HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIX. DESPERANDXJM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IV. IlIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1874. NO. 34. Mamie's Kin?. Johnny Mnggins gaved it to me : J oliniiy"B dead yon know i Hot runned over by s engine ?ro8t a year ago. 'ii. iit a week afore it happened 1 Johnny nays : " Look here, Mamie, hore's a ring I bought you Tlay it'd gold, my dear. " Wear it ou your 'gagement finger," Johnny says to me. Thou bin fa:e got rod and emiliu'. . " It's a ploi'go," says ho ; " When we bo'.h get big," he whispered, Stoopiu' to my ear, " Like as not there'll be a weddin', Won't there, Mamie dear ?" Now he's gone I can't help tbinkhV Sometimes in the night That ho ain't eo far off, nnther, Though he's out of eight ; And it worries of me dreadful That this precious thing Won't stay bright far all my rubbin' Toor dear littlo ring ! Johnny's hands was most timeB dirty, And his clo's was, too ; lint his eyes was clear and honest, Lovin' like and truo. There's so many boys that's wicked, Why should Johnny die ? Keeps me winkiu' desp'rit sometimes, Bo as not to cry. When I hoard he'd been runned over I went quickly to see j Got there just in time to hear him Aakiu' after me ; Only just in time to kiss him ; lie looked up and smiled, Then he closed his eyes as peaceful As a sleepin' child. 'Taint no use I can't help cryin'; Oh, I loved him so ! Johnny dear my boy my darlin' Oh, how could he go ? P'raps some time I'll get to heaven ; If I do I'll bring (So's ho'll know hi) little Mamie) Johnny's 'gagement ring. THREE DAYS UNDERGROUND. The sun on Friday, April 2, had risen brightly on the mining-village of Oar bonoir, find the dull and dismal March days, witii their raw, rainy, inclement weather, looked a lone way back since the genial sunshine had brightened our dispositions and dnert our roads. The miners had " struck" the pre vions day, and the inside workings and breakers were deserted, except by the eutrineers and nremen. We that is. tlu- superintendent, the " inside boss," nnd mine engineer or surveyor had decided to take edvautage of the cessa tion of work and make a trip inside, in older particularly to look at one of the "breasts, in which a "roll" had been met, and iu general to view fie appear ance of tiie mine to see that none of the doors had been left open by which the inside air would be vitiated ; for our mines were not free from fire-damp; to observe the timbers, for iu parts of the mine there had been indications of a " squeeze ;" and also to notice the workings of our two-inch steam-pumps, which were strained to their utmost working as they were under the high pressure of ninety pounds of eteam to keep the mines clear of water. Oa the day before, out of curiosity, I had measured the stream they were throwing, and found to my astonish ment that their combined outputs amounted to 3,000 gallons per minute. As our tramp was to be an extended one, over the whole of the mine, which in one direction was driven for more than a mile, and had labyrinthine pas sages that would have sadly puzzled any one not acquainted with the work ings, we took our dinners along in the littlo buckets that miners carry, and also a bottle of oil for the supply of our lamps. The clay previous had been some what on idle one with me, and, know ing the course our trip was to take, I amused myself by taking a little sketch from the larger map of the vicinity of the particular "breast" we intended visiting. I thought nothing of it at the time ; but afterwards, as will be seen, it became of the greatest import ance. We took a walk through the breaker and the outside workings before we went inside. There were the eight boilers working at a pressure of ninety pounds of steam, and trembling with the mighty force within them ; bat of their safety we felt no fear, as they had a few days before been examined by the inspector and pronounced safo to a pressure of 140 pounds to a square inch. A loud hissing sound, like the rush of waters, caused us to tarn suddenly, but it was only the steam blowing through the safety-valve. At last, our examination being completed, we light ed our lamps, climbed into the cage, and gave the engineer the signal to lower us down the shaft slowly. The descent in a shaft is a very pecu liar feeling to those who have never ex perienced it. We have all felt the odd sensation iu the buck and breast when using a forty-foot pole swing. The feel ing there is difficult to describe, but may be said to be as though the breath in your body, instead of making its natural exit, was going from the back of the lungs to the front, and thenoe out through the breast-bone. So with the sensation in descending a shaft. Here it is not only the breath that appears to be leaving you, but the blood, bones, and brain all seem to be trying to escape through the roots of the hair ; a capillary sensation which is anything but pleasant. We made the descent of 857 feet in two and one-half minutes, and ar rived safely at the bottom of the shaft. The working