HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. Y. MDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, AP1UL 1, 1875. NO. C. The Rose's rromisc. J. an tho violet, darling, And aHk it news of thee. 'Tin mute but the rose-bush nearest Cries, " Wait till the Bpriug shall be. " She'll come on the sunbeam's pathway King Summar for her will spread Slie'll eome when mv crowning blossom Rhall tosa its purplo head. " H'ie'11 come on the wings of Summer, With a brow as bright as June, And a voice like the bird in April When it sings its plighting tune." Oh, many a gift has Summer From his golden gate sent mo j Eut this, thou rose of roses, Is a gift for eternity. TANEO. "Wilt thou have thin woman to be thy wedded wife t" "Harry, Anne, hurry! There's a wedding going on in the kitchen I" cried Nolly Howe, running before her cousin up the garden walk. " There seems to be one there every day," languidly replied Anno. "I should think your father would find his duties as Squiro' too heavy for him." "Its only pmeq tlio wr that they crowd in so fast. The negroes are obliged to marry properly now. But these are Indians. Papa brings the law to bear on red as well as black skins." " Indiaus in this State ?" " O, yes; about a thousand Cherokees. It is they who live in the mountain range that you thought so terrible yes terday. It is solitary and savage enough. The Indians live in their huts very much as they did in their wigwams two hun dred years ago, and fish, and hunt doer and bears. This is the chief's daughter, Taneo, who lias come to be married. She's a Christian iu her way, and a good girl Taneo." "Come, I'll look at her. I'm thank ful she's not civilized. It's so nice to compare a creature of that sort with ourselves." Miss Parr hurried to the kitchen door, and stood looking iu at the tall, straight Indiau girl, with her bare feet and head, and her wedding garment, which was a petticoat and short gown of blue flannel. The white girl was conscious as never before of her civilization; which in her case meant live years of training in fash ionable accomplishments, and trunks full of silks and muslins. Nelly, who was a square, solid, down right little body, eyed her critically mentally commented upon her chalked skin, false hair and teeth and then turned to the Indian. "We haven't gained all that wo might out of civilization, Nan," she whispered. " Look at Taneo's feet not a corn ! And how strong and delicate her shape is J ho carries IieraclC liko oneboj."!" the purple." "Shape! Her waist is two feet round, if it's an inch." "Join your right hands!" The squire's bass voice drowned the whispers of tho girls. Hokus, the groom, a big, slouching, copper-colored fellow, grunted as he thrust out his hand. " Hokus thinks this is making entirely too mu;li fuss about a woman," laughed Nelly. " He's but a shabby-looking fellow," whiuiered Miss Parr. "A chief's daughter ought to make a better match than that." "Taneo has loved him along time. Did you ever seo a more shy and wistful look than hers just now ' She is not civilized enough to think of the advan tages of a good match." "I pronounce you man and wife," said Squire Howe, taking off his specta cles. 'And now, Hokus, my lad, I've a word for you. Things are going to work differently hyur in North Carolina, now that the war's over; for whites, and blacks, and the redskins muHt change with the rest. You've been savages long enough whilo perfessin' to be Christians. For a man to sit smoking his pipe while his wifo plows and hoes the corn, and butchers the pig, is not Christianity, to my notion. Hell '" "No," grunted Hokus. "It's not what I'll allow, at any rate. You Indians are going to change with the rest, I tell you, and you are the man I've pitched ou to set the example. You're to work out of doors, and Taneo will keep tho house clean. Hey, Ta neo? Pig must not sleep iu the kitchen." Taneo dropped her head and laughed shyly. ' ' Well, now, that's settled. The law's going to bo strict. Hokus, I give you warning. You're married like a white man, and you're to have but one wifo, and you're to work for her. The boys call you lazy red nigger, and it's a name you've got to clear yourself of." Tho new-made .wife lifted her head, the angry blood rushing to her cheek at tho name; but Hokus only slouched and laughed. " Now I pronounce you man and wife; and keep clear of the whisky still on your way home." Tho squire (or colonel, for titles hung thickly on his broad shoulders) watched the two Indians go slowly up the moun tain p.ith, Hokus in advance. "I'd like to better the condition of thoso savages," he said. " Anne, you're full of book-learning just now, and have nothing to do. You might give them a powerful lift." " Thanks. I don't feel as if my voca tion was that of a missionary," with a contemptuous smile. " Missionary !" she thought, bitterly. She a type of the cultured girls of New York to settle down into a teacher of barefooted redskins iu their flea-iu-fested cabins ! It might be very well in somo cases to follow Christ's example, who taught the poor Galileans ; but an Indian wa3 an exceptional case, hardly in her estimation to be considered one of the creatures for whom He died. Anne had heard that they " were a race im possible to civilize, and destined to ex termination," aud accepted the theory as the easiest way of getting rid of the matter. As for her uncle, with his bad gram mar, and energetic kindness, and per petual enthusiasm about the beauty and frandeur of nature in North Carolina, e was beginning to be an intolerable bri Nature was a worse bore than he, for Anne's reputation for culture called or admiration of every landscape. Sho was sick of hearing her own ascending "O.O.O!" If the doctors could only have devised any other cure for her cold than this mountain air of North Carolina sho would have been glad. "Come and look at Mt. Pisgah, Nancy," called her uncle, "ypuder, in front of tho setting suu. And there are the great Black Brothers, wrapped in the shadow, aud that peak rising out of the red mist is the highest laud on tho At lantic slope. " It was all so tiresome ! Tho other girls of her Bet were on the hotel piazzas at Long Branch, with a dozen beaux around them. Very different companions from this Pisgah and the Black Brothers ! Then he called her to look at tho horri ble shadow of a chasm, or the yellow light in the balsam range, or the flying colors ou the mist that was blown from tho far horizon across the hillsides. Miss Parr made some trivial excuse to go to her own chamber. What earthly use was there in finding tints in mist ? If it were the colors iu her new neckties, now, or a box of Jouvin's best ! Just a year passed since Miss Parr's first visit to North Carolina, when she found herself again mounted with Nelly on two low mules, climbing the mountainside. The doctors had ordered her to the balsam regions again. Her cough was troublesome. The winter's campaign had proved a failure, too. She had danced and dressed untiringly, but tho " good match " had not been made. She began to look soured and weary, and to sing songs iu the minor key about the emptiness of life. "We are going to Taneo's cabin," said Nelly. " Did Hokus prove an example to his people, as your father commanded ?" .Nelly laughed. "Example, indeed! A week after his wedding, when the time for hoeing tho corn arrived, ho ' heard of a bear,' and set off post-haste for tho animal. He pursued that vision of a bear for a mouth, and came back to find the corn hoed. "When it was ready to gather in,' he thought it necessary to consult the con jurer on the other side of tho mountain as to the chances for rain, and only finished his consultation When tho work was done. " It was tho same story again this spring with the plowing and planting. He sits and smokes, and poor little Taneo drudges on, aud grows thinner and merrier every day, and is more and more convinced that ilokus is tho best and wisest of men. The most affectionate, blindest little soul ! She has just finish ed working up the corn this month, dur ing which time Hokus made a fishing tour iu the next county." " He is at home now," said Anne. " I see him at the door of tho hut. " " And hr comes Taneo. with a ban of potatoes on one shoulder, aud the pap- poose on tho other, and, as I live, with out a smile on her face, for the first time in her life! Who is sick, Taneo? Ho kus ? Little pappoose here ?" Taneo shook her head aud gave a laugh, which ended in a miserable quiv er of the chin and tears in her eyes. " You come to Hokus' house, Nelly ?" " Yes. Go on before us. I want to show this lady how clean Taneo's floor is, and how white she makes the little cur tains. " Now what has that fellow done to bring her to tears ?" lowering her voice. " Work and even beating she takes as a matter of course, and laughs about it as soon as it is over." Taneo passed on before them, stop ping humbly to hear some grumbled re proof from her lord aud master. Hokus, on seeing the girls, shuffled uneasily on his seat, aud glanced hastily down tho road, as if meditating flight. " What has he done ?" muttered Nelly. The floor of the little hut was clean. Two or three boards ou tho wall were rilled with deft plates, arrauged for show. A certain air of comfort and coziues3 reigned over the big fire, tho dean hearth, wooden chairs and tho neat bed. " Taneo's house is a palace compared to the other Indian huts," whispered Nelly. " But who is this, Taneo ?" as a fat, overgrown figure appeared, squatted on the floor by the fire, munching a cake of corn and beans. "Who is this woman ?" The Indiau girl stood without a word for a moment. Then she unsluug her baby, and took it iu her arms, looking into its face. " That is Hokus' new wife. He brought her homo to-day." Nelly turned on him her black eyes dangerously bright. "What do you mean by this, Hokus?" " Married woman down at Lufty," he grunted. " Gave horso and two blow guns for her. All right!" "Right? And Taneo?" " O, she hoe my corn better than Taneo. She bigger. "Ah-h!" cried Nelly, iu speecldess disgust. " Tako up your pappoose, Taneo, and come with me. You shall not stay here one hour