iiiiii HENRY A. PARSONS, Jr., Editor and Publisher. NIL DESPEHANDDMi Two Dollars per Annum. VOL. VI. Iler Treasures. I keep tbem In the old, old bos That Willie gave me yean ago, The time we parted on the rocks . His ship lay swinging to and fro, it watting in the lower bay. I thought my heart would break that day I The picture with the pensive ya la Willie's? No, dear, that's young Blake, n no ook tne west Point highest prize i He went half orasy for my sake. Hero are a lot of rhymes he wrote. And here's a bntton off his coat. Is this the ring ? My dearest May, l never took a ring fiom him I Shis was a gift from Ho word Clr, Host see the pearls are getting dim. bey say t'iat pearls are tears what stuff Isetting looks a little rough. vas as handsome as a prince y Jealous 1 But be went to Borne . fall. He's nevtr written since. . tised to visit st h's borne . lovely place beyond Fort Lee i His mother thought the world of me I Oh, no I I sent bis letters back, These oarae to me from Washington. But look, what a tremendous paok I He always wrote me three for one. I know I used to treat him 111 Poor Jaok 1 he fell at CUancellorsville. The vignettes all that lot are scalps I took in Iiondon, Naples, Nioe, At Paris, and among the Alps ; . Ihoso foreign lovers act like geese. But, do,r. they are such handsome meu. We go to France ntxt year, again I This is the doctor's signet ring. These faded flowers ? Oh, let me see j Why, what a very curious thing 1 Who could have sent these flowers to me r Ah I now I have it Count de Twirl ; He married tliat fat Crosbio girt Uis huir waj red. You need not look So sadiy at that raven tress. You fcnoar the head that lock forsook ; You know bnt yen could never gueBS ! Nor would I tell you for the world About whose brow that ringlet ourled. Why won't I tell ? Well, partly, child, Became you like the msn yourself ; i4lat mostly because don't pet so wild 1 I have not laid him or, the shelf He'd nut a bypone. In a year I'.l tell you all about him, dear. Scribner. THE MINISTER of MONTCLAIR It was no use ; the letters danced be fore Lis eyes, the wholo world seemec wavering and uncertain in those days. He laid his book down, and began tt think of the grout trouble which wa shut! ins? Lim i-j. When tli i.Ik.l- Fpeeka first begun to dance between UimVind the paper, months ago, he had not thought about the matter. It was annoying, to be sure, but he most have taxed his tyes too severely. He would work a littl.i less by lamplight ppare them a little and he fhould bo all right. So ho had spared them mon nnd more, and yet the specks kept or. their elfin dance ; and now for weeks the conviction had been growing on Lira slowly that he was going vo be blind. He had not. told his wife yet, nor could he bear to lay on her shoulders the bur den of hia awful calamity. Oh, it wab iuu narei i And yet was it too hard ? Dared he fay bo he, God s minister who had told other sufferers so many times that ' their ahastenings were dealt out to them by their kind Father's hand, and that tuey snouid count all that brought them near Him as joyous, not crievoiis ? Yet, speaking after the manner of this world, his burden seemed greater than he could bear. What could he do a blind, helpless man f He must give up his work in life let another take his ministry sit helpless in the darkness, Heaven only knew how loi:g. Could he be thus resigned ? . Then, suddenly a flash of hope'kindled his sky, there might be help for him. This gathering darkness might be some thing which science could remove. He would be sure of that, at least, before he io:u juary. Ana men lie became fever ishly impatient. He must know at onoe, it seemed to him he could not wait, 1 iie called ms wife, and told her with. manner which he tried hard to make , calm, that he was going out of town the next morning on a little business. She wondered that he was so uncommunica tive it was not like him but she would not trouble him with any questions. She should understand it all some time. she knew, still she thought there was Bometmug strange m his way of speak ing. Ihe minister strove hard for the mas tery of his own spirit, as the cars whirled him along the next morning to ward the tribunal at which he was to receive ms sentence, tie tried to think of something else, but found the effort vain; so he said over aud over, as sim ply as a cniid, one form of words: " Father, whichever way it turns, oh, give me strength to bear it." Holding fast to this prayer, as to an anohor, he got out of the cars and went into the streets. What a curious mist Feemed to surround all things I The houses looked spectral through it; the very people ne met seemed like ghosts, lie had not realized his defective vision so much at home where it had come upon him gradually; and all objects wore so lamiuur. . Dim, witn au effort, he could see the signs on the street cor ners and find his way. lie leached at last the rest da ce of tne distinguished enlist for whose ver dict he had come. He found the parlor half filled with people waiting like him self. He was asked for