FOB THE FAIR HEX. Onljr Thvielf, Vbr tallowing roi Appeared many ymm Mnrc in an Ktiglmh provincial paper, but al toactixl less attention than their great lamuty merit*, 'lire speakers area dying girl aunding: " Kven um a flower ?" "No, I'uircet, be not to me aa a flower. The uncertain sun call* forth ita odorous I hreuth; Tlie awecteat perfume gives the speediest ; death— 'lhc sport and victim ola summer hour. Fairest, tie not a flower!" " Even as a star ?" " No, brightest, be not to me as a slur; Tin one of the millions, and the hurrying clottd Oft wraps the glitt'ring splendor in its shroud; Morn pales its luster, ami it shines alui Brightest, lie not a star'" " Kven ns a dove?" Mo, purest, be not to ine as a dove; Tito *| oiler oft breaks in upon its rest, Itohbing the downy joys of its soil nest, ▲mi plunging silence through its native grove. Purest, lie not a dove"' " Even as a rock ?" •• No, my moat laithlul, be not as a rock; h It mocks the embracing wave, or stands alone la loveless gloom, in dreary waste* un < known. Senseless alike to fortune's amile or shock. Changeless, bo not n rock!" " Even us—inyucll ?" "My soul's best idol, he but as I by sell, Brighter than star, fairer than flower; Purer than dove, and in thy spirit's power Steadier than rock' Yes' tie thyself, thyself only thyself 1" Yrin nntl .Intra t or flluO, and he has all lie ran attend to at that price. Paulina Kunze, an Alsatian girl of eiglitis'ii, lias Is-en sentcnceil to three months' imprisonment for speaking disrespectfully of the Grand Duke m Bad. •n, at the aiglit of his photograph. p At Nashville, Tenn . the degree of It aster of Arts was conferred by the faculty of Vandcrbilt University upon Miss Kate Lupton, because,ns the clian eellor stated, "slic bad won it in a mas terly manner, having passed most satis factorily all the examinations to which •lie young men were subjected." A new order of anniversary weddings b. End of one year, the cotton wed ding: two years,tile paper ; three, leather or straw; tive, wooden; seven, woolen; ten, tin; twelve, silk and tine linen; fifteen, crystal; twenty, porcelain and delft: twenty-five, silver; thirty, pearl and ivory; forty, rubies and garnets; fifty, golden, and seventy-live the dia mond wedding. 1 A woman speaker at a recent tem perance convention in Ohio remarked that women work persistently. Last summer, on her way to Lake Side, site saw a man and woman hoeing corn. As tie- train Approached, tic mm stopped work, leaned on the hoe-handle, and gazed at the Hying carriages. For aught she knew he yet stands th re look ing. But the woman hoed right on. only glancing nt the passing train. Antoinette Itrown Black well writes: "Family interests, instead of suffering from the wideningof womanly iniluence. must lie surely ennobled and benefited proportionately with the wider sympa thies of a more enlightened motherhood. Tenderness is not incompatible witli a reaeh of intellect, nor bave brad and heart been so constituted by the AII-Father that they must dwell in perpetual rivalry." A flourishing Parisian art threatens to take root in Isindon. It is an old trick in Paris for extravagant young women Intake their lovers into jewelers' shops and to induee these Inters to purchase for them, at an immense price, articles of jewelry made of paste, the ladb-s and jewelers sharing the profits between them. I now hearof a dressmaker hav ing in her pay certain elegant females, who get men to order hamfsome dresses from her which are never sent home. This will probably be accepted as the ncwi-st development of the co-operative system.