of our mine had been begun on the most scientific principles, bat several layers of hard rock had made the shaft extremely costly ; and the circumstances of the company were somewhat straitened when we had reached the ooal vein of which we were in search. It is generally customary to have a "sump," or chamber for holding wa ter, at the bottom of the shaft, bo that iu case anything should happen to the pumps there will be a reservoir for the mine water to flow into, and which will require some time to fill before the tracks are overflowed and work stopped ; but just below the coal, when the sump was begun, a bed of iron pyrites was met, on which the best cast steel drills made ns impression : and, after a week of utterly futile work, the design of making a sump was aban doned, and a slight roll occurring at some little distance from the bottom of the shaft, the coal was mined therefrom and the cavity thus made was used as a sump, although it only held a few thoa sand gallons of water. We started on our tramp after exam ining the two steam-pumps and noting the number of strokes per minute they were making. The mines were very wet, and little drippers falling from the roof trickled down our backs, causing very unpleasant sensations. We did not find much to complain about in the workings till we came to the point where the squeeze had mani fested itself. Here stout timbers of one foot and a half in diameter had been bent into a bow-like form by the pressure of thousands of tons of super incumbent rock, and the crush was only beginning to make itself manifest. The pructiced eye of the superintend ent, aided by his unerring judgment, soon noted tho points where extra strength was required, and he gave his orders to the " mine boss, who care fully marked them. We now retraced our footsteps, and turning into another gangway, reached the " breast " iu which, the roll bad OO' curred. The pitch, or slope, of the coal-vein was here steep, nearly forty' five degrees, which may be compared to the slant of the roof of an old-fashion ed house, and we m ade our way with difficulty up the narrow man-way, on which steps had been cut in the rocK The lower part of the " breast " was filled with coal which had not been drawn out for several days, being left for the miners to obtain a foothold while " bearing in " on the solid coal above them. The mim-way was a tortuous passage, with barely room for one to crawl through ; but, after a little trouble, we reached tho face of the "breast," and began our observations on the roll, There was no mistaking the fact of its being a " roll ; the top rock had de scended and tho bottom raised till but three inches of ooal were left, and that was bo shelly that it could easily be crumbled between the nngers. The superintendent took out his lit tle pocket-compass from its velvet lined case, and, after poising it delicately be tween his fingers and noting the course of the roll, stated his opinion that it would bemet with in the next " breast," about five feet higher up the pitch than it was in this. We now prepared to de scend, when he suggested that we might as well eat our lunch here, where it was dry, instead of going into the gang. way, where we would find a difficulty in getting a convenient seat. In this we acquiesced, making ourselves as comfortable as we could upon lumps of coal. We opened our cans and but just then a sharp, cracking noise was heard, which brought us all to our feet ; and, following it almost instantly, the roof was seen at a little distance to sway and then to fall, making a draft of .air which instantly extinguished our lamps nnd left us standing, for the mo nient, bereft of speech in the darkness, while the dull, heavy echo reverberated till it was lost in the recesses of the mine. We were, as I said, stupefied for tho moment, but soon recovered our speech and Bens.es and anxiously inquired of each other if any one had been hurt. I answered that I was all right, and asked where the " inside boss " was, for I had not heard his voice. The superintendent said he was standing by him when the fall came ; so we pro duced matches, lighted our lamps, and looked around us. A glance to the left showed us his form, lying insensible, with a cut in his forehead, the dark blotches of coal-dirt on his face con toasting terribly with the waxy color of the skiu, rendered far more ghastly and deathlike by the yellow gleam of the lamps. It was evident that we were fastened in by the fall of ooal ; but that did not concern us greatly, as it was well Known that we were inside, and men would soon be Bent in search of us. But what were we to do with the stunned man, for by this time we had ascertained that he breathed faintly. Though neither of us had the advantage of a medical education, we knew what to do in a caee of this sort, and dampening our handkerchiefs from a little dripper, we laved his temples, and Boon had the satisfaction of observing the return of his faculties. After we had explained the situation to him, which he slowly comprehend' ed, we took counsel as to