his name, r nd sent in a card on which was written : "Rev. Wm. Spencer, Montclair." Then he waited his turn. He dared not think kow long the time was, or what sus pense be was in. He just kept his sim ple child's prayer iu his heart, and steadied himself with it. The time came for him at last, and he followed the boy who summoned him into a little room, shaded with green, with green furniture, and on a table a vase of flowers. The stillness and the cool soented air refreshed him. He saw dimly, as he saw everything that morn ing, a tall, slight man, with a kind face and quiet manners, who addressed him by name, invited him to sit down, and then inquired into his symptoms with fitch tact and sympathy that ne felt as if he were talking with a friend. At last the doctor asked him to take a seat by the window and have his eyes examined, His heart beat chokingly, and he whis- pered under his breath : "Thy will, oh, God, be done; only - . 1 1 i give me suengtn. Dr. . Gordon was silent for a moment or two it seemed ages to Mr. Spencer. I hen he said, with the tenderest and saddest voice, as if he felt to the utter most the rain he was inflicting : " I cannot give you any hope. The mnlaily is incurable. You will not lose your sigut entirely, just yet ; but it must come. The minister tried to ask how long it wonta ne oejore ne snouid be blind but his tongue seemed to cleave to the roof of his mouth, and he could only gasp. Dr. Gordon understood ; and answer- ed very kindly that it might be a month, possibly two. He stood up, then, to go. He knew all hope was over. He paid his fee and went out of the room, and out of the house. It seemed to him things bad grown darker since he went in. He hardly kmew how be found his way to tne cars, it was two nours past hi dinner time, and ho was faint for lack of food, but he did not know it. He got to the station somehow, and waited lor the train tostart for Montclair. All the way home he kept whispering to nimsuji : "uno montn, possibly two as if it were a lesson on the getting by heart cf which his life depended. He henrd the conductor call out Mont clair, at last, and got out of the car mechanically. His wife stood there waittijg for him. She had been anxious about him all day. " Oh, William I" sho cried, and then she saw his luce and stopped. There was a look on it fi one over whom some awful doom is pending ; a white fixed look that chilled. Sb e took his arm and they walked on silently, through the summer afternoon. When they reached nonie, ana sue naa taken on her bonnet be spoke at last " Mary, come here and let me look at yon. I want to learn your face by heart." She came and knelt by him. while he roott ner checks between his hauds and turned every lineament, ' Aro you going away ?" she asked. amr awmie, lor ms nxed, silent, mys tenons gsz ? ucgnn to torture ner, it s, ci-ar, i am come : coiner into the dark " " To die?" she easped. " Yes, to die to evt rything that make iip a man s life in this world, he an swered, b-.tterly. "Mary, I am going blind. Thirh what llmt means. After a few more weeks I shall never see vou acain. or our children, or this dear beautiful world where we have lived aud loved each otaer. lho whole creation is only an empty sound forevermore 1 Oh, God ! now can i bear ltr "la there no hope ?" she asked, witl a curious calmntss, at which Ehe herself was r. mazed. 'A one. It was my errand to town to-day to hnd out. I have felt it comitc on lor months, bnt I hoped aguintit hope, and now I know, Oh, Mary, to Bii in me aai'Eness until my death day, i-triving for a sight of your dear face It is too bitter; and vet what am I sav ing ? Shall my Father not choose His own way lo bring i::e to the light oi neavenr x must say, 1 will say, His will be done." Just then tha children came rutmkj in; boyish, romping Wili; shy, yet mer ry little May. ' Hush, dears," tho mother caid. noft- ly; "papa's tired. You had better rnn out again." "No, Mary, let them stay," inter- Eosed he; and then he said so low that is wife's ears just caught the whisper: ' I cannot see them too much in this little while." "Oh. how tho days went on after that 1 Every day the world looked dim uu'r to the minister's darkened eyes. He spent almost all of his time trying to fix the things he so loved in his momory. It was pitiful to 6ee him going round over escu well known, well loved scene, noting anxiously just how those tree boughs stood out against the sky, or how that hill climbed toward the sunset. He studied every little flower, every fern thechildre gathered; for all creation seemed to take for him a new beauty and worth. Most of all he studied their dear home faces. His wife grew used to the dim, wistful eyes following her eo constantly; but the children wondered why papa liked so well to keep them iu sight; why he did not read or study any more. There came a time at last, one Sunday morning, when the brilliant summer biinshine dawned for him in vain. "Is it a bright day. dear?" he asked. hearing his wife moving about the room. ' ' Very bright, William. " " Open the