THE ALAHKA INDIANS. lew They U, Th.lr Manner* and C*il**it. The native races in Alaska number about 35,000; Russians, 300 or 400; Americans and others, 800. The Indians ran be divided into three great elnases: The Innuit of Yukon disirlct; tho Aleu tian and the Tuski of tiieSitkan district. And these again are divided into tribes, settlements and families. These are largely in a condition of degraded super stition, and liable to all the horrible cruelties of heathenism. Tho old, sick and useless arc put to death with various cruelties and disgusting rites. The Indians are again subdivided iuto various families, each of which have their family hndge. The badges arc the whale, the porpoise, the eagle, the coon, the wolf and the frog. These crests ex tend through different tribes, and their members have a closer relation to one another than the tribal connection. For instance, members of the same tribe may marry, but not members of the same badge. Thus, a wolf may not marry into the wolf family, hut may into that of the whale. l/pon all public occasions they arc seated according to their rank. This rank is distinguished by the height of a pole erected in front of their houses. The greater the chief, the higher his pole. Some of tlicsc poles are over 100 feet high. Mr. Duncan, the missionary, re lates how. upon one occasion a head . hi'.l of the Xusac river Indians put up i pole higher than his rank would allow, fiie friends ot the chief whose heads lie would thus step over, made tight with guns, and tho over-amhitious chief was shot in the ami, which led him to quickly shorten his stick. Their houses are from twenty-five to forty feet square, without a window, tho only openings being a small door for entrance, and a hole in the roof for the escape of the smoke. The door is three or four feet above the ground level, and opens qn the inside upon a broad plat form, which extends around the .four sides. In front of their leading houses and at their burial places are sometimes im mense timbers covered with carvings. Those that attended the Centennial will remember such posts. These are the genealogical records of the family. The child usually takes the totem of the mother. For instance, at the bottom ot the post may be the carving of a whale, over that a fox, a porpoise, and an - agle—signifying thXt the great-grand father of the present occupant of the house, on his mother's side, belonged to the whale family, the grandfather to the fox family, and the father to the porpoise, and lie himself to the eagle family. These standards are from two to five feet in diameter, and often over -ixty feet in height, and sometimes cost from ft 000 to $3,000. Forming the en • trance to the house was a hole through this standard, hut latterly they are com mencing to have regular doors hung on iiinges. Among the Stiekines tnese badges, trees or totems are usually off to one side of the door. A man wanting a wile sends a mes - age to that effect to the girl's relations. If lie receives a favorable answer he sends them all the presents he can pro cure. Upon the appointed day he goes to her father's house and sits down on the door-step with his bark to the house. The relations who have assembled there sing a 'marriage song, at the close of which furs and calico arc laid across the floor and the girl is escorted over them from the corner where she has been sit ting, and takes her seat by the side of h<' man. Then dan< ing. singing and • iting are kept up by the guests until they are tired. In these festivities the couple take no part. After this they fat for tv o days, and then after a slight repast they fast for two days more. Knur weeks after they come together . and are recognized us husband and wife. Among the Nehaunes and Taleolins. when a man dies, hi* widow is com pelled to ascr nd tho burning funcnu pile, throw herself upon tho body, and remain there until the hair is burned from her head, and she is almost tuffo < atcd. Silt is then allowed to stagger Ironi the pile, but must frequently thrust her hand through the flames and place it upon his bosom, to show her continued devotion. Finally the nshes are gath ered ud and placed in a little sack,which the widow carries on her person for '.woyears- During this periodof mourn ing she is clothed in rags and treated as a slave. Among the Cliuekees the old and feeble are sometimes destroyed. This is done by placing a rope around the neck, and dragging them over the stones. If this docs not kill, then the body is -toned or speared, and left to be eaten by the dogs. Occasionally the old ask to be killed. Then they are taken, stu pefied with drugs, and, in the midst of ious incantations, bled to death. Among the Tuski and many of the Orariun tribes the bodies of good men are burned and the ashes carefully pre served. But in some sections, where wood is scarce, the bodies of women are not considered worth the wood thnt would be consumed in the burning, and they nre either east out to be consumed by the foxes and crows, or cast into the sex as food for the fishes. A summary cure for crying babies is to take them to the seashore and hold them in the water until they cense cry ing. As soon as they can walk.children re bathed in the sea daily, and they 'Ciirir to swim about as soon as they no 'o walk. Festivals are given on erect ing a new house naming of children, marriages, deaths, etc. These festivals 'pnsist of dancing, singing and feasting.' Some of them are so expensive as to im poverish a whole circle of relatives.