"/lb kerning, imd the Days are Loag." 1 Li < sSresw el other days; In golden laxnry shone the wheat, In tangled grasnness shook tho maise; The squirrels ran with nimble feet, And in and out among the trees The hang bird darted like a flame, The catbird piped licr melodies, Purloining every warbler's fame; And then I heard the triumphal song, " 'Tis morning, and the days are long." They scattered roses, strewed the palms, And shouted down the pleasant vales; I beard a thousand happy psalms, And, langhing, wove a thousand tales Ot mimic revelry and joy j They mocking well the worldly great— Kaek tanlkscd girl and barefoot boy, Dear simpers ot my early late— And then again the roolinn song, " Tis morning, and the days are long." Far winding past the storied town, The river ran through bosky groves; Its floods we sailed our vessels down FuM-treighted with a myriad loves , Our souls went floating to the gales, With scarlet leaves and shreds ol bark; We named them cutters, schoonuis, sails, And watched them lade in shadowy dark; Ihen down the water flowed the song, ' 'Tts morning, anil the days aro long.'' Oh, morning, when the days aro long, And yonth and innocence are wed, And every grovo is lull ol song, And every pathway void ot dread ' Who rightly sings its rightlul proiso, Or rightly dreams it o'er again, When cold and narrow aro the days, And shrunken all the hopes <>( men, He shall reawaken with his song, II 'Tis morning, and the days arc long. " There palpitations, wild and sweet, j The ttanlls ot many an old delight, And dimpled hands that lightly meet. And hearts that tremble to unite, ArisApon the early morn, Pass down the lovely vulee and stand, A picture ola memory born, The mirage of a lotus land— A land where once we trolled tho song, Th morning, and the days are long." —B. 8. Parktr. A Controversy With Cupid. "Little wretch! I bate him. We have never had a moment's peace since he took possession of the house," de clared Polly Patten, with a stamp of her foot. The "he" referred to was not. as might be supposed, a tramp or a sheriff's officer, not even a poor relation, or an Irish butler, or a heathen Chineo. Not at all. The object of Polly's wrath was a personage lifted up, as it would seem, by virtue of his position, above human criticism as above human rules, a myth, an unknown entity—no other, in fact, •than ttte little god cupid himself. He and nis machinations had of late wrought changes—woful ones, Polly thought—in the constitution ol the Pat ten family; and to her imagination represented ali manner of discomfort and discomfiture, the alteration of plans, the blight of hop^s —innovations and cross-purposes without end. She felt toward him a good, honest, hearty hos tility, as one may toward an opponent of flesh and blood, as she sat in tier bed room, inveighing upon the subject to her special friend Susan Gilmore. who was perched beside her on the broad window-sill. "Ob, it's all very well to laugh," she went on; " but just wait till you try it yourself. All last year was given up, vou know, to marrying Helen. Her trousseau, and her presents, and her fur nishing—nothing else was thought of or spoken of for twelve long months. The house was choked with Tier things. We all worked our fingers to the bone. Nobody could turn round without find ing a woman and a sewing machine at bis back. We never even pretended to hear ourselves speak. Well, just as it was all over, and Helen comfortably off our minds, Lizzie must needs set up a lover and a long engagement John Shaw, too, of ail persons! Now I may bt dull, hut in the name of common sense why John Sbaw, of all men in the world ?" " Lizzie knows, I presume." "Well, perhaps she does; still, it is provoking. Every morning of his life John Shaw looks in for half an hour on down town. He and Lizzie absorb the parlor, of course. is all right, no doubt; but. as it happens, that particular half hour is precisely the one which I used always to take to tidy up the flowers, water and trim, fill the vases, and make the room nice for the day, and the want of it puts me out dreadfully. I sit and twirl ray thumbs, and scold to mother, and she never will agree with me. • Lovers are privileged,' she says." "Of oonrso they are. Don't be a spoil-sport, Polly. It's their turn now. Tours will come." "Never! But there's more behind. What do you say to Eunice's indulging in an engagement too?" "Not really?" "Very really indeed. John Norman ia the happy man this time. Two Johns, you observe, by wxy of making the confusion greater. So they sit in the dining-room every evening, while Lizzie and her John occupy the parlor." " And where do the rest of ypu sit?" "Echo answers. We sit wherever we may. Mother takes her mending basket upstairs, and has a student lamp