IIE11Y A. IMItSOXS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. ELK COUNTY-TIIE RE PUBLICAN PARTY. Two Dollars per Annum. VOLUME III. 1UDGWAY, PA., THURSDAY, MA11CII 13, 1873. NUMBER 2. Miscellaneous Selections. MARCH. "MAncii. Its trop, Juniper . Its stone, Tllon.l etonc. llsmotto, 'Ciim-iige niidstrcnirlli in times of dunger. ' ' ' Old Srryin7. In the pray ilawning across the white hike, ., ,'rr "1L' '''e-liummocks in frown waves brenk, 'Mia tlio glittering speara of the fur Northern I.iphts, Likea envuh-y nse.nrt of steel-coated knights, Spanniiin the winter's cold milf with nn arch, Over it, rampant., rides in the wild March, l-ullopiiift, gallopingi galloping in, Into the world with a stir nnrt a din, J he norlh wind, the east wind, the west wind towt'thm'. In-brlngtng, in-liringing the March's wild Wiulher. Hear his rnnth chant as he dashes along: "Ho. ye Maiv.h children, come list to my song! A bold outlaw am I lioth to do ami to dure, -And 1 fear not old Kartli nor the Powers of the Air; Winter's a dotard, and Summer's a prnde, Hut Spring loves me Well, nil hough 1 nm rude. Fullering, lingering, listening Spring liliHliing she wails for the clung and the ring Of my swift horse's hoofs j then forward she presses, Itepclliui;, returning, my boist'rous caresses. "Tlie winds are unbound and loose In the sky, Hinting, frolicking, madly on high: Arc ye uble to cope with the Norlh Wind's strong avin 1 "Welcome boldly his fierce grasp: 'twill do you no lint-m. He knows the children of March are my own, (Sealed with my signet of magic blood-stone. Mood-stone, red blood-stone, green dark and red light Blood is for ardor and stone is for might; Ami the wutch-word borncon by West Wind, the runiror Is, 'Courage and strength in the moment of iiangcr. ' "Children of srurch, are vcstrong.are ye strong? Bhnme not the Hag the West Wind bears along: O ye men of the VI arch! be ye 11 rm as the steel i ) ye women of March I be ye loyul and leal Strong in your loving and strong in your hate, Const unt, like Juniper, early and lute. Juniper, Juniper, juniper green, liemesof blue set in irlitterino- sheen. In the winter's cold snow, in summer's hot Biili.mlnr Unchanging, unchanging, thou heart true and lenuer l ' v Singing of juniper, forward he whftled, walloping, galloping on through the world: And when, shivering, waking, the dull Day oraeil out From her tower in the gray clouds, she heard but i lie snout Of the riotous winds as they followed in glee, On, on to the wooing in mad revelrv. Wooing, the wooing, the wooing of Spring Here's a bold wooing that makes the woods ring, And thrills the leaf buds, though with snow overluden. As March, the wild outlaw, bears off the .spring maiden. Harper's Magazine for March KILL OR CURE. "Tub Major is a caiiitul fellow. Doc tor," I said, as we sauntered out to smoke our cigars hi the pardon, after an early dinner: " out lie oujrht to be more merci ful to us wretched bachelors. What with his charming wile and that exemplary baby, he makes it difficult to respect the tenth commandment." " You admire Mrs. Lay ton?" 'Admire her I If she were not Char lie's wile, I should fall head over ears in love with her. I h we seen fairer faces, but for dear, pretty, delicate womanly ways, i never met ner equal." " l ou couidn t understand a man's thirsting for her blood ?'' " Good gracious ! A wretch who could touch one of her golden hairs roughly de serves to ne cruciuect." " And yet for many days she was in deadly peui oi ner me. " " For her fortune ?" " She had none." " Don't tell me. Doctor, that an inno cent creature like that could give any one cause lor revenge." " No ; I won't tell you anything of the sort." " I think I see. Some one was madly in love with her?" 'Jf you were to guess till this day out you would not find the cause," said my friend. '-Let us sit down hero, and I will explain. It's no secret ; I wonder the Major has not told vou." "Down here" was on a rustic seat that the Major's pretty wife had made at the end of his garden, close to where a little rill, soon to be lost in the blue Hudson, tinkled Its wav through his grounds. ' "During the war," began the Doctor, "I served in the army, in the same regi ment with an old schoolmate. lie was as line a soldier as ever drew sword. Hale, hearty, and sound in mind and body ; eager to see service and he saw plenty. I thought that he bre a charmed life, till one day ho was carried into the hospital tent in a bad way. A ball had entered his shoulder, glanced on the clavicle (what you call the collar-Done), and had gone somewhere. That was all we could tell, for there was no other orifice ; but wheth er it had passed up or down, or taken some erratic course round about, such as balls will take, we knew not and no prob ing could find out. Well, he recovered, went North to regain his strength, and for nearly three years I lost sight of him. When the war was over, and I had begun to practice as a civilian in New York, I met him again. But how changed ! He was a living skeleton, and I saw in a moment that he had become habituated to opium. Do you know what that means ? No? Well, throw a bucket of water into a piano and then light a lire under it, and its strings will not be more outof turethanan opium-smoker's nerves are out of order, lie asked me if he might call on n c at my oHlc, and of course 1 ns.