it HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. TIT. 1UDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1873. NO. 19. Waiting for Yon, Joik. Wintor's agoing ; The streams are a-AWing ; The May-flowers Mowing Will soon be in view. But all thingH seem faded, For my heart it is jaded, , Waiting for you. Jock, Waiting for you : Oil. but it's weary work, Waiting for you 1 Ah soon as the day's done, ' My thoughts to the West run ; ( ' I envy the red sun, That sinks from my view. On yon it's a-shining, While here I am pining, Waiting for yon, Jock, Waiting foi you ; Oh, but it's weary work, Waiting for you ! I Bigh when the day beams j The pitiful night seems To cheer mo with sweet dreams, That bear me to you. Each morn as yon flee me, The fading stars see mo, Waiting for yon, Jock, Waiting for yon ; Oh, but it's weary work, Waiting for you ! Go, robin, fly to him ; Sing ever nigh to him ; Summer winds sigh to him ; Bid him be true ! Where lie sleeps on the prarrioH. Oh, whisper, kind fairies, " Waiting for you, Jock, Waiting for you! ; Oh, but it's weary work, Waiting for you !" A HEAVY ItlRDEX. Robert Hodgkins hatl lived in the village, next door to Samuel Hullins. nt leant a dozen years, and no doubt the two neighbors would have been on good terms together ; but, unluckily for the pence of Robert Ilodgkins, Samuel Hul lins had n pension on account of a bad wound which he had received when fighting as a seaman under Adaiirul Jselson at the battle of Trafalgar. , Uvery week when Ilodgkins went to pay Lis rent up at the tanhouse, he muttered . and grumbled nil the wav there and back, because his neighbor could afford to pay his rent so much better than him self. An envious, discontented spirit is one oi tne worst qualities a man can foster in his bosom ; it makes him mis erable at home and abroad ; it sours his sweetest enjoyments, and plants sting ing nettles in all his paths along the journey of life. For a time Ilodgkins errowled and grumbled to himself, but afterwards his discontent grew louder, till, at last, it became his favorite topic to lament his 4 own ill luck, and to rail against those whose nioney'came in whether they would or not, and who had nothing else to do but to sit in an easy chnir from morning till night, while he worked his heart out to get enough to support him self and his family. It was on a Monday morning that ' Hodgkins, who was sadly behind in his rent, walked up to the tanhouse to Mr. Starkey's, to make some excuse for not ' paying what was due. Hodgkins entered the tanhouse, and was soon reproved for not paying his rent by his landlord, Mr. Staikev, who told him that his next door nefghbor, Samuel Hullins, regularly paid up every farthing. "Yes, yes," replied Hodg kins, "somo folks nre born with silver spoons in their mouths ; Hullins is a lucky fellow, no wonder that he can pay his rent with such a pension as he has got." " Hullins has a pension, it is true," said Mr. Starkey, "but he carries a pretty heavy cross for it. If you had lost your leg, as he has done, perhaps you would fret more than you do now, notwithstanding you might in that case ' have a pension." "Not I," replied Hodgkins, "if I had been lucky enough to lose a leg twenty years ngo, it would have been a good day's work for me, if I could have got as much by it as Hullins has con- trived to get. You call his a heavy cross, but I fancy that his pension makes it light enough to him ; the heaviest cross that I know of is being obliged to work like a negro to pay my rent." Now, Mr. Starkey was a shrewd man, and possessed a great deal of humor, and well knowing Hodgkins' disposi tion to repine, he felt disposed to con vince him, if possible, that the lightest cross soon became heavy to a discon tented spirit. "I tell you what, Hodgkins," said he, " I am afraid that yoH are hardly disposed to make the best of things; however, as you think that your neigh bor Hullins cross is so very light, if f'ou will undertake to carry one much ighter, you shall lire rent free as long as you abide by the bargain." " But what sort of a cross is it thnt you mean to put upon mv shoulders!" inquired Hodgkins, fearing that it might be something to which he could not agree. " Why," replied Mr. Stkey, fetch ing a large lump of chalk and making a broad cross on Hodgkins' back, " that is the cross, and so long as you like to wear it, I will not ask you for a farthing of your rent." Hodgkins at firSt thought that his landlord was only joking, but being as sured that he was quite serious, he told Mr. Starkey that he must look for no more rent from hirn, for that he wns willing to wear uch a ro as that all the day of kin life. Away went Hodgkins, chuckling with in himself at his good luck, and think ing what a fool of a landlord he had got to let him off so easily from paying his rent. Never was he in a better humor than when he entered his cottage. Hodgkins having seated himself with his back to the cupboard, his wife had not seen the cross on his coat ; but no sooner did he turn round to pull up the weights of the cuckoo clock, thau she cried out with a shrill voice: "Why, Hodgkins, where have you been? There is a cross on your back a foot long ; you have been to the public, and some of your drunken companions have played you this trick, to make you lock like regular rimpleton ; come, stand still, and let mo rub it off, or every lad in the village will bo laughing nt yon." " Let it alone," said Hodgkins, turning quickly round ; " I won't have it rubbed off. Go on mending your stockings, and let my cont alone. "But I won't let it alone," replied his wife j " do you think my husband shall play the fool in that manner ? No, that he shan't J I'll have every bit of it off before you stir out of the'honsQ." Hodgkins knew very well that his wife was not easily turned when she had once set her mind upon a thing, so, striding across the cottage, he hastily made his esonpc, banging the door after him with all his might. " An ill-tempered vixen 1" muttered he to himself ; "I would have told her of my good luekliad she been quiet, but now she shall know nothing about it." " Halloo, Robert 1" cried old Fal lows, the bricklayer, as Hodgkins turned round the corner ; " who has been playing you that trick 1 Why, your back is scored nil acrcms. Come here, nnd I will give you a dusting." "Mind your own back, and let mine alone," said Hodgkins. " Mr. Hodgkins," cried little Tatty Stevens, the huckster's daughter, run ning after him, "if you plense, there has somebody been making a long score all down your coat ; mother will rub it off for you if you will come back." " You nnd your mother had better mind your red herrings and treacle," replied Hodgkins, sharply, leaving the little girl wondering why he did not stop to have his coat brushed. No one else not iced the cross on Hodg kins' back till ho got 'near the black smith's shop, where the butcher and the blacksmith were talking, the butcher cutting a piece of elder, to mnke skew ers, and the blacksmith with his arms across, leaning on the half door of his shop. "You are just the very man I wanted to see," said the butcher, stop ping Hodgkins ; but before he had spoken a dozen words to him, old Peg gy Turton came up, in her red cloak and check apron. " Dear me !" cried old Peggy, gathering up her npron in her hand, " why, Mr. Hodgkins, your back is quite a fright f but stand still a moment, and I'll soon have it off." When Hodgkins turned around to tell old Peggy to be quiet, the blacksmith roared out to the butcher to " twig Ilodgkins back." "He looks like a walking finger-post," cried the butcher. "Ay, ay," snid the blacksmith; "I warrant ye his wife has done that for him, for spending his wages at the Malt Shovel." There was no other method of escaping the check apron of Peggy Turton, nnd the laughing nnd jeering of the butcher nnd blacksmith, than that of getting off the ground ns soon as pos sible ; so, calling poor Teggy a med dling old hussy, and the other two a braco of grinning fellows, he turned the first corner ho came to, feeling the cross on his back a great deal heavier than he had expected to find it. Poor Ilodgkins seemed to meet with nothing but ill luck, for just before he got to the school all the scholars ran boisterously into the road, full of frolic and fun, waving their enps, nnd follow ing Hodgkins, shouted as loudly as they could brawl, "Look at his back! look at his back!" Hodgkins was in a fury, nnd would 'perhaps have done somo mischief to his young tormentors had it not been for the sudden appear ance of Mr. Johnson, the schoolmaster, who at that moment came out of the school-room. The boys gave over their hallooing, for Ilodgkins directly told Mi'. Johnson that they were "an impu dent set of young jackanapes, and ever lastingly in mischief." Mr. Johnson, who had heard the up roar among the boys, and cnught a glimpse of Hodgkins' back, replied, mildly, that he would never encourage anything like impudence in his schol ars, but that perhaps Hodgkins was not aware of the cause of their mirth ; he assured him thnt he hnd so large a chalk mark on his back, that it was enough to provoke the merriment of older peo ple thlm his boys, and advised him by all means, if he wished to avoid of be ing laughed nt, to get rid of it as soon ns possible. Hodgkins said peevishly that his back was "nothing to nobody," and muttering to himself, walked on, feeling liis cross to be heavier than ever. The reflections which passed through Hodgkins' mind were not of the most agreeable description. It was, to be sure, a rare thing to live rent free ; but if every man, woman, and child in the village were to be everlastingly torment ing him, there would be no peace from morning to night. .Then ngain, even if his neighbors got used to the cross on his back, and said nothing about it, he knew that his wife would never let him rest. On the whole, the more ho con sidered about it, the more was he dis posed to think that the bargain was not quite so good a one as he at first had taken it to be. As Hodgkins went on towards the Malt Shovel, he saw, at a distance, his landlord, Mr. Starkey, and directly after, to his great consternation, his neighbor, Samuel Hullins, came stump ing