7 7 HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPERANDUM. Two Dollars per Annum. YOL. V, HIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THUIISDAY, JULY 29, 1875. NO. 23. The Dislihl Hchool. Tho district schoolmaster was Billing behind his groat book-laden dork, Close-watching tho motions of ncliolars, pa- thotic and gay and grotcrque. As whisper tho hnlf-loalkss branches, whon autumn's brink brocy.os havo como, Ilia little ecrub-tliiekct of pupils gout upward a half-sniothorod bum ; Like tho froqnont sharp bang of a wagon, whon treading a forest path o'er, Resounded the foot of tho pupils, whouevor their hcols struck tho floor. Thcro was littlo Tom Timma on the front scat, whose face was withstanding a drouth, And jolly Jack Oibbs just behind him, with a rainy new moon for a mouth ; There were both of the Smith boys, as studi ous as if they bore names that could bloom, And Jim Jones, a heavon-built mechanic, the Blyost young knavo in the room, With a countenance grave as a horse's, and bis honest eyes fixed on a pin, Quoer-bcut on a deeply laid project to tunnel Joe Haw Kina' skin. There were anxious yonng novico, drilling their spe lling books into tho brain, Loud-pulling each half-whiepored letter, liko an engine just starting its train ; Thoro was one fiorcoly muscular follow, who scowled at tho sums on his slate, And leered at the inuoeout figuros a look of unspeakable hate, And his white teeth cIobo together, and gave his thin lips a short twist, As to say : " I could whip you, confound you ! cjuM such things be done with the fist !" Thoro wcro two knowing girls in tho corner, each ono with somo beauty possessed, Iu whisper discussing the problom which one the young master likes best ; A class in tho front, with their rcadors, wore telling, with clitlicnlt pains, How perished bifvo Marco rjozzaris while blooding at all of his veins ; And a boy on tho floor to be punished, a Btatuo of idleness stood, Milking faces at all of tho others, and onjoy- iug the scone all ho could. Around woro tho walls gray and dingy, which every old school sanctum hath, With many a break on their suifaco, where grinned a wood-grating of lath. A patch of thick plaster, just ovor tho school master's rickety chair, Boomed throat'ningly o'er him suspended, liko Damocles' Hword, by a hair. Thoro were tracks on tho desks whore tho knife blades had wandered in search of thoir proy j Thoir tops were as duskily spattered as if they diuuk ink evoiy day. The sqnaro stovo it puffed and it crackled, and broko out iu rel-fUtning soros, Till tho grout iron quadruped tremblod liko a dug fierce to ruh out-o'-doors. White Biiowflukes looked in at tho windows ; tho gale pressed his lips to the cracks ; And the children's hot faces wore streaming, tho while they were freezing thoir backs. Will Carlton. TIMID SIMS. " Timid Sims," as ho was called, was - hold iu very inferior repute among the boys at Texas Bar, because ho had back ed down before a six-shooter. A man on Texas B.ir might be lucking iu many qualities, but if ho had "the sand," it covered a multitude 01 sins. " Sand was tho jocular translation for "grit." Sand, iu a locality possessing but littlo law and 1 ss order, was an ulisolute es sential to a god standii g in Texas Bar. Simi had ouo merit. Mo was an inde ' fatigahlo prospector, aud nt last struck gravel diggings on Bixel's Flat. Had ho been " smart." ho might have monopo lized tho entire lead. lie contented himself with a modest sKee at ouo end. Thou down came the able-bodied cutting and shooting men of Texas liar. Jim Freemantlu had worked a bank claim facing tho il.it two years previously, without suspecting tho diggings which existed an eighth of a mile back. No matter. On the plea of possessing a prior claim on Bixel's, ho and his coin peers argued that they had the right of "running tho first boundary lines." Sims had already run his own, which in cluded, so far as ho could judge by ex ternal indications, a fair slice of tho lead supposed to exist underneath. This Freoinantlo & Co. coveted. So they ran their linos, which clashed with those of Sims. Sims found Freemantle's notices posted in tho heart of his claim. lie ex postulated with him. lie renewed his own notices, which had been torn down. Theso were again snatched oft", and his boundary stakes kicked over. This was accompanied by a threat from the pro prietors of the "Conquer We Must" claim, that " any more of that sort of thiug would leaft to bullets." So Sims ' took water," and was obliged to take up with tho fragment of tho ground ho had discovered. Wang Chu kept a "China store" a little above Bixel's Flat. ' Wang Chu ' dealt principally iu gin, salt fish, tea and opium. In his leisure hours ho had con structed a boat for transporting parties of his countrymen, who, from time to time in their immigrations about tho country iu thoir search for diggings, might desire to cross the river. It was built after the Chinese stylo of mariuo architecture It was cumbrous, heavy, lop-sided aud unmanageable iu the most quiet waters. One aim iu its construc tion had been to use as much old tim ber as possible. When Wang Chu had finished Tho