BCLL-PIttHTINM 111 MEXICO. A MadSaasS Ball Barsta ftaa the Areaa aad Traaelaa a Oarv Path Tbroaah Iba Paale-acrtebea Pasalaaa. A traveling correspondent of the Ban Francisco Chronicle reached the ancient town of Bayderaguato, just on the oon fines of oinaloa and Chihuahua, in Northwestern Mexico, and upon suing for a guide to continue his journey was told that the man be would have to I employ was to participate in a bull-fight the next day. The correspondent then decided to stay in the town one day longer and witness the oontest, which proved to be an appalling affair. We quote from his account: The soene of the fight was to be in an old oorral inclosed on three sides by high and thiak adobe walls, and on the other by what appeared to be an im penetrable fence of a growth of pith aya, a cactus of a fluted oolnmnat form and armed with a bristling array of strong, sharp thorns. It formed a fence whioh neither man nor beast would endeavor to break through. A strong scaffolding had been erected outside the adobe walls, to a level with them, and on this were arranged the seats from whioh the spec tators oonld witness the sight free from all danger. My host procured for me a front seat, from which I oonld obtain a full view of the arena. I can never forget the scene which was before me as I approached the seat which I was to occupy. The Mexican women delight in brillant colors for their shawls and dresses; and as the shawl is an indis pensable portion of their attire, it is Euerally selected more for the bril ncy of its hues than any other quality. The seats were all occupied, most of them by women, and such an aggrega tion of gaudy tints I do not think could be found elsewhere. No matter if the drees was old and faded, the shawl must be warm in its oo'.oring and flashing with brightness. The aged crone was there, dark in complexion, wrinkled in visage, shriveled ana bent in form, and whitened to the hue of snow in her dis heveled looks. The maiden was there, of pure white Oastilian blood, with cheeks of purest white, eyes rivaling in blackness midnight's darkest hour, long glossy hair of the tint of the raven's wing, rested upon rounded shoulders, and then falling away until it nearly trailed upon the soil. Old men were there, seemingly so old that it might be thought that death bad overlooked them. Young men were there, dark visaged, scowling jealously upon each other, and with their mantas wrapped about their shoulders, and their wide brimmed hats shading their brows and faces. Home were fully clad, while the wearing apparel of others consisted of merely a trinity of items, hat, sandals and breechcloth. Home of this latter class of men were splendid specimens of muscular development, lithe, active, self-possessed, and evidently conscious of their strength and powers. One especially drew my attention to him. He was outside the arena when I passed onward toward it. I think I never saw a more perfect form than his; it was one that the sculptor would delight to have as a model, or tho painter would rejoice to delineate upon his canvas. He held in his arms his first born, which he fon dled with a father's warmest pride, ami placed himself where I could not (ail to notice his infant son. I made some complimentary remark about his boy, at which his eyes glistened with delight, while the mother, who stood near, re plied in a musical voice with her thanks for the notice of the babe. Back of the group, upon the raised seat, rose the white waUs and dark, brown tile of the church, while far, far away in the die tance the lofty mountain tops glistening in the sunshine closed the picture. After taking my seat I looked down in the corral, and oonld not but admire my guide, not only for his powerful and perfect build, but also for his good humored expression and calm self-pos session. As he loitered about in the arena there was a self-consoipusneas of the victory he would achieve when his opponent should be driven into the in cfosnre. There was some little delay before the bull camejupon the scene; but when a large gate in the adobe wall was opened, and he entered the oorral with a rush and a bound, a terrible presenti ment of an awful tragedy seemed to thrill the entire multitude. For myself, it so painfully imprested me that if I could nave easily left the place I would at onoe have done M, although but a moment before I had been so anxious to witness the contest. It was a splendid animal, well knit, strong and powerful. It seemed to comprehend the situation at onoe, for with a loud tone it bellowed forth its defiance to its antagonist, and then, with head lowered to the ground, oommenoed pawing the earth ana giving demonstrations of speedily commencing the oombat The attendants waved their red flogs before it, and irritated it still more by prodding it with their sharp pointed lances. Our hero closely watch ed its every movement with keen and in tense interest, evidently aware that it might make a sudden rush at any mo ment With a roar that appeared to shake the very earth, and that certainly threw terror into every heart in that audience, It sprang forward, lowering its head with the design of tossing the Mexican into the air; but the attempt was a failure, for he sprang quickly to one aide, and goading with his staff the now incensed animal into a state of fury