) i v. y v 's... 7 V c.. i--- HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIIj desperandxjm. Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VI. MDGWAY," KLK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1870. NO. 30. The Mouse. I'm only poor little mouse, ma'am I I live la the wall of your house, ma'am 1 With a fragment of oh peso, and a very few peas, I was having a little carouse, ma'am I No mischief at all I Intended, ma'am 1 I hope you will aot as my friend, ma'am I - If my life yon should take, many hearts It would break, And the trouble would be without end, ma'aml My wife Uvea In there in the crack, ma'am 1 Bho's waiting for me to oome back, ma'am! Bhe hoped I might find a bit of a rind, For the ohildren their dinner do laok, ma'am 1 'Tie liard living there iu the wall, ma'am 1 lor plaster and mortar will pall, ma'am, On the minds of tho yousg, and when speci ally nunpry, upon their poor father they'll fall, ma'am ! I nnver was given to strife, ma'am 1 (Don't look at that terrible knife, ma'am I) T'ie rtoUa overhead that disturbs yon in bed, Tin the ra'.s, I will venture my life, ma'am! In your eyes I see mercy, I'm sure, ma'am ! O i, there's no need to open the door, ma'am 1 I'll slip through the orack, and I'll never oome back, Ob, I'll never come back any more, ma'am ! St. A'icholat. JACK EASY. How many have laughed over the in cidents related by Capt. Marry att in Ji b story of Midshipman Easy. In presenting his hero to the publio the Author tells us how the nurse was in f tailed ' in neeentrio old Nioodemns Easy' home as follows : Mrs. Easy did not And herself equal to nursing her own infant, and it was n suosEiiry to look ont for a substitute. Now a cooimou person would have been nati-ified with the recommendation of the nipdic.il man, who looks but to the ouo thing needful, which is a suflieiout and wholarome supply of nourishment for the child ; but Mr. mazy was a phi losopher, arid had latterly taken to craii)l')cv, and he descanted very learnedly with the doctor npon the effect of Lis only son obtaining his nutriment from an uuktiown sonrce. Who l-.ii' vs," observed Mr. Easy, "hut that viy nou may not imbibe with his milk t,h. verv worst passions of human nature ?" I Lave examined her," replied the doir, "ami can safely recommend her." " That examination is only prelimi nary to one UK're.iniportant," replied Mr. E:ry. " I will e'xaini-'e her." " fixaniiue ,ho, Mr. Easy?" ex cluiaiod his wife, who had laid. down ngu'n on tho bed. " fho nurse, my dear." " l'xnmino what, Mr. Easy?" con tiauod the lady. " Her head, my dear," replied tin husbai'.d. " I mnfit ascertain whether propensities are." " T think you. had hotter let her alone, Mr. E isy. She comes this evening, and I shall question her pretty severely. Doctor' Middleton, what do you know of ihi young person?" " I know, madam, that she is voiy healthy and strong, or I should not have sslected her." " But is her character good ?" " Really, mnd.tm, I know little about her character ; but you can make any inquiries you please. But at tho same time I ought to observe, that if yon are too particular in that point, you will have some difficulty in providing yourself." "Well, we shall see," replied Mrs. Easy. " And. I ehall feel," rejoined the hus band. This parleying was interrupted by the arrival of the vury person in question, who was announced by the housemaid, aud was nf-h; rod in. She was a baud Home, fkuif healthy looking girl, awk ward aii.d -naive iu her manner, and ap parently 'not over-wise j there was more of the dove than of the Eerpent iu her composition. 1 Mr. Easy, who was very anxious to make his own discoveries, was the first who spoke. " Young wornsu,, come this vri'Y, I wifch to tyaiTiiue your head. "Oh! dear iu, sir, it's quite clean, I assure you," cried tho girl, dropping a eourtoi y. Doctor Middleton, who sat -between tb bed and Mr. Eas-y's chair, rubbed his haada and lausrlied. In tha m'ran tia.e, Mr. E.wy lmd uutied the ttnug and taken off tho cap of the yonug woman, and was very biw-y putting his fingers through her hair, eiuring which tho face of the young woman expressed four and astonishment. "I'm glad to pemive that you have a larg portion of benevolence." "Yes," replied the young woman, dropping another courtesy. " Aud veneration, also." "Thauky, sir." " Aud the organ of modesty is strong ly developed." ' " Yes, sir," replied the girl, with a B.nilo. "That's quite a new organ," thought Dr. Mi Idleton. " Philo-progenitiveuess very power ful." "If you please, sir, I don't know what that is," answered Sarah, with a courtesy. ' " Ntvntheless, you have given us a practical illustration. Mrs. Easy, I am satisfied. Have yon any questions to ask ? Hut it is quite nmieos-(ary." "To be sure I have, Mr. Ea9y. Pray, young womuu, what is your name!" "Sarah, if you please, ma'am." " How long hava you been married ?" "Married, ma'am ?" "Yes, married." "If you please, ma'am, I hid a mis fortune, ma'am," replied the young girl, casting down