TALES OP SUFFERING. Incident* of the Terrible I'bUu in Irelend. By direction of tho citizens' Irish famine relict committee, of Philadel phia, their sub-committee on distribu tion addressed letters of iuquiry to re sponsible parties in Ireland lor infor mation as to the extent and sovcrity of the distress in the several localities. Among other letters received in reply were the following: Sister 8. M. Teresa, of the convent of Our lately of Mercy, Cappaquin, writes: Since the famine years there was not, I believe, such distress, because the farm ers and shopkeepers who were able to help the poor people, either by giving them work or alms, ore now as badly off as themselves. Many of the farmers could not pay their rents and are sold out. May our good God comfort them and inspire those who have money to be generous, at lost for a few months, when we are in hopes things will not look so awfully hopeless as at present. When Katy's $lO came we commenced the children's breakfast, which we have continued to keep on ever since; but last week, when the numlwrs had in creased to nearly eighty, it was an nounced in school that from Monday all whose fatiicis were living should break fast at home. Although the father may earn one shilling or one shilling four pence on fine days, what is it but starva tion when rent, fuel and food are to be paid for? As to clothes, they are out of the question. Mrs. Cullinane, of Bantry, writes: I am sorry to say there is great distress here. But for the money supplied by the friends in Dublin and what was con tributed by the shopkeepers I don't know what would have become of the small farmers and laborers. Every mem ber of the relief committee has his time fully engaged. You know the district from Luave bridge to Glengariff and how wretched the inhabitants are all the way. The poor creatures get no em ployment, their crops failed altogether, and they have to come down to Bantry to get a share of the relief, which, on account of being divided between so many, sometimes a family is obligci. to subsist for a week on a couple of shil lings. Picture to yourself perhaps eight or nine human beings living on two shillings per week, ft just keeps them from dying of starvation. I went into a house to-day in whicn there were three sick children lying on what ap peared to me to be old meal bags, and the covering was not much better. In the mother's arms was a fourth child, who, I was told, was recovered from " the sickness," but was not able to walk from weakness. There wore other chil dren, also, looking miserable. The father was only able to get work for two dajs last week, and the mother assured me the only drink she was able to give the sick children was water. lam listening to sinsilar stories of misery every day. Crowds of poor people come about the house trying to get some of the relief. Only two landlords contributed to the fund—one gave $25 and the other sls. I don't know how any person can be so heartless as to put forward a statement to the effect that there is no distress. Unfortunntely there is. and until crops grow it will continue. I hope the col lections to relieve our poor people will be kept up in America. If those cease Ireland will be in a bad way. God bless the good people who have given us their money so generously, and I trust that He who has His own wise ends in view will grant a plentiful harvest next year. Sheep Killed hy Grass Seed. The penalty of getting hay seed in one's hair must be serious in some parts of Australia. There are districts in that country where the sheep are much dis tressed and often actually destroyed hy he seeds of certain grasses called " Fle liilla," which, having once fallen upon rbeen caught by the wool.quickly work '.heir way through the skins of the ani mals into their flesh. The ripe seeds of 'hese grasses are armed with recurved iiarbules whose points, being sharp as needles, easily penetrate the skin, every movement of the animal tending to drive the seed deeper and deeper into tin flesh. The mutton exposed for sale in the butchers' shops is sometimes so full of these grass seeds that it excites the at tention of strnngprs. One newly arrived • migrant describes a fore-quarter of mut ton as rest mbling a ham just taken from the bag of chaff in which it tiad been brought from England. On close exam ination it appeared that many of the ceds had still their long, thin tails drawn through the flesh, like threads interlacing each other in every direc tion. He goes on to pay that, on ques tioning the butc her, Ite was told that they rarely killed a sheep that was not more or less punctured in this way. It stands to reason that butchers' meat, such as litis, must need to he thoroughly cooked before eating. From other