f - I ; ' r . , r . . HENRY A. PAESONS, Ja., Editob and Publisher, tfXA' COUNTY TUB REPUBLICAN PA ItTT. TWO DOIXASS fEB AN3"OM. VOL I. RIDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1872. NO. 50. J h POETRY. "THE LORD'S HOCSE." Two children, etandlnjr with y.llow hair In tho eunV rich, f olden my, Wlnkln at Sol with their eye. no nn I And thii 1 what thoy my t " I com. from orer the Rhine," one raid. And nulled &" he thought of home i " It'e prettier there than here ; you're read ' Of oar church with Ite handsome dome, " Germany's landn are to line," ehe raid. And we haTe lord' houses there ;" She glanced at tho cot ace. white and red. At the landscape, pinln, hut fair. I America poor?" ,ne asked In pity, " And have you nothing here. To compare with the grand old Rhenish city, And the lords we no much fear t" Antwerlng then, the American child Thoughtfully raised her errs. And m a manner firm but mild. She Joyouily pointed high. To the rich Illumined, lofty ppire, Shining In God'i own light. All lit with the tun'e rich beama of fire, And ibe claspted her comrade tight ; " That In the Ilonse of our Lord," said she. And smiled at the other's look ; For the nhenlsh maid said, " Can It be f " And slowly the meaning took. Two children, standing with yellow hair, And their soft, whlto arms entwined ; Qailng at heaven with eyes eo rare. And thoughts toward Ood inclined. THE STORY-TELLER. TirE WIFE OF DR. FRAMCLIX. BY JAMES TARTOX. On a fine Sunday morning in October, 1723, Deborah Read, a beautiful and blooming lass of eighteen, stood at tho aoor ot her lather s house in Market-st, Philadelphia. Tho city was then forty-throo years of 1 :a a .. : J i uuu iu uuiituuieu n population OI seven thousand. Many trees of tho original forest still stood upon its site tho houses were built at some distance apart, with gardens between them ; and as yet tho street wore oil unpaved. It was a largo, tranquil Quaker village, surrounded by tho primeval wilderness, with groups of Indians frequently to bo seen in its streets ; ana sucli game as wolves, boars, wild turkeys, and deer to bo shot within four miles of tho town. As tho young lady stood at tho door of her home it was about church time in tho morning sho saw in tho crowd of church-going people a strange figure that both amused and surprised hor. It was a stout lad of seventeen, not ill looking, but dressod in the very extreme ot shabbmess. lie wore tho working. clothes of an ordinary apprentice, and these, by exposure to rain and the wear and tear of travel, had becomo dirty and dilapidated. The pockets of his coat were stuffed out with shirts and stock ings, and under each aim he had a largo roll, while he was eating a third. She gazed at him as long as she could see him, wondering and laughing at his ridiculous appearance. If she had any thoughts upon tno subject, she probably sot him down as a runawtiy apprentice, for such indeed he was, one Benjamin franklin, who had made his way from Boston by sloop, by barge, and on foot, to escape tho tyranny of his brother, to whom he had been apprenticed. A low days passed. Miss Read learn ed from her father that a young man was coming to board with them, a print er, who worked in one ot the two print ing houses of tho town. What was her surpriso when the young man arrived, nicely dressed, with clean linen, and very neat in his person, to recognize the torlorn and shabby youth who had caught her eye on that Sunday morning, His chest had arrived meanwhile by sea, and thus ho was able to present himself at his new abodo in a becoming costume. Tho young man proved highly agreeable to the family, lie was lull ot intelli. gonoo, amiability, and good humor, one ot those young tellows who make lrionds wherever they go, because they are themsolvos obliging and friendly. A year glided rapidly by; during which tho father of tho young lady died, and was buried in Christ tjhurcn bury. nig-ground, Philadelphia, where his irravo-stono mav still bo soon and road. His wifo, a vigorous and prudent wo man, carried on tho house as usual, so that it still furnished a home for the young printer. . His fortunes had bright ened during the year. The Governor of the province, who hod accidentally be come acquainted with his talents, had promised to set him up in business as a printer, and was going to send him to ' London to buy typos, a printing press, and whatever is necessary for the busi ness of a printer. With this prospect before him, the young man was embold ened to speak to Mrs. Read on a mo mentous subject. Ho had fallen in love with her boautiful daughter. He told her this mighty secret, and of his intend ed voyage to London, and of tho Gov ernor s project of establishing him in business. Finally, ho asked her daugh ter's hand in marriage. Mrs. Read was far from disapproving the match, but, like a prudent mother as she was, she called the young man's attention to tho fact that neither ho nor her daughter were yet nineteen, and that it would bo most unwise for them to marry just as ho was going upon a long voyago, and about to engage in a new business which