— Anuriran AtUi/ptaritn. Snhaqucons Hardens of Nassau. A writer describing Nassau, N. P-, in the fomdon Queen, says: The subaque ous gardens of the Bahamas are one of ihe most interesting scenes imaginable, and more than fulfill any ideas tlmt fancy may create about them. The J nre really fairy garden*, for-far down in the clear green water wave brilliant sea grass, flowers ami vines, while many spee.ies of fish, varying in hue and size from 'he green and golden minnows, not two ounces in weight, perhaps, to the pwdorou* jew fish, clad in asilver coat of mail and weighing over five hundred pounds, dash through the shrubbery or placidly floit in a grotto. Conches in which pinkish pearls arc concealed may also lie found there, and with them xeai ly every species of shell fish indi genous to tropica) sens. The orange crop of Southern Califor nia ia assuming large proportions. One of the most successful growers in that State is Air. Briswalter, who sold his last year's crop of fruit at the rate of sls per tree, aggregating $89,500. His crop of grapes lie sold for $9,000. The First Caper Maker. Who was the first paper-maker? If the reply to thiti query should be, ns is quite likely. Unit some old-time in ventive genius W(W t |„, nmn j t wm , )0 incorrect. The date of the invention and the founding of paper making is not detiniteiy known. The common wasp was, however, the inventor. The big wasp's nest, which was always kept at a safe dlHtnnte and often knocked down with a stone during the rambles of boyhood, was composed of paper of tiie most delicate anil elegant kino. As spiders were spinners of gossamer welm of intricate and exquisite pattern when primitive man went about dressed in the shaggy skins of beasts, and could neither spin nor weave the beautiful mid fine cloth fabrics of to-day, so little wasps, when people of a later and some what more advanced age had recourse to such rude and unsatisfactory sub stances as wood, atone and brass, the bark of trees and the hides of animals on which to preserve memoranda, were making a material of far greater excel lence. They mad" their paper, too. by very nearly the same process employed by man at the present time. Indeed, sev eral of our best discoveries in regard to building, architecture and nianufaetures of various kinds, if they have not been derived from acute observation of the work of certain animals, including in sects, have, when compared with their constructions and their manner of mak ing them, been found to show a wonder fully close resemblance. The heaver gave men their earliest and most ser viceable knowledge concerning dam building, and to-dav no workman can surpass this animal's skill and precision in the erection of such structures. Nature is a great teacher, and espe cially does the paper-making of the wasp illustrate how valuably sugges tive she may sometimes lie; for, assur edly, the wasp was the fcrst to show that it did not always require rags to manufacture paper, tliat vegetable fibers answered for this purpose and could be reduced to a pulp, and that to make the paper strong and tenacious the (iher must be longer. The first tiling the wasps do when about to build a nest is to collect, with preference for old and dry wood, fibers about one-tenth of an inch long and finer than a hair, and put them into bundles, which they increase us they continue on their way. These fibers they bruise into a sort of lint, and cement with a sizing of glue, after which they knead the ina terial into paste, like papier mache, and roll up a ball; this they trample with , their feet into a leaf as thin as tissue paper. The ceiling of the wasp's chatnlier. to | the thickness of nearly two inches, is | often constructed -by putting, one above ; another, fifteen or sixteen layers or sheets of this prepared paper, and bo tween these layers spaces are left, so that it seems as if a number of little j shells had been laid near one another, j Next they build up a terrace composed j of an immense number of the paper •hells, until a light and elegant struc ture, like a honeycomb, has been con structed. and in the cells thus formed