Tw* DTUUMTI. A LMOn or TH BOAS. u two rival firummsrs The merit# that did blow Of safes wore in Ht. Louis mode And MfM from Chicago They chanced upon A merchant Who fain a *af e wo old bur, And in the praise of their booaaa' wares The drummers twain did Tie, Each striving to see which ooold coo street The most soloeaal lie. Up spake the St. Louis drummer " Ones a man a eat did take And locked the animal in a safe Of our superior make. " The; made a bonfire round the safe With tar and kerosene, And for four- end-twenty boors it blaaed With raging heat, I ween. "The fire went out, the safe was cooled, And I will forfeit fire Hundred good dollars if that eat Did not some oat alive." Then mild npspake and answered him The Chicago safe agent: " With ear safe one da; we did eesa; The same experiment. '* Wo placed the safe selected on Of ooals a fiery bed. And pitched-pine we heaped in soaloil steeped Till the iron glowed bright red; And in forty-eight hoars we ope'd the eefe And, alas! the eat was dead !" " Was dead ? Aba !" bis rival eried, With a triumphant breath; But the Chicago man replied: " Yea, the eat was frosen to death !" No word that Bt. Louis drummer spoke. Bat silent he stood and wan. While the Kansas merchant an order gave To the Chicago man. Better Late Than Never. \ His name was John Holt; anil, more over, he looked like his name, or like the image which the sonnd of his name, in a musical ear, vronld call np in the mind. Physically he was so well pro a portioned that his weight conld scarce be gneesed, and so broad-shouldered at yon had to set him beside another man in order to realize his superior height. His skin was fair and his eyes bine, but the hair, which had been tow colorcd in his childhood, bad deepened to brown. John Holt's fsoe wss not one of those which are called expressive, but wore, in repose, pretty nearly al ways the same look. Mrs. Holt bad a large and valuable farm just on the borders of the town. Htreets had crept gradually about her fields and surrounded them on three aides; on the fourth woodlands stretched back toward the east. Why she should five the control of this plaoe to John, instead of to one of his sharper brothers, was a puzzle even in her own mind, j The only reason she oonld give was that John was steady and more likely to re main at home than the others were. John wss in love with pretty Nellie ! Cramer, a neighbor's daughter ; but one day when he started to tell her of his passion she stopped him short with a laugh and a " Nonsense, John !" He never got angry with her. How ooold he 7 But sometimes a shadow wonlil drop over his face, and he wouldn't have mnch to nay to her for a time. Then, when she went to him with her coaxing ways, and laid her little band on his arm, whispering: " Now, don't be vexed, John; I like yon so mnch; bnt I don't want yon to talk 00006080," he would look down and ■mile, thongh not very brightly, and promise to try to avoid nonsense in the future ; ending his promise with a sigh. " Dear me! I do wish yon wouldn't sigh so, John I" the girl would say, pet tishly. "It makes me feel melancholy to hear yon. One would think I had done something dreadful to yon." Then John Holt would smile again, still leaa brightly, and promise to try not to sigh any more. Such little scenes as this were mere asides, however. Nellie nsnslly paid bnt little attention to John, being chiefly occupied ia dancing, flirting and quar reling with his more showy brother Prank, or with any other gay fellow who was so unfortunate as to be taken with her pretty face. For Nellie was an in corrigible flirt. It was only when she had no one else to talk to, or wanted to piqne some other lover, or when she wanted some real service, that she went to John, who was sometimes pleased and sometimes hurt to see that she came to him only when she wanted help or Advice. " Ton are a sort of grandfather, you know," she said one day, giving his arm s squeeze. " I have an idea thai yon are about seventy-five years old. How old are yon, John?" " I am only one third of that," he ■aid, smiling. " I am only a month past twenty-five. "Possible? Well, you mnst have been very old when yon was born. Be sides, twenty five is old to me. I am only nineteen. Now yon come and hear my story and tell me what to do. I came over here on purpose to see yon." John followed her obediently through the garden and doom to a