r Two Dollars per Annum.' HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher' NIL DESPERANDUM, r:-i -r. NO. 12. VOL. II. IIIDGAVAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1873. ' v.- f ' . ' , , x "o Rose Without 4 Thorn. t)no fond heart, and only one, One bright smile ere work's begun, One gwoot welcome when 'tis douo, And I'm weary Ono fond heart to cheor my lifo, When I weary of the strife, Have I in my little wife Bouuy Mary. But my rose conceals a tlioru, Painting ever, night and morn And our life of blind is shorn I?y another. "Day and night upon our hearts Sits a shadow, and imparts Misery, in tits and starts ; Mary's mother. USDER THE WATER. The first invention to promote sub aqueous search was the diving-bell, n clumsy vessel which isolates the diver. It is embarrassing, if not dangerous, where there is a strong current or if it rests upon a slant deck. It limits the "vision, and in one instance it is sup posed the wretched diver was taken from the bell by a shark. It permits an assistant, however, and a bold diver will plunge from the deck above and ascend in the vessel, to the. invariable surprise of his companion. An example U1 "i i penis, se.uimg in the mud, occurred, I think., in the port of New lork. A party of nmateurs, supported by champagne flasks and a reporter, went dowr,. Th0 bell settled and stuck lio a br,y's sucker. One of the party proporie j shaking or rocking the beli, and doing so, the water was forced nu'ior ami the bell lifted from the ooze. But a descent in submarine armor is the true way to visit the world under water. T le first sensation in descend ing is the sudden bursting roar of furi ous, Niagarac cascades in the ears. It thunders and booms upon the startled nerve with the rush and storm of an avalanche. The Bense quivers with it. But it is not air shaken by reflected blows ; it is the cascades driven into the enclosinghelmetsby the force-pump. As the flexile hose has to be stiilly dis tended to bear an aqueous gravity of twenty-five to fifty pounds to the square inch, the force of the current can be es timated. The tympanum of the ear yields to the fierce external pressure. The brain feels and multiplies the in tolerable tension as if the interior was clamped in a vice, and that tumultuous, thundering torrent pours on. Involun tarily the mouth opens ; the oir rushes in the Eustachian tube, and with sudden velocity strikes the intruded tension of the drum, which snaps back to its nor mal Btate with a sharp! pistol-like crack. The strain is momentarily relieved to be renewed again, and again relieved by the same attending salutes. In your curious dress you must ap pear .monstrous, even to that marine world, familiar with abnormal creations. 'The whale looks from eyes on the top of his head ; the flat-fish, sole, halibut, have both eyes on the same side ; and certain Crustacea place the organ on a foot-stalk, as if one were to hold up his eye in his hand to include a wider horizon. But the monster which the fish now sera differs from all these. It lias four greiat goggle eyes arranged symmetrically around its head. Peer ing through these plate-glass optics, the diver sees the curious, strange l)eauty of the world around him, not as the bather sees it, blurred and indis tinct, but in the calm splendor of its own thalhissphere. The first thought is ono of unspeakable admit ation of the miraculous beauty of everything around lii m a glory und a splendor of refrna tiou, interference, and reflection that puts to shame the Arabian story of the kingdom of the Blue Fish. Above him is that pure golden canopy with its rare, glimmering lustrousuess something like the soft, dewy effulgence that comes with sunbreaks through showery afternoons. The soft delicacy of that tnire. straw-yellow that prevails every where is crossed and lighted by tints and glimmering hues of accidental and supplementary color indescribably ele gant. The floor of the sea rises like a golden carpet in gentle incline to the surface; but this incline, experience soon teaches, is an ocular deception, the effect of refraction, such os a tum bler of water and a spoon can exhibit in petty. It is perhaps the first ob servable warning that you are in a new medium, and that your familiar friend, the light, conies to you altered in its nature ; and it ia as well to remember this and "make a note on it." Raising your eyes to the horizontal and looking straight forward, a new and beautiful wealth of color is de veloped. It is at first a delicate blue, as if an accidental color of the prevail ing yellow. But soon it deepens into a rich violet. You feel as if you had never before appreciated the loveliness of that rich tint. As your eye dwells upon it the rich lustrous violet darkens to indigo, and, sinking into deeper hues, becomes a majestio threat of color. It is ominous, vivid, blue-black solid, adamantine, a crystal wall of amethyst. It is all around you. You are cased, dungeoned ' in the solid masonry of the waters. It is beauty indeed.but the sombre and awful beauty of the night and storm. ' The eye turns for relief and reassurance to the paly golden lustrous roof, and watches that tender penciling which brightens every object it touches. The