blinds, nlease. and let the sunshine in at the east windows." Mary Spencer s heart stood still with. in her; but she commanded her voice and answered steadily : iney are open-, William. The whole room is full of light." ' Mary, l cannot see; the time's come; 1 am alone in the darkness." " Not alone, my love," she cried, in a passion of grief and pity and tender ness, Theu she went and sat down be side him on the bed, and drew his head to her bosom, and comforted him just as she was wont to comfort her children. After a time her tender caresses, her soothing tones, seemed to have healed his bruised, tortured heart He lifted np his head and kissed her, his first from out the darkness in which he mnst abide, and then sent her away. I think every soul standing face to face with au untried calamity longs to be for a space alone with its God. Three hours after that the church bells rung, and as usual, the minister and his wife walked out of their dwell ing, save that now he leaned upon her arm. In that hour of seclusion he had made up hia mind what to do. Tuey walked up the familiar way; and she eft him at the foot of the pulpit stairs' RIDGWAY, ELK COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER and went back to hef pew in front. He groped up the stairs; and then, rising in his place, he spoke to the wondering congregation ! V Brethren, I stand before vou us on on whom the Father's hand has fallen heavily. I am blind. I shall never see kyou again in this world you, my chil- dren for whose souls I have striven so long. I have looked my last on your kird, familiar faces on this earth see to it that I miss none of you when my eyes are unsealed again in heaven, Grant, Father, that of those whom Thou host given mo, I may lo6e none." There was not a toarless face among those which were lifted toward him, a he stood there with his sightless eyes raised to heaven, his hands outstretched, as li to bring down upon them the bless ing for which ho prayed. Some of tho women sobbed audibly, but tho minister was cttim. After a moment he said : My brethren, as far as possible, the tsurvices win proceed as usual. Then in a clear voice, in which there seemed to his listeners ears some un earthly sweetuess, he recited the ono hundred and thirteenth Psalm, mencing ; com " Out of the deep I have called upon Thee, oh, Lord; Lord, hear my voice." Afterward he gave out the first line of a hymn, which the congregation sung, I hen he prayed, and some said, who heard him, the eyes closed on earth were surely beholding the beautiful vision for he spoke as a son beloved, whoso very soul wrs full of the glory of tho The sermon which followed was such a one as they had never heard before from his lips. There was power in it, fervor, a tenderness which no words of mine can describe. It was the testi mony of a living witness, who found the Liord a very present help in the time of trouble. When all was over, and he came down tho pulpit stairs, his wife stood again at the foot, and he took her arm and went out silently. He seemed to the waiting congregation as one set apart and conse crated by the anointing of a siecial sor row, n:id Uiey dared not break the holy silenco around him with common speech. The next afternoou a committee from the church went to the parsonase. Mrs. Spencer saw them coming, and told her nusbund. " It niu&t be," said he to her, " to ask my advice m the choice of my succes sor. "I think thev niiffhl hnvn nniterl ntu, ii"T, r-lie cried, with a woman s linua -c tienco of nny seeming forgetfulncss of the claims given him by his vears oi faithful service. The delegation had reached tha donr by that time, and tho minister did not answer her. She waited on Ihe men into the study, and left them there, go mg about her usual task, with a heart full of bitterness. It was natural, ner haps, that they should not want a blind minister, but to tell him so now, to make the very first waucr of his sorrow sharper by their unthankfulness, it was too niucn. An hour passed before they went away, and then she heard her husband's voice calling her, and went into the study prepared to sympathize with his sorrow, t ne found him sitting where sho had left him, with such a look of joy and peace and thankfumess upon ms lace as she had never expected to see it wear ogain. luary. ue saia. " mere are some kind hearts in this world. My parish warns 10 mo to stay witn theni. and in sist on raising my salary a hundred dol lars a vear." " Want you to stay with them ?" she cried, naruiy understanding his words. V Yes, I told them that I could not do them juntice, but they would'not listen; they believe that my very affliction will give me new power over the hearts of me l ; that I can do as much as ever. They would not wait a day, you see, ies wo Buouiu oe anxious about our future. "And I thought thev were eomino- in indecent haste, to give you notice to go. jurs. openoer cried, penitently. 