they rear their yonng. That ttie wasp was the first paper- 1 maker will, we think, hardly he dis puted. As patent laws did not probably exist in the days when wasps first liegan to multiply on the earth and to huiid their houses of paper, the field has been an ojien one up to comparatively later days, and lias teen well improved and enlarged upon. The quality has been much improved, the quantity greatly increased and the uses to which paper has been successfully adapted are many and marvelous. The wasp was building much higher than lie knew when he went in to the papcr-t.inking business, ile was a genuine Chriitopher Colum bus and really the paper world. Cabinet Recreations. The members of the cabinet sometimes have very amusing interviews with la dies, as tTii' following will illustrate: Young lady—" Mr. Secretary, I have called to see if you can tell me when Captain is to be ordered away, and where he will go to?" Secretary—"l really do not know. Do you wish him ordered away?" Young lady—"No, indeed " (this with a very conscious look and a slight in crease in color); "only, if you were, I would like to know, you know; for you see." pulling out her hand kerchief and putting her little gloved finger in hs-r mouth, a la Maggie Mitchell, "you Know Mr. . now don't you?" Secretary—"How should I?" Young iady—" I hen I'll tell you" (this with a look of determination). " I'm going to mnrry him. and if you are going to order him off why we want to get married liefore. That is all." Secretary—" I have not thought of ordering lilm away, and since he Is go ing to engage in such pleasant business Young lady—"Oh! Mr. .ain'tyou , good? I'm so glad. Now I'll have plenty of time to get ready." Another young lady sends in her card and is admitted, when the following colloquy takes place: Young lady—" I have called to see if you will not give permission to Lieu tenant to come here from A-—P" Secretary—"Any of his near relatives sick?" scanning her closely. Young lady—"No, sir. His friends want to see him so much, and you can have him come if yon want to." Secretary—"Oh! I sec how it is. If you will say you are iiia sweetheart, he shall come. Young lady—"Yes, sir. he is!" say ing this witli both hands hiding her face. The secretary says thnt he gave per mission to tliats officer to come, tele graphing to him to that effect within the hour. All secretaries arc not like the one we are speaking of, so young ladies must not presume upon the above incidents; for tliey might not lie as suc cessful as our two fair friend were.— Weuhinylon fatter. What it Costa to Kan n Locomotive. The New Jersey Central Rail rand Company keeps a record of the cost of running locomotives. It shows that an average day's distance traveled by a locomotive is 100 miles. The work for a month is 3 000 miles; but some loco motives exceed this, as in the case o. No. Ml. which in December loot made O.vftO miiet.. In doing this 133 tona of coal were used and thirty sevengallona of oil to ke p the machinery In order. The company aays that SIB.OB is tho average cost for 100 miles for men. fuel and repairs. In the case of No. 181 the cost lor repairs for the month was $88.50. _____ If you boast of a e fnlcmpt lor the world, avoid getting Into debt. It is giving to gnats the fongs of vipers. ■fc TIMELY TOPICS. The late Serg. Parry, the English law yer, who was the last of the ancient order of sergeants except berg. Hallantine, the others having retired or been raised to tLe bench, died from poison by the escape of sewer gas, his wife having pre ceded him a few hours from the saisc cause, lie was a finished speaker, and, with Mr. Justice Hawkins, led for the crown In the Tlchhorne prosecution. He and his wife were both horn the same day, were taken sick tin* same day, ' and died the same day. The bull fights of Spain arc a remnant ; of the barbarous ages, at the accounts ol which, even, we shudder. It is there- j fore a relief to learn that the young i Queen Christine attended one soon after 1 her marriage only because she " regarded j it as a social duty, and that she was very much shocked hy what she witnessed, j It is stated, moreover, that the king had some difficulty iij getting her to go at all, and then was obliged to use all his persuasive powers to induce her to throw the key for opening the bull's cage, loiter, when arnan and horse had been wounded, she drew her veil over her face, and refused to give the sign which allowed the tight to continue, although finally, with great reluctance, she did so. A sportsman explains why he re ceives the many sea-serpent stories with a grain of allowance. He was hunting on the shores of a| lake in the wilds of Michigan, when he saw what he be lieved to be a monster snake, fifty or sixty feet in length, anil ten or twelve inches in diameter, with humps on its hack