— l/mdfm Mayjair. Ij*dy 4amhtfr. The number of lady gamblers in Lon don is in r by Mrs. Mary Halloek Foote, the artist: The music was excellent of its kind—two violins, a guitar, a flute and one or two brass pieces. During tin- waltzes one could hear but a single united shuffle, as if all the dancers in the room moved with one pair of tret. Full dres for the young men was a fliort velveteen eoat.'bla.k trow ■ . v! H v * and n bright silk scarf, knotted with j arti. ularly hapr-y effect ovi r the slum.dors. outside the coat. Some of tin young men wore the uniform of the flour-fighter*—red flan nei shirts, black truvwr* with red stripe down the sides and a silver star on the ' breast. The crowd was too great and the motion too rapid and incessant for any attempt at study of individuals. One received an impression of extreme vivacity of speech and manner—bright ribbons, scarfs and serapas—waving heads and hands, swaying line* of figures joined in tin* davo, circling lines of ( iigur-*, winding and separating into couples, waltzing away in a ni ir." of color, music, laughter and tobacco smoke. The ceiling was dim with smoke from the cigarettes of the dow agers and the cigars of the lounger* on - the piazza, who leaned in at the open windows. Win n the dance flagged.cries of" I'ii-rt. ritv."' sounded from all parts of the room, and gave new life to the tuusie. Among the company was a young South American, with a high, nquiiinu proflle, and a crest ol bushy curls, rising from hi* receding forehead, like the . sculptured manes of tin* horses on a Greek bass-relief. I noticed him, first, because of his bright and sinewy graee, afterward, because ho was the partner of such a pretty girl—a tall, slight, dark beauty, with the most joyous uncon •piousness of expression and movement, like a child or a beautiful animal. It was worth corning to the ball to see these two dancing together; it was the very spirit of revelry, without conscience or care. I found the canker in the rose, afterward, when I iconic i that my joy ous girl hod been a wife for two year* at least, and that while she was dancing at the cMoaroM ball, htr young hpsbaad was in prison, awaiting his trial for stab bing a friend in a Christmas brawl at j the Guadeloupe. The war of cnscaroncs did not fairly 1 begin until the danm delguerro , at miu j night. hut there were scattering shots and salli-*, and skirmishes In all direc tions. The cascaronns were crushed over the heads of the senoritas, hut the young nun were soundly clapped on the head, and the shells were well rubbed into their thick black manes. The girls generally hunted in couples or packs, and set upon tlu-ir chosen victim with shrieks of glee; then a charge of young men to the rescue would scatter tln-m in all directions. The prettiest ghls got the most salutes, and looked nil the pretlle with the tinsel powder sparkling on their dnrk braid*. There were some wild young romp*, whose nudaciou* charge* upon friend and foe cost them at last their feminine prerogative;— they were pursued and surrounded and bombarded nnd battered with shells, until what hair tlu-y had left could hardly have been worth combing out in themornlng. The Mex ican* save egjg-shellf all the year for this ball: Improvident as butterflies, they are capable of great forethought where pleasure is the object. Two Nnake Stories. Granville Mowrer, a boy aged eleven, son of Isaac Mowrer of West Vincent township, Chester county. Pa., wiut sent to a neighbor's on an errand. In getting over a fence on tlie way the lad was bit ten in the leg by a snake, supposed to be a copperhead. Tlie venom from the bite took immediate effect, and tlie Ixiy he came almost blind, suffered intensely and was unable to get home. He was found in a field shortly afterward, his limbs ' and body swollen, both hands being black ' from the fingers above the wrists. A j woman, wlio had some idea of what was lu st to be done, drenched the boy with ' liquor, and tliis probably saved ids life. He was delirious for several hours, and is still ill a critical condition. Tie hoy! says tliat a black-looking snake Irit him as lie was getting over the fence, striking on the hare leg hcluwiiis trousers, which was short, ami slipped up some distance above the shoe. Ki/./ie Allison, living on tlie railroad two miles west of Wayncsburg, l'a., went in the morning a hull mile from the house to gatle r some Iwrries. While , engaged in picking the fruit she felt something move undir h>-r feet, and looking down beheld a huge snake. She dropped hr bucket and sprung away. She got a stake and went lack to look for tlie serpent, but could not find it for some time. I'pon raising a large grape vine tliat lay on the ground alio saw it coiled underneath. It "prang at In r and came n> ir biting in r, hut she ward'd it off with the stake. At last she got th" stake across the serpent's body in such a way that by putting her weight on tic end of tlie stake she could keep it from getting away. She then set up a cry for help. Her mother, an old woman, heard In r, and thinking that she must he hurt, shouted to tin- neigh bora. Ki/./i'-'s brother Jim mounted a mule and galloped to her re lief. All tliis while kiic had stuck to the end of tlie slake, unable to do n or- tha stand tin-re and watch tlie sn.