EfK COUNTY THE REPUBLICAN rARTY. VOL II. RIDGWAY, PA,. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1872. rso. 34. POETJt T, Original. REST. BT MISS 1. I. 0W1S. Though the earth be bright nd guy, There re souls that ever say. Give na peaeo, O Rive ns reit i Tht It 1. that seemcth but I Though the Idly floatlnc air, And the irllded sunliirht fair, Scented ferns beneath tho shade, Violets wllhtn the glade, Twining iiiojioi bathed in mint. Flowers blooming amethyst Whlsp'rlng pines, that dreamily Murmur legends of the sea, Fleecy clonds with golden edges, Tinkling rills among the sedges, Sunset fading from the sky. Twilight softly drawing nigh, Fill tho soul wltn sweet relief, Hushing Us tmpassion'd grief. Htlll it quickly wakes again To its conflict strife, and pain, For thongh nature breathes of calm Soothes as kindly with her balm. Yet tho spirit doth protest That 'tis quietness and rest That alone can satlxtr Its nncenstng, earnest cry. Wearily It waits to know If this rest will como below ; And it hears an angol voice, Bidding waiting hearts rejoice ; For they yet sweet reel shall find, Then they leave the storms behind. When thev from earth's shadows go, Then they rest and peace shall know. THE STORY-TELLER. SAUL KETCIIUM'S BEQUEST. A feverish excitement was experienced by the young men of our town npon the announcement that Miss Effie Ketchum, tin heiress, was to visit her friend Miss Knowell. Barrenville contained no heiress to any considerable wealth, and, as we had never seen a real live woman with lots of money at her command within its borders, it was not surprising that a stir should be visible among the beaux who were candidates for the matrimonial halter. Upon inquiry it proved a difficult matter to ascertain who circulated the report of Miss Ketchum's wealth, for Miss Knowell emphatically declared she had not imparted the information to any one; but at the same time she ad mitted that her friend Effie had assur edly inherited the possessions of an old undo who had died childless in Missou ri. The amount she had received she knew not, but report said that Miss Ketchum dressed expensively, and it was presumed she could not do so unless she had means to back it. It was, therefore, agreed that Miss Ketchum was wealthy, and that Mary Knowell was possessed of more informa tion on the point than she was willing to admit, for she did not intend her friend to be sacrificed to the fortuue hunting young men who would buzz about her like bees around a sweet flower. Such studying of attitudes in mirrors, arranging cravats and practising steps was never before seen in Barrenville. The conversation incessantly ran on Miss Ketchum until the subject was talked threadbare. At length she came, and the anxiety for an early introduction was painful. The hearts of the young men of Barren ville throbbed and burned, and their heads grew dizzy calculating interest on large sums of luoney. Jack Starbuck and Zenas Mahan were the two best-to-do young men in the town. They both pursued the calling of lumber merchants, having saw-mills on the opposite sides of the river. There had always been an emulation between them, and their desire was to distance each other not only in business but in affairs of the heart also. Jack Starbuck was never known to set his affections upon any particular girl, that Mahan did not appear upon the scene and ultimately spoil Jack's pleasant schemes, whatever they may have been, for Zenas Mahan was a splendid-looking fellow, and, in point of Eersonal appearance, Starbuck was not is equal. But Mahan never evinced a desire to marry, so it fared badly with the girl who was ready to transfer her affections from his rival to himself, and no one pitied the dupe after the little game had been played to an end. Now, when Miss Ketchum arrived in Barrenville, it was generally conceded that either Jack or Zenas would win her j for her wealth forbade the sup position that the latter would scorn the alliance, despite Lis well-known pro pensity of deserting those whom he had won. But before proceeding further let us take a look into the interior ef Missouri. At the time we write of there was a lawless set of men who inhabited some of the inland towns. It required a stout heart for immigrants to settle in certain localities, but they nevertheless were not wanting. Among the few who took up their abode in C. was Saul Ketchum, from the State of North Carolina. There was much to be said about him. He had very little money, but was possessed of a most passionate temper, it was not long after his arrival in his new home that he gave such evidence of his prow ess and readiness to do mischief that the neighborhood stood in awe of him, and few ventured to oppose Wis known wish es. This man, though lazy by nature, had the good luck or good fortune, or whatever you may call it, to make money out of every thing in which he engaged, lie had no children ; his wife was the only inmate of hii house, and she, poor sickly thing, came to