her eyes. " What, have you not beeu inairicd I" " No, ma'am, not yet." . "Good heavens! Dr. Middleton, vhat can you mcan by bringing this person here!' exclaimed Mrs. Easy. "Nut a raanied woman, and sho has a child I" "Jf you please, ma'am," interrupted ihe young woman, dropping a courtesy, it waa a very little one." " A very little one I" exolaimed Mrs. Easy. " Yen, ma'am, very small, indeed, and died soon after it was born. " Oh, Dr. Middleton I What could you mean, Dr. JH Hi diet on I " Mr dear madam, exclaimed the doctor, rising from bis chair, "this is the only person I could find suited to the wants ot your child, and if yon do not take her.T cannot answer for its life. It is true, that a married woman mipht be procured; bnt married women who have a proper feeling will not desert their own children; and, as Mr. Easy as serts, and you appear to imagine, the temper and disposition of your child may be affected by tho nourishment it recoives, I think it more likely to be in jured by the milk of a married woman who will desert her own child for the sake of gain. The misfortune which has happened to this ycung woman is not always a proof of a bad heart, but of strong attachment, and the overweening confidence of simplicity." "You are correct, doctor," replied Mr. Easy, "and her head proves that she is a modest young woman, with strong religious feeling, kindness of dis position, and every other requisite. " " The head may prove it all, for what I know, Mr. Easy, but her conduct tells another tale." " She is well fitted for the situation, ma'am," continued the doctor. "And if you pleaso, ma'am," rejoined Sarah, "it was such a little one." "Shall I try the baby, ma'am," snid the monthly nurse, who had listened iu p.ilence. "It is fretting so, poor thing, and has its dear little fist right down its throat." Dr. Middlbton gave the signal of as sent, and in a few seconds Master John Easy was fixed to Sarah as tight as a leech. " Lord love it, how hungry it is I There, there, stop it a moment, it's choking, poor thing." Mrs. Easy, who was lying on her bed, rose up, and went to the child. Her first feeling was that, of envy, that an other should have such a pleasure which was denied to herself, the next that of delight at the satisfaction expressed by the infant. In n few minutes the child fell back in a deep sleep. Mrs. Easy w:is satisfied; maternal feelings conquer ed all others, and Sarah was duly in stalled. A Neighbor's Revenge. They didn't invite an elderly lady to tho wedding, says tho Baltimore News, but she succeeded in effecting au en trance when the presents were exhibited, aud took a fearful revenge, as follows : Siie adjusted her spectacles, -took a Bil vor cream pitcher forming part of a set, read the card attached to it, coughed mid frowned. A neighboring spectator's attention was attracted, and she said: " It's solid silver it should last." ,: Solid silver, yes ; aud it will last. I saw it first when Hattie Towker was married, and the Wheelers gave her the h t. That was in 1864. Then I met it 8t Clara Sims' wedding, when Miss Burlmge presented it. Off and cn I've s'.en it about a dozen times. The j!weler lets it ont. Last time was when Luella Fowler was married, and the jyweler vowed he'd never let it out again, because the Podgerses, who hired it to present it, didn't pay for the use of it, and Grubs seized it with all the other presents, becauso tho wedding supper wasm't paid for. Presetted by lit r Affectionate friends, Benry aud Jcspbine Plnmmer.' Humph! Ar.y body with a grain of sense might know that the Plnwraers couldn't have given them that. Why, the Plummers couldn't go to church on feuuday fortnight be causo the washerwoman kept their things becauso they couldn't raise mr:ey to pay her." In this pleasant manm-r tho dear old lady, with the privilege of age and near friendship, passed all tho articles on the table iu re view and let the guests know rather more about everybody and everything than they co'ild have found out any other way. The Polish Centennial Address. A deputation of twenty Polish gentle men delivered to United States Minister Waubburne, at the American Legation, in Paris, for transmission to President GraTit, a rpecial address and a medal htruck ou the occasion of the Centen nial Exhibition. The medal on one nide bears the effigy of Washington, and ou tbi reverse the effigies of Kosciusko i'.nd Pulaski. On handing the medal to Mr. Wat-hburue, M. Charles Edmond, a Pole and librarian of the French Senate, raid : " In the name of the Polish im migrants I deliver to your hands an ad dress to the President of the United States, written on the occasion of the glorious eeutenary which the Americans are commemorating; and also a medal representing the founder of American independence and two Polish heroes who fouzht in the liberating army. Mr, Washbnrno made a cordial reply, and baul that pending President Grant s an swer he felt authorized to assure the delegatiou that he would . bo deeply toncned uy tne nonor iney