two feet in length. At first its course was almost directly toward his place of concealment. When he was about to run for his life, the " serpent," then a few rods away, changed its course, and resolved itself at once into a colony of otter swimming in single file. His in ference is that sea animals may some times travel in the same manner, and give sailors the opportunity of drawing the longbow. A gentleman formerly connected with the Philadelphia Ledger is said to have discovered a simple form of audipbonc, which lie has tried witli satisfactory re sults, although he is very hard of hear ing. A few days ago he was explaining the principle of the audiphone to some friends, and to illustrate his remarks, put a folded newspaper between his teeth, bending it over in the t*rm of the audiphone. To his surprise he found that he could hear as well with the newspaper as with the audiphone. He subsequently attended an auction sale, and putting the catalogue between his teeth and bending it down with one hand, heard all that was said, although without some such contrivance he could hoar nothing. The suit of Budd Dome us. the South ern Ohio Fair association, of Dayton, Ohio, has just been tried before the United States district court for that dis trict. The suit was brought to recover 99,250 from the association on a con tract, in compliance with which that amount was to have been paid for an exhibition of speed by Goldsmith Maid on the track of the association, Sep- i tember 30. 1*75. The association claimed that it was not an exhibition of speed, the time being 2:294, 2:24, I 2:4(4. The plaintiff made a plea for a ' judgment for a yuanlum meruit, that is, for so large a proportion of the con tract price as the performance was worth, if not the wljoic amount. The edge decided, as n point of law, that no such partition could Is* made in aspcojal contract, and that the claim must stand or fall in its entirety. A great deal of expert testimony was taken as to the merit of the performance, but the jury failed to Agree. Farmers who read the papers ought to be able to resist the blandishments of the swindlers who are perpetually prey ing on their unsuspecting good nature, for the press has taken much pains to expose the operations of the wily rascals. But the swindlers are smart, and have nothing to do hut invent, and put into operation new plans for imposing upon the farmer. The latest plan, which has been successful to some extent in New York State*, is " census-taking." A gentlemanly fellow appears with a series ol blnnks, upon which lie is gath ering for publication the statistics of the leading farms in the State, and he sets down as the farmer dictates, the number of cattle, bushels of grain, etc., and makes out a grand showing very pleasing to the farmer, and apparently Useful to the farming community. When the list is completed the gentle manly operator asks the farmer to sign his nnme at the foot of a blank space at the bottom. The rest is easily guessed. In a month or two he is notified that his note for 9150 or so, is due at a neigh boring bank, and being in the hands of an innocent third party, he mnst pay it, and the "census becomes the worst kindol an income tax. The annual reports of tiro English and Scotch co-operative stores aie now being' published. The profits divided among tlrf members of the societies range from one shilling throe pence to two shillings eight pence on th<* pound sterling of pur chases made during the year, and seem to average about two shillings, or ten per cent. Stating the amount in dol lars. a member of one of these 00-opera tive stores, about which Mr. Holyoake gave so much interesting information during his late visit to this country, re ceives at the end of the year 11 in the way of profit for every 910 worth of goods he has bought. This is clear gain to him. for lie gets his goods at the reg ular market prices, and is besides as sured that what he buys is of good quality and free from adulteration • The Manchester Co operative Wholes* le so ciety, from which the co-operative stores buy their goods, is a federative institution composed ol 584 societies comprising 306.161 member*. It has a capital of 9703 000 on which It pays five per cent, interest, and its profits are di vided among the brunch societies in pro portion to their purchases, just as the societies divide their profits. among the individual members. A correspondent of the Journal qf Kduralion protests against the fun poked at geographical names in Maine, and thinks tlicm no worse than the unmusi cal and unmeaning names of places in Mnaaacknsseita. lie says* "Our Indian names are descriptive of their location, as well as sonorous and musical. There is Pen-obs-cook. 