' . - . . - i ' HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NlU DESPERANDUJI, Two Dollars per Annum. tl!" i 1 , , . , m - i ' . - I I I" ' " ' ""''",. . . . ii . - .... - .... . .- wi ,1 . I I I, . . - ! H II . . . , . - W VOL. IV; RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA!, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1874. NO. 12. S My Good-for-nothing. What mre yon good for, my bravo little man ? Answer that question for me if yon can You, with fingers as white as a nun, You, withyoar ringlets as bright as the sun. AU the day long with your busy contriving, Into all miBchlof and fun you are driving j Bee if your wise littlo noddle can toll lYhat you are good for now ponder it well. Over the carpet the dear little feet Came with a fatter to climb on my seat ; Two merry eyes, full of f rplio aud glee, Under their lashes looked up unto me ; Two little hands prosmng soft on my face, Drew me down close in a loving embrace ; Two rosy lips gave the answer so true " Good to love you, mamma t good to lovo you !' THE CIRCUIT-RIDER. He Meet a the Champion of Satan on their Own around and Demolishes Them. Eggleston tolls the story of a cironit- rider in the early days of the West, who was evidently a man suited for the time and the occasion : Magruder, the circuit-rider, had been so pleased with his success in organi zing a class in the Hissawachee settle ment that he resolved to favor them with n Sunday sermon on his next round. . He was accustomed to preach twice every week day and three times on every Sunday, after the laborious manner of the circuit-rider of his time. And since he expected to leave Ilinsa wachee as soon as meeting should be over, for his next appointment, he de termined to reach the settlement before breakfast, that he might have time to confirm the brethren and set things in order. When the Sunday set apart for the secona sermon drew near, Morton, with the enthusiastic approval of Captain Lunisden, made ready his tin horns to interrupt the preacher with a serenade. But Lumsden had other.plana of which Morton iiaa no knowledge. John Wesley's rule was. that ' preacher should rise at four o'clock and spend tho hour until live in reading, meditation, and prayer. Five o'clock found Magruder in the saddle on his way to Hissawa?hee, reflecting upon the sermon ne intended to preach. When be had ridden more than an hour, keen ing himself company by a lusty singing ci nymns, no came suddenly out upon ino Drow or a ma overlooking tuo His sawachee V alley. The gray dawn was streaking tuo clouds ; the pre.icb.er checked his horso and looked forth on tho valley just disclosing its salient features in the twilight, as a General looks over a battle-field before the en gagement begins. Then ho dismount eo, ana, Kueeiiug npon the leaves, '.f.CV , prayed with apostolio fervor for victory , , over " the hosts of sin and the devil.'" ''. ; When at last he got into the saddle ( ,' ; . - again the winter sun was sending its . -. : first horizontal beams into his eves, and all the eastern sky was ablazo. Ma . gruder had the habit of turning the . wnoie universe to spiritual account. and now, as he descended the hill, he made the woods ring with John Wes leys hymn, which might have been composed in the presence of sneli a scene. O sun of rightooubuoes, arise With healing in thy wing ; To my diseased, my fainting soul, Life and salvation bring. .These clouds of pride and sin dispel, i By thy all-piorcing boain Lighten my eyes with faith ; my heart With holy hopes inflame. By the time lie had finished the sec ond .tanzo, the bridle path that he was following brought him into a dense .. forest of beech and maple, and ho saw walking toward him two stout men, none other than bur old acquaintances, . Bill McCoukey and Jako Suiger. " Looky yer," said Bill, catching the preacher's horso by the bridle ; "you git down 1 "What for?" said Magruder. ' We're going to lick you tell you promise to go back and never stick j our head into the Hissawachee Bottom agin." " But I won't promise." " Then we'll put a finishment to ye." " You are two to one. Will you give me time to draw my coat ?" Wal, yes, I 'low we will." The preacher dismounted with quiet deliberation, tied his bridle to a beech t limb, oflVring a mental prayer to the God of Samson, and then laid his coat across the saddle. 