Ark," as the miners termed it, he painted two great eyes in the bows. Thereby he had doemed he had made it a rational, living, seeing creature. Wheu it was first set afloat, there was a dedicatory burning of crack ers, joss-sticks, other pow-wowing aud ' an iucrcasod consumption by Wang Chu and his contemporaries of gin and opium. After this the ill-starred and uuguiuly craft floated iu its crippled and lop-sided fashion in a little bight of the river. Its passage over the Stanislaus at the lowest Btage of water was accom p lished wit 1 a vast amount of loud out cries and gabbling on tho part of Wang Ohu and his crew, who miuglod their frantio paddling, when in tho heaviest current mid-stream, with an incessant vociferation of contradictory orders to each other. Tho result was generally a lodgment of tho " Tho Ark " a quarter of a milo below its starting point on tho opposito side, nud a suspension of all Wang Chu's other business until it was towed by hand ngainst the current back again. All the whito men on tho river wero agreed on one point, that tho "Ark" would drowu somebody cro its mission was ended. On this being told Wang Chu, as an additional precaution he painted another eye in the stern, sacri ficed a pig to somo Mongolian marine deity, burnt more joss-sticks, and ter minated the ceremonies with another outpouring of gin and opium. In the summer time a California mountain river is an attenuated, feeble stream, that one may ford at every hun dred yards; an alternation of rivulets, motionless pools, boulder covered islands and great granite boulders rear ing themselves high out of the waters. But when swollen by the long-continued rains of winter or the melting snows of the Sierras in the spring, its quiet, peaceful character vanishes; it becomes a turbulent, roaring, treacherous mon ster; it sets death-traps in every direc tion. Here a whirling eddy, smooth enough on its surface and seemingly harmless ; yet possessed of invisible arms, more powerful than those of tho devil fish, to suck and carry men down into its lowest depths; thoro a mael strom, raging and roaring over tho rocks hidden beneath. During tho freshet the banks quiver and tremble as tho im mense power whirls and foams past, and your voice is caught from your lips and nulled into indistinctness. From " 49 " upward, every ono of theso mountain gold-bearing strenms has claimed a long list of victims, aud many a bravo fellow has been caught iu their deadly em brace never to bo seen afterward. Tho Stauislaus was "booming" ono spring afternoon at its highest water mark, when five Chiuamen, encumbered with their blankets, bundles, rockers, jacks, pans and shovels, came stringing down the Park Hill trail. They stopped aud refreshed themselves for a time at tho stream, and then, accompanied by Wang Chu, placed themselves and bag gago in the boat to be ferried over. A quarter of a milo below their start ing place was tho Black rock, a gigantic boulder, which for centuries had pitted itself against tho stream. It was not more than one hundred aud fifty yards from the shore, and the Stanislaus at this point was not more than double that dis tance iu width. Here tho waters sud denly narrowed to this compass betwixt rocky walls, rushed rather iu a succes sion of great waves or bursts than a regular current. This, iu fact, was the tipper entrance of the Big canyon, two miles in length, anJ bi-easou of the rocky walls and raging current, no min ing could ever be successfully accom plished here at the most favorable sea son. Directly opposite tho Black rock, on a littlo knoll, was tho cabin of Timid Sims. no, in company with a chance partner, was working on the bank near by. Sims was always picking up the waifs, stragglers and castaways drifting about tho country. His house and scanty larder were over open to them. He took them as partners, and trusted them as freely as though they had como burden ed with trunks full of indorsements aud testimonials of good character. Some times thoy robbed him; sometimes they got drunk and made his houso a paude mouium; sometimes they effected tho samo result without tho aid of whisky, by gradually developing sour, surly, ferocious dispositions. Tho best of the lot carried the gross result in gold dust of a week's washing to Columbia for tho purposo of turning it into coin, and after many days' waiting therefor, Sims re ceived a letter from tho delinquent, stating that he was overwhelmed with shamo aud remorso, but ho had given way to his besetting siu for gambling, aud the dust had all gono into tho maw of tho " tiger." He had not proved an able workman cither. His hands seemed never before to have grasped pick and shovel; and after a morning's gasping labor, Sims would often insist that he should remain nt homo during the after noon aud make himself comfortable, for it was a sore distress to see a man past ing aud struggling with work to which it was very clear ho was unaccustomed. "You'll get your throat cut one of theso nights by somo of these chaps you're always picking up," was tho rough aud condescending advico of Jim Freemantle to Sims. Sims looked as if the idea was entirely now to