Cariosities of Statistics. Lot >is observe what our farms and farmers are annually producing fot very man, woman and child of the ■country's population. The year 188(1 produced for each person thirty bushels ■of corn, nine bushels of wheat, eight ! bushels of oats, one bushel of barley, two-fifths of a bushel of rye, one tenth of a bale of cotton, three pounds of wool, two-thirds of a ton of hay, half a pound of hops, two pounds of rice, ten pounds of tobacco, three and a half bushels of Irish potatoes, and half a bushel of sweet jwitatoes. Of animals there was one hog for every person, one horse for every five persons, one mule for every twenty eight persons, one milch cow for every four persons, and two sheep for every three persons. There were fifteen and a half pounds of butter and a half pound of cheese made for each person, and the cows averaged sixty-two and a half pounds of butter each for tin- year. Although our farm products seem im mense in amount it is an astonishing fact that if every acre of Illinois was devoted to wheat for one year, and the average yield should be the moderate amount of fifteen bushels to the acre, the crop would exceed in amount the entire wheat crop of the country for the last year. If the state of Missouri was wholly planted with corn, and should give a moderate yield of forty busheb to the acre, the aggregate would equal the entire corn crop of the country for the year l*Bi>. The state of Kansas alone can raise beef enough to feed the present population of the country. When we have ten times the present population, and when all our lands areas well cultivat ed as the valley of the Nile, the aggre gates of the farm products will be ex pressed in figures difficult to compre hend. Agriculture is becoming chem istry, and husbandry is becoming mechanics, so that one good man be day can do as much work upon a farm as four men did fifty years ago. Facial Characteristics. In the practice of the art of palm istry some knowledge of physiognomy is of great advantage; indeed. the two sciences go hand in hand, one supple menting the other. This so generally indicates good mind and heart; a very small nose, good nature but lack of energy. Thick li|)S indicate either great genius or great stupidity; very thin lips cruelty and falsehood, particularly if they are habitually compressed. Dimples in the cheek signify roguery; in the chin, love and coquetry. A lean face is a indication of intelligence; a fat face shows a person inclined to falsehood. Irascibility is accompanied by an erect posture, open nostrils, moist temples, displaying superficial veins, which stand out and throb under the least excitement, large unequal, ill ranged eyes, and equal use of Icotb hands. A good genius may be expected from middle statue, blue or gray eyes, largo prominent forehead, with templ.-s a little hollow, a fixed, attractive look and habitual inclination of the head. Utile C. (iffen. The Voritur Man Was Fold. "Good morning, John," said one of the leading pastors in Scranton, I'enn., at a young friend whom he met on the street the first warm day of the season, "How does your father stand the heat?". The young man made no re ply, but went his way with a clouded brow. And when the good pastor learned that the young man's father hail died only a week before he nnder itood why his cordial greeting was met so coldly. FLACM FOB TIIK RATIOS. Millions of Thru* Supplied t>y ih !*•%▼ York -11 it a fact ii re i • American Hunt lug Ahead* " What can you tell about (lags that is interesting?" was asked of the pro prietor of one of the largest factories in New York city. "A great deal," ho said. "The trade Is booming ; that's interesting to us. Flags form one of the necessities of life. They are the most prominent outgrowth of American enthusiasm. We get married at an altar draped with the national colors. Sunday schools parade the streets, and go pic nicking with (lags In the hands of the children. Christinas trees are deco rated with them. The advent of bock beer or the opening of a bar-room calls j for the use of the patriotic emblem of \ freedom. We nominate political can- j didates in flag-druped halls. The open- I ing of the great bridge called for thou sands of fiags. We honor the memory of the soldier dead by decorating their graves with the (lag they fought for. We listen to stories of the wrongs in dicted on theoppressed in another land in halls where the stars and stripes are twined with the emerald field and the harp. Everything that excites the emotions sells our llags. There is no place like America for (lags ; there is no (lag so beautiful as the American (lag." " Have you any idea how many (lags are made and sold in a year? " •• Not a very accurate one. They ! are made by the million. Our concern ! turned out a million and a quarter i last year. There are dozens of other firms turning out other millions. We fill orders for a thousand gross of the small (lags. We keep hundreds of j thousands constantly in stock. Flags are perishable. When the present ex citement is over the (lags are thrown away. When the future excitement comes new ones are Ixcught. They are so very cheap that no one cares to keep them. Thus we make small paper (lags, tine by one and a half inches large, mounted on a pin, that we selj at thirty cents a gross. From that