aia mm. Mr. Washburne also thanked the depu tation on his own behalf, and said he shared their hopes for " the establish mentof liberty throughout the world." Several Americans were present, and tne proceedings were most cordial. A Popular Error, It is a popular error to suppose that milk is frequently adulterated with aheep brains, starch, chalk, or pipe clay, whereas its adulteration simply resolves itself into the addition of water and the abstraction of cream. As even pure milk varies from twenty to thirty per cent, in commercial value, it is difficult for tho analyst to determine how much water has been added or cream abstract ed. Furthermore, durirg the sale of a cau in a store, the best milk goes from the top in an hour or two, bo that what remains may beoome so poor as to be unable to stand a tost. The solid matter iu milk varies from nine to sixteen per cent ; that containing from ten to twelve is generally good and wholesome. Fat is the constituent of milk that varies most, sav from two to four per cent. Goats' milk, is rioher in solid matter than cows' milk, containing as muoh as fourteen per cent. Why Annt SalHe Never Married. " Now, Aunt Sallie, do please tell us why you never got married. Yon re member you said once that when you were a girl yon wore engaged to a min ister, and promised us you would toll ns about it some time. Now, aunt, please tell us." " Well, you see, when I was about seventeen years old, I was living in Utira, in the State of New York. Though I Bay it to myself, I was quite a good looking girl then, and had several beaux. The one that took my fancy waa a young minister, a very promising young man, and remarkably pious aud steady. He thonght a great deal of me, and I kind of took a fancy to him, and things went on until we were engaged. One evening he came to me and put his arms around me, and kind of hugged me, when I got excited and some rlus trated. It was a long time ago, and I don't know but what I may have hugged back a little. I was like any other girl, and pretty soon I pretended to be mad about it, and pushed him away, though I wasn't mad a bit. You mnst know the house where I lived was on the back streets of tho town. There were glass doors in tho parlor, which opened over the street. These doors were drawn to. I stepped back a little from him, aud when he came up close I pushed him back again. I pushed him harder than I intended to, and don't you think, girls, the poor fellow lost his balance and fell through one of the doors into "Oh 1 aunty. Was he killed ?" " No. He fell head first, and as he was going I caught hold of him by the legs of his trowsers. I held on for a minute, and tried to pull him back; bnt his suspenders gave way, and the poor man fell clear of his pantaloons into a parcel of ladies and gentlemen along the street." "Oh! Annty! Aunty 1 Lordy!" " There, that's right, squall and giggle as much ns yon want to. Girls that can't hear a little thing like that without tear ing around the room and he-he-ing in such a way, don't know enough to come iu when it rains. A nice time the man tiiat mnrries one of you will have, won't ho? Catch re telling you anything BKRin. Uut, Aunt Haine, what Became oi him ? Did you ever see him again V No; tho moment he touched the ground he got up and left that place in i terrible hurry. I tell you, it was a -icht to be remembered. How that man lid run. He went out West, and I be lievo he is preaching in Illinois. But he never married, lie was very modest, and I suppose he was so badly frighten- d that time tnat no nover dared trust himself near u woman again. That, inrls, is the reason why I never married, felt very bad about it for a long time for ho was a real good man, and I've oft.-n thonght to myself that we should have been very happy if his suspenders hadn t given away. Honcsly is the Best Policy. One day a strange customer came to a Detroit customer. He wanted some goods and he paid cash down. The next (lay he made another purchase and paid cash, and as the days went by his face oud his cash became familiar. One day he retnrned with the change given him and sail I : " I believe I am an honebt man. You paid mo twenty cents too much." lhegrocer received itand was pleased. Two d&ys after that the stranger returned from tne curbstone to say : " Another mistake on your part; you overpaid me by forty cents. The grocer was glad to have founel an honest man, and was puzzled to know how ho could have counted so far out of tho way. Three days more, and the stranger picked up a dollar bill in the store and paid : " This is not my dollar. I found it on the floor, an I you must take cuarge ot it. Ihe grocer s heart melted, and he wondored if the world was not progress ing backward to old-time honesty. A skip of one day, aud then the honest man brought down a wheelbarrow, or tiered eighteen dollars' worth of gro ceries, and would have paid cash had he not forgotten his wallet. He would hand it in at noon as he weut pant, he said and it was all right with