V,. ifte ifiili HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL despeiiandum; Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. IV. KIDGAVAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1875. NO. 51. Jnt .n (J o(l Lends. Jn t ax O.i.l lna 1h mo, I wo.ild go 1 wo.ild not BHk to choose my way j (.'oiitout with what He will bestow, Assured Mo will not let me stray, Sj a-i He leads my path I mako An I step liy stop I gladly take, A child in Him confiding. Just as Ood leads, I am content ; To rest me calmly in His hands j That which He has decreed and scut 'J'liut which His will for me commands I would that He should all fulMl, That I should do His gracious will Iu living or hi dying. Just as Ood leads, I will resign ; I trust nie to my Father's will s Whon reason's rays deceptive shine. His counsel would I yet fulfill. That which His love ordained as right, Bcforo Ho brought mo to tho light, My all to Him resigning. Jut as God leads me, I abido, Iu faith, in hope, In suffering true s His strength is ever by my side Can aught my hold ou Him undo ? I hold me firm in pa'ionce, knowing That Ood my life is still bestowing The best in kindness sending. Just as Ood leads, I onward go, Out amid thorns and briars seen ; Ood does not yet His guidance show But iu the end it shall be seen 1 1 jw, by a loving Father's will, Faithful and true, He leads mo still. A COLORADO CANYON. Adventure of Mnjnr Powell and his Pnrlj In nne of Them. By the 2Gth of July, says Maj. Powell, we found our boats ouce more in a bad condition; they had been beaten so much nguinst the rooks that they were leaking badly, so we lay over a dny for repairs. About ten o clock, Bradley, To well, II iwluud, Hall and myself start ed up n side canyon to the cast for the purpose, of climbing out to a pine forest above w'ir we hoped to obtain some pitch for our b wit-t. We soon came to a pool of w,itjr, then to ft brook, which wim lixt in th"i sands below; passing up tho brook th'i canyon narrowed, the walls closed m and were often overhang ing. At last we f ouud ourselves in ft vast amphitheater with ft pool of deep, clear, cold water on tho liottom. At iirst our way seemed cut off, but we soon discov ered n little shelf, along winch we climbed, and, passing beyond tho pool, walked a hundred yards or more, turned t the right and found ourselves in an other amphitheater. There was a wind ing cleft at tha top reaching out to the country above, nearly two thousand feet overhead. The rounded, basin-snaped bottom was tilled with water to the foot of tho walls, and there was no shelf by which wo could pass around to the foot; if we swam acrois, wo met with a face of rock a hundred feet high, over which a little rill glided, aud which it would be impossible t climb. We turned back and examined the walls on either side carefully, to discover, if possible, some other way of climbing out. In this search every man took his own course, and wo were soon scattered. I almost abandoned the idea of getting out, aud was engaged in searching for fossils, whon I discovered, on tli9 north, ft broken place up which it might be pos sible for ma to climb. The way for a distance was up a slide of rocks, then up" an irregular wall by projecting points that formed steps anil gave hand-hold, aud then I reached a little shelf, along which I walked, and discovered a verti cal fissure parallel to the face of the wall, and reaching to a higher shelf. This fis sure was narrow, and I tried to climb up to the bench, which was about forty feet overhead, though I had a barometer on my back, which rather impeded my climbing. The walls of the fissure were of smooth limestone, offering neither foot nor hand-hold; so I supported my s.'lf by pressing my back against one wall aud my knees against the other, and in this way lifted my body, iu a shuffling manner, a few inches at a time, until I had niado perhaps twanty-five feet of the distance, when the crevice widened a little and I could not press my knees against tho rocks iu front with sufficient force to give me support in lifting my body. I tried to go back, but this I could not do without falling, so I strug gled along, sidewise, farther into the crevice where it narrowed. By this time my muscles were exhausted and I could climb no longer, so I moved still a little farther into the orevice, where it was so narrow and wedging that I could lie in it, and there I rested. Five or ten min utes of this relief and up once more I pushed, till I reached the bench above. On this I could walk for a quarter of a mile, till I reached a place where the wall was again broken down so that I could climb up still farther. In an hour I reached tho summit. Hanging up my barometer to give it a few minutes to settle, I occupied my self in collecting resin from the pinyon pines, which were found in great abun dance. One of the principal objects of the climb was to get this resin for the purpose of smearing our boats, but I had no means of carrying it down. The day was very hot and my cout had been left in camp, so I had no linings to tear out, but it had occurred to me to cut off the sleeve of my shirt and tie it up at one end, and in this little sack I collected about a gallon of pitch. After. taking observations for altitude, I wandered back on the rocks for an hour or two, when, suddenly, I noticed that a storm