'How I misiudeed them 1 Shall I learn Uhnstian chanty I" So it was settled that the minister of JSiontclair should abido with his neonlo. T' il , . --- - or mree years more ms persuasive voice called them to choose the better way; and then hia own summons came to go np higher. In those three years be had sown more seed and reaped more narvests tnan some men in a lonsr life time. He did his work faithfully, and was retdy when the hour came for him go Home. Just at the last, when those who loved him best stood weeping round his bedside, they caught upon his face the radiance of a licht not ct this world. He put out his hands with glad cry: "I See. I see 1 Out of the dark intn light I" And before they could look with awe and wonder into each other's eyes, the glory had begun to fade, the outstretch ed hands fell heavily, and thev knew that the blind minister was gone, " past night, past day," where for him there would be no more darkness. Facts About Lunatics. Some of the minor statistics in Dr. Parsons' eleventh annual report are not without interest. Of the 412 women ad mitted to the New York city lunatic asylum last year, eighteen were under twenty years, 132 between twenty and thirty, 119 between thirty and forty, seventy-two between forty and fifty, forty between fifty and sixty, eleven be tween sixty and seventy, eight between seventy and eighty, two between eighty and ninety. Of the 412, 193 were mar ried, 147 unmarried, fifty-eight widows, one divorced, thirteen "unknown;"' 137 had blue eyes, 103 gray, ninety-one brown, sixty two hazel, seventeen black, two "dark;'' 241 had brown hair of dif ferent shades, sixty-two black, fifty six gray, only seventeen red. As to previ ous religious belief, 249 were Catholics, 115 Protestants, twenty-five Hebrews, twenty oue unknown, while two were of no religion. As to previous station in life, fix were farmers' wives, forty farmers' daughters, twenty wives or daughters of carpenters, twenty-three of tailors, fif y four of laborers, sine of butchers, six of shoemakers, twelve of merchants, fifteen were domestics. norrible Cruelty. The Toronto Telegram says : John O Shanghnessy was a convict of about twenty-five years of age, who hailed f ron. Kingston. On the twenty-seventh of April, 1875, lie was confined in the " dark cell for some trivial act of in subordination, forced upon him by the exasperating Stedman, who tantalized the fellow into making some offensive retort to the taunts of the deputy. For this trifling offense the unfortunate n an was chained up in a standing posture for five days and five nights, his feet and hands painfully shackled to rings in the wiin, only to be relieved for short inter vals to enable Lim to partake of the meager allowance of bread and water allotted to him three times in each twenty-four hours. His toes had been rendered powerless before his entrance into the prison, and the result of this was that his torture was rendered more intense, owing to the fact that he had, lor trie greater part of the time, to sup port hinirolf by his wrists, as encircle-d in tne cruel r m ps in the wall. All tLe Eower was gone from his toes, and as he ad to stand on them in order to relieve tho torturing strain on his wrists, it may be imagined what crucial anguish the poor victim endured during these one hundred and twenty hours of chafing nignt and day. A moro galling or fret ting process of raokiDg. torture it is hardly possible to imagine. The writh ings of the pitiful convict, as he vainly endeavored to mollify his sngnish by shifting about as well as his manacles would permit, have been described as heartrending. Each new change of position only brought a keener agony. and there was an indescribable depth of suffering expressed in his oft-repeated expression, as the hours dragged their slow length along : "Thank God, there's another hour gone." When finally be was released from his torture his wrists and ankles were terribly swollen and he was wholly unable to walk. Had he not been a man of splendid constitution he could not have survived so exhausting an oraeai. A more brutal or inhuman device for inflicting agony on human flesh and blood it is impossible to con ceive. When an appeal was made to Stedman to put a termination to the suf ferings of this man, and it was repre sented to him that the convict was in danger of dying from his extreme suffer ing, the unrelenting, unfeeling official replied : " Let him die I" An Ancient Civilization. Explorations by scientific meu in Ten nessee have discovered facts of thrilling interest, which prove that in the State are to be found the evidences of the most advanced civilization -which ob tained in the Mississippi valley. The skeletons of tho aboriginal raco ore found in caves and iu stone graves. The cave, of the limestone retrions were used bv the aborigines as receptacles for the deud. When one died, the body Who usually doubled up, the knees touching tho chin, and wranued in skius and mats, the number and fineness depend ing undoubtedly upon the wealth and importance of tho deceased. In one instance the skeleton of a mau was fonnd wrappeel in fourteen deerskins, over which were blankets of bark. In some awes tuey were Kbrouded in a