Missouri shaking with fever and ague, and only lived a year after her arrival. Her death pro duced no further effect upon her hus band than to make him empty the whis key jug more often than he hitherto had done, and to growl more savagely when things were wrong with him. He left behind in North Carolina two brothers named Timothy and Mark. Both had a daughter born to them about the same time, and unconsciously named them Effie, after Saul Ketchum's wife. When Saul heard of it he smiled grim ly, and, speaking to his wife, said : " And now, old woman, what are you going to do about this 'i Here you have two nieces bearing your name ; which are you going to make your heir if you outlive me V I don't like to divide a cherry, and we may not have enough to make both rich." " There's time enough to talk of that, Saul," replied the woman. " When we are done with our means it may be dou ble what it is now, and it will bear a di vision very welL Women shouldn't bo too rich, you know." Timothy Ketchum (who was the fath er of the visitor at Barrenville) took it into his head to visit his brother Saul, and carried his daughter with him. Had he loft her at home it might have fared better with him. The child was bright and uncommonly precocious for her years, and one day, observing her uncle apply a jug to his lips, she watch ed until the process was completed, when she asked him what he was drink ing. " Whiskey," he replied, with a laugh. " Ah," said Effie, " now I perceive why they call you 1 Whiskey-jug Saul.' " " And pray, who calls me so ?" in quired her uncle, coaxingly patting her head. . " O, papa, mamma, and all the rest." " Who do you mean by all the rest asked her uncle ; " did you ever hear your Uncle Mark make use of such language!-" "O, no," innocently answered the child ; " Uncle Mark told them one day they ought to be ashamed to speak 69, and they only laughed at him." " They did," responded Saul Ketchum, slowly surveying his niece, and inward ly chuckling at his secret thoughts. In due time whiskey slew Saul Ketch um, and it was rumored in the house of Timothy Ketchum that Saul had left him his fortune. Poor -ilark never re pined or grudged Timothy his good luck. By-and-by there came a letter from Saul's lawyer, stating that the estate had been divided between the brothers' daughters, but in a rather eccentric man ner, for the will bequeathed the daugh ter of Mark Ketchum all the money and lands, while Timothy's was to have her uncle's whiBkey-jug. There was sorrow and mortification in the house of Tim Ketchum, for it had been the general belief his daughter had come into possession of all her uncle's wealth. Effie had, in the first flush of the ex citement, conveyed the news, to her friend Mary Knowell ; but when the real state of affairs was known, she was glad to absent herself from town and wait for a season until the discomfiture of herself and father's family was less keenly felt. Accordingly she came to Barrenville, but she either forgot or did not deem it of sufficient importance to correct her first letter to her friend. Tim Ketchum, as soon as he heard the good news, had gone to the shopkeeper's and given extensive orders for his daugh ter's wardrobe, and they were only too happy to sell him upon credit. Effie certainly obtained a dashing outfit, for which her Uncle Mark generously paid, besides giving her a purse of gold. Thus equipped she came to Barrenville. Jack Starbuck was first on the ground, and sailed in with flying colors to win the rich Miss Ketchum ; the lesser lights followed in his wake, but of course re ceived nothing but politeness and smiles, while tender glances and moonlight strolls were tt served for Jack Star buck. While this happy state of things ex isted, Zenas Mahan, with his handsome face and splendid figure, appeared upon the scene. Moreover, he drovo two magnificent bays, finer by far than Jack Starbuck's sorrel mare. Effie was per plexed, and went for advice to her friend Mary Knowell. " What shall I do '" she exclaimed ; " Mr. Mahan has asked me to have him, and he is so handsome !" ' Then why don't you have him ?" re plied Miss Knowell. "Because I am already engaged to Mr. Starbuck, but for pity's sake don't mention it." Mary Knowell laughed. " What do you propose, Effie ?" she asked. Tell me candidly," said she, becom ing very sedate, " which is the rishest of the two ?" "Mr. Mahan is the most wealthy," replied her friend; "but suely you would not make that the motive '" " Yes, I would," responded Effie. " Why, you are positively mercenary," answered her friend, with a smile, " after your writing me all about your uncle leaving you such a splendid for tune, what on earth can you desire more money for '(" Miss Ketchum quailed beneath Mary Knowell' a look. The remembrance of the letter she had written made her feel uncomfortable. Whatever she did must be done in a hurry. At a subsequent meeting with Zenas Mahan she confessed to him that she was engaged to Mr. Starbuck. Zenas beard the