was coming from the south. I sought shelter in the rocks, but when the storm burst, it came down as a flood from the heavens not with gentle drops at first, slowly increasing in quantity, but as if suddenly poured from an immense ( basin. I was thoroughly drenched and almost washed away. It lasted not more than half an hour, when the clouds swept by to the north, and I was in the sun- - shine again. In the meantime, I discovered a better way of getting down and started for camp, making the greatest haste possi ble. On reaching the bottom side of the canyon I found a thousand streams roll " ing down the cliff on every side, carry ing with them red mud. Traveling as fast as I could run, I soon reached the foot of the stream, for the rain did not reach the lower end of the canyon, and tnt yttM wm running dowa a tUjr bed of sand; and although it came in waves several feet high and fifteen or twenty feet in width, the sand soaked it up and it was lost. Wave followed wave and rolled along nnd was swallowed up, and still tho floods came from above. I found I could travel faster than the stream, so I hastened on to camp and told the men thoro was a river coming down the canyon. We carried our catnp equipage from tho bank to where we thought it would be above tho water, and then stood by to sec the river roll on to join tho Colorado. Near tho foot of Cataract canyon tho walls suddenly closed iu, so that the gorge was narrower than we had before seen it. The water filled it from wall to wall, giving no landing-place at tho foot of the cliffs; the river was very swift, tho canyon very tortuous, so that wo could see but ft few hundred yards ahead. The walls towered overiiead, often overhanging so as ti almost shut out tho light. I stood on deck watching with intense anxiety, lost the way should lead us into danger, but we glided along with no obstruction, no falls, no rapids, and in a mile nndj A-lialf emerged from the narrow gorge "into a more open and broken portion of the canyon. Now that it is past, it seems a very simple thing indeed to run through such n place; but tho fear of what might be, made a deep impression upon all of us. Shortly after wo arrived at the foot of Cataract canyon. Hero a long canyon valley comes down from the east, and the river turns sharply to the west in a continua tion of tho line of the lateral valley. In the bend on the right vast numbers of crags, and pinnacles, nnd tower-shaped rocks are seen. We called it " Mille Crag Bend." On the 29th of July, we entered a canyon with low red walls. A short dis tance below its head wo discovered the ruins of an old building on the left wall. Th;ro is a narrow plain below the river and the wall just here, and on the brink of n rock two hundred feet high this old house stood. Its walls were of stone laid in mortar with much regularity. It was probably built three stories high: the lower story was yet almost intact, tho second much broken down, and scarcely anything was left of the third. Great quantities of fliut drips were found on the rocks near by, and many arrow heads, Bomo perfect, others broken, aud fragments of pottery were strewn about in great profusion. On the face of the cliff under tho building, and along down the river for two or three hundred yards, there were many etchings. Two hours were giveu to the examination of those interesting ruins, when we ran down lifteen miles further and discovered an other group. The principal building was situated on the" summit of tho hill. Parts of the walls were standing to the height of eight or ten feet, and tho mortar still re mained in some places. The house was in the shape of au L, with five rooms on the ground floor; one in the angle and two in each extension. In the space in the angle there was a deep excavation. From what we know of the people in the province of Tusayan, who are doubtless of the same race as the former inhabi tants of these ruins, we concluded that this was a "Kiva" or underground chamber in which their religious cere monies wero performed. Tho sandstono through which this canyon is cut is red and homogeneous, being the samo ns that through which Labyrinth canyon runs. The smooth naked rock stretches out on either side of the river for many miles, but curiously carved mounds and cones are scattered everywhere, aud deep holes are worn out. Many of those pockets were filled with water, and in one of these holes or wells, twenty feet deep, I found a tree growing. The excavation was so nar row I could step from its brink to a limb of the tree, and descend to the bot tom of the well down a growing ladder. Many of these pockets nre pot holes, be ing found iu the course of little rills or brooks that run only during the rains which occasionally fall in this region, nnd often a few harder rocks, which evi dently assisted in their excavation, could be fouild in their bottoms. Others which are shallower are not so easily ex plained. Perhaps they are fouud where softer spots existed in the sandstone, places that yielded more readily to at mospheric degradation, and where the loose sands were carried away by the winds. Just before suudown I attempted to climb a roundod eminence, from which I hoped to obtain a good outlook over the surrounding country. It was formed of smooth mounds piled one above an other, and up these I climbed, windiug here and there