not one !" Taneo submissively picked up her baby, and stood still, tho tears rolling down her cheeks, her eyes on tho ground. Hokus grunted uncomfortably, and finally waved his pipe with an air of command. "If tho women want mo to have ono wife, they can fight for me," he said. " That is all right. Hokus willing to live like Christian." Nelly vouchsafed no reply, but started down the lull, sweeping Taneo with her in her righteous indignation. Miss Parr, having reached home and gone back to her novel, speedily forgot poor Taneo and her misery. It rained heavily that day, the clouds settling down over the mountain peaks towards evening, and the rain increasing to a torrent. After sup'er, as they still lingered about the brightly-lighted table, Taneo suddenly appeared at tho door without her baby. Some strong emotion had banished the habitual reserve and shy ness of the Indian woman. " I go back to Hokus," she said. " I hear the river. Oconalufty kill many people when he up iu a storm." "Nonsense!" said the Squire. "Go back to your bod. Hokus hai legs to save hunselt if the Lufty is up. "He got no legs, nor eyes, nor ears when night comes, tie always tU'unx, said Taneo, gravely. "His new wife is sober, I suppose. You Rhall not go, Taneo." "What is it she fears?" asked Miss Parr, when she was gone. " Their hut is built in a hollow on the edge of the Oconalufty a river that rises with great rapidity aud force, in a singu lar sort of tidal wave. But Hokus cau take caro of himself," and tho Squire took up his paper. An hour later, Aunt Rubj" the cook, came to tho door. " Dat fool, Taneo, dono gone, baby aud all," she said. But littlo could be dono. The Squire, with ono or two colored men, started iu pursuit, but tho mountain roads at night through tho driving storm proved im passable. They woro forced to come back. Tho morning dawned clear. Nelly was up by daybreak, and away on her sure-footed mule. Miss Parr to her sur prise, went with her. Tho road was through the defiles of tho mountain, through which tho swollen streams dash ed fiercely. The girls crept slowly and careiuiiy along tneu" edge. jNeiiy wasd grave ana silent. "You don't think any harm could have come to tho Indiau?" asked Anne. " She has always lived in the woods." " The floods of tho Lufty are different from those of other rivers. Five streams run into it near its source, and below that it is walled behind high banks. The rise, when there is one, comes down iu a solid wall of water several feet in height. O, Anne, what is that ?" She sprang to the gronud and ran forward. They had reached the banks of the Oconalufty. The river ran over the spot where Hokus hut had stood. On this side they saw the Indian standing by a tree, looking down at a dark body which lay at his feet. His pipe was in his mouth, but it had gono out. "It is Taneo ! O, Anne, it is Taneo ! And the ioor littlo pappooso on her breast!" Nelly threw herself on her knees and lifted the cloth off of the still face. "O, Hokfts, she is dead!" "Yes," Hokus nodded, solemnly. " She forded tho river last night. She woke me up and tried to pull me through tho water ; but Hokus and the river was too much tor Taneo. Big log strike her on the head." " And you ?" "I was'drnnk," calmly. "That other woman ran off aud left me. She shall not hoe corn for Hokus. Taueo good wife," looking down at the quiet face. with somo trace of genuine feeling in his sordid face. Tho girls rodo slowly home. Nellv crying quietly as she wont. "1 was very fond of Taneo. It is shameful to see a woman's life so wasted!" she cried. "It does not seem wasted to me." said she knew. Hokus is little better than a beast, but her love for him was good and beautiful. Some women livo only for themselves, and love or work for no body." She drew rem, and, falling behind, rodesadlyaud thoughtfully on. Youth's Companion. Selling Ills Eights. A good story used to bo told of tho old fashioned relations between masters and servauts in colonial times in New Eng land. A gentleman in the neighborhood of Bostou hired a farm servant, to whom ho became much attached because of his fidelity and thoroughness in all kinds of work. But ono habit of tho servant was very offensive. He kept his hat on iu the house, and even in his master's room. The gentleman, after long annoyance, determined to correct the habit. " John," said he, kindly, one day, " you always keep your hat oa when you come into the house." "Well, sir, haven't I a right to?" "Yes, I supposo you have," was the reluctant reply. "Well, then, why shouldn't I ?" This tlio gentleman was not prepared to answer, so ho determined on another line of attack. ' ' Now, John, what will you take how much more wages will you ask to tako your hat off when you come in ?" " Well, that requires consideration, I guess." " Take it into consideration, then, and tell mo to-morrow morning." In tho morning John presented him self promptly. " Well, John, have you considered?" "Yes, sir ; I guess it's worth a dollar a month." " It's settled, then, John. You shall have another dollar a month." Johu was