as it passed him, nerved himself for the more serious part of the oonfiiot. Two or three times the bull renewed the attack with no better result, aad every time he escaped the animal the audience shouted and cheered loudly, appearing to have overcome the presentiment of evil, and having full confidence in bis ability to win the vio tory whenever he chose to do so. It would hardly be credited that the coun tenance of a bull oonld vary in its ex pression, but it certainly appeared as if intense rage and demoniacal hate stood out upon every hair on its face, and the more it was baffled in its attempt to gore its in tend sd victim, the deeper and wilder beosas that expression of vicious propensity. One of the attendants gave the bull a more severe thrust than he intended to do, when it turned M sud denly upon him that, before be oonld evade the attack, the animal had him upon its horns, and ripping the body open with the exertion, tossed him high in the air, while bis blood spouted out upon its face. The man fell with a heavy (had upon the Mil, and in an in stant the ball was goring him again and again. In vain the others tried to divert its attention from the man, or endeavor ed to rescue their fallen companion from his terrible fate. In less time than it require* to narrate the episode, the poor fellow was a lifeless oorpee. It was a sickening sight. Homo of the women fainted at onoe, while the others screamed in terror and horror at the soene. All thia commo tion, combined with the soene of fresh blood, wrought the ball into a state of fronry, and it swept around and across the inolosure with such violence and rapidity that the men oonld with difficul ty escape from its rushing attaoks. The cry was given to open the gato and let the bull pass oat into the stall in whioh it had been kept; bnt the gatekeeper had become too terrified to understand the order or to perform his daty, and the gate remained olosed. The nerve of my guide never faltered for an instant, bat seeing the terror of the others, ana witnessing the fary of the animal, he drew his long knife and calmly awaited the next rush to make the final thrust that should terminate the existenoe of the bull and the soene of exoitement. Onoe more the bull swooped down to ward him, and be stood ready to strike the knife into his neck, bnt as he at tempted to spring back and let the bull pass by him before doing so, his foot slipped, and he was at once impaled up on the horns of the beast, and in n moment Iris lifeless body fell within a few feet of his dead comrade. The excitement of the crowd now reached the most intense point; it amounted to actual agony. For a mo ment they were spellbound by terror, and gave utterance to piercing shrieks and cries. Then several shots were bred at the bull, none of which took serious effect, bat only appeared to increase its madness. Suddenly the ball, now blinded with rage and maddeued by the wounds it had reoeived, dashed against the thorny barrier of the pitahaya, and breaking through it, rushed among the terrified multitude upon the outside of the inclostire. The crowd scattered in all directions, and the bull tossed or tramped upon all who were in its way as it rushed toward the open plain. There were threo others killed outright and several seriously wounded. Heartsick with the horrible soene I blended with the people that were seeking thei v homes. When drawing near a group that surrounded one of those killed up on the outside, above the wailing of the crowd there rose upon the air the shrill agonised cry of a heartbroken woman, and as the group made way I saw lying upon the ground one of the animal's victims, while its mother was kneeling over it It was the first-born of that fond father I bad before noticed, the ball having tossed the neighbor who had it in his arms and killed them both at the Bame time. The Pot of Hold. A cobbler in Somersetshire dreamed that a person told him that if he would go to London bridge he would meet with something to his advantage. He dreamed the same the next night, and again the night after. He then deter mined to go to London bridge, and walked thither accordingly. When ar rived there, he walked about the whole of the first day without anything occur ring ; the next day was passed in a simi lar manner. He resumed his place the third day, and walked about till evening, when, giving it up as hopeless, he de termined to leave London and return home. At this moment a stranger came up and said to him: " I have seen you for tho last three days walking up and down this bridge; may I ask if you are waiting for any one?" " No!" " Then what is your object in staying here?" The cobbler then frankly told his reason for being there and the dream that had visited nim three successive nights. The stranger then advised him to go home again to his work, and pay no more attention to dreams. " I my self," he saest protec tion tinder such circumstances was to keep the mouth shut. If people must keep their mouths open in a chilly at mosphere, they ought to wear a Alter. Above all be careful of yonr feet in oold, damp weather. Have thick soles on your shoes, and if caught out in a rain which lasts so long as to wet through your shoes despite the thick soles, put on dry stockings as soon ss you get home. Rut in oold, wet, slushy weath er, don't