bench under the shadow of the beech grove on the lawn; and when she took her seat there he leaned against the trunk of a tree and waited, loo! iug down on her. " Ton see, John," aha began, " I've had an offer." John Holt was tanned that summer, bnt through the brownnees one might have seen a faint blush ran over nia face. Nellie didn't see it, for she was looking down and rolling her apron tas sels, s very bright oolor in her own feme. There WM s moment's silenoe sftei this announcement, and seeing that he was expected to say something, John said "Tee;" " O' , if y-fi don't waut to advise me, I w Ta't trouble yon," the girl flung out, rising in s Pi " Gome back, Nellie," he said, kind ly. "I am not oroas, only tell me what you want." Bhe seated herself again with a little ontver in her lip. q " I want yon tell me what yon think of Jamoa Lee. Tell me if yon think I d better marry him. Tell me if yon think he cares enough for me to go just where I say and live where I wish." The oolor waved again in John Holt's face, and he drew a quick breath. Borne impulse to speak seemed to oome upon him. Glancing np for his answer, Nellie saw the ohange and added a word: " Ton soe, John, I like Albert Leigh ton better than I do James." The oolor and light droppod ont of his face again, and a rim of even, white teeth preeeed for an inatant his under lip. "Then why don't you marry Albert Leighton 7" he asked, looking np into the tree that spread over his head, and reaching to break a slender twig. "He never asked me to," she an swered demurely. " I suppose ho mouns to, doesn't he 7" asked John, looking at her with aglanoe that might be called almost haughty. " How can I tell 7" Nellie pouted. " Hen are eo queer. The most of them would rather wait to be asked, I think." "If yon want iny advice, I will give it," John said, twisting and flinging away the little twig in his band. "If yon like Albert, don't keep James Lee in suspense. Ton have no right to do it You can't aerionaly think of mar rying one man when yon nrefer another. If Albert likes yon, as I believe he does, take him. He's a good fellow." " You think sot" the girl said, look ing up suddenly. "I think so," he repeated, turning away. " Now let's go np to the house." Hho rose and walked quietly up by his side, her fair, girlish face a little pale, her eyes downcast. At the gate she stopped. "I will not go in, now," she said, in a low tone. " I will go home." He merely bowed, and looking hack after a few stops she saw that he had not entered the honse, but was stealing off toward the barn. The next week James Lee commenced a violent flirtation with Bessie Holt, John's sister, and in a month the two were engaged. Nellie langhed and turned the light of her smiles npon Al bert Leighton, a handsome, dashing fel low, who had been crazy about Lee for the last six months. John Holt said nothing, but wss rather 000 l about his sister's engagement " Yon see, suspense would have killed him," Nellie whispered, miscbievonsly. " I hope he isn't marrying my sister out of piqne toward you," John said, ooldly. "If I didn't think Bessie loved him too well to give him np, I'd tell yon." "ADd betray my confidence, John Holt," Nellie exclaimed. " I tell yon 1 he is like most of you men—purely self iah. He didn't care a fig sbont mo. I think he seems to like Bessie." "When are yon going to get mar ried ? " he asked abruptly. The question came so suddenly that for once the girl lost her composure. A : crimson blosh swept over her fsoe, and she dropped her eyes without being able to speak a word. Of coarse, sbe recovered herself in s minnte, and protested that she bad no thonght of marrying. Any woman would ' have done the same. But the blush had ' convicted her in John Holt's eyes, and he scarcely heard a word that abe said. It was winter, and while they talked they were waiting, with half" a dozen others, for a large sleigh that was com ing to take them ont to a party given by a friend seven or eight miles off in the oountry. Even before Nellie's binab hail faded, the trampling and jingling at the gate attracted their attention, and Albert Leighton pnt his head in at thr door to call them. Bessie and her lover came forth from an adjoining room, an other group name np from a distant window, and they all ran gsyly out and and bundled into their placer. The party passed off as such things nsnally do. All seemed