what were the best means of escaping from our under ground prison. Though we felt certain that it could not be long before parties would be in search of us, yet it was agreed that we should not remain idle, but endeavor to out our way out into some other chamber of the mine. Picks and sbov els were lying around where the miners the preceding evening had leit them, and each taking one of these in hand, we proceeded to tap licbtlv the eoal in order to determine if possible by the sound where the nearest pillar stood, and, therefore, where we would have the least cutting to do. While we were engaged in thus sounding the walls of our prison, a dis tant rumble was heard which caused us to stop short in our labor and look at each other with blanched faces. Our thoughts ran on but one thing the timbers in another part of the mine must have given way and blocked us out completely. We now waited motionless for the gust of air which always follows a fall but as our lamps gave not the slightest nicker, we were entirely at a loss to ao count for it. So puzzled by this collection of mis haps, and wondering how soon they would come in search of us, we con tinued our tapping on the Bide of the " breast ;" but it always gave back the same ringing sound, and that was so guide whatever. Just then the wick of my lamp need ing trimming, I searched in my pockets for a knife, and, feeling a piece of paper, took it out and found that it was tho sketch of thnt portion of the mine. We felt that this little drawing was our salvation, for without it we would have been working blindly. After a close examination of it, we determined j'ust where to start, in order tu out into an air-hole, which was thirty feet away, through solid coal. After having decided upon the spot. we began work immediately. Only one could work at a time, and as we were each to work fifteen minutes, in order to tell when the time would be up, the superintendent looked at his watch. Tho hands pointed to a little after twelve. He said, "I thought it was later, as it must have been almost that wheu wo Degan our dinner." The boss responded, " is it noon, or night ?" Noon, of course ; answered the superintendent. We thought for a time by way of de termining, wheu tho boss said : "Have you a watch-key ?" " Yes." " men wind up your watcn and you can tell." The superintendent did so, and found that his watch was almost run down. We looked at each other in silence. Could it bo that we had been there twelve hours, and no help come to us ? It must be ? It seemed strange that we had not yet felt the pangs of hunger ; but now, our attention being called to the fact that we had eaten nothing all day, we turned toward our dinner-cans with a good appetite. We ate sparingly, how ever, for the reason that the period of our immurement seemed very uncer tain. No thirst was felt because of the dampness of the air in the mine. Thus rein vigora ted, we started again at our work, and ere long had the satisfaction of seeing that we had made about ten feet of progress. While I was resting and waiting my turn with the pick, I heard a confused squealing in the lower part ot the "breast. We stopped work and looked in that direction, and saw, to our as tonishment, rats iu great numbers, making their way through the inter stices of the loose coal. We thought at first that they had in some way ascertained our condition, and intended making a raid on us en masse, but a moment's observation dispelled this idea, for they appeared cowed and frightened, and, instead of showing fight, sought seclusion under lumps of coal. I' or a moment the superintendent looked thoughtful, then grave, then, in atter agony muttered: "the water is rising we re lost I We stared at each other in mute de spair. What the thoughts of the rest were 1 cannot tell, but my own life and actions went into a panorama beforejmy mental vision, oius or omission and commission passed by in a torrent, and my olleuces magnified themselves, and their blackness and size overshadowed the good acts I had done, blotting them our completely. The superintendent, thinking audi bly, murmured, " My wife, my child 1" and we heard a deep sigh from the boss. We turned to look at the latter, and as we did so he fell on his face, the blood gushed from under the bandage in a stream. Hurriedly lifting him we tried to staunch the wound, but in vain; tie it no matter how tightly, the blood oozed through the handkerchief. The condensed air of the chamber forced it from his body, and his face, which had been livid, became pallid and wax-like, and bis pulse ceased to beat. He was dead 1 The superintendent looked at his watch. It had stopped. He shook it and found that it had run down. Had another twenty-four hours passed ? It was insupportable, this death in life, Was there no hope for us ? We refilled our lamps, exhausted the oil in the bottle, and with brains reel ing and blood gushing from our finger ends, again attacked the coal. Hark I Was not that a sound ? We listened and heard it again, and I rap ped back vigorously. It had chanced that, for