-il i ,-trike and bite everything it could reach. Mr. Allison soon dispatched the snake, and found it to be ius't three feet long and very thick in proportion. Mi*-. Allison was seared badly, hut declared she would have stayed there till some one came to kill the reptile if it took a! day. Hnulino ( /k) //i mid. Ten Men's Narrow Escape. At Virginia City. Nevada, as tin *hifi was h"ing changed at the Yellow Jacket mine shaft, ten men had a narrow escape from dentil. These men, says a local paper, got on Itoard of the small skip at tin - ",300 station to go to the Initio.u of the shaft. They had gone but a short distance before the IS'. ' Tillies of the don key engine broke, and the skip, with its living freight, started f>r the Is.tiom at lightning speed. I' McCarthy, tie t'"l as a brake, and finally brought tic skip to a stand when it was within twenty feet of tlie Is'tlom of the shaft. The drum was revolving at lightning speed when tic plank was first intro dueed, and the friction produ <1 streams of lire and smoke, hut thepr> -surrgradu a!h told, slowed down tic sp ed of tic -kip. and fimillv stopt"- i it. To tliriist tic plank into the rapidly-revolving nis ehin-'ry wa* a dang< rou* experiment, and might have ist Mr, MeCiuihy hi* life, hut lie got tin- right hold in tlie start, ami held on with bull-dog tenacity. To do the right tiling, ju-t a- he did, at tic right moment, reipiired great quirkni -s of thought. Tlie plank, the pla< e where it was to 1c inserted, and how it was to bettaed man all luve been thought out in a -ingle instant. During the d. ml of the klp one man h-apisl from it and enuglit tic b< 11-rope, holding to which lc managed t me lively traveling. He got "(T tlie skip, and not finding a good landing-place on the wall plate, he went down until lc overtook the skip, wlcn tie got alxiard of it at the |-oint which seemed niost convenient. Aside from a ' severe shaking up and a bad scare, the men all came out of the scrape aimut as sound as wlcn they got into it. t'harles Sumner on Profanity. In a letter to tlie Hartford I\mrltd, Templcton, tlie Boston correspondent, relates the following in relation to the late Senator Sumner: We were talking about the profanity of a v. ry dintinzui-dcsl American state man not now living. Mr. Sumner (who j never swore hints. If) said: Well, I nave ! heard him sw> ar severely; hu*- as a rule nobody swears in my presence. Tic • greatest mortification I ever received in my life in tliis way was wlcn I was at a ! breakfast abroad with 1/jrri Brougham, i We sat down at the breakfast tabic, wlcn somelswly brought a newspaper to | Lord Brougham. It contained personal attacks upon him. Tl e article w.i* marked and lie read it through. Wlien 1 lie hail completed it he began a volley - of the most scathing oaths tliat I ever heard fail from the lips of man. There was no limit to tlie euncj tliat lie rained ' upon tic lead of tlie author of tliis I piece. 1 was shocked and stricken dunih, said Mr. Sumner. Tha only other oc cupant of tic table, except I/ml Broug ham and myself, xvas Brougham's mother. She sat nt tlie lie.ad, opposite her son,a venerable and courtly lady, witli an elevanee and grace of tnann< r that I never saw excelled. I dared not look nt her for some moments, but when I ventured to turn my eyes in that direc tion I found not a muscle of her face wa* moved. She was as ralmly unconscious of what lcr son was saving n* if lie was talking in Arabic. Tlie breeze soon blew over, ami we had a very cnjnynhlr breakfast. A Prophecy. Whole hooks of latter-day prophecies were once founded on tlie similarity of tli' names of Napoleon and Apoilvon, or Apoleon, thedark nngel; and one Franch