figure the price runs up to f2i* for a very large and elegant silk banner handsomely embroidered. The largest bunting (lags seldom exceed thirty-six by fifty feet in size. Such (lags are used by hotels. Then there are the streamers, the burgees, or banners with mottoes, the signal llags for merchant ships and yachts. Those may becalled side issues to the dag business, but they are a large factor in the trade." " What do you make your (lags of?" "Silk, bunting, muslin and paper. Hik (lags are usually made to order. We keep a great variety of bunting llags in stock. These (lags are made by sewing the different colored cloth together. The next cheaper grade of (lags is made by printing the colors on the white cotton cloth. We can print them as large as six feet in length. Tliev are printed on hand presses, much the same as newspapers were printed years ago. All attempts to cheapen the work by steam power have failed." " Do you make foreign flag*?" " Thousands of them. They are wanted for decorating purjeoses chiefly. Ships buy some, but not many. They gel them abroad. The foreign con suls give us orders for some very ele gant (lag-." " To what territory do you look for your trade?" "The whole rountrv. New York supplies the nation, although many fiags are made elsewhere. Here is an order from Cincinnati. Over there is a bundle for San Francisco. You can say that in the (lag trifle, as in a great many other things.New York City leads the world." (told from Permian llivers. The whole of Chueamba, (Peru), says a correspondent in Iron, for a number of leagues alcove and below the temple of the sun is auriferous, and the inhabitants of the province of Huamelics, through which it passes, obtain by washing the sand, and by means of sheepskins. 200,000 or 300,- 000 dollars' worth of gold annually. The wool on the skin is cut out until it is nlxcnt half an inch in length. The skins are then anchored down, with the wend side up. by means of , loose stones placed on them, in and Ice low the various rapids. In which |x>- sition they are suffered to remain from six to twenty-four hours. They are I then carefully raised out of the water, ' turned wool side downward in a lcatea j (tub) of water, and thoroughly washed; the gold falling from the wool of the skin is finally collected from the bottom of the batea. Sheep were unknown to the Incas, and as they had obtained an Immense amount of gold from this Pactolean stream, it is presumed that they used the skins of the llama and those of the vicuna The alcove will not only Ice of Interest to the general reader, but will also furnish a wrinkle to the gold miners similarly situated. TOPICS OF THE DAT. The camphor tree has recently been introduced into California and prouiis es well. It grows well all along the coast, and one tree at Scramento has i already attained a hight of thirty feet. It is easily propagated from seed or ' cuttings. Itesides producing the well- > , known drug, the tree Is valuable for , lumber. j \ A late liritish lllue-Ilook shows ! ] that 559,498 persons were employed j in all the mines of the I'nited King dom during the year 1882. The total number of fatal accidents was 959, re sulting in the death of 1218 persons. ( an increase of 105 as compared with the year 1881. Modern methods, more- ; over, have not made mining safer in Great Britain, for in 1882 there was one fatal accident for every 582 | persons employed, whereas the aver age for the past nine years was one fatal accident for every 590 persons employed. South America is the lurid of cheap beef, after all. In that country cattle have increased so rapidly the last few years that fat bullocks have declined from #!'• per head to a few cents over #0 per head. It is estimated that in two years from now the number of cattle in the Argentine Confederation will number 28,' KM •, 00", against 1-i,- 000,000 in 1877, 5,000,00outh bv your civil w.tr. Al though they would laugh at the idea if you suggested it, nine out of ten men in F.ngland lielieve that Albert 1 K.dwnrd, Prim eof Wales, will be tie last king F.ngland will ever have. A revolution is silently but surely pre paring that will uproot all the rem nant-. of the old feudal system." "A spurious Napoleon IV," says the I.ondon Urophi', "has lately de ceived a good many jieople at Turin. He was a young Italian weaver of very good address and decidedly hand -1 some, anil for some time succeeded in keeping up his pretended position as the late prince impcral, who he de clared had not been killed in Zululand. His money having come to an end, the pretender took to highway roblwry, and when caught, so loudly declared his Napoleonic pretensions that hewas treated as a madman and sent to an asylum, front which he escaped and practiced his old trie the only star to shine in her new sphere, deprives matri mony of that charm which generally surrounds it in the eyes of maidens. Such a reversal of the common order of things could only exist in a coun try where the needle points to the south and where men wear petticoats. During a recent lecture in London IK- fore an assembly of army officers, inventors of small arms and other ex perts, Colonel Fosbcry astonished his audience by suddenly drnwing from under the table a wca|sin which he had just brought from Liege and which he railed a "baby electric gun." It