TESIII OW PvRLIOLUOL. . The ItADFOID RimOafs*a pnbltsbed even Thursday morning by GOODS - ICU B R1T1311000 1 4. One Dollar per annumitikadvance. girAdvartioug In all care," exclusive of sub scription to the paper. SPECI NO FIC ES Inserted at TIM oaths per It no /or hilt Insertion, and rvirs cent% pectins for each :4110SCqueut Insertion, but no notice inserted - fur less than fifty cents. VEtitla kt3VEItTI3ENIENTS IMMO Insert at reasonable rates. A I alui•trator's sod Executor's Notices, vs; Au Mors Notices,f2,6o; BusmeasCards, (par year) IS, additional !Ines f I each. Yearly wtrenistirs are entitled to quarterly oh %ages. Transient advertisements must be paid for funds/once. All resolutions of associations; communications of Host:ea or individual Interest, and notices of marriages or deaths.exceeding dve line s are chug ed rrrac viTS per line,lout simplebotteesof mar riages end de 4ths will be published withouteltarge, • 'rite it secures biasing a larger circulatiosithan any other paper In the county. mates It the best advertising medium tn Northern Pennsylvania. Joa VutNTING of every kind, to plain and fancy colors. done with neatness and dispatch. ilsn•lbIlls. Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Blllbeads, st a t c afests, be., of every variety and style.printed at the shortest notice. The RKPOIRTSS office is well supplied 11th power. presages, a good sistioXt- Tit new type, and everything in the printing ran be executed in the most artistic Manner and at the lowest rbtes. TERMS INVARIABLY CASU. - • Vusiuess a/arbs. DAVIES, CARNOCLIAN & HALL, krroamiTs-Al-LAW, , SOUTH SIPE OF WAED HOUSE. nee 4a.71„ DILL KINXEY AI .ATTOICR ENS-AT-LAW. Office—Rooms formerly occupied by Y. M. C. A. Rending Room. R. J. lIADIIL. 3,18,80 O. D. gtsizy. AIRS., E. J. PERRIG , TEACHER OF PIANO,./LITO OROAN. tessopegiven, to Thorough Bass and ,Harmony. Ciatcation of the yoke a specialty. Located at T. Plneltt. Reference t Holmes & Passage. • Towanda, Pa:, March 4, 1880, • • T OIIN W. CODDING, . . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TOitANDA, PA. ()lice over Klrby's Drug S:ore: - VOMAS E. MYER A TTO RY; LT-AT•L TOWANDA, PA. •rice with PatrlCk and Foyle. 5ep.25,19: pEcK & OVERTON • . ATTORNEYS-AT LAW, - TOWAS A, t' A. OVEUTON, HEW: M. BECK I tODNEY A: MEROUR, ATT4M NET AT-LAW, . - _ -., . TOWANDA. PA., . • ....11 , 71tnrpf Patents. Particular attention paid x. 4 I.nsiness In the Orphans (Jour', and' to the Waa l-nen! of estxteg. t ',ltee in Montanyes 'Pock IAVERTON & SANDERSONi‘k ATTOIINtiI , AT-LAW„ TOWANDA, PA• ock:Rrox. J rs W IL JESSIIP; ATTORNEY AND COCNSELLOII-AT-LAW, - 11ONTROSE. PA. Judge Jessup haring resumed the praetteeof the Ittn. : ie Northern Pennsylvania, will attend to any legal IntAness InJruxtedloliitu In Bradford equnry„ l',-r, , ns.wlshlitg to conttute Iflm, can earl 'on B. Streeter, Sal., Towanda, Pa., valeta appolament call br !pale. TIEN R,Y ATTORNKTyitt COCIqELLOR-AT-L4 TONVANDA, PA. Feb 1 - 4 1 L. lIILLIS, A TTORNMT-AT-L AW, TOW AN DA, PA. • 1 - 4 1 F. 'G OFF., • . • . • I ATTOIIi: EX-AT-LAW, . • .WYALUSING, PA., • A gon, y for the Rate and purchase of all kinds of 'Securities and for tusking loans on Real Estate. All business mill receive careful and' pnitopt fJune 4, 1879, • • 11. HOMPSON, ATTORNEY rr • LAM , , WYAIXF , ING, I'A. WM &Mitt to alt hu:oliess eutrucetf Wilts care to Bradford, suillran and Wyolui , Counties. Office with Etui. Porter. [norig:U. 11 : 1111.6 - 1 . --.. BULL, SURVEYOR. t:NGINF.I.:RING, SURVEYING AND DRAFTING. with G. F. Ma , ou, over Patch & Tracy, .51.tita street, Towanda, Pa. G EO : W.KIMBERLEY, ATTORNF.Y-AT.LAW, TOW ANDA, PA 0ni,.0-I..coud door south of F►rst. National Bank. ' August 12. ssO. 3SON,' A TTOILNEYSI-AT-LAW, TOWANDA, I'A. N. ELSIIItEr I • M6PHERSON, A I'TORN ET-A T-LAW, TOW A ND-N, PA, • I)bi'l Airy Brad. Co FRP. -INS"c'....RANCE. Tiering accepted ; the agency of -the - I.ANCAStilitl; INSVKANCE COMPANY, 14isetts over $13,000.000 00.1 I am prepared ty write policies at currenrrides. M. D. SAVA : ,ItTti, Agent. 1 , :ti,••• with IV tn. F.., Vincent, Towenda. Pa. lyr. T 01I\ . W.',NIIX; p t ' ! . . - , E AT rims 61 , •AT-14W 'AND U. 9.• CO)1111.185101CRIA TOWA I NIia., PA. - torbte—N on h slde Public Square. : . • • . .Jarr.1,1575. S .INr W. _ATTORNEY -AT-LAW, Tel WANDA, PRICS'A • 'Mice—South .Ide Poplar street, opposite Ward 11 [Ner. 13, 1879. r ANDREW WILT, el . • ATTOIRNICY-AT-LA*. %);Ili•e—Means. muck, SI alu•st, over J. L. Xent's Fier.., Towanda. May be consulted to German. [Arid' 12.'76.] W . J. YOUNG, . ATT.itS FS-AT -LAW, TOWANDA. rA. , )or.—sr.rond door south of the First Nit!enal Rank Ntlln St.. up stairs. . WM MAXWELL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW TOW A N DA, PA. offiee over Dayton's Store A prtll2, M. WOODBUR 1' Pla., and finrirt.nri„ Orace at r Szr.aA, }Carrot May 1,18% 1y• vir B. ;KELLY, - PENTlsrOflice V eve* . M. E. Rosenfield's, Towanda, Pa. inserted on Gold, siiTer, .Rubber. and Al. , amour base. ;Teethextracted without pain. 34-72. ' - 1. 4 1 D P I'ICED • i . .. .4. . 141 . 17 S :CIA ..: M. 41. D S; IR to . EON. . 0 .'u over Modfanves• Store. OTheMhoure front 1.0 : - to 12 A. M„ and from 2 to 4 x. •.. pedal attention given to DISEASESi.. i DISEASES .4 . Or and ' . 1 • or. TR E F.Y.E.i' I THE EAR . - _ .... . r_i_ W. .itl' A N , I . N....A • . I . COUNTY ScrnItINTENDi 'Mee day last Saturday or each inolillt. over Turner eg Gordon's Drug Store, Towanda, Pa. Towanda, dune 20, 1878. (1 . S. RUSSELL'S . • GENV.ItAL INSURANCE AQENG-Y M3V2Rr70.,. TOW)k I. YDA. PA. BANKi !TOWANDA, PA. APITAL PAID IN.. SURPLUS FUND Bank otre'rs unusual racilittee for Ole trans. act ton of a general banking business. lIETTS, Cashier JOS. rresident. - IMRS.II.`PEET, T E A C 11 mu. Or I T F.104: 4 .4410pf,r term. • ' Otestietice Third Stri•rt, Ist T. , samli, Jan. 12, , i5-iy. • GET YOUR JOB PRINTING 100 r st—theItEPOIITEROYIPICE, opposite the cocrtatouss, Towsnds. Claikirird tsatk •speeialty PHILADELPHIA TIMES. TOWANDA. PA. The Tisaza will enter the Wow Year with alarier circle of regular readers than it has bad any pre-vi- QM period of its history, and the important events of the nett year must steadily enlarge the fled of Independent Journalism. ' A new administration's/rill be inaugurated ; new political occasions will create new p.ditical duties: the great commercial and Industrial prosperlty,of the country must stimulate progress and,thrift In alt sections, and the tendency of politicl' power. will tie toward corruption and despotism, as it ej cr Is When the people are iverted teem thei,,sttirn criticism of authority by peace and Vents'. .' I The TIMES will he in the future, as It has been in the past, absolutely independent of all politlyti ,parties, but earnestly and fearlessly devoted to n teerity and patriotism in old' statesmanship andito the freedom and sanctity of the ballot. Depend ant party organs will continue to babble about par ty men and party measures; to excuse the public jobber and the demagogue ; to suppress. pervert; or deny the truth when -party Interests demand ;It, And to lavish the regulation praise of the servant to the master ; bnt tI,H groning intelligence of the age daily multiplies the readers-of the indephident newspaper, and the Plumate' which best retteet the rapidly Increasing independence of the people Will be the great American journals of the future;, The TAU-its aims to reach the highest s4pdard of thedudeper dent newspaper. It restlessly op poses corrupt ion,- ts and rings of all parties, wheth er in city, State or nation. it opposes every form of imperial political domination, whether repre sented by an individual. by a faction or by a, : party. It opposes sectionalism North and South as the' de- , mon et the Itepublie, and It demands public" tran quility mid the supremacy of liberty and I.