to find a practicable way, until near the summit, when they be came too steep for me to proceed. I searched about for a few minutes for a more easy way; what was my surprise at finding a stairway, evidently cut in the rock by human 'hands ! At one place, where there is a vertical wall ten or twelve feet high, I found an old rickety ladder. It may be that this was a watch tower of that ancient people whose homes we hatl found in ruins. On many of the tributaries of the Colorado I had before examined their deserted dwell ings. Those that showed evidence of being built during the latter part of their occupation of the country were usually placed on the most inaccessible cliffs. Sometimes the mouths of caves had been walled across, nnd there were many other evidences showing their anxiety to secure defensible positions. Probably the nomadic tribes were sweeping down upon them, and they re sorted to these cliffs and canyons for safety. It is not unreasonable to sup pose that this orange mound was used as a watch-tower. I stood where a lost people had lived centuries ago, and looked over the same strange country. I gazed off to great mountains in the northwest, slowly covered by the night until they were lost, and then turned toward cam). It was no easy task to find my way down the wall in the darkness, and I clambered about until nearly midnight, before I arrived there. The London Telegraph gives its countrymen a very bad name when it says: The most brutal, the most coward ly, the most pitiless, the most barbarous deeds done in the world are being perpe trated by the lower classes of the Eng lish pceploi The Indian Question. Tho New York Tribtmr, in discussing tho report of the Indian commissions of tho United States, says: Five years ngo the condition of, tjiese very men, nnd the enmity existing" between them nnd white settlers, was hold to bo so desperately hopeless, that iu the popular belief the only chance of relief for them nnd us was thnr wholesale extermination a creed still openly professed by ft large body of respectable people. Tho In dian was held to be.iv miserable incubus on the body politic, nnd given over with out compunction to the robberies of ngents, or the murders of military com manders, such ns those who olio lino morning disposed of the unnecessary Piegan women and children. There has been a great and wholesome reaction of feeling iu this matter; religious bodies have taken hold of the Indian problem zealously, and tho result is that large bodies of the Indians havo been brought into a partial stato of civilization by these religious teachers, and thnt the nation has been forced to see that it is possible that they should bo so brought. But the development is recent. The Iu- I diau iu the best case is still in his non age; ho requires long and friendly en couragement before he take his new rnle fairly upon him; it requires that he should change his whole habit of mind nnd body. For the Apache brave to turn his back on the buffalo, to come out of tho solitude of his wigwam and go to work and trailing with other men, is as much of n wrench to him physi cally and mentally, as it would bo to our respectable brokers nnd bankers were Wall street emptied into the Colorado desert, nnd they forced to earn their livelihood by rod and gnu. It is just at the crisis when the Dakota and Cherokee is making this effort, with, it must bo acknowledged, an unhoped for energy and persistence, that it is proposed to withdraw from him all government aid, nnd to leave him to stand alone. The proposal to bring the wild tribes into a condition of self-support by furnishing them with means of work, either bv ir rigating the land of tho reservations or j as herders of cattle and sheep, it at once more reasonable and just. The state- I ment, however, that these Sioux are be- ' ness and the high living furnished them by the government will nmuse any one familiar with the payment of rations. An incomo of one hundred and sixty dollars per annum is not certain to induce gout in the feet of the recipient, especially when but a small portion can be expend ed on his stomach, nnd so large n por tion often sticks to the hands of the dis burses. Measurements of Ancient Cities. Nineveh was fourteen miles long.eight miles wide, and forty-six miles around, with a wall one hundred feet high, and thick enough for tliree chariots abreast. Babylon was fifty miles within the Walls, which were seventy-five feet thick and one hundred feet high, with one hundred brazen gates. Tho Temple of Diana, nt Epliesus, was four hundred and twenty feet to the support of the roof; it was one hundred years in building. The largest of the Pyramids was four hun dred and eighty-one feet in height and eight hundred and fifty-thres feet on tho sides. The base covered eleven acres. The stones nre about sixty feet in length and tho layers nre two hundred nnd eight. It employed 350, 000 men in build ing. The labyrinth of Egypt contains three hundred chambers 'and twelve halls. Thebes, in Egypt, presents ruins twenty-seven miles around, nnd contained 350,000 citizens and 400,000 slaves. The Temple of Delphos was so rich in dona tions that it was plundered of $50,000, 000, nnd tho Emperor Nero carried away from it two hundred statues. The walls of Rome were thirteen miles around. A SilTer Mine. A newspaper correspondent