along, with his wooden leg, in com pany with Harry Stokes the carpenter. Now Harry Stokes was quite the village wit; and Hodgkins dreaded nothing more than to be laughed at bv him. in the presence of Samuel Hullins. His hrst thought was to pull off his coat, but then, what would Mr. Starkey say to that ? Not knowing what else to do, he took refuge iu the Malt Shovel, but soon found the house too hot to hold him, for when those who were drinking there began to laugh at the cross on his back, both the landlord and landlady declared that no customer of theirs should be made a laughing-stock in their house, while they had the power to hinder it. The landlord cot the clotheB-brush, and the landlady a wet sponge, and Ilodgkins was obliged to make a hasty retreat, to secure his coat from the sponge and the clothes-brush of his persevering friends. When Hodgkins left horn, he in tended to go to a neighboring village about some work which he had to do, but his temper had been so ruffled by old Fallows, Patty Stevens, the black smith, the butcher, and Peggy Turton, as well as by Mr. Johnson and his scholars, the company at the Malt Shovel, and the landlord and landlady, that he determined to get home as soon as h could, thinking it better to be railed at by his wife, than to bo laughed at by the whole village. If you have ever seen, on tho first of September, a poor wounded partridge, the last of the covey, flying about from place to place, whilo every sportsman lie came nenr had a shot at liim, you may form some notion of the situation of poor Hodgkins ns he went back to his cottage ; sometimes walking fast that he might not be overtaken, some times moving slowly that he might not overtake others. Now in the lane, then iu the field ; skulking along as though he had been robbing a henroost, and was afraid to show his face. The cross by this time had beeome almost in tolerable. No sooner did he enter his cottage door, than his wife began : " And so you are come back again, are you, to play the tomfool ? Here have been half a dozen of your neigh bors calling to knowif you nre notgone out of your mind. If ever there wns a madman, you nre one ; but I'll put that coat in a pail of water, or behind the fire, before I will have suh antics played by a husband of mine ; come, pull off your coat ! I sny, pull off your coat !" Had Hodgkin's wife soothed him, he might have been more reasonable, but as it was, her words were like gunpowder thrown into the fire. A violent quarrel took place, words were followed by blows, and dashing, smashing, anil crashing resounded in the dwelling of Robert Ilodgkins. The fiercer a fire burns, the sooner will it consume the fuel which supports it ; and passionate people, in like man ner, exhaust their strength bv the vio-. lence of their anger. When ilodgkins found that there was no prospect of peace, night or day, at home or abroad, either with wife or amongst neighbors and villagers, so long as he continued to wear his cross, he of his own accord rubbed it from his back. The next Monday Hodgkins went up to the tan-house betimes, with a week's rent in his hand. "Ah, Robert," said Mr. Staikey, shaking hishend, "I thought you would soon repent of your bargain. It is a good thing to encourage a contented disposition, and not to envy others, nor unnecessarily to repine at the troubles which God has been pleased to lay upon us. Let this little affair be a lesson to us both, for depend upon it, we never commit a greater mistake than when we imagine the trials of others to be light, and our own crosses to be heavier than those of our neighbors. " Godliness with contentment is great gain." Cotton and Sugar Culture in Egypt. A gentleman in Boston has recently received a letter from a friend iu Egypt, who makes some interesting statements concerning the growing material pros perity of that country. The dpvelop. inent of the cotton trade has been very rapid, and the year just closed has been one of the most successful in the pro duction of that staple known to the Egyptian planters. The whole crop of the' year is estimated at two hundred million pounds, which at Liverpool brings prices ranging from 10 pence per pound for common to thirty-five pence for the best Sea Island, there being Ashmoor and Galini as intermediate grades. The traffic in cotton has been taken out of the hands of speculators, and committed to commission houses. The writer touches upon the enterprise of the railway that is to unite Soudan, Abyssinia, nnd Middle Africa with Alexandria, Cairo, and tho Red Sea, and indicates the great development of country which is expected to result from it. The Viceroy has recently largely increased his sugar interests in Upper Egypt, and while he hitherto planted ouly 23,000 fedars, or acrefc, of laud with sugar cane, he now has 150,000 under cultivation, each fedar yielding under good management one hundred cantars of gray sugar and twenty-five cantars of molasses, a cantar being 98 pounds. It is no wonder that the Vice roy is the wealthiest monarch in the world, when all his revenues, of which this is but a small part, are so immense, but the