confession with more compos ure than Effie thought he would, but he nevertheless determined not to despair so long as Effie gave him opportunities to meet his rival. And he succeeded. Quietly one evening Zenas Mahan took Effie Ketchum riding; on the way he picked up a couple of friends, and then drove to the house of a neighboring clergyman, who made them man and . rr 11" , "1 1 1 1 111 Witt). enas iook nis oriuo 10 toe noiei, and went to the home of Mary Knowell for her trunks. Poor Jack Starbuck was almost struck dumb when the truth wm announced to him. A few weeks later, and Zenas Mahan and wife were sitting in their room at the hotel, and there was no one by to hear their conversation, except the chambermaid, who had her ear to the keyhole. " And now. Effie, dear," said Zenas, " tell me something about your proper ty. You have given me no information on the subject yet, and I have been wait ing in hopes you would do so. How much do you possess '(" " Possess 1" exclaimed Mrs. Mahan, with a look of feigned surprisp, " why, I am not worth money. What put that in your head f I am suro I nover gave you to understand any such thing." .N ot worth money I gasped .en as Mahan ; " do you mean to say I have married a penniless wman r" " Pretty nearly so," replied Effie. " Pray, tell me," continued her hus band, with remarkable cosiness, " how did the report grt abroad that you were wealthy Y "Why, you soo," answered Effie, " when we first got the news of Undo Saul's death we thought he had left me his fortuno, but, unfortunately, he gave it all to my cousin, who bears the same name as myself." " And he left you nothing i" " O, yes, he did." " Well, what was it you inherited V" " I can't help laughing when I tell you. Uncle Saul was an eccentric man he bequeathed me his whiskey-jug." "His w-h-i-s-k-e-y jug!" gasped her husband. " And I have married a wo man whose sole possession is a whiskey jug!" From that moment Zenns Mahan be gan to stay out late at nights and have urgent business in a neighboring city. He couldn't ' bear the mischievous look in the eyes of Jack Starbuck when they met. Jack frjtsnkly told Zenas he didn't bear him any ill will for " cutting him out," whilo Zenas, with equal frankness, told him that he wished to heavens ho hadn't succeeded. Jack Starbuck married Mary Know ell, and was quite happy and prospered abundantly. Zenas Mahan moved away from Barrenvillo, and the last beard of him was that his wife and himself were occupying different houses. Legalized Slavery. That portion of the fair sex who clam or so loudly for their rights, should be thankful that they did not exist several hundred years ago. It waR not until the tenth century that women obtained'the privilege of choosing or refasing their husbands. Often they were betrothed, as children, the bridegroom's pledge of man iage being accompanied by a "se curity," or "wed," whence comes the word. Part of the wed always consisted of a ring, placed upon the maiden's right hand, and there religiously kept until transferred to the othorhand at the later nuptials. Then, also, were repeated tho marriago vows and other ceremonies, out of which those now prevailing have grown. The bride was taken " for fair er, for fouler, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer," and promised to be M buxom and bonny " to her future hus band. At the end of the final ceremony, the father. of the bride gave to his new son one of his daughter's shoes, in token of the transfer of authority which he effected, and tho bride was at once made to feel the change by a tap or blow on the head given with the shoe. Rather a forcible earnest of future happiness, one would imagine. However, tlie hus band took an oath to use his wife well. If he failed to do bo, she might leave him, but by law he was allowed consid erable license. He was bound in honor " to bestow on his wifo and hit) appren tices moderate castigation." We have nothing to show tho exact amount of castigation held moderate by the Anglo Saxons ; but ono old Welsh law decided that three blows with a broomstick on "any part of the person, except tho head," is a fair allowance, and another provides that the stick be no longer than the husband's arm, nor thicker than his middle finger. Prior t tho seventh century a wifo might at any time bo re- Eudiated on proof of her being either arren, deformed, silly, passionate, luxu rious, rude, habitually drunk, glutton ous, very garrulous, quarrelsome, or abu sive. An Insect Samson. In preportion to its size, tho strength of the beetle is enormous. A well known entomologist gives un instance of its power, no says, "This insect has just astonished me by its vast strength of body. Every one who has taken the common beetle in his hands knows that its limbs, if not remarkable for agility, are very powerful ; but I was not pre pared for so Samsonian a feat as that I have just witnessed. When the insect was brought to me, having no box im mediately at hand, I was at a loss where to put it till