ac counts it appears that the seeds are not infrequently found nctuaily piercing the heart, Uver and kidneys of sheep that have died from the effeetsof their move ment*. One writer says that he has found "tlieint rnal organs so crowded with the seeds that they felt like a bag of needles, if squeezed in the hand. On some "runs," where these grasses are specially abundant, the annual loss of sheep Is a vtry serious matter. It has even been asserted that the northern part of Queensland is unfit for sheep be cause of the great abundance of the noxious grasses. A Ghastly Nlorj. The wife or a skilled artisan namad Schniid. ol Satunra, Russia, gave birth to a child while her husband, who had spent all his wages for many previous weeks in liquor, was away from his home upon a drunken frolic. Two days after her confinement Schmid staggered 50, of which $10,130 was contributed by the colored mem bers. Chicago has 913 churches, besides 20 mission chapels and 11 Adventist and Spiritualist societies. The Catholics have 34 ol the churches, the Baptists 24, the Lutherans 24, the Methodists 10, the Presbyterians 18, and the Episco palians, Congregationalists and He brews 10 each. The Freedmcn's Aid society proposes to the friends of tho late Bishop Haven to raise $30,000 for the completion of Clark University, at Atlanta, Ga., as a suitable monument to his memory, his name to be given to a professorship in the institution, in which he was very much interested. It is estimated that among the Eng lish-speaking population of tbe wortd there are 1H.000.000. Episcopalians, 16,- 0041,000 Methodists, 13,500,000 Roman Catholics, 10,250,000 Presbyterians, 8,000,000 Baptists. B,o< 41,000 Congrega tionalists, 1,000,000 Unitarians- (if other religious sects there are 1,500,000 adherents and 8,500,000 are of no par ticular religion. The R v. Theodore Monod, a promi nent Protestant pastor of Paris, has been deputed by a French rgissionary society to visit the United States, to represent the present condition and needs of Protestantism in France, and to obtain help for the evangelization of Paris and other parts of that country. M. Monod studied theology in the United States. A careful inquiry into the statistics of the work of the Methodist Episcopal church in the South shows that there are 913,776 white and 197,123 colored members, a gain of 8,000 colored and about 8,000 white memliers in two years. There was an increase in the same period of 129 preachers and 24,228 Sunday-school scholars. The number of baptisms last year was very large, reaching 40,406, about one-half being of adults. The Salvation Army has considerable strength In Great Britain. It has an an nual income of nearly SIOO,OOO, and it* organization includes 120 corps, 180 of fleers nnd 3,256 speakers. It holds 50, 000 meetings in the course of a year.i p 113 theaters and music halls, beside about 40,000 open air meetings. One estimate of the aggregate of the audi ences places it at 2.000.000. The Fcople of Havann and Their Customs. A correspondent of the Trov lime*, writing from Havana, says: The peo ple here appear listless: they move slowly, lazily I may say. There is mani fest little of the vim and push seen in our northern oitites. The natives are small of stature, sharp-eyed and voluble in speech; in communicating a simple statement, as for instance directing the coachman where to drive you, they will talk, talk, and there secpns no end to the jabber. Walking Spanish means very slow; talking Spnnish, fast and long. The Victoria carriages. French style are the popular vehicles in Havana; the streets are full of them. A courpe drive, which may he extended three or four miics, costs only eighteen cents: or sixty-five cents the first hour, and orty-fivc cents each sulisequent hour; two persons may be comfortably seated in a Victoria, nnd three light bodies can squeeze in. So it wili he seen that drivingout is a very cheap luxury here, and it is largely availed of hy almost everybody except the laboring people. The horses are small, generally In poor condition, but tough as a knot; their endurance under the broiling sun of this climate is remarkable; they trot off at a fair gait and never seem Jo tire. The cruelty practiced upon dumb beasts is shoe ring; the horses are most unmercifully whipped at their work, and oxen, which are nlmost ex clusively used in drawing service moving immense loads wit t clumsy, heavy carts are cruelly goaded with a pole steel-tipped to a sharp point. The oxen are so Itarncssed that they draw from tlie r heads, and rope rein* are attached to rings in their noses to direct their course. Dumb beasts are overworked, poqylv fed and tortured to death. Bossessefl as they areof won derful endurance, thty break down