gentleman who writes of him says that there can be no doubt " that the actual Government of Egypt is the best she has had for many centuries past, nnd that nothing is neglected to develop her resources." Resurgam. A strange case of resuscitation lately took place at the hospital of the Val de Grace, at Paris. A man had hanged himself in a garret in the Rue St. Jacques, and having been cut down and examined by the medical men, was pro nounced dead. The clinical lecturer, however, desired to try one last experi ment, and he opened the chest and at tempted artificial respiration, but with out success. He then applied the pole of an electrical battery to the pneumo gastric nerves, and passed a strong cur rent at intervals of four seconds. Soon after some signs of respiration appear ed, and in five minutes the cardiao pul sation was perceptible. The epiglottis was tumefied, and the tongue had to be drawn out with pincers to leave a pas sage for the air. A few ounces of blood were-obtained from the medico-cephalic vein, the dilated pupils contracted, the signs of life became more and more manifest, a few drops of alcohol were given, muscular contractions became visible without electricity, warmth re turned to the feet, the pulsation in the carotid arteries recommenced, and the patient waB saved. His View of the Matter. "I give and bequeath to Mary, my wife, the sum of one hundred pounds a year," said an old farmer. "Is that written down, master ?" "Yes," said the law yer, "but she is not so old but she may marry again. Won't you make any change in that case ? Most people do. " "Ay! do they T Well, write; again and say: 'If my wife marry again I bequeath to her the sum of two hundred pounds.' That'll do, won't it, master ?" "Why, that is just doubling the sum she would have received if she remained unmarri ed," said the lawyer. "It generally is the other way the legacy is diminish ed if the widow marries afterward." "Ay! but he who takes her will deserve it Artificial fruits are much used for hat trimmings this season. runisliment In Delaware. The Whipping Pout, Ihe Pillorr and the (lollow. A correspondent who visited George town, Delawnre, writes as follows: About the centre of the town, which numbers between eight hundred and nine hundred inhabitants, stands a re spectable Court House, fronting nirth directly to the southeast stands a 'common-looking pump, as I supposed, but upon more careful examination it proved to be the far-famed whipping post, for which Delaware is so widely reputed. The post in question is an old one, nnd has done good service in its day ; it is about seven feet high. The prisoner is made to hug the post, and his hands are handcuffed to it by means of iron pieces, which firmly hold the arm against the post. A hole in the post allows a place for the pillory, in which, under the law, tho prisoner has generally to stand be fore being flogged, supporting on his neck nud arms a weight of about fifteen pounds. There are but few persons whose constitution can stand this pun ishment one hour nnd. live. Still the people of the town claim these rites of barbarism nre the only remedy they have against filling their jails with a set of worthless rascals who would prefer to let the county support them than to work themselves. Directly iu the renr of the Court House, about one hundred yards, stands the jail, a substantial look ing two-story building, the yard of which is about thirty by forty feet, and is enclosed on three sides with a brick wall sixteen feet high and on the third by the jail building. Within this yard is the gallows erected for the execution of Green, alias Burton. This structure is also worthy of our forefathers, and would have probnbly nnswered excel lently fifty yenrs ngo ns a swift means of transit iuto the next world. It is, however, somewhat behind (or ahead ?) the inventions of the present age. It is made of two unbarked oak saplings, sixteen feet high and sixiuches in diam eter. These nre erected about eight feet apart, and across the top is placed and bolted firmly with wooden bolts an oak log, hewn about six inches square. In the centre of this a large iron hook is placed, to which the rope was tied. Pieces of timber are nailed from the uprights to the jail walls, about two feet distant, about eight feet from the ground. Upon these cross-pieces nre plnced three sixteen feet pine planks, thus forming a platform. In front of this and directly in the centre of the gallows is the trap, which is about two by three feet. Two large hinges attach it to one of the planks forming the platform, and it was supported by three pieces of timber about one and a half inches thick, extending from the ground. -To the centre piece was at tached a rope. At the conclusion of the services and after the cap had been drawn over the face, the two outside posts were removed, and at a given signal the remaining one was suddenly pulled out and Burton was launched into eternity. Political Intrigues in France. Things in France remain stupidly dull on the surface, probably because all parties are working in secret to cir cumvent nnd outwit ench