him, but the next straggler coining along was readily taken in. It was about cloven o'clock. Sims and his co-operativo straggler had put through their last run of twenty-five buckets, and wero " washing down"" to seo how it had yielded. Tho sievo and apron of tho rocker wero taken olf. There was a great deal of black sand iu tho bottom of the apparatus. This Sims was running off by means of successive streams of water, poured from his long handled dipper, aided by a peculiar rapid rocking of the machine. Slowly, at the upper end, tho black sand deposit assumed the shapo of a point, and near the apex, ono after another, camo out a little run of golden yellow flakes. "Takes a good deal of dirt to make a little gold, doesn't it?" said the strag gler. "When I was on tho north fork of the Tuba, in '51, I got six ounces once out of twenty-five buckets. Thorn wai the times, though." " Thero's about two bits hero, I guess," said Sims. "Well, that's better than nothing; aud we ain't beholden to any one for it either. I 6ay, Tom; if those Chinamen start to cross the river iu that old boat of Wang Chu's they'll drown." Tho boat had started, and was gliding up an eddy in direct opposition to tho course of tho stream. For the immense mass of waterrushing down and striking the rocks at the narrow entrance of tho Big canyon caused a portion nearest shore ou either side to be sent directly back full three hundred yards. For this distance there were two smooth currents runniug up; between them, a foaming, surging current, rushing down. By taking advantage of these upward ed dies a skillful boatman ccftdd laud his craft on either side nearly opposito tho point from which he had started. Wang Chu and his passengers sailed smoothly olong until the upper eddy be ing reached, the boat's head was turned into the mid current. Then it seemed as if seized by a monster. It was whirled around like a top, shot for a second on tho top of a great surge, and shot down again out of sight and under. Thoro was a momentary glimpse of tho five men, paddling wildly and half rising from their seats; the next they wero all gono. A hundred yards below, liko a whalo shooting qjtt of wator to blow, came tho boat, "bottom lip, from- tho depths, and clinging to it was Wang Chu. It was dashed against the Black rock ami pressed under by tho current. Wang Chu sprang on tho rock. Tho rest wero never seen. Sims and tho straggler gazed like men in a dream. There, before them, were still tho rush ing, roariug stream, tho sun shining, tho birds singing; all going on and having gone through it all as though nothing was happening or had happened, and, in five seconds, four human beings snatched fron life to death I But Wang Chu must be rescued. There was tho poor, half-submerged creaturo on tho rock, tho ice-cold cur rent at times dashing clear over him, and striving, as it were, to tear him from his hold; and lietween him and tho shoro tho merciless stream, which could as easily Rweep away a thousand men as one. There ho remained until near night. Gradually the population of Texas Bar and Bixel's Flat accumulated on tho spot, All measures to float him a line by which ho might be hauled on shoro proved abortive. " I'll swim off and take a lino to him," at last said Sims, "No, don't go," said one among tho crowd ; " it's certain death I" "I willl" said Sims. " No, you won't not if I can help it," said Jim Freoinantlo. " You're wrong to try it ; and if you do, we're going to stop you. We've as good a right to stop a man from committing suicido as murder." Thoro was a murmur of assent from Sims turned away and tho bystanders. walked toward his cabin. When again ho emerged, it was with a cocked six- shooter iu his hand. Ho camo straight toward tho group and spoke: " You say you will stop mo from swim ming off to the Black rock. I do not intend that you shall. You havo suc ceeded in making my lifo thoroughly miserable on this fiat by injustice, tauut and abuse, aud now that there's a chance for getting rid of it you want to stop me. You seo you have inado a mistake. You've put mo up for a m in without a grit. Well, I'm going to show you that courage runs in streaks, aud it takes different circumstances in different men to draw it out. I'm courageous enough now to own that I backed down before some of your six-shooters, bocauso I didn't think my lifo was worth yon dirty little claim. But any of you would risk yonr lives iu a dispute over a pack of cards, because you've got a fighting reputation to keep up at any cost, aud you dare not live to bo called coward by some hound who would pick your pockets had ho a chance. Not ono of you dare go near Tom Wilson's cabin, when l nursed him through tho small pox. Not one of you dare go a prosoct ing as I did on the headwaters of Owen's river, and camp out for weeks alone, fifty miles from the nearest settlement. And I'm not afraid of tho river, savage as it looks ;" for tho roar of its waters, as I've listened to them many a long night in my cabin, has been a kinder voice than any of yours, and if I drown, I waut tho Stanislaus to bury mo somo whero deep down iu its channel, where your hands at least may never