UL "VI 1 1 J Scuotcb ta politics, Citcraturc, Igricnlturc, Science, Ittoralitii, and iScueral ihi.clligcucc. VOL. 30. STROUDSBURGr, MONROE COUNTY, PA., APRIL 10, 1873. NO. 48 r, . 1 Published by Tarodore Schoth TSl -tS r till irs a yea rin advitio-e nnd if not pi I tief rc the en I of the year, two dollars mii1 fifty tents vtill be charged. ! ii ti-iir.i itinuH I u :i til all trrearages arc paid, Except at the o li.iu o the Bailor. Iveriise neiits 'f 'ne "vre of (ciglit lines) or tens. oie etc i:ii--o m-Tlicis $1 50. Each additional h.iili :i, 51 cent. Lonjer ones in proportion. JOX? lIJI1iT2 JiG, OF ALL KINDS, fixecnlei in the hiahest style of the Art, and on the most i eason itile terms. ygMnmwm gum i v ii i i. Mm " DR. J. LANTZ, Surgeon and Mechanical Dentist, Still his Ins office on Main street, in the second tory of ur. S. W.dl.i.i's !nck hunting, nf-miy tippo nite the Siroiidslnirx House, and lie fl itters himself that hy ciijiitfeii years i:.nlaut iii-arln-e and the iinit arnet an I c oH'ul alti-iiM n to all matters -rtaining to his proivsMnii, that lie i fully allt to p-rf-riu -ill wperHtions in the ilf n'al line lit the mo.-l c.icful. t;mle lul in I s'i!itil inani'tv. S;ir:i.il attention given to saving the Natura Teeth ; also, to the ia-iTti-Mi d Aitllii-ial fei-lh on Hntier, G iM. Silver or i'oiiii;iiious Gums, and perleit fits In stll ca-es insured. M .st ners.iis ka-nv the greut f.illv and danger of en trustins their umk to t!ic inexp.rieiireil. iirtn those living at a u?t nice. A l ll 13, 1 S7 1 . ly WILLIAM S. REEST Surveyor, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. Farms, Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. Office next door aliove S. Kees' news Depot nnd II J door below the Corner Jitore. March 20, l7o-tf. D it. gi:o. W. J.tCI&SOX PHYSICIAN. SURGEON & ACCOUCHER. In the old office of Dr. A. Keeves Jackson, residence in Wyckou"'s building. STROUDSBURG, PA. August 8, lB7"J-ti: JR. II. J. I' i'iTERSO.V, OPERATING AND SECIIASICAL DEMIST, Having located in East Stroudsbnrg, Pa., an nounces that he is now prepared to insert arti ficial teeth in ihe most beautiful and life-like manner. Also, great attention given to tilling and preserving the natural teeth. Teelli ex tracted without pain hy use of Nitrous Oxide (r.u. All other work incident to the profession dons In tns most skillful anil approved style. AH work attended to promptly and warranted. Charge- reasonable. Patronage of the public H;!lt'iled. Oilk-e in A. V. Loder's new handing, rp- Jn.-its Analomink House, V.:it Jrtroudsbiirg, July 11, 1S72 ly. DR. N. L. PECK, Surgeon Dentist, Announce ih it ha vi:ig jus' retnrred from Dental Co!lgs, h? is folly prepared lontake artificial tet!i in lue most beautiful and bte i!e manner, and to fiU decayed tceih according- to the most i n proved method. Teeih extract d with 't pain, when de sired, Ly the use of Nitrous Oxide (!-.. which is entirely harmless. Repairing o all kinds neatly done. All work warranted. Cbnrges reasonable. Office in .1. tl Keller' new Brick build in. Mai- Street, Stroti Jsburg-, Pa. nug; 3l-lf WouM re-iiyctl'ullv announce to the public that he has roinovcJ Ins rtliiee Ironi Oakland to CauudeTisis, Monroe Countj-, I'u. Trusting that riany yt;irs of consecutive practice of -Medicine ami htirgen' will re a friSbicnt Lruarante3 for the jmblicconSilcncc. February :., 1S70. tf. JA.1IKS U. WAMOX, AlJorney at Iiiv, OIHee in t!ie liuil'ling formerly occupied by L. M. Iiirson, an.l op)tosite the trouds burg Hank. Muia street, Stroud.-burg, Pa. jan 13-tf Trivial! HONESDALE, PA. Mot central location of any Hotel in town. II. W. KIPLE k SOX, J f.9 Main strcrt. Proprietors. January 9, IK73. ly. LACK41V.4.A IICt'SK. ori'osriE the depot, Kast Stroud-sburg, Pa. 13. J. VAN COTT, Ioprietor. The BAH contains the chotest Liquor and the TACLK is suplied with the best the market afford. Charges moderate. may 3 1872-tf. WATSOX'S Mount Vernon House, 117 and 119 Horth Second St. ABOVE ARCH, PHILADELPHIA. May 3D, 1S72- ly. "gARTOXSVIIJLE IEOTEL. Thi old established Hotel, having recently hanged hands, and been throughlv overhauled and repaired, will reopen, for the reception of f guests on Tuesday, Mav 27th. The public will always "find