the grocer. That was the last of the honast mun mom in fades to no n, and noon melts away in darEness, am he cometn cot, There aro no mistakes in change no more dollars on the floor, and the cro cer's eyes vear a way-off expression, as if yearning to see homo one for about two minutes. X 'arrovr Escape. " Two aeronauts who ascended from the Crystal Palace, Sydenhem, England, had a narrow escape from drowning. Six minutes after the start they entered a vast boety ot hot vapor throe thousand feet thick. After penetrating it and reaobing au altitude of seven thousand feet, the mercury suddenly fell seventy degrees, and tne balloon was deluged with two hundred pounds of heavy cold rain. Three hundred pounds of ballast had to be thrown out rapidly, for they eunk so low that they could hear persons shouting. After rising again with strong south-southwest wind to nine thousand feet, they remained forty min utes at that height, and then desoended quickly, because they were already on the Essex coast, having traveled fifty miles in the hour. They wero close to the German ocean, and their grapnel nearly becemo entangled with the mast of a fishing smack, whose crew rescued them from an island, where the balloon lay capsized, and the aeronauts under the oar in the mud. Let Me See Him. When Louis XV. was passing through a town in tho north of r ranee, his re ception being of the most enthusia' tic, au old woman was suddenly seen to dart through the ranks of the military escort, crying: "Let me see him I - Let me bo Lira !" ' Tho king stopped his carriage.' ad dies1 ed a few kind words to her, then continued his progress. . . , . Then the old woman, flung her bauds into the air, and, with all the rapture of ii ions Simen, cried; " Thank Heaven ! 1 have seen him Aud now I don't' care how soon he elies!" HOW HE WOT THE KEY. The Story f a Bunk Robber That Didn't Come by Telrarnph. A few days ago about dusk a stranger called at the residence of a bank cashier St. Louis, and introducing himself, said he desired some private conversa tion on business of importance. The cashier thereupon led him to a private room, gave orders that they were not to be disturbed, seated himself, folded his arms, and desired his mysterious ac quaintance to communicate the object of is visit. The man coughed one or twice, then snid : Being the cashier of this here finan cial institutioti, of course you keep the key of the safe f The cashier said he did. "And you know about th" bank rob bers that go round and tie and gag cash iers and their families, and with pistols at their heads compel them to give up the keys 1" The cashier said he did. " And you've heard about the Dcvon- ort Brothers and the Spiritualists and things?" The cashier said ho had. "INow," said the stranger, "I've been studying up the whole business, and I have found out how to overcome them." "You don't say so?" " Yes, sir. For 85 I will impart to you secret which may at some future time save your life and the funds intrusted to yonr care, I will show you how to untie any series of knots, however compli cated; to remove agag from your mouth, nnd, in fact, to set yourself free. I can release myself iu 2:14$, and with a week's practice I'll bet that you can show better than three minutes. You see the advantage of my system ? There is no need to resist and get shot; all you have to do i3 to let them tie you up, and, as soon as they have taken the key and gone, why you just let yoursoli loose aud give the alarm. The cashier said it was a remarkable invention. Yon bet it is," said the inventor, ' and as I never take any money for it till my customers are satisfied of my honesty in dealing with them, I'll toll you what I'll do. Just let me gag and bind you, and theu 1 11 give you simple directions what to do, aad if you don't nnlooso yourself in five minutes and ex press your entire satisfaction with the process, I'll give you 10. If you find that I am a man of my word, you'll pay me 85." Tiie cashier said that nothing could be fairer. " Another thing," continued the visi tor; " I'm a poor man, and this secret is my only stock in trade, so 1 11 ask you not to teach any one else how to do it, for that WGUld spoil my business." The cashier consented to the arrange ment. "Take this $10 bill," said the other. If I fail, you keep it; if you are satis fied, you will return it to mo vith -an other $5. And now this is how we do t. So saying he took a roll of cord uud a gag from his pockets, and with great dexterity tied that cashier hand and foot, and gagged him so that ho could not wink. "Now you are tied pretty firmly, ain't you? You wouldn't think you could ever get loose, would your The cashier looked the replies be could not speak. 