asked Senator Jones, of Nevada: How nre we to nccount for the fluctuations in the shares of the Nevada mines ? Are they honest ? The Senator said: It is easily explained, and the quotations are per fectly honest. You can see. When we dig into a mine we come to a " face " of silver bearing quartz. Now, it is proble matic whether that face is two feet thick or fifty. I, inside, take my chances, and say I will give 1,000 a share for that mine; but, upon digging in, it is dis covered to be only a few inches deep, whereupon I offer to sell my $1,000 share for 8500, pocketing the loss. This naturally goes on until we reach another face. The lead proves to be a profitable one, and my $1,000 may give me a divi dend of $5,000; and so these enormous fluctuations are really in great measure due to tho real risks and uncertainties of the mining business. " Probabilities" on New Year's Day. A St. Louis girl describes the misery she endured receiving New Year's calls. Among other things, sho says: " I think the first one dropped in ' about nine o'clock. ' Came early,' he said, ' because he had to go out to the western part of the town.' First ho imparted the start ling intelligence that the weather was inauspicious for calls, but he didn't be lieve it would rain, though he confidently looked for snow. Then he remarked that there were but few callers on the streets, but he supposed they would come later in the day. Then he took a gloss of wine and a plate on his two knees, spreading his feet to bring his knees together. Then he wished me many happy returns, and then he left as another entered. Over and over again the self -same platitudes, and lefore night I felt like a signal service bureau, nnd was so stuffed with weather that I was sick." Lent. Lent begins this year on the 10th of February, much earlier than it has done since 1869. This will bring the high festival of Easter this year on the 26th of March, which is within six days of the earliest period upon which it can ever possibly occur. On some years Easter fulls as late as tho 25th of April. Some years there as many as nine Sun days between Epiphany and Ash Wed nesday, but this year th:;re will only be five Sundays intervening between the jubilee of Epiphany and the solemn fast Of IrtUt. AltOTJT STEAM BOILERS. A 1'rnrllrnl Knninrrr Tells as why they nre Wcnkcnril nnd Explode. Safety and the production of a large quantity of dry steam nre the two essen tials of a good boiler, said James Whit ney before the New York Society of Practical Engineers, but these two re quirements are antagonistic to each other, and the best boiiers ore the result of a compromise. If we could have n perfect hollow sphere of metal, we would have theoretically the strongest form of steam generator, and in the infancy of steam engineering some spherical boilers were made in England, and con tinued in use nearly to our own time. But it is possible to bring the fire in contact with only a small portion of the surface, and hence we have little steam for a good deal of fuel. The form, therefore, is changed to a cylinder, with the firo underneath nnd playing upward ngninst the sides. This affords a greater heating surface, but tho ends do not boar the same relation to the pressure as the sides, and must be stayed by braces thut shift a portion of the strain on the heads to other portions of the shell. If, now, our fire is started under the boiler, the lower part heats faster than the upper part, nnd consequently expands more. Tins bends the lower part outward on the arc of a circle, which, although im perceptible to the eye, is the result of an irresistible force. This expansion of tho lower part of the boiler brings a strain upon the upper pnrt; when the boiler if allowed- to cool it resumes its original form. At each change of tem perature, therefore, there is a to and fro movement of the lapped edges of the plates where they are riveted together. Tho final effect is that the plate cracks along the line of its least resist ance. In some boilers the fracture mny be along a bine of rivets, and be entirely hidden from any possible view. But if the riveting be extremely good tho min ute bonding to nnd fro is more apt to occur iu one plate close to the over lapping edgo of the plate to which it is riveted, and when the crevice opens to the interior of the boiler, any acid in the water will act chemically to increase it. This is termed " grooving " by the Eng lish engineers, nnd is not confined to any particular type. For if, instead of placing our fires beneath the cylinder, we extend a large cylindrical flue tlirough the cylinder or shell of the boiler, we simply change the locality in which tho effects of this alternate expansion and contraction are exerted. The flues are fixed in the ends of "the shell, and are hotter than the shell, and of course ex pand more. Being confined against the ends, the flues bend upward. If we put on a steam drum in which the otherwise waste heat from the escaping products of combustion may dry the steam from its contained vesicles of vapor, we ac complish an increased eaomrmy of fuel; but by adding a vertical cylinder inter secting a horizontal one, we have au additional joint between portions subject to quite different temperatures, and at which ' grooving " is liable to occur. If the joint is made with angle iron, in which the grain