'My friends," ho said, "I don't want to whip you. I advise you now to ic uie Bioun. as aa American citizen, i nave a right to go where I please. My iuiuur was a revolutionary soldier, aud menu io ngni lor my rights." bhet up your jaw!" said Jake, swearinc and aDnroachino' th "nrenMi. ' from one side, while Bill came up on the other. Magruder was one of those short, stocky men who have no end of muscular force and endurance. In his unregenerate days he had been celebra ted for his victories in several rude en counters. Sever seeking a fight even then, he had, nevertheless, whpn m. ambitious champion came from afar for ine purpose of testing his strength. felt himself bound to "give him what he eame after." He had now greatly the advantage of the two bullies in his Knowledge of the art of boxing. T" . . "T l 11 n . ... jjeioro jaKe naa nnishea Jus pre liminary swearing tne preacher had surprised him by delivering a blow that knocked him down. Bnt Bill had taken advantage to strike Magruder heavily on the cheek. Jake, having felt the awful weight of Magruder's fist, was a little slow in coming to time, and the preacher had a chance to give Bill a most polemical blow on his nose ; then turning suddenly, he rushed like a mad bull upon Sniger, and dealt him one tremendous blow that fractured two of his ribs and felled him to the earth. But Bill struck Magruder behind, knocked him over, and threw himself upon him after the fashion of the West ern free fight. Nothing saved Magru der but hi immense strength. He rose right up with Bill upoa him, and then, py a aeit use of his legs, tripped his antagonist and hurled him to the ground. He did not dare take ad yentugeof his fall, however, for Jake had regained his feet and was coming np on lum cautiously. Bat when Sniger saw Magruder rushing at him again, he made a speedy retreat into the bushes, leaving Magruder to fight it out with Bill, who, despite his sorry looking nose, was again ready. But he now ' fought shy," and kept retreating slowly backward and calling out "Oome up on him behind, Jake I Come up be hind 1" But the demoralized Jake had somenow got a superstitions notion that the preacher bristled with fists be fore and behind, having as many arms as a Hindoo deity. Bill kept backing until he tripped and fell over a bit of brush, and then picked himself up and made off, muttering : " I ain't a-goin to try to handle him alone I He must have the very devil into him I" About nine o'clock on that same Sun day morning, the Irish schoolmaster, who was now boarding at Goodwin's, and who had just made an early visit to the Forks for news, accosted Morton with : ' An' did ye hear the nooze. Moirton ? Bill Conkey and Jake Sniger h'.-v had a bit of Sunday morning ricre ation. They troid to thrash the pray cher as he was a-comin through North's Holler, this mornin' ; but they didn't make no allowance for the Oirish blood Magruder's got in him. He larraped 'em both single-handed, and Jake's ribs are cracked, and ye'd lawf to see Bill's nose ! Captain must a had some proi vate intherest in that muss : hey, Moir ton?" " It's thunderin' mean," said Morton; "two men on one, and him a preacher ; and all I've got to say is, I wish he'd killed 'em both." ' " And yer futur father-in-law into the bargain? Hey, Moirton? But fwat did I tell ye about Koike ? The pray cher's jaw is lamed by a lick Bill gave him, and Koike's to exhort in his place. I tould ye he had the botherin' sperit of prophecy in him." The manliness in a character like Morton's must react, if depressed too far ; and ho now notified those who were to help him interrupt the meeting niuD ii any disturbance were made he should take it on himself to punish the offender. What We Eat. Sovcr. the culinarv anthnrif.v. Mr. the cook of the London Reform Club, and a great artist in his line, goes into mis sort oi calculation in one of his books the " Modern Housewife" and obtains results startling, if not alarming, to persons who had never looked at the subject from an arithnieti cal point of view. To take a boy of ten years to the top of a hill, as he takes his mythical personage, and surround him with the objects thut in the course or iiis lifetime he will have to devour, may be truly described as appalling. iirst there are 30 oxen, then 200 sheep, 100 calves, 200 lambs, 00 pigs, 1,000 fowls, 300 turkeys, 263 pigeons, 140 rjounds of salmon, 120 pounds of usu, au.uuu oysters, 0,443 pound weight of vegetables. 243 pounds of butter, 24,000 eggs, 4 tons of bread about 3,000 gallons of tea and coffee! besides tons of fruits, barrels of sweet meats, and hogsheads of wine. This is, after all, only an outline, and Soyer assures his readers that. 30 far from exaggeration, he has, from experience and observation, made up a scuie oi ioou lor me aav lor a beriod oi sixty years, it amounted to 3a tons weight of meat, farinaceous food. auu vegetaoies. Tins statement can neither be denied nor affirmed without going into the statistics, but it is parti ally corroborated by a gentleman who states that for fifty years he has eaten two eggs tor breaklast, making 730 per annum, or a total tor half a century of 46,500 eggs. This goes for a period of only fifty years, 12,500 better than Soyer, and does not provide for the quantity eaten in puddings, cakes, des serts, aud the like. Where does it all come from ? A Brutal Bigamist. A coach-driver named Gustave Goethe, a native of Prussia, was placed on trial in iew lork city for biganiv. District Attorney Rollins claimed that the prisoner had been married on the 13th of February, 1809, to Sophia Zim merman, and had subsequently married a woman named Uabettd Wagner, dur lug the lifetime of his first wife. The jury, without leaving their seats, found Uoethe guilty, and he was sentenced to four years in State prison, the Reoorder stating that he believed the prisoner naa peen guuty