Borne time previously, I had been trying to learn telegraphy on the Morse instrument, of the operator at our office, and I suppose that, unknow ingly, I, in my tapping, had made use of their signal of "attention." The same familiar tap tap tap tap tap was returned, and I saw at once that my instructor must be among those outside. I rapped : "Is there any hope for us ?" He answered : " We'll try to save you : raincloud burst over the shaft deluging it with water, and one of the boilers shortly afterward exploded, blowing up the engine house." " How did you get in ?" I asked. " We are in an airhole which communicates with the surface." "What time is it?" " Three o'clock, Sunday morning." We had been inside over two days 1 Would we escape t A short silence, and he rapped "How far above the water are you working 1" I turned to look. It was within five feet of us. The condensed air was exhausting our strength ; our lamps gave a final flicker and burnt out; I reached down for water to bathe my throbbing temples and felt something soft resisting. It was the body of the Boss. I drew back with a shudder. A rat crawled up my leg ; it made my blood curdle. I put my hand towards the water again and felt several rats floating ; the air, with a pressure of at least three at moswheres. had killed them. And now we heard the sound of picks and bars on the other Bide. They had Bent outside for them. It re-inspirited us and we worked for life. The water was within three feet of us, They soon signaled from the other Bide that they were going to blast. We await ed the shock and could almost hear the fizzing of the fuse. " Cra sh !" the thunder nearly deafened me. I called the superintendent by name. No answer. I put out my hand to feel him ; he was breathing faintly. I reached down a foot to the water and sprinkled it on his f aoe. He heaved a sigh which, light though it was, sound ed like a deep groan in the thick, heavy atmosphere. I heard the tap tap tap tap tap of "attention," tind tried to answer, but had not enough strength. My face felt nnffusbd with blood, and I could hear the pulsations of my heart. They eeru -d to become more rapid, faster fasVr faster, and I oountod no more. I can indistinctly remember, how ever, a more violent crash, and being violently f iroed through a narrow aper ture. When I recovered my senses and recollection I was in bed, with my gray haired mother bending over me and asking how I felt. I tried to move, but shooting pains went through my whole body. 1 looked at my hands j they were covered with strips of plas ter. I was about to interrogate my mother, when the telegraph operator stepped n. and seeing that I was convalescent, began, without questioning (he always was rather garrulous), to acquaint me with the particulars. lou Bee." he said, "we did not miss you till after the hurry and con fusion inoident to the explosion by which the fireman was killed and the engineer badly hurt was over. Then, in the evening, when aa three of you were missed, they started in search of yon. 1 was away, and uia not return till the evening of Saturday, when i at once ordered a re-search as far as we were able, for the water was not over all the gangways. We supposed that you must have taken refuge In the farther end of the mine, and we went as far as the water would allow us, and were just giving up the search, when I recol lected the air-way, wnere we found you and afterwards heard your picks. You remember the conversation by tele- Bpfcr.. 1 nodded, though 1 could but indis tinctly recall it. Well, then," he continued, "we got as large a force as we could to work, made a blast, and afterwards heard nothing from you whatever. Then we worked on vigorously, and when we thought we had gone far enough, put in a slight blast, which broke a hole, through which a gust of air aud water came, shooting you and the superinteH' dent violently into the water in the air way and extinguishing all our lamps. We brought you to the surface as soon ns possible, carried you with trouble through the crowd for there must have been nearly five thousand people on the ground, as the news spread, and our conversation through the coal had been in every paper in the Union. Intense interest had been excited, and hourly telegrams were sent away from here." I asked about the superintendent. " Ho is able to walk around, but has no remembrance of anything which OO' curred iu those three days." " And tho mining-boss ?" " Poor fellow 1" here he pointed to the graveyard, which was in view of my window. " He weighed but 125 pounds when we found him he must have lost twenty pounds ot blood. I am now twenty years older than when this happened, but should I live lifty more, the remembrance would be ns distinct as it is bow of my Three Days Underground. Josh Billings' Spice Box. Most every one luvs to listen 2 slan der, but thare ain't but few but what despise the author ov it. Without munny, without friends, and without impudence, iz about nz low down in this world az any man can get, and keep virtewouse. After a man has passed the age of 57, about awl that he can find to talk about and brag on iz that he has got more pains and akes than enny of the rest of his nabors. There is nothing that a man is bo certain ov as he is ov what he sees, and yet there is nothing after all that de' ceives him of tener. Beware of the man who is always ready to swop old friends lor nu ones. The dog that will follow every body tin't worth a kuss. When I play whist I alwuzz like a phool for a pardner, for they do hold tucli good hands. 