to enjoy them selves ; Nellie wsa lovely as a pink and fnll of mischic*, Leighton waa attentive, and John Holt was cheerful and kind to everybody. He was fnlly as quiet as nana), to be snre, and rather avoided Nellie Cramer, bnt it ia doubtful if any one but herself noticed that. It was twelve o'elnck when they start ed to go home, and the moon had set. At first their gnyety held ont, bnt after a mile or so fatigue and want of sleep liegsn to tell npon them, and one by one they fell into silence. "John," Nellie said, "there is just room for me on the seat with yon. Hay I come there 7 It is cold here." He made room for her in silence, and , she left her discomfited escort and took her place next that strong shoulder. Then silence fell again ; bnt after; awhile, in the darkness, John Holt was; aware of a light pressure against his arm, then a soft, plaintive whisper stole , into hi* car. " I am so sleepy, John I" He turned s little—why not 7 they were old friends—and lifted his arm to the back of the seat, took the head softly and tenderly to his bosom. And so she lay in that faithful and tender clasp till they drew near home; then, with one whispered word of loving gratitude, " Nobody is so good sa yon 1" she drew away, and took Albert Leighton'* hand to step out at her own door. After a stir in his own mind, John Holt oonelnded that Nellie and Albert had quarreled. He sighed, since she could not hear and so be annoyed, pitied the girl, and then went steadily about his work. The waters of his soul were too deep for babbling. When spring came, for the first time in his life John electrified his friends. He wis going to California, The an nouncement was mads quietly bnt firm ly, and he stood tike a rock, against which expostulation beat itself to spray. He gave good reasons, and absolutely maintained his right to choose for him self. " Ton have always as id, mother, that you wished I were more venturesome," he said. " I am going to please you now," " Bnt how is the farm to get along without you 7" she objected. " Frank understands everything and can manage." Mrs. Holt took oottnge, and, breaking ower some tittle awe, which, in spite of her talk, sbe felt for her son, spoke out: " John, has that Moll Cramer jilted you?" " Jilted me I" he aaid, flashed aa mnoh with anger u with surprise. "What do you mean, mother 7 We hare alwaya been good frienda, bat never any more. I never gave her the chance to jtlt me." " Then, why don't you give her the chance 7" persisted his mother, who did not ehooee to give op now that the ioe was broken. " Nell ia a good girl, if she does flirt a little. I always thought that she liked you, only that yon were too slow to sec it. Then, Noll has got a little money of her own that wouldn't lie amiss." " You are entirely mistaken, mother," he said decisively. Don't let ns say any more about it." " Oh, you great fool !" muttered the mother, looking after him as he went out. " Was there ever a man so blind I He is no more fit to live in the world than an angel out of heaven is." Then, seeing Nellie Cramer passing the street, she lifted her voice and called Imr in. The girl came in, wondering at such a peremptory summons. " Come and sit bv met" commanded the matron, and Nellie obeyed. Mrs. Holt scanned her from head to foot; the neat, trim figure, ia its nnugly tltting paletot of dark gray, the green bonnet, that brought out her fresh, clear color with a new luster, aud the fair, bright face. '' Did you • *i >w that onr John is go ing to California?" said Mrs. Holt, abruptly, her keen eyes on the girl's face- All tin' color foiled out of it in an in stant, and Nellie Cramer dropped into a chair an suddenly an if nho hail been shot. Hhe sat there and looked at the other with her (drained eyes, but raid no word. "Yea," said Mrs. Holt, unable to re press a slight smile of satisfaction at this proof of the correctness of her sur mise, " yea, he's set on going, in spite of all that I can say. Ho is going in a month or six weeks. Let mo see; this is the middle of April. He says be shall start by the first of Jnne at far thest." That amile of Mr*. Holt's was an un fortunate one. Nellie had always feared those sharp eye*, and now the thought flashed upon her mind that John's mother waa trying to expose and morti fy her. A woman's pride will do s great deal for her, even when her heart ia breaking. It brought the color