‘‘.: fur every citizen of the Union. GI Tlie Tt sirs will begin the New Year strengthen ed In all efits already exceptionally strong dePart nieuts. Inn Annals of the:-War will be continned In the fcr..Exby EDITION, with interest ing extraetstherefront In the'other editions. and the contributors for to this limpartant feature of the paper will be from the ui* distinguished solditirs anti civilians of both North and South Its largelistrof conttlbutors In this and In foreign countries will be more thatariaintalned ; its rells ble news corresporobTrree i tiSinsurpasscd by that of any other Jourinil - nrilie. country ; Its various de partments essentials to a ctonplete newspaper for the hoine and family-circle are constantly enliven. ed by fresh writers, and ill will tnaltdain the posi- Hen It has won solely en %pi nieritl, as one of the most reliable and com pete newspapers of the World. May I, ,79 Jolts' F. SANDEnsON T tat ms DAILY' 'Delivered Fliy carriers, for tWelve'eents a week ; mail subscription, six dollars a year, or fifty carts a month, postago free. Wm-X- L - I—Published every Saturday Morning. two dol lars a year ; live copies, ; lea coplee, ,•- twelity copies, (d 15.. An extra copy free to the getter-no of a club. • Address TisiES, clet23. TIMIS BICILVIN-G, THE BEST PAPER END [noirt 1-75 The Scientific American The SCIENTIFIC AMERTPAN•is a large I' I rst- ChISS Weekly Newspaper of Sixteen Pages printed In the most beautiful style, profusely illustrated with splendid engravings, representing the newest thventlons and the most reeen!TX - Irv?)ices In the Arts and Sciences:loch:ding New anit.inCerest log Facts in Agriculture, Horticulture, the lane, Health, Medical Progress, Social Selenre, Natural History, Geology, Aseronomy: The most vatnabld ractlcal papers, by eminent writers in all depart ment of Science, will befound In the SCIENTIFIC 'AM F.IIIC AN. I. Terms. ta.:;:a per year, e 1.60 half year. which In t;lintes pobtage. 4 1)6tount, to Agents. , Slnglit copies, t..n cents. Sold LS all New silealers° Remit by postal t.tder. to 31U.NN CO Publishers, 37 l'ark now, New York. PATENTS. SCITE ronnrethrn 1 ' AME R ICAN th :i 31t 'ors. :ttuNs: & Co. are ttWreVors .Ano'rlean and Foreign Pittents, having yc:fra kneet and vow have the largest establishment In 'the world. Patents arc obtained on the beat ternis. A special notice ia'Aniple. lo the SCIENTIFIC ERICAN of all in ventions patented througn this A gtticy,-wit h the name and residence of toe Patentee. Hy the Immense circulatitoi•thits given. public attention la directed to the 'petits of the new Patent, and sales or Introduction often lr!asity effected. , Any person it . .) has made a new dlscoynryta 111- Ventlom - eatt at.vertain, free . clankle; whethera .pat t ean probably be obtained, ity writing to Siva &('n. We also, send pie out lland Hunk about the Patent Laws, Patents, Cave. s, 'Platte. Marks. their costs, and how vomited, with Matt; f - tr procuring adynnees on tuvuttlotis. 'Address (or he Paper. or COM' ertil rig pafrata, • U? 3 & Row, New yoix. - Branch Orme, err. F &.7UI s(.s , Washlngton• I). C. 1.. ELSISP.XE [feb.llS THE GREATEST LIVING AU , 1_ THons.sucti as Prof. l'Alaxlfullerjß , lion. W. E. Gladstone, Jas. A. Fronde, Prof, I tt, ley. W. A. Proctor E..w. A. Freeman, Prof. T , - I dal!, Dr. W. B. Carpenter. Prahefs Power'Coids. Prof. G.ildwin Smith. The links of Argyll, Win. Black. MIAs Tharlieray, Mrs; Muloeh-Cralk; Geo. l ,Mac,.. Donald. Mrs. Oliphant, .lean Ingelow,' Thos. Hardy, Mathew Arnold, Henry Kingsley, W. W. Story, Turgucuief. Carlyle, Ma skin, Tennyson, Browning, and many - othels, are - represented in the pages of • , •• . In tSal the Living Ape enterg Upoll its thirty eighth year, admittedly unrivalled and COntili tiouAly buccesffittl. During the year It V.lll furnieli to Its ieuderellie7 productions of the most eminent authors. above - named and many other.; enihrAeing the choicest serlal and Snort :dories liy.the it :Wing Foreign Novelist:B;mM an'amount..: tNAPPROACHED BY' ANY OTHER PERI (MICA!. • In the vcorld, of •the mo4t_vitinable' Literary raid Scientific matter of the tin - y,'ltinfi the peos of the. Esmlyist s, Scient Ihts, critics, wovefert, and represe'iding every epartment of linowlodge and l'f,:vress. ThplAVIDa; AGE. wee.kly znagizine giving raure,iliku THREE AND A QUARTER THOITSAN4 ,'• double•colunin octavo,' Dag.fi readlyp-m a ker yearly. It Frew Ids id. an inexpensive Torn.. con sidering ltb gnat ittnciont of ;natter. with fre,ll= owing to Its weekly Itg tie. and with a el4tis . .. facto, y conlidetepess attempted hy na other publi cation, the best F. , sayr. Reviews, eritlei , in,. Talus, Sketches of Travel and Discovery, l'i.etry. ftlograpiticli. Historical and Political infor mation. the entire body of Foreign Perk.rileal —Phylsl - on • It' Is therefore Invaluable to every America , . reader, as the only .t.tillsfactorily fresh and con pletti , unipllatloo of an rridispeusahle curt ehlt'llter aturc—lndtspensable because it embraces the pro- ductions of the • "In no-other form can so much thoroughly good readlog Le got for to little tutmenjin horeher forni can so remit Instruction and entertainment be'got in so small a space."--Phf/adefphia Times. ' • • •• There la no other publlca.lon like It Is known arid. read by all Who desire to keep abreast Ith the - telt Irate& t houg t ,of the English-qte !a•erld."—Rpiseopal Rejiater , Philadelphia. "jt reproduces so fully the choicest articles from the "foreign tnar.ar.lircs, that one Irhe takes it does .. not I feel the' tired of anything else In the Way of fore:lan periodical literatnre."— The Advance, Chicago. "Its frequent issue and ample space enable it to give all' that-the very ablest of .living Writers fur nish to periodical literattire on science. history, biography; plillosofar‘, poetry. theology, politics. and criticism: and to add to this the lull comple- ment of the best that there is In lictierr."—:Ths• Inferior, Chicago. .•• Gives the best of all at, the price of one.".`—.New Fork'.fricters.n t. "'rectos with the choicest ilterature.of the day r - ' I —\ - rte York Tribune. r '• It Is. by all udder the best eclectic put.ltshttf." —.Southern Churchman. 'tit enables the reader, at • trifling expense, con !tittering the quantity and quality of the reading to keep Face with the heed Ihought and literary work or our titre."—Chriktfan Clll . Oll, 'IV,-to York. l - " One cannot read,evirything No man will be behin,l the literature of the thneswho reads the L/ rING Aott."—ZiOn't Herald. Barden. : We know of uu inveattnent of eight dollars, In the world of literature. Owl grill yield equal re tarns,"—The Presbyterian. PAilndelphfa. - . '•dt hateno rival."