I could kill it ; but a quart bottle full of milk being on tho table, I placed the beetle for the present under that, the hollow in the bottom allowing him room to 6tand upright. Presently, to my surprise, the bottle began to move slowly and glide along the smooth table, propelled by the muscular power of the imprisoned insect, -and continued to perambulate tho surface, to the aston ishment of all who witnessed it. The weight of the bottle and its contents could not have been less than three pounds and a half, while that of the beetle was about half an ounce, so that it really moved a weight one hundred and twelve times its own. A better notion than figures can convey will be obtained of this fact by supposing a lad of fifteen to be imprisoned under the bell of St. Paul's, which weighs twelve thousand pounds, and to move it to and fro upon a smooth pavement by pushing witiun. Remedy fob Sc ratches. Thomas J, Graves writes to the Western, Rural that he has treated hundreds of cases of grease-heel or scratches as follows, and never failed to cure if treated before the foot commenced to come off: "Wash the parts affected thoroughly with soap suds in order lo take off all the grease, dirt, &,o. Wipe dry; then take the groase on the tire wtnis boiling and throw it on immediately. Apply this way about every other day, for three or four times, sometimes of tener ; be your own judge as to how often from the ap pearance. Keep out of dews and mud as much as possible. Do not keep stabled or tied up, and allow the animal as much exercise as will be taken of its own accord. I give this of my own per sonal knowledge and experience." Tale-Bearers. "Tho tale-bearer is lust as bad as the tale-maker," echoes Mrs. Candor, with uplifted hands and condemnatory look ; yet, in the same breath, she proceeds to tell somo scandalous anecdote, and, with a laugh, trifles away the repnta- tation of an unfortunate acquaintance. A fair representative is this lady ol a certain class of evil-doers, who may justly be termed firebrands. Their sole desire seems to bo to niuke miseniet all around them. In presence of the tale bearer it is unsafe to make the most in nocent remark, if affording as much as tho mere end of a thread that can be twisted and " snarled." For one of his characteristics is his want of exactness in report, and a certain. loose idea of verity not conducive to general moral ity. You say good-naturedly, meaning no harm not a bit of it that your friend John is an eccentric fellow (so he is i), and cares very little for what peo lo think of him ; that he is thoroughly P independent in mind, has his own ideas, and follows no traditions. The tale bearer goes to him with tho pleasing intelligence that you have called him an atheist, a socialist, a radical, and other dubious things which no conven tional, easy-going gentleman who dress es for dinner ana wears clean linen de sires to be called. In the lieat of his anger at your supposed treachery, John gives vent to a dubious expression con cerning yourself perhaps quoting the well-known passage concerning the moto in your neighbor's eye. Back comes the tale-bearer, with a long story concerning John's unflattering opinion of you, rendered more forcible by vari ous hints of dark meaning concerning his hypocrisy towai-ds others, tor whom he professes friendship. As a natural consequence, a coolness springs up be tween you and John, and a pleasant in timacy is forever blighted. To be sure, if there were no credulous beliovers in evil stories, tho tale-bearer's trade would be at a discount ; ho would get tired of scattering sparks it they did not set fare to the tow ; and it is only credulity, backed by that wretched desire to find more to blame than to praise in our fellow-creatures, which makes the tow so inflammable. But the mischief-maker is to blame in the first place, and is the principal culprit. When you admit into your family a firebrand, all things go ill. lou search in vain tor the ause, but it is as it a spell had sudden ly been cast over your establishment. one to which you have neither key nor the counter-charm. Your wifo is un complying and ill-tempered ; quick to take offence; on the smallest occasion bursting into tears, as an ill-used Griselda, or firing out into a rage as, a woman ot spirit bound to defend her self. Your children, who once were manageable and affectionate, now dig, pute your will and justico; your ser vants are insubordinate and discontent ed ; they strike for higher wages, and object to the work assigned them to do : they bemoan themswlves. as tlaves, or what is next thing to slaves, and give warning on slight provocation. You find yourselt regarded as a tyrant, and conscious that you aro wholly un changed, wonder what has sent the cur rent of opinion against you: so skilfully does the misehief-maker perform, his Work, that a long time elapses ere vou detect his finger meddling in the family pie ; when you do, it is too late to wholly remedy tho mischiet done, and