drag mo out. Let mo pass !" They made way for him. His faco was white, hard, firm and desperate. He walked with a proud step, liko a king going to the scaffold. All the shrink ing timidity, tho baflled hesitation of former days, hail disappeared. It was another man who passed through tho crowd, another being who had, as it wero, suddenly risen up and usurped tho body of Timid Sims. Jim Freemantle walked hastily a littlo ahead of the rest. "Lnok here, Sims," said he, with a moro kindly intonation iu his voico than over he had used in speaking to him before ; " look here come back, boy if you go in, you're only goin' to get drowned for a China man tisu't worth it anyhow and and we've mado a mistake, and yi uro grit, that's all. Here, tako my hand." Kims took tho proffered baud. It was but for a moment'. Ho did not allow tho grasp to detain him. ",It's too late," said ho. "I don't waut your kind words now. I don't need them. I stand above you all, and I've known it thi3 many a day. I'm going to prove to you that I ilcn't fear death. If I should turn back you'd say in loss than a week I'd been playing a game of bluff. I al ways knew I had grit enough iu mo. It only wanted your scorn and that poor creature's extremity to bring it out." Ho walked for a few yards further tip the river bank, made ouo end of the light line ho carried fast to a stake, divested himself of his upper clothing, aud holding the other end of tho warp, plunged iu. It was all over in a mo ment. Down with racehorso speed ho was borno on the surging, muddy bil lows toward tho Black rock ; dowu he came, borne like a feather ! with one arm uplifted, as ho was shot past, he held out to tho Chinaman the lifo-pre-serving lino, which the poor creature eagerly grasped. But Kims could get no hold of tho black and polished boulder. The fearful current, roaring and tremb ling, bore him into tho mouth of the Big canyon ; but no ono on Texas Bar after that hour ever spoke of " Timid Sims." A Brutal Fellow. James Brown, of St. Giles, London, claims to bo reckoned among tho noble baud of vivisectionists, his trade boing the catching of cats and skinning 'em alive. " Tho simple fact is," he says, " I get an honest living by skinning cats, aud because skins takeu from the live cats ore worth sixpence apiece more than those taken from the animal when dead, I skin th cats alive whenever I can." As tho court did not believe in Brown's cruelty, ha was sentenced to twclvo months' imprisonment. . A Criminal's Career. Looking at tho pioturo numbered No, 195, iu tho Now York police court gal lory, says a correspondent, a careful ob server would at onco pronounce it to bo that of a talented man. The high foro head, finely-shaped head, and general contour of the features denoto intelli gence and firmness. It is that of Charles II. Bullnrd, alias " Piano Charley," ono of tho most expert bank robbors in tho country. In company with " Ike Marsh and Mark Shiubnrne he effected the famous robbery of the Ocean bank, in Now York city, by which nearly $500, 000 was carried off by tho burglars. Then came, in 18G8, tho equally daring rob bery of the messenger of tho Merchants' Union express company, on tho New York Central road, between New York city aud Buffalo. Bullard, Marsh, and one Thompson entered tho express car, bound and gaggod tho moFSonger, and stolo $100,000 from the safe. They flod to Canada, but were extradited and lodged in Whito Plains jail for trial. Ex-Recorder Smith was hired by Mrs. George Roberts to defend tho prisoners and was paid $1,000. After the exami nation, which resulted in their boing committed for trial, the gang wont through tho ex-recorder on his way homo, aud stole back the $1,000. Then a party of notorious burglars, headed by JJiiiy .tori-ester, of JNatnan murder ce lebrity, perfected a plan for freeing Bullard, Marsh, and Thompson. They went to Whito Plains and dug into the jail while tho prisoners assisted them from tho inside. The men were freod and wcro lost sight of until the robbery of tho Boylston (Mass.) bank in 18G9. Tho bank was plundered of $540,000. It was thou learned that Bullard, under the name of Judson, hired the house next to th3 bank, and with his companions cut through the wall into the bank vault. Bullard at onco flod to Paris, taking his wife with him, and under tho name of Charles II. Wells opened an American drinkiug saloon under tho Grand Hotel, on the Boule vard des Capucines. A faro bank was carried on in a private room at the rear of tho saloon. The place was continually thronged with Americans, and Bullard did a thriving business for over a year. Bullard was finally arrested and the place broken up. Bullard was tried at tho Palais do Justice on a charge of keeping a gambling house, convicted, and sentenced to ouo year's imprison ment, nis wife came to this country and was robbed of a quantity of valuable furniture and her money by a woman keeping a boarding houso. When Bul lard was released he camo to New York, joined ids wife, and took up his quarters in a house kept by a noted burglar known as " Dutch Dan." This man informed tho police of Bullard's being in the city. Ho was at once arrested, taken