—Nete York Evening Posh. Published WEEKLY' at eB.OO a year, free of lust= age. $125,000 ...... 60,000 im„ TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS rot' the year 19,81. remitting before January Ist. the numbers of Isso Issued after the receipt of their subwriptlons,lvlll be sent 0 !Lin S. Arlll, 1871 Club-Prices for the Best Home and Foreign • _ . [...Possessed of Tug tiVista Ant and one or other of our %iv - actin's Anmenean monthlies, a sub.. seriber.will Mut hitnscP In command of the whole bitnation. - -Phitadelphia Ereufog Bullrlfn 7 - • Vat 00.50 'iii 14 VI NG AGE mid-ally ono of time Siiihthlies (or Harpers Wt:ekly or Mural NM) mllt fur a year, pest paid: or. hir E 9 60 Tux Ica Aor. acid ttat• fit. Nicholas, orliciplettiu'aJour. nal, or Llpplacoli's Addnta• syriss.t. C 0. 4. livatoia. r ,- j' GOODRICH & HITCHCOCIC. Publliher‘o. VOLITI!dE XLI. "gm libverlisattents. • THE The Times for 1861. TiZY lT DE A 1/ . . TIFUL tr i S TRATEi) 36TH TEAR Littell's -LiTing Age. ABLEST LIVING WRITERS Literature WE TWAIN. Oh, Earth and Heaven are far apart ! . But what if they were one, And neither you nor I, Sweethear4 Had anyway mladone P When we, like laughing rivers fleet, • That cannot choose but flow, Among rbe goiters should meet and greet, - _ Shoul d meet and mine° to, Sweetheart— • , • That would be sweet, I know. ' No need to swerve and.drift apart, Or any bliss resign p Then I should all be yours, Sweetheart,. • And you would all be mine.' • But sh, to rust:, defied and brown, • From thaw of 'smirched snow, To rpoll the corn, beat down and drown Tim rail', red lilies loci Sweetheart, Ido not %rcpt you se. • • . For yoU and r are far apart Ahd Dover may wo meet. • Till you are glad and Frain!, .Siveetheart, Till I am fair and sweet. Till morning light his kis e Sed 'tit white Ax highest AlOtto snow, Till Loth are brave and bright of sight Z - wander high or low, .6,- _ s;weetheitrt For G*;il havu It So . . ..„ Oh, Bear .n and Earth aro far apart IJ:youarc hoed or true, re - Arittlf4l4siiii or crawl, Sweetheart, - Can no way binder me. - • • • But st"e . Yliil come In lordly state, With mountain' winds aglow, When I, by dazzling gate shill wait, To meet and. Mre you so, Sweephe'art * , That will he hearers, I know. ,r4Fri;in" 2 ke Mezatitt? f,,/ Poeta." SCO4CM:NG . SOL. Scientific Theories of Heist, Interpret ell in the Language cok Common Life. ' • 4.n article in - a recent number of The Popular -Science ' Monthly is of 'such-rare interest to' .those who are at all interested in scientific inquir ies that; for the benefit of those who will not be likely to read it there„we cendense r 'and put in;i little simpler form for the{ benefit of,. the readers Of: THE REPORTER some Of: the_ new facts that-have 'been .termined 'and theories advanced, usl4g ns much as possible the languageiof the author,, and drawing a littisl. from other works that treat uponithis subject. lIEAT OF . '4.IE SUN has itlways been a pu4iling problem for scientific investigiqors to solve. -There are so many thitigsto . be taken into consideration, theltitude of the sun, the Condition of the'air; thQah• sorption of the earth's atnrsphere, the metcorlogical conditions, especial ly-. the• moisture in . tile aiiirinir. these and many others, have caused a wide variance in the views of experiment on and it is only.Or late years we , , see4tO arrive at" some rational eon . - elusion—uusatisfazitory- at the best— as to. the *Mount of_ heat,that the ?). rth"rccei ves or the sun tranmits. Tl' re has been • a prevailing, but false idea th&.t,the temperature of the sun, was. vastly greaterlhan the latest experiments have proved. - .kast certainly far beyond anything w.e can p-oiliice artlticially,- but when Secihi placed it 'it: I ~ . ',11)00,000 degrees Fahrenheit, Errtesson .nt 4,1:4)0,000 or 5ti,0ut.,4100 degrees, and we rf!col lect 'that the *intensest artificial heat does not reaelt:over -4vo degrees at most, it wit! be seen how much be yond the boutids of` eyen probability the best scientists - are often led. , The etfective.temperature of the sun is probably . not over It-;,00) degrees, and ma3 l / 4 ,reaeh :aS, low as-10,0U0 de grees. Fahrettbeiti intense enough when we consider that molten iron is .but 2,7i-:6 degrees Palirenheit. Theamotint of heat received on theearth'' . 4 surface, , with the sun at would melt an inch-thick ness-of ice in two hntirS and thirteen niinutes_Since there is every reason to believ4 that the 'sun ,iturs forth I the same amount of heat in all.direc tionS, it'follo*s that if the sun were surrounded 'by a' great'shell of Ice one 'inch thick,. and the, fliarneiffr . Of the earth's orbit (1 ti6,0t0.,600Vmi16) its •eys would just 'melt the Whole' in the same time. sopposing this shell to shrink in diameter; still e-On taining the same quantity, of ice by increasing its thickness, until its in- ner surface touclic4Jthe outer surface of the sun, it would fie a sheet of ice . • more than mile J an thickness, and: the sun, would thA j ii, its way out-in, the same two hours and thirteen Min- Utes:,• •If this ice were formed into a rod forty-fiVe miles' in diameter and darted toward tfiejsun with the speed of, light' (more than eleven millions . of miles a minute), its Advancing' poin*votild be melted off as fast .as it approached, if by any, means ; the. whote`of the solar.rays could be con centrated uponf it. • Or, put-it a little . ' ditferentlY, if ire could, build • up.a solid column-cif ice, to the sun, two ',and one-quarter -miles in diameter, spanning this inconceivable abyss of ninety-three millions of miles, and if the sun should concentrate his whole Power upon it, it would dissolve-and melt, notiin an hour or minute, but ' in a single second-; one swing of the pendulum • and it would be water ;• seven Mo'reand it . would be naught but vapor.' Every'square ,foot of. thesun's Bur face•gives but. heat enough, to seven engines of' a' thousand horse ' power cad)._ It has been shown that, j if the stint were- composed of a:solid mass' of the best' anthracite 'coal, and produced its heathy comfit stion, ' it would burn J out in less than cis. thousand years, while' we reckmilits age, by millons. : OF .- THIS ENORMOUS OUTFLOW - of heat, the earth only receives about a two millionth part,:- and the, Whole solar system of planets and. their at tendant satellites only about One three-thousandth. But this minute fraction received by : the earth is enough to melt yearly, at the equator, a layer of ice •somethiOg .