and are used up in three or four years at longest under snch cruel usage. The sum realized from the recent sale of the Deiuidoff paintings in Florence ($537,385) is very large, but it has been excelled at |p*t once and approached several times. The Gillott collectirin of 525 pictures brought $8(16,050 in 1872; Mr. Albert Grant sold his 905 pictures for $520,684; in 1875, Mr. Mendel's Manley Hall collection of 445 pictures sold for $499,800, and twenty years earlier, Lord Nortliwick's 1,881 pictures brought him $488,198 in cash. With out making the statement too positively, it is probable thßt the largest sum ever actually paid for any single canvas was $119,644, the picture being Muriilo's " Conception of the Virgin," which was honght for the Lbnvrc at Paris, at the sale of Marshal Soult's collection in 1859. And possibly $60,000 is the largest sum ever received for a single work by a living artist, the picture in this case being " 18u7," the painter Meissonier, and the buyer A. T. Stew art, A Modern Romulus. In his interesting work, entitled " Jungle Life in India," Mr. Bali has adduced good reasons for believing that the old classical story of the rearing of Romulus and Remus by a she-wolf may be founded on fact. This author cites the caeo of two lads in an orphanage at Seknndra, near Agra, who had been discovered among wolves, and in many ways shared the habits of these ani mals. One of his stories is supported by a letter from Professor Max Muller. It says: A trooper sent by the native governor of Cliandaur to demand pay ment of some revenue, was passing along the banks of the river about noon, when lie saw a large female wolf leave her den, followed by three whelps and a lit tle boy. The boy went on all-fours, and when the trooper tried to catch him he ran as fast as the whelps and kept up with the old one. They all entered the den. but were dug out by the people with pickaxes, and the boy was secured. He struggled hard to rush into every hole or aen they came near. He becamo alarmed when he saw a grown-up per son, but tried to fly at children and bite them. He rejected cooked meat with disgust, but delighted in raw flesh and bones, putting them under his paws like a dog. They tried to make him speak, but could get notiiing from him but an angry growl or snarl. Another instance is quoted as having occurred at Chupra. A Hindoo father anc" mother went out to cut their crop in March, 1843. The woman had with her a little boy, who lately had been severely burned on the left knee. While the parents were at work the child was car ried off by a wolf. Some years after ward a wolf with three cubs was seen about ten miles from Chupra followed by a boy. The boy, alter much resist ance, was caught and recognized by tho mark of the burn on the left knee. He could eat nothing hut raw flesh, and could never be brought to speak. He used to mutter and snarl, but never articulated distinctly. The pans of his knees and the points of his elbows had become horny from going on all-fours with the wolves. In November, 1850, this boy escaped again and disappeared into the iungle. Thus the "she-wolfs litter" of Macaulay's " Lays of Ancient Rome" may have been, after all, no myth. John Bright. It is related that once a party o Americans entered a studio, where a fine portrait, just completed, was stand ing on the artist's easel. "Oh," said one of the Americans, " that must bo John Bull." "No," quietly responded the artist, " it's John Bright." The anecdote forcibly Illustrates the truly British physical type of the Qua ker orator and statesman. In personal appearance, certainly, he is an English man of Englishmen. Robust, though not corpulent, of body; with a round, full face, and bold, straight nose; his countenance rounded, open, healthfully ruddy, having a remarkable purity of complexion and fine texture of skin; tiic eyes, large, gray, clear, bright, some times stern and defiant, but in repose often gentle and kindly; decision and vigor most plainly expressed in the resolute mouth and firm jaw and chin; a face less mobile than calm and set: the brow broad and white, and arched high at the top; the whole frame strong, well-proportioned, almost massive, in dicating great powers of endurance, and giving, even at his prese nt age, no hint of that delicacy of health which has in recent years impaired his public activ ity. In liia company, one has a keen sense of his power, one feels himself in tile* presence of a born leader of men. He holds his head high, anel looks you, and every one, full in tho face-; and that with n keen, searching glance that rather rolra you of your ease. Self-re liance, hone-sty, pride of intellect, reso lution—nay, even intolerance —may be rend in his expression. John