to her face again, and strengthened her trembling limbs. It • toadied her voice and her eye*. Mr*. Holt was puzzled and disconcerted by the sodden change. " I'm so sorry I" Nellie said, in a tone of fearless regret. "We can scarcely ' get along without John. He seems such a stand-by. But men ought not to be tied at home, I think. If they choose to go, they should be allowed their own way. There he is now, in the garden. I am going out to speak to him of it." | "Try to coax him to stay, Nellie," I said the mother, in a tone of more en treaty than perhaps she had ever n*ed in her life before. "Heia a good son, and I can't get along withont him. I think yon can keep him if yon will" This prayer weald have been effect ual, but for the memory of that smile which rankled in the girl's heart Had i she not given John Holt every encour -1 agement, if he had oared about her T Had she not said and done things so affectionate toward him that aho had blnshed with shame thinking of them afterward t John was no fool, and if he I baeer. atimmer 20# 23 Kirber, Northern and Eastern, each 6 (KwSe 10 00 Fixber, Southern and Western . 4 000r MOO Fox. aUver 10 00® SO 00 Fox. cross. Northern and East ern 2 006* 2 50 Fox, rod, Northern and Eastern 1 4floe 1 50 Fox,red. B.Penn., N. J., N. Ohio I 00® 1 20 Fox, red, Southern and Wextern 80® 1 00 Fox, gray, Northern and East ern, cased 75® 1 25 Fox. gray. Southern and West ern 60® 1 00 Fox, kltt 0 ® 60 Ooat, American, fh 10® 16 Lynx, each 1 00® 3 00 Marten, State* 1 00® 1 50 Mink. New York and New F.ng iand 1 00® 300 Mink. Canada. Michigan and Minnesota 10® 20 Mink. New Jersey. Pennsylvania and Ohio 40® 60 Mink, Maryland, Virginia, Ken tacky. Indiana, Wisconsin lowa 30® 40 Mink, Missouri and Southern 25® 35 Mnxkrat, Northern and Eastern. fail and winter 11® 14 Mnxkrat, Weat Penn. and Uhio. fall and winter ... 10® 12 Mnskrat, South*m. fall and winter 7® 10 Otter, Kentucky. Virginia, North Carolina, Kanaax. etc. 3 00® 325 Otter, Northern sod Eastern and Northwestern 3 00® 6 00 Otter,Pennxylvanls.New Jersey, and Western 2 00® 3 00 Otter, South Carolina and Geor gta 2 00® 2 50 Opossum. Northern, cased 6® 15 Opossum. Southern and open Northern 3® 8 llar-oon, Mich., N. Ind., N Ohio 75# 80 Raccoon. 111., lowa, Wis, a-d Minn. 60® 70 Raccoon. V and E. Stat® and N. Penn 60® 70 Racoon. N J , h. Penn., Ind., Mo., Neb., and Kan 35® 45 Raccoon, Md.. Vs., Ky.. Twin.. V and H. Car , Oeo., Ark.. Fie., and Ala 25® 35 Skunks, prime hack, No.Leased 1 30# 150 Skunk*, prtmx blsck, No. 1, open 1 10® ] 30 Skunks, prime one half white streaked 50® (0 Skunk a. whole streaked 10® 20 Sheep, wool akin 20® 75 Wolf akina, mountain, large ... 1 50® 300 Wolf skins, prairie, prime. 50# 00 Jics York's Big Fire. The recent destructive flres in New York recall some of those noted con flagration* which have become histori cal in the annals of the city. The first historic fire wsa in the beginning of the revolution. Trior to that there waa the incendiary panic, but it was not accom panied with severe damage. The Are referred to took place soon after Waah ington's retreat (Hep tern ber, 177(1), and destroyed the beat part of the city, in cluding the first Trinity church. Nearly 400 buildings were laid in ruins, and the burnt di*trie* waa not rebuilt in twenty year*. Trinity church waa not rebuilt until the beginning of the present cen tury, and was so inferior in its construc tion that in forty years it was consider ed nnsafe and was therefore demolish ed. No one who sees the present Trinity can regret the change. The burning of the Park theatre, in IWK), was the next fire of note, and oth er minor casualties! occurred, bnt noth ing of a startling natnre until the great fire of December 15, 1836, which had never been equaled on the continent. The previous aggregate damage, occa sioned by all the Area that had ever oc curred here, wi* less than that inflicted by this vast and crashing catastrophe. It destroyed the heart of the bnsiness district, including 700 buildings (chief ly stores), with an estimated loaa of ta0,000,000. The extinction of the large amount of capital waa one cause for the panic and pressure which aet in the next year, and which is still re membered. In 1845 the bnsiness part of the city waa again ravaged by what may be culled the great fire. Unlike the last above mentioned, it ooenrred in the hot test part of the summer, and