satisfied. He had maintain ed his rights, waving their exercise for a consideration. The gentleman was also satisfied. Ho retained a good servant, who reformed his only bad habit. More Postal Changes. The new United States postal law doubles the price of third-class matter, making it one cent an ounce, or fraction thereof, instead of one cent for two ounces, as heretofore. This is tho kind of matter which relates to merchandise, and which the express companies sought to have excluded from the mails. The express companies can now go bock to their exhorbitant rates, and will no doubt do so. Transient newspapers aro to pay as much per ounce as heretofore for two ounces. Public doenments, and all called such, aro to be sent free to the governors of States aud Territories franked by the clerk of tho House until December first. ' Agricultural reports, seeds from the Agricultural department, and whatever is printed by order of Congress, go free for nine months, or until the meeting of the next Congress. This includes the C'onfjresnio)ial liccord, all the speeches delivered iu Congress or authorized to bo printed. The Cherokee Advocate asserts that the Indian Territory has suffered pro portionately greater losses, and has, pro portionately, more destitute families from drought and grasshoppers, thou either Kansas or Nebraska, CRIME IN NEW YORK. A Year's ExhibitAn InterentlnH Study to riillniitliropinls and Others. Between November 12, 1873, and Oc tober 31, 1874, 8-1,821 prisoners were ar raigued before the eleven police justices presiding over the six police courts in the city of New York. Tho number is nearly identical with that in 1871. These pris oners consisted of 00,213 males and 24, C08 females. The number summarily dis charged, either from alleged blunders made by the police failing to obtain evi dence, or from complainants neglecting to prosecute, was 35,565. Of tho total of 49,251 held upon somo charge, after deducting five eases pend ing when tho year closed, 10,345 were males and 32,908 were females. The ex cess of females over males is accounted for by the fact that by far the larger number of females arrested were charged with intoxication and disorderly con duct, involving offenses against public decency. . The evil spirit of intoxication ac counts for 40,777, nearly half tho total number of arrests. Over 2,000 of these were also charged with " disorderly con duct." Of the total number arrested for being drunk, 27,208 were males and 13,574 females. These figures, however, do not represent accurately the city's in temperance, because "intoxication, un der the law, is not an offenso unless the person is arrested in an intoxicated state, under circumstances amounting to a vio lation of public decency. " Of those ar rested for intoxication, 17,004 were dis charged and 23,113 14,183 males and 8,927 females were convicted. The charge of disorderly conduct ac counts for 20,093 arrests of whom 13, 568 were males, and 7,125 females. Thus intoxication and disorderly conduct formed the occasion of 61,470 arrests, or seventy-two and one-half per cent, of the entire criminal calendar of the year. Of those arrested for disorderly conduct, 9,000 were discharged, and theremaindor furnishing bonds for good behavior, pay ing a fine, or in' default of tho latter, going to prison. The convictions on the two charges of intoxication aud dis orderly conduct represent about seventy one per cent, of the entire convictions. The nationalities of persons convicted is somewhat imperfectly known, as out of thoso convicted of intoxication 9,120 are credited to Ireland, 1,157 to Germany, and 3,331 to tho United States, and 0,840 are under the head of "not given." Again, under convictions for disorderly conduct, 4,050 are credited to Ireland, 3,072 to tho United States, and 1,189 to Germany, but 3,015 come under the head ' ' not given. " Taking the offenses which rank next to those cited for arrests, nr sault and battery accounts for 6,254, more than half of whom were discharged; petit larceny, 4,319 cases, 1,074 dis missed; vagrancy, 3,139 persons, 274 be "arrests, of whom 599 were dis charged. Tailing the two general divis ions of crimes ranking as felonies and those classed as misdemeanors, the former accounts for 4,021 arrests, 4,131 being males and 490 females. Charges of misdemeanor, 12,420 arrests, 10,579 males and 1,847 females." Vivisection of a Horse. A contemporary, says the London Echo, contains a description from an eye-witness which exceeds in pitifuhiess even Bewick's well known woodcut of the old horso "Waiting for Death." This is what Mr. James says ho saw in New York: Having managed, by the help of a bribe to the negro attendant, to obtain au inspection of au under ground place where cats and other ani mals were subjected to all sorts of ex periments, a rustling of straw in tho furthest compartment attracted my at tention. Scarce ono ray of light pierced the gloom of that horrible place, but I thought I eoukl distinguish the huge form of some large quadruped restlessly treading the straw under its leet. " Why, boss, what