'the sloping rocky piaoe;' Ken-ne-beec, 'the long-water place;' the Andros-ooggin. corrupted from Amos-keagan, 'thu fishing-place;' tue l'ree-umpe-oot, • iho-clelt-rock plxce;' the Sacoor Ssuk tuck et, • the discharging-tidal-atream;' the Piscata qua. or Pesca-tuek ak, • the divlded tidal-strcam-place •' the (Johbsoseeconti cook, ' the place where there lean abun dance of sturgeonand the musical name, Abcljacnrmczuscook, 'the place of the inflowing stream.'" He thinks Chelsea is not half so beautiftil ae the mdian name Winno-simet or Win ne-aekim-et, "at the good spring," and doeH not see that the badly-corrupted word Boston is pieaaantcr. to any one but a native, tlian its original liidian name.Wishawmut, 'at tlie great ferry,' nor that Dorchester is preferable to Mat* tapan, ' the stopping-place.'" Good old Governor Winthrop gives us Wennatuk set, "at the beautiful tidal stream,"but his descendants must give it the dis agreeable name of Plympton. The most rhythmical name quoted is that of a brook in Mt. Vernon, N. H., the Quo nuinnapssakcsassanagnog. A Pet Dog's Fatal Bite. A recent dispatch from Wilmington, Jh'i-i to a New York paper, says: Richard (J. Alexander, a well-to-do citizen of Delaware City, was bitten by a dog supposed to he mad one day last month. As he was sitting in his door- j way, holding a pet dog in his lap. the animal sprang upon him and sank its , fangs deep in his check and upper lip. j It then dashed away through the neigh borhood, and before it was killed bit I about twenty other dogs. Since he was bitten, Alexander h: s been fearful of the j hydrophobia, and took many different remedies. On Monday morning last he j first felt w hat are believed to have been j symptoms of the disease; he complained ola pain in the hack and a palpitation ! of the heart, but attributed them both to torpidity of the liver. On Thursday j morning, when lie went to wash, he found that he experienced an aversion to waterthat hccould not overcome. He j ate a hearty breakfast, but could drink nothing, and stoutly maintained that , nothing ailed him. His fortitude in re sisting the dread malady is character- ! ized by the physicians as one of the most remarkable things they have met with in their practice. He refused to have a doctor called in until he had a 1 and when medical aid was finally called. ' he copinoscd himself with great effort. The doctor at that time wns not con vinced that Alexander had the hydro phobia until he remarked that he felt that he wanted to sneeze all the time i and couid not. The fangs of the dog had torn the carriage of the nose, and the first symptoms of the disease in such cases is a morbid feeling in the wound, i Soon after this the spasms became vio- ! lent, and, to soothe the patient, strong opiates were presented, hut lie could not ' ■wallew. Toward evening he became | very violent, hut after the spasm begged j to be killed, and pleaded with those present to leave the room, or he might unknowingly bite them. The spasms grew more pronouwed and frequent, and finally it required the united force of six men to hold him. He died in great agony last night about eleven o'clock, just forty-five days after lieing firj>t bitten. A general outbreak of hydrophobia is feared in the neighoor hood. as many dogs were bitten by the dog that caused Alexander's death, and not killed. The Doctor's Pigeon*. The carrier-dove has been utilized for another service in the cause of humanity. Dr. Harvey J. Philpot, of Kngland, writes as follows to the london Tele qrafJi: I have made valuable use of the carrier or homing pigeon as an auxil iary for my practice. So easily arc these winged "unqualified assistants" reared ana trained that I am surprised they have not been brought into general use by the profession I belong to. My modus operandi is simply this: I take out hall a dozen birds, massed together in a small basket, with me on my rounds and when I have seen my patient, no matter at what distance from home, I write my prescription on asmall piece of tissue paper, and having wound ft round the shnnk of the bird's leg, I fently throw the carrier up into the air. n a few minutes it reaches home, and, having been shut up fasting since the firevious evening, without much delay t enters the trap cage connected with its loft, where it is at once caught by my gardener or dispenser, who knows pretty well the time for its arrival, and relieves it of its dispatches. The medicine is immediately pre pared and sent off by the messenger, who Is thus saved several hours of waiting, and I am enabled to complete my morning round of visits. Should any patient be very iil turd I am desirous of having an early report of him or her next morning, I leave a bird to bring me the tidings. A short time since I took out with me six pair of birds. I sent a pair of them off from each village I had occasion to visit, every other one bearing a prescription, Upon my re turn I found all my prescriptions ar ranged on tny desk by my dispenser, who had already made up the medicines. Hunters', Skaters', and Toasters' Perils. At Ilion, Ohio, three boys were drowned while skating. A breech-loader in the hands of Ross Orier, of Griswnldville, (Ja., caused the loss ol one of his feet. I'eter Cramer, of Plymouth. Iml., fell on the Ice while skating, and was so seriously Injured that death followed. Mrs. Jane Davenport, of Ann Harbor, Mich., fell on the ice. and striking her head against a sharp plank was instantly killed. E. 11. Loom!