could not ix!discharged until brough in connection with the source of elec trie force, but that done, it could b* worked with amazing rapidity, its in ventor, Mr. I'ieper, of Liege, having few days before llred 104 rounds in two minutes. Colonel Fosbcry exhi bitisl its mode of operation by mean' of a small electric accumulator secret ed under his vest, ami minute car j tridges containing only powder and wad. Various speakers afterward ex ] pressed the opinion that electricity' would again revolutionize the inanu I facture of small arms. An adventurous walk across the en tire continent of Australia has recently 1 been completed by George Ernest Morrison. The whole distance trav 1 ersed from the Gulf of Carpentaria tn Melbourne, exceeded 2'" HI miles, and was covered in 120 days. Passing through uninhabited wastes, where sometimes intervals of 1 c rated otherwise law-abiding citizens and led them to a violation of the very law s they are themselves demanding shall l>e enforced. " But this is no! sectional, it continues." •• Crime i general, recognizing state lzoundariet as little as it does the rights of pro perty or the sanctity of human life, and in the North as in the South there is too much of it going unpun ished. Atrocious villains, seeing this arc loci to despise the methods of th,e courts, and commit depredation* others wise unthnught of. The liettcr classes, recognizing the same faidts in the ail ministration of the law, goaded to madness by the sight of unpunished crime, take the matter into their own hands, and by tlie commission of a crime themselves punish a still greater offense. That is all there Is of it, and it is done in Michigan and South Car olina; in Illinois and Tennessee; in lowa and Kentucky. The man wh attempts to sectionalize these offenses and impute them to one people alone is blind to the facts or a willful per- \ verier of the truth. Freight cars are now built to carry 4d,009 pounds. THE SKA OTTER TRADE. t lira of Ureal Flneneia art* l aluc lr Huprrlar !• ftaalakln. The San Francisco Examiner says: "The sea otter is an inhabitant of the North I'acilic ocean, and is found no where else in the world. Formerly they were abundant along the coast | from lower California northward, as ■ well as among the Aleutian islands, I and from Kamskatka to the Kurile ! islands. Their fur is of the most ex quisite fineness and richness in both color and texture. The best skins are of shining jet black, and their elegance of surfaee and of l>ody is not perhaps | surpassed by that of any other fur 1 known. The majority of the skins show a very rich dark brown, those of ! a poorer quality hi-coming lighter. It is somewhat remarkable that this fur has never become fashionable in our cities. The richest and most expensive sealskin sacque ever seen cannot sus tain comparison whatever in elegance with what the same garment would have la-en if made from prime -kins of the sea otter. And yet this charming fur is allowed to go almost exclusively to the Chinese market. The skins of scarcely any other fur bearing animal brings so high a price individually as do those of the sea otter. A cargo of them win brought Into San Francisco, of which not on<- was worth less than |75, and they , ranged from that to fl2'. Those, however, were of uncommon excel lence; they usually bring from $4O to |7O, and it would probably be fair to average them at |5O. When the I'ryhilov islands were tirst discovered, two sailors alone, named Lukannon and Kaiekoy, killed in the tirst year 5000 sea otters; the first party which reached Cook's inlet obtained 8""0 skins; the first visit of Russians to the gulf of Gahkulat, in 1794, yielded 2'tO". The skins were then worth as much as they are now, so that the season's work of those two sailora iirst mentioned, on the island of St. i'aul, amounted to no less a sum certainly than $250,00". Such a wholesale slaughter could not continue and the follow ing year they got less than 1""". A few years later the sea otter abandoned M. I'aul's Island and have not reappeared there since. All along the coast a similar history is noticeable, and the sea otter bids fair to become so m irly extermi nated that they w ill cease to afford a profit to the hunter. singular as it may apja-ar. the otter's skin is too large for him. Take hold of any part of his b'*!y to lift him and the skin comes 11]• loose in the hand as it dis-s on the tus k•-f a dog. The cotiM-qucrici is that, although the entire length of the animal, from the nose to tin root of the tail, is commonly but little over thris- fist, yet wlx-n the -km i reuu \- •d and stretched in drying it often measures live feet, and in - iih- i .tw-s nearly six. TheTinnting of the otter is greatly changed in the last twi-nty-five y< irs Boats were formerly usisf fr-ou which to shoot tlx-m, but it no longer pay, Now men sbiit them from the In ah, using n-1 boats. This is done on the coast of Washington Territory, l*-tween Port Granville and Gray's Harl-r. and scarrx ly anywhere else at present From morning till night the hunter walks the ls-ai h, ready for a shot, but even while he sees his game the chunc* that he will sis ure it is not particularly flattering. The lirst difficulty is that of putting a bullet through it at |H'r haps ■!'