-ented ; but it was days before he came, and when he did arrive I knew that lie had been preparing himself for a tight w ith himself, Some foolish patients come prepared to hide the truth, some to magnify their ills. It is part of our busi ness, in serious cases, to examine a man's mind before we ask about his body, and hardened us a surgeon must be, I confess that the condition of my poor friend frightened inc. There was an expression in his eye that I had never seen in any Bane being ; and what made this worse was the culm business-like manner in which he spoke. He told me that soon after he had (apparently) recovered from Ids wound, he began to sutler from pains in his head, which increased in severity till they became so agonizing that he had recourse to opiates to alleviate them 'lint 1 nave not come to consult you about this.' he said, 'tins I can bear must bear. W ould to God that they were al ways tearing me! The worst is when they are not.' " ' They leave you very weak ?' I su, arested. "'Thev leave me,' ho replied, oulte calmly, with a burning, all but unconquer able., desire to take human tire. " I am not generally a nervous man, but T nt.irted. and looked round me for some weapon of defense. ' Dou't be afraid,' he continued with a sad smile, ' the Jit is not on me now. I should not have come if it had been. I have been nearly starved once or twice, not daring to leave my room, r ran connuer mv madness now ; the question is, how long I can continue to do so. I feel that it is growing upon me. I leel niv power ol resistance be coming weaker and weaker the craving for blood tfetlinsr stronger and stronger, Iain like a man who hus slipped over a precipice, and feels the earth and shrubs to whi-:h he clings, slowly, slowly, sure ly, surely, giving way with him. I have brought wretched cum out of the street, and killed them in my frenzy. In the hope io exiiausi n on mem. it is no use. 1 must have human life.' "'Any human life?1 I innulred. 'or some one In particular?' "'Why do you ask this, Doctor?' he cried, petting suddenly excited. j.o mauer ; go on.' " ' Sometimes.' he resumed. ' it seems that any life would do ; and sometimes i ocror, iour days before 1 saw you 1 met, upon a New Jersey ferry-boat, a young girl. So pretty, so refined and nice I I followed her to her home the devil, that has taken possession of me, led me. She went in and soon came out again Into her little garden, and tended her flowers- poor child I Doctor, if I had had a pistol with me I should have shot her. You may smile; but some clay soon I shall take a pistol on purpose, and shoot her.' "it wascieany no use arguing with him. The best way with such people is to ad mit their facts and try to work round them. " 'Then.' said I 'the only thin? vou can do is to submit to the restriction of an asylum, till this feeling has passed.' -it win not pass, 11 i were to go to a madhouse I should sham sane. Sooner or later their vigilance over me would be re laxed. Then I should murder my keeper, and go straight for that innocent girl.' " 'Then leave the country.' '"Well, that would save her: but, Doctor, one life is as dear to its holder as another. If I don't kill her, I shall kill some one else.' " 'My dear fellow.' I replied, in as light a tone as 1 could assume, 'these fancies are curable. Put yourself under skilled med ical treatment. Y'ou are all to bits physi cally. Get sound in body, and you'll get an ngnt in your minu.' un trie contrary, l am all to bits, as you say, mentally, and my body suffers tnrougn my mind. Medical treatment I 1 have consulted every practitioner of note here and hi Europe. Some think I'm fooling them, some look wise, and talk as you do about "treatment." All have failed. Doctors are no use to me.' Then may 1 ask. why vou have come here?' "'To ask your advice as a friend.' he answered, drawing his chair nearer to mo ; 'and,' lowering his voice, 'to ask you one'question as a friend and a God, tearing man, and to which I pray you to give me a piain yes or no. "'Go on.' '''Feeling as I feel, shall I be justified before God in taking my own life"? Will it be deadly sin for me to do for myself wnat i womu uo to a mau dogr " 'I repeat his words almost as he spoke tnem. i cannot give you the lamtest idea of the solemn deliberation with which he put tliis awful question. For some mo ments I could not say a word. Then I b tar ted up and told him that I would not answer him yes or no that it was not fair to ask me to take such a responsibili ty. Then he rose too, and said that he must resolve it lor himself, and 1 saw plainly which way it would go. ' Give me till to-morrow to think it out,' I said, detaining him. 'To-morrow maybe too late,' he re plied. i ne nt may come upon me to night for all I know.' ' Come home with me ; I'm not afraid you won't hurt me,' I said. " 'I would try very hard not to do so- but I know myself. I cannot trust my self, won't you trust me.' " ! will trust you ; hut 1 11 do more, l ou are not armed, I suppose ?' "'No,' he replied with a shudder, 'not now.' " 'I'll take care that you shall r ot be, ana l n carry my uernnger in my pocket On the first Indication of homicidal mania I give you my word I'll shoot-and I'll shoot straight.' I said this to satisfy him poor fellow! In his weak state I could have laid him down like a child. It did satisfy him, and we went home together, I led him to talk of our old soldiering days, and "radually got him back to his wound, I made him describe the first sensations of pain in his head, and repeat all that his different advisers had said. I happened to have a strong preparation of liasheeh Dy me. i gave nun a dose, and whilst un der its influence I carefully examined hi head. Now the head, you must know, does not fatten or was'e away in propor tion to other parts of the body. Still hi; had become mere skin and bone; and this state, perhaps, gave me an advantage ove others who had made the same examina tion. At last I felt, or thought I felt, a faint twitching u sort of abnormal pulsa tionabout two inches above the left ear. It might be merely nervous, but it might be caused by the ball. "I then set my mind to work, and thought the whole case over steadily. In the first place was that impulse to take human life, of which my poer friend had spoken, really uncontrollable. For ex ample, suppose that one day he did take pistol 'on purpose,' and go to that young lady's garden would , he shoot her? lo suppose that the insane mind never changes its purpose, or turns from the fell completion of its purpose, is to say in other words that the insane mind is stronger than the sane mind. If a man with a freshly broken leg were to tell you he was going to run a