to Boston for trial, convicted, and was a short time ago sentenced to twonty years in Stato prison. Bullard is a man of very good education, speaks French and Gorman fluently, plays the piano finely (whence his alias of Piano Charley), and is one of the very few burglars who can open a combination safe with his hands alone. Pauperism and Crime. According to official returns provided by several departments under the Brit ish government, it wonld appear that iu the year 1864 thero wero 1,009,289 per sons who had received relief from the poor rates in England and Wales. In Scotland the number was 120,705, and in Ireland'69,217. Ton years later, which brings us to last year, the number of persons who had relief in England and Wales was only 829,281, ond in Scotland 111,990, both countries therefore ex hibiting a marked docreaso. In Ireland tho number was 79,033. Hero there is an increase, but it is more apparent than real, duo to the better administration of the poor laws and to the more careful collection of statistics. It is notorious that tho condition of the Irish poor is vastly bettor than it was even in 1864. Airtho returns from tho largo cities, and especially from Loudon, have also for a long time past shown a steady decrease in pauperism. Again, tho number of convictions for crime iu England and Wales in 1804 was 14,726, in Scotland 2,359, aud in Ireland 3,000. Ten years later such convictions were reduced iu England and Wales to 11,089: in Scotland to 2,230, and in Ireland to 2,542. There is, therefore, an actual decrease in both pauperism and crimo. But that decrease is mich greater than these figures seem to show. We must not forget that the population has greatly increased. In 1805 wo have not the returns for the previous year at hand tho population of tho United Kingdom was 29,861,908. But in 1874 it had in creased to 32,412,010 ; and it is calcu lated by tho registrar general that it is now increasing at tho rato of 1,173 every day, or 428,145 annually. Cost of Burial. Tho Now York Tribune says : From facts given iu editorial, tho following schedule of the cost of a first-class funeral ou tho American plan may be adduced : 1 Rosewood coftin, lined with velvet 300 1 Comu-plate (name and all the virtues engraved gratis) 12 8 Full extension eilvor-plnted handles. . . SO 1 Cotliu-box to protect cotliu ", 8 1 Ice-box (second-hand) 15 1 Bhroud 25 1 Hearse 10 10 Carnages to Greenwood 70 8 fairs gloves to pull-bearers 20 8 Sears for pall-bearers aud one fof door. 10 1 Undertaker's fee for personal attend. auce 25 4 Porters to carry out coffin 6 1 8exton at church 15 1 Organiet and choir 40 Flowers 100 1 Lot in Greenwood COO 1 Grave-digger 5 1 Monument, home njauufacturo, of Quincy granite 900 Total 2,101 The Beer Capital op America. In ternal revenue roports show that tho city of Milwaukeo, with its one hundred thousand inhabitants, consumed during the month of June 28,327 barrels of lager, making 14,050,192 glasses, at a cost or $702,509.C0 to the consumers. As half of the population may be as sumed to be minors below the beer drinking age, the remainder must have taken ten glasses each per day, THE NORTH POLE. Wl I tlm InlcrcKilim Problem of nn Open 1'olnrMra Uver ho Molvcrt f A portion of the globe fifteen hundred thousand square miles in extent- -more than thirty times as largo as England aud nearly ouo-half as largo as the United States, exclusive of Alaska embracing both soa and land, is unknown to man kind. All attempts to penetrato it havo failed. There aro no romances more thrilling than those which tell of those efforts from the time of John Cabot, who sailed uuder nenry VII., to tho time of Sir John Franklin, who lost his life in the reign of the good Victoria. It was the dream of Cabot to find a short road to India through the Arctic seas a dream cherished by the mariners of that time with unvoryiig faith. This was more than threo centuries ago, when tho world was wondering over tho discovery of America, and English daring would not patiently rest under the honors achieved by tho Spanish, the Portuguese and the Dutch. Theso three centuries havo beeu marked by persistent efforts to redeem the failures of Gabot. We have our own Henry Hudson, to whom wo owe tho discovery of New York and the river which immortalizes his name urging his small vessel toward the pole in 1007. In ono of theso odventures ho was to die a dismal death, abandoned by his seamen in an opon boat. We havo tho Frenchmen endeavoring to work their way north from Canada, in the time of Charles II., but without re corded success. The Russians also, un der their great Czar Peter, wero to renew the effort in more recent times, under Behring, the Dane, who was to discover tho strait which divides Asia from America. Tho burden of the efforts to penetrate the Arctic regions have rested upon tho English. One huudrod years ago we had Lord Mulgravo seeking the way to India, stimulated by a largo re ward. Among those who sailed with him was young Nelson, afterward to bo como the mighty admiral. About this time Captain Cook, who was to meet his fate in the Sandwich islands and to be como one of tho most interesting