runs parallel with the sharp corner iu the angle of the iron, tho danger is much increased, and this has led American engineers to discard tho English plan of using angle iron in steam boilers. The new and better sys tem is to make the joint on u curve hav ing a radius of about four inches. The ends of the shells or cylinders of boilers nre often fitted in their places with nngle iron, but the same objection liolds ns in tho filling of the domes. As a rule, sharp nnd rigid corners should be avoid ed between plates liable to unequal ex pansion from heat. This gradual de terioration of boilers from the cause in dicated is one of the most insidious of all the causes of explosions, nnd it is one that is inherent iu all modifications of the cylinder typo. Skill nnd good judgment may reduce the danger but cannot wholly obviate it. Evergreens In Orchards. ' A correspondent says that the theory of planting evergreens among fruit trees, for protection, is wrong. They impover ish the ground, occupy space, and shade the fruit trees. Fruit from slinded trees is always inferior iu quality. To pro duce a fruit bud, the sun must thicken tho sap to a glutinous liquid. Without the rays of the sun, buds will form only to produce leaves. The most perfect fruit is found on the outside of a tree ; and therefore, to give lights the penolo gist trims aud thins out the branches. This explains why wall trees produce such uniformly large and excellent fruit. A belt of evergreens around an orchard may be beneficial, not because of the heat that is supposed to emanate from them, but because they break the winds aud still the air as, sweeping winds often dry up the vital sap of both evergreen and deciduous trees. Alternate heating and freezing are de structive to vegetable as well as to nni nial life ; because the heat starts the sap, nud the frost freezes it. Tho freezing swells the sap, nnd lifts the bark from the wood, the channels of circulation are straiued and destroyed, and the part so affected dies. Well matured wood is not apt to suffer from cold. ,To save tender trees, let them finish their season's growth before cold weather ; and to has ten maturity, give a dry bottom and light and air in abundance. Some evergreens supposed to be ten der (the rhododendron, for instance) will survive the whiter better on the - north side of a building, unprotected, thim on the south of the same protected and shel tered from the rays of the sun. Fifty-four generals' widows draw pen sions from the United States. A corre spondent of the Chicago Pout says: " When the pension paid the widows of brigadier-generals, fifty dollars a month, was offeree! the widow of brave General Meade, I am told she very emphatically declined to receive it, because it was ltss than that paid Mrs. President Lincoln. Of all the women who served in the vtiar in various capacities only one was pen sioned for physioial disabilities, and tlat was Mrs. Isabella Fogg, of Maine, w!no was seriously injured by a fall in Louis ville, engaged in hospital' work. Slie died here last summer." "I said happy New Year to the judge," says a ruffian in Charivari, " And did he give you nothing I" " Yea PKIS0N LIFE IN ENGLAND. The Fruinle Prlunn nt .Mlllbmik IIovt ilie Convicts Hprnd Their Time. A correspondent of the London Daily News gives the following sketch of a convict s daily life iu the female prison at Millbank : By half -past seven the cell must lie in nppie-pie order, nnd nil the clothes taken off the bed, neatly folded up inside the quilt, nnd placed at the foot of the bed stend. Then comes breakfast, consisting of a piece of bread and a tin of cocoa. From Monday to Saturday a pound of bread is daily allowed to each prisoner. On Sunday twenty-two ounces is the allowance, but, per contra, on this day the prisoners dine luxuriously off cheese, of which three ounces is served out to each on returning from divine service. Half nn hour is nllowed for breakfast, nnd from eight o'clock to nine is devoted to labor. At nine, the prisoners file out down the corridors into the chapel, where they sit on bare benches, with the assistant matrons planted here and there on high stools, keeping a wntehful eye over the silent congregation. Pray ers are over in time for all to be back in their cells at half-pnst nine, when there comes another hour's work nt knitting or the mnking of articles of clothing. At half-past ten the straw bonnets, guiltless of ribbon, nre donned, the ugly yellow clonks nre put on, nnd all, being first marshaled nnd counted in the corri dors, march into the yard for "exercise." " Exercise " means marching round and round the yard in single file, whilst the warders look on, Nobody speaks a word or looks to the right hand or the left, but for sixty minutes all plod round and round, a silent, sad and sullen company. This performance over, the prisoners re turn to their cells and get to work again, sewing or knitting, till one o'clock. At one o'clock they dine, tho rations being carried up to the wards by relays of the prisoners themselves. The allow ance is served out to each in her cell by the assistant matrons. On Mondays and Wednesdays the prisoners dine of mut ton, of which each gets three ounces, with a few spoonfuls of gravy, the char acter of which may be inferred from the fact that it is "flavored with one-half ounce of onions, and