(iver,ose hundred and ten feet thick,and.eYery thirty square feet of the earth's sur face receives an average energy' or heat enough to run a one-horse pow er etigine contiluously. Most of this;„ of course, is .expended merely in maintaining the earth's temperature; but a 'small portion, perhaps :one thousandth of "the whole, is stored away by. plants and animals, and con .atitutesttu abtirldkut reveuue of pow- E MN TOWANDA, BRADFORD , COUNTY, PA., _THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 6, 1881. , - El ler for the whole human race. Now, lwlicti such a large proportion of the suns heat and light passes.off into space, it, seems a terrible waste. But as Epee is full of isolated , particles of matter, which we'encounter from time to time as meteorites, we can see that, scow or later, each solar ray reaches i resting place. Some I ;:tve thought that the-sun sends heat only towards its planets; that the action of radiant ,heat, like that of gravitation, is only between masses. But all scientific investigation so far shows that this ii.not the case. The energy radiated from a heated globe, is found, to be. alike in all directions, and, wholly independent of the liodies that receive it ; nor_ is there, 'the slightest-reason to auppose that the sun is any, way different in_this re spect from every other incandescent Tess. _ Ordrabout one-half of the 'sun's rays projected toward ( the earth reach its.crust, the other - half being inter cepted and absorbed in its atuio7 sphere,. even when . - there are no 'clOuds. But it does . not follow that the heat thuscabsorbed is 104 to' our earth,for the i ait itself becomes Warm ed and comniunfcateS' its.heat to the earth . ; ,awl :Since she atmosphere in tereepts„ also a • large proportion of thelteat :which the earth 'would radi ate into spaeis, if thus not blanketed, the temperature of the 'earth is.kept: much" .higher`, and above all, more uniform than it would be if there were no air. .•, • ' When the lays'of the sun irte con centrated by means of a burning- . glass we have a very direct.eviderce of their poiver. Like the telescope;: the lens moves the object at its focus virtually nearer the sun, so that the temperature at the focns is what the direct rays Of the sun would be at the assumed distance,-mzking allow ance for loss of heat by transmission through the glasses. • The missViiow erfullens yet. constructed virtually transtivrts the ,object at its focus to within about v:59,006 miles :of the sun'6surface, and the most refractory substances—platinum, fire-clay. the diamOnd itself—in tbis- focus are eithefinstetly melted oi flashed irk; to vapor, There is no 'doubt . that if the sun Were to Come as near as the moon, THE SOLID EARTH WOULD MELT ALIKE. WAX . , And nod' we come to questions like these : 116%; is such a t he,at Mir* tained? How long • has it lasted al ready how long will it continue to last; are there any, signs Of increase or diminution ? Questions.to which, in the present _ state of science; only vague and unsatisfactory replies are possible. 'Here is no evidence of progressive changes in the aillountof solar heat s ince the beginning of au thentic records. There have been no such changes in the distribution of plants' and animals. Within the .last two thousand years as must have oc 'currecl if -there • had been within this period any appreciable alteration in the beat rewired from the snn. So lar as can be' made out, the vine and 'the olive, the cereal§ and the forest trees, grow . just Where they did in classic days. . But ,two thou sand years is 'btu, the, breadth of a • I moteln•the life of the sun, and in the remoter part them have,been 'great tehanges in the earth's tempera ture; evidenced by. gelogica.l records; caboniferpus epoch 'when the teM perature was tropical in,almiist Arc tic latitudes; glacial periods when our teMperate zones were. eased - in sheets Of solid' ice as: Greenland is now l3ut'it is not yet Certain wheth er theF;e, changes are to be traced to variations in the amount of . .heat emittol by the sun, or to changes in the earth. herself or in her orbit. We tan only say that, so, far as odr ob 'servation goes, the outpouring of so •la'r heat,eatnazing as is, appears to have gone on unchanged .throngh all . .the centuries of h ritna9 history. . What,. then, maintains' this fire? j In the first place it is quite certaih that it, is not a case of mere-Combus tion. As has been said, even if the • sun were made 41;61M Coal, burning in 'pure oxygen, it could, dilly last about six thousand years.-it would have been nearly one-third consum ed since the beginning a the Christ ,ian era. Neither- can . the 'source of its heat lie simply cooling of its incandescent mass.. Huge• as it is, its temperature must have fallen more than perceptibly within tiro thousand years if this were - the 1. Ammo. many theories, two plansi , -ble 'ones have been proposed One of, these finds the chief Bonito of the solar heat in the impact of meteoric matter, the other, in the slow contrac tion of the sun. AS to the first, it is quite certain - that some of the solar heat is , produced in ' this way; but whether the supply of meteoric ,Mat ter is sufficient. to account for a great proportion, is a question. :As to the second, there 'is n 0,.. doubt . that the 'contraction of the sun's mass could pioduce the whole supply of its heat, but there is as yet no direct evidence that the 'sun is really shrinking A 'quantity of matter 'equal to Only about the one-hundreth part of the . mass of the earth, • falling annually' upon the solar surfaCe, would ((MAI:NITAIN ITS 'HEAT INDEFINITELY. • Of course, this increase of 'tbe sun's mass Would cause `.an acceleration of ,the motion of 'all the planets and shorten their periods of -revOlution, but!as the mass of the sun is '330,000 times that of the earth, its annual in crease would-be only one tbirty.three millionth of . the ,Whole; and it-would require centuriesj to, make the - effect sensible. • - ' The only question then is whether any such quantity of. matter can, be supposed to reach the sun. On the .whole, it seems improbable ,for as tronomical reasons. there were :near the sue any considerabLiquan tity of meteoric matter it ought to produce avery Observable effect upon the motion of the planet Mercury— an effect not yet detected, or but in a slight degree. So, ,while conceding that a portion and probably a consid erable fraction of the solar heat may be accounted for. by this hypothesis, we must look farther for the priced , pal revenue of solar energy. Astrono -1 mere find it, in' the probable slow eon t . \ ( , REGARDLESS OP DENUNCIATION FROM - ANY QUARTER. V traction of the suit's diameter, and the, gradual liquefaction and Solidifi cation of the gaseous mast If the sun does Contract r heat is necessarily produced by the proeess, and phut in enormous quantityots the power of gravity is twenty-seven times 'as great as, at the earth's surface, and the contracting , mass jail° immense. Helmholtz has shown 'that, unfavor able suppositions, a, Contraction of about 250 feet a year in the sun's diameter—a mile in 21. years--would account for its whole annual beat emission. This contraction is so low ,that it would be finite imperceptible to astronomers. It would require 9,500 years to reduce the . diameter a single second of arc, and nothing less would be certainly detectable. - I f,this theory of the source of the sour heat is et:trivet, it "follow that the' time must come when it sill end; and, looking backwhrd, we see that there must. also have been -a- begin ning; time 'was when there was no 'such solar heat as new, anti the time must comewhen it will cease., To calculhte the future duration of the. sun is a daring conception. Yet, ae tiprding to Newcomb, if the sun main tains . its present radiation, 'it will have, shrunk to half its present di amet;er in abont, five millions of years. at the longest. In- can'haidly, then, continue to be mainly gaseous, and its-temperature must haye begun to fall. Newcomb's copelusion, there fore, is that, it is hardly likely