might not prove profitable. How much better to wait until he was safe at home again, and the business was well established. There was no denying this, and he was obliged to submit. Having thus arranged the matter with the mother, he spoke to the daughter, who confossed with her tonguo, what her eyes probably had often avowed, that she loved him, and she promised to marry him on his return. lie" set sail, and. reached London in due time. . There he discovered that the Governor had docoived and wronged him most sruelly. ' Instead of letters of credit, the Govornor had given ' him mere letters of introd action whichjwere absolutely "worthless." ' The" "consequence was, that this young printer of nineteen found himself in London with ten ponndi in bis pocket, and not ft friend in ' Europe who could bo of tho slightest help to him. To completo his misfor tunes one of his Philadelphia frionds, who had crossed the Atlantic with him, and had come to London expecting to live by literature, could obtain no em ployment, and had no resources but Franklin's purse. The printer was not long in getting work at his trade ; but as there were two to be supported, the ten pounds rapidly melted away, and Franklin saw no prospect even of his boing ablo to get back to Philadelphia at all, still less of appearing there as a master printer. In these circumstances ho should have written to Miss Read a plain statement of tho caso, and asked her to wait for him or released her from tho engage ment. Either he had not the courage to do this, or else, absorbed by the wonders and pleasures of tho town, ho had be come indifferent to her. He merely wroto her a short note, announcing his safe arrival in London, and telling her he was not likely to return soon. This was one of tho great errors of his life, which, ho said, he could wish to correct if ho were to livo it over again. Month after month passed, and De borah Read, anxious and forlorn, heard no more from hor faithless lover. A new suitor presented himself, Rogers by name, who carried on the trado of a potter. Ho was an excellent hand at his business, and for this reason Mrs. Read favored his suit. Other relations persuaded her to marry him, and at last she gave her consent and the marriage was celebrated. Soon tho dreadful rumor was noised abroad in Philadel phia that Rogers tho potter had another wife. Such strong reasons appeared for crediting this report that Doborah Read, who had lived unhappily with him, re turned to her mother ond resumed her maiden name, a sorrowful and hopeless woman. Her most sanguine friends could not have foreseen for her a happy and honorable future. Soon after Rogers, who owed money in all direc tions, tied from his creditors to the West Indies, whence came soon after a report of his death. Franklin remained in London for about two years, at the end of which ho returned as clerk to a Philadelphia mer chant, whom he had met by chance in London. Upon his arrival ho renewed his intimacy with Mrs. Read and her daughter, and doubtless explained his inconstancy as best he could. Ho la mented Deborah Road's unhappy con dition ; and, however ho may havo ex cused his behavior, ho felt that she owed the ruin of hor life to his own " giddi ness unci inconstancy. The mother, however, insisted that it wasxAf who was most in fault, bocause sho had urged on tho unhappy marriage, even against her daughters inclination, bho still con. suited Franklin Ivbout her affairs, and they wore all excellent friends. Ann so passed three or lour vears : during which Franklin, through his own industry ana good conduct, became a master printer, and proprietor of a news paper, with the prospect of founding an extensive business, deeding capital, ho tried to increase his store by mar riage, and when that scheme failed, ho turned his thoughts to his first love, poor Deborah Read. Her runaway potter was probably dead ; but ho might not bo ; and she seemed forever cut off from marriage by the fact that her second husband would bo responsible for the debts of her first. Such was tho law of the period. rrankun, pitying her forlorn condi tion, always reproaching himself as tho cause ot hor woe, and not less fond of her than before, at lost proposed that they should risk a marriage. Nor was tho match so unequal as it seemed ; for, bachelor as ho was, he had a son a few months old upon his hands, which was good set otf against tho chances ot Rogers reappearance. In 1730. seven years after Miss Read had seen Franklin walk up Market street eating his roll. they were married. Rogers, it turned out, was really dead ; nor did any of his creditors apply to Franklin for payment. Tho child was taken homo and reared as though it had been born to them in wed lock. He was educated, and afterward became Governor of New Jersey. Tho marriage was eminently success ful in every respect One of Franklin's maxims in Poor Richard's Almanac was this : " A man must ask his wifo to thrive." Nothing more true. In vani shall a young man, without much capi tal, toil and deny himself, if he has a wife who squanders his gains, and takes no