thickened with one-eighth ounce of flour, and with bread left from the previous day." In addition, each prisoner has three-quarters of a pound of potatoes. On Tues day the fare is bread, and a pint of soup, containing eight ounces of shins of beef, one ounce of pearl barley, three ounces of fresh vegetables, and three-quarters of a pound of potatoes. On Thursday the dinner consists of three-quarters of a pound of potatoes, and an equal quan tity of suet pudding, containing one ounce and two pennyweights of suet, six ounces of flour, and four ounces and fourteen pennyweights of water. On Friday and Saturday the fare is beef and potatoes, three ounces of tho former to three-quarters of a pound of the latter, which is rendered further appetizing by the addition of gravy made in the same generous fashion as that of Mon day. On Sunday comes divine service, and bread and cheese again, and then tho muttop, tho soup, the suet pudding, and the beef in clue aud unalterable order. At two o'clock on the afternoon of week days work recommonces, and is continued till half-past five, when "sup. per " is indulged in. Supper consists of the remains of tho day's allowance of bread washed down with a pint of gruel, the component parts of which are two ounces of oatmeal, one-half ounce of molasses, and two ounces of milk. At six more work, which is car ried on till eight o'clock, when three quarters of an hour's leisure time is al lowed for reading. At a quarter to nine bed-making begins, and by nine all lights are put and darkness reigns throughout the always silent cells. These hours are the same in winter with the exception that the prisoners rise half-an-hour loter and go to bed half-an-hour earlier. The Erie Railway Opera House. The New York correspondent of the Troy Time writes that it is a question what will become of the Grand Opera House, and says: " Perhaps it might be turned to a religious service, just as the old Chatham street chapel was formed out of a disused theater. There is hardly a church in Eighth avenue at least within a mile of this spot and hence it might thus afford excellent ser vice. It may be added iu this connec tion that the railway company has now possession of nearly all of Fisk's real estate. It was conveyed in tho niuo- mimon surrender made bv Jay Uoulu, who had the control of it. This includes the opera house aud tho row of cottages which reached down almost to Josie Mansfield's former palace. It is a very fine property, but cannot be rented ex cept ut a loss. Fisk's management of the opera house" was very adroit. In making the purchase all that he paid down was taken from the Erie company, and then he let the building to the com pany at $75,000 a year, reserving the opera house for himself. As the latter was estimated at $25,000, it made an annual rental of $100,000. The company did not need this grand building. It was simply a plan of Fisk's to unite business and pleasure. To increase his glory he assumed command of the Ninth regiment. All was going well till his death. The company has resuaied the down-town offices which Fisk vacated, and the grand establishment now stands empty. It is offered to tenants in con venient sub-divisions, and the financial office would make a good banking-room. Fisk expended $60,000 in. safes, and his other alterations were at an expense of about $150,000 all thrown away." The Centennial. The people of Philadelphia, in their practical way, are pushing the work of the Centennial exhibition. A report has been submitted to the President by the director announcing that twenty-four nations have already expressed a desire to take part in the exhibition. The building of the industrial palace is going on in Philadelphia with earnestness and skill. One of the first acts of the new Spanish king is the appointment of a .nobleman to be chief of the Spanish commission in place of Castelor, who 1. -1 1 J ..... ...1 1. U I... I 1. nave no place m the new govern ment THE SILVER MINE MANIA. To.ilrey Poor To-uiorraiv n f nrringe nnd I.ncrs nnd Finery Next Iny Things have been in such a whirl hereabouts recently, writes a San Fran cisco correspondent, that one hardly knows who he is or what he is, whether a millionaire or an ordinary individual, as millionaires are now therule.and "or dinary people " the exception. I never before so thorouglily realized how re spectable it is to bo poor. It is posi tively so; for wealth not a common matter of a few hundred thousands, but millions is as glibly discussed as if the people had been cradled iu gold and sil ver. The big fortunes that have been made here lately ore realy astounding, and to listen to how so and so made a hundred thousand yesterday on an in vestment of five thousand, how the " ring " must have cleared a couple of millions so far this week, is like reading the " Arabian Nights. " You can't most always tell, cither, who has bceu specu lating; in fact, it is almost impossible to find anybody who has not, Iiigid busi ness men who frown at stock speculations nre "in"; ministers, the servant girls, the clerks, the lame, the halt, the blind, are nil in stocks. They hear of such large profits from small investments that they cannot resist. I know of not one but fifty instances where poor people, from an investment of a few hundreds, have been raised to affluence in a day. The cook in our house