that the sun can continue to give sufficient heat to support life On the earth (such life as we are now acquainted 'with at leaSt) for ten millions .of ,years froni the present time. We can com Pete the past of THE SOLAR RISTORY somewhat more definitely than the future. Knrisvinif id the present amount radiaron and the mass of the sun, we can compute how long the solar fire has been maintained at its pres ent intensity by the process. of con densation. No conclusion of geome try is more certain than that o the_ contraction of the sun from a r tame= ter many times larger than the Orbit of Neptune to its present dimen - sions-Lif such , a , contraction has act ually taken • place has) furnished about 18,000,0U0 times as much heat as the sun now supplies! in a year, and therefogethe sun can not have been -ernittinCheat at the present , rate for nicire than that length of time, irits' heat has been generated hi this manner If the - hypiithesi's be true, as -it probably is in the'Main, we are inex orably shut up to the:conclusion that the total, life of the solar system from RS birth to its death is included in some such space of f.itne as 30,- 009,0 A of year ;.• no reasonable al loWance foy the, fall of meteoric mat ter, .based on what we now observe, 'or, for the development- of heat by liquefaction, solidification, and churl; ical combination . of the gaseous va pors in the original or Present state of the sun, could raise it to 60,000,- 00. • • . Yet what. is our perception of the knoWnetirtipared to what, we'kno:iy not? 4.t.i4 impossibl4 . 3. to assert that there Nis been no catastrophe in the past, no !collision -with some wander ing star, ended, as Croli.has suppos ed, like some ofl thoSe'•we know of now. in the heatens,. with a Kelocity, fir sarpasSing thal to he acquired by a fall,.even from infinity, producing a 'shock which might, in a few - - hours or moments even, restore the wasted eti ergies of ages. - .• Neither caa'we assume that-there may not be wayS of which we have ,yet no conelitionby which the enor mours energy Apparently lost in space may' be returned; 'and burneit outsuns. and run-down systems re stored. If, as we believe! there has been no loss of 'energy or matter since the dOvn of creation, some such thing Must take placeond if our suns and; planets are not them selves restored they will:be made the germs and material 'of new ones to replace the ' J. M. B. LOVELY PHILOSOPHY. How a Boston Girl Just 'Adores the - Concord Sch•ol. . A few days ago a Thiston girl who hail been attending the School of `Philosophy at .Concord arrived - in Brooklyn gm a visit to a seminary chum. After canvassing thbruughly, the fun and gumArops that made up their ediicatiori in the seat of •learn ing at which ..their early scholastic efforts were made, the Brooklyn girl began, to inquire into the :nature'of the ,CpUeord entertainment. ' Ail& so . you' are taking lessons in, philosophy. ;I.low'do you i iike it ?" "Oh I it's 'perfectly , about science, you know, and we all just dote on science.". . " It, must be nice. . :Whit is it about?" . . . "It's about molectilesi much as anything else, and molecules are just too . awfully nice for . anything. If .there's anything I really. enjoy - it's polecules: " . " Tell • me .about theni, my dear. ` hatA are moleCules ?". • • ".Oh I molecules. - , They are little wee things, and it takes ever so many of, them. They are splendid :things! - Do'you know, there Ain't anything but what's got moleculeS'in And Mr. doolcis just, .as sweet as:be - can be; and Mr. Emerson too: . They es plain _everythin,.(7'.so beautifully." • " like to go there!". .said th? BroOklyn girl, enviously. You'd enjoy it ever' so' much. They .teach protoplasm,:; too, and if 'them is one thing perfectly. heavenly, .protoplasm or molecules." • " Tell me about .protoplasm ; 1 knot t I should adore it." 1 - " Deed you would. F's just too sweet to live, Tou know it's about s how things got tarted, or something of that kind. YOu ought tp hear Mr. Emerson tell about it. It would , stir your very soul. The first time he explained about protoplasm there wasn't a dry eye in the hotise. We, named our hats after him. This is au Emerson hat. YOu §ee the ribbon is drawn over the crow n and caught with a buckle and a bunch of flowers. Then you turn up the aide with a spray of forget-me-nota. 'Ain't it just iiiNE oo sweet? All the girls in the school save them." •!A How exquisitely lovely ! Tell me some more science." `u-Qh I I almost forgot differentia 'Can. I .m really and truly positively in bi've . with differentiation. Its dif ferent from molecules and proto plasni,,but it's every bit as nice. And Mr. Cook You should hear' him go on about it I I rettlly believe he's . perfectly' bound up in it. This scarf is the Cook scarf. All the girls wear. them, and we named them after him just on account of the interest he takes in differentiation.v " What is it, anyway ?" " This is mull; trimmed with Lan guedoc lace-- , —" • "I don't mean that -that other." " Oh! differentiation ! ain't ;it sweet ? It's got somethiitg to- do with species. .It's the way you tell one hat from another, so you'll khow Which is ,becoming. And we learn all about ascidians, too. They are -the divinest things. .I'm absolutely - enraptured with 'ascidians. ,If I only ;Had an ascidian of my own rwouldn't: 'ask anything else in the. world." "What do. they look like, dear? 'Did you ever see one V ) asked the Brooklyn girl, deeply interested. " Oh, no . ; nobody - ever saw one 'exceptMr. Cook and Mr. Emerson ; but they are sOmethinilike,an oyster with a reticule 'Lining on its belt. A think I,hey are just ,heavenly." "Do you learn 'anything else be tides all these ?" " Oh, yes. We . learn • all about eomße philosophy tint lOgic and those.%ommon things like metapl-ys ics ; but the girls don't care anything about those. We are just in cestacies over differentiation and molecules and Mr. Cook and protoplasms and ascidians. and Mr. Emerson, and I .really don't see Why they put in those vulgar branches. • If anybody besides Mr. - Cook and lir, - Everson had done it, we : should have told" him to his !face that he was too terrible, awfully mean." - • • • And the Brooklyn girl scent to. bed that - night in the dumps because fortune had not vouchsafed her the advantages enjoyed by her .friend, while the Boston . _ girl dreamed "of seeing_aff - iiscitlian chasing a Imple• .rule over a differentiated' back, fence with a club for : telling a.Protoplam that his youngesCsister had So many freckles on her nose that they made 'her cockeyed.