Bright is now in his sixty-ninth year. He is two years younger than Gladstone and six younger than lord Benconsflcid; and as English statesmen are a peculiarly vigorous rne-e, and often continue their public activities into the eighties, it may he hoped that lie has still some years of labor in the cause of reform before lilin. His public life be gan in 1843, wl.cn be was thirty-two years of age. in which year he was fleeted to parliament by theold historic city of Durham. Four years later be took his seat for the first time as the representative of the great progressive constit uenc-y of Manchester His career in the houscof commons, therefore, has extended over a period of thirty-seven years- Good Comimny. Tbe Debfa of the States. Below wr have compiled a table show ing the debts of the States of the Union in 1840 and 1879. The figures for 1840 hsve been obtained from a statement published in 1841 hy Albert Gallatin, and those ol 1879 from the various Slate documents. At this time the table will be of peculiar interest: Total Stale Total Slate Statu. Ihfit. 1870. Debt, 1840, AUUina #7.800,300 811,500000 At known 5,000,000 3,000,000 California 3,403,000 Colorado 123.000 Connecticut .. .... 4,967,0 0 None. Onlnwarc 9.53,000 None. Florida. 1.284 000 Not known. Cleorgis. 1n,644,000 Not known. Illinois 500,000 12,210,000 Indiana 6.000 000 11,890,000 lowa 590,000 Nona. Kansas 1.1UJ.000 Kentucky 1,850,000 3,790.000 Louisiana 11,724,000 23,730,000 Maine 6.848,(00 550,000 Maryland *10,750,000 11,490,i00 Miohisan 9t 0,000 5,340,500 MinnnMita 2,675,000 Mississippi 500,000 7 000,000 Missouri.. 16,00.1,000 2,500.000 Nobreska 500,000 Nevada 660,000 Now llniiij aliire,.. 3,450,000 None. New Jersey 2 2 0,000 None. New Vork 9,150,000 21 000,000 Nortli Cam 1 1n*.... 27.000,000 None. Ohio 6,475,000 12,940,000 Oregon 320,000 Pennsylvania 21,875,000 38,860.000 Khodc 151 and,.,.., 2,535.(00 None. Smith Carolina.... 6.730,000 6,610,000 lennea-ee 26.320,000 7,150,000 Texas 5,073,000 Va.mont 140,(00 None, Virginia 29,350,0 0 6,320,000 Went Virginia Prohibited Wisconsin 2,250,000 None. Total * $266,638,(8.0 #188,610,000 * Maryland held #l4 250,000 in internet pay ing eeruriliM of corporations, besides #23,- 360,000 ol unproductive Mcuritiws. f Masscliu*utu has a sinking fend ol #11.268,000. Forty years ago the various States jf the Uuion owed $188,610,000; to-day j they owe $900,638,000. BrwUlrtel. I FOR THE FUR HEX. Fashion Nam, Street dresses are ail short. The surtout is the coming garment. Waistcoats are going out of fashion. The day of the white chip bonnet is over. Hold glitters and sparkles on cvery thirg. A great deal of red is used on black dresses. A new lace is painted in peacock feather eyes. Silk muslin bonnet crowns will be much worn. Shoes for street wear show the sensi ble English heel. New suits of white nainsook are flounced to the waist. lianguedoc lace is much used for trim ming evening dresses. Crepe lisse ruchings are set inside the brims of small bonnets. Ruby heads and yellow pearls are the latest novelties in beads. Friezes should be from twenty to twenty-four inches deep. It is impossible to make a collarette too large for the fashion. Illondes wear black lace scarfs with out any white lace or flowers. Heliotrope and creum is the favorite combination of colors this season. Yellow sunflowers and crimson pop pies are favorite flowers this season. Eugenie net. much used in millinery, shows gilt threads in diamond meshes. New cashmeres come in all fashion able colors and are unusually rich in effect. Sleeveless habit corsages of velvet or satin are worn over ball dresses of tulle or gauze. Satins figure extensively among hand some labnes for costumes and bonnet garniture. Beaded and jet passementerie forms a fashionable garniture for costumes of silk and satin. Beaded passementeries are largely used for trimming silk and satin man tles ard dresses. Plain eolnred Freneh buntings will be combined with figured foulards for wear at watering-places. New dress buttons come in two sizes one intended for the coat and the other for the dress waist. The prevailing fancy for directoire styles has brought lindruped toilets largely into fashion. Cotton satin, witii printed designs of flowers, is the novelty said to be held in reserve for the summer. Some of the new artificial flowers are furnished with celluloid leaves wlreh appear very lifelike and are said to wear well. Spring nnd summer mantles are weighted with a profusion of lace, rib lion and jet fringe, network and orna ments. The new woolen mixtures are no heavier than the French huntings, and are covered with alternating dashes of two colors. Corduroy underskirts will continue to be worn under draperies of silk foulard, Yeddo