1 have had people set down bi mi Bide and konfidently undertake to explain something to me of great importance, and after talking 34 minutes by the watch, I not only didn't kno what they had been trying to tell but had forgot a good deal that I knew before. There is but little that iz new under the Bun, and what iz am t good for 'iiuch. I kan't tell exactly what's the matter ov me, but I am alwuz just a little shy ov the woman who wears her hair kut short. The great mistake that meny people make is to think that they was made before the world waz instead ov since, The Men Who Do Not Succeed. I confess that increasing years bring with them an increasing respect for men who have not succeeded in life, as those words are Commonly used. Heaven is said to be the place for those who have not succeeded here : and it is sure that celestial grace does not thrive and bloom in the hot blaze of worldly pros perity. Ill success sometimes arises from a superabundance of qualities in themselves good from a conscience too sensitive, a taste too iastiuious, a self- forgetfulness too romantio, a modesty too retiring. 1 win not go bo iar as to say with the living-poet, that " the world knows nothing of its great men," but there are forms of greatness, or at least excellence, whioh "die and make no sign ;" there are' martyrs that miss the palm, but not the stake ; heroes without laurels, and conquerors with out the triumphs. The negroes of McLennan county. Texas, recently passed resolutions more proper in meaning than in lan' guage. They declare that they " have a desire to live where peace and plentv lays at every door, and hopes to see the time come when the lion shall lay down with the lamb in perfect peace." They also register their intention to " indorse good men for representatives. caring nothing of what profession they are, or what party they are, bo, they are good men," " The Steer aud the Cat. A correspondent in Onondaga county has sent us, says the New York Tribune, editorially, an account of a wholly novel and extremely valuable invention for the education of working cattle. Au intelligent young farmer in that county recently went out to try a three yoke team of steers. The nigh steer IU lilt) ill i u ill u y UftC mjf uuwu iiguv iu front of Mr. Jones's house, and noth ing which could at first be devised was of any use at all. All the appliances with whioh the agricultural interests are al ready familinr were exhaustively exper imented with upon that steer. Mr. Jones himself came to help, and be tween them they got the steer out of yoke, so that he should not strangle himself, but he only lay down the flat ter for all that, lie became as nat as a comic newspaper. " Confound him," said the irate owner, " I'd like to drag a cat across him 1" " The very thing," exclaimed the neighborly Jones. " I've got the biggest cat you ever saw." In less than a few minutes Jones was back from his house, bringing with a large, fine-looking Thomas cat, well known to possess a powerful and cultivated voice, of more than usual compass and unsur passed timbre. The cat was put on at the shouldcrd of the steer and drawn steadily and carefully backward and downward. The steer kicked some, but he did not get up, although the cat seemed to know very well what he was put there for. Acain the cat was planted weu ior ward and drawn aft, but the steer paid him no manner of attention, and this or something else aroused the wrath of the cat, for, just as he was putting in his claws for the third drag, he gave tongue if that's a fair word for it in his best and loudest music. The effect was marvelous and will be of great value, for the steer not only sprang to his feet with unexpected agility, but his tail was as stiff as his horns as he dashed wildly away homeward. No trouble at all with him since that, for at any signs of a balk you have only to begin a vocal imitation of that torn cut, and the strength of the yoke and chain is tested instantly. We do not think that any attention need be paid to ob jections to this operation based on the idea that it is an appeal to tne super stitious instincts of the lower classes. It is rather to be regarded in the light of a musical triumph. We have never heard of any extensive employment of the cat as an incentive to exertion, ex cept in tho navy, and even there the one important element of success seems to have been omitted. Beyond doubt, a series of careful experiments with re fractory mules would bo very interest ing, the prospect of a favorable result being very encouraging with a race who have so great an ear