other. One of the fine schemes of the Conservatives is to get up aplcbinciteto decide wheth er the government shall be Monarchical or Republican. They imagine that, if all the Imperialists and Monarchists and anti-Thiers men will unite in voting for the Monarchy, they will find them selves in a large majority, and can set tle the little matter of whether the na tion shall have a boy Emperor or a King among themselves afterward to their entire satisfaction. But already the various factions have begun to count the chickens before the eggs nre fairly laid, and the people who might vote for a Monarchy with one man at the head of it decidedly object to going for a Monarchy in t he abstract, without know ing whether they are to have the old clothes of Louis Napoleon, or a royal commonplace in the person of Cham bord. " Show us the man," they ex claim, very naturally. They don't pro pose to play blind-man's buff any more when a throne is the stake. Meanwhile, M. Thiers has shaken hands with M: Gambetta, and henceforth the Republi cans will be one. This is a decided gain ; and so long as the fire of public danger keeps the Republicans pressed together in a common interest. idea, and policy, meir cause is sale. The Trlson Ship Martrrs. Since 1808 the bones of American soldiers and sailors who died on board the British prison ships have been lying in a vault on Jackson street, Brooklyn, near the Navy Yard, where they had been deposited with due ceremony by the residents and the Tammany Society, or Columbian )rder. As the city grew the walls of the vault were encroached upon, and several futile attempts were made to procure funds and a site for a more suitable monument to the memory of the martyrs. The present Park Commissioners have erected a mauso leum for the remains on the green slope of Washington Park, or Fort Greene, facing Myrtle avenue, and just above tne paraue grounu. ihe structure was erected at a cost of $0,500. The body is of Portland granite, embelished with pillars and fretwork of polished Aber deen stone. It is 10 feet high, 30 feet long, ana lo teet wide. The style is partly Egyptian, ana the general ap pearance is graceful and appropriate, Two wagons and ten laborers conveyed the thirteen coffins from the vault to the mausoleum. Upon each coffin is a plate bearing an inscription. Upon the tomb the following inscription will be out : " Sacred to the Memory of our Sailors, Soldiers, aud Citizeus, who Suffered and Died on board British Prison Ships in the Wallabout during the American revolution. ' A tall Shalt will probably crown the tomb in short time. There are cases in which a man would be ashamed not to have been imposed upon. There is a confidence necessary to human intercourse, and without which men are often more injured by their own suspicions than they could be uy tne pernuy oi ouiers. Onr Home Department. What n Western Editor n)i of I lie Local Depart incut of a Newspaper. The local news is the most important feature of a newspaper, says Colonel Calkins in his address before the Wis consin Editorinl Convention, for the vnst majority of readers. It is like so cial gossip, nnd it hns a pungency and attraction; if well told, which a record of the. most important remote events does not possess. If the reader knows personally all about the facts which are described, so much the better ; for the account of a dog fight which he, him self, beheld, or the report of a meeting which he attended, or in which he par ticipated, will be perused by him with greater inerest thnn he would feel in the most thrilling description by an eye witness of the capture of a Modoc chief tain. A man will read with absorbing interest every line in a description of a fire at which he was present, and the minutest details of which he already knows ; and if he can find an audience to listen, he will read it again to them aloud. If he took part in subduingthe fare, the account will possess a double charm and ravishment, and his eye will kindle, and his cheek will glow as he fights anew in print the battle with the flames. To see in print what the eyes saw occur yields an indescribable pleas ure to the human mind. As we live again in our children, we live over again the eventful moments which the news paper reproduces before us. .Whatever men stop in the street to talk about, or women meet nt the tea table to discuss, is of sufficient importance for the local columns of the newspaper. I have seen a local editor, (who did not understand his business), enter breathlessly the office in which he was employee, and describe orally, with animated elo: quence, an event which he had seen, or which rumor had conveyed to him, and which he would never think of writing up for the paper, until told to do so. We hnve also, all of us, known men who would have been invaluable journalists if they had possessed tho faculty of writing out their observations for the printer ; for they find out what every body else wants to know all about, and they will tell the news of the town by the hour to curb-stone listeners ; but they fail to comprehend the duty, or the utility, of puttingwhatthey