have you got there ?" said I. "Oh, that's poor old Uncle Sam; never mind him," replied the jani tor. " But I do mind him, and I mean to see him," I answered; and ho opened a large shutter, and let in the light of the closing evening upon tho gaunt and bony form of a poor horse, quite seven teen hands high, which stood with drooping head and closed eyes, munch ing tho straw of its bed. He was scarred all over, aud I could trace upon his skin where arteries had been taken up and tied again; where the nerves had been brought to the surface and the wounds sewn up ; and the delicato nostrils were sloughing sores. Tho hoofs, containing the most delicate and sensitive mechan ism, had been perforated in many places. And this is vivisection ! We must say that Mr. Hart's efforts to clear American physiologists from what he styled tho "cruel calumnies" con tained in a recent memorial, have hardly proved altogether successful. Mr. Rog ers (the eminent dentist, and one of the governors of St. Bartholomew's Hos pital) has written to the Spectator quoting two " annual announcements " of colleges in New York and Philadel phia, promising vivisections as an attrac tion to students, and now a recent visitor to the country gives us a glimpse of what he has seen there with his own eyes. Mr. Hart's argument that American physiologists cannot possibly be sup posed to practice any cruel experiments. because thev vehemently deprecate legal interference, was scarcely to be estimated as finally conclusive. How to Fix tho Clock. When the clock stops, do not take it in to the repair shop till you have tried as follows: Take off the pointers and tho face; take off the pendulum and its wire. Remove tho ratchet from the "tick" wheel, and tho clock will run down with great velocity; let it go; the increasing speed wears away tho gum and dust from the pinions tho clock cleans itself. If vou Lave any sporm oil, put the least bit on the axles. Put the machine together, and nine times in ten it will run just as well as if it had been taken to tho shop. In fact, this is the wav most shopmen clean clocks, If, in stead of a pendulum, the clock has a watch escapement, the latter can be taken out iu au instant, without taking the work apart, aifd the result is the same. It takes about twenty minutes to eleaa feraei clock, and saves a dollar. COMPULSORY EDUCATION. The Qnestlon In the Vlltnf iu Compared With It In lite City. A correspondent from New Jersey in quired recently as to the duty of villages and small towns in regard to the execu tion of tho law for universal education. This writer stated that in his own vil lage and in many others, there aro no " night-schools," or "industrial schools" for the truant and semi-vagrant class of children, and that if such children were arrested the authorities would not know what to do with them. We need not inform the residents of villages and small towns, in New Jer sey, New York, Pennsylvania, or iu any other State, says the New York 'Times, that compulsory education is a more im portant question for them than it is even for this city. There is little police au thority in our small communities, aud if a number of poor children grow up, neglected and uneducated, they at once begin to prey upon property, degrade morals, aud threaten even the security ot Me. A striking instance was given of this result of public neglect iu tho condition of a number of villages and towns on the lower Hudson during the early part of the past winter. The chil dren of the poor and working classes had been suffered in these localities to grow up without education or moral training, except such as tho public school imparted to those who chose to attend. The boys were utterly without education or moral discipline. They only worked occasionally, never at steady occupation. Their livelihood was picked up by such employments as tending cows, watching goats, thieving, and chance errands. When they be came older, tho bolder among them joined the ranks of thieves and burglars. At last, with other more accomplished associates, they began a thieving cam paign through the whole country-side. There was scarcely a comfortable villa or conuty house, from Tarrytown to Hast ings, which was not either visited or tlueatened by these young ruffians. The houses whose families were resident iu tho city iu the winter, were of course those preferred. Others, however, were not spared. Even country stores were opened. No one seemed able either to detect or arrest these nimble thieves. There is no police- worth speaking of iu this happy and idyllic rural district. The consequence was that the young vagabonds had free sweep. Property holders began to feel insecure of every thing. Gentlemen, wearied out by the day's business, spent the nights in pa trolling their premises with guns and pistols. At length, local patrols of the citizens of these villages wero organized, with much trouble . aud expense. But the close of these marauding expeditions seemed to be brought by. a horrible mur der committed by one gang, on an inno in Tarrytown, though