crape, and light woolen dress goods. Nun's veiling is the name of an inex pensive dress material which ranks higher than hunting and comes in all the new shades. Dresses of India muslin nia.le in Paris are decorated with sultana scarfs of Oriental silk, embroidered with either gold or silver. Eutestring ribbons have been revived by Paris luiliincrs. Tlicv arc made with tape borders or featic : 1 edges in old time style, and arc called taffetas. l)ri sacs with plan corsages, plain tight sleeves, and plain skirls without flounces, lahiiers, or overskirte, are worn by some very fashionable women. Scarfs of scarlet tulle, headed with tiny pearl beads, are worn to advantage by those to whom scarlet is becoming, in place of the white illusion ncclt scarfs of last fall. Hats with black velvet facings trim med with scarfs 01 cream, pink and blue gauze may lie worn hy ladies to whose complexions neither ol the hrtght colors is becoming alone. Square handkerchiefs of bright col ored striped foulard are twisted into pretty dress caps for Indies and fastened on the head willi large Spanish pins fir bouquets of artificial flowers. Momie cloth which lias steadily in creased in favor since its first introduc tion as a linen fabric is furnished now in handsome woolen goods finished witii a crinkled or crape-like surface. Throe small ostrich lips shaded from pearl to heliotrope, from cream to Isa tielle yellow, or in various shades of taie color,form the •• Prince of Wales " Blutaes employed on Tuscan and chip ate Evening dresses are made with the bodice open, in the shape of a square or an oval, and trimmed wi'li draperies, lace and fringe. The sleeves are fin ished at the elbow, nnd trimmed to cor respond. Many mazarin collars are still worn, both of white and black lace. Two plaited pieces of point d'esprit, or ol crepe lisse ruching, one turneit up and the other down, with a ribbon between, make a very pretty color. NHQ-OW plaiting* form a favorite trimming for the foot of skirts; these arc each three inches wide when fin ished, nnd are made to lap an inch upon each other; the plaiting is then pulled out of its flat fold, to look as huncliy as possible. Surtout suits, consisting of long ooats of elegant shape, slashed in the back nearly to the waist, lined with bright silk, provided with handsome buttons, and worn with skirts finished by simple knife plaiting*, are a favorite style for handsome walking dresses. Tlio latest novely in dress goods is ecru ootton, thicker than the heaviest unbleached muslins ot last summer, and hayaderA.ripes of bright shades of lime, scarlet, yellow and black. Over these bayadere domestics are sometimes draped the cheese cloths of last summer. A Far is letter aava Ihnt the airy lace, satin and ribbin muffs bnv* prov d so pretty an addition to the toilette that tliey have established a position in the ballroom, where they are carried in the hand or sewn to the dress. They look very well made to match the dresses In the plain Oriental silks, printed with dculpta in (told orsHrcr. Foulards are touch need not only In combination witli other softer silks, nut with ftr.e woolen fabrics. Tbey arc Heaiitlfnily finished and come In sprays, delicate blossoms and other floriated patterns, broche designs and dots on black, white, cream, dark and medium colored grounds. They furnish one ol the most comfortable of fubrics for Hum mer wear. Novelties in lingerie are constantly appearing. Among the newest are silk petticoats cut out on the border in squares. In each of these open places is a small inserted pufling. Some of these skirts are made of blue surah, with inserted pufllngs of light blue satin. The square pieces which arc cutout of tnn lower part of these skirts are not more than six inches long and there are u number around the skirt. The newest and simplest fichus are vcrv large, and are of Indian muslin embroidered on the edges, so that lace is not needed for trimming them, though the latter is sometimes added. They are in four different sizes, of which most arc graceful additions to iiouse toilettes for the present season, and will be; worn out ol doors during the Hummer, when, with the wide brimmed garden lints, they complete most picturesque costumes. In I/ondon for dressy occasions hoods and muffs made ol brocade, with strands of gold rvfnning through, are very fashionable. The hoods are sepa rate from the dresses or jackets and are finished oil in front with long loops and ends of colored (generally red)satin ribbon nboutthree inches wide. The muffs have ribbon nnd lining to match, and are trimmed with black or coffee colored lace. Sometimes the toque is also of the same material. Hall dresses arc made by Worth with white skirts and colored bodices Thus the