* to yards or even more. It is not a Creed moor target, but a little black spot in the midst of the dark, leaden-colored sea, and is not more than four inches across. Yet lie often hits it, though generally after many failures. The very best marks men average at least twenty-live shots for every otter kilbsl. Oriental Torlnres. Impalement, horrible as it is. Ls not the crudest punishment inllictl in (tricntal countries. Particularly the Chinese and the inhabitants of Atmam. Cochin Cliina and Main seem to leave exhausted all their powers of inven tion in devising new and insufferable torments for criminals or persona who had incurred the hatred of the rulers uf those countries. In China relels and traitors are literally cut into a thousand pieces. The executioner who is to carry out this dreadful sen tence fastens the prisoner, who Ls tied hand and foot, with a chain to a post, end makes an incision over the fivre head of his victim. He pulls the skin of the forehead over the eyes of the sufferer, so that he can no longer see. A large basket with small knives Is now placed beside the executioner, who shakes them up several times and takes them up, one by one. I On each knife is written the name I of a part of the human body which I'm : (lend who takes the instrument of tor ture from the basket proceeds to lace rate slowly. Little nieces of 'jesh and skin arecut from the struggling wretch, and whim the executioner lIM cut and slashed one part, in his opinion, auffl eiently, he takes another knife from the basket and proceeds an before, un til at last all the knives have been taken from the basket. But while the victim suffer* horrible torments the executioner operates on him with such skill that no vital parts are touched, and death doe* not come to the relief of the sufferer. And when all the nllrubers of this terrible lottery of knives are drawn, the bleeding body of the unfortunate man is thrown to ravenous dogs, who, more merciful than their masters, soon put an end te the agonies of the doomed man. Another punishment said to have been indicted in China on great crimi nals consisted in being brushed to death. The instrument employed in this torture was a wire brush, with which the executioner brushed, or rather scrajx-d, off the flesh of the cul prit, a proceeding which natunilly con sumed a great deal of time. The tor mentor witli consummate skill, brush •si around all the great veins and ar teries, to prevent the victim from bleeding to death, and kept him aliv for a long time. In J-iam the death penalty was indicted on rebels *'7 having tlie-in trampled to death by eie phants. Others had a small cocoanut forced into their mouth, so that they haoins, was set in motion by Jergensin 1 -VIO. It i- a curious fact that so Arm in texture is the paper of a genuine hank of Kngland note that burning alous < ;ui destroy it. During ooe of the ri-cent hot days in Brooklyn N. V.. the bridge de s<-ended to within 1d.% feet y inches of the water. I'nloadod, in the coldest wlather, it would be two feet higher. Tie* "Parliament of Bats" is the name given to the Knglish Parliament which convened in February, 142 G. I in* uiernlM-r* were forbidden to w ear theirsw• >rds, as they had l>een accuiw , tomcd t> do, and armed themselves with lmnieiise wooden bats. A < aliforma man ha* a flock of twentv-tive ilotiu*sticatel wild geese, i ire jwularity f the wild geese u that if it- mate dies, it never take* anothi r. s-erond marriages, so ta -js-a'K.are not tolerated them. In olden time* an extraordinary custom prevailed in Denmark, that of ''lining a live animal, a horse,a lamb, i pig, ar. I sometimes even a child at tin ciimiiii-ruetiient of a building. It is strange that a similar custom a|>- l>*ars. from the Servian ballad*. t h;iM' prevailed among the Sclavonians. \ lamb w i- generally cntornlied in the foundation of a church; a horse in * churchyard. The "Knglish Prophetess" war .h anna south cote. lorn about 177:1. claiuieii to possess such miraciiloui powi-r as would restore the dcadtt life, ami once a large concourse ot pcsiple assembled to witness the fill tillmcnt of her profession. One of the crowd suggested the expediency o* ascertaining with a dagger, if tliemar to la "raisisl" was really dead, where njHin the "corjwe" sprang to his fee* arui ran away. The commissioners < hargeil with e* amining recruits for the French army were compelled to reject a. lad la scars ago for the reason that he was a fraction of an inch under the pre scribed higlit. He was so young, how, ever, tli.it there was efery reason to siip]i*c that lie would grow, and ha was marked as a likely .-andidatc tot the next year. Last yean accordingly, lie was measured again, but instead of increasing in statue, the conuuia sioners were amarcd to find thai ha had grown perceptibly shorter. They decided to give him one more chance, and he has just lieen examined again, only to 1H. Anally rejected, sinre it ap pearad that lII* head is steadily sinking toward his hoota During the two years bis hight. has decreaaeil one* t went iet h of an inch. Tke rule forbidding a prince to con tract a marriage with a woman of in ferior rank is rigorously observed in Germany. ITince Alexander, of Witt genstein however, hat refused to al low It to stand In his way. He fell in love with Die governess of his chil dren and renounced his i title tew in order marry her.