©lit pDemoftat. BELLEFONTE, PA. The Largest, Cheapest and Best Paper |>VHUSHED IN CENTRE COUNTY. VALLEY FORGE. j;|., fi..,lmnn Church, In llrp*r's >l*K*ln- for April. Valley Forge is a manufacturing place, nnd there is a constant hum of machinery from the pnjKtr, flour, and woollen mills. The neat little houses of the factory hands are gay with flowers and vines, while the Imudsome residence of the mill-owner towers castle-like above them. Fast all these dwellings, at the end of the street, stands the old-fashioned stone edifice hallowed by Washington's presence. It is a plain, somewhat contracted looking house, this Valley Forge shrine, after the usual type of ancient Penu svlvnnia homesteads,with a queer roof over the door, without either posts or pillars, shaped like the sounding-boards in old-time churches. The small-pnued windows are long, and end in low deep window-seats that could he sat in with ease ; hut they are not cushioned, or made the most of in any way. The entrance door opens in halves, aud two broad flat stones lead to it. Nothing has been changed in the old house since Washington left it, with the exception of paper aud paint; hut it strikes the visitor as decidedly bare-looking, and by no means attract ive as a place of residence. The ad mission fee of ten cents is appropriated bv the Centennial Committee for the furnishing fund, their intention being to furnish the back room on the, ground-floor, known as Washington's private office, with articles gathered here and there of the date of Wash ington's residence, and as nearly as possible a fac-simile of those in use at the period, the origiual furniture hav ing slipped away down the back stairs of time without leaving a trace be hind. As vet, however, nothing has been accomplished, and very little of inter est is to be seen in the way of relies. The hack room is the chief point of interest; and one of the deep w indow seats is a box, the lid of which is labelled "Washington's private papers, 1777," this receptacle having probably been made to avoid surprises. We are also shown a Revolutionary cannon hall, the old anvil used iu shoeing the horses of Washington and his troops, an ancient fire-place with "backs and jaiubs." The iron hacked' another fire-place is unexpectedly dis played outside of entrance door which opens into a narrow passage. This hack,of German manufacture, is quite a work of art, and evidently intended a* a representation of the miracle in ( ana of Galilee, the queer figures and water jars being supplemented by a (ierman inscription,in which the words "Warner" and "Wcin" tire quite dis tinct,also the reference to John ii, 1-11. The most noticeable article of furni ture in the room .is an "old clock on the stair," which seems its legitimate place. It was not used, however, by Washington, having been imported from England by the grandfather of the present venerable occupant in 1784. The old I'otU mansion has beau pur chased by the Centennial and Memornl Association, ami in the deed of trust the ground belonging to it is careful ly estimated at two acres aud eight lurches. The long low stone barn that stretches across a large portion of one side is rough and plain—the same in appearance as when Washington stabled his horses there. A LITTLE TRAMP. From tli* 81. LOIIU Republican. The other day a "country boy made a pathetic appeal to a Union park policeman in the heart of New 1 ork. The hoy had been gazing at the policeman's star from afar, and at last came to the conclusion that he was a tnan of authority in the town. The policeman had kept an eye on the boy, too, so there was a good ileal of inter est worked up between the man nnd hoy before they had any communica tion. At last the boy timidly ap troached the policeman and asked im where he could get something to eat nnd a place to sleep, for he was hungry and tired. He was a bright looking little fellow, but he was evi dently weary and worn, and travel soiled, and from the country. He was lost in town, and lingered round the I nion Square as a country spot —an oasis in the desert of pavement and walls, and a familiar friend in a soli tuile of thronging strangers. The po liceman did not beat the boy with nis cfcb and tell him to move on, as we sometimes read of policemen doing to little tramps. On the contrary, he kindly placed the urchin in the hands of an officer of the Society for the Frevention of Cruelty to Children. In answer to inquiries the little fellow gave all of his history that he knew, and explained his presence in New ork in a very interesting manner. His story was this: "My name is Joseph Blowers, nnd lam 13 years of age. I can't road or write, but I know how to spell my name and a few little words. I was born somewhere up by the White mountains. My mother died eight years ago and my father died two years ago. Before he died he gave me nway to a farmer named Jacob * oorhis, who lives at Galena, at the foot of the White mountains. I bad to work about tho farm, mid hud to takoeareof seven cows and milk them morning and evening. Mr. Voorhis never sent me to school, and ns I wanted to learti something 1 made up my mind to go away and see if I could not do something else, so that I could go to school. Ho I left Mr. Voorhis, and I've walked nearly all the way from the White mountains to New- York, which I'd heard was a liig city. Sometimes I've inannged to get a ride on the way. It was a long tramp here, but f wanted to go to school, and I heard that they hnd big schools here. I want to get something to do to pay my way, so that I can learn something." There are bad boys in New York who sometimes "play it" upm good people, and prove to be ninong the things that "are not always what they seem." .Joe did not look like one of them, and his air and appearance proved his whole story, but the officer wished to make "assurances doubly sure," so he took the boy out for a walk and managed to lose him in a crowd, while he observed Joe's move ments from a convenient hiding place. The |>oor boy ran up and down in ter ror ut having lost his guide, like a little stray dog hunting his master. He was again groping helplessly and hopelessly in the solitudes of the mul titudes, and evidently knew nothing of the streets of New York. This*, knowledge or ignorance was what the officer wished to test, and being satisfied lie again appeared be fore the lost boy like a messenger drop|>ed from the clouds. Joe was overjoyed, and the friend of the chil dren was satisfied that Joseph Hlowcrs, the White mountain boy, was not a little fraud. A boy who, at the age of thirteen, orphaned uud ignorant, finding the time of edugption slipping by, walks from the White mountains to New York to hunt the better life, has in him the kind of stufTof which great men are made. lien. Franklin strolled into Philadelphia, then the metropolis of the country, munching his penny loaf; Horace Greeley lum bered into New York a green country gawk, and Joe Blowers, a little tramp, may make a big history for all any body knows. THAT OLD REBEL YELL. AX INCIDENT Of SOUTHERN EXCURSION TO CINCINNATI. Colonel J. K. MeGowen, of the Chattanooga Time* in a speech to that paper, gives the following graph ic description of an incident of the Cincinnati banquet: The great orchestra, under the puis sant baton of Michael Brand, struck up the stirring old air "Dixie," with its soul-thrilling associations and memories. For a moment there was a hush. The old soldiers of the North and the old soldiers of the •South looked at each other, ami the vast throng was still. But before the second bar was struck, the emotions of the gallant Southerners overcame : them, and almost simultaneously they | sprang to their feet, more than a ! thousand strong, and the old South j ern battle-cry made the lofty arches ring again. Side by side with them i stood the Northern hosts uud cheered with theiu. Again aud again the men of the South broke forth as the gay measures woke their enthusiasm, and the strains of the orchestra were fairly drowned by their united voices. A prominent gentleman of Cincin nati, and a famous soldier, turned to ! Gov. Marks, of Tcnnnessee, and said : ' "That is the old rebel yell." "Yea," was the reply, "and now hear it raised for the stars and stripes," for just then the orchestra struck up that grand old patriotic air. The scene that followed is indescribable. As the full orchestra poured the grand old strains of — "The Ur-p#ngled banner, Oh, long may it wave OVr the land of the free And the home of the brave.'' the graud organ burst fqrth in glori ous unison with all its magnificent power and the vast audience arose as one man, and the old Union cheer blended with the old rebel yell to the notes of the National air for the first time since the dark and hloody years of the great civil war. Men who had faced each other on many a crimson battle-field under the stars nnd bars clasped hands and waved handker chiefs until the great level of the hall was like a white sen. All the sound of the orchestra was lost in the exultant shouts of reconciliation and common patriotism and the great wave of en thusiasm swept over the vast, giowing concourse and carried