for music During a Fire. The New York Times in a review of the Fall River mill fire, and after no ticing the , means of escape offered says : At first sight, one would say tuat au possible means of escape had been pro vided. Probably this was what the owners of the Granite Mill thought about it. But the inqueBt shows that tho fire-ladders on the walls were scarcely used at all ; that the elevator was soon stopped with the machinery, and that the destruction of the only stairway was the cause of a panic that drove the poor creatures out at the win dows or back into the flames. As we have once before had occasion to say, the distressing lesson of this calamity is that no dependence can be placed unon so-called fire-escapes which con sist of iron ladders fixed on the outer walls. If people had their senses about them when a fire breaks out, and other means of egress are cut off, they could calmly and safely descend by the fire-escapes. They do not have their senses about them : tney win not, or cannot, use these ladders, and they per ish in the flames or precipitate them selves headlong from the windows. This was the fact at a disastrous fire in Center street, in this city, not long since, wheu several persons were burned to death, though an iron ladder reaching nearly to the ground was with' iu easy reach. This element of danger, tnen, may as well be taken into account by mill owners and builders. It is all very well to sav that the means of escape were ample had there been no panic. There was a panic, and, therefore, the means were not ample. A panio is precisely the thing tht'.t must be 'provided lor, One stairway inclosed in a tower was not enough for the three hundred oper stives f the uranite Ami. cad ex perience has shown that the other and extraneous provision for egress are next to useless. In the best mills, we are told, three stairways are built for each, and fire-escapes are hxed at each seven' ty-five feet of wall. Men may use these latter women and children scarcely es cape by them. Mystery of the Lakes. Lake Erie is only sixty or seventy feet deep ; but Lake Ontario, whioh is 592 feet deep, is 230 feet below the tide level of ocean, or as low as most parts of the Gulf of St. Lawrence ; and the bottoms of Lake Huron, Michigan and Superior, although the surface is much higher, aro all from their vast depth, on a level with the bottom of Ontario, Now, as the discharge through the River Detroit after allowing for the probable portion carried off by evapora tion, does not appear Dy any means equal to the quantity of water which the three upper lakes receive, it has been conjectured that a subterranean river may run from Lake Superior, by tne nuron. to ljase untario. xnis con jecture is not improbable, and accounts for the singular fact that salmon and herring are caught in all the lakes com' munioating with the St. Lawrence, but no others. As the Falls of Niagara must have always existed it would puz zle the naturalists to say how these fish got into the upper lakes without some Buch subterranean river ; moreover, any periodical obstruction of the river would furnish a not improbable solu tion of the mysterious flax and reflux oi tne lanes. It is a Oerman boast that no Ameri- can, Irishman or Englishman can sell lagei and make it pay, An Authority on Hydrophobia. Dr. Lipntard, who has translated into English an essay on hydrophobia by M. Boulay, says that M. Boulay's expe rieuoe and standing have rendered him an authority upon all veterinary mat ters, and that his paper on hydrophobia was delivered and discussed at the Sor bonne. In this lecture M. Boulay says the best protection is gained from knowledge of the earliest manifestations of the disease. Its nature is unknown ; it is transmissible, but only by inocu lation, and that by a bite. The saliva of the dog and tho oat is the most viru lent, and is so from the moment that the first symptoms show. At first the dog is quiet, sad and taciturn seeking rest but finding none ; the agitation in creases with the disorder, and some times amounts to hallucination in the animal. Through all of this term the dog is submissive to his master, and the obedience sometimes remains nntil death. All are cautioned to beware of sick dogs, and those that are restless and too suddenly affectionate. Mad ness is not always, though usually, ac companied by dread of water, and usually the diseased dog has no appe tite. A depraved appetite is a pretty sure indication. It leads to tearing carpets, biting wood, etc Sometimes the muscles of the iaw are paralyzed, and no dog's mouth should be explored for the cause, not even when he seems to be removing some obstruction from the throat. Blood-stained vomiting is an indication. A hoarse, low, pro longed bark is another ; though there is a dumb rabies. The nervous sensi bility is weakened ; the sight of an other animal of the same species pro duces a paroxysm, and other animals share this, but in the dog it expresses the secret fact finally. Sometimes the afflicted dog deserts, and if he does so his caresses are to be