K-publienn. lor writing and analyzing, produced the following: N A POI.VO*. Apot.ro*. l'oi.ro*. Ot.ro*. Lro*. ROM. OM. Which Icing arranged in tlie form of a sentence, gives " Xojmli-oti on olron Iron eon apoleon poleoa." This is the Greek for " Napoleon, being the lion of tlie people, was marching on, destroying the eitira." The llend of the lionapartes, Hrfi men and hoys now living wlio bear tin* name of HemApartc, namely, three nephews and five granel nephews of the First Napoleon. They are: I'rinep Jerome Napoie-on, son of Jerome, fourlti hrotfier of Naitoleon 1., and his two sons, tlie Princes victor and i/ouis; tiicn the descomlantji of Prince Charles, son of Luo'nn Bonaparte, sevond brother of the gi t Emperor. Tills Prince Onirics' sons are Prince Lucien Bonaparte; tli" Cardinal Prince Nap<- Icon CharlfH, ex-president of tie Con seil-General of Corsica; Prin I/mi* Lucien, formerly senator, and long a | resident of 1/melon: anil lastly Prince ; Pierre, whose son, Prince Poland Bona parte, is studying at the military school of St. Cyr. I i he interest wit l w hi> h Prince Jerome ' Napoleon is now regarded as the head of the Honaparte family, and the chid of the imp'rialist party, amply justifies any details that may he givi n respecting him". 1 A larger man tlian cither the first Napo leon or Ids father, Prince .Jerome re- 1 semliles the latp r more than the former, though in his earlier yean his lik>m-s to the ureal Kiiipcror was simply extra ordinary. His expression is placid and often extremely agreeable, hut now and t h< n the fire of tin- < 'orsican hums in ids eye and his line)v ebb I. | mouth add- to tlie intensity of his I'sik. Tin prim e i„ fifty-"- I'll years of nee, not yet e r "y, thoueh ouie what bald. IJ in head. savs J ienotus, is a superb one, wor'hy alike' of the prim e ami tin- thinker, and second only in what Uieenthusiastie reactionary writer calls aristocratic h-autyto that of the < ompt< ile Cliainlsird. At home lie uoi.'.lly walks to and iro while con vcreing,smoking cigarette*, and k.-nine one or both hands in Ids pockets. Sud denly he stops before the visitor; his > language beconn s animated, ami even vehement, while his words teem with color and pietures.|ueness. lie never laughs, but only smile#, Tba prince lei .a wonderful collection of Anecdotes nt his disposal. In the street Prince Jerorue mav Is- n><-ogni/.d by Ids broad lirimmed hat; miming along, lie will sudd Illy ijllicken liis ste ps win n he is deep In thought. He rides every morn in:.', Im ing acconipnnie urit vto that fieri-e light which h* its upon a throne. The tlieory was pronoundl a short time ago. ays a London paper, tliat Prin • JI rome Napo icon's familiar ni> k name " I'lon-i'ion" took its origin fr<>m his h< r- >i' b' ha% ior in tlie ( 'riuu a, wlnTi he "smelt had" with such frequency and relisti that thcoflr-crs of Ids division ticstowi-d upein him tlie d< - riptiv -obri juct of " Plonib-l'loinh." A corre spondent, leiwi ver, pronounces tliis de rivation of tlie ni -knanie t<> be in nrre t," f iting that Ji- had l'imself learne-ei from the life of the iaf. Minister of Htat<\ von S> ur tli, the exact ■ ir um-'an' es wld' h saddled Ids imperial higliness f,,r life with s., quaint a -"briquet Prince J'-roni' resided during Ids i-arly child* h<>od in the royal castle at Stutlg.ordt It wiil be rotiieinh'Ted that he was at one time a subject of WurtitnW*, and tliat Id* first military service w,a per formed in the army of tliat State. Th" late King William of Wiirt'mlwtg wns very fond of the little prince, and fre quently pluvial with him in the royal gardtSM. At first time tliat he naked voiing Jerome "what his name w.-i-.''tin lit!