—Brooklyn Eagle. Climbing a Pyramid. The business of climbing - Cheops. is begun as early in the day ati•possi ble ; not that•it is a long or a difficult task, but because the sun 'Ours his hottest .Wams in a baptism of fire over ; the desert, and there is no ahatlei *no breath of. fresh and fragrant no cooling draught at had& rYOu alight at the base of the Cheops and are i ranted lately besieged by an army of . tedawees, who are famous:l,hores. For -more than . forty centurieS - ihese gedhwees have besieged the pyratidd .climbers from every quarter of the earth; they have a smattering•of all languages at . their tongue's end,;and their hands are filled s with old coins and new scaial.l, which they swear are old.',Tbe sheik'is your only hope; every village, every community, has its sheik,-and his word is law. Pur chase his friendship—ybu can do it with a couple of francs you are perfectly 6 — are. He orders three Of his . '' howling savages" to take you irrhand, and. conduct you to the sum mit of CheoPs... According to the agreement witli.the sheik, you, were to pay so Ent;ch into his hands' upo'n your return to earth-, after havingre-- posed-as long.aS -- you think fit at tile top.of the pyramid: Meanwhile no fee ; is to be giveit to the three fierce and athletic fellows:who help,you up and-. down, nor, are they to -414 for -any„ l on pain of the_bastinftd4o6 case anys complaint is made agairrst them.. This being considered satisfactory by all parties concerned.. - you are seized under . the arms, by two of the Bedawees, while the third , gives you a gentle pokean the small of the hack from time to time. Once started .on this novel ascent, , it. is quite imposSi sible .to abandon it before- it is corn; pleted to the letter. You may. repent and• grow dizzy • and. short-winded, but the strong 'grip oh your arms brings you to yOur feet again, and 'you arc swung up from one terrace to another, hurried to the right and to the left by a..zigiag trail that bola evidently .been i searching for low steps and crevices in.the stories, and found them in many eases. table-; stone is about the Height of a table-; it is four hundred 'told sixty perpen dicular feet. to the top. of the pyra mid, and you are permitted to rest about three times on the way up. • .At first the Bedawee touches your right arm, and aslcs you if you would like to rest. YOu scorn the, idea, and; •leap like a chamois from rock to rock,• to show , him how , :very fari you are from feeling• fatigued. lie praises. your 'Towers of . endurance, feels of your muscleS, Had says your legs are splendid. YOU realize thakthey Must :be, .fOr you have evidently astonished' • ,him with your strength and.agility. 'By and by he insists upon your rest- . jag for a moment 'only. • You, rest 'for . big sake! as - much as,your own, for you itie ajlittle out of breath, and fear that be, that all three of the at tendantsonult Seel fatigued. At this momen!, a small .'boy makes his alt. .pearance with a - jug of brackishAvater in. his hand. . lie climbs like a cat, and he is so little that bis. head is • loSt below,theedge of . ettedt Muir as he climbs towards you. 'The boy fol lows you to the top and pours water over your head and hands, arid gives you a drink at the Oightest provoca” tion, and all. for a laalf dozen sous. He. is gettir. 0, his. mugcleg i lp-training for . the ascent be •Itopes to make in ylars to dome, - for be is, barn under the pyramid,{ and he .will ie under it some -day. ;:unless he 'happens to. breathe his last at the top of Before yott are quite ready to start afresh the Bedawees clutch,you, and 'you go bounding frOm skep.to step, sometimes finding foothold for your self, but oftener dangling in mid-air, with ,the fellow behind : clinging to you instead of lenditig liksigiP„W ,When you' 'propose a second restli 1 I L .r. L. L , . M= put off with the promise of one a tie farther,up, and you nearly perish before you come to the spot. There is no pride of muscle, no ambition, no wind left; in you now 1 - You sink into a corner of the rock and shut your eyes, for you have caught a glimpsoof the sandy'sea that is all aglow in the fierce sunshine; and away down at the foot of the -pyra mid there are 'muctitudes - of black objects creeping about like ants, and you know these are men and women, and then you" feel top if you could never get to the top of Cheops; and if you did, you know you Could nev er get to: the bottom again, unless you were -to tumble head foremost down all 'those frightful stairs,oral you grosv faint,and„call on the water boy, and find life a good deal of a bore. - You don't look dOwn after that. You hum fragments of that unforgetabh3 song, with its highly moral refrain " Excelsior," and begin, to perspire profusely, and to feel as if you would probably lay your bones °lithe top stair and give up the ghost' on the spot. ,Resignation or despair, you hardly know which, has eowed you. When you rest the third time one ,of the Bedawees kindly chafes your legs,:straightens out the kinks in your muscles, and says pleasant things to you about the remainder of the kintney.. Ile pOints you to the top,_ which, sure enough, is only a little farther up, and you be.kin to wonder if it will . be large enough to stand on, or if you will have togstrad dle -it, and perhaps roll down kar. the other side. It is lairge enough to build a house on. I ached for a shel ter of some sort while I was up there, an'd having looked over all the world of sand, with the blue Nile flowing thidugh it between shores of emerald and fields of corn and groves of palm, was glad to slide down into the narrow shadow under - the highest step, and there rest.--Char/es War ren Stoddard. Old Men in Politics.- • filiandfather Licksbingle and Dea con Radspinner, two patriOtin this community, were walkiUg down street .together yesterday. It/was remarked that, two, such venerable .men•were not often seen together, and people raised their 'bats to them as they passed along and spoke to them rev erently. "There's . entirely too much bitter ness in this campaign, de:aeon," said Mr. I . ..;ieli.shinzl - e, "'and 1 . regret it exceedingly. .Now, *hen we wuz young 'Men we took. an interest in politics, we had none of this 'ere eVerlastin'"catzhaulin'." • • - . , Indeed we hadn't," acquiesced Peaeori • Radspi pner. " Take • J ack son's -campaign, ,for . instance. There wuz a 'lively interest taken by both parties, .but there wuz none ,Of your bully-raggin' like we see nowadays:" " That's a fact, deacon," said ,old Litkshingle ; "but between me an' you, I never thought tnuch . of, ;Jack _son." • ' . "He was a, miglity gooth. - man, Lickshingle." " Ile' was small potatoes compared to some men we have now, deacon." " Who d'ye mean ?" de4anded the deacon. " W ell, there's Garfield," - said I;ickShingle. • , "Garfield be clanged. You know mighty well, Lickshingle, he couldn't have•been 'lected hog-riye in la hill town - in Jackson's day." • " He's a darn sight better man than ancock." "Go slow...Lickshinglc, go Slow T." said the deacon, somewhat agitated., • " 011, I...knoW,..what Pm. talking aix•tit, 1" retorted Lickshingle as the stabired-the pavement spitefully with his. hickory. 'cane. " f i lancoek's.' stonghtori bottle, that's What he is." "An' what's Garfield? Great guns; what'S Garfield•?l Didn't he lay . a cheap-John sortbf a pavement ontirid the Capitolland charge the government a million dollars for it?"- andithe deacon's:e3 es. blazed with in dignation. . " t see here, deacon, look at your man Hancock's ,letter to Sherman. Didn't he. try to blow' up Washington . with glycerine? Say; didn't he?-Oh,l read the papers, old man, an' know what's going on." • • - " Hancoek's a good an' pure-man. Didn't he fight like a bulltdrig in the war of the rebellion ? Where was Garfield skulkin'.in the time of dis aster.? In- Canaily, by thunder, in Cauady " What was Hancock doin' with a stiletto in his boot the night Lincoln wuz murdered? Answer me that. If: Wilkes. Booth had failed, this Hancock was ready to finish the job. Don't talk to me!