camo to mo a day or two since to nsk me to plnzo take enre of her money. Supposing she had a few mouths' wages I consented, whereupon she brought me a bag containing five thousand dollars. "Hello, Bridget," said I, "where did you get all this?" " Made it in Ophir, your honor. I bought it at twinty dollars and sold it to day at three hundred dollars, aud here's tho money, sir. " I looked nt her. She didn't look much like a stock sharp. Said I, "Bridget, who got you into stocks ?" " Me sister, sir, who lives wid Mr.. Brown, the broker; and she heard him say nt the table, when she was wait in', that Ophir was bound to go up, aud she tould me, sir, and we put our money together nnd bought it, and to-day we sold it nnd got the money." " And did your sister make an equal amount '" " Yes, sir, just the same. On the spur of the moment I wns about proposing a partnership n three-handed game, Pod gers, Bridget & Mary the business to be conducted jointly, by Mary with her ears, Bridget with her tongue, and self as manipulator, it is needless to say, Bridget and Mary furnishing the capital. I confess I felt myself very small.' There was that imromantic, slightly pockmark ed, pug-nosed Bridget, with not half the brains I ought to have, nor one fraction of the opportunity, had made more money in proportion to her requirements and capital in a few days than I, with all my supposed knowledge of business ana chances, could in a life-time. What a swell Bridget would cutiu the ouldcoun thry with her five thousand. I know a broker whom I heard yester day bid sixty-seven dollars a share for all the stock of one mine, for his own per sonal account, Amounting to over two millions, who two years ago was merely a curbstone broker and appeared on the street with his coat buttoned up to his chiu because he had no shirt; whose whole wealth at home was a straw mat tress, one chair, one stool, n few tin plates, a fork or two, and a wife cooped up in one miserable little room to help hnn enjoy all this splendor, and go hungry, as she did. I saw her yesterday in a splendid crimson-lined clarence, going down town, with tho tallest hat and a feather that brushed the Hies from the carriage-top; such a camel's-hair on hex arm 1 and such lace trimming ou her dress ! and generally and minutely got up regardless ! but withal, n lady born aud bred, and she carried it like a queen. I stopped and looked at the whole pic ture, and I mused; I may safsly say I felt glad. " What a change !" I said to myself ; " that's right, my little woman; you havo had it mighty rough, and you just go it now; just take your revenge on the goddess tor uer previous scurvy treatment." What a glorious satisfac tion to a man to see the woman ho has dragged down to poverty, nnd who shared his lot unmurniuringly (what an awful long word), by his own energy, his own hands nnd brains, placed, in a brief period, to the top of the giddy pinnacle of prosperity to that summing up of all earthly bliss to a woman, a better car riagejthau any other woman's, wider and finer lace flounces, a set of furs uu equaled, and a camel's-hair that makes people turn around in the street and look after her. Lives there a woman with soul so dead, who, to herself, has not said, "Tins is happiness. They are poor, weak creatures, aud have their lit tle failings. These ore harmless. There is no sin in all that. If we fellows do no worse, then we are a great deal better than I have any reliable account of. The Wales Coal Miners' Strike. The coal miners' strike in South Wales, a correspondent writes, collapsed almost as soon as it began. It was forced on the men against their own better judg ment, by the trade union delegates, as a kind of assertion oi the authority of the union. But as soon as it was seen that the masters were not to be frightened in this way, the men lost heart and threw over the delegates. The shopkeepers of the district also applied a strong in fluence against the strike, by refusing to give credit, .between midsummer 1871 and the end of last year, colliers' wages were increased by from fifty to sixty per cent, ihe subsequent reductions have been at the rate of about twenty-five per cent., and nave evidently not yet reached their lowest point, though they will doubtless not sink back quite to then former rate. The price of coal has in the course of the year fallen about thirty per cent., and wages nave in every du trict have reduced. The lowering of wages has also extended to iron manu factures. The puddlers and iron-workers have had to submit to three successive reductions. These make a total reduc tion of some twenty-six or twenty-seven per cent. The production of iron in England has fallen from 3,383,000 tons and 35,a'Jl5,00U value in 1872, to 2,487, 000 31,225,000 value in 1874. There can be doubt that the development of the American iron trade is, iu a large degree, the cause of this decline in cngiua proauouoni Cupid Crying. Why is Cupid erying so ? Because his joalous mother beat him. What for? For giving up his bow To Celia, who contrived to cheat him. The child ! I could not have believed He'd give his weapons to another. He would not, but he was deceivod ; She smiled ; he thought it was his mother. Hems of Interest. " Hanging isn't played out iu New York." No, but the art of hanging has, judging from tho last exhibition. The Maysville