know where it will do most good. The talk of the streets, the counting-room, the shops and social circles is tho best material for the local editor. The ablest editorial article on the events of peace and war will pass unread, or without comment, whilo a paragraph about triplets born in the humblest neighboring family will be in everybody's mouth. Every man takes a greater interest in the absence of his friend or acquaintance from home than he would in the absenco of the Qneen of Great Britain from her do minions, A bank in New York may be come insolvent and ruin thousands, but we will barely mention it, while, if a store across the street is locked up by the sheriff, we will talk about it all day. An army may be Blain iu battle on the other side of the globe without exciting one of our emotions ; but we will all get up, and run to look, and Vie shaken by a tempest of feeling, if a drunken roust about is knocked down around the cor ner. We feel an interest in the world around us far deeper and more enduring than that which we feel in the world at large. Our home, domestic wonder is the real nine days' wonder. This qual ity in human nature gives to the local department of the newspaper au attrac tion, if it is well edited, which no other department caD acquire. Young Men and Marriage. The Rev. Howard Crosby, D. D., in an article discussing the obligations and duties of young men, uses these words: " The true girl has to be sought for. She does not parade herself as show goods. She is not fashionable. Gen erally she is not rich. But, oh ! what a heart she has when you find her so large, nnd pure nnd womnnly ! When you see it you wonder if those showy things outside are really women. If you gain her love, your two thousnnd are a million. She'll not ask fpr a car riage, or a first-class house. She will wear simple dresses, and will turn them when it is necessary, with no vulgar marnificat to frown upon her company. She'll keep everything neat and nice in your sky parlor, and give you such a welcome when you do come home that you'll think your parlor higher than ever. She'll entertain true friends on a dollar, and astonish you with a new thought of how very little happiness depends on money ! She'll make you love home if you don't you're a brute aud tench you how to pity, while you scorn, a poor fashionable society that thinks itself rich, and vainly tries to think itself happy. Now don't, I pray you, say any more "I can't afford to marry." Go find the true woman and you can. Throw awny that cigar, burn up that switch cane, be sensible yourself, and Beek your wife in a sensible way. Tho French Indemnify to Germany. Here is the briefest statement of the French indemnity payment that has yet been made public. The Journal Offi ciel, the French Government news paper, declares that of the three milli ards which remained to be paid Ger many, one was entirely discharged last autumn. The second has been already paid. The third and last milliard (the fifth of the entire indemnity) will be delivered to the German Treasury in four equal payments on the 5th of June, 5th of July, 5th of August and 5th of September of the present year. In return, the Emperor of Germany has engaged to evacuate, on the 5th of July next, the four departments Vosges, Ardennes, Meuse and Meurthe-et-Moselle as well as the fortress and arondissement of Belfort. The evac uation is to be affected within four weeks from that date. As a pledge for the two last monthly payments, the fortress of Verdun and the military district around will alone continue to be occupied until the fifth of September. They shall be evacuated within two weeks from that date. Trimmings of galloon and lace em- I broidered with jets, are much worn. The Sliah nnd His People. The Shah of Persia has arrived in England. Extensive preparations were made forhisroception, aud Great Britain proposes to show Nassr-ed-Din the full glory of her kingdom and the extent and Bources of her prosperity. He goes to Buckingham Palace, where ho and his suite will be accommodated. There will be a grand review and a march through Londcn, which last is really the most effective means of impressing the bhah with the force at the command of the Queen. No city in Europe can turn out so large a crowd, and London is but a fraction of England. The Persian King will visit Manchester and Birmingham, and there behold some what of tho impulse which labor gives to empire. There is deep political significance in the visit, so far as Russia and England are concerned and the Government of each of these countries is exceedingly anxious to secure the good will of the Prince, not because he is powerful, but because he stands closely related to their dominions in Asia, and because Persia is a field boou to be opened to railways aud manufac tured goods. The Shah has come with a liberal purse. He has some $20,000, 000 put by for his traveling expenses. These, however.are borne chiefly by the Governments to which ho pays visits. He will, doubtless, scatter largess with a liberal hand, aud make many pur chases. The Shah wears a robe which is valued at 