'I don t think you could myself. said the inventor; "and now let me tell you my name is Jesse H. James, the no torious train robber, and if you don't fork over that key in three seconds I'll cut your throat from ear to ear. I beg your pardon; you can't, but I'll take it myself. It's no trouble," and, turning that cashier over on his back like a tur tle, he took the key. " I won't take your pocketbook," he said, "for the $10 is yours," as I don't think you will be able to get loose in nve minutes, or five hours either. So long, sonny. and, with a courteous bow, he quitted the apartment, and proceeded to the bank, which he rifled as completely and leisurely as if he had been one of the directors. The Fad event has cast gloom over the community. Auecihites of John Bandolph. Tho celebrated duel between Ran dolph and Henry Clay grew out of the Presidential election of la'H. la that election Mr. Clay, finding that he had no chance but held the balance of pow er, eleotei John Quiucy -Adams, by whom he was made secretary ot state In publio debate Mr. Bmdolph spoke of this as "a combination, unheard of till then, of tho Puritan with tho black leg." In the resulting duel Clay missed his aim and Randolph fired wide. Clay grasped bis hand and exclaimed: trust in Uocl, my dear sir, you are un touched; after what has occurred would not have hnrmed you for a thou sand worlds." Not long after Clay told .Randolph that Mrs. uiay had borne son, and they had named it John Ran dolph Clay. Mr. Randolph, straighten ing up, replied: " I hope he will never disgrace his godfather. Notwithstand ing thh incident, and the fact that Mr. Randolph paid a visit to the Senate but a few days before his death for the ex press purpose of bidding adieu to Clay, the tradition is that he was at his own request buried in his grave iu a sitting posture with his faoe to the West, "that ho might watch his enemy, Henry Clay." The place which he selected for his grave was between two pine trees in front of his house. One of them is still standing. ' Mr. Lincoln's Horse Trade. When Abraham Linooln was a lawyer iu Illinois he and the judge once got to bantering one another about trading horses, and it wa agreed that the next morning at nine o'clock they should make a trade, the horses to be unseen up to that hour, and no backing out, uudur a forfeiture of twenty-five dollars, At the hour appointed the judge came up, leading the sorriest looking speoi men of a horse ever seen in those parts. lu a lew minutes Mr. Lincoln was seen approaching wit a wooden saw-horse upon' his shoulders. Great were the shouts and the laughter of the crowd, and both wero greatly increased when Mr. Linooln, ou surveying the judge's anirnul, set down his saw-horse and ex claimed: " Well, ' judge, this is the first time I ever got the worst of it in a horse trade." CAUSES OP INSANITY. Aa Interesting- Paper from ike Rtfpeilnlea. dent of no Enaitah Aailoin. Dr. Glouston, physician superinten dent of the Edinburgh asylum, in his annual report, says : Glancing over the summary of assigned causes, it is at onoe seen that intemperance stands out as by far the most frequent, it alone caused forty-eight of the 260, or about twenty per cent, of the cases. Much is properly said about the prevention of diseases owadays. Most unquestionably the sura total of tho mental diseases iu our city might have been lessened in that amount if the laws of nature had been better obeyed. Fifty of the cases thus resulting from drinking and excesses being paupers, each costing 27 a year to the publio rates, over 1,300 will have been paid for ono year's production of lunacy from very preventable causes, and, of course, this takes no account of tho cost of the old incurable cases al- eady in the asylum from the samo cause. I am quite sure that intemperance was the remote cause of the disease in more of tho oases; but, even allowing for those, we cannot put this down as ac counting in any way for more than one in four in all cases of insanity. In as signing intemperance as the cause of in sanity in a number of oases, two things must not be forgotten. The first is, that the taking of stimulants may not be a cause at all, but merely a symptom of the brain disorder; and, ns a matter of fact, it is often one of the early symptoms in many cases. The second thing to be kept in mind is that there are many oases in which it is the real cause of the mental disorder, but the mental balance has always been so un stable and the brain working so easily overset that a very little alcohol indeed will bring on an attack of insanity in these persons, just as in those same peo ple fright or a little overexcitement will upset their sanity. This is the class of persons who, in my exporienco, get up i , i - - ' , en uy reijgiuua revivuia. The resetting and recuperative power that is really an essential part of a healthy, nervous system, whereby tho effect of not too long continued overeat ing or overdrinking, overfeeding or overwork, are at once recovered from, is wanting in these people. Nature pro vides that short excesses do not do muoh harm to healthy peoplo. It is a poor sort of boiler that bursts whenever the exact pressure needed for its daily work is exceeded. . And before I leave this subject I may mention that I have not reckoned in any way tho