on the round table in the upper entry. Papa shuts himself up in tuat dreadful little close ' den' of his, or the office. I observe that he business there of evenings much oftener than formerly—because there is no comfortable plaoe for him at home, no doubt. Jim makes a point of being out. As for Amy and me, we sit on the back stairs, or in the but ler's pantry, or any other odd corner which nobody eho wants." Polly laughed, but there were tears in her brown eyes, and a very mutinous look about the pretty mouth, which John Norman, while in process of " sampling the family," to borrow Polly's own phrase, had once likened to beautiful Evelyn Hope's, of the true "geranium ted. "As If all this wasn't enough,"she went on presently with a half giggle. half sob. " here is a letter come to-day from Fanny Allen —our cousin, you know—and she is engaged too; and she proposes to make us a visit, and her young man means to ' drop along, forsooth, while she is here. Now whore are they to sitP I can't imagine, unless they take the air-chamber of the ftir i nace. The front steps are quite too cold at this time of the year. Or I might have the trunk-room cleared out for them; I hadn't thought of that before." "Polly, you are ridiculous. Your oousin will manage that for herself — see if sho doesn't. They will take walks, or something." "Oh, if tliey only would! If the whole lot of them would ' take walks.' and keep on walking, and never walk this way, how comfortable it would be! Sue, you are abominably tolerant about such matters. That miserable cupid! I wyli I could hold his wings in tho candle and burn them off. lie never flies in but to do mischief Bomewhero. How peaceful and happy we all were together before this sort of thing be gan!" "Tako care: he will hear you, and he is a revengeful creature. I believe him to be the original 'little pitcher with long ears,"' laughed Susan. "I don't care if he does hear me," asserted Polly, defiantly. Has cupid ears? Certain it is that matters grew iworro rather than better for Polly from that day forward. Fanny Allen came, and in duo time her lover, according to programme, and with the latter a cousin, Mr- Olhnicl Oliphant, a suc cessful merchant, just home from China for a brief visit. Ilis return was 'not purely for business purposes. Mr. Oil pliant was on the look-out for a wife; and with the prompt decision of a mer cantile man, he elected Polly Patten for that position on a two days' acquaint ance. A flrm believer in the faith that " faint heart never won fair lady," and " nothing venture, nothing have," he offered himself at the end of the week, and quite undiscouraged by Polly's dis mayed "no," sat resolutely down and traced his parallels, resolved to gain by siege what lie had failed to win at nroup by assault. This complication set the seal to Polly's discontents. "For just imagine what a state of things it makes, she tald her confi dante Sue. " There they sit —the three sets of ninnies—one in the parlor, one in the dining-room, ono in the'den,' from which poor papa is turned out bag nnd baggage; and there is that abomin able Of O! (never did man have such suitable initials) looming like doom or a thunder-storm all day long, deter mined to get me by myself, and ' culti vate my acquaintance.' How can he make me care for him, lie says, if lie j never has the chance to see me alone? It is the most embarrassing, abominable condition of affairs. I seriously medi tate running away to teacli school—or something. Home is growing unbeara ble." " Why do you dislike Mr. Oliphant so much? He seems to mo vtry pleasant—" " Suo! When he teases the life out of me! I declare she is blushing. Are you turning iraitor too?" " Not in the least —I don't know what you mean, that is. What I wanted to tell you was that we're going to have a ymi ng man of our own also. My brother .Jack is coming home next week." " How coherent! I declare. Sue, you make me suspect something. Jack? He's the one who's been so lonjj; in Ger many, Well, I hope you'll enjoy him; but pray keep him to yourselves. I've had enough of young ipen, Johns espe cially. I never want to see one again as long as I live —I think. Gracious! there's that tiresome O. O- strolling up and down in hopes of catching me as I come out. I declare it is unendurable. Good-by, Sue. I'm going home by the back door, if you don't mind." And catching up her bonnet, Polly vanished, while Susan Gilmore, with a guilty look in her eyes, andapnirof red, red cheeks, tied hers on, and issuing sedately from the front door, encountered Mr. Oli phant, and presently, under his escort, walked up the street. " After all." she thought to herself, " if Polly can't like him, and doesn't want him, why not?" Why not, indeed? It was unanswer able- Another