foot-race, you would not believe him. because your common sense revolts against the idea of his running with a leg disabled. But if one with his brain disabled declares that ho is troinar to do something dependent flpoa the action of his mind, common sense does not always argue so wen. In the second place, did Biy poor friend, with his impaired means of judg ment, believe that the impulse was uncon trollable? Because if he did the end would be the samo, so far as he was concerned. He would sacrifice his own life to protect that ot ottiers, though they were in no actual danger. In the third p'ace, might not this story of the -impulse be a mere pre'nse to excuse the commission oi suiciaer Now there are no forms of madness more obscure in their origin, more difficult to detect, more persistent, and more fatal than suicidal mania; ana as mere nave been numerous cases in which persons who have destroyed themselves have care fully prepared evidence tending to show that their death was accidental, why should there not be one in which the fatal act was to be (so far as possible) justified? " In the fourth place, granting that there was either real homicidal mania or fancied homicidal mania tending to sui cidal, or simply the latter was there a possibility of cure? " As the three first questions rested for their solution on one set of facts, and the deductions to be draw.i therefrom, I con sidered them together. A victim of sui cide mania rarely if ever speaks of suicide. When a man says he is going to drown himself, vnn mav trenerallv direct him to tho cars which will take him to the river side with tho fullest conviction that he will not breakfast with crabs. If, in an exceptional case, suicide is mentioned, it will cither be treated lightly, as an act that is not a crime, or the patient will be very earnest In his assurance that he would never commit It. Remembering my poor friend's manner, 1 noticed that he spoke of taking his own life with much more emotion than he evinced when he told uie bf the impulse to shed the blood of others. ITis words, 'I must have hu man lifn if I had had a pistol with me I should have shot her some day soon I shall take a pistol on purpose and shoot her I fcbould murder my keeper and po straight for the iuno cent girl,' were spoken as calmly as though he said, 'I owe five dollars I must go and pay them,' and at the same time with a tone of deep comniiseratiou for the predestined victims. They were to die for no fault of their own, btit they were doomed to death if he lived. When. on the other hand, he spoke of saving their lives at the sacrifice ot ins own, nis man ner changed. No one alllicted with sui cidal mania ever treated self-destruction with the horror, the consciousness of Its wickedness, and the religious doubts as to its bcingTfordonable under any circum stances, with which he considered it. He had never once spoken of murder as a crime. 'After a long careful consideration I came to the following conclusions : He is not laboring under suicidal mama. His Impulse is real and will have fatal results. Confinement In an asylum womu have no curative enect. "Then I took down my books bearinir upon the anatomy oi the human head. 'The next morning I addressed him thus : " 'Before I answer vou as to whether you would be justified before God, under the impulse you have told me ot, in taK ing your own life to save that of another, you must answer me several questions.' "uo on,' lie said. '"When vou consulted those doctors did you tell them all that you have told me?' No. I did not dare. I said that I had horrible thoughts and cravings, but with out entering into details as to what they were. Once 1 went so lar as to say J feared I was becoming dangerous, and the fool smiled.' Good. Did they ever speak of search ing for that ball?' l es, they said it might oe the cause of my sufferings, supposing that it had lodged near the brain, but that no one would take the responsibility of searching tor it so to speak in the dark.' " 'They were right the operation might kill vou and the ball be not found, after all.' " He looked up, and the dull, delected look that had become habitual passed from his face. " 'And even if It were found,' I went on, ' its extraction might cause your death all the same.' " He laid his hand on my arm, and tried to speak, but he could not. " ' Still it would give you a chance lust a chance of mora than life.' His grasp tightened. I could feel his heat beating. 'And submitting to such an operation almost hopeless though it be would not oe quite suicide.' " He fell on his knees and sobbed like a child. ' You'll do it ?' he cried, ' God Al mighty bless you ! You'll do it?' " Well," said my friend, lighting a fresh cigar, "to make "my story short, I did it, with the assistance of a young surgeon whose nerve I could trust. We found the miserable piece of lead near where I had suspected it to be. It was just a case of touch anil go. Had my knite wavered twice the breadth of its own edge had the assistant been unsteady with tho forceps it would have been fatal. I don't want to appear vain of my success, so I'll say no more than tnis ne recovered." " And hasn't killed anybody ?" " No, and doesn't want to." " By Jove ! I wouldn't be too sure of that. And so the girl he wanted to mur der married the Major?" " She did." " Then if I were her husband I'd take precious good care that your interesting patient didn't come Into the same State with her." " My dear fellow if you were her hus band you'd do exactly as her husband does." " Does he kno v ?" "None better." " And doesn't care ?" " Not a bit." " Then he's a brute !" " You'd better tell him so here he comes." " Does she know?" " She does." " And she's not afraid?" "No." "One other question. Docs -your in teresting patient still live, in this coun try?" " He does." " In what State?" 'This State." "Nenr here?-' " Very near." " Then with all possible deference for our friend the Major, I think he is very foolish.