this houe a de sirable place of resort. " Every department will le managed in the best possiide manner. The table will be supplied withthe best the Market affords, and connoisure will always find none but the best wines and liquors at the bar. Good stabling beloning to the Hotel, will be found at all times under the care of careful and obliging attandantp. may 23, 1872. ANTHONY H. IIOEMER. BLANK LKASKS For Sa!o at this Offico. TEltRIBLE DISASTER. LOSS OF A WHITE STAR STEAMER The "Atlantic" Wrecked off Nova Scotia SEVEX IILTDREI LIVES LOST The Supply of Coal Exhausted SHE STRIKES A ROCK AND GOES TO PIECES All the Women and Children Drowned THE CAFTAN AND THIRD OFflCER SAVED IIailfax. N. April 1 This after noon a report was circulated l hat a sfeam er bad beeu wrecked on the coast, and everal lives lot. It was at first regard ed as a ctucl April Tool hoax, but to night the Cunard agent here received news that it was all true, and only a little of the truih had been told, the lact being that ihe White Starslcatncr Atlantic, Captain Williams, fiotn Liverpool lor New York, while coa;ing to this part lor coal, (-truck oh Meagher's Hock, oear Prospect, tweo ty two miles west ol Halifax, and became a total wreck. Of about one thousand souls on boaid upward ol seven hundred were drowned. Third Officer Brady ar rived here to night, and sajs the Atlantic left Liverpool on March 20, with up wa.ds ol nine hundred steerage and about City cabin passengers. She experienced rough weather during the passage, but all went well until noon Monday, March 81. when her supply of coal became exhauted. The captain de tertuincd to put into Halifax, and the captain and third officer were on deck un til midnight. Her position was then judged to be S tmbro light bearing N. N. W. thirty. uiue miles. The captain wtut so o bis chart room, leaving orders to be called if there was any change in the ship's position. Brady went to bed about the same time as the capt: in. Ti e next thing he remembers is that he was thrown out of his buuk, and llt t lie ship strike t-everal times. He then lushed on t'eck, and found the captain and ofii-ers there, and the deck lull of passcu.crs. lie get an axe an l commenced to clear away the boats The captain and other ftS-ers were busy doiug the same thiug. Brady got bis boat out. and put two womeu in it. A number ot men attempted to get into it, and about a dozen succeeded Just at that moment the steamer tell over on her leaui ends tnd hank. On'y one t oat had been got out and that as carried down by the steamer, and all in it lost. Brady scrambled into the unzzen rigging, which was above the wa ter, atid. seeing he could d'j nothing there, weut lotward and unwove the halyards., tieing ar-sivid by Quartermasters Speak man and Owen. He t! en took the halyards and all three waui to the rock The line was hauled ashore an 1 a nu til er of passen gers landed by it. A number bad got on if, but as the tide was rising, their situation was uu better than on the ves sel. Just then fishermen on pbore came out in boats and rescued those on the rock and a large number from the rigging. Brady remained at the scene until noon to-day, when all who were alive on board had been saved, except Chiel Officer Mr. Firth, who was iu the rigging fchoutiug for help. Brady says be tried to get a crew fo go to Firth's rescue, but the sea was so heavy that nobody would volunteer. Altogether about persons were paved, including Captain Williams, also Fourth Officer Brown, the doctor aud several of the en gineers and sailors. Not a single woman or child was saved Most of them, as well as hundreds ot meu. were drowned in their berths. The ship struck about two A. 31 . the weather at the tiu e being dark but nut thick, with a rough sea. Steamers are poing down to night to render what assistance ibey possibly cau All the people saved from the wreck, ex cept Brady, are still at Prospect, where ihe fishermen are giving them all possible attention. New York, April 1. Among the cabin passengers lost on the Atlantic, the only ones now known, are William II Merrittaod wife of New York, Miss Mer ritt his sister, and Miss Soreymser, his nister in law. No list of the passengers cau be obtained to night. THE CHIEF