hull of the sunken ship, lying slant and open to the sun, has been long enough sub merged to be crusted with barnacles, hydropores, crustacea, and the labored constructions of the microscopic ex istence and vegetation that fill the sea. The song of Ariel becomes vivid and realistic in its rich word-power : " Full fathom five thy father lies ( Of his bones are coral made, Those are pearls that were his eyes j Nothing of him that doth fade But doth suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange. The transfiguration of familiar ob jects is indeed curious and wonderful. The hull, once gaudy with paint and gilding, has come under the skill of tho lapidary and sea-artist. It is crust ed with emerald and flossy mosses, and glimmers with diamond, jacinth, ruby, topaz, sapphire and gold. Every jewel shape in leaf, spore, coral or plume, lying on s greenish crystalline greund, is fringed with a soft radiance of silver fire, and every point is tipped in minute ciliato flames of faint steely purple. It is spotted with soft velvety black wherever a shadow falls, that mingles and varies the wonderful display of color. It is brilliant, vivid, changeable with the interferences of light from the fluctuating surface above, which trahs mogrifies everything touches the coarsest objects with its pencil, and they become radiant and spiritual. A pile of brick, dumped carelessly on the deck, has become a huge hill of crystal jewelry, lively with brilliant prismatic radiance. Where the light falls on the steps of the staircase it. shows a ladder of silver crusted with emeralds. The round-house, spars, masts, every spot where a peak or angle catches the light, have flushed into liquid, jeweled beauty; and each point, a prism mid mirror, catches, multiplies, and reflects the other splendor. A rainbow, a fleecy mist over the lake, made prismal by the sunlight, a bunch of sub-aqneous moss, a Ronp-bubble. ore all examples oi our i daily experience of that transforming power of water in the display of color. The prevailing tone is that, soft, golden effulgence which, like the grace of a cheerful and loving heart, blends all into one harmonious whole. But observation warns the spectator of the delusive character of nil that splendor of color. Ho lifts a box from the ooze : he appears to have uncorked the world. The hold in a bottomless chasm. Every indention, every ac clivity that casts a shadow, gives the impression of that soundless depth. The bottom of the sea seems loop holed with cavities that pierce the solid globe and the dark abysses of space be yond. The diver is surrounded by pit falls, real and imaginary. There is no graduation. The shallow concave of a hand-basin is ns the shadow of the bottomless well. If the exploration takes place in the delta of a great river, the light is affect ed by the various densities of the double-refracting media. At the proper depth one can see clearly the line where these two meet, clean cut and as sharp ly defined as the bottom of a green j glass tumbler through the pure water j it contains. The salt brine or gela- j tinous sea-water sinks weighted to the bottom, nnd over it flows the fresh river water. If the latter is darkened with sediment, it obHsures the sileut depths with a heavy, gloomy cloud. In seasons of freshet this becomes a total darkness. Bnt even on a bright, sunshiny day, under clear water, the shadow of any object in the sea is unlike uuy shade in the upper atmosphere. It draws a black curtain over everything under it, com pletely obscuring it. Nor is this pecu liarity lost when the explorer enters the shadow ; but, as one looking in a tunnel from without can see nothing therein, though the open country be yond is plainly visible, so, standing in that submarine suauow, an nrounii is dark, though beyond the sable curtain of the shadow the view is clear. Ap ply this optical fact to the ghustly story of a diver's alleged experience in the cabin of a sunken ship. It is narrated that there was revealed to his appalled sight the spectacle of the drowned pas sengers in various attitudes of alarm or devotion when the dreadful suffocation came. Tho story is told with great ef fect and power, but unless a votulic iantern is included in the stage furni ture, the ghastly tableau must sink into the limbo of incredibilities. The cabin of a sunken vessel is dark beyond any supernal conception of darkness. Even a cabin window does not alter this law, though it may be it self visible, with objects on its surface, as in a child's magic-lantern. As the rays of light puss through an object flatwise, like the blade of a knife through the leaves of a book, nnd may be admitted through another of like character in the plane of the first, so a ray of light can penetrate with deflec tion through air and water. But be coming polarized, the interposition of a third medium ordmarly transparent will stop it altogether. Hence tho plate glass window under water admits no light into the interior of a cabin. The distrust of sight grows with the diver's experience. The eye brings its habit of estimating proportion and distance from an attenuated atmosphere into another and denser medium, and the seer is continually deceived by the change. tie