- Were I in his place I should say, My good sir, 1 admit that the ball from which you suffered so long cannot get back Into your brains, but I am by no means sure that the ideas it engendered may not return. At any rate your presence near my wife is likely to make her nervous, and I appeal to you as a gentleman to lo cate yourself -in some other part of the country. If you do so I shall have the highest respect for you; if you do not, and ever have the misfortune to pass with in a mile of nfy house, the interior of your skull will become more intimately acquainted than ever with lead in the usual form.' " " "Very neatly put" said the Doctor, " but our friend does not think of com mitting suicide now." " Mercy, Doctor!" I cried, " you don't mean to say that the man who wanted to murder the Major's wife is is" " The Major himself. Yes, sir." Tem ple Bar. The Future Electric Telegraph. MM As we now understand it, electricity Is divided into two halves, or as those halves are scientifically termed, positive and negative. The earth is a vast reservoir of the negative half; but who can fathom the extent in the universe of the other, or positive condition of electricity? Yet we know that when these halves meet, an im pulse, shock, or flash is resultant. This was shown years ago in the experiment of the celebrated Lcydcn Jar. Utilizing this impuise, shock or flash by simple machine', so that it Is made to Indicate lcttersand words by graduated interruptions or frequent breakings of the circuit, constitutes the whole system of modern telegraphy. The positive portion of electricity, as applied to modern telegraphy, or the Morse system, Is artificially made by cer tain acids and minerals (the chemical ac tion of acids on minerals producing it), and this action Is transmitted over the wires of indefinite length. But this ac tion, ebullition or positive impulse would amount to nothing would be a mere wate were it not brought into contact witn tho earth containing the nega tive or opposite electrical condition. But this connection with the earth is made, at the telegraphic stations, and a decided impulse or shock results.in terrupted as before stated, to indicate characters and letters by the use of sim ple machinery adopted lor tne purpose. l ins is the present system oi telegraphy, due credit for which has been already awarded to Professor Morse. We have to comprehend those simple formulas as developed by modern telegraphy to Eroperly understand the idea suggested y Dr. Loomis in his aerial telegraph scheme. As in the present or Morse system, we must have the negative orground current to complete the circuit, so must Dr. Loomis in his plan us? the earth to com plete Ins circuit. But instead of genera ting the positive form by means of acids and metals, and transmitting it over wires elevated a lew feet above the ground, Dr, Loomis proposes to go up above the clouds and then find a continuous strata or current naturally positive and univer- sil (the same as the other opposite or noorufivn fVn-m la imivnra.il tn tho narth anil by simple means bring these two mar riageable forces together, complete the circuit, make the impulse or shock inter rupted by mechanical devices to form sig nals lor letters and words tne same as ia the Morse system, and without the inter vention of wires, from pint to point the N strata m the upper cioua current answer ing the purpose oi wires. The conception ot Dr. Loomis is a grand or.e, and worth the profound attention ol all his countrymen, it is a lar more feasi ble plan, in view o'f our present knowl edge oi electricity as applied to telegraphy, than was the Morse system at its conception. In certain conditions of the atmosphere. as in thunder storms and the presence ot the aurora borealis, this form of electricity is brought so near to the earth that com munications have been sent from point to point over our telegraphic wires without the aid ol chemicals, iience, tiDove the point affected by terrestnaf disturbances it is philosophically inferable that elec tricity m its positive condition is univer sal. The earth, as we know, throughout its vast extent, possessed an Invisible elec tric force in a negative form, and why not the corresponding positive form in the vast depths of the ethereal universe ? And it is not essential that the condition should take the lorm of currents correlative to air currents (spoken of by aeronauts) for the purpose ol telegraphy, since the uni versa! presence ot electricity in this form throughout the vast strata ot cither would suffice to carry out to success the idea con ceived Dy lr. loomis. Tins system win revolutionize tele graphy ail over the world as soon aa it is practically developed and utilized, and so inexpensive will it be in its daily opera tion that it will soon supersede the postal system of all countries without the aid of legislation to this effect. Dr. J. R. JIuyes. for Identification With the land of Ophlr, the probabilities multiply that It was this table-land between the Zambezi anil Lim popo rivers In 'Africa. At any rate, if there is gold there now, it will soon be found, overhauled, and put Into circula tion, and with it probably some equ lly valuable additions to the world's knowl edge of itself and its history. Sjn-ingjicld Mass.) Jicpubtican. Wild Flants Domesticated. The Cabbage is first cousin to cauli flower, broccol', etc., and they all come from the wild cabbage of the sea-coast. It is a marine plant, and loves salt and salt water. The wild cabbage is a tall. wavv. coarse plant, but the pods are now gathered and eaten in the spring months in some parts oi n,ngiana. T here is no plant which has produced by cultivation a greater number of varieties than the cabbage. We can extend the varieties much further, but it Is sufficient for us to consider the wide range between the little red cabbage for pickling, and the " mam moth," with a head so large that it can only be boiled In a large caldron. In the cauliflower we eat the fleshy flower stalks and undeveloped buds, which are crowded together Into a compact mass, it was