oi perjury as well as Digamy, un being taken to the pns oner's box, Goethe stood in front of his first wife, Sophia, who had testified against him, and struck her a heavy uiow in tne face witn ins clenched nst, The brutal ruffian was immediately overpowered by the court officers, and by direction of the Recorder was again placed at the bar. For the cowardly assault on his wife, the Recorder sen tenced the prisoner to an additional year in State prison, making the sen tence five years' imprisonment. On his way to the Tombs, Goethe stated to the officers in charge that if he ha4 had a pistol ho should have shot the Re corder. The Flying: Shilling:. This is purely a slight-of-hand trick. but it does not require muoh practice to pe able to do it well ana cleverly. Take a shilling between the forefinger and thumb of the right hand : then bv a rapiu iwisi oi tne nnger, twirl the coin by the same motion that you'd spin a teetotum. At the same time rap idly close your hand, and the coin will - ; a . . i n . . .... disappear up your coat sleeve. You may now open your hand, and, much to the astonishment of your audience, the coin will not be there. This espeoial trick may be varied in a hundred ways. One plan is to take three shillings, and concealing one in the palm of your left hand, place one of the others between the thumb and forefinger of the ri?ht hand, and the third between the thumb aud forefinger of the left hand. Then give the coin the twist already de scribed, and closing both hands quick ly, it will disapper up vour sleeve, and the left hand being unclosed, it will be louna to contain two shillings. Thus you will make the surprised spectators believe that yon conjured the coin from your right hand to you left. The Heart Not Essential to Circulation As you well know, Dr. Brown-Se qnard tells us, the blood circulates from the arteries to the veins, and Prof, Draper, of New York, has perfectly wen proved mat tne chemical changes ocourring in tissues must be a cause of activity of the circulation. But there are many other facts besides those he knew, which show that wheu we irri tate a nerve, if there is more blood in the part where that nerve goes, it is not because that nerve goes to blood vessels, "and affects them by dilating tuem, put pecause of the direct trans. formation of nerve force into chemical force producing an attraction of blood A great many facts indeed show ns that circulation will go on without an im pulse from tho heart. In plants the circulation proceeds from chemical changes without any heart at all. with out any power that pushes the liquids forward. In foetal monsters in our own species there are cases in which the monster had no heart, and in which tho comma nication of its circulatory system with that of the almost half child with which it was connected, was too slight for tho circulation to go on if we were to look upon tne heart as tho only organ pro ducing circulation. Besides, in em bryos, in animals at a certain degree of tneir development lorm tne ovum, cir culation takes place while the heart is not yet formed. And we may say that instead of tho heart being the only organ mat serves lor oirouiation, that, on the contrary, the heart is formed by circulation. The circulation helps to give it a form of organization, and helps to give it a function when it has accomplished its organization. I long ago made an experiment with frogs, consisting in making a section of tho ventricle of the heart, dividing it so as to do away with more than two thirds oi the length of that part. After a time a clot is formed there which unites the lips of the cut, and the circn lation goes on with a part of the ven tncle, which is so small indeed that there is hardly an impulse coming from it. 'Ihere is a passage, however, for tne Diooa mere, and that is all that is necessary, that the great cause of cir culation, which is attraction, may be accomplished in every tissue through life. Even in our own species it has been my lot to see ono case, that of a lady, in which the heart was almost en tirely destroyed by fatty denosition. Tho heart in this case had very litte action,- if any, but still lif o persisted for some time. In appearance there was a state oi health, until suddenly one day death occurred. There is en record the case of a man who for three days had had no beating whatever of the heart and who, never theless, had had a circulation. He had had no pulse the beating of the pulse depending on the heart but the blood was circulating, and life was maintained all the time. Therefore, although I would not say certainly that the heart is a useless organ, it is certainly by far less important than it was considered to be, a great deal of the work of circu lation being due to the attraction that tissues exert on the blood. That at traction is increased by certain nerves, and thereby circulation is considerably increasedTsometimes locally to a most wonderful extent, by an irritation of the nervous system. In cases of inflamma tion we see this very plainly. Where tho inflammation exists inside of the cranium, we find that the carotid artery beats with tremendous violence. Some times we find an enormous increase of pulsation in tho arteries of the temple. As we find in such cases that the heart, as indicated by the pulse in tho wrist, is not beating with much more force than usual, we must conclude that there is considerable irritation and an inflammation in the membrane of the brain or the brain itself. Messages from the Moon. Of all the heavenly bodies, tho mnnn is the nearest to us and the most easy to observe.