hesitates, halts, and is observant oi the pitfalls about him. A gang-plank slightly above the surface of the deck is bordered, where its shadow falls, by dismal trenches. There is a range oi hills crossing the deck before him. As he approaches he estimates tho difficul ty of the ascent. At its apparent foot he reaches to clamber the steep sides, and the sierra ib still a step beyond his reach. Drawing still nearer, ho pre pares to crawl up ; his hand touches the top ; it is less than shoulder-high. But perhaps the strongest illustration of the differing densities of these two mendia is furnished by an attempt to drive a nail under water, uy an nbso lute law such an effort, if guided by sight independent of calculation, must lau. nauii ani experience, lesieu in atmospheric light will control the m cles, and direct the blow at the very point where the nail-head is not. For this reason the ingenious expedient of a voltaic latern under the water has proved to be impracticable. It is not the light alone which is wanted, but that sweet familiar atmosphere through which we are habituated to look. The submarine diver learns to rely wholly on the truer sense of touch, and guided by that he engages in tasks requiring labor and skill with the easy assurance of a blind man in a crowded street, The conveyance of sound through the inelastic medium f water is so dim cult that it has been called tho world of silence. This is only comparatively true. The nsn hos an auditory cavity, which, though simple in itself, certifies the ordinary conviction of sound, but it is dull aiid imperfect; and perhops all marine creatures have other means of communication. There is an in stance, however, of musical sounds produced by marine animals, which seems to show an appreciation of har mony. In one of the lakes of Ueylou Sir Emerson Tennent heard soft musi cat sounds, like the first faint notes of the eeolian harp or the faint vibrations of a wineglass when its rim is rubbed by a wet finger. This curious harmony is' supposed to beproduced by a species of testaceous mollusk. A similar in tonation is heard at times along tho Florida coast. Interesting ns this may be, as indica ting an appreciation of that systematic order in arrangement which in music is harmony, it does not alter the fact that to the ears of the diver, save the cas cade of the air through the life-hose, it is a sea of silence. No shout or spoken word reaches him. Even a cannon-shot comes to him dull and muffled, or if distant it is unheard. But a sharp, muck sound, that appears to break the air, like ice, into sharp radii, can be heard, especially if struck against any thing on the water. Tho sound of driving a nail on the ship above, for ex ample, or a sharp tap on the diving-bell below, is distinctly and reciprocally au dA'lo. Conversation below the surface by ordinary methods is out of the ques tion, but it can lie sustained by placing the metal helmets of the interlocutors together, thus providing a medium of conveyance. LijrpincoiC a Magazine. Forest Tree Culture. The Evergreen and Forest Tree Grow er, a monthly, devoted to the consider ation of the'snbjects embraced by its title, has a valuable article on the im minent need of action of tho people in all nnrts of the country, especially in the East, to provide for the future by planting trees. From the article we take the following remarks : "Having visited the centers of our lumbering trade, and carefully gathered statistics, we find that, at the present rate of waste, seventeen years will com plete the destructio n of our pineries. It is estimated that five years will suffice for the forests of Maine, once supposed to be exhaustless. Soon after our pine is gone our fine hard wood forests (which now supply the immense manu factories, the agricultural enterprises, and car works) will be destroyed, and then the remaining timber will' suffer very severe drafts. Thirty years will inevitably seo large tracts at the East denuded of timber, while beautiful groves, large enough for building and manufacturing purposes, will adorn many portions of the West. If properly cultivated and tended, trees will grow to a good size in thirty years. There is a great difference between a natural and an artificial forest. Before us, as we write, is a section of Scotch pine thir teen inches through, and the tree was thirty-five feet high. Go into many of our well-kept artificial forests, and you will find that the trees otten maue a diameter of one' inch a year, and a height of two feet ; and we have known white pines to grow even three or four feet a year. The soft woods often show a yearly circle of au inch in thickness, giving a diameter of two inches a year." The Modoc Ambush. In a military application the unexpec ted misfortune which befell the United States troops may be briefly stated. In the morning, at seven o'clock, the weath- . ..i " -i i a t cr brigut aim piensani, laipium uvuu Thomas ond a force of sixty-nine men- infantry und artillerymen, but all acting is infantry were detailed by Lreneral Gillem to reconnoitre a certain position in the lava beds where it was supposed the wilv savages were secreted. The instructions to Captain Thomas were to ecounoitre this