the chances are that you never will get back the high place of trust you have lost. So it is wherever the pest of hu man intercourse appears. Mischief fol lows on his steps as surely as night fol lows on sundown. When he appears, tho wisest thing to do is turu a deaf ear to his words, with a cold shoulder to follow ; for if you listen to his plausible tales, mischiet ana unhappiness will surely come ot it. Sea Sickness. If naval nausea were inevitable, liko death, the common lot of all mankind, you might bear it without grumbling, though you might not like it. What makes you savage is, that somo people are never sea-sick at all. Nor can you guess, before a trial, who enjoys this blessed immunity. People who can waltz all night without giddiuess, or swing and see-sa x all day without feel ing sick, or ride in a close carriage with their backs to the horses, may count on a tolerable chance ot freedom. Sex, strength, and florid health, are no cer tain guarantees. A frail, thin, delicate- looking girl will delight to ride on the dancing waves, while her riiddy cousin, a lad of fourteen stone, will beg for his lii'o to be set on shore. A great lady who kept a yacht, was said, when her husband did not please her, to propose a trip to sea for the benefit of his health and the correction of his disobedience. Urazy folk are reputed to defy the stomach-searching movements of the sea, making one ask which is the worse of the two, the bodily or the mental ailment. Physicians who have tried the experiment, in the nope ot curing crack-brained patient, have brought horibie sufferings on themsolves, while their invulids enjoyed perfoct ease and comfort. There is a legend of a doctor who excursioned, a la Cook, an insane party out to sea in the hope of curing them by a marine emetic. They were not ill, but the doctor was ; so, for fear of catching the disease, they threw the doctor overboard. Age may have some thing to da with a liability to the vim tation. Young people, as they grow up, often get over the qualms brought on by riding backward in a coach. We knew a person, a capital sailor from bis boyhood upward, obliged to delist from taking runs out to sea soon after passing three-score years and ten.. The stomach had no longer the same powers of resis tance. On a long voyage, some recover from sickness after a couple of days, others in a week, others never, bo long as they remain at sea. All tit Year Round. A lady about to marry, was warned that her intended, although a good man. was very eccentric Well, she said, if he is very unlike other men, he is more like ly to be a good husband, Growth of British India. More and moro every year does the East call upon tho West to witness its rapid growth and cresoent prosperity. The maxim that " Westward the star of empire takes its way," must find its limit at last ; it looks as if the empire of com merce at least would, in no long time, once more find its seat in what we are wpnt to regard as the far Orient. Asia and the Australasian islands seem deter mined to prove that they do not propose to yield as yet to young republics in tho setting sun. The progress of China and Japan in modern arts and ideas is a fact which thrusts itself upon us with every mail which reaches us from those an tique lands ; and the splendid results of British enterprise in India are appear ing just at a time when people are be ginning to doubt whether the British dominion over India has not entered upon its period of decay. India has, in recent years, begun to add new sources of wealth to the world's commerce. Camels'-hair shawls and Oolconda dia monds, beautifully-worked fabrics and delicious fruits and spices, treasures of temples and of mines, no longer consti tute even her chief claim to the admir ing consideration of mankind. In the cultivation of coffee she is beginning to rival Java, Mocha, and Jamaica; in that of tea, China ; in that of cotton, our own Southern States ; in that of silk and its manufacture, Lyons and Hong Kong. Her exports of teas, which are grown along the mountain-slopes of Kangra and Looshai, have increased ten told in as many years, and have now reached a value of some $5,500,000; the exports of silk have doubled in the same period, and the same may bo said of cot ton, dyes, and coffee, while the exports of hides and skins have tripled. Fifty million dollars worth of opium is sent from Bengal and Bombay annually ; and the increased value of the sugar, the wool, the seeds, of jute and its manufac tured products, proves that the advance continues to bo made along " the wholo lino." The total of Indian exports, which was $175,000,000 in 1862, reached $270,- 000,000 in 187 1. Tho English claim that this material improvement in their splen did Oriental possession has been accom panied by a corresponding economic, sanitary, and moral improvement, of which a rose-colored impression is given by the reports of the Indian Govern ment. The building of canals has, it is said, in a measure checked the ravages