mere drinking craving or the inability to resist it, as constituting insanity. I believe this may or may not be real a insanity iu different cases, but it was from developed and unmistakable mental alienation that all my patients suffered. When the causes of insanity of our eighty-four private putiento are oomporod with those of the 'i'22 paupers, the difference is most strik- ng, and entirely bears out the general law already indicated. Of those eighty-eight private patients, mental causes produced the disease iu about thirty-eight, physical being only twelve per cent, under them, while in tho paupers they were just one-third as numerous. These facts tend strongly to show that the higher iu the social scale wo go the more strongly do purely men tal and moral shocks act in upsetting a healthy mental balance, and that those 'causes operate more powerfully on the lower classes of a town population than an agricultural. Oue Way of Carving a Turkey. There is nothing a young unmarried man likes better than to go to a dinner at the house of a friend and be asked to carvo the turkey. He never carved a turkey in bis life, and with an old maid on one side of him, watching him close ly, and on the other Bide a fair girl for whom be has a tenderness, he feels em barrassed when he begins. First he pushes the knife down toward one of the thigh joints. He oau't find the joint, and be plunges the knife around iu search of it until he makes minoemeat out of the whole quarter of the fowl. Then he sharpens his knife and tackles it again. At last, while making a terrific dig, he hits the loint suddenly, aud the leg flies into the maidon lady's lap, while her dress front is covered with a shower of stuffing. Then he goes for the other leg, and when the young lady tolls him he looks warm, tho weather seems to him snddenly to become four hundred degrees warmer. This leg he finally pulls loose with his fingers. He lays it on the edge of the plate, and while he is hacking at the wing he gradually pushes the leg over on the clean table cloth, and when ho picks it up it slips from his hand into the gravy tlibh and splashes the gravy around for six square yards. Just as he has made up his mind that the turkey has no joints to its wings, the host asks him if he thinks the Indians cau really be civilized. The girl next to him laughs, and he Bays he will explain his views upon the subject after dinner. Then he sops his brow with his handkerchief, and presses the turkey so hard with the fork that it slides off the dish and upsets a goblet of water on the girl next to him. Nearly frantic, he gouges away again at the wings, gets them off in a mutilated con dition, and digs into the breast. Before he cau cut any off the host asks him why ho . don't help ont the turkey. Bewil dered, he puts both legs on a plate and hands them to the maiden lady, and then helps the young girl to a plateful of stuffing, and while taking her plate in return knocks over the gravy dish. Then he sits down with the calmness of despair and fans himself with ft napkin, while the servant girl clears . up and tikes the turkey to the other end of the table. - He doesn't discuss the, Indian question that day. He goes home right after dinner and spends the night trying to decide whether to commit suioide or to take lessons in carving, 1: It is significant of the change which is taking place in marine locomotion, that, of all the tonnage imported into Great Britain last year, steam veeseU repre sent 12,324,116 tons, as against. 10,869, 047 ton iu sailing vessels; 15.100,991 tons were conveyed in English, and only 7.502,172 tons iu foreign vessels, "Gifted lu His Nose." The following is John Norton's the Old Trapper's reason for not using tobacco, in Mr. Murray's Adirondack story now running in the Oolien Rule : " Henry," said he, as he stood leaning over the end of his boat, "you come here and we will hist this boat into camp. 1 dare say I am an old fool, but somehow I sorter feel that this lake shore isn't quite the spot to leave an honest man's boat on. I can remember when to have done it would have cost a man his boat and scalp, too, onless the Lord marcifuily kept his eyes open by dreams." Iu a moment the boat was plaoed where the old man wished it, and setting his back against its side for a support, he unlaced his moccasins, and thrust his smoking feet out toward the fire. Taking a pipe from my pocket, I filled it with a choice brand or tobaooo x bad in my pouch, and proffered it to him. "Thank ye. thank ye. Henry." said he, as he made a motion of rejection of tho offer with his hand; "I thank ye for the kindness ye mean in your heart, but if it be all the same to ye, I won't take it. I know it is a comfort to ye, and I am glad to see ye enjoy it, but I have never used the weed; not for the reason that I had a conscience in the matter, but because the Lord gave me a nose like a hound's, and better, too, I dare say, for I doubt if a hound knows the sweetness of things, or can take pleasure from the