position in order to os- rtain if the Indians were really there ; ut. if there, he was to avoid bringing on a general engagement, as it was the purpose of General UUlem to send up a lattery or two ot his mortars ana to shell the position before entering it. After a march of two hours along the south flank of the lava field the recon noitring party, in approaching a lava butte, or little mountain of volcanic ocks, discovering no signs oi inuians, signalled back accordingly, only tha next instant to nnd tnemseives unuer a destructive fire and enveloped by the deadly Modocs. Tho death of Captain Thomas, Lieutenant. Howe and other ollicers, the killing' and wounding of more than half the little command and the precipitate flight of the remainder, the approach of reinforcements and the removal ot our dead nndwounueuunner a night of rain and darkness, were the closing scenes of this bloody drama. A Woman Hanged. Susan Eberhart was hanged in Web ster County, Ga., for murder. A few weeks ago Enoch Spann was hanged Jor the murder of his wife. The story of Spann's crime was that of Susan Eber hart s, she being connected wicn mm in the commital of the murder,-the cir cumstances in the woman's case need not be rehearsed. From a belief that her youth ond ignorance greatly lessen ed her guilt, streuuousjexeitioiis were made to save her. Ten of the twelve jurymen and nvmy hundreds of citizens petitioned the Governor ior a commuta tion, but in vain. The fatal fact of her aiding and abetting Spann throughout was too plain, ana her allowing the as sassin to come to her bed in the pres ence of the still warm corpse too evi dently proved a monstrous and detest able depravity. At the appointed hour the culprit walked cheerfully to the scaffold. She appeared to be quite composed, and declared that, being quite prepared, she was wining to cue, The execution, it is needless to say, aroused the wildest excitement. A Russian Crime. Several months ago an outrage of the most villainous sort imaginable took place in a Moscow theatre, when some thieves raisea a cry of fire, produced a panic, and availed i i it. tnemseives oi it 10 pursue meir vuca tion. Precisely the same manoeuvre, probably dictated by the exemplary success of that at Moscow, has just been performed at Nice, on the occasion of a grand musical performance in aid of charity bv amateurs, members of the French aristocracy. A dreadful scene ensued, and robbery was committed wholesale. As this trick appears catch iug, and the ruffians of this country are not -a whit behind their European con feirees ia villainy, we allude to these in famous operations that the police may be forewarned and lorearmea. An Illinois woman lately diad an eye put ut by the explosion of a tea can-nister. A 3Iny Greeting. Lelterfroni Bcrtliolil Aiieflmch, flie Grant Mr mi ii n Author, to lil Countrj-uien in America. The following dispatch wns sent by Anerbach, tho well known Gorman au thor, to his countrymen in America, on the occasion of the opening of the Vienna Exhibition: A May greeting sent to the New World from Gersnbnch, iu the Black Forest, by Berthold Auer- bach 1 What will bo your leelings, my beloved countrymen, when, this sum mer, you will come again to Germany to seo the Exhibition? Germany is your fatherland; America is your chil dren's land. You come back like sons ond daughters married abroad, to visit their father's house; you are indepen dent and free, but within your hearts there dwells a faithful memory, and you will find the old home still beauti ful, and you will carry back refreshed souls into the New World. Welcome 1 But I am prevented from mingling with tho crowd and bustle there, and what would a single voice signify there? So much the more happy do I feel to be permitted to send a message from a verdant valley of my home. All rivulets on earth Have their course they sing on the street.' Under my window rushes the beautiful Murch (river), driving mills and carrying rafts; she flows into the German Rhine, the Rhine into the oeeau. But the Ocean of Thought, into which to-day oil is floating that is. the Exhibition in Vienna! "Cuckoo!" calls the bird of spring from the shadowy hills, and, "Look, look!" it means when spring awakes and all germs are budding. Thus, yonder, therein the Exhibition, all germs of the human mind are developed, and "Look! look!" is the cry there also. But collect thyself, and realize that this is no out side voice this is the voice within thee. Try and lay thy finger on the pulse of the present! .. . r 1 T1 !!.; To the great international .uxmuiuon the Black Forest has also contributed virtual proofs of its industry, science ana art ; but now litue it seems m wia grand universal collection! Yet it is one Bound, one note of tho great sym phony. For all that whistling of steam, that digging, boring, hammering, chisel ling, down to the hardly audible move ment of the painter's brush, all is one complete symphony called labor. It renews and embellishes the world! The old legends appear new. Tho Argonauts! Yonder, upou the "beautiful blue Danube,"- float swim- a tti x tt; - - nnng mansions; irom uiin to lenna they carry hundreds not of warriors, but of workmen and they bring back, not the Golden