be caught out without over shoes. Rubbers are unhealthy, unless care is taken to remove them as soon as you get under shelter. Tbey arrest all evaporation through the pores of the leather. Cork soles are a good inven tion. When you go into the house or your office after being out in tho oold, don't go at once and stick yourself by the stove, but take off your coat, walk up and down the room a little, and get warm gradually. Warming yourself up at a stove just before going out in the cold is one of the worst things you can do. In short, make some use of yonr common sense, ami thus emulate the lower animals. Ills Objection. " I've only got one objection to your paper," said an up-oountiy farmer as be shelled out two Bland dollars for an other year's subscription, and smiled i upon us across the editorial desk. We were all attention at once, and asked for ! the objection. Editors always like to head objections and suggestions, and if • a good old patron was to come along and ask us to publish the Declaration of Independence, we'd have to do it. "I've , been taking your paper ever since I it started,"be continued, "and I like it. It gives all the borne news, all the Bute news, and all the general news of im portance ; but, as I said before, there's one objection, and that's the advertise menta. Yon see, whenever that paper gets into the house, Maris she goes right i for those new advertisements, and every i piece of flummery she reads about she wants, and that's where the trouble cornea in. Then the girls tbey get hold of it and read about this, that ami the other— cheap things and nice things, i new things and fashionable things—and yon just see, between Maria and the girls, they keep me in hot water all the time." We assured our troubled pa | tron that we heartily sympathised with him; but told him that sensible men would use the columns of their local paper ass means of communication with the people—that this was something that " in the natural course of human events" could not be prevented; and he finally conoluded that it was all right ; " for," said he, "your advertising col umns frequently save us money, tiecause they tell us where we can bny the cheapest good*. "—Middl'tovm Tran* cripi. Carrying Secret Messages. A curious list might be msde of the strsnge methods employed in transmit ting many important historical mes sages. The intelligence which enabled Gyrus to overthrow the Median mon archy was conveyed in the body of a hare sent him CM a present. The insti gator of the lonian revolt against Persia sent bis agent s trusty slave, with verbal order* to shave his head, when the ne cessary instructions appeared traced on the skin beneath. During Mohammed's wars letters of this kind were frequently plaited in the long hair of female slaves. The mediaival fashion of writing in ink which only became visible when held to the fire is well known; but Oerdinal Richelieu surpeeeed even this by his de vice of a dispatch whose alternate lines made an entirely different sense from that of the letter as a whole. One of the French chiefs of the Fronde war oonoealed an important letter in a roasted crab. Warren Hastings, when block aded in Benares by Gheyte *Bingb, ap prised the English army of his situa tion by dispatches written upon roiled up slips of parohmant, which his mes senger* carried in their ears, instead of the quills usually worn there. The let ter which recalled Geo. Kanfmaon to the relief of Hemarcaud, when besieged by the Bokhariotee in Jane, lflBA, was stitched np in the sandal of a loyal na tive. It even stated—tbongh the story oerbiinly savors of Maoohanaeftmm that a French spy. in 18TO, tarried a photographic dispatch through the Ger man lines in the hollow of one of hie false teeth I FOR THE FAIR HKJL News M< Nets* fer Hnm. A sunflower in diamonds is the new est ornament for the hair. The fashion in England, set by Lord Oarington, ie for afternoon marriages. Leather belts, fastened with Hpsnish buckles of iron, are worn in the evening, 7 Headbands with pendant rows of jew els or coins are mnch worn in New York. Mrs. Bnrnette, the anthor of " That lass o' Lowrie's,"is very girlish-looking. Perfumed gloves are now fashionable, bnt a more delicate perfnme than ben zine is desirable. Two hundred and eighty maiden ladies were mined by the failure of the West of England bank. London bss s book in circulation in which all marriageable girls who are in possession of s fortune of f1.200 per year are registered. Striped satin purses sre fashiouable with those ladies having any money to put into them, and still more fashion able with those who haven't. Mosaic jewelry is coming tip again among fashionable ladies. Pearls are quite the rage. Filagree ornaments of gold and silver are much worn. The lucky horseshoe has become a wedding gnest; in wedding invitations the cards admitting guests to the church sre made in tho rhape of a horseshoe. The ladies of Japan sre said to gild their teeth, and those of the East Indies to paint them red, while in Cjnxert the test of beanty is to render them black. The newest engagement ring is of gold, and consists of two hands meeting and clasping over a small gold heart, which occupies the top of the interior | circlet. If you do not wish to be exposed, don't talk too mnch before your chil dren. A child's mind is