avoided when he returns. A long time may elapse be tween inoculation and manifestation. When. the rabies is fully developed the dog is excited aud ferocious, with spells of insensibility ; other dogs flee ; the mad dog escaped, at first runs naturally, attacking any life he encoun ters ; then staggers, exhausted, and is not dangerous unless provoked. He dies from slow paralysis and asphyxia. If foreign matters, like wood, glass, iron and rags are found in the stomach after death, it is safe to believe that the animal was mad. A rabid cat is more danererous and ferocious, but the cat is less liable to hydrophobia than the dog, and usually runs away. In five years 3U0 persons were bitten in forty-nine French departments, and 129 of those bitten died, while 124 es caped disease, and sixty-eight results were not known. A majority of those bitten were children, as were a majority of those surviving. Of these, eighty- nine cases occurred in the spring, sev enty-four in summer, Bixty-four in the autumn aud seventy-fivo in winter, showing that the disorder is common to all seasons. The term of inoculation was under Bixty days in seventy-three of 106 observed cases, and shows al most a certainty of escape after ninety days. In ninety cases death resulted within four days seventy-iour times, and was delayed beyond that but six teen times. Death was the invariable result when the bite was complete. The actual cautery or burning with gunpowder or some other caustic im mediately, is tne oest preventive; washing, pressing the wound to draw out the poison, while tying a ligature tightly above it, is the must efficient treatment ; and alter tnis any approved course can be employed. The subjeot is of so much moment that this expert monograph, though not all that could be desired, is welcome. The Beverages of the Day. Throueh a recent convert to the tem perance cause, the ingredients of whioh some of the spirituous and malt liquors, so-called, are composed, are given to the public, to wit : Bourbon or rye whisky is manufac tured from hicrh wines, commonly call ed fusel oil whisky, made to-day and drank three days after. It also con tains vineear. syrup, oil of bourbon, French coloring, bluestone, and other poisonous chemicals. It costs 80 cents to SI a gallon, and retails ior socffl&o a eallon. Cognao brandy is made irom a rencn or Cologne spirits, burnt sugar, oil of cognao. vinegar, bluestono, Jamaica rum, honey, and aloes. It costs $2 a eallon. and retails from So to $10 a trillion. Irish or Scotch whisny is made irom Canada highwines, or new distilled whisky, one week old, saltpeter, fine suit, essence of oil or Scotch or Irish whisky, fusel oil, syrup, bluestone, &t. Croix rum. some imported Irish or Scotch whisky for flavor. It costs $1.50 and retails for So a gallon.. What sells for the best Holland gin is made from French spirits, water, oil of lumper, syrup, white wine vinegar bluestone, JNew England rum, peacn pits, with some imported gin for flavor. Old Tom gin is made from the same ingredients, but double syrup is added to make it sweeter. It costs Sl.za a erallon. and retails for $5. It is also bottled as a medicine, and sold for the kidney disease. Jamaica and at. Uroix rum is made of double refined highwines, Frenoh coloring, oil of rum, fusel oil, vinegar, bluestone, burnt sugar, molasses syrup, with some imported Jamaica, Cuba, or St. Croix rum for flavor, aiurn, aiops, and prune luice, Stock ale or porter is diluted with oil of vitriol, stryohnine, and aqua fortis to maKe it Keep, new aie it uuuteu wnu oil of vitriol and damaged molasses, Lager beer contains a little malt, plenty of water, some inferior hops, rosin, tar, saleratus. soda, with lour ainerent chemicals to make it keep after brew ing, A singular death occurred recently in Butler county. Ohio. Two men had engaged in a fight, a week before, and one bit the other's eyebrows nearly off. A day or two after the wounded man complained of " feeling sick all ever," grew rapidly worse, and almost imme diately after drinking a glass of water, fell dead. After deatn nis body tamed I yellow, and black spots appeared various portions of it, Fowl Fattening. Lucy Hooper writes from Paris to the Philadelphia Press : " The greatest curiosity in the Jardin d' Acclimation is the singular fowl-fattening maohine, which has been in operation for a short time, but which is a great success. Imagine the top of a round tea-table divided off into sections, with a parti tion between each section and a board In front with a half-moon-shaped aper ture in it. In each of these sections an unhappy duck or chicken is confined by a chain to each leg, and under each is fitted a tray, which receives all the dirt and is emptied daily. Through tho centre of this structure goes a round post, and there is a series of Biicn tea-table tops to the roof of the build ing, each with its divisions and its im prisoned fowls. At stated intervals a man comes round with a somewhat Complicated machine filled with a kind of thin gruel, and fitted with a pipe at the end of a long India-rubber