- It is especially interesting as the boundary between astronomy and meteorology; everything above the moon is in the celestial heavens, and consequently belongs to the former science ; everything below the moon is the terrestrial fikv in tliA and therefore lies within the domain nf the latter. The connection between the moon and the earth is closer than is of ten suspected. If a line be drawn frnm the center of the earth to the center of tne moon, there lies in it a point (much nearer to the moon than to us) where the moon's and the earth's attraction on any material object are exactly equal If the object be removed a little toward us, it will fall upon the earth ; a little the other way, it will be drawn towards me moon. Arago has calculated the toice necessary to shoot a bodv fmm the moon to reach this intermediate point of equilibrium, and finds it to be py no means an impossible or unattain able force. Consequently, it is not im. probablo that many (though perhaps nut mi oi iuo meteoric Btones that fall. . . , . ..lit i ii.. a." t . . : . are sent hither from the morn. It would bo very possible for an inhabitant nt tho moon, supposing such inhabitant to exist, to keep up a daily communication witn me eartu py means or proieotilH. For ns to reply to tho correspondence, would bo immensely more difficult. The nearness and conspiouousness of the moon have caused the human race from tho highest antiquity, to attribute to it great innuenoo on tho variation of tho weather. A Land of Milk and Honey, A San Diego editor savs that at the risk of being pronounced a falsifier by Eastern people, ho will state a few facta illustrating tho fertility of Southern California. He. had seen a mass of wheat, the product of a single grain, on which he counted one hundred and nineteen stalks. It was taken from tho ground before being allowed to matnm. otherwise each stalk would have borne at least sixty grains, being a yield of over seven thousand grains from one. Two years ago a Mr. Kimball planted some olive cuttings, which have beobme thrifty trees, the height of a man. Bees filled an empty hogfchead in a back yard with honey, and the alfalfa-fed oows yield milk enough to fulfill the scriptural requirements of a promised land. . , , , , Tho Wrong Ticket. ' Calvin Luther has been a resident of Whitehall for many years. He has spent probably more money for lottery tickets man any man in t'hiiadelphia. Week after week his earnings have gone to the venders of lottery tickets. Cal vin has pinched himself and family to satisfy his passion. Once in a while, as if to tempt him on, the Fates have favored him, and a small prize has been drawn. . Large sohemes have been mailed Jiim regularly, and the next mail would take back an order lor tickets. His hopes have been great, alwavi feeling, and telling those who expostu lated with him about the evil, that he knew he would draw a big prize yet. iiast summer an astroiogist came along. She was tho seventh daughter or a seventh daughter. Calvin over heard a conversation about her remark able powers. He made up his mind to consult her about a lucky number in a lottery of which ho had received the scheme that day. Calling at her board. ing-house, ho was shown to her room Going into a trance, she informed Calvin that, "t if he would say nothing to any ono, but go home and think in tently on a number, he would dream of seeing the lucky number on tho person of his wife." Ho was to keep his secret on the subject to himseu for three days. and each night he would have the dream repeated. At the expiration of the three days she told him to go buy tne mimuer ne naa seen. Calvin went away overjoyed. He could Bcarce contain himself, nor wait until night. v . That night he dreamed of seeing two figure 4s. one each side of a large ring worm on his wife's person. He woke next morning nearly beside himself, At night the dream was repeated, the two 4s. being seen on the same place. The following day was a long one to Calvin. The hours passed slowly. He was almost tempted to send and pur. chase the lucky 44. Still he waited, as the astroiogist had told him that he would not get the lucky numbers un less he followed instructions. (The third night arrived, and the dream was repeated. There were those two 4s one on each side of the ring-worm on his wile s person. Calvin arose early the next morning. He telegraphed immediately, asking if No. 44 was sold, if not, his orders were to send it C. O. D. An answer was returned that the lucky number was unsold, and was forwarded according to instructions. The ticket arrived, and was paid for. Calvin could hardly wait