interest in his career. Mrs. Franklin was one of tho most industrious, careful. and friendly of women. Beside attend ing her husband's little shop, she bought rags, stitched pamphlets, folded newspa pers, tenderly nurtured his child, and kept her husband from being extrava gant. He was by no means of an eco nomical disposition. He was generous to a fault, and, I am sure, was much in debted to his wife for the rapidity with which ho made his fortune. In the ear ly years of their married life he could sometimes boast and he did boast of it that he was clothed from head to foot garments which his wife had first woven, and then made. " It seems, however, that sho was not averse to a reasonable amount of com fort and display. Franklin narrates that for a long time after his marriage he bad nothing for breakfast but bread and milk, and ho used to eat it out of a two penny bowl with a pewter spoon. "But, be continued, " mark now lux ury will enter families, and make a pro gress in spite of principle. Boing call ed one morning to breakfast, I found it in a china bowl with a spoon of silver. They had been bought for me without my knowlodge by my wife, and had cost her the enormous sum of three and twenty shillings ; for which she had no excuse or apology to make but that she thought her hiwband deserved a silver spoon and china bowl as well as any of his neighbors." We have another pleasing glimpse of Jlrs. Franklin, in the early years of hor married life., in An advertisement.. tub- lished in Franklin's paper,' 2hi PenneyU tania Gazette. Franklin advertised eve rything, and this is one of bis attempts in that way : 1 " Taken out of a pow in the church, some months since, a Uommon .Prayer Book, bound in red, tr;U, und lettered D. F. (Doborah Frinkhii) on each cover, The person who took it is desired to open it and read the ikighth Commandment, and afterwards return it in the same pow again ; upon which nofurther no- tieo wiU be taken. The first great sorrow of hor married hie was the death ot their hrst child, most beautiful and intelligent boy, four years of age. So engaging was he, and so rooted in tho hearts of his parents that Franklin declared, thirty-six years after, ho could never think of him even then without a sigh. When the reader visits tho gravo of Franklin in Christ Uhurch burying ground ho will observe nenr it a little stone, not two feet high, which Franklin placed over tho grave of his boy. He odded to the usual inscrip tion these words : " Tho delight of all who knew him." Their only otherchild, Sarah, grew to womanhood, inheriting and transmitting lier mother s beauty. .During the last hlteen years ot their married life Franklin spent most of his time in Lngland, as agent for tho Colon ies. Such was her dread of the ocean that she never could be porsuaded to ac company him or visit him. During his absence sho took caro of all his affairs, better, in some respects, than ho could have done it himself. By almost every ship sho sent him American nuts, ap ples, and other products, and he sent her in return all sorts of rare and beautiful things in fabric and household furniture, such as sets of china, articles of silver ware, table-cloths, tea trays, blankets, silk for dresses, and any curious house hold implement which ho thought might be useful.. On ono occasion ho sent her a large, handsome beer jug. " I fell in love with it," ho told hor, at first sight, for I thought that it look ed like a lat, jolly dame, clean and tidy, with a neat blue and calico gown on, good-natured and lovely, and put mo in mind ol somebody. To make the jug more welcome, ho filled it with pretty little coffeo enps, packed in salt. During the Stamp Act troubles of 1705, when tho false report reached Philadelphia that her husband hod fa vored the odious measure, tho mob threatened to sack his house. On this occasion she proved herself worthy to be tho wife of Pennsylvania's representa tive. Gov. f'ranklin entreated her to take refuge in his own house at Burling ton, and all hor friends urged her to go. For nine d;tys, sho says, people kept persuading hi-r to leave her house. At length, she le. her daughter go to Bur lington ; but .or herself, sho would not budge. - " I am very sure," said sho, " that my nusoand nag done nothing to hurt any body, nor havo 1 given any offense to any person at all, nor- will I be made uneasy by anybody. I will not stir, nor show the least uneasiness. But if any body comes to disturb me, I will show a proper resentment." And, indeed, she armed and fortified her house, ' stationing her brother and cousin below with guns and ammuni tion, and mounting guard up-stairg her self, prepared to defend her abode. The storm blow over, and very soon the truth respecting hor husband's conduct was known. For forty-five years Benjamin Frank lin and Deborah Read were united in marriage. She lived to see her husband tho most honored of Americans on both conti nents, and sho lived also to see her daugh ter suitably married to a merchant of Philadelphia, Richard Bache. Her last years were greatly cheered by her beau tiful grandchildren. She