of tever, which finds a congenial home in a country at once hot and moist, and amid a slovenly race ; and the cultiva tion of the cinchona-plant, which is re garded as the best febrifuge, has been directly encouraged by the authorities. The building ot railways and the estab lishment of schools are now occupying the attention ot tho viceregal govern ment, and much is hoped from these agents of civilization. Lapis Lazuli. This mineral, which is called azure stone by tho vulgar, is of a magnificent blue color, sometimes spangled with beautiful gold spots, from flakes of sul phuret of iron throughout its mass. It occurs in shapeless blocks, or rounded pebbles, or, at times, in prismatic firms. having four sides, obliquely set. It is of a compact grain, opaque and hard ; will cut glass, and strike hre troin the steel It is found principally in Persia and in the neighborhood of Lake Baikal, in Siberia, and is highly prized for jewelry and ornamental work. The purest specimens are reserved to cut for gems, and to make those rare t lorenhne mo- saics, so much admired. A quality less rich goes to the decoration of tho houses of tho wealthy. The halls of the Orloff Palace, at St. Petersburg!!, are papered throughout with lapis-lazuli from the lirand-Bankharrie. The coloring mas ter of this stone gives that beautiful blue which is called ultra-marine, not because it is beyond a sky-blue, but that it was wrought trom beyond the sea, namely, the Levant. It is procured in a sort ot soap-niakmg process, by the use of chemical agents. Exposed to a strong fire, the mineral mass melts to a yellowish-black paste. Biinply calcined, it is deprived of its color by strong chemicals, and leaves a pot of jelly. There exist some massive fragments of lazuhts, but the mineral is usually com bined with foreign matters, so that a specimen quite pure and bulky attains a high price. The French treasury has a magnificent lazulite cup, shaped like a sea-shell, and worth two hundred thou sand francs, or forty thousand dollars, There is also a bowl, or hand-dish, valued at sixteen thousand dollars, which were cheap if it gave French rulers clean hands ; and there, too, you may see a sabre, with a lazulite hilt, worth twvlve thousand dollars, the gift of Tippoo Saib to Louis XVI.; and three cbaplets, ot a thousand francs each, on whose beads of, lazuli the royal nobs said their prayers lazily when the Red republicans were not utter them. Intemperance. In a late number of the Contemporary Review, Herbert Spencer combats the idea that inebriety is on the increase. He describes the time when men took drugs to increase their desire for wine when glasses were so shaped that they had to be held until emptied ; when a man was reckoned as a "two-bottle man," a " three-bottle man," &c. ; and when (Mr. Spencer might have added) one of the first of Scottish nobles em ployed a domestic whose sole duty it was to sit under the table and loosen the neckcloths of the guests as they fell from their chairs, in order that they might not suttocate in their drunken sleep. In toxication used to be a mark of honor, It is now a disgrace. Education has driven the evil from one class after an other. It is now almost exclusively con- fined to the lowest. As Mr. Spencer says, the remedy for it in England is not a " Maine-law," but the introduction of the education that has banned it else' where. A printer recently made " Be ye there- i lore steaaiast, me text oi a minister I sermon, " Be ye there for breakfast." Reynard on the Watch. Nature has made the fox sly, adroit and cunning, giving him those qualities to secure food where she has given others brute strength. Ho has thus be come in all lands a type of malice and cunning, and is the great character in the fables of every nation. The fox appears to be tho same crafty animal in all countries, there being quite as many American tales of vulpine sagacity as we can find in England. There are so many stories ot this nature, that it is impossible to give even a hasty account of them. We therefore select one of the shortest : On the banks of tho Kentucky River rise huge rocky bluffs, several feet in height. A fox that lived near this river was constantly hunted, and as regularly lost over the bluff. Now, nothing short of wings would have enabled the animal to escape with its lite down a perpendio ular cliff. At last, a hunter, being de termined to discover the means by which the animal baffled them, concealed him self near the bluff. Accordingly, in good time the fox came to the top of the cliff, and looked over. He then let himself down the face of the cliff by a movement between a leap and a slide, and landed on a shelf, not quite a toot in width, about ten tect own the cliff. 