till the next day, when the drawing was to take place. Tho day arrived, however, and with it a message to Calvin, which read fis follows; 'No. 404 drew the first prize." ' There," exclaimed the unfortunate man, with a terribly disappointed look. " just my darned luck! 1 left out that ring-worm," Burned to Death, A little boy, aged four years, by the name of Isaiah Roy, whose parents are living aown in mo uiyourn neighbor hood, near the south line of Scott Township, aud some five or six miles southeast of the city, was burned to death, under the most distressing cir cumstances. The little boy, in com. pany with his eider brother, was stand ing by a prairie fire, which had been set out by Mr. Bryant to back-fire around some fencing, when suddenly the wind veered around with a perfect whirl, niid drove the flames iuto his face, setting almost his entire clothing. which was of cotton, on firo. At tho same time the flames and smoke so strangled him that he reeled and fell directly into tho blazing grass. The older boy, with great coolness and pres ence of mind, dragged him out of the fire as soon as he possibly could, and took him to a ravine only a few yards off, and endeavored to extinguish the firo in his clothing by rolling him in tne water. The clothing was of cotton. and so thoroughly and completely ablaze by the time he got him there, that ho did not succeed in doing so un til his entire apparel was consumed and his 6kin burned to one complete blister. The poor little'fellow suffered tho most intense : pain for some two or three hours before death relieved him of his agony. Fort Scott Monitor. Tho Indian Famine. A correspondent, writing from one of the iamine-stricken districts of India, says : It is no easy thing to write co herently with the moan of miserable starvelings constantly in one's ears. Whenever I looked np from tho paper tnero stood or squatted before mo out side the open door of tho tent, some half dozen forlorn, hollow-eyed, emaci ated women begging for food to keep them from starving. If I called for tho chuprassie to "move them on," for io work within sight of them was im po&siDie mey went patiently away wiiu me uuu resignation oi latalists. But no sooner were they gone than otheis came. Lean mothers cam a an d laid down littlo children, that lay prone on tho grass, as if they were dead, for mey were too lar gone in starvation to stand on their wasted little legs, and prayed for a morsel of food to save their little ones. Wretched old women, shriveled and starved almost out of human semblance, tottered over tho grass, to fall prostrate outside the tent, and pray for relief, while their gray hairs trailed among the dust. The air was full of tho dull, monotonous howl in which relief is craved, as a marsh at eventide echoes with the croaking of frogs. Discharged. A Whitehall groceryman marks the rices of provisions on tho covers of his arrets and casks. He had a new clerk the other day who mixed things. He got the cover of the sugar barrel, which was labeled " 9 cents a pound," upon the lard barrel and straightway bean to sell lard at nine cents. The sudden decline in the price attracted all the people in town, and tho clerk thonoht he was doing a big thing until tho pro- Erietor returned, paid him off and told im to emigrate to Troy, where smart people were in demand. Troy Press. I Game f Scotch Billiards. game of shuffle-board is littlo known in this country, and bnt few Americans play it. It is a Scotch amusement, and in principle is identi cal with tho popular out-door game known as ' curling." It is very simple, and therefore easily understood ; but to play it well requires fully as much skill as is called for in tho game of billiards. The only paraphernalia of the game are a long, narrow board, and eight iron disks like quoits. iThe board is usually irom mirty to mirty-nya feet in length, but may bo longer or shorter, as cir cumstances require ; is about two feet in width, and as smooth as glass. prerequisite to its efficiency, however, is mailt must po perfectly level, and is therefore made strong and solid, and seldom less than from four to eight incnes iuick. The iron disks are about three-quar ters of-an inch thick, three inches it diameter, and weigh from a pound and a half to a pound and three-quarters. Four of these are cast with tho letter N on the upper side, and four with the letter O. Tho board is laid on a solid table, at an elevation of thirty-six or forty inches from tho floor, and is surrounded on all sides by a narrow gutter to receive the pieces or disks when they fall. Si inches from each end a straight lino is aescripea across tne board, which serves to mark certain distinctions the players' shots. The gamo is played by two or four persons, but as tho number of nlovers . . makes no difference in the nature of the game, tho explanation will be most readily understood by confining the play to two. Tho contestants take their stand at one end of the board, which has been sprinkled with fino white sand, one with the O disks, the other with" those stamped JN. Tho tirst player sends piece with n glissade