cunons cloth made of bast fiber, into which feathers were twisted, so as to give the appearance of a variegated silk mantle. Uver three were coarser wraprjines : but the order in whi h I hey wero laid on was by no means uniform. The body, with its coverings, was often placed iu a wicker basket, pvramidal in foim, aud small in the top. Sometimes tho basket was covered ; at other times the head protruded irom an opening. uwing to tne niter in the soil ot the caves, tho corpeeshave not altogether de cayed, the flesh being dried up and tho hair turned red or yellow. The work ing of the caves for saltpeter during the last century has-nearly destroyed these witnesses of ancient civilization : so we turn from them, with their cliff paintings and scattered relics, to the better preserved testimony of the stono graves. Scarlet Fever. The Lancet calls attention to the im portance, as a safeguard to the public health, of securing the early detection of cases of scarlet, fever, it be ing of . incalculable conaequonce not only to the patient bnt to the com munity, in order that timely measures may be taken to prevent the spread of the disease. The Lancet save that the throat symptoms are the most trust worthy for the purpose cf diacnosis in the initial stage of scarlet fever; the soft part of the palate is- extensively reddened, and not merely the tonsils, as is the first instance in ordinary sore throat. When this condition is met with, accompanied by a very hot skin and a very quick pulse, attended or pre ceded by sickness", with a thickly furred tongue, red borders, and prominent papilles, a case of scarlet fever may be prepared for. In most cases, adds this journal, sickness occurs within some twenty-four hours after the commence ment of the attack indotd, it is well known to all observers that, iu the large proportion of "cases, eickneEs occurs within twenty-one or eighteen hours. California's Gold Held. The gold yield of California this year, local authority says, will probably be about $20,000,000, or as much as it was in 1875. Of this, two-thirds may come from placer claims, and the remainder from quarlz. The greater part of the plaoer gold is obtained by bvdraulio claims in the channels of dead rivers. with deposits of auriferous gravel sev eral hundred feet deep and a quarter or a half milo wide. Although many acres of deep gravel beds have been washed away to the bed rock, large areas re main, and promise to yield a good pro- fit for many years to come, though the product will doubtless decrease gradual ly. The placer mining camps which have no hydraulic washings are steadily declining, if they have not already dis appeared, or if they have not sonio other resource. The placer workings of Yuba, Shasta, Tuolumne and Mariposa counties amount now to little; in Plumas they are nearly as productive as ever. A CO-OPERATITE STORE. An iDteresllasr Deaerlptlaa of the Leeds (Bnalaad) Co-operative OocletT. Co-operative stores in England are more of a success than such institutions are In this country, and they are evi dently managed there with great care. Some of these stores are immense in size, and contain beneath their roofs and in their different departments any arti cle that the workingmen who patronize them desire. A writer in Scribner's Monthly describes one of these stores as follows : Here ia a tangible expression of York shire common sense a handsome four story block of store, splendid in plato glass, carved stonework and architectural display the stores of the "Leeds In dustrial Co-operative Society, Limited," Albion street, Leeds. It may be Satur day afternoon a half holiday in the mills and the streets swarm with work people of every age and condition. Albion street is none too wide for the traffic that pours along its sidewalks and roadway, and gathers about the open doors of the " Leeds Industrial," actu ally struggling in and out, and pressing thickly up to the counters. One door leads to a grocery store, the next to a drapery store, another door leads up stairs to the house furnishing ware rooms, the outfitting department, and the boot and shoe store. There is no eliplay in the windows (after the co operative manner), and we may follow the multitude inside to watch the aotive trade. Plain, hard-working people, per haps grimy from their toil, press up to the connters, cash in hand, ready to buy. The salesmen have evidently pre pared for a good demand, and the staple goods, already put np in convenient pack ages, aro piled iu enormous heaps on the counters. They deal out bundles with wonderful speed, take the money, make a note in a bock, tear off the vouch er (or half-leaf), and give it with the change to the customer. Each one takes his or her goods and moves away as quickly as possible to make room ior others. Near tho door, in a tin'ytffice, such as is sometimes used for the cashier iu American stores, sits a young girl. Eich one presents the fly-leaf to ner, aua receives a tin or brass token representing the amount of the purchase. id is is tne evidenoo of trade at the so ciety s stores, and