like a " Jack- I in-a-box," once unlocked, it ia all out in a minute. Young ladies who wish to have small mouths are advised to repeat thi* at fre quent intervals during the day, " Fanny Finch fried five floundering frogs for Francis Fowler." The Japanese ladies paint their 1 cheeks, but the article tbey uae for the j purpose.when first pnt on is gram; ex- ; posnro to the air, however, soon turns it to a sea-shell pink. The new Hebrew United Htatos Sen ator from Louisiana, Mr. B. F. Jooaa, i is said to have a heantifnl and charm- I ing wife, who will add much grace to Washington society. Berths von Hillern, tho pedestrian, j is quietly studying in Boston, and ia aid ed materially by two admirers—one a lady of Baltimore, and another the wife $ of a Boston merchant. The Austrian white glove, a soft cas tor sf creamy-white tint, ia much worn; it is a dressy street glove, and may be , cleaned very satisfaetorily; it ia worn s size larger than a kid glove. A bridal couple from Arkansas has made a little excitement in the Missouri town of Joplin, the bride being just six feet tall and very slim, and the groom six feet seven inches, and almeenlier for these latitude* ?" The professor paused s moment m he wan mashing a potato and replied: "Ouee* it'* about the name thing every year." •'ln eeeson's of atmospheric deproa aion alternating with nnexpected tmreal excitement* and rapid change* reanltant on sudden accumulation* of moisture, irach disposition* of the atorm belt are not, iD my opinion, entirely nnoalled for." " Exactly," remarked the profe**or, lifting a fly ont of hi* coffee. " Hnt," oontinned the agent, delight ed at the ntyle in which be wa* crowding the profeeeor; "I donbt not bnt that oertain energetic polarisation* of the molecnle* in the mineral deposit* have an attraction for the electrically-charged cloud*." At these point* the profeeeor, who had Iwen knocked around the ring and crowded to the rope*, no to "peak, be came fairly roused to hia position and slogged for the other's none at once. "Ah, exactly, mv friend; in the ledge are Tast deposit* of minerals. Found in volcanic matrices and disintegrated by the upheaval of plntonic rock and semi fused masses of silicioos ainmnia, mingled with homogeneous defrris of porphyry, the molecules of kaolined felditea, with s slight potash base, the i deeoopositirn of the feldspar is most affected along the line of the borixontal i cleavage and neoeaaarily the liberated oxide of manganese combining with the percolation of the alkalis which perme ate the entire mass, causes a pronounced state of polarisation, which cannot fail to aooount for the peculiar attraction in the vicinity, I might farther explain the intricate chemical properties of the belt by illustrating the"— By this time, however, the book ; agent, who daring the round had been i verbally pasted in the jaw, smashed in the nose and biffed in the eve, ro*e from hia seat, paid full price for his hslf caten meal, and ahot ont of the place. Andy said be examined the profeeeor, found his pnlse regular, no signs of per spiration and his mind intact. 1 Irginia (iVee.) Chronicle, Frslt sad Diphtheria. The Boston Journal of CKemitfry says; Dr. Emil Qnerner, of Philadel phia, sends ns the following note on this subject, which will interest oar profes sional readers, even if they are not pre pared to accept the author's theory. "After a laborious and scrutinising in vestigation into the aanae of a large number of casea of diphtheria that have oome under my care daring several years pest, I have almost arrived at the eonclasionkhat the primary affection of an individual comes from the fungi which arc found as spots of different eolors on the exterior of fruit, particu larly apple*. As far aa the power of my mioroeoope has shown, those fungi seem identical with the fungi from a diphthe ritic ulcer ; and last autumn I traced a number of eaaaa, at one time five togeth er in one family, back to the eating of Elm picked from the ground in or rds without previously cleaning the fruit by rubbing or washing. The prev alence of this dreadful dieeaae in the last three decades may well be accounted for by the (act that the appearance aod flourishing of lower vegetables and an imal organism is periodical; of which we have; examples In the potato dis ease, the diseese of the grave vine and cholera, which latter has been ascribec to a fungus growing on the ear* of rim in East India and carried in the humai body as a oontagion over all parte o the globe, and in many other eases, 0 course, any person infected with th< disease from the primary cense may bt the center of infection for others." The Herrors of Cypres. The special oerrespondent of the Lon don Standard wrote from Lamaee ooo oerning the country recently acquired by Oreet Britain: "The trail of the serpent is frequent and oonspicuou*. Crawling abominations infest the saered groves; oentipedes and sundry other entomological nnisanees of the qaeerest names and shapes, that curdle the blood or tiokle the midriff, frisk *cd skip in the grass. Had Cleopatra sojourned here, she would never have ehoeen the plan of Jtlo ife M ahe did—the asp is so vulgar tli at by no manner of means oonkl suicide by its instrumentality be considered respectable. The mosquitoes bold high level, bnt be would be effemi nate indeed who