a favorite saying of the great lexicographer. Dr. Johnson. " Of all the flowers of the garden I like the cauliflower the best," a sentiment worthy oi tnis learnca epicure. The numerous varieties of the cabbage Illustrate in the most striking manner the changes which are produced In species by cultivation, and the permanence of some varieties of races. They also give us in structive lessons in the economy of vege table lite. The Turnip comes from a wild plant found by the sides of rivers, ditches, and marshes. Like the cabbage, it has pro duced several varieties, the result of long- cultivntion. From the wild plant we have the little flat turnip and the huge rata baaa. with all the varieties between. This m'ntia nnw mnaf OrirlnlTT mil H vntorl nQ fnnrl for stock, and it has added much to the as a ship's cable docs a coachman's whir. The Banyan Tree. The Banvan Fieus Indiea) is Indigenous to India only. I call it one of the "kings of the forest," because no other of the vegetable giants ever measured a tithe of five acres in circuit, or afforded shelter from the torrid sun at one time to one tenth of an army of ten thousand men. No one who ever spent the long noon tide of an Indian day under the capacious shadow of a banyan-tree, or slept unin jured during successive nights under 'the protection from dews and rains of its shingled foliage, or strolled leisurely for hours along avenues and foot-paths bor dered by flowering slmrbs and cooled by gurgling streamlets, all within the boun daries of tho repeating branches of a sin gle tree, will be disposed to dispute the claims of tho banyan to be counted as one of the three monarehs of the woods. When a banyan first springs from its seed, its method of growth is normal. Like the oak, or elm, or beech, or maple, it grows progiesslvely through ltsdiller cnt stages of shoot, and plant, and shrub, and sapling, and tree. There is nothing about it that is peculiar. It observes the ordinary routine of vegetable life. Rising in height from year to yenr, it puts forth nmDs which are ciotnea in iouage. over the Orient there are banyans, still short of their hundred years of age, which are in no resnoct prculiar. Like other denizens of the forest, the stranger would pass them by unnoticed. But, when Its lirst eenturv is passed, and its burden of successors becomes oppressive, like a hale old fellow ot the human race, it scens sup, port In its children. Kverv one is familiar with the fact that different trees shoot out their limbs at dif ferent angles to the trunk. The Loni hardv nonlar. in this respect, varies wide- v trom t ne elm. aim tne larcn irom ine willow. The English oak-branch leaves the parent stem at so high nn angle as to be almost horizontal. The banyan does the same. But the latter has a length that surpasses the former almost as much wealth of England The Tarsnio is also a reclaimed wild plant, and it is difficult to say whether we are Indebted to cultivation or Importation tor it; most probably tne fatter, as it is a native of Britain. If the wild plant is cul tivated two or three years In rich garden soil, it acquires all the desirable charac teristics of the best kinds : and if left to itself in poor soil, it speedily goes back into its wild, degenerate condition. Pars nips appear to nave been very early re claimed irom a wild state, ior rimy tens lash. Now, it is a well known law m mechanics, that the longer the arm the more powerful is the lever. The Drancn of the English oak ceases to grow be yond the point where the lever power would wrench it from tho stem. The branch of the banvan does not. One stons at live-and-twenty feet; the other not even at five hundred. Provision must be made, therefore, to give the latter sup port, and its wonderluf peculiarity is, that nature lias made sucn provision. in the Danvan. wnen a norizoinai us that parsnips were cultivated on the branch has been put forth t such a length banks of the Rhine, and were brought from thence to supply the tables of the Roman emperors. Journal of Chemistry The Land of Ophir. A Lively Thresher. The Titusvllle Press gives an account of a young man from an eastern city who had been visiting rural mends in that vi cinity. After seeing a farmer thresh out a "flooring" oi oata tne otner morning, he asked and received permission to swing the flail a few minutes, upon assuring the agriculturist that he was perfectly famil iar with the art of threshing. . Expecto rating upon ins hands, the young man went at the oals, but at the first pass knocked the horn off from a new milch cow that was leisurely chewing her cud in a neighboring stall. The second swing caved in the head of the farmer, who thought he was safe enough as long as he rocsted on top of the fanning mill in the other end of the barn ; but, without dis covering the havoc he was making, the city artist kept at his labors; the third blow fell upon the oats, the fourth killed a hen in a manger near by. and the fifth pass of the deadly weapon was the best of an, ior it came round behind the young man, boomerang fashion, and taking him under the lower jaw, knocked him down, ana thus put a stop to tno work oi siaugii. tcr. The mere fact that the city "thresh er" returned to consciousness an hour be fore the farmer did, allowed the former to get several miles out of town before his efforts at threshing oats were discovered py tno neighbors, Among tlie wonderful discoveries that turn all eyes toward Africa, it is thought with considerable confidence that the Ophir of the Bible has been identified In the gold region which exists between the Zambezi and Limpopo rivers in south eastern Africa. This region has been pe culiarly inaccessible, being held by the Metabelr. nation, a fierce and warlike peo ple who originated in the Zulu 1.