scent thai goes into his nos trils. But He has been marciful to man as it was proper He should be and gave him the power to know good and evil in the air; and smellin' has always boen ono of my gifts, and I couldn't make you understand, I dare say, the pleasure I have had in the right exer oiso of it. For you know that natur' is no more bright to the eye than it is sweet to the noso; and I have never found a root or shrub or leaf that hadu't its own scent. Even the dry moss on the rocks, dead and juiceless as it seems, has a smell to it, and as for the arth I love to put my nose into a fresh sile, as a city woman loves the nozzle of her smellin' bottle. Many and many a timo when alone here in the woods have I taken my boat and gone up into the inlet where the wild roses was in blos som, or down into some bay where the white lily enps was all open, and sot in my boat and smelt them by the hour, and wondered if heaven smelt so. Yes, I have been sartnly gifted in my nose, for I have always noted that 1 smelt things that the men and women I was cuidin' didn't, and found things in the air that they never suspicioned of, and I feared that smokin' might take away my gift, aud that if I got the strong smell of tobacco in my noso once I should never scent any other smell that was lesser and finer than it. So I have never used the weed, beiu' sort of natorally afeered of it; but what is medicine for one man may be pizen for another, as I have noted m animus, for the bark that fattens the behver will kill the rat; and so you must take no offense at what I have said, but smoke as much as you feel moved to, and I will scent the edges of the smell as it comes over my side of tue lire, and so we 11 sort of jine works as they say in the settlements you do the smokin' aud I will do the smellin', and I think I've got the lightest end of the stick at that." And the old man laughed in every line of his time wrin kled face at the smartness of his saying. Eating and Dyspepsia. It is au old German adage that " More people i-ig their own graves with their teeth I .an with spades, and verily it would seem so, if we look at the im mense number of dyspeptic, rheumatic and gouty individuals, creeping through lite in pain and wretchedness, xet it is next to impossible to induce even think ing people to control their appetites and to eat such things and at suoh times as nature shows them are necessary and right. Dr. Hall declares unhesitatingly that it is wrong to eat without an ap petite, for it shows there is no gastrio juice iu the stomach, and that nature loes not need food, and, not needing it, there being no fluid to act upon it, it remains there only to putrify, the very thought of which should be sufficient to deter any man from eating without an nppetite the remainder of his life. If a tonic is taken to whet the appetite, it is a mistaken course, for its only result is to cause one to eat more, when already r.n amount has been eaten beyond what the gastrio juice is able to prepare. The object to be obtained is a large supply of gastrio juice ; whatever fails to accom plish that essential object fails to have any efficacy toward tho cure of dyspep tic diseases. Tho formation of gastrio juice is directly proportioned to the wear and tear of the system, which it is to bo the means of supplying, and this wear and tear can only take place as the re sult of exercise. The efficient remedy for dyspeptics is work outdoor work beneficial and successful- in direct pro portion as it is agreeable, interesting and profitable. A Disappointed Wife, A downcast looking woman, about forty years old, called at a lawyer's offioe in Detroit and asked the attorney it he could see to a little business for her. He replied that ho could, and she explained. "My husband went to the Blaok Hills over four months ago." "Yes, I see. That is desertion, and Rood grounds for divorce," be replied, "I don't want no divoroe, sir. What I want is for him to send me some money." And he won't!" Well, he hasn't sent any yet, And what can I do ?" asked the law yer. Put a lawsuit ou him and scare him into it." she answered. He gloomily replied that the court' had no jurisdiction iu such a case, and that ho conld do nothing. " Why, if I was a lawyer, I could put a suit on him in un hour l know could I" she protested, lie shook his head. " Well, all ridht." the said, as che row to go. "I thought lawyers had somo get up to 'em, and I always held my breath when one passed the bouse, but this thing has opened my eyes, You don't kuow any more than I do, sir, and i don't know anything I Uood-day sirr - . . Oh, Fortune. Oh, fortune, thoa who doft deceive The greatest of this world of onre, Thou who dost p'ace unrrt meat might Near an abyrr, all veiled with flowers. These marr of the sword and crown, Fate rears them up or casts them down, Each bears a tempeit in bis (onl ; And counties levolutions beut in daiker sargos at their feet, Than o'er the Euxlno waters roll. Their tortnrcd slnmber bnt prolong Their fury