everything lie fore it. It was a scene never to lie forgotten by those who anticipated a moment what was cardinal in the his tory of the Republic. England'* (treat Belle and Heiress. Fmm til. London World. The rumor chronicled last week of the approaching contract of marriage lietwecn I'rince Leopold anil Miss Maynard is said to be unfounded. Huch an alliance would have been popular, and a beauty who has £30,- (MM) a year is not a bad match, even a for a I'rince of royal blood. The Maynards have always been a popu lar family in Essex, and the bright Cresence and winning smile of the eiress of that ancient house are ever welcomed at Duumow. Easton Lodge, near to Dunmow, which is Miss May nnrd's property in her own right, is one of the fiuest mansions in the county, aud is no mean rival of Aud h-y End—but without its wealth of artistic treasures —or Down Hal). The late Viscountess Maynard, the grandmother of the new beauty, for many years distributed £2,000 j>er annum aiming the poor in the neigh borhood of Easton. Miss Maynard nttaincd her eighteenth birthdav last December, and it will be remembered ; the occasion was celebrated by a magnificent entertainment, which cost an enormous sum and was one of the most brilliant ntfuirs which has been known in Essex for a generation. Flowers were brought from Nice, and a suite of temporary reception gQyms were erected for the occasion. AKKNKMIKKG. 8. 11. M In llir|M*r'ii Mugarlnr for April. Just In-low Constance the beautiful island is Kcichenau lying likes gem in the miniature sea. On the hills to the left the chateaux, villas and castles. At least one of these is historical; it is al most the sitnpliest among them, but is interesting as having been for twenty years the home of ljueen Hortense, the daughter of Josephine, and step (laugh ter of Napoleon the First. With nil her brilliancy of birth and character, she wag an unhappy and an unfortunate woman. She had seen her own father murder ed oti the guillotine, lier mother mar ried an Emperor, only to die broken hearted. ller stepfather died on a lone island of the sea. She herself married a king, only to he divorced and de throned, while her children and her whole family became wandering fugi tives in strange lands. It is extremely saddening to walk through the rooms of her little home here, and recall the fate that billowed her in life. When Napoleon became Emperor, she was one of the most brilliant arid talented women of his court. She wrote excellent verses, arranged (Jays and composed songs that have cheered the French Hrinies in battle from that day to this. Her song "I'artant pour la Syrii" may last with the French lan guage. When Napoleon's star of destiny failed him, and all who bore his name, or were related to him, were banished from France, poor Hortense. after being refused a resting place in many lands, bought this little villa in a quiet corner of Switzerland. Here she devoted many years to self culture, and the culture of her two BOIIS. Here was spent the boyhood of France's second emperor. Arenenberg is a plain villa outside, but is situated on one of the loveliest spots of the shores of the river Ithine. In the gar den near the villa is a long, low house, used then, as now, for stables. The upjter floor of this out-house contained the rooms of the young prince, Louis Napoleon. Here he studied, and here he schemed. In a recent visit to Arenenberg the writer hunted up a number .of old resi dents of the neighborhood who had been companions of Napoleon, and a few who had leen friends of Hortense. There were many rememliered incidents of the life of both ; for both, though in a very different way, bad been much liked by all the villagers. Hortene's kindness to the poor of all the district has embalmed her Dame in grateful remembrance there, and even the stern republicans of .Switzerland had a warm sympathy for an unfortunate queen. As to her son, the late Emperor, jx-ople could never tire telling of the incident* of his boyhood that pointed to the com ing man. What a swimmer he was! what a horseman! what a wrestler! and if half the stories be true, what a rake! Of his horsemanship it is main tained he had not an equal anywhere. It was a habit of his never to mount a horse by tho use of the stirrup, but to run and spring over the crupper and into the saddle at a bound. Ixiuis Napoleon visited Arenenberg when he became Emperor, nad twenty thousand people came to bid him wel come. As a young man he had been a captain of militia sharp shooters here, and president of the village school lioard. These bodies joined officially in the greeting. There were several coaches and four drawn up at the sta tion for the Em|>eror and his staff to ride in. What was the astonishment and joy to see Ntpoleon jump into the one horse wagon of a friend that hap pened to be there, and with him head the great procession through Constance! How the people shouted and clapped hands at the democratic Emperor 1 Hortense, after suffering several years with a dreadful cancer, ended her event ful life here in 1837. Mhe died in the little upper east room. The stranger going in there now will be impress#-. 