will be a guide in estimating the allocation of profits next dividend day. For every baar of flour tho member may buy he will receive nacK a bonus or dividend of two shill ings and sixpence. On all other goods tne bonus will be two shillings and two pence in every pound these tokens represent. This is the key to this active trade ; this explains this eager ness to buy ; this is the " excuse for be ing " that the society can show. The shops seem to be eaual to the best of their class iu London or New York. The stock is very large, of ap parently tne iect onajity. and is admir ably put up, ready for immediate sale. Going up stairs, we find the building blockaded with people intent on trade. A woman coming down stairs, her three boys making much clatterwith their new wooden shoes, brushes past a man with a wicker baby carriage -under one arm and a mop broom under the other. Ihere is plenty of roughness, broad Yorkshire dialect, toil stained clothing, and good English push and scramble; every man for himself; but, with all, there is a fetsling for order and honest good nature. Above stairs, there are balls and corridors packed from floor to ceiling with boots and shoes, brushes, kitchen ware, household goods and ready-made clothing. The people swarm into every nook and corner, be siege the salesmen, and drive a lively trade. These busy shoppers and anx ious buyers are the members of the Leeds Industrial a few of the sixteen thousand shareholders, the legal owners of this building, the thirty branch stores, the shoe manufactory and the great flour mill at Marshall street in the Holbeck district. Every man and woman in this company has five or more shares in the society, or has paid down good shillings to let them earn the shares. Each oue of these people participated iu that handsome dividend of 16,506 17s. 8d. that was paid last quarter day. That is more than two pounds a year apiece, or two shillings and a trifle over iu every two hundred and forty pennies they spent at the stores, besides the interest at five per cent a year on their united share capital of 122,332 17s. lljd. Headache from Eye Strain. Dr. Weir Mitchell has been investi gating the causes of headache, and, among other conclusions, presents the following, viz. : That there are many headaches which are due indirectly to disorders of the refractive or accommo dative apparatus cf the ayes; that in these instances tho brain symptom is often the most and sometimes the sole prominent symptom of the eye trouble, so that while there may be no pain or sense of fatigue iu the eye, the etraiu with which it is used may be interpreted solely by occipital or frontal headache; that tbe long continuance of eye trouble may be the unsuspected cause of in somnia, vertigo, nausea, and general failure of health: and that in manv cases the eye trouble becomes suddenly mischievoun, owing to some failure of the general health, or to increased sen sitiveness of the brain from moral or mental causes. Cases are cited bv Dr. Mitchell in support of his theory ou this subject. now Totes Were Lost The Eureka (Nevada) Sentinel saysr A certain candidate has lost thirteen votes through making a rash promise to his wife. He had promised that in the event of his election he would buy her a sealskin cloak and a pair of navy blue stockings, and she couldn't rest till she told thirteen lady friends all about it The ladies expressed themselves as "awful glad" to hear it, but threatened their husbands with a suit of divorce if they dared to vote for this particular candidate, " That old thing would look nioe in a sealskin cloak and navy blue stockings, wouldn't she?" is the way they expressed themselves in speaking of the candidate's wife. Who says that women have no political influence f 30, 1870. The Sentence of J'tronsberg. The cable announces that Dr. Strous berg's sestenoe was perpetual banish ment from Russia, and considering the troubles he has got into by going there, together with the fact that he is not a native of the country, we may presume, says the New York Time, that the sen tence is not one that will particularly distress him. Dr. Strousberg, who was born at Neidenbnrg, Prussia, is now only fifty-three, and there are hot many men who have put more life iiito as many years. Losing his father when a boy. he joined some unoles, who had settled in London as commission agent", tfd soon after brcirne a member. His fxmily were Trnelities, nf the churoti of England. He did all in his power to improve his education, and at an early age became associated with some news papers in London. When twenty-five. hecime out to the United States and gave German lessons. It might have been supposed that he would have found this a fair field for carrying his vast con ceptions into execution, but this country was not at that period the place for sueii a man as it was to become later. So Stronsbersr, having realized some'money by selling at a heavy profit a cargo of aamnged goods, resolved to return to London. Thoro he invested his money in ft newspaper, and then went to lier I