had the happiness of escaping the anxieties and terrors of the Revolution ary War. She diod in December, 1774, with only ono regret, that sho could not live to see her husband once again. In deed, she had boon for ten years longing and piniiig for his return -, but the press ing business of the Colonies still detain ed him, and she died at last when ho was making hie preparations for his homeward voyage. Her body was borne to the grave by somo of Franklin's old est friends, men who had known them when, 44 years before, they had begun housekeeping, and ate their breakfast of bread and milk from Eastern bowls. There wero scarcely any women at that period who were what we now call educated, and the letters of Mrs. Frank lin show that she was not gifted in the use of the pen. But sho was a faithful and affectionate wife, a friend and helpmeet to her hus band, who was enabled to devote him self to the publio service because he had at home a wife oompetent and willing to take charge of his affairs in his ab sence. Woof Household Magazine for January. A Railroad Surrey on Snow Shoes. Tho Green Bay (Wis.) Gazette of the 0th, says : We had tho pleasure of a call several days since from Mr. Archi bald McNab, ot the stall of Sanford Fleming, Esq., Chief Engineer of the Canada Pacific Railway, a proposed route from the navigable waters of the St, Lawrenco River to Frazer River, on tho northern boundary line of British Columbia. Mr. McNab left Sault Ste. Marie on the 29th of November, with a party of men to go to Nepigon Bay, in tending to start irom that point to sur vey. J. hey embarked on the screw steamer Mineral Rock, and after various dolays, owing to imperfect machinery, they were, on Dooomber 13, frozen in off ltewenaw Point. Here they were on a bleak point, no money, little provisions, and destitute of comfort. After much trudging and hard labor they finally reached Houghton, and from thonce they made their way to this point, and by communicating with the Canadian authorities, procured sufficient funds to enable thorn to recommence their jour ney. Mr. McNab and party left here on Sunday evening for Duluth, where they will commence their pilgrimage for the point originally intended Nepigon Bay; being compelled to traverse the entire distant on snow-shoes," Hints About Conversation Spocial conversation, says an English magazine writer, is work, serious work ; general conversation should be the diver sion of our leisure. Special conversa tion is to ond in a resolve, and inanition. General conversation ends, as far as any visible effect is concerned, . with itsolf. Thus, what is familiarly called " shop" should be rigidly banished from tho lat ter.' There aro moments when women may fairly compare notes about their servants, their children, their dross ; when lawyers may fittingly discuss their suits, thoir clients, their courts, their re forms ; when artists may properly can vass the time expended over certain pic turns, thoir pricn, their technical merits and so forth. But, be it understood, all this is business : it is nothing but " shop," let tho conversation be carried on when it may. General conversation needs all of these indeed, there is no aid that it scorns ; but it noods them as accessories, not as principals. They should bo used as the sido-lights, the timely illustrations flashed upon tho main theme, at mo ments when it is threatened with dark ness or dimness. This main chomo should be no one's in particular, but should soom to bo any ono's at times, and in turns. Thus only can bo reconciled the two at first seemingly conflicting condi tions of all good general conversation that it should not bo mean, common, or vulgar, and yet that everybody should havo an intorest it. It is the humility of some, and the ar rogance or egotism of others, that pre vent tho happy combination from being moro common. Pooplo have only to be gin with three axioms the first of which is, that everybody is entitled (indeed bound) to form his own opinion, quito irrespectively of anything he may have read or been told ; the seeond of which is, that everybody is equally entitled to declare that opinion ; and tho third of which is, that everybody s opinion is en titled to consideration, and that not on ly on the ground of courtesy, but be cause it is certain that any opinion hon estly and independently formed is worth something, and opportunely expressed, may contribute in a striking manner to a current discussion. But for this most desirable consummation to bo reached, difference of opinion must no longer bo thought to verge upon bad manners, and truth or tho pursuit of truth, not vic tory, must bo the common quest. Tho upper ten thousand of this world prido themselves upon being so vastly superior to tho rest of the human race, that they are confidently justified to thomselves when thoy strengthen the barriers which separate them from the common herd. We are not among tho believers in. the social equality of mon, but we cannot allow ourselves to be blinded by the spurious distinctions which now pronounce them unequal. Abolish distinction of