1 to see everything just as she left it. There is the bed on which she died, and near it is the ramp bedstead which her son the Emperor bad at Sedan. There, too, is her harp, as well as the harp of Jo sephine. Down stairs there are five rooms filled with remembrances of the Napoleon family. On a little table in the tecep tion Tootn is the gilt clock used by Na poleon on the ialand of Si. Helena. In other room* are good paintings and statues made from life of Napoleon the First, Hortense, her mother Josephine, and her brother Prince Eugene; also the furniture presented to Hortense by the city of Paris at the time of her marriage to Napoleon's brother. There, too, covered with a crown of ivy, is a marble bust of Napoleon the Third, taken from acastof his face after death. The Empress Eugenie repurchased this place (it had been sold after the death of Hortense), and presented it to the Emperor. It was lately the sum mer reaidenoe of herself and the young Prince Louis. Over the bills from Reichenau, and in another arm of the lake, lies the pretty little island of Mainau, with its charming gardens reaching down to the blue waters. Real royalty dwells here, for it la the property of the Grand Duke of Baden ; and his father in-law, the Emperor of Germany, often spends his summer days in this lovely retreat. In fact, the kings and princes of Eu rope have managed to secure moet of the rare apote around the luwer end of Lake Constance. •Judith I). Chitntilng in tli# Hnngor Whig. The Old Pod Auger Days. I saw mii sged man at work, 11 turned an auger round ; And ever Mnd unon ho'd pause, And meditate profound. "Good morning, friend," quoth 1 to him— "Art thinking when to raiie choice in ways; ! She used to sit blindfold and" stern In old 'pod auger day*.'" - ♦ WOK DM UPON BVINO LIPS. I now soke or the crest o- esrtii vet tiik kino or terror*. Queen Elizabeth, at the end of a moat prosperous reign, begun amid i danger* and many difficulties that were j overcome by bold measure* and pru dent council*, died exclaiming, "Ah, j iny possessions for a moment of time." I George VI. met death with almost a jest upon his lips. Turning to Sir VVal j tran Waller, on whose arm he leaned, ' lie said ; "Wliatty, what '*this? It is i death, boy, and they have deceived us." ! The Danish Sovereign, Frederick V., greatly beloved by his subjects, cried "There ia not a drop of blood on my hands," as he passed away. Ilenry VIII., who had altered the whole course of monastic life in England, exclaims "Monks! Monks! Monks!" Edward | VI.. the wan boy King. Avith his fast fading eyes, commended hi* nul to God, "Lord, take my spiritand Cromwell a* he listened to the discourse of those about him aid, "Then I am safe," and was silent forever. The la*t word of Charles I. on the scaffold to Archbishop .tuxson was "Remember," referring to his desire that his son Charles should forgive his fath er's murderer*. Ann Boleyn, in the same terrible situation, clasped her fair neck, saying, "It i* small, very small and Mir Thomas More, as he yielded bintsell to the executioner, said, with sorry wit, "For my coming down let me shift for niyself." .loan ol Arc at the •take ended her eventful, stormy life, j with our Saviour'* name upon her lip*, a* brave as Gen. Wolf, who, dying in the midst of victory on the battle field, and hearing of the enemy's retreat, cried, "What! do they run already? Then I die haftpy ;" or Philip Sidney, after he had relinquished the draught of water loan humbler oomiade, though parched with thirst, turned him round to die, saying, "Lai me behold the end of this world with all ita vanities." Miiabenu desired to die while deli cious strains of music floated on the arr. but bit laai utterance was a demand for laudanum to drown pain and concioua nesi. Moaart's laat words were, me hear once more those notes so long my solace and delight;" but Haydn, forgetful of bit art, cued, "trod preserve my Emperor." Alfleri's sympathetic nature displayed Itself In the words, "Clasp niy hand, dear friend, I