fortnight passed. Cousin Fanny and her Eanr* went away, but O. O. still lingered. Polly gave an excla mation of despairing disgust when she learned his intention; but, after all, he aid not prove the nuisance sho had feared. He bad other friends in town by this time, other engagements, and did not haunt the Pattens' house every day, and ali day long, as at first. Polly heard of him often at the Gi(mores'. She saw little of Sue in those days; Hue was oc cupied with her brother, just returned after his long absence. Mindful of Polly's interdict, perhaps, she was in no haste to present him to her friend—a fact which Polly was disposed to resent, when, a full week after his arrival, she was at last brought fare to faco with him. She liked John Gilmore at once. He WAS quite different from the other Johns, and not at ail formidable, Polly thought— tall and spare, quiet in speech and shy in manner, wearing spectacles, too, but al together vory "nice." What a myriad of diverse meanings may be included in that word, beloved of girls, " nicel" In John Gilraore's case it mennt that he did not talk nonsense to Polly, and yet that he seemed to like tho nonsense she talked; at least he brightened under it always, and it made him laugh. He never bored her with sense and long ex planations, but she was never in his company without finding herself after ward thinking about things which he liad said, and looking up little points of information suggested by bis talk. He was so kind-hearted, too—always so kindl He didn't sneer at her diatribes against love and lovers; and he seemed to understand and be a little sorry for her. left out in the cold, solitary in the midst of the elsterly cirole onoe so one in interest and so closely united. Here was a genuine friend at but, the reflected —a friend of her own; and comforted thereby for her losses, she grew a little more tolerant of the happiness of other people; and even when, a little later, a great wave of surprises and sudden changes broke over the home and ail in it, still the tolerance continued. For, first, John Norman had a part nership offered him in Houth America, and he and Eunice had to be got ready at two months' notice to sail to their new home. And while Polly was toil ing over the hurried preparation which was all that Ume mado possible, Susan Gilmore, her one special friend, called one morning, and with a burst of emo tion quite unwonted in the staid Sue, confided the lactr that she was engaged —engaged to O. 0.. whs wns the loveli est. dearest man that ever was, though Polly had been so nnkind as not to find it out—a fact sbe (Sue) was very glad i of now—and they were to be married hi six week*, and sail for China directly afterward. And would her dearest Polly forgive her, and promise to lore O. O. all she possibly could, just lor her sakeP "You too?" was all Polly's reply. But she put her arms round Sue's neck with a tear and a sob, and all was smooth between them. Sue, who had dreaded the interview, was aranzed at Polly's forbearance. A chancre had evi dently come over the spirit of her dream. Trials, wo arc told, nave a chastening effect on the character. Was it her trials which were thus blessed to Polly P After that all was bewilderment and confusion dire till the two weddings were over. Eunice nnd John departed the dny after theirs, and a lull fell upon the weary household. Mrs. Patten went upstairs to lie down. Polly, who Bighed for fresh air, departed for a walk with John Gilmore, who missed his sister so much, poor fellow! and Amy. the cadettc of the family, pre pared to celebrate their newly recovered freedom by adorning and making beau tiful the dining-room, now rescued from courting purposes, and restored again to the common use of the house hold. A busy afternoon indeed did little! Amy make for herself, but it was a merry one, and she sang as she worked. Every vmso In the room she filled with violets and wild flowers, or" apple blooms from the just blossomed orchard. The curtains were pulled to exactly the ideal angle, the chairs regrouped, all the horrid look taken away, Amy thought, :is ( if the room were mesnt only for two, j and for no one else. It wjis dusk when she finished, and curling up in the sofa | corner, sh'' awaited will: im patience Polly's return—Polly, who had hated the love-making as much as she Ind, j and would be so pleased. Polly was the one person in the house of whose sym pathy Amy tell quite sure. She was long in coming, hut she came at last. Amy heard her step on the porch, and witli it another step, louder, firmer. Surely that tiresome John Gil more was not coming in to spoil every thing this first pleasant night. No: he had come to see papa. Amy heard him j tap at the door of the "den," while ! Polly ran upstuirs. lie emerged as she i came down; there was a long confab bing in the entry; but at last the front i door shut with a delightful emphasis, 1 and Amy jumped up from the sofa to en joy the effect of her surprise. "Come in—oh, do come in!" shecried. " I want you to see if the dear old room doesn't look lovely. I've been all the! afternoon doing it, so that it might i>c i nice for our first evening. Isn't it pleas- j ant to have a room to sit in ajrainP Aren't | you glad that the wedding is over, and ' all theftiresome love-making, and we can have cozy little times at home like other people? Why, Polly, how queer you look! Don't you like it? What makes you do so?"