- nd, and sweeping northward, conquered it, and have prohibited, on penalty of death, all foreigners from examining its auriferous capabilities. But on tlie death of their King L mzihitttzi, about three years ago, their jealous strictness has been a little relaxed, and elephant hunters, particu larly Mr. Hartley have partially explored the region and brought bac'-t wonderful accounts. Carl Mauch, the German geol ogist and explorer, some time ago made a flying trip into the same country and sent accounts of certain remarkable ruins and ancient mine shafts to Petermann, tlie geographer, who gave his published sanction to the identification of this re- fion witli the ancient Ophir. Sir Robert iurchison inclines to the same opinion. The records of the earliest Portuguese navigators mention extensive ruins to the southward of the Zambezi, which thev supposed to have marked the palaces of tlie Queen of Sheba. Rev. Josiah Tyler, the missionary, whose station is but a lew hundred miles soutn ot this gold coun try, corroborates the probabilities of in teresting discoveries,areha3ological among the rest, which promise to make this, as well as other parts ot Alr.ca, famous in tho near future. He regrets, however, the very hasty observations of Carl Mauch, leaving it in doubt whether the ruins alluded to may not belong to the eariy Portuguese au venturers. We know that King Solomon had the rendezvous of his loreign navy, the ships of Tarshish, In the Red sea, and that his rhenlcian ally, mrain ot Tyre, "sent in the navy his servants, shipmen that had knowledge of the sea, with the servants of Solomon," and tnat they brought back from Ophlr, not only gold in abundance, but "great plenty of altnug-trees and pre cious stones,' also silver, ivory, apes and peacocks." Mucn the same sort ot tranio comes down from that region now especi ally if the ancient aluiug tree may be the eDony, tne precious stones, diamonds, and the peacocks may be extended to in clude ostrich leathers and parrots. T ho speediest connection between the United States and Port Natal on that coast at the present time is via Suez canal and Aden on the Ited sea. According to Herodotus, Pharaoh Necho, king oi Ecvnt. about 200 years after Solomon. having built the original of the present suez canal, circumnavigated Atrica, and probably long before this, the Phenicians, most renowned mariners of the olden times, had knowledge oi this African coast, It corresponds, too, with the long voyage to Ophir and back, that it should be in a land distant as this, for "once In three years came the navy of Tarshish," accord ing to the books of the Kings. So while Arabia and India and Spain and eyen Peru, have been rival claimants Guarana. This is the name of a popular beverage which the natives of Brazil prepare from the fruit ot a small climbing shrub that grows chiefly in the northern part of that country, and on the banks ot the Ama zon. The essential principle of thi3 fruit is identical with caffeine, and its composi tion in other respects is strikingly similar to that of tea and coffee. An analysis by Tromnisdorf shows that it contains caffe ine, 4: green oil, 3.5 ; resinous oleaginous matter, 2.5; tannie acid and salts, 40, starch and gum, 115 ; vegetable fibre, 30. Sten- house, in some cases, lounu o. per cent, of caffeine. It is thus seen to be very much richer In this Important ingredient than either coltee or tea, the lormer rare ly containing more than one or the lat ter more than two percent, of cafteine. During the months of October and No vember the fruit is gathered. peeled, dried, reduced to powder, and made into a paste with water, when it is ready for use. If not overdrieil. the color of this prepara tion is a light chocolate, and it also has a pleasant flavor, which is said to linger long in the mouth. With cold water and a little sugar it forms an excellent bever age, or it may be eaten in the solid slate like the preparations ol chocolate. It is also employed by tho natives in a form known as guarana oreau. as commonly prepared it admits of being transported without suffering deterioration, resisting alike tlie sun's heat, intense cold, numid- itv. and putrefaction. Mantegazza, writing of the effects of the beverage, savs : " Between breakfast and dinner, in the warm days of June nd Julv. there Is not a l everage more healthful and refreshing than a fresh euo of guarana. After drinking it one feels jinvigorated, having in a measure par iken at once of food and drink." It has been used medicinally both as a remedy for headache and as an astringent, but Its ef- cts are only transient, hike other mem bers of its class, guarana is not without s dangers, in large doses it produces xhilaration. convulsive inquietude, ex- Itation of intelligence, wakefulness, slight diminution of pulse, and. want ot appetite Galaxy for March. as to render it difficult to maintain itself without breaking, it lowers down from its end one or two more roots, which, enter ing the ground, send forth rootlets, and themselves oecome new sirms. in uue time the horizontal branches, which once were in danger of being destroyed by their own weight, are as easily support ed by the pillars as a bridge is by its piers. So the process goes on. Lateral branches shoot out irom tne main iimus, wnien latter are constantly growing till they reach gigantic size. These lateral brandi es also put clown stems and shoot out branchlets, until it comes to pass that, in place of a single tree, tnerc is a wondrous colonnade of stems, supporting as many natural ratters, on which repose dense canopies of foliage. N. Dodge in Ap- pletons Journal. The Earliest Newspaper. The Airless Moon. Avnn tho Illusions swept away by modern science was the pleasant fancy that the moon was a habitable globe, like the earth, Its surface diversified with seas, lakes, continents and islands, and varied forma of vegetation. Theologians and savants gravely discussed the probabilities of its being Inhabited oyaraee oi semieni. beings, Willi forms and faculties like our own, and een propounded schemes for opening communication with them, in case thev existed. One of these was to construct on tlie broad highlands of Asia a series of geometrical figures on a scale so gigantic as to be visible from our plan etary