and romantic names in our literature, strenu ously sought to open the passage to In dia. It was Cook who discovered the proximity of tho Asiatic aud American continents. So many failures, says the Herald, have only stimulated renewed effort. The nineteenth century has scon many expeditions. Rewards wero offered by tho English to whalers to press into high latitudes. It is moro than fifty years since Parry mode his famous ex pedition, when Franklin went over tho land for five thousand fivo hundred miles to mark its geography. Thirty years havo gono by since Frankliu went out with tho Erebus and Terror. His in structions were to endeavor to find a passage from Baffin's bay to Behring strait, and on July 26, 1845, ho was last seen entering Baffin's bay. He was to dio two years later a victim to his in trepid devotion to duty. It is twenty years inco Dr. Kano commanded his expedition aud solved some important problems. We havo tho record of tho Polaris, so well known to our readers ; the valuable expeditions of Dr. Hayes, and tho achievements of the Austriaus under Lieutenant Payer. Tho problem of the north pole was never so interesting as now ; Austriaus, Germans, English and Americans are olike striving to solve it. Thero havo been many misfortunes and disasters, many sacrifices that we mourn. But every explorer goes out guided by new experience. The difficulties that at tend tho attempt aro extraordinary aud disheartening. But in tho end courage and patienco will win, Tho nineteenth centiuy, which has soon so many won ders, bids fair to realizo tho dream of every mariner since tho time of Cabot the dreani of Arctic discovery, and of making tho north polo as familiar as the equator. A Curo for Duelists. Thcro was a French regiment iu which duoliug was all tho rage. Tho officers wcro always fighting each other, or get ting up littlo afl'uirs with tho officers of other regiments. At last tho war office, wearied out of patienco, changed tho commanding officer. A colonel was sont down who would bo sure to stamp out such nonsense. Two days after his arrival, two of the officers came to ask his permission to go out aud fight. To the amazement of everybody ho gave his consent; the officers went forth to fight, they slightly wounded each other, and "honor was satisliod," as tho phraso goes upon theso occasions. They were no sooner recovered than they received an order to wait upon tho colonel. "You have to go out and fight again to-morrow," he said; as they looked at him with questioning astonishment, ho explained: " When officers fight in tho regiment I havo the honor to command, they kill. Go 1" The officers went out again, and this timo made good holes in each other, which took six months to heal. Tho story is very horrible. They were sent out again and ogaiu, and at last they killed each other, but henceforth and forever in that regiment, and a good many besides, thero was ou end of dueling. The fate of tho young men who were thus sacrificed to bring about such a result was sad, but they brought it on themselves, inasmuch as being fully awaro' that the colonel was sent to repress dueling, thev choso almost on his arrival to demand that ho should stultify himself and permit them to have their way. It is, we have said, only on the condition of the duel being thorough ly iu earnest, and a tight to the death. that it has a raimn d'etre iu modern so ciety, and tho history of this French regiment proves that it flourishes iu these modem days chhifly on the credit of being inocuous. Population, Chicago and St. Louis have been x- ing tho " Smith method " of calculating the population of cities. It is claimed that in tho United States thero is one Mmith to every 540 persons. Tho St. Louis directory shows 900 Smiths, nud calculations by the abovo suggestion give 489,240 as the result for St. Louis. A Chicago editor succeeds in finding in his directory 1,390 Smiths, ond forty eight Smyths, Smits, Schmidts, etc., making iu all 1,438. Multiplying this number by 540, he makes Chicago's pop. ulalion loom up to 770,520. " ' ' The Hair Worm, or Horsehair Snake. A friend has sent us a lively specimen of that singular species of animated na ture known as the "hair worm," or "horsehair miako." It camo into tho possession of our friend from the faucet of her dwelling, connected with tho water works. In answer to inquiries as to its origin, and how it camo all the way through the pipes, we append tho fol lowing: Most of our readers aro doubtless familiar with the form and appearance of this singular worm or snake, and many of us, when boys, and somo of ns when full grown men aud women, wero fully impressed with tho belief that a hair from a horso's tail, when left iu a pond J or other still, warm water, wouia turn into one of those singular creatures. It lias been a popular belief that if incau tiously handled it will bito tho ends of the fingors and occasion that peculiar sore or gathering callod a whitlow. But tho microscope shows that it 1ms neither jaws nor other instruments by which it can either bite or sting. Indeed, it has not even a mouth, but obtains its suste nance by the absorption of fiuids through