die Gcothe cries. "Light, more light." Tea so, "In toua mantis, Do.nioe;" Byron, "Come, come, no weakness ; let's be a man to the laat; I must sleep now." And thoae who saw hi* embalmed body in 1824, when brought to England from Misaolonghi in tbe Florida, and remov ed to Sir Filer aid Knatchbull'a llouae in.Great George street, where the coffin was opened, described the face a* of marble whiteness, the expression that of stern quietude, laying wrapped in his blue cloth cloak, the throat and head uncovered, crisp, curling locks, slightly streaked with grav, clustering over the temples, the profile of exceed ing beauty. Boiteau congratulated him self, ai he closed his eyes upon this world, upon the purity of his works, saying, "It ia a great consolation to a poet about to die that he hss never written anything injurious to virtue j" and Sir Walter Scott, little thinking hia end so near, said, "I feel aa If 1 were myself again." Dr. -Johnson, the rough, kiwd heart, whe loved a good hater, died as he said to Miss Morris, "God bless you my dear." Washington, dying at Mount Vernon, cried, "It ia well." Franklin's laat words were. "A dying man can do nothing easily." Mme. de Suel, whose sorest trial waa her enforcer! absence from her native land, died saying : "I have loved my God, my father and my liberty." ' ' Hannah More'a last words were: "Pat 't-jO/ i" Grotius, "Be serious i" Haller, "The artery oeases to beat;" Adams, "Independence lorever;" Jefferson, "I resign my soul to God, my daughter to my oountty j" Looke, to Lady Masham, who waa reading the Psalms, "CesM now;' and poor Lmh, after the most self sacrificing existence, wrote li!a last word* to a friend, "My bed fellow* are cramp and cough—we three *leen in a bed. 1 Bishop Broughton's last word* are, "Let the earth be filled with II in glory Archbishop Sharpe, "I shall be happy Bishop Ken. "/Sod'* will be done;" Fair, Cntniner, Hooper, and George llerberi, "Lorl receive my spiritand lhe*e are hut a few of many srich utter- J ance*. The Prince ('onsort confirmed the impression that prevail* that the dying have sometime* a foretaste of coining happine**, "I have *uch *weet thoughts," were the last word* of a rnoat nolde life. ♦ * If AT lIOI,KM AT lIAKKIHHUKG, < >oe of the most intensely interest ing volume* which ha* recently been issued front the office of the public j printer at l(arri*hurg, i* the annual re |K>rt ol Auditor (ieneral Schell. Figures ure usually esteemed a very dry and un palatable sort ol diet, but the volume to which we refer contains a vaaf amount of food lor reflection, and embrace* al most n* many amusing features a* a com ic almanac. Among the various source* of revenue are two dollar* in "con science money" which came from Phil adelphia. This i* a shihll beginning, but it may contain the promise of bet ter things in the future, of all the money pilfered from the trea-ury dur ing the lust twenty year* these are the first two dollar* that have ever found their way hack again. May we not in dulge the hope that they will be parent* ola numerous progeny of returning prodigals? It i* a great mi-fortune that history will be deprived of the name of tin* first great conscience-striken apostle of reform. F'uture age* will never know whether it i* 'Lish Davis or Harry lluhii.or Kmil Petrol!', or George Handy Smith whom they should rise up and call blessed. No less novel and startling is the announcement that the revenue* of the common wealth were still further augmented by the return of 1 thirty-four cents, *n unexpended bal ance remaining in the hands of Secre tary Quay. This seems to settle all doubts a* to the candidacy of Col. Quay , for Senator Wallace'* seat in the Unit ed State* Senate. With this thirty-four i cents a* a basis hi* would be a strong candidate on a platform of retrench ment and economy. The satisfaction ; of the public over the di*continuancc ; of annual session* of the legislature will i be largely increased by knowledge of the lad that the last senate eot the | State sl4€\7oB.y*2, and the house $l2O, j .'ifi.'i 99, with $20,674.2-1 additional for | the trl\gi'htirt £mrL Whether the State received a corresponding lienefit many person* will feel disposed to que*- tion, in view of the fact that the only : measure of general legislation to which - they devoted their time and talent* not* the schema to sUval four million dollars out of the treasury under pre- I tence of paying the damage* of the Pittsburgh riot. In justice to the sena tor* and member* it must be admitted that they didn't pocket all the swag j themelve, but were