1 he fox then disappeared into a hole above the shelf. On exami nation, the shelf turned out to be the mouth of a wide fi- sure in the rock, into which tho fox always escaped. But how was he to get out again ' He might Blide down ten feet, but he could never leap ten feet froin a ten-inch shelf up the face of a perpendicular rock. This impossibility struck the hunter's mind, so he instituted a search, and at length discovered an easier entrance into the cave from the level ground. The fox was too wise to use that en trance when the hounds were behind him, s he was accustomed to cut short the scent by dropping down the rock, and then when all the dogs were at the edge of the cliff, he walked out at his leisure by the other entrance. An Alarming Fact. An ever-increasing craving for stimu lants is among the crying evils of the times. In additon to the large quantity of liquor consumed yearly in the United States, opium-oating is bocoming popu lar with a large class of people, so much so that, if tho practice be not checked, we shall have more than one " John Jasper " in our midst. In Kentucky, the Opium evil must have assumed alarming proportions, for the legislature of that btate has just passed a bill providing that, on the affidavit of two respectable citizens, any person who, through the excessive use of opium, arsenic, has heesh, or any other drug, has bucouie incompetent to manage his estate, may he confined in any asylum and placed under any guardianship, as in the case of habitual drunkards or lunatics. Tho act says nothing about snuff-dipping, tobaeco-chewing, or smoking. And while on the subject of narcotics, it may be well to add that the medical journals of the country complain of the alarming increase in the consumption ot hydrate of chloral. Indeed, one periodical al leges thut it is being used in the most reckless manner. It is said that even in Europe it is superseding absinthe, opium, and alcoholic stimulants, while its man ufacture has increased enormously. Lie hin says that a single establishment in Germany produces half a ton per week, while in Jbinglaud, according to a Lou don paper, taking chloral is the new and popular vice, particularly among womeu, utid is doing at least us much harm as alcohol. The drug is said to be kept in thousands of English dress ing cases, and those who begin to use it ofren grow so addicted to it that they pass their lives in a sort of contented stupefaction. Coffee Urowing. Not many years will elapse before California will buuomeono i-f the coffee growing countries of tho world. Tho Sancelito Herald status that a party of Costa Ricaus, with a former President of that country at their head, have pur chased a tract of land near Sau Rafael, and among other employments designa ted to be followed by the colony is thtit of raising coffee. Coming from a coun try where coffee is raised with success, these Central Americans ought to know some of the requisites of a country for the business. Whether San Rafael is the spot to inaugurate the new enter prise is doubtful until demonstration has determined the question, but that there are portions uf the State in which coffee can be grown, has long been be lieved. The southern part ot the State has many localities where the experi ment may be tried with high hopes of success, bull, it is not impossible that San Rafael and other places in the mid dle regions of the State, may be adapted to coffee culture. A tew years since, the general idea was adverse to the pos sibility of growing oranges in any but the southern portions of the State ; but actual demonstrations have proven that they can be cultivated as far North as Chico, and in several of the gorges in the Sierra Nevadas. The capacities of the country are growing upon us year after year, and the apparently bold ex periment of growing coffee near San Rafael may be based on superior judg ment. Never get angry. It does no good ; and those who indulge in it feel no bet ter for it. It is really a torment ; and when the storm of passion has cleared away, it leaves one to see that he has been extremely silly, and has made him self si.ly in the eyes of others too, Who thinks well of an ill-natured, chur lish man, who has to be approached in the most guarded way'r' Will a bad temper draw customers, pay debts, and make creditors better natured 'i An an gry man adds nothing to the welfare of society. Since, then, anger is useless, needless, disgraceful, without the least apology, and found only in the bosom ot fools, why should it be indulged at au r Some one bus defined polite society as being a place whi re milliners pass for too much and morula for too little. A Chicago court hs decided that it is imperative upon an insurance company tri cHva niit.ien wlion ft imlicv PXIiireM. A lawyer has just recovered the loss of his library under this decision. Economy is wealth. A woll-regulated Newark family ate hash tor breaklat in 365 different styles last year, Bnd the mother is, in consi quence, enabled to display a $90 lace handkerchief. In proof of tho fact that tho cotton manufacturing' interest of the South is rallying from the effects of tho war, The Neie OrUanit Pkny e notes that the con sumption last year ws 1'20,()M) bales, against 91,000 in 1870 and 80,000 in 