waa mem orable for that mysterious explosion which waa proof against all investiga tion. The burned area waa not leaa than twenty acres, and waa rapidly rebuilt. The fire thus proved a permanent bene fit, but a number of insurance compa nies ware ruined. Several very extern ■ive " tea firm," as they were called, have occurred, one of which waa the de struction of the Smith warehouse, with a loaa of nearly $1, 000,00a Tea makes a heat ao intense aa to prevent an sp- S roach snfflciently near to cope with the estractive element. The recent Broad way Area are more extensive in point of loss than any which have occurred since 1846, and havegiven insurance stocks a heavy blow. The companies in many instance have lost their surplus, and the stockholder* most not expect their usual dividend*. At an English wedding, which took place not long ago, tbe bridesmaids win* three bends of silver braid aronnd their heads, with a lily at the aide. The onion originated in Europe. Bo important facta Wk ont on# by one. JORDAN AND THE DEAD MEA. Tax Sursl aaS raami Waters #f gales ties. The following extract is from " Hyrian Sunshine," by T. O. Appleton: The Nile ia a sacred river, and the Tiber is famous, but the most sacred and most famous river of the world ia the Jordan. From the beginning to the end, it has that mystical character which befits such lofty pretensions; its life is the most vivid and oomplete, and its death the most sudden and mysterious that can be imagined. It is torrential, and it leaves the baDks of the Hermon and the many fountains of its tributaries with an eager precipitation, as if it bore a mission. From its greatest height, some hundred feet above the sea level, it leaps downward till it disappears ia the Dead sea some thirteen hundred feet below it. It hides itself among oleander,tamarisk and willow, and many an unfamiliar Oriental tree, as if wish ing to keep from profane eyes the secret of its errand. It does not stop long to overflow its banks and fertilise the val ley, for it has a purpose too mystical to waste itself even upon acts of benevo lenoe. It is only willing to become a living barrier between the desert tribes and the favored nation which loved it. No boat lives on its bosom. No fisher men dwell by its margin; hut it moves, one headlong column of sacred waters from its cradle of snow and cloud, high in the heaven, till it dies in a fatal lake marked by the finger of God, and for ever a subject for man's curiosity and reverence. It would seem a thing apart and not to IM- confounded with vulgar water*, which lose their personality in the bosom of the mighty sea, but exhaling to heaven like some holy messenger who perished in the fulfillment of his duty. It* birth and its death alike separate it from it* sister rivera of earth, and only the voiceless mounds of perished and nameless cities, tribes stationary as if bidden to halt by some supreme destiny of the past,or the awed and questioning stranger from the many Christian lands whose Imptism drew it* authority from the sprinkling of it* waterw, are seen upon its banks. And then we wandered through rnanj whispering reeds, through a kind of jungle where sterility and the river had fought for mastery, and which showed traces of both; a tangle of bushes a* it w< re, fighting their wayj up, and great space* of barrenness which the summer would soorch to lifelessness. And at last the Dead sea. Though we know that it is of volcanic origin, and fed by mines of salt, the imagina tion now, M ever, is content to sec in it a thing accursed. There was a fresh breeze; and a reluctant lift and heavy tnroble of its tiny breakers male them unlike other waves, bnt rather like those of Dante's Infernal sea. There wu a breath hearv with doom in ths air, and we were fortnnste it was not more stifling. Was it the breath of those lost or tortured there ? And be neath thai saline rbeet, did we not see, as in the picture of Delacroix, the ago nizing and twisted figures of the con demned ? We did not bathe tn the Dead sea. Others have done so, and report of its Imoyancy the same tales that are told of onr own Ball lake. There is a whimsi cal coincidence in the geographical re lation of the Dead sea and the home of the earlier prophets, and Mr Brivhsm Young's persona] continuation of the old dispensation, with a private Dead sea of hia own, in his immediate neigh borhood. The poorest