- Don't talk te me!" .It's a lie," howled the old deacon, a4,,lie whirled around and faced Lick shingle on the street. " It's as true;as holy writ, an' any man's a 'liar that days so," retorted Lickshingle, too much wrought Up to be particular co his. phraseology. "You're a bald-headed old scdut drel,"lyelled the deacon. _ L. : "You're an old Wei:, an'' I can wipe,,the ground with `you," howled Lickshingle, gripping his cane -and advancing. Friends jumped in, and the two -furious- old men were dragged away in opposite dire'ctions. The deacon :squirmed around in the arms of his captofs, shook 'his cane at Lickship. gle and hisied I " Your man Garfield would never nave got into the army if he hadn't been drafted, and he wouldn't went then : only he thought he would be able to . desert—the ornery son of a gun l'll'etrolquet World. hi a iwbo'refuses justice to the defeiicet less 'wilt make every concession to the powerful. PRESERVE thei piivacy of your house, marriage state awl heart from relatives and all the world. t . Tnr. (ire-fiy only shines when on the wing ; Bo Kis with the mind ; when •we rest, wp darkeli. IF l MEActions of men are like the index of a book. , They, point out what is most agreeable in them. 31E:4 are born with two eyes and one tongue, as though they should see Wee as much as they say. • He: who puts:a bad construction on a good act reveals his own wickedness 'of heart., $l.OO per Annum In. Advance. 1 ' +, THY WILL BE DONE. I did net ask thee, Lord, to etre . . Thh racking pin, time aching eves, This feeble fleshflit. torture's grasp, This absence - 144m the sunny skies: I prayed for health, for bounding„blood„ For joy bineatkthe glancing suh ; -And thou has answered with this woe : Thy will be 'done. I did not pray, 0 Lord, for this . ; That friends should leave me lune and . lrear, That poverty Fheuld hedge me in, • That I should work In care and fear, I-prayed.for home and wealth and bliss; Thatwhat ',tolled for might be won ; Thou bast denied the blessing still • Th — will be done. • , I did not seek, 0 Lord, for night And sorrow darkening o'er tny way, That I-should look Into the grave I prayed for light, that faces dear : Might greet we as the days went on, And they have vanished lige a cloud— Thy will be done. Thy 4111 be dtiee ; thy will be done; I trust thee, Rather, Mother, God t• I trust thee though my flesh grows faint Though I ani,bur.ed 'neath the sod ; Stllltrtnit thee, for In death's cold arms Thy prpsetme: is a beaming eun, - 'All that is lost in the aye shines: • will be done. . . • A friend. of minc had a python = paCked ready to go to the Calcutta . Zoological Gardens . (this - 1 - g a very large snake of the boa-constrictor spe- . cies). It was put in a small box.with batonS nailed over the top. But the .snake objected to the imprisonment ; and whilst the box was in the veran da, preparatory to its going . to 'Cal-. etitta, it put its strength against the batons and . raised them from their holdings. Hearing the cracking, uy Mold went . to see. what was up. and the snake reaied. its huge head and bit him on the hand. 'Here was a pretty go. It .was c.ommonly report ed that pythons Were not•venomous, but one is• apt to question the itecura cy of such statements when smarting from the bite ot one. •My friend was not long in deciding to help himself. He sent do;rn to one of„the manufac turing houses for a small piece of live charcoal. He tied his wrist to post of the veranda, and- put the charcoat.On the wound.. When -en durance,b&lanie longer impossible he took the charcoaroll. It is no dis , grace to my -friend to say he felt ill. The - excitement of being !bitten IT a possibly venomous snake is silificient to upset one,., witliont- the immense strain - upon the nervous System caus ed by endea.voiing to bui n the poison out ' 111 v friend's hand remained in bad ' siate • for a long while, but eventually healed; so I have adopted. the belief that python bites-are not fatal.' Gunpowder is sometimes em ployed , 4 ” a-curative agent; a little being Ny'prinkled in the wound and exploded.: It is soppbsed that- 'this acts aS'doe§ chaiecial- in burning °tit the poison, only Much more . expedi tiously: And the idea of exploding gunpowder in a wounded linibis not pleasant and is apt to make one - won. der bow One's bead vonld'feel atllie shock... - 'The fearfatilenoin of snake bitd.is fully seen in the deaths which occa sionally occur amongst elephants:At is the general •practice td - fetter ele phant's forefeet.at night and let-them loose in - the jungle. When lying-down asleep they are. sometimes bitteri,nd a little pCiison from a small snake soon circulates through. the massive beast and results in death. • . . As I was passing thrdugh the jun gle on one occasion a fearful'odof assailed - me, and I 'told the natives with me to make search for it. After awhile they eanne.acrdss a python iii a state - of coma. The r: stenchLwas caused 'by the decomposing head of 'a small deer which was in the• snake's mouths I should here mention that when largelthings of this. kind •have to be swallowed the jaWboifes in a. Snakes head diSlocate, and make • room, for a far larger Substanee than the size of the reptile would lead it to be interred could be taken in .the wouth. • This deer had small horns, and had evidently been swallowed from behind, others Vise the - horns would have somewhat' impeded, the 'passage. .• The neighbors said that probably the python had caught- hold of the deer as it was feeding, wound itself round the body; crushing the bones and causing'deatih, then straightened out the fore - iind hind legs, and ss.ral- lowed it. It was marvellous to think 'of VAS : being done; and the python . gaining the victory: over a fleet and active.deer. The snake -scarcely gave any Sign of life, and one of the peo ple:with- me killed it, With an axe. Then we cut , the .bodr - open, and found the deer, which was rapidly decompoiing. - . : • - Narrating the occiiirence`afterafard to a mahout (elephant driver), I . was told that that was nothing .in com pariSon with what snakes were able' to.do.' I might remark heri UM if a. European in Ind' a'expressesiurprise at, anything to a miive; he is invari ably given to. understand that lie has •had.but a glimpse Of the'remarkable occurrences which take Lila& in the country. The mahout 1 mentioned said. , it was: nothing for a snake to swallow a deer,. and then entertained. me with .the following veracious nar native F A herd of wild elephants was roaming the country . once, and after staying some while at a Bait spring began to pass on. One, however, a very large aninial,:iitayed a little be; hind, being h in . fact,•the last to leave I the spring. As he was hastening to join the others, a snake (who had been watching in an adjacent tree) threw its body out as the elephant passed by, and, keeping.tiold of .the trunk of the tree with its extremity, caught bold of the elephant's hind lea. The monster stopped and turn- . around to see what was the matter,: and by this the snake got - a better hold, and wound itself about the ele phant's :Then commenced-the \tug•of war. The:elephant saw what : was . the matter and began to pull. But it