skirts in some instances are white tulle, the bodice cardinal velvet, col ored brocade, or Roman "silk In pink and paic blue horizontal stripes or bars. The trimmings on such toilettes are various—plain satin, gauze striped satin, gold passementerie, woven to imitate embroidery, beaded gauze (the gauze into which beads are woven), and flowers in profusion are all used. Pretty percales and cambrics have dark blue, lavender or gray grounds, strewn with white polka dots. They are trimmed with narrow gathered ruffles edged with Russian braid edging or with torchon. Tucked yokes are on some of these dres<* and a band edged with torchon lace borders the yoke, while below the yoke the waist forms a side plaited basque to be worn with a belt. Rands of plain blue gingham border the ruffles of striped blue and white cambric dresses. Buttons are a matter of great im portance in modern toilettes. Tbey arc most fanciful and varied in style. Some are of enamel with flowers in the Japanese style, others of tortoise shell inlaid with gold, of carved mother of-pearl, of engiaved steel, steel rut in faeets. out jet, ete., hut the most artistie are those of cliinn. painted by hand and enameled. Some of these are quite little mar vela, each bultoj of the set being ornamented witb n different pattern and becoming real works of art ► an* and Their I.ltcratnr*. in the East, the use of the fan is of remote antiquity. There is. a fine col lection of fans among the Egyptian antiquities in the British niusum" Terence, who lived in the second cen tury, B. C., refers, in ouc of his I-atin comedies, to the lan. as uetd by the ladies of ancient Rome. The illustrations of vases and other remains of the classic times of Greece and Rome represent the kind of fans which were in use in those days, while the early manuscripts arc embellished with drawings of those of medieval Eu rope. The great pictures of Titian and ids con tern pornrtcs carry the histoiy down to more modern times. The fan was first brought into Euro pean notoriety ly Uatherinode Medici*, who introduced it into France. Great puros were spent in ornamenting tans, and many were painted on by the skillful fingers of Watteau. In the paimvdaysof thj French court, when X IV. and Marie Antoinette lived, there was a profligate extrava gance in fans, which was extremely profitable to the manufacturers of them. Queen Elisabeth, ol England when in full dress, carried a fan. lturing the six lot nth and seventeenth centuries, inns were used by gentlemen. During tiie present century 11827). it was a blow given wth a fan by the Dry of Algiers to t he French consul, that led to the war which ended in makinga French colony of that whole region. The out-door lan WAS large enough to screen the face fioni the sun. and in old prints ladies, aic seen carrying their fans in different positions, just as fancy pleased thorn. In old times, the fan was used to ex press, by peculiar movement.*, love, disdain, anger and other emotions. Gay, in enumerating the accomplishment* of Flavin, says: " In other IMIUII, the tmn WOULD prove An engine ot small fores in love." In the eighteenth century,the fan was held up to shield the face when any thing too shocking for female ears was uttered. Pope makes an allusion to the discontinuance of the fashion: " Dm modest fan WAS lifted np no more. And virgins smiled st w i.st they liltished be fore." . . During lite same century at Tall* held in London and elsewhere, gentlemen se lected their partners by drawing a lan from a number placed promiscuously in a hat. For that reason, the fans of the ladies were carefully studied, as each one possessed an individuality. A tourist in Spain. as late as 1861. wrote the followinjwmut tlis use of fans in church: not under standing the services, 1 could guess the nature of it at any pnrtionlnr tiue, by the way in which the fans were waving. The difference between a litany and a thanksgiving was unmistakable; the minuter shades of devotion were also discernible." In 1871, tlieie wns held, under the pat ronage ot Queen Victoria, at the South Kensington museum, a competitive ex liibition of fans. Large numbers were placed on exhibition from Egypt, Tur key, Mexico and the islands of the Pa cific ocean, and included almost every private and pubho collection of any pote. Tilt queen eoeived the highest Errmium (fa.WO) ,or a fan which once clonged to Marie Antoinette. The manufacture, of fans is exten sively carried on in England, France and Belgium. Whole villages in Pl cardy are employed in the various branehet connected with the industry. The Chinese have greatly excelled fn the art of fan-making, and fn the species of lacqucre 1 fans their snpetiority is ad mitted. Cheap fans are manufactured in Canton