the guilty person was never discovered. There can be little doubt that these petty thieves and young burglars were simply village Btreet boys, grown up without education or moral discipline. Many a saving supervisor and village trustee of theso towns no doubt bitterly regretted last winter that ho had not permitted a little of the expense to be paid out for prevention which ho was now forced to pay for safeguard or for punishment. Under the JNew lork law, already passed, and which will be passed by other states, the school trustees call upon the supervisors for au appropriation for a small outlay on a "night school." This for tho six months need not cost over 8250. Then all children not attending i day school should bo warned to at once enter this school under penalty of arrest. Tho place of detention must bo arranged by the school trustees. After a few warnings, only a small number would be obliged to bo arrested. Compulsory attendance at school would become a habit. But village residents should go fur ther. Their duty and their interest are clearly to see to it that the poor in their localities are educated. There Mght to be in all townssmall " industrial schools," carried on in part by volunteer labor, like these schools iu this city, designed for tho vagraut, poor, and ragged chil dren. Great aid could thus be given to destituto families, whilo at tho same time their children could bo trained iu industrious habits, and brought under moral discipline. Tho increaso of such young girls as the "Margaret" of un fortunate fame could thus be checked. It is the experince of tho city industrial schools that no children leave them to become vagrants or thieves. They are moral preventives. Each village will thus bo the guardian of its own welfare, and spread the benefits of education among all classes. Influences like those of tho visitors of the " Charities Aid," which are reforming the poorlouses, would stop the increaso of pauperism and crime among children. We should then have a system of education which would reach to the bottom of society. Not With That. A colored man entered an Alexandria barber shop and demanded a shave. The proprietor seated him in ordinary chair. Being seated ho was lathered. The barber then, after rummaging in a chest, produced what must have been the father of all razors, and commenced stropping it vigorously. , The customer, half blinded by the soap, seeing him handling the small scythe, asked what he was going to do with it, and when told that he was going to shave him with it, said he wouldn't be shaved by any such thing, and hastily rising, seized a towel, wiped his face and left the Bhop. A Rich City of the Dead. Greenwood cemetery, in Brooklyn, .s a wealthy association. The receipts in 1874 were SaaU 810.9(5, which, with the cash on hand the 31st of December, 1373, $39,658.53, made $372,409.49. The expenditures for 1874 were $371, 772.01, leaving on hand on the 31st of December, 1874, $090.88. The fund for tho improvement and permanent care of the cemetery is $978,190. 10. Last year there were 403 lots sold, making the whole number sold up to 1875 21,885 There were 3,757 interments, exactly the same number as in 1873. The whole number of interments up to the 1st of January, 1875, is 172,890. LMrOSINU ON IMMIGRANTS. The Frauds ITseit to Induce Immigration to Brazil A Warning. An official notice has been issued by the immigration commissioners of Great Britain, acting under immediate orders from tho Secretary of State for tho colonies, says the New York Times, warning intending immigrants from pro ceeding to Brazil. The reasons for this almost exceptional action on the part of the English government are such an may at any time occur in the case of other countries besides Brazil, and although we do not apprehend a frequent repeti tion of them, the incident is one which should not pass unnoticed. The govern ments of Brazil and somo of tho South American republics have, for two or three years past, been making strenuous efforts to obtain a supply of labor either from Europe or the United States. To that end they have represented the ad vantages of their respective countries in glowinar colors, and they have made Eromises which, if genuine, ought to ave proved a strong attraction. To some extent the purpose was served. Families and single men and women migrated from here and from across the Atlantic to Rio Janeiro, Buenos Ayres, and in less numbers to other places in South America, but only to find all their expectations disappointed. Their an ticipations as to soil, climate, and the demand for labor wero not realized. The promises that had sounded bo well were not fulfilled, and, in place of the hearty welcomo that they had been told to look forward to, they found themselves sur rounded with a populace prejudiced against their nationalities, and a state of public opinion which was neither liberal nor tolerant. In this predicament as many as were able returned home. Many died of disease or starvation, and the few who were compelled to remain have sincerely deplored the day when they