swimmer keeps his beat) above water; and persons have said to me that their legs seemed to fly np from nnder them. All speak of it* wslers as refreshing after the great heat of that tropical valley. Birds are said never to fly over it, which ia the merest superstition, for they are really often saen to do ao. This lake certainly has s brand upon it, as of divine ven geance. The waters are heavy with ■in, the shores around blessed, and the very site of destroyed cities upon its banks unknown. And here are still seen the apples of Budotn, smooth and pretty to the eye and tonch, of a pale yellow, like a small orange, bnt within, aa Josepbns says, still retaining the ashes of Kodom in living perpetirity of the divine punishment, They are like lit tle oranges to the eye and tonch, bnt when pressed are like oak apples, and explode like these, a puff of air leaving the shell hollow, with only a slender ponch holding fine filaments like silk, which the Arabs use as matches for their guns. "That Fre Dag." A noon yo*lerd*y there *u a piece of txdcord, a dog and • man on the Wood ward at anna portico at the city hall. If the dog oonld have bed bia ear about it, he wonld probably have offered the man foraale at a low figure; bat doga in thia country are dumb. It we* the man who explain id: "Tea, thia 'ere dog ia for sale. I kinder thought wh( tr I left heme that I wouldn't take leae than #lO for him, but I find, on gittin' here, that moat every body own* five or aix doga apieoe; and ao I 'apoae I'll have to oome down to aix or aeven dollar*. I hate to do it, though. If the old woman waan't wearing a borae blanket for a akirt, and the children barefooted, I wouldn't part with thia dog, even up, for the biggeat rhinooero* in ltarnom'a ball oolleokahun." " Any mean trait* about him ?" in quired the citicen. " Waal, no," alowly replied the owner; " nbt any downright mean trick." " Then why do you wiah to sell him V " Waal, I can't lie, even to eel] a dog, and aa bad aa the old woman waata a new akirt. The fact ia, we've kinder loot confidence in Boxer, and the old woman, in pertiekler, ia down on him." " How waaitr " I don't keer about the dog'a hearin* what I aay," replied tlie man a* be low ered bia voice and drew off a lit le, " Ton aee, be took the durndeat atreak on you ever beard of. One day he left home and oome book with a wallet in hi* mouth. There waa #6OO in 11 Next day he brought home a diamond ear ring. Next night be eame home with a gold watch and chain, and on hi* next trip he brought home a thousand dol lar* in greenback*. In the course of the paat moatb this 'ere dog haf brought home over ten loat pock etc books, seven gold watchea, five diamond rings Mid six wolf robe*." ••O6od gracious I but ia that so?" ex claimed the citizen, looking the dog over anew. " Tee, that in no; end tbat'e why we've loet oonfldenoe in him, end why I went to eel! him, I'm afraid be don't oome by those thing* honestly, end they ere e harden on my ooneeienoe. The old women bee tamed everything own to the sheriff to be restored, end nhe Bey if we keep the dog we're siding end abetting robbeiy." "If I take this dog i shell simply keep him in the hern," observed the citizen. "Justso. If yon let him oat he'll find e lost wallet, sore." '' 1 shell see that be remains locked np day end night, my honest friend, end, by the way, let me compliment you on your rare display of ooneeienoe. Yon deserve the thanks of every honest man. Here are $7 for your dog." "Thank yon," wee the bumble re ply, and that meek and humble look didn't leave the men's feoe until the dog end his new owner had tamed e corner. Then he didn't say anything. He merely gave vent to a chuckle which sonnded like ice breaking off a mansard roof in a thawing day and ooming down on a lot of scrap-iron. Detroit Frr.t Prut. K Counterfeiter's fttory. Lodged in the Newark jail are tws notorious oonnterfeiters who have float ed more " queer " money and given the authorities more trouble within the last ten years than all the other counterfeit ers combined. These same two gentle men have romantic histories that engage the attention of the public, and would no donbt win a few sympathizing words from the press were the latter not oon scion* ♦hat it is always the habit of such dangerous criminals to beguile sod touch the soft side of the public with just such tales. Charles Cinch, one of these knights