would make moan over tbem. No; tbe plague from which we fly in abject terror are the snakes. There are four species of tbem, and two of them are of tbe deadliest type. These are tbe oofla, which is ground-colored, some two and a half feet long on an average, and with a sharp-pointed beed and under part streaked with white. Tbe venom of this reptile is so poison "UK that its bite kills in six hours. This is no traveler's tale grounded on vague hearsay. Lieutenant Heager told me hs bad a boy carried into tbe hospital one morning at Linaeol who had been bitten by the oofla. Before tbe afternoon tbe poor lad was rigid in death. Tbe clough is the deadly congener of the oofla; he also is of the treacherous color of the soil, and makes his way sometime* into dwelling bouses. Mr. Vice - Consul Loiso found one coiled round the neck of s favorite kitten the other day. Be cause of tbe snakes tbe field laborers and ail tbe inhabitants of tbe rural dis tricts, women and toddling children in cluded, wear high boots. But high boots will not protect against that ugly rival of tbe snake, tbe venomous spider, whose puncture is credibly reported to sign one's death warrant. With all these thick-sown terrors under foot and in tbe air, it is notable bow exempt we ire from dread of these troubles till we meet tbem, and bow few are tbe deaths from snake-bite and kindred accidents." How to Make Bread. Take four good-sized potatoes; peel, boil and mash, and pour on to tbem one quart of boiling water; strain tbe whole through a sieve; let thia get blood warm, and then stir into it one of yeast, one spoonful of white sugar, one s'poou fnl of salt and three quarts and a pint of flour. Beat well with a spoon and set in a warm place to rise, fin summer it will rise in four hours; in winter it will tste five.) When well risen, take a pint of flour and put part of it on tbe kneading board; then turn the dough upon tbe board, and put one spoonful of lard on it; then kneed twenty minutes, using tbe pintof flour; now put the dough iu the pan again and let it rise one hour, and then form into loaves. (Do not have over a pint-bowl full of dough in a loaf.) Let tbe loaves rise forty minutes, and bake forty-five minutes. Bread made in this wsy cannot be excelled. Graham— Half-cup of veast, pint of warm milk or water, and flour enough to make a thin hatter. Let it rise over night. Htir in, in the morning, half a cup of sugar, salt, teaspoonful of saleratns dissolved in water, and Graham enough to make a very stiff batter. Beat all the ingredi ents thoroughly in the sponge before Kling tbe Graham, and then stir in the Graham, a little at a time, beating well. Hhape into loaves, and bake an boar and a half. Tbe oven should not be so hot as for white bread. Brown—Three cupt of Indian meal, three of rye. one half of molasses, one spoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of saleratns; wet with one and a quarter quarts of milk to make a stiff batter. Bteam five or six boors. This will make enough to 111 a two quart pan.— From Miu M. Parloa't Recipe*. A Persistent Bog. More than eight yean ago a poor man n amed Gray died, and waa buried iu tbe I old Gray Friars' churchyard, Edin ; burgb. His grave ia now leveled by \ time, and nothing marks it But the j spot had not been forgotten by bis I faithful dog. James Brown, the old curator, remembers the funeral well, and that Bobby was one of the most conspicuous of mourners. James found tbe dog lying on the grave the next morning, and as dogs are not admit ted he turned him out The second morning tbe same; the third morning, though cold and wet, there be was, shivering. The old man took pity on j bim and fed him. This ooovinoed the dog that be had a right there. Sergeant : Scott, B. E., allowed him his board for s length of time, but for more than six I years be had been regularly fed by Nr. Trail, who keeps a restaurant close 1 by. Bobby ia regular in his calls, be ing guided by the midday gun. On the occasion of the new dog-tax being raised, Mr. Trail waa called upon to pay few Bobby. He would have dona so had the dog acknowledged him aa his master, but ha will attach himself to no one On having of tbe facta of the case the lord promt of Edinburgh exempted him, and, to mark his admi ration of fidelity, presented him with a handsome collar, with brass nails, and an inscription: " Gray Friars' Bobby, presented to bim by tbe Lord Promt of Edinburgh, 1877."— 0 mr Dumb .ts immi*. . larMakea and Urn irahb Here is an incident in the history of the old soldier who waa, until lately, the marshal-president of France. At the close of the battle of Tetehia, Oee. Aohard, desiring to send an important message to a subordinate commander four miles sway, intrusted iissaoKahoo. He offend him a squadron of mounted chasseurs as an escort, but it waa de clined, and the brave soldier rode off atone. He had proceeded aome distance on hie iourney when suddenly be be held a host of Arabs in punattt of him and a deep ravine la front of him. There was no alternative other than to jump tha ravine or be si sin by his pur bone breaking ana of hie leg* as ha struck the opposite aide. Tha Arabs recoiled hem the dangerous leap, sod contented thwmslvsa with diaohargirga shower of bullets after him. MaeMabou cammed unharmed, and reached hia dse -1 ttaarina ia safety.