18(iJ. " I say, Pompey," said one frecdman to another, " dis chile has trit-d lots ob gift fares and tings for a prize, but neb ber could draw anything nt all." " Well, Jim, I'd vise you to try a hand-cart ; de chances are a tousand to one dat you could draw dat." One hundred and twenty-five ox teams were in procession at the forty-ninth fair of the Merrimac, N. H., Society, . " attached to large farm wagons filled with handsome farmers' daughters and extensively and beautifully deoorated with flowers, evergreens, and the fruits of tho earth." A minute criticism, in the British Quarterly Review, of the commissioners' report on the British coal-supply, re duces the available amount, from the "practically inexhaustible" total esti mated by the commission, to a deposit which, at the present rate of consump tion and increase, will be exhausted in, seventy-three years. Emmet Wells estimates the American hop crop of 1872 at from 00,000 to 70, 000 bales', loaving a deficiency of 45,000 bales to supply the yearly demand. He thinks there aro 25,000 bales of mer chantable old hops in the country. Tho crop in England and in Germany turns out better than was expected. It is stated that thirty of the best European engravers are employed in New York in mauufacturing counter feit plates of European bank-notes. Fifty persons travel between New York and Europe, carrying over the counter feit bills to the Old World, and as many moro act as agents in the larger cities of Europe for tho circulation of spurious currency. The story is told of. Ben Butler's earlier days that a Yankee obtained his legal opinion how to recover the value ot a ham which a neighbors dog came along and ate. Ho was advised to pros ecute and recover for damages. " But tho dog was your'n," said the eh irp Yankee. Butlor opened his eyes a lit tle, asked him what the ham was worth, was told five dollars, paid the money, and then demanded a ten-dollar fee of the astonished, native for legal advice. A murder has been committed in Bal timore, which ought to rouse tho indig nation of tho entire human race, for it was a representative of thoir remote an cestry that was stricken down. Sisjnor Baccagelleppo is a wandering uii.i -trl of the city of monuments, who whi!. un earned about a haud-or,-an ornaui-. iit tl with a plaxful monkey, oneof the patri archs of t he infant world ; but t b is ven erable being so firt'urgot his tiiui'.v and his relation to the fcueet-tovs as to rite the blind of a looV-r-on who mel'l'-d with the pendent eviJli-noo of his anti quity. The mini in Ms r,i?;- lima ui-j pamcid ii hand ana slew t'nt inoui.i.'y. Signor Bacci, et, was wroth tmrl hrt him arrested, and some wn notilil riio coroner, who empanel ed .m muUig-.'iit jury, but refused to hold an inqu-t, when tho loi'iu oi ino aoeeaseu was un covered. There was a worse class of men took part in our hut war than tiio D iald Dahiettvs. These were the noted bor der ruin ins who "javhuwiied " the, un fortuiiiter States of Missouri, Arkaiit-as, and Kentucky. They were itru like lshuiael. Every man's hand was against them, and their haiids were against eve ry man. They robbed and murd.-red with impunity. One of the most brutal of these characters was Frank Burton, who had his hiding-place in the Oz irk mountains, rive thousand dollars was offered for his capture. He is said to have murdnred over a hundred persons, both Southern and Northern, and when his cave was examined, after his death, there were found in it a largo pile of arms of all descriptions, a number of watches, a largo tunl of money, and over fifty suits of clothes that Burton had stripped from the bodies of his vic tims. The following instance of "adipocere," a peculiar form of decomposition which dead bodies sometimes undergo, is given in the Tribune, of South Bend, Ind. It appears that about two weeks ago, a lady of that city, who died from over exertion, was buried thera, and that re cently the grave was opened tor the pur pose of transferring tho remains to an other resting placo. The persons em ployed found themselves unable to move the coffin on account of its great weight. arising, it was supposed, from the petri fication of the corpse. On raising the coffin from the grave it was opened, and although petrification had not taken place, the corpse was as perfect as the day it was placed in the coffin. After it had boen brought to this city, a more careful examination was given it. It was estimated to weigh about two hun dred pounds. The whole body was per fectly preserved, even to such parts as the tongue, which could be moved back and forth in the mouth. The expression of the face was retained, and the color of the face was natural, except for its waxy appearance. The shroud, when exposed to the air, fell to dust. It was an instance of that kind of conversion of the flesh of a dead body into what is called " adipocere," which looks very much like spermaceti. Similar cases, though rare, nave been known to occur in Philadelphia aad ekevrhere,