n as agent for an insurance company. Un to this time he hnd sriven no sicn of tho magnitude of bis future opera tions, but in lobi, having become ac quainted with some English capitalists, he renolveei to become a railroad con tractor, and within six years was at work ou a dozen liueis. His operations now begun to assume colossal proportions. He had large factories in various plaocs, and employed at ono time over a hun- area mousana men. lie bought a whole county iu Poland, and an estate ror which ho paid 84,000,000, in Bo hemia. He had a great mansion in iiondon, and his house in the aristo cratic Wilhelmstrasse at Berlin' was the wonder of the Prussian capital. His charities fully kept pace with his other expenditures. The glories of this marvelous mau culminated some six years ogo, when a grand fete was given in his Berlin home to celebrate his silver wedding. Just as tho creme de la creme of Loudon once thronged Hudson's saloons ot Albert Gate now the French embassy, while Strousberg's mansiou in Berlin has been secured for the English so all the ce lobrites of Berlin flocked to the million aire of the day with their congratula tions. But presently came the war of 1870, and found him up to his ears in costly enterprises. The price of money rose, and he had to pay rates for it which ale up all his profits. It is now said that if he could only have com pleted his Bohemian iron works the greatest on the continent ho might have pulled through, heavily weighted as he was, and it was with this end in view that he persisted in carrying on, and thus gave dire offense to many of his creditors. There appears now to have set in a considerable sympathy for this very gifted man, whose crime in Russia seems to have been one in which no cognizance would have been taken in another country the borrowing from a Moscow joint stock bank on inadequate security, whereas tho directors, who have endeavored to make him their Rcapegoat, were really the persons to blame. With more moderation, Dr. Strous berg might have been a F.econd Brassey. And here is where the latter showed himself so remarkable. " I never," said a friend, "saw Brassey thoroughly wretched exoept on oue occasion, when Mrs. Brassey had sot her heart on a house near Lady Palmerston's, in Pica dilly." So hateful to him was auything approaching to elisplay or ostentation. Yet at this time Brassey, paying a rout of 84,000 a year, was worth 825,000,000, and conld havo bonght up the street. It may bo hoped that Dr. Strousberg may ultimately secure a solid and com fortable independence &ftni hia sharp experience. His wife is said to nave signed away to the creditors al most all that had been seonred to her. and sold her magnificent jewels for their Mummies Converted into Paint. FeW PeTRnnfl ATA a wav a flint vanf.M, Egyptian mummies nra crnnnrl mi intn paints. But in this country and in Eu rope mummies are used for this purpose the asphaltnm 1Vlf.fl urli inli thaw n tz impregnated being of a quality superior u mm wmuu can eisewnere be obtain ed, and producing a peonliar brownish tint when made into paint, which is prized by distinguished artists both of this and other countries. The ancient Egyptians, when thev dead, wrapped in clothes saturated with fpuBjium, ouiidea, as it were, better than thev knew, an it nnnl1 realized the fact that ages after they had been laid in the tombs and pyramids along the Nile their duet would be used in painting pictures in a world then un discovered, and by artists whose lan guages were to them unknown. That a portion of one of the Pharaohs, or a Potinhar. or vn nf tlm VWot Potiphar, may even now be on the can- ,o u ciut-t, n iiLiiituu, or a uuurcn, who may question f Difficulties of a Doctor. Miss Alley, a missionary fi nm TnrKn tells this Btorv : A Mohammedan nf high rank had several wives. One of tnem, more beautiful than all the rest, was seriously ilL It seemed that she must die. and her hnshand Hnt fnr Tir Batcheldor, who accompanied the mis sionaries, in India a wife is permitted to see do other men than her husband aud her brothers. Therefore the doctor was told that he could not see the sick woman. Her attendants described her condition, but this wonlil nnt. nnffloB o,i,l the doctor said that he could do nothing uniess ne was admitted. A white oloth had been spread over the woman, and a hole had been out in it sn timt. uha might extend her Land and permit the uocior to ieei tier pulse. Thin would not do. The doctor must see her tongue and eyes. Theu holes were out near her mouth and her eves. and. the dnntnr prescribed for her. She was cured. . Men no longer reap as they sow. They sow by band and reap with a machine. NO. 41. Items of Interest. Of the 159 239 inhabitants of Rhode Island 135,093 we re born in the State, and 61,600 ate rmtives of the United States. A justico of tbe peace in Baltimore swore a Chinaman on a tea chest the other day in default of the writings of Confacius. Of five robust young servant girls who slept in a room in Antwerp where the gas escnped, four died and one was saved with difficulty, Put