left their native land. Iu the case of Brazil, the government of that country promised free grants of laud to immigrants who would settle up on them, together with assistance in cul tivation. It induced some two thousand persons to go to Bio. But no grauts were ever made, and, although three years have elapsed since the offer was first put forward, and notwithstanding the efforts of some of tho foreign ministers in Brazil, not any assistance has yet been given by the government in any way to relieve the few families that were obliged to stay iu the country. Yet, in face of this breach of faith, a new scheme for drawing a foreign population has been devised. A now settlement is proposed. It is described as in one of the richest districts where, in a few mouths, crops can be gathered from virgin soil, and where there is a conve nient market for all tho produce that can bo grown. Besides which, a tramway is to bo constructed "immediately" to ef- apital. Such is the inducement "oilere'd. But ou investigation it turns out that the place chosen for tho settlemont is sixty two miles from the provincial town, aud not less than one hundred and fourteen miles from the port, from which the city of Rio can be reached only after a voyage of forty hours more by steamboat. There is at preseut no means of com munication from the place of the settle ment to either town,' and experience has shown that the " immediate" construc tion of a hundred miles of railroad in South America is rather a vague project. Under all these circumstances, it seems that tho British government is perfectly justified in the course it has pursued, and the warning is ono which others besides British subjects may, perhaps, usefully take into consideration. But their is something more to be de rived from all this. If Brazil and the Argentiue Republic had kept good faith with their immigrants, it is tolerably certain that they would have succeeded in attracting a vcrv useful stream of popula tion. There is no reason why they should not. South America is wanting in many of tho advantages which take immicrants to other places, but this coidd bo counterbalanced by artificial conditions of a favorable character. Where, however, those conditions come short of fulfillment, more harm is done than if they had never existed. It is that very danger which this country has to fear. We owe very much to immi gration. It has been to tho United States a source of population and of wealth. But last year witnessed a great falliuor off in the number of immigrants, and the fact was undoubtedly duo to the condition of the labor market, and to the statements made by persons who had re turned, disappointed, to Europe. Agents aro now busy striving to induce laborers and others in Great Britain and elsewhere to come to America. What may we not suffer from their too great zeal ? If they are successful, and the persons they send out to us are disappointed, we shall find the main stream of immigration turned elsewhere, so that when we want it we may not be able to get it. The labor market here is, for the moment, well supplied in most branches. Everywhere we hear of people out of employment and anxious to do anything that will bring them a livelihood. While this state of things last3 is it wise to try and force a current of more labor into the country ? We think not. It would be better to leave immigration for a time to tako its own course, uninfluenced in any way, and then, when employment be comes more general, which we hope will not bo long, the country may reasonably expect to receive all the foreign popuia tion that it needs. A Conditional Precedent. In Augusta, Maine, no provision has been made this winter for feeding and loderiuK tramps. A vagabond went into a police station and wanted to sleep there : "We only lodge prisoners," 6aid the sergeant behind the desk. " You only lodge prisoners," repeated the vagabond, meditatively. " That's all," was the reply, you have got to steal something, or assault somebody, or something of that kind.' "I've got to assault somebody, or something of that kind," again repeated the vacrabund. thoughtfully. Then he reached across the desk with his right arm. and knocked the sergeant off his ft )ol. savins, as the officer cot up with his hand to his eye, Give me as good a bed as you klu, sergeant, 'cause I don t feel very well to-night. Items of Interest. A boy only twelvo years of ago com mitted suicide at Gainkirk, Scotland, recently, on account of grief at the losi of his situation. Tho greatest discovery at Pompeii is that of a woman making a fire in a cook stove, whilo her husband is in bed and asleep. She was a noble woman. A Cleveland man puts waste papers into his letters, so as to make them weigh all that will pass for threo cents. He does this to revenge on Undo Sam. A witness in a Catskill law office de scribed the poverty of a field of corn as follows: Tho crop was so stunted ond short that the toads could sit on their haunches and pick bugs off the tassels. Some boys at Bristol, Vt., poured kerosene on a dog, and set liim