—for Polly, half tearfully, was kissing and fondling the child. " Oh, I do. Amy darling. I do like it very much."pleaded poor Polly, "but — only—my pet, I'm afraid you'll he very disappointed; hut John Gilmore is com ing here this evening to see me. and I'm afraid I shall have to ask you to let us have this room." "John Gilmore! Good gracious! Polly Patten"—with almost a shriek— "you're not engaged to him? You don't mean that?" " Y-e-e-s," faltered Poliy. "Oh. Amy dear, don't look so distressed!" " I will look distressed; 1 have a right to," cried Amy, with a burst of sobs. "After ail you said! A man named John, too—three .Johns in the family! Oh! Polly! And yon who de clared you hated men named John! Well, alter this, I never, neveT will be lieve in anybody again." " Amy. dear, I talked a great deal of nonsense. You must forget it. I didn't know." But Polly urged in vain. Amy pushed her hand aside, and rushed awsy to console. herself as best she might with a hard fit of erying, and Polly, convicted, repentant, hut by no means unhappy, was left behind. So ended Polly's controversy with cupid. She was vanquished, as Pollys are opt to be in such warfare; but there are defeats which count for more than victories, as we all know, and this may have been one. I regret to say that she never formally apologized for her incon sistency, and she took possession of the dining-room every evening without the l ast apparent perception of the selfish ness of the proceeding. Amy w s greatly scandalised, but eui bonol To each his turn. Little Amy's will come some day, and then she too will forgive and understand.— Harper's Bator. Death la the Coal Mines. The report jf inspectors of anthracite coal mines in the Schuylkill region re lating to casualities in the mines is a ghastly list. In IK7B the killed num bered eighty-seven and the injured 247. In 1879 there were 113 killed and 337 injured. Of the fatal accidents, twelve deaths were caused by explosions of fire-damp, seven by blasts and other explosions of powder, fifty-five by fall ing coal, slate and rock; twenty-two by cars and mine wagons, and seventeen in miscellaneous ways. The ways in which some men meot death are strange Indeed. Patrick Casey was caught by a rush of coal in a shute and carried with it to a point where a plank caught him by the neck and choked him to death. Griffith Watkins, a boy, left his place in the breaker and went to get a drink of water. As be was passing the bbiler-bouse a runaway car crushed through the side, struck him and killed him. Charles Dreshman, a miner, aged twenty-two, who was engaged shovel ing at the mouth of a shute, was found lying dead, with one leg down the shute and a small quantity of loose earth lying on him. No indications of what killed him could be found, but it waa sup posed that his foot slipped Into the hofe, and he imagining that he was about to fall to the bottom, was literally fright ened to death. Living la <}aiet. A rule for living happily with others is to avoid having stock suhjoots of dis putation, It mostly happens when peo ple live much together, that they come to have certain set topics, around which, rom frequent dispute, there is such a growth of angry words, mortified vanity and the like that the original subject of difference become a standing subject for quarrel, and there is a tendency in al) minor disputes to drift down to it. Again, if people wish to live well ti> f tether, they must not hold too much to ogio, and suppose thai everything is to te settled by sufficient reason. Dr. Johnson saw this clearly with regard to married people when be said: " Wretched would be the pair above all means of wretchedness who should be doomed to adjust by reason, every morn ing. all the minute details of the domee tie day." WOHDKBFVL LEADVILLP. further I'mli of latwMt About tb* Fa moiit Milter City o Colorado. Colonel Elisha W. Davis, a member of the Pennsylvania legislature, said to a Philadelphia Time* reporter, on re turning from a trip to Leadville, Col.: " Two years ago a little tumble-down shanty or two stood on the site now oc cupied by