dress, manner, aifcl sjech, and where is the difference betweton many a lady and her maid, be tween many a gentleman and his valet, between some peers and .their grooms ' The conversation of the drawiug-room is, in too many instances, not ono whit better or more elevated than that of the servants' halL and the discussions of a smoking-room are perfectly on a par with those of the stable. And if we are to stick to our definition, does it not fol low that he is the highest man whoso conversation, i. 1. whose thoughts for, depend upon it, tho two things are con vertible is habitually the highest and tho most soaring 't A Queer Story of Superstition. The Berlin (Wisconsin) Journal has this story : A gentleman who resided in this city has related to us a strange story of superstition and barbarity, which he claimed had happened in this city recently. Our informant was a Gorman, and the parties in the story are Polandors, but their names we could not learn. Tho story, as related to us, is substantially as follows : About the first of Docembor or last of November a young Polish woman gave birth to a child. About two days afterward sho diod and was buried in tho city cemetery. After about five weeks the wifo of tho brother of the dead woman was taken very sick, and it was thought she would die. It appears there is a superstitious idea among the Polandors that if ono of a family dies, unless tho head of tho corpse is out off tho whole family will bo likely to follow in rapid succession. However, if after one has died, another is taken sick, if somo of the blood is procured from the dead body and administered to the patient he will recover. In accor dance with this superstition, our in formant alleges, the husband of the sick woman went to the burying ground on the night ot January a, nve weeks alter interment, dug up the body, cut off the head, and took from it blood and other liquid, which he administered to his wifo as a medicine. That shortly after this the sick woman's malady assumed the form of smallpox, from which she reco vered and she is now entirely well. Our informant claimed that many wirnosses story, and from what wo learned we are could be brought to corroborate fiis to bolicve that there is some foundation for tho story. .The person who gave us our information knows the name of the Polander in question, but would not discloso it. Nevada "Ships of the Desert." Tho Virginia City Enterprise, of the 13th, says: ; A train of over a dozen camels arrived in this city yesterday afternoon from the valley of the Carson River, below Dayton, These "ships of the desert" wnrn loaded with hav in bnlf.a fn Artama' " " , 4WU J hay yard on North D street The huge, ungainly beasts pieaeuwiu quite a pie- turHaniiA snnpjirHUofl as tllPV 4!ln! ,nfn town with thoir oumbrous freight Upon arpv4ng at tne nay yaro,mu word ot command, they aii nou aown to be. ie-i liasod. -of their . loads. These animals &Trufi.r ti f hriva mita &a wall in l,,a country as in the wilds of Sahara. There 1 l.. J L- 1 aid au euuuuaiiiio v& uuoui ut liere, II they are necessary to the comfort of the beast. The Narrow Gango In Colorado. Mr. Samuel Bowles, of the Springfield Republican, gives tho following descrip tion of the experimental narrow gauge railway now in operation for about seventy-five miles below Denver : Tho Colorado road, which has been constructed with groc t rapidity for seventy-five miles south of Denver, is in tended ultimately to be built along the base of the Rocky Mountains to Santo Fe, thonce to Albuquerque, thence to El Paso on tho Mexican border, thence to Chihuahua and finally to the City of Mexico a total distance of about 1,750 miles. When completed, it will bo ono of the most important lines of railway on the Continent It is not likely that it would havo been undertaken t but for tho fact that tho narrow gauge plan of construction involves so much less ex pense than that'of the accepted system. Mr. Bowles says that tho cost of build ing this road has been but $13,000 a mile, while tho Kansas Pacific, which traverses a like region of country, cost $22,000. As to its working, ho says : " Tho road and its trains, in tho first place, look like a railway plaything, in contrast with the broader and heavier tracks and larger cars of tho accustom ed lino ; delicate and dainty, thoy Seem almost too faint and feeble for tho hard, quick work to which they aro callod.and especially unequal to the great contest which they have invited. Yet so far, surely, they aro performing their task with ease, with- oomfort, with celerity and with success. The track-bed of the narrow gauge is 6 feet wide, as against 9 ; the distance betwoen tho rails 3 feet, as against 4 feet 8 1-2 inches ; thctiesare 0 to 6 1-2 feet, as against 8 ; the rails weigh 30 pounds to the yard, as against 50 ; the engines 12 to 16 tons, as against 25 to 30 tons, putting about half the weight on tho drive-wheels that tho large locomo tives do ; the passenger cars, with 8 wheels, and carrying 32 passengers, weigh 6 tons, as against 18 tons, 8 wheels and 50 passengers ; and tho freight cars so far