Fleece, but;the inalieu ablo treasure of rich sights and new energy And another one still! Once upon a time there were three princesses ; two of them were highly honored, shining iu a resplendent palace afid surrounded by brilliant suitors, while the third had to work for the necessities of life, sit ting on the domestic hearth. The Cin derella of the Old World was Labor ; her brilliant sisters were Science and Art. But Cinderella Labor was set upon the thrown, and tho princes and leaders of nations come and bow and salute her. BHt to-day, at her grand festival, she unites with her the sister Beauty and the sister Wisdom. They are no longer separated their union is already pronounced by'the words "in dustry of art" (Kunst-fnduslrie). Still Science is and will remain mas ter. The shining glories of humanity will henceforward be free. Science and Art ; though not directly serving the ends of utility, they are, nevertheless, sufficient unto themselves. They are the wings that carry Pegasus into the empyrean ; but through them a breath of the higher world perviuias all lite chained to the earth. Physical power s measurable by horse power, but the flight of genius is immeasurable. It is immeasnreAble because only the under standing of master spirits ot its time can furnish the measure, which later generations only learn to apply when the ashes of the inventor have been long in the grave. Imagine that on this 1st day or May, at early dawn, even before a living soul has appeared, a man is walking through those halls replete with labor on the banks of the Danube ; a man who be longs to Europe as well as to America. He was a disciple ot tne uerman mas ter Gutteuberg,f but also, in tho life of his mind, a genuine "sen-made man. Dare I undertake to recall Benjamin Franklin ? Nearly a century before this day he was to meet the Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria. " Joseph and Benjamin were brothers," sons of one mother, Humanity. Benjamin Franklin, walking through this gigan tic collection ot labor, thoughtfully, but with a beaming countenance, he stops in front of that apparatus which has made lightning speak, which has caught lightning and made it harmlessly sweep past the habitations of men, and now it speaks over continents and through oceans. That is science, that is labor, which nowadays are working miracles. Since this has happened the idea of super natural miracles has become obsolete. Onward he paces, and a new devotion. as it were, speaks from his mild fea tures. Here is the age oi power con centrated. where striving and daring lead to the elevation ot Hie. What would the Olympian games be com pared with this ? .... i How many years oi laoor, oi quiet thought, of devoted energy, are here united before the forum of humanity ? And here all nations are measured and judged by the mental labor they have accomplished, bv their visible work done tm liberate, to elevate, and to em bellish existence. Here is the world's soul visible- to the eye. It is a wonderful greeting to the workman, the presence of ail this fin ished work. The soul of the originator speaks to the admirer, not only from the written word ; nay, also out of the hewn stone, out of iron and wood and all materials. Onward walks Franklin, and with a feeling of intense joy He contemplates the ingenious and well-considered means invented to instruct and elevate man kind. Forsooth, here one nation is the tutor of the other ; here is the academy of labor, here is the genuine university iu the original signification of the term 1 A sense of intense pain clouds his thoughtful brow os he contemplates the improved instruments invented by man to slay man. When will tho creative conquer the destructive genius of man ? When, at last, will eternal peace unite all nations on this expanded, beautiful ei- ......... ... But as lie loons at tne tars ami Stripes he is recalled to a sense of joy, and murmurs to himself words of de light, which he will only openly express at the centennial celebration of the in dependence of the United States. At this moment the doors of the In ternational Exhibition are thrown open. A new migration of nations begins. A new era of universal labor dawns upou the world. Bertholu ArEr.BAcn. Personal Journalism. A Ruse. Years ago Capt. Downing hod com mand of the sloop-of-war Vandalin, and was cruising in the South Pacific Ocean. A French merchant vessel, in which were two American citizens, engaged in traffic at the time in New Zealand, was driven ashore on tho rocky coast of Chatham Island, and all her crew mur dered by the natives. The captain of a Dutch trader, who had witnessed the butcherv. but had been unable to ren der any assistance, brought information of the' fact to the Bay of Islands, where the Vandalia lay. Capt. Downing set sail at once, and upon reaching Chatham Island, distant some three Hundred miles from New Zealand, he found the wreck of the merchantman, and he also fouud traces of the slaughter ; but the murderous natives had fled into the rocky fastnesses of the interior, and he could not catch them. They had seen his ship coming in, and had recognized it ns a man-of-war. Downing knew that it would be use loss, as well os dangerous, to lead his men