most munificent jin their largesses to tboir political I friend- who constituted the grand army iof clerks, door-kee]>ers, messengers, \ pasters and folder*. <>ver fifty thou sand dollars were paid in salaries to the officers of the senate. Six thousand dollar* were paid for stationery for the -enate, and fifteen thousand for the | house, and every member of each bodv waa allowed $25 for stationery and $lOO for postage. For buckets ami brooms $2,000 were ex [>ended ; $2,246 were psid to 91 scrub women to clean up the sen ate'* dirt, an average of forty women every night, almost one to evety sena tor. The resident clerk, at a salary of $.1,000 ami a "contingent fund" of $2,- 200, and who ha* really little or noth ing to do, had two clerks to help him •in it at salaries amounting to $1,300. The inauguration of Gov. lloyt cost $1,098.11, and the stint of $10,995.91 wa* ex|M>nded in refurrfishing and re pairing the executive mansion. The public printing cost the enormous figure of $2*7,924. 56; and the superintend ent of public grounds got the nice little plum of $13,421.78. The furnishing of a room wherein the lieutenant gover nor discharges the arduous duties of his office cost over $5OO. The emhrionic statesmen of* Harrisburg cost the com monwealth $129.50 for ice water to mix with their whiskey and reduce the tem perature of their blistered gullet*. These are only a few specimen items selected out of a volume of 276 pages. How much more undiscovered richness the report contains may safely he left to the imagination of the reader. In the Australian Forest. from Ohstnbrr*' Ji.urnsl. Morning and evening the Australian forest is awake; at noon it is asleep. No greater contrast can be imagined than between the morning hours and those at mid day. In the former, the very flowers seem to possess an active existence. Myriads of such, larger and more brilliant than those under Eng lish skies, load the air with the sweetest scents; magnificent tree-ferns wave their fronds or branches in the light breete ; on old stumps of trees great, J;reen and yellow lisardi lie watching or their prey ; the magpie throws her voice from the wattles, and possibly the lyVe-bird in the.denser scrub; and in the tall gums numberless parrakeeta, parrots, rosellaa, cockatoos, butcher birds, lovebirds, etc., are screaming nd darting to and fro. But bv-and-by the intense heat will silence all these, and nothing will he heard but the chirp of the grasshopper and the shrill sound of some unseen insect. At twi light again there is a revival of life, but not of so cheerful a description. The cicadas shriek by myriads tneir deafen ing "p-r-r-rr-r," drowsy opossums snarl In the gum-holes, and flocks of cocka toos scream as some greet grey ksngs roo bounds past them like a belated ghost. If there is marshy ground near, the deep boom of the bittern, the wail of the curlew, and the harsh cry of the crane, mingling, poeaibly, with those of or passing flock of black •wans, will add u> the concert. In a moment of silence one mav be startled by the mocking laughter or the jackass, or the melancholy "mo-poke" (for "more-pork") of the bird of that name. The dead of night is not so still as the universal hush of the burning noon. A New Application of Ihc Electric Uffht. Vrmii Hi.- Si-w Yoik Ili-mM. Tbe wondei* of the electric light, it secni*. ore not to cease. The lnti-*t de velopment of ith virtue* is it* power to promote the occult processes of vege tation, a* recently demonstrated by the eminent rcienti.-t Dr. C, W. Siemens, before the Royal Society, The elabor ate experiment* made by thi* inventi gator to ascertain whether plant* ex- . posed to the electric light were atfected by it* ray* conclusively prove tbat it i* eflicaciou* in producing their leaf green and in greatly stimulatmgiheir growth. After announcing thi* beautiful discov ery to the meeting of the society on the •llh !nst. the discoverer placed a pot of budding tulip* in the toll brightness of an electric lamp, and in l>out forty minute* the hud* had expanded into full bloom. I >r. Siemens' experimental tost*, conducted (or two month*, show t'lat the ordinary vegetables which were kept entirely in the dark died ; those exposed to the electric light only or to daylight only throve equally well, while those exposed to the daylight and also to the electric light succe*ive ly grew rapidly and vigorously. He contends that the radiation of fient Irom powerful electric arcs can be made available to correct frost and probably to promote the ripening of fruit in the. open sir. It. has been generally sup |>o*ed