oway the little uniform, lay the toroh upon the shelf, pay your election i.'ts np promptly, you've a realizing sense how 'tis yourself. This election excitement ban caused the "oldest inhabitant" to forret the usual proclamation that wo are to Lave an unusually severe winter. "Did you do nothing to resuscitate the body ?" was recently asked of a wit ness at a coroner's inquest. "Yes, sir; we searched the pockets," was the reply. Milliners in Faris who furnish ladies out of town with their hats senel for their photograph before they .make the selection of shape and color of trim mings, According to the German philosopher, Adelnay, the number of lnngnsges spoken in Europe is 587, in Asi3 937. in Africa 276. and in Americal,2G4, making a total of 3,064. Tho cost of sending a soldier to Cuba is officially stated iu a Spanish journal to be 183 pesetas or francs. Each soldier receives a cash bounty of $50 ; a substi tute receives 8100 extra. It is roughly estimated that 5,000 Western girls have taken husbands this year for the only earthly reason that they were thereby enabled to visit the Centennial at somebody else's expense. The builder of a church now in course of construction, when the toast of his health was given, rather enigmatically replied that he was " moro fitted for the scaffold than for public speaking." Dynasties may crumble, planets may be blotted cut, George Washington body servant may eventually die, but it is feared the idiots who make wheelbar row bets on the election will exist for ever. Wood fires ore becoming fashional le again. The blessed wood fire! The happiest moments we hove ever known wero when sitting before one, with a blanket wrnppcd around us, trying to get warm. "Lenny," eaid her maiden aunt, "you should eat the barley that is in your soup, or you'll never get a man." Lenny, looking up innocently, in quired: "Is that what you cat it for, aunty?" The Corliss engine flywheel made 2,355,300 revolutions during the Exhibi tion. The wheel is thirty feet in diame ter, and any one point on its periphery traveled during the period stated 40, 147 miles, or a little over 260 miles each day. The fall title of Miss Edith Pechey, who was reoently confirmed as a physi cian in Dublin, will bo "L. K. Q. O. P. I., if she passes the examination. 'Ihe London Telegraph thinks that the idea of rolling so much of the alphabet npou an unprotected female is revolting. A young lawyer wrote to an old limb of the law a letter, which read thus: "la there an opening iu your part of the country which I can get into V Answer " There is an opening in my back yard about thirty feet deep ; no curb around it. If it will suit, come ou 1" An exchange says that a society hns been formed in Siberia which compels ail males to marry when of age, and makes the wife the head of the family, and the husband a marked subordinate. There are a good many families in this country that are run on the Siberian plan. According to the reports of the city fumigators, the Chinese laundries in San Francisco aro a fruitful cause of the spread of smallpox, as largo quantities of clothing taken from bodies of people who have died of the disease have been washed in them and then exposed for sale. A Georgia colored debating society was lately discussing : "Which is the best for the laboring man, to work tor wages or part of the crop?" An old "uncle" spoke the sense of the meeting when he thought " bofe was de best, if dey could only be brung togedder some how." A person complained to Dr. Franklin of having been insulted by one who call ed him a scoundrel. "Ah!" replied tho doctor, "and what did you call him?" "Why," said he, "I called him a scoundrel, too." "Well," re sumed Franklin, "I presume you both spoke the truth." A man in Philadelphia wanted to be excused from serving on a jury on tbe ground that " he was a saved sinner and could not sit iu judgment on bis fellow men." The judge thought such an ex hibition of moral courage would fail of its effects nowhere except before the practitioners of that city. Truffles are found by swine. The trnflle hunter goes out with his trained hog and a pocketful of acorns, and tbe beast roots the ground for the truffle. Aa soon as it appears in sight the vigi lant hunter raps the hog on the snout and secures the prize, rewarding the disappointed porker by an acorn. Some curious statistics, just published, show that out of a population of more than 86,000,000 in France there are 37, 927 bjind and 29,512 deaf and I'nmb ; so that in 950 inhabitants there is one blind, and iu 1,220 there is one deaf and dumb person. In Faris alone tlire are 7.333 mad people, while in all France there are 18,123 male and 14,964 feme la lunatics. The little daughter of a noted politi cian, who likes to travel on his war reoord, the other day unwittingly fur nished the "opposition" with a good joke on her papa. A one armed soldier came to tbe house begging assistance, and the liitle girl, in condoling with bim, said, lispingly: "My father wath a tholdler, but he didn't get huit Hej wath a prudent tholdler."