on the chase into the tangled wiuis of the island, and after cruising a while up and down the forbidding coast, he sailed away. Two days afterward he fell in with a Yankee whaler tho Kod ney Farwell, of New Bedford and en tered into nn arrangement with her commander for hoodwinking the Chat ham Islanders. Capt. Downing trans ferred his whole crew a hundred and eighty men on board the whale-ship, with plenty of small-arms and ammuni tion, leaving a few of his officers, with the whaler's crew, to take care of the Vandalia, and once more made sail for Chatham Island, which he reached just in the edge of the evening, nnd cast anchor in the small bay of the village. On the following morning a few of the natives ventured off in a canoe ; but Downing did not allow them to come on board. He exposed just enough of his men to keep up his chpracter as a whaleman, and no more. He gave to these visitors a few trinkets, however, and made them understand that he wanted to get wood and water. They returned to the shore, and two hours later a large war canoe came off, with fifty men in it, armed with spears and bows. Downing allowed this delegation to board him, though ho well knew they had como for the purpose of murder and robbery. The tussle which fol lowed was severe, and a dozen of the rascals were shot down before the rest were overcome. But they were finally conquered, and among the prisoners was tho chief of the island. Once more on board his own ship, with his prisoners safely in irons, Capt. Downing returned to the Bay of Islands, where he found a French frigate. It had been a French ship which the Chatham savages had ravaged, and to the tender mercies of the officers of the frigate the American commander resigned his captives. Ledger. W hat n Tell Known Editor has to Soy About It. . Mt. Henry WTattcrson of tho Louis villo Courkr-Journol delivered on ad dress before the Indiana Press Associ ation nt Indianapolis, from which the following extract is taken : Wo have heard a denl of late years about personal and impersonal journol ;... t.. nf America we must i.ntro mi abundance of personal journalism; it is an appendage to our condition as well as a result of our char acter. During our civil war, it was re marked by foreigu officersof experience M ho had come here to observe the pro gress of military events that individual valor and exploits not merely count for :n. tlion tlipv do with Euro- pcan armies, but that they are required by our Boldiery, who keep a close watch on their leaders. This is a republican habit, and, as far as editors are con nnvnoi 1 it. is rendered the more scrutm- o,1 inevitable bv the comparative smallness of our towns, which are not hirffe enough to afford concealment to on individual occupying a conspicuous local place. Those who read a newspa per are pretty sure to find out who it is that edits it ; thero is no possible es no . tim'mnn'n simple comings in nnd goings out will discover him ; and just n's he happens to be a person of excep tional character or characteristics is he likelv to be marked ond talked of, until, r.tv well known, and having himself charged with all the virtues ant oil H.o nfTeriKes of his loumal, he is, in voluntarily, apersonal journalist. There ;a immmniinl iniimalism in England, because the English press is conducted by scholarly dummies, who, dwelling m London, to which the press is confined, are able to lead reclusive lives, and dm. linina' for the most part the em pn ployoes (A men who publish newspapers as the" would tramo in ureminmun, ..m not pa'id enough or permitted to display a costly nnd offensive individuality. Iu America the power of the press is not consolidated in a single great city. All the larger towns have their journals and their journalists ; some of them of the richest and most notable. In this way journalism " with ns, os in France, though for an opposite reason, opens v. road to wealth and fame which is closed to tliA iournalist of England, who, from necessity and not from choice we may be sure,' leads an obscure life and goes tn hia n-rnvA "unwept, unliouored, and v,v.u,..,.r " ATmi nf virrorous parts and ' sound understandings do not willingly part with their identity. I his is a poi tion of the heritage which God has giv en to mankind, our finer part, for it causes us to strive, to labor, to aspne, to keen ourselves honorable and pure, to Rep I; thfl rrood will and good report of our fellow-men. Personalism is only nl.ioetionablo when it becomes physic ally blatant or absurd, nnd degenerates into niero childish vanity or idiotic con ceit. It is considered, and it is, a most ennobling and admirable quality, when it causes Morton and Sclrnrz to detach themselves from the rest in order that they may tell millions of their country men what they think on this question and on that. The journalist does not, in his most personal moments, display himself half so much as these, and, while he is to be warned against using his great vehicle to the mere tickling of his own vanity, he is surely not to be blamed for going in nt the front door, instead of creeping round by way of the back alley, nor stigmatized for holding his head up m the lace oi an tne worm, mm ni hi, serf toto genitum se credere