a mombrano over that part of its body whero tho mouth should bo. Joseph Leidy, a well known Philadelphia pro fessor, once tried a series of exhaustive) experiments to prove that this popular notion of its origin could not bo true, Tho microscope and scientific iuveatiga tion, however, have moro fully proven that this, like every other living crea ture, springs from nu egg in tho first place. Science informs us that this is not an insect, but belongs to that class of para sitic worms which livo and thrivo for a certain length of timo in the iutestincs or substances of some other body, liko tho tape worm in the human Rysteni and the trichina in the hog. Tho uamo of tho genus to which this worm belongs i i Oordins, and there are quite a number of different species. The most common species of this genus, and that to which tho ono now before us belongs, livo in in the bodies of grasshoppois, crickets, aud various other insects ; but when nearly mature and full grown, they boro their way out of their insect home, and take to the water or moist earth, whero after a few days they lay their eggs, whioh aro almost innumerable. They are laid in long strings, which look liko very fine white sowing cotton. Ono of these worms was scon by Prof. Leidy, while ho was experimenting, to lay a string ninety inches long ! Theso eggs are exceedingly small so small that up ward of 12,000 of them have been count ed in ono forty-fifth of an inch as thus laid in a string. This would givo some thing liko six millions of eggs as tho product of tho single worm observed by Prof. Leidy. Tho eggs, exposed to tho warm sun, hatch in about one month, and liberate worms which havo very little or no re semblance to their parents. The pro f cssor during his investigation succeeded in hatching several eggs. They pro duced small tadpole-shaped creatures, with a spine and two circles of sharp hooks six in a circle, which could bo pushed in and down out of tho head. This forms a kind of boring apparatus, by which tho tadpolo can penetrate tho bodies of such insects as may approach them. Tho professor placed somo of tho larva) of May flies iu tho vessel iu which tho eggs were hatched, and soon tho young tadpole Gordu wero seen to bore their way into tho larvro. They were also seeu to penetrato tho delicate membrane at the joints of the legs of crickets and grasshoppers which wero confined and placed in the vessel. They were carefully watched, and it was found that they gradually ascended among tho muscles and other organs ot tho bodios, strongly reminding one of tho similar but slower movement of trichina) in tho muscles of man and the hog. Of course, their chaugo from tho tad polo condition to tho worm takes placo withm the body of the insect in which they take up their temporary homo, living aud increasing by the nutritious lluids thero found until nearly or quite fully growu. That such is the case has been verified by a report from Mr. Jus tus Gago, who some years sinco wrote to tho Michigan Farmer, as tho result of his observations, that ho had discoveied that tho cricket resorts to tho water din ing tho month of August to rid itself of its unwelcome intruder. Mr. uage had been led to believe that the hair worms, which were numerous in a certain locality, issued from the bodies of crickets, which wero also numerous iu the samo locality, although ho was unac quainted with tho manner iu which they found their way into the crickets. Ono day, after ho had been experi menting by placing crickets hi the water to obtain hair worms from them, aud had succeeded in securing two specimens, ho noticed a cricket crawling up the side of his water pail. It jumped into tho water, lay quiet for a moment, produced a hair worm somo six inches in length, and then made it3 escape nimbly over tho edgo of thj pail. About tho same timo ho found a worm some seven inches long in a dead cricket which ho found under a stone. Pacific I2ttral J'rcss. Training a CliiM. Tho very first lesson a parent has to learn is that whutover ho attempts to teach a child he must himself first prac tice. Whatever ho wishes his child to avoid, ho must mako up his mind to re nounce, and that from tho very earliest stage of existence, and down to the minutest things. Iu young children the imitative faculty is so enormous, tho reasoning power so small, that f ne can not be too careful, even with infants, to guard against indulging in a harsh tone, a brusque manner, a sad or angry look. As far as is possible the tender bud should live iu an atmosphere of continual sunshine, under which it may safely and happily unfold, hour by hour, aud day by day. To effect this there is required from tho parent, or those who stand iu the parent's stead, an amount of self-control and eelf-do uial which would be almost impossible had not Heaven implanted on tho one sido maternal instinct, ou the other tha . extraordinary winning charm which there is about all youug creatures, making us put up with their endless waywardness, and lovo them all tho i better tho more trouble tlioy givo us. Thoughts for Saturday Kiglit. Brutes leave ingratitudo to man. Self trust is tho essenco of heroism. Jealousy