as low as two cents a docen. Fans art a'so made, to a fair extent, in this country. The total value of tlie fans annually manufactured in the world is placed in excess of $500,000. An Anrlciii Itmnr*- In Tvicaaf t A Chicago limetf orresponrient, writ ng ironi Tum nny in Italy, says: Oar ing tiiis visit I witnessed muy inter esting rustic games and ceremonies, notably a marriage, witli it* escort () f maidens with their lamps, and a dance OGlobratingtfiatcharroingctlitoiis among the ancient Italians, the . opening of summer, which Virgil describes in a famous passage of ids firnt eclogue. First came an invitation to the goddess of oorn, two pretty and graceful girls representing the priestesses of Ceres— tiie one fair and garlanded with white flowers, the other dark, and crowned witli purple flowrrs. They pause to strike their uplifted tamborfnes, while behind thflm their sisters rush breath less butshouting witli flowing garments and oulsprpad arms. Two young men with purple caps and emhroidered vests advance, each with a silver amphora or saered vase of wine, wiiieh is first sipped bv the pricstes es, followed by the maidens who surround them, and then by the young men who closely fol low up the rear, the whole accompan ied by characteristic songs and recita tions. Then all join hands, a youth and maiden alternately, and form two immense rings, all being crowned with chaplets of grain and grasses, and the priestesses decked with additional gar lands of the same nature lianging like a scarf across their shouldfis. The leader directs the movements of one ring until they all sink down exhausted, when they are relieved by the other ring al ternately until the old Roman dial on the church tower marks the morning hours and pale moonlight gives place to the glowing day. Then they are led, smiling tend bowing their heads, in review before ur, and then before their o'der friends who are seated as specta tors, and then ngain bounding off in a lively circle they twist and turn it into all imaginable sltapes, seldom iireaking the magic ting, returning again ana again to the groups of spectators for in spection and approval, and again bound ing off in the mazes of the intricate dance. The leader will perhaps con duct tlicm to the brow of the hill and then starting hack some of them are sent down the bank and recovered by the clasped hands in the chain; and then laughing and shouting she leads theni to tfie border of a mass of grain spread out to dry, and drawing Iwuk as before, some of them are thrown head long into the long white straw, the leader constantly passing through the ring and turning it, as it were, inside out- Along the blue Mediterranean or on the borders of the inland iakes the shores and waves iiave offered means of bright epjoyment to these dancers lor many happy generations. Hl for lludu-hM. Dr Day says in a late lecture: What ever be the plan of treatment decided upon, rest is the first principle to l> cul cato in every severe headache. Rest, which the busy man and anxiousraother cannot obtain so long as they can manage to keep about, is one of the first reme dies for every headache. a':d wc should never cease to enforce it. The brain, when excited, as much needs quiet an 1 repose as a fractured limhoran inflamed eye; it is obvious that the chances of shortening the seistire and arresting the pain will depend on our power to have this carried out effectually. It is a prac tical lesson to keep steadily in view, in that there may lurk behind a simple headache some lesson of unknown mag nitude which may remain stationary if quictue'r can he maintained There is a point worth attending to in the treat raert of all headaches. See that the head is elevate d at night, and the pillow hard, for if it be soft the head sinks into it ami becomes hot; which with some people is enou h to provoke an attack in the moriiibg if sleep has been long and heavy. Qweffi \ trtorla'* Onus liter*. Of the five daughters of Queen Vic toria the Princes? Beatrice, the young est. will oon Into remained the'iougc unmarrbd. The Crown Prin"- pean merchandise ftw ivory and e'ther productions of the interior of the dark continent, for which undertaking* cap ital of several millions was to he raised. His patrimonv was rapidly disappear tag, and to place bounds to his costly activity his father obtained the ap pointment of trustees fur his properly. The son lias now been appointed vice consul at Sierra Leone, nod, in conse. quence, applied to the civil tribunal U obtain the removal of the interdiction. The fudges, however, doubted whether lie was yet sufficiently cured of his ex travagant ideas and declined to accede to the demand. * - Tl Three roill'on sores ot fall wheat have been sown in California.