■ r. who could not speak distinctly, replied, " i'lon-l'lon," instead of " hsin." King William sub-' qtiently ;w,kc to anei of liitn hy tliis pet name. It was eventually adopte-el bv tin- court and by Wurtenib' rg society in general, and has stuck to liim ever "ini-e. TJie sohriqui-t of i'lon-l'lon, therefore, was Itcstowed ufsn tlie prince fiy himself and none otlu r. The Sutro Tunnel. Win ii tlie flooded mines of the Com stock w ere relieved by the completion ; of tie- Sutro tunnel, tlie Inundation of the shaft* was reduced 100 fi-rt in eiglit liour. Mr. Sutro. when honored with a scp nado, made the longest speex-h of his life. "It is almost fifteen years," i aid lie, " since I first proposed the con -1 strui tion of a deep tunnel from tlie Car son valley to tlie Comstock lode, and i almost ten y> rs ago the first nick was | stru k in beginning a w ork wiiieli lias been -ontinuid sini-e, by day and night, without any Interruption, with an ex pi nditure ill fii.OOO.noo. To-da v. for tlie first time, the water from tlie Comstock min< < flowed through the Sutro tunnel, and it gladdened ail your hearts to see tlie stream of limpid water, tliat had caused many of tlie mines on tlie Com stoek fxde to iie idle for years in im- I potent effort* Ui tret lliem from it, make its appearance at the tunnel entrance, j Home people wlio had foresiglit sufficient ' knew more tlian ten y< ars ago tliat tlie 5 day would come when tliese mines could he worked no longer; but tlie great | untliinking wlio only live from day to day, looked upon the undertaking of piercing these mountains as one so gigantic and protracted tliat they ridi- , culeil the idea, and gave it hut little en couragement. The day w ill come when thefe will lie avenues under tho*e nmun-j tains in every direction, with trains of I ears coming and going throughout the day and night; ami when we shall reach j under tlie top of Mount Davidson at a deptli of 3,600 feet beneath its summit, treasure* may be untoldisljif which none of as liave any conception. A JfoveiYnrf. Tom Johnson, of the poorhouse, lia* a faculty of getting eonsidernble work out 1 of tlie Inmates under his charge. There : was one wlio made up hi* mind not to work at all, although he wm capable of ' doing considerable. To nsroid it lie kept in lied and made out to be ill, de manding the attention of the physician. Tliat gentleman staled that thero was nothing the matter with hint. Tom thought he could cure him, and the other night placed a coffin in hi* room. When the old man awoke the first thing that met hi* gnxe was tlie " wooden overcoat," which stood at the foot of the bed. Till* seemed to animate him. He arose early, dressed himself and informed- Tom tliat lie thought lie wa* better, and asked the steward if there wasn't some thing lie could do around tlie house. He has been busy ever since.— Hubuiue Herald. ' TIMELY TOPICS. New England has over S3 armers clubs, witli 72,(XX) active members and library iiooks to the number of 21 '"00, and in the United States tli urly 2,(XX) agricultural societies, 68, (XX) volumes m their libraries, and with ac ta** to 300 different agricultural publi cations, all exerting a direct influence on the intelligence and future prospects td tlie tillers of the soil. I lie ( aliloi nla lam liman or farmer is t' a certain_extent demoralized by the ' climate, wiiieli allows him to perform outdoor work the year round. Unlike the Eastern farmer, therefore, lie is in clined to let tilings go by the hoard. I here if- a lack of thoroughness in build ing, in planting and in the care for ani mals. ili -,e is little concern for ap 1 pej riii'-i ; th,, soil of many years re-' mains uudisturlwd U|on tlie wagon wheels; ii, flower garden is well cared for; they m ml the li.-irie -s-s witli Lit* >f ropo, and they trust little or nothing to the vanity of paint. I lie English " court" w< nt into mourn ing for the French prim-e imperial for one week after tills Style: The lodic* to wear black dre-o'K, white gloves, iilaek or wliite shoos, feathers and fans, pearls, diamonds, or plain gold or siherorna nn-i.ts. Ihe g' ntleineii t> wear black court dr> with hlaek swords and buckle*. Then tlie severity of the in signia of grief was modified for three nay, the ladies to wear black drc"cs, with colored ribbons, flowers, feathers and ornaments, or gray or white dresses witli black ribbons, flowers, feathers and ornament*, and on tie- tenth day tlie court " .vent out of mourning." Twenty nine years ago two >M>ys,al*out a do/.