nsighbor, on tlte supposition that the moon people womu reeugui.e me "in ject, and immediately construct similar figures in reply 1 Extravagant and ab surd as it may appear li the light of mod ern knowledge, the establishment of this Terrestrial and Lunar Signal Service Bu reau was treated as a feasiblo scheme, al though practical difficulties,- which so often keep men from making tools ot themselves stood in the way oi actum ex periment; but the discussion was kept up at intervals, until it was discovered that 11 there were peopiu in uieiuuwu they must be able to live without breath ing, or eating, or drinking. Then it ceased. There can b no life without air. .beau tiful to the eye of tlie distant observer, tlie moon is a sepulchral orb a world of death and silence. No vegetation clothes its vast plains of stony desolation, trav erscd by monstrous crevasses, broken by enormous peaks that rise like gigantic tombstones into space ; no loveiy loruis of cloud float in the blackness of its sky. There daytime is only night lighted by a rayless sun. There is no rosy dawn in the morning, no twilight in the evening. The nights ure pitch-dark. In daytime the solar beams are lost against tlie jagged ridges, the sharp points of tlie rocks, or the steep sides of the profound abysses; and tlie ej'C sees only grotesque shapes relieved against fantastic shadows black as ink, with none of that pleasant grada tion and diffusion of light, none of the subtile blending of light and shadbw, which make the charm of a terrestrial landscape. A faint conception of tho horrors of a lunar day may be formed from an illustration representing a land scape taken in the moon in the center of tlie mountainous region of Aristarchus. There is no color, nothing but dead white and black. The rocks reflect passively tho light of the sun ; tlie craters nud abysses remain wrapped in shade ; fan tastic weaks rise like phantoms in their glacial cemetry; the stars appear like spots in tlie blackness of space. The moon is a dead world ; she lias no at mosphere. Harper's Magazine for March. Ai-tiiohities have differed widely as to the nation and city entitled to the honor of having started the first printed news paper. For many years it was supposed that tno credit Deiongea to r.ugiuuu. n was claimed that the British Museum had a copy of tlie earliest paper in its collec tion. It was called the ,nqiisn jiercune, and printed July Zi, 158S; but it has been shown that this copy, like specimens of r.iro old coins, was spurious, ana gotten up for sale. Watts, the bibliographer ot tlie Museum, who saw, on examination, tint the type and paper were of modern origin, and d d not belong to the sixteenth century, exposed the forgery. It was an ingenious fabrication, pretending to give tlie news of tlie Spanish Armada, which was destroyed m the lMignsn nannei ny Drake and Howard a day or two previous to the date of the sheet. There were seven numbers of this spurious Mercuric pro ducedfour In manuscript, and three in print. v enice lias aiso cuimeu uie nouor ui leading the way in giving newspapers to tlie world. Tho Qazetta, thus named be cause it sold for a small piece of money called gazzetta, it is asserted, was printed there in lo0, and it is pretended tnat copies of this paper of that date are in one of two collections in London. But late discoveries have apparently established tlie claim of the old German city ot Nu remberg to this high honor. A vaper called the Gazette, according to trust worthy authorities, was printed. In that Dresden Porcelain. Tnrc celebrated porcelain of Saxony bears the name of, though it is not made in Dresden, but at tlie town of Meissen on the Elbe, fifteen miles below the capital. Not to go there is a palpable neglect of the tourist's obligation. The porcelain manufactory is in the old Castle, once this residence of the Saxon princes. It is an imposing edifice, and, from its local po sition on the banks of the river, looks re nmrknhlv nlcturesoue at a distance, and not much less so on close inspection. Its appearance is assisted by the Cathedral hard by, a handsome Gothic structure with a graceful open-work spire. The earth from which the porcelain is made is obtained from Aue, un insignifi cant village twelve miles from Zwickau. Tho process of preparing and baking tlie clay is slow, difficult, and complicated. Tlie mixture, or biscuit, is composed prin cipally of kaolin and ground feldspar. The materials are reduced to very line powder, an I stirred together with water in cisterns, the surplus water being pressed out through linen bags, separated by filtration or other metlio Is. When the biscuit is of the consistency of dough, it is thoroughly worked over by beating, kneading, and treading, and is then put, away moist for a year or more to undergo the 'molding process, which increases its lilastieitv. Tho better kinds of porcelain are formed in molds of gypsum, and the nicest skill and care are needed to la-iiuon the vessels, as well as in the glazing and buking. A good deal of the ware is una voidably spoiled, such precise Handling does it require; but tlie artisans employed in this manufacture have had years of experience, and have inherited their trade, as is the case wun tne urusseis nice maim ers and Amsterdam diamond-cutters. It is said that the excellence of porcelain de pends on locality and atmosphere ; tnat numerous efforts to manufacture tlie Dresden china elsewhere, with exactly the same material and the same work nun, have failed again and again. There was always something lacking some thing almost indefinable, but still some thing Whether it is that the artisans are npeustonied to a certain routine and Mexico and Its Jiew President. We took President Lerdo of Mexico to be a man of work. In referring recently to Homans' Cyclopedia of Commerce, we found that all the information there compil ed on Mexico was derived from the works of this same Lerdo de Teiada. But a let- tertotho Tribune complains tnat nis ad ministration is not a working administra