1,000,000. Ho brought an assortment of wives with him, but they were too much for his Persian temper after ho reached Europe, so he sent them all back from Moscow, to raise a breeze in the. harem, and vilify their absent and unreasonable lord. The absence of these gentle dames will be a relief to the good Victoria, who has a keen sense of propriety. Tho Shah is very rich ; he has absolute sway, and he absorbs the revenues of the country and adds them to his private fortune. His poor subjects are crushed by poverty and public burdens, and within the last two years thousands of them have perished from famine, while luxurious rulers havo added to their hoarded treasure and paid no heed to the want nnd misery which devastated the King dom. The Shah, in August, 1871, re turning to the capital, was met at the gates by "thousands of howling wo men," who were.dispersed by the police. He issued an 'order that bread should be sold at a nominal price, but the bread did not come. He then ordered the Vizier of the town to bo put in chains, tho chief baker to be'eut open, and the other bakers to be roasted in their ovens. Strange as it may seem. bread by this means, was made no cheaper, and now the Shnh is wander ing around to see with "how little wis dom other lauds nre governed. How the Probabilities are Cast. At the seventy odd stations in the United States the observations nre mnde six times daily with each of the instruments named m regular succes sion nnd at the same moment of time. The first is mnde nt seven o'clock iu the morning and tho last at ten o'clock nt night, three of which nre forwnrded to the central office at Wnshington, from which the "probabilities " are cast at 10 a. u., and 1 a. m., constituting the morn ing nnd evening weather reports. Ihe headquarters here nre connected with all the telegraph companies, and work at stated tunes in long circuits in re ceiving cipher messages. The cipher system insures accuracy and brevity one word giving the degree and fraction of a degree of temperature instead of being fully written out nnd is used to make up the meteorological condition of all the stations. These cipher mes sages commence to come from five to eleven p. m., nnd when finished are ta- ken iuto a trauslating-room and read aloud, when three clerks write them out from memory, so familiar have they become with the cipher, one on a rough map and two on the main tout bulletins, When these reports are all noted on the map the condition of the thermometer, the state of the barometer, the direction of the wind, the condition of the heavens, tc, a careful study of the entire country is made by Lieutenant Craig or releasors Abbee and Maury, and the synopsis of the weather made tor the riew England, Atlantic, aud Middle, and the Western aud Gulf States for the past twenty-four hours and the probabilities indicated for the next eight hours. These are in turn placed on bulletin-maps and are tele graphed broadcast to tho daily papers by the Associated i'ress. Execution of a Woman for the Murder of Her Husband. At Sarina, Canada, Mrs. Workman was hanged in the jail-yard for the mur der of her husband iu February last. Great exertions were made to procure a commutation of her sentence, but with out avail. The unhappy woman, up to the time of her execution, deolared that she did not intend to kill her husband and that his death was the result of a drunken brawl. She could not regard herself as guilty of murder. She as. cended the scaffold with a firm step, and manifested fortitude and nerve which astonished all present. After the prep arations were finished, she expressed a hope that her case would be a warning to wives who have drunken husbands, and to husbands who have drunken wives. Rev. Mr. Thompson then utter ed a fervent prayer in her behalf, and with this prayer of faith aud hope on her lips the drop fell, and the poor wo man was launched into eternity. She died almost instantly. An old gentlemen went one day with his gun to shoot partridges, accompan ied by his son. Before they approached the ground where they expected to find the game, the gun was charged with a severe load ; aud, when at last the old gentleman discovered one of the birds, he took a rest and blazed away, expect ing to see the game fall, of course, but not so did it happen, for the gun kicked with so much force as to knock him over. The old man got up, and, while mbbinc t.ViA Hrmrka out of his eves, in quired of his son, "Alphy, did I point th right end oi the gun at tne birds 7 Items of Interest. Trn..t to 41, ;nvi-onn between a iailor IT v ra .uw i . 