dislikes tho world to know it. Wheu all clso is lost, tho future re mains. Hopo is a light diet, but very stimu lating. Tho inuocont seldom find an uneasy pillow. A foo to God was never a truo friend to man. Wo read tho book of cxperienco only backward and find it punctuated as Clod willed. Had we not faults of our own, wo should tako less pleasure in observing thoso of others. Man without religion is a creature of circumstances : religion is abovo all circumstances, and will lift him up abovo them. Every man has iu himself a continent of undiscovered character. Happy is ho who acts tho Columbus to his own soul. Thero is no dearth of charity in tho world iu giving, but thero'.is compara tively littlo exercised in thinking aud speaking. If wo look upon lifo as a gift of days, only ono to be used and improved at a timo, all its duties can bo dono, all its burdens borne. Everything that tends to emancipate us from external restraint without adding to our own power of self-government is mischievous. Many persons aro judged harshly by tho world because they allow no eyo but God's to see into the inner sanetuurics of their hearts. The most civilized are as near to bar barism as tho most polished stoel is to rust. Nations, liko metals, havo only a superficial brilliancy, Items of Interest. M. Thironin has been imprisoned for one year in France because his dog kill ed a littlo boy. Pitch a lucky man into tho Nile, sa3s an Arabian proverb, aud ho will como up with a fish iu his mouth. Compared with the quantities of pianos practiced on mornings, tho num ber of suicides is very small at this season of tho year. Tho theory that two railway trains can pass each other safely on a single track is again disproved, and yet tho experi ment will bo tried again." A San Francisco rumsoller was con vinced of tho degradation of his business when his daughter, eleven years old, got drunk and was arrested. It is a groat comfort to I: aid -headed men in these, red-hot, star-spangled, centennial days, to reflect that the eaglo, too, is bald-headed. Stylo is nohair. " I declare," said Susan, as sho watch ed tho people coming into church, "that man looks lino a piece oi uricii ueei. "Hush," said her sister, " it isn t meet in you to talk so. " Tho "black death" scourge, which has recently appeared on the rivers Tigris and Euphrates, is tho samo which destroyed millions of lives iu Europo and Asia during tho fourteenth century. A young man fell from an attic window in Baltimore tho other day, a distance of fifty feet, and, strange to say, did not kill himself, though ho broko both arms, lie had been sitting in tho window asleep. Professor Collier, secretary of the Ver mont Stato board of agriculture, says that all the specimens of potato bugs sent to him from different towns in Ver mont prove to bo something else than tho Colorado beetle. An English tourist who recently start ed alouo to ascend to the summit of Mount Snowdon, iu Wales, is missing. Ho is supposed to havo sunk in a quick sand on tho edgo of a lake near his path in descending tho mountain. William Ingraham choso u sapling in Savoy, Mass., from which to hang him self ; and it bent with his weight so that his legs trailed on tho ground, compel ling him to strangle himself to death by leaning heavily in tho noose. It is noticed that twenty-niuo land marks have already becu secured in tho patent office for the word " Centennial," as applied to various articles of manu facture, such as almanacs, cigars, omen ing, bitters, shirts, watches and even lager beer. A counlo of confldenco men at bt, Louis, tho other day, lit upon a roughly dressed " Granger" and got him to tako some bogus twenty dollar pieces for greenbacks. But tho joko didn't end thero, as tho victim was tho famous detective John Eagau. Santa ASfca is seventy-seven years old, but ho is still erect and slender, and his black hair aud black eyes yet preserve thoir original brilliancy. He is as fond of cock righting as ever, dux hasn't money to indulge in it as much as he would like. Solomon Hagar was a lazy drunkard who lived with his industrious brother at Harvard, Mass. no went homo drunk and the brother threatened him with expulsion from tho premises if ho did not reform. " You will be sorry for that," said tho sot; and thereupon ho went to the barn, set tiro to a mow of hay, and was burned to death in tho conflagration. Au Albany gentleman was a fow days ago annoyed by tho noise of four spar rows that had built their nests over ono of his window copings. He accordingly tore down tho nests and threw them into tho street, when, much to his surprise, a flock of sparrows immediately gathered on tho spot and with much chattering restored to their old placo the habita tions of the homeless birds. A timber raft sont down the Missis sippi from Wabasha, Mum., to St. Louis a few days ago, was composed of 250 cribs, making 2,343,205 feet of lum ber, after deducting the usual ten per cent. In addition to this there was a "top loading" composed of 11,284 bundles of lath, 1,081 palings, 773 1 thousand shingles, and 470 sticks of square timber, assorted sizes ranging from the largest clown tyj the Binollest.