down the board striving to propel 'it beyond the lower line. and if possible to makoitovfirhnnc the lower edge of tho board. If his piece remain anywhere on tha lmnrd outside the line, and there be no piece of his antagonist's before it, he soores one. Should his piece lie between the lino and the edge, the same conditions governing, his count is two. Tf his piece hang over the edge, in which case the shot is called a " ship," ho scores three for that pieco ; and so on. Thus it will be seen that tho first object of yiujd in iu unru ms opponent 8 pieces from the board : the second, so to guuru uiu own as to prevent his oppo nent from driving them off. It will readily be understood from this exnla. nation that the highest count that can be made in one inning is twelve ; but it is doubtful whether any suoh soore has ever peen maao in a game between two players of even tho most ordinary A Bohemian of Old. The business of running after nnwa is not of recent creation, it is as ancient as the invention of journalism : the old Bohemian was a Fienchman called ltenandot. m i a j.no mosi emiennt runner after news was named Mathieu Donzelot. other wise called the " Pavement Sinker." In the morning, before leavme his room. the wide-awake Donzelot consulted the sk ies, and a barometer which adorned his Mansard ; then he took his cane and writing-case, saying: "Rami Some will slip to-day under carriage wheels. anu oe crusuea to death. ur else "Stormy weather 1 We shall have to record some cases of mental alienation or of hydrophobia." Or finally uni .i i . y uiuomy i ciouay I jj ine weather lor spleen. Let us make war on suicides 1" Ihere was a not one day on Pan theon place. Donzelot sat down amid a hail of stones, pen in hand, to note aown tne events. One of his frienda happening to bo present, said : " What are you doing here, sir? Run 1 fly!" Donzelot. without listeninc to liim drew his watch, and continued to writ.A down minute for minute tho phases and evolutions oi tne riot. Are you not going to run?" cried anew his friend. God forbid : but since yon are go. ing yourself, oblige me by handing this to my j'ournal ; you will tell them that j. remain on the spot to send tho con tinualion." An hour after, tho disorder was nt. it height ; the authorities and insurgents had come to blows. The National Guard fired, and our Bohemian was struck by a ball. A surgeon hastened to him. " You are wounded ?" said ho. " Yes." replied Donzelot. " and se verely, too, for I cannot write." " Write," abruptly said tho surgeon ; " Don't be in a hurry." replied Don zelot. " Each one to his business ; mine is io relate events. xou will re. place me. Here, write at the bottom this postscript : ' Twenty minutes past 3 p. m. In consequence of tho discharge of mus ketry Dy mo troops, three men were wounded and one killed. Who is tho dead man ?" asked the surgeon. "Myself," replied Donzelot. and he xpirea. What They Wore, Queen Victoria, at her last " draw ing-room," resumed some of her former stateliness in demeanor and appareL She wore a black watered silk dress with a train trimmed with crape, em broidered in black silk and jet ; also a ruby and diamond diadem over a long white tulle veil, and a diamond and ruby necklaoe and brooch, besides a variety of orders. The Princess of Wales wore a dress of white satin with pleatings of satin and ostrich feather trimming ; the train of white satin also, with pleating of satin and ostrich feath er trimming. Her head-dress consisted of a tiara of diamonds, with feathers and a veil. The Duchess of Edinburgh wore a petticoat of white tulle over white silk spangled with silver and striped with wreaths of roses, and a train of the same material trimmed with wreath of roses and pleat of silver striped with bands of silver and roses. Her head-dress waa a coronet of dia monds and rubies, with white feathers and a veiL . Tbe Tho THE ARMY ANTS. How They Travel and How They Snb. Ut on Their Travel! An Interesting Sketch. As a general thing, ants are found in settled communities, which change their habitations rarely, and then for .causes not under their control. A remarkable exception to this rule is found in the ecitons, or army ants of Central Amer ica. These, while existing in thor oughly organized communities, num. bering myriads if not millions, never make permanent settlements, but are constantly roaming about the forests in vast multitudes, scourging tho insect world as the migrating armies of Attila soourgod the less warlike nations of Europe. The traveler's attention is usually called to one of these predatory swarms by the twittering of birds which follow their course to feast on the flying in sects which they scare up. Ap'proach. ing, he will discover a dense body of ants, in a column three or four yards wide and of enormous length, moving rapidly and examining every nook and corner where their game may hido, The captured inseots are speedily torn to pieces and carried to the rear, or to their temporary camp, by relays, of workers. On the flanks ard in advnnce of the main army, smaller columns of skirmishers are thrown out to