have roused the fears of Europe. As lf to justify the interpretation given, the press, the men of science and observation, and physicians, all attribute the visitation of this year to an abnormal oondition of the air. These and similar disturbances of our mundane system are laid down by our Lord as premonitory signs of His approach. Trumpet-tongued they sound through our Christendom these warning words " Be hold the taidegroomoometb." NUMBER 9. History of a Weathercock. Being the Wcuaderfnl and Instructive Legend of MedtcoPoUlte. aranslated from the Spa nish of Farnan C a b al - [So little Is known up to the present day of the popular tales and legends of Spain, and the specimen which we here present to our younger readers is so good and so un common of its kind, that we feel that we stand in need of no excuse for oar selection, even to the graver portion of our readers. No Dr. Dasent has as et undertaken to ex plore the folk-lore of Spain, and the formal and punctilious Spaniard is in general but little suspected to possess the great fund of native humor which inreality lurks beneath his stateliness. The conversation of the lower orders indeed bristles all over with quaint proverbs and humorous sayings, as is exemplified in the inimitable Sancho Panza ofinmortal celebrity and an inquiry into popular tales, proverlos, and songs of that little-frequented part of Europe would richly repay the labor of the interested in such matters. The legend here given is an Andalusian one, and professes to explain the origin of weathercocks in the history of Medio-Pollito, or Half-Chicken, the cross-grained founder of his tribe. The curious superstition allu ded to in it, of eggs being laid by old cocks, is firmly believed by the people; and we have heard it asserted by a well-informed Spaniard that an unusually small egg which he had found in the hen-roost must cer tainly have been laid by the cock. A cock however, is said to lay only once in his life, and the basilisk contained in the egg takes seven years to hatch. The first person whom he sees on breaking his shell he is able to kill by the power of his eye; but if any one should first see him, the basilish himself dies. Scarcely less curious is the notion, on which the final catastrophe lin gers, of St. Peter's dislike to the crowing of a cock, and his stooping to take revenge on one that had offended him in this man ner. Our story is translated from La Gaviota, a tale of Spanish life by Fernan Caballero, the greatest living Spanish nov elist.] There was once upon a time a hand some Hen, who lived very comfortably in a court-yard surrounded by her nu merous family, among whom there was one chicken that was both lame and ugly. Now this was the very one that the mother loved the best of all, for that is the way with mothers. This cripple had been hatched from a tiny little egg. He was indeed no more than half a chicken, for he had only one eye, one wing, and one claw ; and for all that he gave himself more airs than his father did, who was the hand somest and bravest and most gentle manly cock in all the fowl-yards for sixty miles round. This chick thought himself the Phoenix of his race. If the other cocks laughed at him, he thought it was out of envy; and if the hens did, he said that it was for anger because of the little attention that he paid to them. One day he said to his mother, "Look here, mother, the country wearies me; I have,Lairte up my mind too to court. I want* see the King and Queen." The poor mother began to tremble when she heard these words. "My son," she exclaimed, " who could have put such nonsense into your head? Your father has never once been outside his own domain, and he is the pride of his race. Why, where would you find such a.court-yard as you have here? Or where a grander manure-heap? Where would you find better or more plentiful food, a warmer hen-roost, or a family that loves you more dearly ?" "Nego," said Medio-Pollito in Latin, for he was set up to be a great scholar, "My brothers and my cousins are Ig norant clowns." "But, my son," continued his mother, " have you never looked at yourself in the glass? Have you not found out that you have got one eye and one claw less than other people?" "Nay, if you begin upon that," re• plied Medio Pollito, " I shall answer that you ought to fall down dead for shame at seeing me in such a state. It is your fault and nobody's else. What sort of an egg did I come out of, pray? Was it laid by an old cock ?" "No, my son," said the Hen, " for only basilisks come out of those eggs. You were hatched from a very little egg, but indeed that was no fault of mine." "Perhaps," said Medic) Point°, his comb turning as red as scarlet, " per haps I shall meet with some clever sur geon who will put on my missing limbs. Anyhow, my mind is made up ; off I go." When the poor hen' saw that there was no way of turning him from his purpose, she said: "At least, my son, hearken to the prudent counsel of a loving mother. Take care not to pass by any churches where there is a statue of St. Peter, for that saint is not at all fond of cocks, and still less of their crow. Avoid also cer tain men whom there are in the world, called cooks ; for they are our mortal enemies, and will wring your neck as soon as look at you. And now, my son, St. Raphael, the patron of travel ers, be your guide. Go and ask your father's blessing." Medio-Pollito approached the vener able author of his existence, and stoop ing to kiss his claw, begging his blessing The worthy old cock gave it to him with more dignity than affection, for he was by no means fond of him on ac count of his peevish temper. But his mother was so much moved, that she was obliged to wipe away her tears with a withered leaf. Then Medio-Pollito began his march, clapping his wing and crowing three