< ny urs of age. were playing "tag" in l/'WHton, Mi'. They Were merry and active hwis, and were frolick ing with HchoollMiy cntliusiastu and rare!' -n< -s. ()fie lad e uiglit tlie other, struck liis loads and playfully tipped it im over, liis whole Weight came down U|M>n liis fading plnvmate, wlinss spine was seriously injured in eonsequ'-nep. He was con veyed home, and it wasfound that ii" was a physical wreck. For two years tie was aide to walk around uvciy little, and then, as the results of liis iniuri' gradually grew mon-s'-rious, In was obliged to be carried from one place to another, entirely losing the use <•! liis lower limbs. At length his w hole body became rigid, and lie was povver 1' For twenty-three years Mat hew Kankins lias sat fixed in liis chair as in a vise night and day. The New York Herald thus desi rite s a hor*e-powr : " Tliis question is fre quently ;isk<-d : What is understood by a horse-jKiwer. and why came tliit way of reckoning to t>e adotit'-d and hrouglit into genera! Use'-* It. fore tlie tiower of -t'-ani w is generally known and applied : te> m's-hanieai purisen*, tiors<-s w-r- Wad to rais< gai and otto le ivy i'-s. Mr. M'sits, in his extx-riments, carefully eonipar'd lie relative power of tli" diffV'ient hr-i ds of horse*, and found it* av• rag" equal Uj raising 33,txx) pounds on<- f"-t r minute, or. wii it ii ' qllivalent, to r>l*e 330 pounds 1(10 feet, or Ino pfuinit- 3,'ttl f.-et during tliat sj a me* lumi- a) purposes, ami wlii' II is still retained in e>.tnmon use " A remarkable story, showing tie gr< at ads antag'-s of ignoran <. is p.!d ot a French T-cmk who won a prin- in tic late lott'-ry. Sle luid f, t certain, long bclore tlie drawing of tin' pitas, tliat No. 27 would turn out a winner; and site managed to buy it. and awaited tlie result with anxiety, hut without fear. Tlie list - am< out in due time, and surely enough No. 27 had won a big prize ll'-r ma ter tiereforc. questioned her about it. asking to te- informed why she f. it so sanguine. Tlie explanation was simple ' Why, sir," sire re-plied, " I ' dream -■' thrf more than eereimary inte-ri oeeicd through Baffin's bay. TlicJc.annetterested in tlie Itarlsor of San Francisco for several months, hut the time of eb-parturo was purposely de layed. that tli>' Sirait* might l>c reached as near as possible at the hrcak-Un of the i'-c i,i August or early in Septenilmr, before' which it would he vain to at lempf a passage. Miye,r J. M. Walsh, who has tssoime famous in the Indian country a* thoeiffi ce-r of tin* Uanaeiian Mounted Polieo, in charge of tlie camp of Sitting Hull anei the I'ncnpnpa Sieux. has contributed scveTal columns of opinion anei narrative tee a Chicago paper lie thinks Sitting Bull is well eii-jeose-d toward the United States, hut criticism of the In eiinn policy : " You can't make two gov ernments —one feer the Indian and one for the white' man. You don't need them. Ttvat the Indian like a white man from the start. Show him that you recognize the fact that he lias rights, anei point out to him what tlieise rights are. Teach liim that the white man s rights anei liis are identical. Then show him that he will he protected in liis rights, i and that lie will iw punished if lie in fringe* on the rights of other*, and the husine** is sHtleai." And it i hy en -1 forcing tliis policy, he say*, that Canada has been enabled toilve at peace with the savage* for a generation. We find this interesting question and answer in the "Nette* and Quexio*" de partment of the Onicntifir Atnrrimn .- "J. A. M. aaks: Are glass insulators indis pemsable or not in putting an lightning rods on huildings. for protection against the electric current f Some parties haw been putting up rods here wltlmul in sulators, using emit strips of xlne to hold tlmm to wails and roofs. Our pev>ple are itnorant on the subject anei would lie gta! to tee a full explanation in your valuable scientific journal. A. fnu- I later* should not he used. Tlie roe) should be fa*toned directly against ii,o building. Hut the moat important pre caution in to make dure that the bottom '•nil ol tli*' rod ha H a large oonductinff Murfiu ein contact wiUi the earth. Better imve no rod than simply to bury the end a l< w feet down into dry earth; the proper way in to Bolder the bottom end of the r>xi to a metal water pipe or gM pipe in the ground. If there are no pijos, then