*, of Brooklyn, Mich." shot a squirrel, and climbed the tree to get it. He fcil forty feet, and had sev ral hone* broken. Owing to a broken shoulder and con cussion of the bruin. William 8. Pollard, of Virginia City. Nev., will noH slide down hill for some time. Alexander Jameson, seventeen years of age, of St. Ixiuis. went hunting mi Sunday. His time is fully occupied now tending a shattered leg from letting his gun fall. Frank Fagan, twenty-five years ol •ge, of San Francisco, Cal., went duck shooting, got excited at the sight of game, lost his head fell out of bis boat and was drowned. John Rraldwood was surprised to see the ramrod of his gun go through the trees alter passing through his hand. He was trying to draw a charge, at Bruce, Mich. While dragging his gun by the muzsle through a piece of brush, Harvey Ecker, of Hastings. Mich., thought he was enjoying Sunday. But the charge intended for the game went into his body, owing to a treacherous twig, and his friends buried him on Tuesday. Ho was sixteen. WHAT A " BLIZZARD IS.* A 4Jrphfe llsicrlpUoM bjr OSI who KBOWI Whereof fflo ftpeafci. "The papers want to know what a ' blizzard' is, and they turn up their noses at the word, hut them as has been tliar' can' see where the joke comes in. I've shook hands witli one or two bliz zards and here's the aflidavies to prove it!" He drew off his hoots. Three toes were missing from the right foot, and the big toe alone remained on the left. Two fingers were gone from the left hand, one ear shriveled out of shape, and liis nose seemed to have no life in it. He was a rough looking old chap, and he was warming his heels on the f team-pipe in tin* cabin of a ferryboat along witli several other passengers. "Well, what is n blizzard F" asked one of the crowd as the old man pulled on liis boots. "What's the weather here, to-day I" "Two below." " Well, you add live or six degrees of cold to it. take off your clothes and walk around for three hours, and you'll hav*( a slight comparison. A blizzard haint zactly a two-edged sword nor a hulTet, i but it lives next door to 'em. You'd ! better twice over be notched in a tor nado. I'd take the chance of outrunning a prairie fire quicker'n livin' through a Jfnuary blizzard." "Tell us about 'em." "The fust one I ever seed," said the old man as he held up the stumps of his missing lingers, "was down in Nebraska, close to the west line. I had aranche, ' and was well fixed. The livin' room for me and three herders was about twenty feet squar', with a biz stove in the middle. On the fourth day of Jinu- j ary, 1859, there wasn't a flake of snow on the ground, and at four o'clock in the | afternoon it was warm enough to go in my shirt sleeves. Half an hour before the sun went down the sky wns clear and blue. I stood looking off at a herd of horses, feelin' as if I wanted to go j bar'fut, when all at once a shiver climbed over me. It was as if ice- | water had been poured down my ba< k. i There was a moanin'. roarin' sound ; away to the westward, another shiver, ' nnd the next minit it was dark and the blizzard had come. Quicker than I can j tell you the sky turned black, night set ! in, and mountains of snow come boomin' along before a gale blowing eighty miles an hour." "Well?" said some one as the old man j paused. " Wail, there she was. That blizzard was born in the Rockies. She'd whirled 'round and 'round, gettin' stronger every minit, lilted herself out of somr awful canyon, tore along the crags and peaks. ! and finally tumbled down on the level j and started eastw.nd. mad as a grizzly I and powerful as a million runaway horses! Them three herders weren't half a mile away, and all mounted, hut j yet only one reached the cabin. The I other two were stuck as dumb and ] numb as if hit with cannon balls, and they weren't out of their saddles a minit i before they were covered with six in- | dies of snow." " Must have been cold!" "Cold! Mebbe it wasn't! I didn't j have no thermometer to look at. but I didn't want one. Our jug of whisky froze solid and split tlx* jug in ten minit*. | Frost settled on ttie taller candle within an inch of the light. Every hoard in the ranche cracked and popped with i cold. We hod a big atove, but the fuel j was mostly under a shed fifty feet