times as a signal of departure. As he arrived at the banks of a stream that was almost dried up,—for it was summer,—it so happened that the slen der thread of water was hindered from flowing by a few branches that had fall en across its bed. On seeing the traveler, the Stream said,— " Thou seest, friend, how weak I am. Scarcely can I move a step, and I have no strength to push aside these branch es that block up my way. Neither can I make a round to avoid them, for it would entirely exhaust me. Thou couldst easily get me out of this diffl culty by parting the branches with thy beak. In return, thou mayest not only. quench thy thirst in my current, but reckon on my services as soon as the rains of heaven shall have restored my strength." The Chicken replied,— " I could, but I don't choose. Do you think I look like the servant of dirty little streams?" "Thou wilt remember me when least thou thinkest," murmured the Stream in a fainting voice. " It's very fine for you to boast "' returned Medio-Pollito, mockingly. " Why, one would think you had just drawn a prize in the lottery, or could be sure of - help from the waters of the Deluge." A little further on he met with the Wind, lying faint and helpless on the ground. ''Dear Medio-Pollito," he said, " in this world we all have need of one another. Come near and look on me. Seest thou what the heat of summer has done to me? tome, so strong, so mighty? to me, who raise the waves, who lay waste the fields, whose power none can withstand? This midsummer day has killed me. I fell asleep, intoxicated by the perfume of the flowers with which I was playing, and here thou seest me swooning. If thou wouldst but raise me two inches from the ground with thy beak and fan me with thy wing, that would enable me to take flight to t ity cavern, where my mother and els rs, the Storms, are busy mending up a w old clouds that I have torn. There they will give me some refreshing draughts, and I shall recover my strength." "Sir Wind," replied the ill-natured Chicken, "many a time have you amused yourself at my expense, puffing at me from behind and blowing open my tail like a fan, so all who saw it might laugh at me. No, no, my friend,; every dog has his day, so go od afternoon to you,Mr. Joker." With this he crowed three times In a loud voice and strutted proudly away. In the middle of a stubble-field to which the laborers had set fire, there rose up a slender column of smoke. Medio-Pellito drew near, and saw a tiny flame flickering from time to time among the ashes. "Dear Medlo-Pollito," said the little Flame . thou art come in the very nick of time to nave my life. I am at , suma or ~...L,----- liinualllo Anvanciailuts, Y." M IS" ef 411111Z ien; to per yew m g r each ad °nal Mr% s _______- . ..... -- . r . Buz, mums, Pirinerrer.z-r. ZILLT. AbiriatZtairG 7 Nadi a ' 'OO firzt. tion.=l 4 waits far nob iinblioQueot la" , SPIXICAZ Norm= inserted in Local Colman; 15 cen pier line. Eirzcitaz ts Nowa= preoeding an d deaths, 10 mita per line for i nas ition. and 5 cents !braveryfridtmlint, insertion. Somme Ciampi, WWI or Ins, one year - ~ 10 Businesscrnus,llve liner or less, care LZGAS• AND OTB I 8 NOTIOZEF. Executors' ...vilest zoo Salicartistrigow, 2.00 Gee' 2.00 Other "Not An tors' n ices," ton lines , or lea, three Ll5O w my last gas for ant of fttel I onn. not think what p is become of my ootudn the Wind, for it is he who always helps me out of my troubles. Do bring me one or two little straws to revive me." "What business is it of mine, I should like to know ?" replied Medio-Pollito. " You may go out if you like, and wel come. I don't want you." " Who knows but you may want me some some day ?" answered the Flame. "No one can say, `There shall be no harm happen unto me.' " " Now, then," said the cross creature, "must you always be preaching! Take that then !" And so saying, he covered him with ashes ; after which he began to crow, as usual, as though he had done some great deed. Medio-Pollito at last reached the capital, and passed in front of a church which they told him was St. Peter's. Thereupon he posted himself in the doorway and crowed until he nearly cracked his voice, for nothing in the world but to annoy the Saint, and to have the pleasure of disobeying his mother. When he came to the Palace he wanted to go in to see the King and Queen, but the sentinels cried out to him, " Keep off!" Thereupon he turned aside and went through a bank-door into a large room where he saw a great many people passing to and fro. He asked who they were, and was informed that they were His MAlesty's cooks. Instead of run ning away, as his mother had advised him to do, in he marched with head and crest erect. Immediately one of the scullions laid hands on him, and wrung his neck in a twinkling. " Hullo there!" said he, " bring me home hot water that I may pluck this fowl." " Water, my beautiful crystal lady!" cried " do • not scald me, I entreat you. Have pity on me!" "Hadst thou any pity on me, when I asked thy help, ill-natured bird !" replied the Water, boiling with indig nation, and splashing him from head to foot, while thescullions soon left him without a single feather to cover him. Then the cook laid hold of him and put him on the spit. " Fire, brilliant Fire?" cried the un happy bird " thou who art so powerful and so glorious, have pity on my state, draw In thy flames and burn me not !" "Wretch ?" replied the Fire, " how darest thou appeal to me, after having attempted to smotherme on the pretext that thou couldst never need my help? Come near and see what I can do !" And, not content with browning hlm, he burnt him as black as a cinder. When the cook saw him in this state, he took him by the leg and flung him out of the window. Immediately the Wind caught hold of hlm. " Wind !" cried Medlo-Pollito "my dear and