of " spurious plates.' told his story in the United Btates com missioner's office, and in brief it is ss follows: Born in Prussia, at the age of fourteen he was apprenticed to an en graver and beoame very akillful at the business, a fact that hundreds of thou sands of our citizens have no reason is donbt. To avoid a draft he went to Eng land and subsequently came to this city, where he and sixteen others were in dnoed by an English officer to take ser vice in the Crimea. Ulricb was drafted into the famous Light Brigade, and was one of the gallant six hundred who mads the historic charge at Balaklava. He described bis feelings when the brigade dashed at the Busman lines. He said be was carried away with the excite ment, as were his fellows, and be did not think of danger. He was struck on the head with a musket by a Russian soldier. His sknlJ was crushed, his side was pieroed by a bayonet, and he was left for deed on the battlefield, where be lay helpless for thirty-six hour*. He was then carried off by the English trops and placed in a hospital. II•- recovered, and was sent to England. In supjiort of the above assertion he ex hibits scars on hi* head and body. After a short residence in England he return ed to this city and fell in with Jim Col vert, a partner of Cole, (who is under arrest with Ulrich), and Col vert induced him to engrave a vignette, not telling him for what purpose it was to be used By this trick, be said. Cole got him in bis power, and he was forced to engrsve many plates for him. At one time they issued (50,000 in (5 banknotes, and at another (300,000 in (50 notes were ship ped to Hamburg, Germany. Tbess notes, be said, were given by brokers in Germany to emigrants who were ooming to this country, and on tbair arrival the emigrant passed the notes for railroad fare. In this way the United Htates officer* discovered that counterfeit (50 notes were being circulated in Europe. —Nm York Mail. Oeta arc not supposed to have the in -1 Iclligenre of dopa, tin an exchange, and yet if we observe them we find that they are capable of a great degree of reasoning. A oat belonging to a* bad a | kittrn, which, when it bad learned to [ drink milk from the aanoor with ita mother, wan given to a neighbor. For many day* after the old oat never drank more than a certain qnantity of the milk given to her, leaving the real for the kitten, which ahe hourly expected ;to retnrn. After a time, finding the kitten did not come, abe reatimed her | habit of drinking the whole of the milk ! placed in the aanoer. We were calling | at a cottage when an old cat came in. " Ah t" aaid the woman of the bouse, "abe ha* been to aee what onr neigh bor'a oat haa got for bar. She ia too old to hnnt for beraelf, ao onr neigh bor'* cat will keep a mooae or a bird tor her, and ahe goes regularly every morning to aee what there ia for ber." Another cat we have seen who baa been taught bricks in the same manner aa a dog, and if ber mmtar places her on the table and aaya " Die," abe will lie qnite motion Ice*, and not move a paw or her tail until be tells her to get np, when die jnmpe ap immedi ately and ia aa friaky aa ever. Bird* asf Hard Winters. The tendency to angnr a hard winter from the arrival of bird* which nanally winter in conntriea far north of ua, is, we think with the Bev. 1\ O. Morris, himself a great observer of the habits of birds, generally a mistake. What such arrivals do prove, ia not what in going to be so much aa what haa already happen ed in these northern regions—the birds flying before the odd, rather than taking precautions against it before they feel it No doubt this may imply a severs winter for ua, as well aa for these north erly regions, especially if northerly winds prevail, an they are very apt to do wben there is nnnsnal cold, and, tb erf ore, an unusually dense atmos phere to the north of na, which rushes in on the rarer atmosphere of onr more bnmid climate. Rat that it only saying that the birds fly from weather which is not likely to extend itself tons, not that thoy anticipate severe weather before they feel it. When robin* come into onr boose* we do ant take it as proving that a long treat is oomtng, but only that a hard boat is already there; and we suapeet that the northerly birds fly south for precisely the same reasons for which the robins acker our bouse* when they find the oold insupportable ont of dootn.—Lmv&m