mundo. Practicable Imforinatioii. It is always well to know what to do iu case of accident : For dust in the ves, avoid rubbing ; dash water in them ; remove cinders, etc., with the round point of a lead, pencil. Remove water from the ear with tepid water ; never put a hard instrument in the ear. If an artery is cut, compress above the wound ; if a vein is cut, compress be low. Is choked, get upon all fours and cough. For slight burns, dip the part in cold water : if the skin is destroyed, cover with varnish. Snioth er a tire with carpets, etc, ; water will often spread burning oil, and increase danger, iietore passing tnrougn smoue, take a full breath and then stoop low, but if carbon is suspected, walk erect. Suck poisoned wounds, unless your mouth is sore ; enlarge tne wound, or, better, cut out the part without delay Extorting Confessions. The police of India have novel ways of extracting confessions from their prisoners without torture. One method applied to opium eaters is perfectly simple and sociable. The policeman 1 , i : i Sits down opposite ins primmrr unu playfully keeps an opium ball rolling abo'ut the palm of his hand. Of course the prisoner suffers like Tantalus him- . . 1 . . . . Al. .. Ail. self, and the consequence is viiai me policeman very soon gets his story and the prisoner hisopium. Another method, used where there are a number of pris oners suspected of the same offense, re minds one 01 similar proceeumirs iu Arabian tales. One man is taken from the number and locked up alone, while his companions imagine that he is in the next room. Iu this room are several inspectors, who proceed to stoutly be labor nn euiptv sacK nangiuR m me corner, one of them keeping up a vio lent groaning. This over, the man is loudly called upon to confess, and a constable simulates a confession in a low, mumbling voice. All this little comedy seems a stern tragedy to the trembling prisoners in the other room, and when the next man is brought out lie is almost sure to make a full con fession. A Beautiful Experiment on Sound. The following beautiful experiment, described by Professor Tyndall, shows how music may be transmitted by on ordinary wooden rod. In a room two floors beneath his lecture room there was a piano upon which nn artist was E laying, but- the audience could not ear it. A rod of deal, with its lower end resting upon the sounding board of the piano, extended upward through the two floors, its upper end being exposed before the lecture table. But still no Round was heard. A violin was then placed upon the end of the rod which was thrown into resonance by the as cending thrills,' and instantly the music of the piano was given out in tne ieo ture room. A guitar and harp wer substituted for the violin, and with the same result. The vibrations of the niano strings were communicated to the sounding board, they traversed the long rod, were reproduced by the resonant bodies above, the air was carved into waves, and the whole musical composi tion was delivered to the listening audi ence. One of the presents at a recent wed ding in Rochester Minn., was an acci dent insurance policy for $3,000, cover ing the groom for twenty-four hours. A Lepers' Village. A Cnrloua Town In tho Bund viricU IslnnU . Ill William R. Bliss's' new book of travel in the Sandwich Islands he de scribes os follows a ' Lepers illaM . "There is leprosy in the Hawaiian blood, but none of it is to be en in Honolulu, as those who are afflicted w itu it ore sent to the lepers' village, on tne island of Molokai. . ii t,. iuit tin. acttloment on Molokai. which is about thirty mites east of Hon olulu, we embark on a clipper-schooner bound to winuwora 10 uiiii8 ii -cargo of sugar from Lohaina town on the island of Maui, where lepers may be seen in its ono broad sireei. After rolling to starboard ami to larboard all night long, the schooner 'heaves to' at sunrise on tne southern coast of the is and, and we are set ashore from a small boat in the little harbor of Ivaunaliam. " The island is green with vegetation, but is nearly deserted. There are less than fifteen hundred persons on it, al though it contains ono hundred nnd seventy square miles. As we ride on horseback away from the shore, up the ascending plains, in a northeastern di rection , we pass deserted garden pn tones , fallen walls and ruins of native huts, on which knots of long grass are waving like signals of distress. " Crossing a succession of green hil fl, we come suddenly to tho brink of the precipice of Kalaupapa, which looks north to the ocean and is two thousand feet high. Below, from the foot of the precipice, stretches a plain, diversihed with hills and vales, nnd reaching to the distant she re, where it curves like a scythe into the sen, turning up a white swath against tho trade wind. in plain is covered with luxuriant vegeta life on it. Here and there a few brown uuU catfh eve. Far on the right are dots of white houses, luaiiii mo ! V tKoi steep bridle-path zigzags uu front of the precipice, and we must de scend it. Under wreathing vines, white blossoms and swinging trailers, adorn and obstruct the descent valley of death, tho horses step care fully and tediously. In an hour t hey reach the plain, when a gin"!' " miles brings us to tne buiuimu.