Leadville, a city containing to-day nearly forty thousand inhabi tants, and which I do not hesitate to predict will have one hundred thousand Mficoplo before the end of another year." " Talk about the wonderful rise of San Francisco and other places," con tinued Colonel Davis, " but think of Leadville in comparison with any of them and you'll acknowledge that it must get the palm. With its fine banking concerns occupying elegant buildings and doing a very large busi ness: four daily newspapers—three Re publican and one Democratic —not ex celled in enterprise and general features by any other papers outside of Phila delphia and New York; several flour ishing weekly journals; three first-class theaters: numerous fine churches, in cluding Episcopal, Methodist and Uo ! man Catholic; whole streets full of busi ness structures that are the architec tural equals of those in many of the large Eastern cities, and a fine post office building now being erected of brick and stone—it is already a city of no little importance. Except in the outskirts, it is not scattered like many other mining towns, hut is compnctly l built up—more so than Harrishurg, of which, I think, it is the'equal, if it does ! not go beyond that city in population. I Nearly all the temporary wooden-truc | lures have already given place to sub- I stontial buildings 01 stone and brick, i Any quantity of good bricks can be j made there, suitable clay being found lin the immediate vicinity. Leadville looks just as much like an Eastern city as does H&rrisburg. "The city is 14,000 feet aliove the level of the sea, nnd all around it in the dis tance loom up snow-capped peaks. During my stay of three weeks there, however, I have perceived little, if any, ; difference between its climate and that iof Philadelphia. Nevertheless, the soil | thereabouts is not suitable for farming ; to any considerable extent, and the pi r , manency of the settlement mast de- end ' upon the supply of the surrounding sil ver mines, which for many generations will be inexhaustible. Thelocation of the city on a gradually sloping mountain is such that during a thunder-storm the people can see the iiphtning flash below them. Snow remains all the year on the surrounding peaks. It is amusing ! to see how strangers in the city are de i ocived by the apparent distance of these ' mountains. I started one morning to I take a stroll to the base of one of them, ! supposing that it was about two or not more than three miles off. Judge of my astonishment upon being tola that it was not less than twenty miles away. The journey was postponed. Another day, as a waggish friend and myself were out walking, we came upon a little spring, run or brook, less than a ysrd wide. My friend slopptd at its edge, and. after appearing to measure it with his eye, proceeded to divest himself of his garments, j "What are you doing?" I asked, in surprise. "Going to swim across, of course," was the reply. " I've been fooled enough I on Leadville distances: hut alter this I'll try to make due allowance in ray calculations." "Take it all in ail, the cost of living ; in Leadville is no more than in Phila delphia, while the remuneration for la bor is from two to three times as large as it Is here. Beef is cheaper and better there than here. The only supplies that command a higher price there are vege tables. Day laborers ram from 93 to $4 a day; carpenters, $4; miners, from 44 to $4.50, and other workmen in like pro portion. Any plucky man going tnere with a little capital ought to get rich if he minds his business. The entire sur rounding country abounds in mineral wealth, chiefly silver and iron. The fact that lead fs found in large quantities, combined with these, ores. gave the city its name. Sliver, however, is the most abundant, and, of course, the chief treasure sought for. Anthracite coal was recently struck, and the supply promises to be very great. Every trade and profession flourishes. Undoubted ly leadville will be the center of the sil ver mining business for the next twenty five years It is now by tar the largest town In the State. "The popu 'at lon is not so heterogenous as Philadeiphians might suppose. The majority of the people are of American 1 birth, recruited largely from New York State and the oil regions of Pennsyl vania. New Yorkers are getting hold of all the big mines. Several mines, in eluding the Robert E. Lcc, Pittsburg and Crysollte, have been paving at the rate of $lOO,OOO a year lor the last six months. If Leadvlllehae done somuch with no railroad nearer tlian thirty-two miles, what may be expected when the road now running from Denver to Rnenn Vista will be finished as far as leadville? Indeed, it is probable that the Denver and Rio Grande road also will soon be extended to