or their agonr. E'en in their dreams by turns thoy foar Or glory in our misery. Their pow r that fills ns with diamay, A crime upreared it yesterclar, A crime will hnrl it down to-morrow. Jmtloe purity are fled, And we behold reign in their stead, Rod-handed war and carking sorrow. And often, without sound or strife, The loftiest throne falls puddouly By Its own weight thus dragged to ruin. Oh, woeful grandeur ! Happier he. Content to dwell where no storm rnves, His sails to joyous zephyrs giv'n ; Who, heark'ning to the myBtio waves, Floats on the ocean's mcvii-g bine Benoath th' unmoving bine of heav'n. Items of Intel est. The dry season ia known as the um brella's holiday. The clam is blessed with sands of life that never run out. Except on the score of eoonomy thero is no reason why circumstances shoulel alter burial cases. "What is that man yelling at ?" asked a man of his boy. " He's he's yelling at the top of .his voice 1" Offending boys in London sre sen tenced by the magiotrates to be whipped; but the parents aro usually made the ex ecutioners. Six prisoners set fir 3 to and burned the Richmond (Texas) jail a few dnya ago. They were all nearly suffocated wheu taken out. " What," said Bonaparte to Las Caeap, "is more overheating than weakness which feels itself protected by strength ? Look at women, lor example." A Watertown, (Conn.) merchant has received twenty-five cents, that havo been due him for twenty-five years, from a conscience stricken debtor. An army officer on the plains fays the Sioux have this new motto: "White man big smart ; he furnh-h brains. Bed man heap brave ; he knock 'em out." A railway porter at Hay worth Heath, England, committed suicide during a fit cf delirium tremens, by swallowing nearly the whole of an eight-page news paper. It choked him. A rich man in Araheim, Cal., threat ened to have a poor man ejected from a house because the rent was not paid; and tho poor man's mode of vengeance was to get into the rich man's hallway and die there cf smallpox. As the trial of a breach, cf promise suit was about to begin in San 1 rauos co, a juror arose and asked to be ex cused because he was engaged to bo married, ajd consequently his mind was not free from bias. He was excused. Dr. C. B. Faber, in the Practitioner, argues against the use of drugs iu sea sickness. They prolong the attack, aud he would only advise opiates when vomi ting is continued to an alarming extent. Several hours a day on deck is what ho advises. A man in Paris, wishing lately to pace joke upon his wifo, hired a coffin and placed himself in it at the moment of her retnrn alter a lew day s absence, vn seeing the supposed corpse, she fell senseless to the ground and has since beeu a lunatic. The wool clip of the United States in 1875 was nearly two hundred million pounds, whereas in I860 it was only sixty-five millions. In 1875 the country bought about fifty million dollars' worth of woolen goods, and eleven millions' worth of wool. A fellow in England who defended himself against a charge of chicken teahng by declaring that tne iowi umped upon him, and he was afraid it would kill him, and therefore wrung its neck m self-defense, evidently ueneveu thut a poor excuse is be tter than none. The New Orleans Picayune, in trying its hand at description, says: ihe modern city schoolgirl goes along with a big tilter, a bustle, striped hose, humpbacked, carrying thirty-one differ ent books, three slates, four copybooks, bottle of ink, pocket mil oi pencus ana pens, 87 worth of p nohback jewelry, a mouthful of chewing gum and thirteen red streamers dangling after her. The inefepenefen says: A late English traveler found a simple minded Baptitt mission church in far-off Uurmah using for the communion service, and we doubt not with God's blessing, Bass' pale ale instead of wine. The opening of the frothing bottle on the communion table seemed not quite decorous 10 tne visitor, who presentetl the pastor with a half dozen bottles of claret for sacramen tal use. Sheen dogs iu Texas are thus trained: A pup is taken from its mother before its eyes are opened, and put to a ewe to suckle. After a few times the ewe be comes reconciled to the pup, which fol lows her like a lamb, grows up among and remains with the flock, and no wolf, man, or strange dog can come near the sheep; and the dog will bring the nock regularly to the fold at any hour in the evening at which he is habitually fed. A Scotch couple who had beeu but a few months married, recently took advan tage of the railway to Edinburg to see the ceremonies at the laying oi a louncia tion stone. The young wife proposed staying a few days with her friends it. Edinburg, but it was necessary that hei husband should proceed homeward Dy the boat. To try the strength of hi, helpmate's affection, be remarked that he " doubtit the boat would be sae heavy laden that a wad gang to the bottom. "Dan ye think sae t" responded hi affec tionate partner. Then, John Ander son, ye had better leave the key o' the house wi me, "