tube. He introduces this pipe down the throat of a duck, presses down a pedal with his foot, and a certain quantity of food is forced through the tube into the creature's craw, a disk above showing exactly what amount of force he I to use and how much food passes. Th! process is gone through with each fowl till all are fed. and it is repeated four times a day for ducks and three for chickens. Two weeks suffice to fatten a duck, but three are necessary ior a chicken. Apart from the necessary confinement of the birds the process does not seem to be at all a cruel one, as the amount of food forced down their throats is not excessive. The ducks which I saw fed did not seam to suffer in the least, and in fact when they saw the man approach moct of them became clamorous for immediate attention, and plucked at his clothes as he passed, with eager beaks. What They Were. Time was when Iceland was inhabited by a race of men that in their native strength matched the elements by which they were surrounded. Were there storms? they were storm-kings. It was of such a race that Fouque wrote when he gave to the world his Theodolf the Icelander. It was by one of this Norse race a sea-rover, named Nad dod that the island was discovered in 800. It was by such men, led by In golf, a Norwegian "Viking, that the island was first colonized in 874 a thousand years ago. These haughty men had fled from Norway on account of the tyranny of Harold Harfagre. They were strong, stern men ; but their strength was exercised not in strifes among themselves, but in con flict with the forces of nature. They were lovers of order not less than of freedom. Evary year their legislative assembly, the Althing, met on the plain of Thingvalla, and all executive poer was vested in a President cnosen oytuo mblv. They had a regular code of jurisprudence, and among them the in stitution of trial dv jury was ior mo first time fully developed. Senor Cas- telar, in a recent address to his fellow countrymen at Malaga, depreoating the excesses of Spanish republicans, al ludes to these Norse Vikings, to whom we owe the regulated freedom of Sax ondom. "Free peoples," he says, " are ever distinguished from slavish peoples by the fact that the former al ways appeal to right, the latter to force. The Arab, locked up in his fatalism, the serf of a caliph or BUiian, trusts only for his defense to hisBharp cimeter and to his strong arm, while the Saxon, the valorous Baxon son ot tne siorui, king of the ocean seeks his rights in the laws and his deiense m tne jury. An eruption of Hecla in lvod dried up the bed of the Skapta river, filling it with lava the fiery stream continu ing for three months, devastated 500 square miles or territory, ouiucumco the spring floods ruin the habitable valleys. Famine and pestilence follow. In one year (1607) the small-pox car ried away 16,000 victims ; in another -y - , i i ll.OUU died oi iamine anu uiseaeo, Al lowing a great volcanic eruption. Judicial Rebuke t) Jurors. At the opening of a jury trial case in New York city, a judicial lesson was read to jurors, which it would seem strange should be necessary, were it not for the frequent evidences of the "ways that are dark" bo often pursued by jurors. A jury being sworn in the case referred to, judge spauiuiug (.pretuu- ing) said : "Gentlemen of the jury, before this case is miiiateo x wisu io re mind you of the precise nature of your oath. It is, that you shall try all cases brought before you strictly according to the evidence. The reason I make this remark is this a member of your body, who also acted as a juror here yesterday, after his discharge from the case, in a conversation had with the Court touohing the case, I was led to believe from what he said that he chose to pass upon the testimony in view of his own experience and from what he knew about matters and things in general, rather than from the facts as set forth in the testimony. I desire simply to say to you, gentlemen, that jurors are sworn to try cases according to the evidence only, - and must ignore any impression they may nave lormea with regard to the merits or demerits of the case, independent of the testimony itself." The juror in question must have winced at this rebuke, but it passed unnoticed, tho Court consider ately withholding any personal auusioa to him. Blackmailing. In June last a woman, in collusion with a young man named Samuel B. Murdock, visited the residence of Hon. Fernando Wood, in Washington, professedly to procure his influenoe in obtaining her an office, but as facts subsequently showed, she was concerned in an effort to blaokmail him. Mr. Wood promptly had the parties ar rested, proved their guilt, and the jury promptly brought in a verdiot of guilty. If innocent persons upon whom black mailers operate nave the courage to act upon the lesson taught them by Mr. Wood they wonld Buffer less than they-do. "Woman is a delusion, madam 1" ex claimed a crusty old bachelor to a witty ,i i i j i i young iaay. Ana man is always iiug- on I ging some delusion or other," was tho quick retort.