flush tho insects they are in pursuit of, many of which, in their terror, bound right into the midst of the mam column, to be torn to pieces instantly. The greatest catcues occur in masses of brushwood, Here tho cockroaches, grasshoppers, spiders and other insects take refuge among the branches, while the ants are occupying the ground below. But their security is brief. -In a littlo while ex piorers are Bern up, ionowing every branch and driving the refugees to the ends of the twigs, to fly into tho air and be snapped up by the birds, or drop among the throng of ants below. In this dilemma the spiders alone have any means of escape ; they can sus pend themselves in mid-air and remain in safety until their enemies have re. tired from the bushes and passed on to other conquests. The individuals of this species of ants aro of various sizes, the largest being about a quarter of an inch long, tho smallest less than an eighth of an inch; A much larger variety pursue their prey in a similar manner, bnt vary their tactics some what as occasion demands. When on a general hunt, they spread their columns over a considerable breauth and sweep everything Deiore mem, crickets, grass, hoppers, scorpions, centioedes. wood. lice, cockroaches, and spiders falling utmost certain prey, jiixpioring parties aro also sent up trees to look for nests of bees, wasps, and probablv birds. Tho moment a prize is found the fact is reported to the army below, and a col umn is sent up to take possession. Mr. Belt, to whom we are indebted for these observations, and whose "Naturalist in Nicargua " gives more numerous and valuable additions to tho science of natural history than any book of travel since Wallace published tho "Malay Archipelago," describes these ants as pulling out tho larvas and pupre from tho cells of a large wasp's nest, while the owners were hovering about, pow erless, from tho multitude of their in vaders, to render any protection to their young. When hunting in solid columns, these ecitons were found to be generally, if not always, in search of tho young of another species of ants which make their nests in fallen timber. When log is found, tho column spreads out over it, searching all the holes and cracks, the smallest individuals pursu ing tho unfortunate hypoclineas to tho furthest ramifications of their nests. The invaded ants rush out bearing their young in their jaws, and aro despoiled oi mem so quickly that it is quite im possible to see how it is done. The ecitons do not harm the mature hypo clineas, caring only for the larva) and pupa?, which are hastily borne to tho war of their column. What ..they do with their plunder finally does not ap pear. It would seem that they cannot rear tho young hypoclineas for slaves, as certain northern ants do with their prey, since no mention is made of any such addition to the membership of their communities. hen marching, these eciton armies appear to bo directed by numbers of individuals, of a larger size and a lighter color than tho regular, workers, scattered at intervals of two or threa yards. They stop often, and occasion ally run back a littlo and touch some of tho other ants with their antennas, as though giving orders. At the head quarters thero aro individuals of still greater size and more ferocious aspect, whioh soon make any one molesting tho nest acquainted with tho efficacy of their enormous jaws. The temporary resting places of these ants are usually in hollow trees or nnderneath large fallen trunks that offer suitable hollows. One which Mr. Belt found in a hol low log, open at the side, must havn contained a cubio yard of ants clustered in a dense mass, like a swarm of bees. And these were but a part of the whole community, as many columns were out side, some bringing in tho pupee of other ants, others tho legs and dissected bodiea of insects captured on their foray. These incomers proceeded di rectly into the. interior of tho living mass through tubular passages, which were kept open just as though it were formed of inorganio materials. Like the bunting races of mankind, these predatory swarms are compelled to make frequent removals to new hunting grounds. The migratory columns are easily known by all the common work era moving in one direction, tho larvaa and pupa) of the community being carefully carried in their jaws. many observations and experiments were made by Mr. Belt, testing the in dividual intelligence of these wonderful creatures. Though inferior in some respects to ants which hunt singly, he does not hesitate to place them at the head of their order for intellectual and Bocial development. The most extensive Limburger eh pen faotory in the country ia said to be in Scott county, Minnesota, It uses the, milk of one hundred and twenty cows. Items of Interest. Twenty-six chairs in the United States Senate are to be vacated within a year. Mental pleasures, unlike those of the body, never coy, and are increased by repetition. A man may bo great by ohance, but never wise and good without taking pains for it. It ia now quite tho fashion for rich women in Boston to remember their pastors