much-honored Wind I thou who reignest over all and obeyest none, mightiest among the mighty, have com passion on me, and leave me alone on this rubbish-heap!" "Leave thee !" roared the wind, snatching him away in an eddy and whirling him through the air like a shuttlecock, "No, never as long as I live!" He set Medio-Pollito down on the top of a steeple. St. Peter stretched out his hand and fastened him there. From that time forth he occupies this post, blackened, flattened and featherless, lashed by the Rain, and puffed at by the Wind, from whom he is always try ing to protect his tail. He is no longer called Medio-Pollito, but Weathercock. But be it known to you all, that there he still is reaping the just reward for his disobedience, his pride, and his ill-nature. The Murder at Auburn, Maine. The negro, Clifton Harris, who has con fessed that he, together with a white man named Luther S. Verrill, murdered the two aged women at Auburn, Mo., a few weeks ago, says that the original plan was simply to rob the house, and that murder was not intended except to shield themselves from discovery. He gives the following horrible details of the cool blooded way in which the crime was finally committed: Both men went into the house and through the kitchen and sitting room to the room where Mrs. Kinsley slept, and Harris says Verrill entered it, for Harris heard from the the sitting room, where he was at,,the time Mrs. Kinsley crying, " Polly! Polly I come here I" Polly being the name given Mrs. Caswell. It was so dark that nothing could be seen. It seems from the confession that Harris subse quently learned that Verrill laid his hatchet on the lounge in the sitting room, and pro ceeded at once to Mrs. Kinsley's bedroom, opening into the sitting room, finding her peacefully sleeping. He seized her, and it was then she shrieked and cried "Polly, Polly, come here," and the negro appeared on the scene. As soon as the shrieks were given and the plan thus spoiled, the acoom plice seized a chair and struck Mrs. Kins ley with it over the head, demanding to know where the money was. 'At first Mrs. K. said that "her daughter had all the money with her down to Lewiston." The negro then appeared and the demand was repeated, when she indicated it was at the head of the bed, in a closet in that place. While the negro was searching for the money, Polly Caswell, aroused by the cry, arose, came out into the sitting.room, and proceeded to the mantle-piece, where she was trying to light a lamp. The aciooraplicie, hearing Polly coming out, loft the bedside of Mrs. Kinslej, the latter being partially insensible, and passing out of the bed-room, leaving the m alto there, stealthily got be hind Polly and struck her on the head with, as is supposed, the hatchet. This felled her to the floor, and Verrill left her, supposing that she was dead. It was there that the pool of blood was found on the floor. While Verrill was disposing of Miss Caswell Mrs. Kinsley began to move as if attempting to get out of the bed, when Harris turned upon her and gave her a heavy blow with the chair which felled her. Verrill then re turned to the bed-room, and demand was again made for the money, but no response was received. Mrs. Kinsley was still alive, but perhaps in a swoon. Her pockets and the closet were again searched by the mulatto, but nothing was found. Mean while-V -Verrill was perpetrating (as is alleged) a nameless crime on the per son of Mrs. Kinsley. Soon after, Miss Caswell, who had been left for dead by the mantlepiece, was discovered up and moving across the floor toward her room, her white night clothes making her visible in the dim moonlight. Harris went out to take care of her, and seizing a chair struck her and at last felled her in the doorway, where her dead body was afterwards found. Return hag to Mrs. Kinsley's bed-room, Harris found that Verrill had made way with Mrs. K. by stabbing her in the neck. Harris was then sent for a light—all the transao tions above detailed having been in the dark. Ho proceeded to the Wuhan, but, trying to obtain a match, he IM M. the match box, and it turned out that neither of the murderers could light a lamp. They then sat down together upon the lounge in the sitting room and talked over the money matter. After a short time Harris said " It is no use to stay here, we can't find the money ;" whereupon they both arose and left the house by the back door. A Queer Fish A remarkable amphibious animal of the seal kind, which wascaptured at Gillespie's Beach, about 100 miles south of Hokitika, New Zealand, by Mr. Kilmartin, is now being exhibited in Melbourne. In appear ance it presents a mixture of the dog and the fish. Its head resembles that of an English terrier, except that the ears are merely rudimentary. The body is like a seal's, and the animal propels itself upon land or In water by means of two large flippers in the forepart of its body, and two smaller ones behind. Its tall is about two and a half inches long. The anixnal shuffles pretty quickly upon the ground, and its motion in the water is produced by rolling over and over, and propelling itaelfforward after the manner of a screw. Its cry is something like the bark of a dog, but pe culiarly shrill.—Melbourne Age. Sudden Death and a Sad Effefte. George Brown, EN, t a dry go od Merchant) of Jersey City, suddenly ell dead from disease of the heart, on Tuesda c yoginle por k . versing with a friend in raLatiArk to his ap proaching marriage, which was to have taken place on Thursday. Another sad incident connected with the affair is that a friend, who was called in, went at once to inform the parents of the young lad,y to whom the deceased was engaged and she overhearing the conversation the know ledge of her betrothed'sdr i l l 00=1 her so suddenly, had the tO her reason.