introduced weigh 2 tons, run on 4 wheels and carry 4 to 5 tons of freight, as against cars weighing 9 tons on 8 wheels, and capable of 10 tons load. Where four passengers sit in tho ordinary cor, three are seated in the narrow ones, two on one side and ono on tho other of the passage way, the car being divided in the middle by a door, and the seats for two and ono, respectively, being re served in tho two sections, so as to bal ance tho carriage. Tho cars at first in troduced aro 7 feet wide, and 10 1-2 feet high from rail to top. They prove a trifle moro compact than is necessary, and not quite generous enough in ac commodations lor passengers ; but this evil is boing remedied in new cars now constructing j while sleeping cars and day drawing-room cars can bo made for tho narrow gauge roads, which will ac commodate still more persons, in pro portion to their size and weight, than tho ordinary ears of this character now do." Building and Loan Associations. Much has been said of co-operative associations for manufacturing and for carrrying on other branches of produc tive industry, as well as of co-operativo stores, but what are known as building and loan associations, representing an other application of the same mutual principle, are comparatively little under stood. The latter offer very decided ad vantages not only to tho working peo ple, but to all persons in receipt of wages or a fixed salary, whether shop girls or railroad superintendents. Tho building and loan association is in the nature of a savings bank, all the depositors in which are stockholders and entitled to a pro rata share of tho pro fits which their aggregated savings earn. It is a perfectly mutual concern, there boing no preferred class of stockholders, and, as usually managed, tho officers for tho most part serving without salaries. Tho expenses are exceedingly small. A prominent feature of such associa tions is tho privilege accorded to mem bers of borrowing money, in amounts proportioned to the number of their shares of stock, on remarkably favora ble terms. This enables a poor man to become the absolute owner of a houso in from eight to elevon years by paying an nually but a small sum in addition to the rent of it A law passed by the Legislature of Pennsylvania in 1859 provides for tho incorporation of building and loan asso ciations, and prescribes certain general rules and limitations respecting them. Somo of the details of their working are a littlo complex, but tho plan in the main is very simple, and entirely within tho comprehension of everybody. A man or woman either who can save ten dollars a month, may take ten shares of stock, which have a nominal or pros pective value of 200 each. By contin uing monthly payments of $10 during a term which varies from eight to eleven years, he can withdraw the sum of $2,000 at the end of that time. Sup posing the association to run nine years and six months (which is about the aver age period under good management), such a stockholder actually pays but $1,140 in return for the $2,000 which ho obtains. He thus realizes an average annual interest of very nearly eight per cent, on his money, while five per cent, is the highest ever allowed by savings banks, and four per cent, is tho more usual rate. This example shows the paramount advantages ot such mutual societies sim ply as a depository for savings. Of course a smaller or larger amount of stock may bo taken with proportionate results. Men who desire to borrow, moderate amounts of money, either for the pur pose of purchasing or building a house, or starting in business, find quite as great au advantage from the possession of stock in a building and loan associa tion, though they may be obliged to pay a considerable premium in addition to legal interest.. J. hat premium goes to swell the epnjmon fund, and the larger the' profits thus made by" the association the soonor its object is accomplished and the end of its existence reached, when the borrower is not only relieved from further payments' of interest, but his note and mortgage are cancelled witheut tho payment of any principal beyond tho amounts which have been received from him as monthly duos on his sharc3 of stock. The stock in these associations may be transferred at any timo, and always for more than it cost ; thus there is no pos sibility of loss, provided honest or ro sponsiblo officers are chosen. Tho prin ciples and workings of this plnn cannot all bo explained within tho limits of a newspaper article. Several books have been written concerning it, and amonth ly journal The Building Association Journal devoted to tho subject, has been published in Philadelphia for more than a year past. Tho idea of Such associations origin ated in Scotland about 1815. Tho first oho in this country was organized in Frankford, Philadelphia, January 3, 1831. The number now in this city is estimated at 350, and tho avcrago of capital invested in them at upwards of $25,000,000. Philadelphia Press. Facts About Trichina) in Hogs. i A Cleveland despatch says : M A well authenticated and undoubted case of trichinee spiralis