Leadville, opening up traf fic along the Arkansas river. At pres ent passenger travel and battling must he done by means of singes and wagons between Leadville and Buena Vista. There has been no robbing done, how ever, since Judge Lynch hanged two fellows last fall. Indians are not feared as there are none nearer than the Gunni son country, thirty miles distant, and they are fast disappearing from there." The Unman Bar. Imagine two harps in a room, with the same number of strings, and each string perfectly attuned to a correspond ing one in the other. Touch a string in one, and the corresponding string in the other will give out the same sound. Try another string and its correspond ing tone will be sounded. So with all the strings. So with any combination of string*. It would not matter how you played the one harp the other would respond, as regards pitch and quality, would be almost perfect. Now substitute for one harp the human ear, and the conditions would, according to theory, be the same, except that the re sponsive mechanism of the ear is much smaller thßn that of the responsive harp. In the car there are minute cords, rods, or someihlag in such a state of tension as to be tuned to tones of vari ous pitch, sound a tone, its correspond ing rod or cord in the ear will respond, perhaps feebly, but still with energy enough to excite the nerve-filament con nected with it; Utc result Is a nervous current of the brain, and a sensation of a tone of a particular pitch. fToed Words. TIMELY Torm. Mr. Ernest Hart, the eminent sani tary writer, would like to ace the tea pot banished from the breakfast table. For young people, dyspeptics, and la borers, he thinks nothing eaual to hom iny porridge. Bread ana butter and oocoa is a vpry good breakfast for work ing people, he thinks. Tea is a nerve stimulant, and on that account, he says, out of place as a breakfast hcverago. Comparatively few persons know how the White House at Washington got its name. It was given to it because of its color. The building is con structed of freestone, and nftcr the British burned the interior in 1814 the walls were so blackened that when it' was rebuilt it was found necessary to paint them. Ever since at Intervals of a few years the wholesffructure receives a fresh coat of white paint. The cum brous title of executive mansion was very naturally dropped for the short and literally descriptive name of White House, and now only figures in official documents and correspondence. The unreasonableness of mankind is pretty truthfully illustrated in the fol lowing item from the Builder and Woodworker : When a man's house is building, he never tiiinks the carpenter puts in one-third enough nails, and frequently, and with biting sarcasm, asks him it he doesn't think the house would stand if he ju*t simply leaned it up against itself and saved all his nails? Then, a few years afterward, when fie tears down his summer kitchen to buila a new one, he growls and scolds, and sarcastically wonders why that fellow didn't make the house entirely of nails, and just put in enough lumber to hold the nails together. The sewing machine branch of the machinery trade is becoming of great importance in the United States, very nearly 4,000 skilled artisans being cm ployed in the sewing machine factories, fhe following figures show that an ex tensive export trade is being carried on under this head: Germany, $539,000; England. $405,000; Mexico. $153,000; Australia. $110,000; Colombia, $93,000; Cuba, $08,000; France, $11,000; Vene zuela. $30,000; Brazil, $2l 000; Argen tine, $18,000; Scotland, $16,000; Pern, $15,000; Central America, $12,000; Belgium, $10,000; Nova Scotia, $11,000; Hawaii, $8,060; Porto Rico, $9,000; ! Quebec, $7,000; other countries, $29,- ! 000; total, $1,661,000. A Philadelphia firm some years sine* | inadvertently failed to return the value iof certain paper boxes in which their I imported goods were enclosed. The | value of the whole invoice was $63,- ! 322 66, on which duties were paid to the amount of $15,985.67. The luty on the boxes would have been $326 02. * A gov ernment detective alleged that under the act of 1867 the whole invoice of goods could be forfeited, but he magnani mously offered to "settle." The im porters went into court, and the ease, after eight years, was finished the other day, the jury bringing in a special ver dict entirely exonerating the importers from any fraudulent intent and limiting the damages to the amount of duty on the boxes and in interest thereon. When General Grant had completed I his trip through Florida, he gave the I New York TVtMcne's correspondent his conclusions as to the future of that State. " I think," he said. " that Florida has a bright prospect. Her productions will be a monopoly; and