tion, but spends its time in attending ban quets and receptions, to the neglect of the state business. So notorious has this be come that Lerdo appears In caricature as the festive president. These fi.asts of the Mexican nobility are beyond description, and throw quite into the shade any of eur extravagances in that line. The richest man in Mexico. Senor Escandon. recently entertained 1,000 "uests, setting a table of 400 covers, etc. Meanwhile the elements of social discontent are perilously plenty Think of this fact, that the whole landed city as early as I4.y,nve years niter xeier . m influences of sur- Schotter cast the first metal type in mat- r ' lnia- which thev cannot change rices. Nuremberg with the lirst.paper in jnct of their tlie fifteenth century, also claims the w ou l,uc question; but that honor of the first paper in the sixteenth " ' J infreouentlv follows the century. There is an anciently priuteu nivsterious law Governing the re- sheet in the Libri collection which ante- SiT&rfJSr,l.ow"n hv re- dates all others except the sheet of 14;.7 "1 experiments. The manufacture of an .the CWtci of Cologne. It is called pXinas been for generations tho tte Aeu Muy aiuHupa I profitable industry of the neighbor- and bears the date of I ebruary, la34. I he f ,-,.,, nnfl iaJ iiUnlv to continue British Museum, it is said, has a dupli- r generations to come.-From "Along cate of this sheet. f. vtL h iITVI,,a m-vm Bhowxk. in Thus to Germany belongs the honor ;'a aa azine March. not only of the first printers and the first printing, but also ot the nrst printed newspaper. It has also another claim to distinction. In IG15 Egenolf Eurmel Started Die Frankfurter Oberpostamts Hei- fuia. the first dally paper in tne worm. This journal is still published; and the eitv of Frankfort is to erect a monument in honor of its founder and editor as tne father of newspapers. From "News papers and Editors," by S. S. Coxant, in German Emigration. How Government Debtors Make it "Square" in Japan. -,.,.. ! v,i,i kt. i -vA iwiromiiim niiinfi papers and jiiditors," oy . a, population of nine or ten m illions, the Harper's Magazine for March majority OI wnoui are iiLueueuiertrcntcu than slaves! This vast substratum of un derlings, with passions all molten with ages ot oppression, is what keeps the vol cano in eruption This is the material that i-4 ready to flock to the standard of any who will confiscate the property of the nateu spamsu lanuiorus una wmcii maintains In the heart of the country stub born lit'le Indian communities that suc cessfully defy the control of the govern ment. One of these communities, not content with defensive operations, is now in tne neid witn iu,uuo men, pieces oi artil lery, and the rebel Lozada at their head. To deal with these causes ol social disturb ance and with the disturbances themselves, Lerdo seems not sufficiently active. Su perior to J uarez in learning and more ami able than he in disposition, ho seems iu- t. rior to n nn in administrative auauiv. He was evidently in the right place as chief justice or the supreme court, it is yet, however, too soon to judge positively of his administration. Exchange Gilt Frames. Boll three or four on ions in a pint of water, then, with a clean paint-brush, wash over your frames, and the flies will not alight on them. No in- iurv will result to the frames. This ren ders unnecessary the unsightly draphigs or gauze, The question of the great increase of emigration from Germany, which it was thought some nine ago tne vjroveriiuieiiL would take some active means oi eiiecn ing, has been brought up in the German Parliament, and witn very satisi.ictory re sults. Count Euleuberg, the Minister of tho Interior, acknowledged the lact, anu deplored it, but, declared there was no help tor it, anu attriuuieu iu neeiy iu wu war, in spite of all that the war has done for the gloruication oi r atneriauu. in me A native Japanese merchant named first place, tne enormous rise oi yrices .ms, Yamashlnya, a resident in Yokohama, as is usual, not oeen iouoweu uy but with business houses in Jedde, ponding increase of wages, and the labor Ozaka and Nagasaki, committed suicide a ing classes are suffering severely, although short time 6lnce. He was indebted to the tno Treasury is uureuiig miu rau, government for a sum of $200,000 by non- tho next place, the small capitalists, who, t . i . -. . i -. i j : .. 1 1 .. 1 t. .,,.,,,.. t.a nltica ivbiell is COlltribU- faults. Officers were sent to arrest him, ting most largely to the tide of emigra- but, knowing his fate as a dishonest trad- tiou, nave Dcen Beriuusiv er, he anticipated the action of the law by loss of lite in the French war, and by the making out a statement oi nis nauinues givm uui -u, - 1 , . , and future intentions, which he personal- ture created by the new role which Ger- lv left at the War Office, and then return- many nus uuuw uuwu " i ..m.vw., edtohis house and disemboweled him- and which makes another tremendous self. Hardly was he dead when the om- connict oneoi meevci vunv woiiusru.. cers, sent in haste by the department, ar- They are. therefore, afraid to embark or rived to seize him, but, DaiKeu ia weir cumuiuB iu uuu, J : a . obiect, took his keys 'and books, and with their little all to the only Oatxy in placed guards in the possession oi uu wuicu uie imu ui wi ui.. . property, ine Japanese uowik, wm uj . - .. ---- records the case adds, very naively : "We tho worst enemies the industrious man hear other Instances ot geii-aestruciion nus to ieur mo wo ruuiored." This is really a terrible taie aiors.- as reuiw, iui u tlU 8 of The result of twinges of conscience. It scarcity of agricultural labor, the Minis- is to be hoped mat neither ine uuiiuguur vi iKiuiimnu w.v, ...w . Its remedy wi'i extend in or to our iiins- tuim:i), a. , tian land. What would the Coroners do in the matter of fragmentary evidence r two i!.ngiisn sisu-ts nameu rratt, Shocking, even to think of it. If. Y. have Just put up their shingles as dentiste Herald, m uwuu. auojt man, ,