is now undergoing in vestigation by our physicians. It has already resulted in tho death of ono vic tim, and soveral more are in a dangerous condition. Tho unfortunate sufferers aro a family by the namo of Martens. For soveral weeks past thoy have at dif ferent times eaten of pork, cithor made into sausages or cooked in the usual manner, which was to all appearances in good condition, and there was no in dication of disease of any kind. A fow days ago the entire family, consisting of Charles Martens, his brother Ernst, wifo and two children, wero seized with symptoms that baffled at first all at tempts at discovering their character ; but an examination of tho pork partaken of proved r inclusively the presence of ,1,i'i''., .vi tiiohinro in an encysted state, iii epite of all that was done to relieve him, Charles Martens died Monday night. Miss Martens is in a very crit ical condition, and there is but little hope of her recovery. Ono of tho chil dren may recover, but the only member of tho family out of danger is the broth er, Ernst Martens, who ato but little of tho affected meat. A microscopic exam ination mado of a piece cut from the muscle of tho arm of the deceased with an instrument having a magnifying ca pacity of four hundred times, revealed the presence of a number of trichinro, somo of them still alive and active, but soon dying on exposure to the air. Their average length - was one-eighteenth of an inch. Their color was a light drab, ' marked with shades of ft darker color. Experiments have shown that exposure to heat greater than 160 dogroes effectually destroys theso dread insects. The first cases of trichinosis in America were in New York. At Marion, Iowa, in 1866, nine cases occur red in ono family, fivo doaths resulting. In the same county, eating raw ham containing trichinro (proved after R-ard by examination) caused tho death of six children at the same timo. An examin ation of pork in Chicago by a commit teo of tho Academy of Scionco of that city proved the existence of trichina) in one in fifty of the hogs inspected. Somo of tho flesh contained from 10,000 to 18, 000 of these insocts to the cubic inch." Buffalo Erjrress. The Submerged Treasure In Cuinaua Bay. The wrecking expedition, (says the Boston Journal), sent out by the Ameri can Submarine Company has been for some timo engaged in tho endeavor to recover the treasures sunk in tho Span ish frigate San Pedro de Alcanbara, in Cumana bay, more than half a century ago, aro progressing in the work. The hulk has been cleared, and tho debris above the ballast removed. The result shows that tho treasure room was abovo and abaft tho after magazine, and tho terrifio foroo of tho explosion scattered its contents broadcast ovor the bay. An idea of tho explosion may be gained from the fact that cannon weighing six tons were found to have boon hurled three hundred feet A few Spanish milled dollars and somo interesting relics and curiosities were found. Tho com pany have decided to fit out at once small vessels suitable for dredging pur poses, and expect to be able to recover a largo portion of the millions of coins which cover the bottom of the bay for over an area of an aero or more. Mr. Fuller of Norwich, Conn., is the man ager of the expedition ; and the brig Nellie Gay, which has boon engaged in this work, will, on her return to New London, be fitted out for another expe dition of like character. Children's Eating. When a parent seos a child come to the breakfast table, nibble a little, then go away, death is in tho distance, and may be near in a great many cases ; in all there is solid ground for apprehension of coming ill in somo form or other. This want of appetite for breakfast may come on very slowly ; it may be weeks before it is decided enough to bo remarked ; so much the worse for the child, because greator will be the difficulty in righting things. If children are going to school, eating should be made compulsory, or brain disease will follow sooner or later, for the brain must be nourished, or rest less sleep follows, and in its train dreams, nervousness, cold feet and hands, with severe debility. All school children should have plenty of meat and bread for breakfast and dinner, with all the fruit and berries they can get afterward for dessert ; if not these, then no dessert at all. A speedy and easy, way to reuiody meal-time nibbling is to begin' with a supper of bread and butter, and. one cup of hot milk anJ water, and nothing elso. Allow not ' an atom, o' anything tobe eaten between meals, and cbmttlein to be in bed by nine o'clock. Within s week a hearty breakfast will be tho re sult, with an increasing vivacity, activity, life and joyouaneea. Facts and Figures. Diamonds in Arizona have advanced in price. You cannot now purchase really good ones short of sixty conts a bushel. Illinois is the great railroad Stato of the Union. She lias now in operation 3,725 miles just 705 miles moro than any other Stato. A human footprint fifteen inches long has been found in a slate quarry near Seneca, Kansas. Tho pro-Adamite man woro large boots. A Boston coroner