besides her oranges, pinccpples and semi-tropical fruits and vegetables, she will in time produce the sugar for the consumption of the entire country. Then site grows the finest long-*tapie cotton, the best of tobacco j for cigars, and her timber is ol Immense | value. Then, when the swamp land is cleared of the timber, there will remain the choicest kind of a rice country. The soil, while apparently harrcn, is suited to the climate, and there are extensive beds of material for fertilization that will not only supply the needs of the I land, but will be an article of export.' The work of the Bible revision com mittee, so far as concerns the New Testa ment is now substantially ended, and the revised text will probably be form ally and finally published during the coming summer. No more apt occasion could he selected, for the present year is the fifth centenary of the publication of Wycliffc's translation of the Bible, printed in 1380. The work has been go ing on simultaneously iu England and this con .try. The appearance of the new version will be one of the summer's sensations. A change that will strike the ordinary reader is the arrangement by paragraphs, according to sense, in stead of the chapter and verse plan of the King James translators. Work on the Old Testament will hardly be com pleted tiefore 1883. " See ine bny his soul for two cents,' was the remark of aw irkman at Spring field. Mass., ah..lit a man for whom he had worked, who was esteemed a gener ous public giver, and hart eonae into the shop to get seme work done. The man laid a two-cent piece on the counter and turned away. The visitor soon saw the coin, and, after hastily looking about the room to see that no one was looking, picked up the money and put it in his pocket. When he came to pay for bis repairs he was charged twenty-seven cents. As h* had generally paid but twenty-five cents for the same work he inquired what the extra two cents were for, and, after some urging, be was gently informed that it was to pay for the two cent* he hart picked Dp. He seemed sli at once to havs important business at home. An English impostor of the gentler sex lias been unmasked at Chelmsford, alter being petted and fed by the benevo lent since 1854. under the impression that she was so ill of paralysis that she could not leave her bed without help. During all this time she had subsisted on the charity of the townsfolk, and fre quently the prayers of the church have been requested in her behalf. But all This time, too, when no one was looking on, or likely to enter her dwelling, the "paralytic" woman could deftly leap out of bed, dress herself swiftly, cook a substantial meal and eat it with a relish. At last, after a quart* rof a century o,' deception, she has been found out. Some prying neighbors invaded ber privacy at time* when they were not expected, and fojnd her not only out of bed and dressed but making a hearty meal. An Ohio paper of a statistical bent publishes the following item descriptive of an incident which might wall have taken ows even If It did not: There was so much spitting of tobacoo Juice at bis lecture in Hamilton, Ohio, tbatPro feasor Proctor took notice of it and mad* a mathematical calculation in regard v, It. " I jet us suppose," continue p ro . feasor Proctor, " that the moisture ex. truded in this unpleasing war in Ohie in the course of a year would, if uni formly distributed, correspond to th* addition of a film of moisture no thicker than a postal card over the entire State Then if tiiereare hut 2tK) postal cards ta the inch there would in 1,900.000 years be formed a sea about 110 yards dee* over the entire State. And as in the course of my lecture I had occasion ta speak of the earth's future during 2,500 . 000,000 years, it would seem to follow (dreadful thought!) that the sea would rise over Ohio and neighboring Stat/* of equal sallvarv potentiality to a height of nearly 200 miles! Noah's flood ww nothing to this." Some of the recent executions in Rus sia recall a very striking incident of tb reign of Peter the Great. The nihilism of that period was represented by th revolt of the Strelitz (Archer) guard which Peter quelled and punished with merciless severity, beheading a man for every turret on the Kromlin wall, which overlooked the place of execution. Th> headsman being fatigued with th butchery, Petei himself took his plaoi and struck off twelve heads with hit own hand. The thirteenth was a hand some young soldier nicknamed r > r , (eagle), who, pushing aside hi- j,r>do censor s h- adh-ss corpse, cried, with laugh. "Come, brother, it's my tun for an audience with the czar now Peter, struck with this reckless ga.iat try, pardoned and promoted hirr Some French writers have endeavor" to throw a coloring of roman* c ovrj the incident by making its hero tlv czar'a unacknowledged son, but the n sportive ages of the two men render this all but impossible. The Study of Saturn! History. Beasts, birds, reptiles and fishes, eon sidered as forming one group, con stitute but a comparatively smaii see. tion of the world of animals. Creature* allied to the snail and oyster, but a.. v different kinds, exist in multitude which are known to us. but doubt leu also in multitudes a* yet unknown Worms form a division so varied in ns ture, and so prodigious in number that the correct appreciation ol one to an other and to other animals—their ci.vssj fioaiion— forms one of the most diffif u : of zoological problems. Cora'.