-". consists of detached houses, enclosed by low walls or picket fences, standing in open pasture lands and sweet potato fiflds. Papnra, puhala, banana trees and a winding brook give a picturesque a flip village. Its horizon r , , 1tt (lower- off tho and on the other side .UV uio is bounded on ono side by the . 1. ...l.iitil nov.'i-ei nreeinicc. wiueii pii world, ocean. " 'Every prospect pleases, and only man iH vile.' "Every person in this community is a leper. Of those who have not hands or feet, the men till the ground and tho women braid mats. Those who cannot take care of themselves are nursed in hospitals by leper nurses. The boys and girls go to school to leper teachers, learning the branches of n sim ple education which none of them can probably live long enough to appreciate. They leave the school with froeilsomo shouts; they romp across the green fields, enjoying the air and sunshine like chil dren in other lands, uueonsciousol their misfortune. , " In a grassy field near the sen-shore stands a little church, visited nil day by the sun nnd sea-breeze. Here iv native minister, a leper, leads religious services on Sunday for his miserable fellows. " These poor people seem to oo con tented. Arat'on ot live pounds oi liesii meat and twenty pounds ot vegetables is issued weekly, in addition to what each one cultivates witn nis own muwi. This support is so much better than any Hawaiian ever has nt nome.iimt u n.. living on other parts of the island have desired to make themselves lepers in order to be taken care of in this little village of death. As we turn owoy for our homeward journey, it is natural iu. wish, for the sake of humanity, that there might be in tins ueuumui a river Jordan into which these miser able people conld dip ana be cieuusi-u. But the curse of Elish upon his corrupt servant seems to bo irrevocably fixed upon them: Th lenroKV of Naam&n shall cleave unto thee and unto thy iseed forever." How a Fortune Prevented a Marriage. Some time ago, says a Montreal pa- Mm miini1nil t.nvf ( o no nun TlPf fl. WPIlltllV mul i'ascinatiucr young be borne to a hot coal, or end of a widow came from New York and toon cigar. In case of poisoning, excite up her abode in Montreal, hileboard- vomi'Hurr l,v tieklinff the throat, or hv ing there she fell in love wun a son oi warm water and mustard. For acid her landlady, a handsome youth, t n,li . f,. ll.-nl,-,. I twontv venva nf nre. The -VOUllg llUllsuun Ulio maim. , iu. uiuimiuv . . . . . . . , , - - - o good in most cases ; in case of opium fate called him away to the West where poisoning give strong coffee and keep moving 11 in water, noat on me uacii, with the nose and mouth projecting. For apoplexy raise the head and body ; for fainting lay the person flat. Single Beds. a situation had been procured for him. Cupid, however, called him back, the widow proposed passing strange and was accepted. Things bavicg gone so I smoothly, the wedding was nppoimeu for an early day, ana tne iauy uuu nur intended were beiug congratulated on their happy future, when unfortunately .. large double bed, which has held -ir nappy , its own ior centuries, is iun iumiiK --- - ,. :n vpw Yorv baviuff foitune would be forfeited nothing would be left to her but a bare allow ance. Here was a dilemma. However, a fortune isn't got every day ; so, after due deliberation, the match was uronen off. The despair of the would-be young bridegroom may be easily imagined, for when the news irom JNew iom came iu hand, he still wished to marry the wid er, one abstracts irom tne outer noma amount of vital force. This is especial ly the case where old ond young persons share the same lieu, uesides, in a room where there is no decided current of air, the emanations from the lungs and skin of a sleeper poisons the atmosphere for a considerable distance. In the publio wards of great hospitals, never less than two and a half feet is allowed between iwo and a nun ieei is luiuneu uciwccu i i n i 1 1 each bed for this reason. In the sleeping JleUkt .. t 11 II as his proposed tnue wouia mrow apartments of royalty and nobility siugls beds are everywhere the rule, and no exception. The Lmperor of Uerniany sleeps upon a narrow bed and hard mat tress. The- single bed covering is a I wadded silk ouilt. The Emperor and Empress of Austria take their royal slumbers on similar beus, witn tne same description of coverlet. One of the principal advantages of these narrow beds is that the mattresses are easily aired, and that, in tne opinion oi au Btreetg exceeding sixty-five feet in width, house-wives, must oe a very important the municipai authorities have the pow- consideration. n the height to b oarrind to away. . A Good Idea. In Paris, the height of buildings iB determined by law ac cording to the width of the streets. Thus the buildings cannot exceed thir- jty-eight feet in height in streets less than twenty-six feet wide ; forty-eight feet in streets from tweuty-sn to thirty I two feet in width. For boulevards and . Mai. -Gen. Heury W. Halleek left an estate valued at $430,785. His widow has removed to California, a maximum of sixty-five feet, provided that in no case the building shall have more than five stories.