has been accused of presenting bills for viewing bodies that he never saw. He gets $4 a head, and gets ahead about $1 every time. A woman engaged in passing counter feit twenty-dollar notes has been arres ted in Milwaukee, and a large amount of counterfeit money found in her pos session. A Cincinnati paper says that the- lo cation of the Union Pacifio depot grounds at Omaha, on G. F. Train's property, will mako Train worth ovor 100,000,000. Among the literary people who mako their winter homes in Washington, are Mrs. Southworth, Mrs. Ann Stephens, Mrs. Mary Clemmor Ames, Mrs. Mary A. Dennison, and Mrs. Harriot Prcscott Spofford. A prominent manufacturer of wood working machines in Cincinnati has re ceived orders from the government of Japan for shingle and lath machines, turning lathes, and other machinery for wood-working. Somo of the towns in Vermont having vaccinated most of their population, are now a littlo inclined to grumble becauso the small-pox does not come along. Thcro is a general feeling that all the trouble has been taken for nothing. Some of tho quiet villages of New Hampshire havo a commendable way of reliving the tedium of thoir long winters. Two rival towns engage in a spelling contest, which is carried on without any of the bitterness which is opt to bo de veloped in other "wars of words." Antrim and Bennington have been fighting' it out on that line all winter. At last re ports Bennington was two words ahead. Carroll county claims to havo tho big gest man in Tennessee, in tho person of William B. Shaver. According to a recent measurement he measure around the wrist eight and one-half inches; around the arm, eighteen inches ; around tho calf of leg, nineteen inches ; around the thigh, midway above tho knee, thirty three inches ; around tho chest, five feet ; and around the waist, six feet. His height is six feet five and one-half inchos. Boston has had another big swindle. An enterprising man named Brock opend a " Commercial Agency " in that city, through which country merchants could of course make thoir purchaso at a vast advantage. So largo was the concern that it had its own printing establishment for getting out circulars, reports, etc., and employed a largo num bes of men and girls. No sooner had it got well a-going than tho projector sud denly conceived that ho would find tho climuto of Canada beneficial. Ho left many debts unpaid and carried off some plunder. "Aunt Phillis," nn old colored wo man, who was well known in and about Rahway, N. J., was burned to death at Bricktown, near Rahway, the other night. She was born in New Jersey about the year 1707, and during the Revolutionary war, although a mere girl, is said to have boon of some service to tho American cause as a spy. She herself used to say that at one timo she was in the special service of General Washington. She had in her posession a gold snuff-box, which was given to her by Governor Livingston as a tes timonial of her. services to the Federal cause. An ardent youth of Cleveland, over whoso romantic head seventeen summers had passed, blew out his brains tho other day becauso he was "crossed in hopeless love" with a young woman somo yoars older. His mother made the course of his true lovo exceedingly rough, and poor fellow he had nothing to livo for, and so got rid of the small modicum of brains that nature had lodged in his cranium. If he had had his wish, and married the woman, it would only have postponed the catostropho, for he would very likely havo awakened from his rosy dream to discover that he had been a fool, and had no resort but tho pistol to end his married woes. He evidently was marked for woes anyhow. The suggestion of Gen. Hazen of the United States Army that Government should take some means to prevent the extermination of the buffalo, appears to be a sensible one ; for there is no reason why animals so valuable and so cosily subsisted should bo wantonly butchered by thousands, and their carcasses left to rot on the plains, as is now the case. The buffalo lives upon a short grass which grows luxuriantly upon the high, arid plains of the far W est, and while it is valuable as food, its skin, when dressed, is an almost indispensable adjnnct of a sleighing equipage. If any effectual means for protecting these animals from unnecessary slaughter can be devised a great benefit will be conferred upon the country. . Mr. C. E. DeLong, the United States minister to Japan, is a selfTmade man, who, by his indomitable energy and ability, from small beginnings has climbed the path to distinction. In 1856 he was constable in Foster's Bar Township, Yuba county, California. He afterwards studied law, and practiced with considerable success. He represented that county several times in the State Legislature. From California he went to Nevada ' and . acquired a very large and lucrative practice. He was twice a candidate before the Nevada Legislature for tho United! Stats SonAta, bat waa di-tod botu tiiBw by -ott , hmnW Ma jorities. He vent to Japan as minister in 1869; and naa 'heon vary active ad vancing American interest ia that country.