-forminjr animals and cognate forms, togctb's with star-fishes and their allies, com before us as two other hosts, and y, there are other hosts of other kinds to which it is needless here to refer. Yet the whole maas of animals to which reference has yet l>een made is exceeded (as to the number of distinct kinds) by the single group of insects. Every land-plant has more than one species ol insects which lives upon it. and the same may be probably said of at lean every higher animal—and this in addi tion to other parasites which are not is sects. The lowest animals have not j* her n referred to. but the numlrercf their undiscovered kinds which may exist it the ocean, and in the tropical lake? and j rivers, may be suspected from the rari i ety we may obtain ucrc. in a single drey of stagnant water. Recent researches, i moreover, liave shown us that the depths of the ooean, instead of (a i wc supposed) lifeless as well as still and dark abysses, really teem with animal life. From those profound recesses at* creatures have been dragged to light forms which were supposed to hare long passed away and become extinct. And this leads to yet another consider : ation. It is impossible to have a rDu plets knowledge of existing animaj i without rveing acquainted wiin so matt of the nature of their now extinrt pre decessors as can be gathered from tt relic* they have left behind. Sot i relics may be bones or shells imbeddee in muady deposits of ages bygone, and which deposits have now turned to roci or may consist of but the impress of their bodies, or only a few footprints Rich as is the animal population of the world to-day, it represents only s rear; i naut of the life that has been; andsmxl as our knowledge may ever be of that j ancient life (from imperfections in ib rocky record), yet every year that knowledge is increased. What increa# may we not also expect hereafter, whm all remote and tropical regions lia bsen explored with the care and pati ence already bestowed on the deposits which lie in the vicinity of civiliwi populations. . A Floating Island. Says the Johnsville (Oregon) \tiltw- Among the many natural curioitire of this county it f* not generally knows that there is a "floating island." I? in the "Siskiyou*." lying iike a pearl is the great mountain chain, is Squaw lake, a beautiful short of water, now utilised by a mining company as a reservoir For many years the lake had been * vorite and delightful resort lor fishing parties, and contained, nearly in us center, an island comprising about on? acre of ground covered with luxuriant grass and a growth of willow and alder. It was never dreamed that tlie pre tty little island was not terra firmn. but wlien the bulkhead across tlie outlet o! the lake dammed up its waters the island rose slowly until it had been eieTatcd fully sixteen teet above its original love; It would be a question for Uk> natnralik rather than the geologist to dotermin? the age of this floating island, a? it i? evidently made up entirely of decayed vegetation. Perna.si at some rrnset? period the roots of a tree, uptorn by the mountain storm, drifting out into tf* lake formed the nucleus from which th? island has grown, but it seems singuisj that it should have remained anchored and unchangeable in its position. He Knew the Legtslster. Many a horse has been seduced iron a pasture into a stable by a hatful of oats held iuat beyond hi* now; recently a noble redman was beguiled by a simi lar operation. Indian John, the n in nebago chieftain from Shawano, ap peared in the Wisconsin legislature, with a petition, and, at the suggestw" of some gtaeeiesa wag. waddled up ts Assemblyman Naber, who bad the floor and was apostrophizing narrow-guag? railroads, and grasped his outstretched hand. Of course there was a roar of laughter and applause, in the midst which the sergeant -at-arms held up • nickel before the Winnebago chieftain face, and slowly backed toward the door of the lobby. John followed ts the very exit where the nicket was be stowed upon him and the door was •lammed la his face.