away. I thought to go after.a load, but as f opened the door I fell back as if ten j thousand needles had been tired into my face. That one breath of the blizzard froze my nose and ear." " And you were out of fuel?" " Yes. in half an hour I burned up j stools, benches, tables and all else that ; would burn, but after midnight the fire ' went out. Then I lost my toes—frost- ! bitten even when I was dancing over the floor. Ours was a tight cabin, and yet there was a foot of snow on the floor before daylight. The awful wind drove j it through the crevice Did you ever j hear the pie which goes with a bliz zard ? Well, you'll face a cannon sooner j tlian hear it a second time. The wind screamed louder than a locomotive | whistle. It raged and raved like a giant in chains, and it struck down every livin' thing it came to. Ail at ; once it would stop hlowin' for half a minit, nnd the stillness would be awful. Then I'd hear a sighin' and groanin' afar off, as if poor lost children were cryln' for home. Then the groanin' would change to a screech—the screech to • j wild shriek, and the gale would whirl j 'round and 'round the cabin as if bound to lift it from the earth in its teeth, j That gale knocked over trees a hundred years old, and rolled rocks weighing a thousand tons down upon the level!" "And about your stock f" " When that blizzard struck my ranch 1 had 500 cattle 2.000 sheep and about 200 bosses, all alive nnd kielsin'. It died away about daylight, and after an hour's work we got out o' the cabin and through the snow. Far as the eye' could reach all wss a dead level, (•niches, ravines and dips had been . filled up with from five to thirty feet of! snow. Every horse, sheep nnd steer had 1 gone down in his tracks to die and be coffined in white, and we two. frost bitten and froaen, were fifty miles from nny white mnn Dual sneer at a bliz zard! You'd better meet a thousand she timers!"— Pflmil AVv Press. . A Whistling tlnoy. A new buoy has been invented by M. I'errin. of Havre, which includes the novel feature of announcing its posit ion by means of whistling, and hence is known as the automatic whistling buoy. In shape the body is similar to the ordinary conical buoy, except that about three feet from the extreme top it is made flat. On this are fastened two small tubes, through which the air goes into the interior, and between these a tri niendou* whistle is fixed. Around the whole is a hand-rail, and two s**ps are placed, so that the summit may Ije reached from a boat for painting, re pairing and other purpose* Resides, there is a manhole. From the bottom of the cone a large iron tnbe, about thirty feet long and between six fret and seven feet in circumference. Is at tached. When in use, more especially in a heavy sea, the wind, on going down the small tubea in the top, is imme diately forced oat through the whistle, by the perpetual bobbing up and down of the buoy. The noise, it is expected, will be so great that it will be heard for miles off from the place where it Is moored, thus giving ample notice of the dangers that surround it. The first iron works in America were erected in If 19, at a place called Falling Creek, a branch of the James rivsr, not tar from Jamestown, the first settlement of the Virginia colony, thirty-two miles I from the sen. FARM, IAIMH AID HOUSIROLB. r*rm on^rHfil*^ 68 hr ° Qr ' OUf to tbe ye§ No other animals should be tolerated in a yard with ep, f or it will only re sult in vexation and loss. A bag of hops us large as the two lists, placed in a bin or store of grain. will, it is said, kill or eradicate all grub* and in sects from the grain. The dead ones ram be removed by fanning. Shelter is one of the first objects in wintering sheep successfully. Farmers often condemn barns and sheds as un healthy places for sheep, when it is a want ol ventilation that docs the injury. Milk paint for fences or bams is made by mixing water lime with skim milk to a proper consistency to apply with a brush. It will adhere welfto wood whether smootli or rough, to brick, mor tar or stone, where oil has been previ ously used. A farmer in Bangor, Me., observing that wheat was being picked from the seeds of standing grain, and seeing at the same time flocks of yellow birds flying about, shot some ol them. On opening their crops he found only three grains of wheat, and by actual count 350 weevils, Particular care should be used in cleaning milk pans and cans. Many cases are on record of diseases in fami lies from using milk infected with nox ious germs from foul milk cans. Milk men upon again receiving the cans should cleanse them with boiling bo water. Cattle like a change of diet occasion ally, as men do. Keeping cattle on hay or straw alone is a little like living on bread or potatoes, or meat alone, with nothing except that one dish. Therefore