on fire, the other day. The dog ran under a barn among a mess of hay, and the barn, with all its contents of hay and grain, was destroyed. Some days ago Henry Buzzard, son of a farmer living at Kemsell, a village on tho border of Notts, while playing with a strange cat was bitten by tho animal. A short time after the boy becamo ill, aud the surgeon who attended pro nounced him to have hydrophobia. Tho poor youth died in the most terriblo agony. "Herbert," said a perplexed mother, "why is it that you're not o better boy t" " Well," said the littlo fellow, soberly, looking up into her face with his honest blue eyes, " I suppose the real reason is that I don't want to be !" We think the child gave the real reason why all of us, big as well as little, are not better than we are. A Boston wag once wrote to a former President of the United States, asking whether he would accept a carriage and horses as a token of esteem from tho Young Men's Christian Association of that city. In due time an affirmative answer was returned from Washington. The wag thereupon sat down and wrote back: " I thought so." It is needless to add that the carriage and horses were never sent. A show exhibits in country villages, and travels in sleighs. Whilo crossing the Green mountains from Ludlow to Rutland, Vermont, a short time ago, the company were snow bound for three days in a farm house. The baggage sleigh, which they had preceded, did not arrivu, and as soon as the storm had abated, a search was made for it. The sleigh was found overturned in a drift, and tho driver frozen to death. In tho Malayan peninsula largo apes of naturally intelligent breeds are em ployed by their masters much in the same way that human slaves aro made use of in somo parts of Africa. The cocoanut palm is valuable for its fruit, but this is very difficult to procure, so the landlord of a tope of palms trains his seem to delight in the work. In a spaoo of ten years not much less than two millions of British subjects have left their native land. Somo went to Australia, some to Canada, and more the United States. Until lately the Irish immigrants were iu excess of the English and Scotch. Siuce 1809, how ever, the respective ratios are reversed. During that year Great Jintain sent forth eighteen thousand more immigrants thau Ireland, and in lSVZ tins excess was even more marked. Of two members of a well-known Bos ton firm, one of whom possesses the larger capital and the other the larger business influence, tlio latter became dis satisfied, the other day, and advertised anonymously for a partner with )ffuu,uuo capital. One reply was received to tho advertisement, and a correspondence en sued between the two parties. At last these parties met, and tho man who answered the advertisement proved to be the advertiser's partner. A Victimized Young Man. An amusing story is told of a young Americau gentleman who, while sojourn ing in i'aris, invited two uemoisenes u accompany him to the theater. He se cured three Beats, and drove to the house of his fair friends, half hoping that ono was indisposed, so that his felicity might be unbounded. The two were awaiting him, aud their mother as well, who kindly invited herself to chaperon tho party, and intimated that her daughters could under no circumstances go without her. There was no help for it. I he four crowded into the carriage. No fourth seat could be obtained adjacent to the three already' secured, or even on the same tier, and during three long acts the three ladies sat in a box, whilo our young American gazed at them with feel ings unutterable from his seat in the par quette. The drama over, only cabs, with room for two, cauld be obtained to con vey the party home. Here, then, was a dilemma which young lady should he select as his cab companion ? They wero both charming, and the matter was diffi cult to decide. The old lady settled it, however, to her satisfaction, if to the annoyance of ounow miserable coun tryman. ' Hortense and Sophie, you go in this cab. Monsieur and I win fol low you in the next." The young gen tleman now thinks that French social customs are barbarous. The United States Bounty Bill. The following are the reasons given by President Grant for vetoing the Soldier a Bounty bill: First That it appropriates from the Treasury a large sum of money at a time when the revenue is insufficient for cur rent wants; and this proposed further drain on the Treasury by the issue of bonds authorized by this bill to a very large and indefinite amount would seri ously embarrass the funding operations now progressing, whereby the interest of the bonded debt is being largely re duced. Second I do not believe that any con siderable portion of the ex-soldiers, who it it supposed will be beneficiaries of this appropriation, are applicants for it; but ra'her it would result more iu a measure for the relief of claim agents or middle men, who would intervene to collect or discount the bounties granted by it. The passage of this bill at this time is inconsi tent with the measures of economy now demanded by the country.