make a long trench and putin dome go<>d conducting material, nueli m fine char coal, or hard coal dust, iron ore, or old iron, unking a g'H>d rennoition between the bottom end of the rod and thin con ducting material." In the Matter of lilet. Old Mm. Kieklepineh says the present id a very unheaitliy season of y ;r, and that people mudt exereiiw (rreut care In regard to their diet. She ► ay* they eunriot cat ey rylhing. And Mm. N., is quite correct; people cannot eat evi rylhing and keep well and hearty. It id very unhealthy, for inftauoe, for a p rron to eat Htove wr either I oil. i|, fried „ r on tic half hie ;!. for it would probably give I im the ".hak one w ishes to be yi| p-d hy nigiit mare. t>rven "trash,'" such as grs.-, leave*, bnieiiH k-. I'at is grei n, e-tc .i- a; to giv# on* th* hlui'd. Stovepipe, either Itu-riari or Ameri can. I,* ing tubular, i iik- ly t/i make* a ! rson hollow with pain, if eaten freely. I,nu irbo ite only obc dented Joint at •i dinner recently sniel it did not soot him. ile evidently felt the* torment* eif ths mi tned. Sauee of all kin rrisli._M. lb,on hydrophobia. Among other thing* the speaker said: Hydro phobia never originate* spontaneously. It must always come from the inocuia tion eif virus received from an imimal. The period of incubation is generally from thn* to seven weeks. Tlx* longest j* rienl dex* net exceed three month*. lln sympt' ii • of hvdrophohia are un usual powe i-s of eneiurancc, loss of ap petite. iner* i-eof thirst, dilation of the , puj . ol Uu * ye, and in the run of ani mal . craving after earth, sticks and storms and para ysis of the hinder part-. There Is ao a peculiar spasm of tlx* pharynx. The reason why water i refused is not that there jg a fear of it. as the word hydrophobiaTm piics, but i -ause tlie contraction of the mu* le of tlx* throat make* it difficult and painful for the patient to drink. For the disease* to lie received thd virus must come in contact with an abrades! surface* eif the skin, e>r a surfacs that ran absorb it. as that of the mouth. <)f those* that an bittern by rabid dog*.con - trary to the general impression, neit more than a third suffer from hydro phobia Ilahicsnnd bydroplxibia are un kneiwn in some countries. In South America they an* not known. In th Madeira islands, wheredeigs abound and NuffV*r every other disease, they are not known. In Prussia, em the other hand, l.ufifi eases oeeurred at one time, within ten years. Flxperimenta of eminent French physician* have shown thai hydrophobia is not caused by want of water or by want of fexxi. Science has now so far advane*e*d that many cases under certain eire-umstances e*an bs cured. The disease is not now abso lutely incurable. 1 net lan Itabies. That an Indian mother loves her babe i clearly shown by the care which she bewtows upem its cradle, adorned with tlx* richest beadweirk and e*nibroidery. The founelatiein of this rraeile is an un yie-lding heiard upon which the haby ewn be firmly lashesi at full length en its back. This lniard is usually rove red with softly dreseeel buckskin, with (lapsand pouchew in which to envelop the baby; other trilx*s neit rich or feirtunate enough to procure this material, have reeounw to a neat combination of shruhwtxxi poles, reesl splints, grass matting and the soil and fragrant ribbems eif tho bass or lin den tree bark. Sweet grass is used here as a bed lor the youngster's lender back, er else clean dry mess plucked from the bended limbs of the swamp-firs; then, with htie-kakin llionga or cord*of plaited grass, the baby is hound down tight and secure, for any and all disposition that its mother may see fit to make of it for the next day or two. Perhaps for two or three hours out of the twenty-four the babies are allowed to roll about on tha grass ; hut the minute It begins to whim per the mother claps it bark into its cradle, where it rests with emphasis, for H can there move nothing save its head; so far from disliking these rigid conches, tho babies actually sleep better in them than when free, and positively cry to bs returned to them when neglected and left longer than usual at liberty. This fact Is certainly an amusing Instance of the lores of habit.