that plants, like-animals, require a certain period of rest in the twenty four hours, hut these experiments show that, subjected to the sunlight by day and the electric light by night, the# make increased and vigorous progress. The discovery may lead to some im portant practical results of which it* | own author has as yet no hint. Where | natural water power can be had at lit- I tie cost and the mechanical energy ne. oes*ary for working the electric light ing apparatus i* inexpensive it may, and no doubt will, he highly available tor horticulturists, The Reason of Bird*. From th# £|w-<;ut<#r M*y I t*ll you a®ff\v fact* to provo that birds can he, like their human friends, both reasonable and unreason able ? 1. Several years ago a pair of my canarie* built: while the hen was sit ting the weather became intensely hot. She drooped, and I began to fear tbat she would not be strong enough to ; hatch the eggs. 1 watched the birds | closely, and soon found that Ute cock I was a devoted nurse, lie bathed in the fresh cold water I supplied every morn ing. then went to the edge of the nest, and the hen buried her head in hi* breast and was refreshed. Without hands and without a sponge, what more could he have done J 2.' The following spring the same bird was hanging in a i window with three other canaries, each |in a separate cage. 1 ws sitting in the j room, and heard my little favorite give j a peculiar cry. 1 looked up and saw all the birds crouching on their perches, paralyzed with fright. On going to the window to ascertain the cause of their terror, I saw a large balloon passing over the end of the street. The bird* did not move until it was ouV'd sight, when they all gave a chirp of relief. The balloon was only within sight of tbebitd whogare the alarm, and 1 have do doubt he mistook it for a bird of prey. 3, I have a green and a yellow canary hanging side by side. They are treated exactly alike, and are wartu friends. One has often refused to par take of some delicacy till the other waa supplied with it. One day I had five blossoms of dandelion ; 1 gave three to the green bird, two to the yellow one. The latter flew about his cage, singing in a shrill voice, and showed nnmis- * takahle sign* of anger, finessing the cause I took away one of three flower*, when both birds settled down quietly to enjoy their feast. Mineral Resource* of Virginia. Fixm the IWltnnefore the New York Academy of Sciences on the mineral resources of Virginia and West Virginia. The lec ture was of a sort to explain the recent renewal of railroad building in those section*. Virginia produces iron ore in great abundance, while We*t Virginia i* full of coal beds. The Virginia iron ores are of remarkable quality, stretch ing in vein* between the Biue Ridge and the Allegheniea. and extending from Pottsdam on the east to Clifton. The iron beds were sometimes contin uous, sometimes in folds numbering from three or four up to twelve, and some of the specular ores were as rich in mineral as those of Lake Superior. These ores have not been developed, owing to difficulties in access and trans- Crtation. Fuel i* scarce, connection not ing yet closely made with the coal beds further west. But the time was now coming when these ore bed* would be worked. They were too rich to be longer neglected, few of them con taining more than a fifth pf one per cent, phosphorus. Virginia ia richer in iron than Pennsylvania, says Prof. Kc cleston, and it is a store of wealth for coming generations. If, he added, the prosperity of tbe iron trade continued, an industrial survey would have to be made of tbe country, and such a sur vey would show so much industrial wealth in Virginia that capital must in evitably flow into the State. Scotch Farmer* for Minnesota. Mr. Williamson, a wealthy grain mer chant of Liverpool, England, visited Minnesota last September, and hs* since then completed the purchase of thirteen sections of iand on the Red river. He desips to send this tear two fsmiliea of tifoshire farmers from Scotland to locale on each section, and within three years to have three fourths of his entire purchase under cultivation. It is not proposed to make large farms, but to mske such a size that farmers having both miens ana intelligence, as the Fife sMre men have, can bring the cultiva tion of the soil to its highest perfection, and instead of chance and average crops have a constant certainty of *t least forty bushels of "No. 1 hard" to the acre. _The original Fife wheat, whioh has made Mioneaota Hour so fk mous, came from Scotland where these emigrating farmers reside.