1 1 . - and a jeweler ? One watches cells, and the other sells watches. fessed to Shack Nasty Jim that he is the real author of "Betsey and I Are Out. pointed to inquire iiito an extraordinary outbreak of typhoid fever in London traced every case to me use oi impure water. Tl,o Intisof.nnTnTnlAil ret.ll .T1 of til wheat crop of California shov an esti mated yield of over 13,000,000 centals. The surplus for export will doubtless be fully as large as that of last year. n;. i71 Mia T.nlrA Chninnlain iron mines yielded 375,000 tons of ore ; 371,474 tons wera extracted from the Missouri iron mountain, and over one million tons were mined in the Lake Superior iron region. Somebody, we suppose, must bear the brunt and be saddled with the re sponsibility of the great Boston fires ; and it seems natural enough that it should be Mr. Damrell, the Chief Engi neer. A petition tor his removal on the ground of incompetency, is in cir culation. Some of our beautiful "Indian" names aro not so romantic as they are BtippOS orl fr ho Konrsfllrrfl Mmmtuill. ill New Hampshire for instance, received its name from an old farmer, named ueze kiah or Kiah Sargeant, who used to ilwell nt its foot. Its Indian name was Cowissewaschook. T hot nld linv. cried Paul Prv to ail o-rnnTTnfnr whom llfl PKllipd nt tllG bot tom of a yawning gulf, "what are you digging there ?" "A big hole," the old boy replied. Paul was not to be put off iu this fashion. "What are you going to do with the hole?" ho asked. " Going to cut it up into small holes, rejoiued the old boy, "and retail them to farmers for gate-posts." It is estimated that the number of miles of railroad in operation in the United States is 68,000; that the cost of the same, on a liberal calculntiou of .30,000 per mile, was $3,400,000,000; that the gross earnings last year were $508,711,200; and that the gross value of the tonnage exceeded ?lo,UUO,OUU,UUU. These means of transportation are the growth of forty-two years, for in 1830 the hrst railroad tracK was laiu. ' Lnme !" sighed Mrs. Pnrtington. ' Here I have been sufferin' the biga mies of death for three mortal weeks. First I was seized with a bleedin' phre nology in the hampshire of the brain, which was exceeded by the stoppage of tho left ventilator of the heart. This gave me inflammation of the left borax, nnd now I am sick with tho chloroform morbus. There is no blessin like that of health, particularly when you're ill.' A common crime in London is to en tice awny children, strip them of their clothing, and then leave them naked in the street. Twelve such cases were re cently heard before one magistrate. In one of them a mother who had hunted frantically through the streets for her child, was so fortunate as to encounter him, at eleven o'clock at night, in the hands of a woman who was dragging him towards Westminster Bridge, ex hausted and stripped of nearly all his clothing. The persevering mother res cued her child and arrested his ab ductor. According to "Burleigh," the way in which Dr. Storrs, of Brooklyn, com menced to preach extemporaneously, was this: Hiscongregation, though small, was respectable and wealthy. He found new men coming to isrookiyn ami draw ing large congregations, nnd he said that something must be the matter with himself if he could not draw. He re solved on a new departure. He laid off his gown, left his notes on his study table, and went at it. The experiment more than met his expectations, and ho is now one of the most effective preach ers in the country. Freemasonry has gained a somewhat notable success in Brazil, where the government has warmly espoused the order in its conflict with the priests nnd clerical party of the country. The Premier gives assurance that the Ma sons will be hereafter relieved of religi ous persecution. South America, the least enlightened quarter. oi xne civil ized world, hns for many years been the only place where an open contest has been waged with the Masonio order, aud it is probable that the clerics have begun to see the futility of any further warfare of that kind. Vegetable Perfumes aud Health. An Italian professor has made some very agreeable medical researches, re sulting in the discovery that vegetable perfumes exercise a positively healthful influence on the atmosphere, converting its oxygen into ozone, and thus increas ing its oxydizing influence. The es sences found to develop the largest quantity of ozone are those of cherry, laurel, cloves, lavender, mint, juniper. lemons, fennel, bergamot ; those that give it in smaller quantity are auise, nutmeg, and thyme. The flowers of the narcissus, hyacinth, mignonette, heliotrope, and lily of the valley de velop ozone in closed vessels. Flowers destitute of perfume do not develop it, and those which have but slight per fume develop it only in small quantities. Reasoning from these facts, the pro fessor recommends the cultivation of flowers in marshy districts, and in places infested with animal emanations, on account of the powerful oxygen influence of ozone. The inhabitants of such re gions should surround their dwellings with beds of the most oderiferous flow ers. - A Boy Mubdekeb. Vicksburg fur nishes one of the most startling cases of precooious crime upon record. A boy, six years of ago, living with his parents near that city, plainly showed Lis jealous anger at the advent of an ra fant in the family, and in his childish way brooded over his fancied wrong. Taking advantage of the absence of his parents the other day, he killed the in fant in its cradle by crushing its skull with a brick and then managed to drag the body some distance from the cabin, where he hid it under some bashes.