could not disconneekthe snake Oom the :tree: Neith'er gave way, and the pulling continued with fear ful vigor, until a cracking was heard. Suddenly the great tree around which ,the snake hid fixed its hold was seen to sway . and gradually its lateral roots . IZgan appehr ahOve . the earth, the truck to totter, and finally ma lank4i3 *RI Tales of Snakes. the topmost branches crashed to the ground. But the inost marvellous part was that the trunk, having Wide spreading branches - Which rested on the ground, was raised a great dia. • tance from -the earth. The snake, - which still maintained its hold both on• it and the elephant, was hoisted up with the trunk and took the ele phant with IL Next day a party of villagers out for firewood, when short distancefrom the tree, saw the novel_ sight-of an elephant suspended (apparently). in mid-air. Upon closer inspection they : Aland kenake was the connection with the.tree, and one man got through thebianchis on to the trunk, cut through 'the snake, which immediatelY fell to the ground. with the elephant and was crushed in the. fall; The liindoo le&nd needs no comment., Snakes do not get on .stall where pigs are' kept; in. fact; thA former are_ almost strangers in itief)resence of the latter. Pigs are sometimes ba r , - ten, but, do not seem to die ; they bite - at and eat snakes withciut much ado upon. coming across them. Whether the sluggish circulation of a swine's blood prevents the poison frona'taking.visible effect; or whether the thick coating of fat .which-gener ally finds place upodthe frame of a pig prevents the snake poison' frora reaching the'illood veisels, I do not - know; at, all - events pigs attack snakes _with impunity. , : ;An obi-fashioned' weather •iiidica tor •in England- was.a bunch of Sea weed hhng upon the walls of a house to tell whether fair or wet weather -'would be ie order o „the-day. I have seen snake skins answer the same purpose, being . stiff . and city whei? the- sun was out„ nd gradually .becoluino• limp upon an approaching storm, • . 1.1 . Snakes lay their eggs in clusters of-Seven or eight. ThOsei have seen have been rather Smaller, than pig : eons! eggs, and stuck togelher as though they had run one into - the other I .have heard of .Sonthailis eating them, but cannot saywhether this is so. I. should think it highly piobable.-Ifrgiiford ((England) Ob eerver. . . A Clergyman's Experiende. A country. clergyman says in the • Tr6y Times : "There are great many , unwritten chaPters,of a Clergy- . man's life in the country which would read like romance to the uninitiated. There are chapters of hard facts at well as happy fancies . . In :my -first year in the ministry my salary' was just $5OO, .With which I boarded my self and team, had the lung fever,.- was married, paying-the minister a $7, fee—and so my (ieadheadism be gan. My first wedding at the par sonage was a' great event. It was on - a cold winter day. The extra fire was,made Cn the parlor, and'Yhen the couple arrived .1 fecrtheir horse with hay and bats, the bride ,and groom ate benitily of a good steak dinner, obtained a certificate which cost fif ty cents ; and I received one dollar for the entire entertainment: There , are of course profitable marriage oc casions-.--L.oasis in the scorching sands e of ministerial . .. pathways. I -know of an-ex-presiding elder of the Troy Conference who was called on to ofli 7 • date at a contemplated wedding four miles froth a •Vermont village. A. ' horse atil buggy were sent to. :take him to the place, and On his arrival he found that a . farriily row had 0115. 7 • ed :mindefinite postponement of the Redding.: Ile Was,-,not :eten asked in, but Was allowed to foot it, home, -in the mud 'without 'ffee or thanks. Funerals -in the country call for great / grace on the - part of the . "parson, l• , have - officiated :it three funerals in .one day in families . outside of my own congregation without thanks or fee. I have even paid a livery hire, - receiving nothing in' remuneration, to attenditineral3.' Still, I am call ed a "dead head,”l.because. I some-. times ride on railroads Mr half-fare when on ministerial. duties. I have. attended two pauper funerals in-one day, for . which the toWn paid the overseer for.h:s time, the doctor- for his visits, the grave•digger and the undertaker,. but- I received ,nothing . for my services. Thin I have attend ed -other funerals in all kinds of weather, where interested patties, upon •my taking leave,-. have said : " see ycku alai n some other day.." One Man Who proMised .to see me• sonie'Other day; saw me sooner than he expected. At a- carnp-me.Cting _a, few months later , he was t. converted, .and when 1 saw.the tears inhiS eyes 1 - mentally prayed., Loid;li - Ve mer cy-on that man's souL'' • When. the meetitg'elOsecl: he • warmly grasped me_wita his right hand,-and with his left, -handed -me a . *'..4 -bill, saying': —, feel as though I ought to pay you for attending, my wife's funeral funeral last June." Well, for once, I felt the Lord -had- answered prayer." Thotlghtfut Thoughts. .• A t.i, the world may forsake an author, but vanity will never forsake him. .11.kvt: the, courage to :mkncrwledge your ignorance rather than appear - a liar.; MonEsTv seldom resides in a breast that is not enriched with nobler virtues. I.7OLINSS and b'auty depend upon I.e• caprice add the, imagination of men. , &NOBLE part of every true life is to learn 'to undo what has been wrongly done. - • , - Tun flist ingredient in conversation is truth, the next good sen.v, the third good humor, and the fourth wit. IN this great iheatre of life it is permit ted to God and the angels to be specta tors, but all - inen must be, actors. BE thou ever so amiable and disinter ested, twine hatchet,faced misanthrope will swear thou haat an axe to grind. - Ir. is not the fincinber of promises a man makes, but the niimber he keeps, which gives him a position among respectable people. TuE greatest. heresy 'that can deceive the human mind is the, heresy that - makes . a man believe that he can meet with i mer cy while he lives in sin. ' Hiors never hurt any one—never yet interfered with duty ; nay, always'strug gles to the performance of duty, . gives 'courage - and clears thejudgment. IN all good things' give the eye and ear full scope, for they let into the mind 're strain the tongue,, for if is a.spender ;few . men haVetepepted of silence. A t.k.knix6 elocutionist once said to a sow preacher : " I can do nothing mote for you. .All that yon need now to make you a power i 4 some greksorrow." Witir every ex . ertiori•the . best man.can do only a nasierate amount of good ; but it seems in tho power of the moat cnn: temptiblo jedividual to do incalculable mischief.' ArFt.it-yloss are the • medicine -or tho mind. If they aid ,-uot tooth,wme !eV- it Sullice that they_ard wholesome. It is not required in physic that it should, please, but heal. HE who goes into his garden to loci for cobwebs and spiders will, no doubt, find them ; while he who limiks for a dower may retu,in to his house. with•one bloom." ing in his' hOsoni, DEctstox awl • promptitude, croft though a mot - soteetivnes may err Gar want. of due deliberatiuts, 7 114 in the Lug :Tan, more ofren coruluem to success. th4l4 slog jird,oue(A, that rumen too late.