in their wills. Arthur Orton has become very de vout. He is an assiduous worker, and still asserts that he is Sir Roger. Throw life into a method, that every hour may bring its employment and every employment have its hour. Tho liberty to go higher than wo are is given only when we have fulfilled the duties of our present sphere. Tho wish of most people is for a for tune and Dothing to do. How fully men are punished when it is realized. Faith which works by fear only leads to a selfish, dishonest repentance, if to any, and leaves the soul at the gates of death. In weighing the characters of men wo must penetrate the envelope of affec tion and assumption which many ha bitually wear. Scoff net nt tho natural defects of any which are not in their power to prevent. Oh I 'tis cruelty to beat a cripple with his own crutches. A woman in Indiana claims a divorce on the ground that hrr husband a mother beats her, and her husband is afraid to interfere. Nature is a frugal mother, and never gives without measure. When she has work to do, she qualifies men for that and sends them equipped. This country sent to England between Jan. 1 and March 31, cheese to the value of $2,610,230 a gain over tho same time last year of 8100,000. A man at Weston. Mo., fired in tho dark at a man who was stealing his corn, and next day the county sheriff waa around with his arm in a sling. The third class ef naval cadets at Annapolis are to be deprived of their vacation this year in punishment for in the dismissal of the ring leader. The worst feature about this crema tion business is that some winter morn ing, in a fit ot philanthrophy, your widow's second husband may empty your ashes on the icy pavement for the beneht of pedestrians. "An ox does not taste as good as an oyster, but it can run twice as fast," was the result of a boy's effort to write a composition on oxen. Another defined panegyric as "something good for a baby when it had the stomach-ache. Tho San Francisco liquor dealers having organized are to raise a large sum to fight against the interference of the crusaders with their customers in the interior and against "local op tion." Both questions are to be combat ed in the courts. As two children were playing to gether, little Jane got angry and pout ed. Johnny said to her, "Look out, J ane, or I'll take a seat up there on your lips." "Then," replied Jane, quite cured of her pouts, "I'll laugh, and you'll fall off." An Alabama nancr reports a curious death of a child. She had been sent out to cut some meat on blocks of wood used for the purpose, and falling asleep was soon covered with red ants which bit and stung her so severely that fever and death ensued. The new style of oath is out. Mrs. Marrowfat ordered her husband to peel the onions for dinner before he left the house, and Mr. Marrowfat, bringing down his fist upon the tablo with much emphasis, observed : " May I bo cre mated, madam, if I do 1" Svlvanua thinks it would be a good thing to say, when the Governor blows np and calls you as obstinate as a mule, ' Tiike enough, when you have an ass for your father." Sylvanus does not mean to try this himself. Ho has no occasion. Any boy who wants it may have it. A Detroit gentleman prides himself on his fine fowls, and his neighbor is nually vain of a fine coach dog. The dog worries tho life out of the chick ens. A few days ago the owner of tho dog received the following note : Friend Yon keep dogs. I keep chickens. If my chickens worry your dogs, shoot 'em." A Mormon Wedding. The latest marriage ceremony, par taking of a wholesale character, at Brigham Young's " Endownment House," in Salt Lake City, is thus de scribed by the Tribune, of that city : The bridegroom came from the rural deersticks,' a youthful saint, filled to overflowing with the nurture and ad monitionof the Prophet Brigham. His prophetio soul informed him that it was not good to be alone, that Ithe dilapi dated kingdom sadly needed building np, that legions of fugitive spirits were hovering about his steps, seeking, with tears in their eyes, earthly tabernacles in which to repose. So he did the best he could do under the circumstances. He selected three tender fair ones, and won them for his bridos. Last Monday the quartet got married. Tho thrice happy groom conducted his bevy of brides to the 'Endowment House,' and the party got sealed on the whole sale plan. Brother Wells was present at the interesting ceremony, and the cockles of his heart warmed toward tho well-doing saint. The President tap ped the Benediot upon tbe shoulder, invoked increase upon his union, and assured him of God's blessing on so de voted an act. The awkwardness of the situation waa apparent when the much married saint attempted to seal the nuptial ceremonies with a kiss all around. Each blushing bride persist ed in receiving the first salutation, and the bobbing of heads was quite lively for a while. The young man gave it up at last, and issued ont into the wicked world with an expression npon his countenance whioh indicated that he -had now got business enough on hand to occupy all Lis leasore momenta," ' t . . .