liullctin sagely remarks: The season for slaying hogs nnd sleigh ing girls is nt baud. The difference is, the girls like it, nnd the hogs don't. Tho New York Tribune, has sent $7,500 to Kansas aud Nebraska, the re sult of its dollar subscriptions, aud claims that it will increase this amount to $10,000. Only a military despot will be oblo to govern Spain, and it is a new illustra tion of tho poverty of that wretched country that it does not possess, so far as is known, even a good despot. "I will my Bon should learn thegerman just so good as english then a man who know two Languages know more as another who knows only one," wrote n fond Burlington father to his son's school teacher. Baggs got up too early one morning, and began to scold the servant girl. His little six-year-old, who had been listen ing attentively during the conversation, broke in with: "Father, stop scolding; you needn't think that Jane's your wife." A little child of James Doran, of Bridgeport, died suddenly ft few days since, and liis mother, while viewing the remains lying in tho coffin, was so over come with grief that she dropped dead, and both mother and child were buried in the same grave. Sharp little Katie Doyle, of Pittsburgh, got out of patience with her bashful lover's backwardness, and so brought matters to a favorable climax by saying to him : "I really believe you are afraid to ask me to marry you, for you know I would say yes." Au editor bemoans the calamities of tho present year in tho following touch ing strain : First that Beecher business, then the grasshoppers, then the Demo cratic victories, and now an increased tax on wlrisky ! My goodness, what is this country coming to 1 A Scotchman, 80 years old, nnd nenrly denf, wns naturalized recently in Knys ville, Utah, the judge descending to shout his interrogatories into the old man's ear. When asked if he intended to obey tho law, he answered, iu his native Scotch dialect, that "it wasna worth while for him the dae otherwise noo." The most extraordinary instance of tho application of the proceeds of theft is re ported from Montreal, where a letter. earner on prooaiion mow h rrjjiicu letter containing six dollars, and used the contents to insure himself iu one of the companies that guarantee the honesty of their poncy-noiuers in responsioie posi tions. Lady Dudlev. whose jewels, estimated at $250,000 in value, were recently stolen at a railway station, is a sister of Lady Morduuut, defendant in a lamous divorce case. Lord Dudley was made an earl by the wliigs for satisfactory votes. His in come averages $1,500,000; but last year, owing to the great increase in the price of coal, was $5,000,000. All who handle money must occasion ally get hold of counterfeit bills, for the Note Fruiting Bureau at Washington makes the startling admission that seven out of tho nine denomiuotions of the national bank notes have been counter feited. Nor is this the worst yet. It is further asserted that the makers of spurious notes are getting more expert every year. A little five-vear-old boy in Indiana said to a judge who had called at his father's : " Are you going to your store?" "I haven't got any store." "Are you going to your mill?" "I haven't got any mill. "Are you going to your shop?" "I haven t got nuy shop." " W ell, then, how do you make money I " I make it bv mv brains." " Well my papa makes money and he hasn't got any brams. The British Postmaster-General is charged with an net of petty tyranny. A number of the lower 'rated emloyees signed a memorial (which, under the re gulations, they had a right to do) asking for au increase of pay. Lord John Man ners replied that they must withdraw their request, which is done. He cliarges them with insubordination, and then dismissed those who signed. For this act he is being severely criticised. One of the boys, just.before'returniug to Cornell tho other day, sent a young lady friend of his a cake of Lubiu's finest variety of toilet soap, with the re quest that she would draw no inferences X . 1. itl 'PI,.. m receiving burn a KUL-, no man was somewhat astonished the next day when he received a letter from the young lady containing the present of a tine tooth comb, witn tne requeBi mat he would draw no inferences therefrom. Sunset and Sunrise. TIia sun sets nn some retired mendow. wlinra nn limine is visible, with all the glory and splendor that it lavishes on the cities, and perchance, as it nas never set before where there is mil a soniary marsh- hawk to have its wings gilded by it, or only a musquash to look out from his cabin, and there is some little black voiiiA.l l.rnnlr in Hia midst of the marsh. just beginning to meander, winding slowly arouuu a aecaying stump. o walked in so pure and bright a light, gilding the withered grass and leaves, so softly and serenely bright, I thought I una never named in sucn a goiuen nooa, i, . , a- mi wiinoui a rippie or a murmur w n. xue west side" of every wood and rising ground gleamed like the boundary of Elysium, and the sun on our backs gleamed like a gentle herdsman driving us home at evening. So we saunter to ward the holy land, till, one day, the sun shall shine more brightly than he has ever douejAall perchance shine into our minds amlil'arts, and light up our whole livs with a great awakening light, as warm n& serene fcnd golden m on a bank aida in nuVttmai