feed some roofs, as well as hay and meal or shorts. If you haven't the roots on hand, be sure and have a supply next winter. Cabbage lias a superior value for feed ing purposes. English cattle feeders as sert that their beasts progress faster on cabbage, mixed with plenty of line-cut wheat straw and cotton cake, than with any other vegetable. Cabbage contains one part flesh-forming substance tothree of beat producing, whiie in potatoes, the flesh-forming is only one to twenty. Cabbage is also rich in mineral matter Hew to Sweep a Beaas. To sweep and dust a room properly is an art, and like all fine arts has a right method. Well done it renovates tbe entire room, and the occupant takes possession feeling that "ali things have become new." It is not merely a per formance to be done by the hands, but a work into which taste and judgment, ia other words, brains, must enter. Are these closets opening into the room to be swept? Arrange the shelves, draw ers or clothing preparatory to sweeping day; then let this be the first to be swept. Cover the bed with soiled sheets, as also all heavy articles that cannot be removed; first, however, having carefully dusted and brushed tlicm. Remove all the furniture that can easily be set in hall or adjoining room, having first dusted it; then, tak ing a step-ladder, begin to sweep or brush or wipe the cornice and picture cords and pictures. Draw the shades to the top of the window or, if there are inside blinds, dust them carefully. Open the windows. All the dust left in the room now is in the carpet or air, and the current of the windows will soon settle it. Now begin to sweep, not toward a door or corner, but from the outer edges of the room toward tbe center, where tbe dust will be taken up with a small brush and dust-pan. Go over the room oqce more—this time with a dampened broom; that removes the last bit of dust and gives the carpet a new, bright appearance. Replace the articles of furniture as soon as the air is entirely free from dust, uncover the rest and the room is new and clean. All this seems an easy thing to do, but there is not one in a hundred willfollow out the details. Some will sweep the dust into the hall, or from one room to another, and th< n wonder why their house is *• soon dusty again. Others forget cor nice and pictures, and thus leave a seed of future annoyance; while a third class will do all but using the damp broom, which is as the finishing touches to a picture Chicago AUiarux. llouitkoM Hints. Soft soap should be kept in a dry place in a cellar, and shou a not be use ! for three months after it is made. A French chemist asserts that if tea be ground like coffee immediately be fore hot water is poured upon it. it will yield nearly double the amount of its exhilarating qualities. Table cloths should be but slightly starched, and folded lengthwise, alter ironing quite dry on the right side, first down the middle, then putting each sel vage edge to the center, pressing them down on the right side; next placing the two double parts, thus folaed, to gether, and then doubling the other way in the same.manner. To preserve the aroma ol oofloe. add the white of one egg to every pound ol eoflcc just before it is quite oold. Stir it thoroughly into the mass, *o tha every berry will be wet with it. To clean lamp chimneys, hold] them over the none of the teakettle when the kettle is boiling furiously. One or two repetitions of this process will maks thorn beautifully clear. Of course tbey must lie wiped upon a clean cloth. To wash a black and white cotton dress, have a tub partly filled with hot water, add one large tables poonful of powdered borax; wet only one part of the dress at a time, the basque first; use very little soap, and only on the most soiled places; wash quickly, rinse in warm water containing a tablespoonful of table salt; starch on the wrong side, wring very dry. shake out weih hang where it will dry quickly; next wash the overakirt and then the under-ekirt in the same way. HmlUi mala. GlyceriheU< a ouuiw rub on chafes tiurns or chapped hands or sun scalds. /xi*m oj l.iff says simple remedies are frequency the lor Ixwdarhe. A cup of sour mi'k spread upon a thin ch tli and applied to the head will many times give relief. Or, a mild mustard plaster on the hack of the neck will th- pain, or drinking a cup of hot water. o*n .t r sweet oil mixed with warm milk and water, and drank plentiful un til It acta as an emetic, is an antidote to poisons in general Temporary relief from a painful sore corn nure, say* an exchange, readily be obtained by applying strong carbolic Take the *rfc out of a small bot i le of carbolic and apply it (the cork) to ihe corn. Relief will come at once, and xou will be able to walk with compara tive comfort till you can find time to remove the corn with a knile.