OFFICR'S STORY. FIGHTING THE WAVES RESCUED BY A GALLANT CLERGYMAN AFTER TEN IIOUHS IN THE RIGGING A WOMAN'S GHASTLY FATE. Halifax, April 2. J. W. Firth, chief officer of the Atlaulic, in reply to the reporter's questions, tuade a Mate meat iu substance as lollows : My watch ended at 'Z o'clock on Mon day night. The second aud fourth of ficerb took charge, aud I weut to my berth 1 was aroused by the shock of the vessel Nuking. The second officer tame down to uiy room, and said the ship was ashore and he was afraid .she was goue. I put ou a few articles ol clothing, got an ax, ud weut on deck to clear the boats The ship had careened over before I reached tbe deck. 1 cleared tbe twoetar board boats. Just then a heavy seal swept the boats away. 1 was holding fast fo the tnizzentnast rigging imj now climb ed higher for safety. The night, was so dark and the spray blew so thickly that we could not see well what was going on around us. I saw men on the rocks, but did not. know bow they got there. All who were alive on board were in the rig ,-ing. When daylight came I counted 82 persons in the uiizzeumast rigging with me. including one woman. Wheo these saw that there were lines between the ship aud the shore, many of theui at tempted to go forward to the lines, and in doing so were washed overboard and drowned Many reached the shore by the aid of the lines, aud the fishermen's boats rescued many more At last all had either been washed off or rescued ex cept myself, the woman, and a boy The sea had become so rough that the boats rould not venture near us. Soon the boy was washed off. but be swam gallantly and reached one of the boats in safety I got a flint hold of the woman and se cured her in the rigging. I could sec the people on shore and in the boats, and could hail them, but they were uuable to help us. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon, after we had been in the rigging ten hours, the Rev. Mr. Ancient, a Church of England clergyman, whose noble conduct I can never forget while I live, got a crew ol four men to row hiui out to the wreck He got into the main rigging and pro cured a line, then advanced as far as he could toward me aud thiew it to me. I caught it, made it last around my body and then jumped clear. A sea swept me off the wreck, but Mr Ancient held fast to the line, pulled me back and got me salely in the boat. I was then soexhaus ted and benumbed that I was hardly able to do anything fur myself, and but for the clergyman's gallant conduct I must have pcrishpd soon. " The woman, after hearing up with remarkable -strength uo der her great trials, had died two hours before Mr. Ancient arrived. Her half nude body was still fast in the rigging, her eyes protruding, her mouth foaming a terribly ghastly spectacle reudcred more ghastly by the contrast with the numerous jewels which sparkled on her hands. We had tu leave her body there, and it is probably there yet. The eeue at the wreck was an awlul one, such as I hnd never before witnessed and hope never to witness again. Comparatively lew bodies drifted ashore ; most of them, with such articles as came out of the ship while I was ou her, were carried to sea OUR PAST AND FUTURE. Every four years . the nation meets together to renew the consciousness that it is a community bound by a common interest and laboring for the common good ; nor as President Grant cauie for ward upon the platform at Washington, the representative of this principle of unity, as the telegraph bore the record of his oath aud of bis clear and suggestive address to uearly forty millions ot people, was there anything but satisfaction with the great majoity that the choice of the nation bad lalleo on one no worthy and so trusted. A sense of security passed over the intelligent and toiling throngs from tbe shores of tbe Colurubi to the waters of the Hudson. They felt that the community was safe aud entire ; that tbe jirring clash of warring parties has been converted into rare unanimity ; that the period of civil discord was over, and the country entering upon a new career of unequaled prospeiity. Some on Inatigu ration day, touched by the communal feel ing, looked far back to the dawn of the infant community; saw Washington, surrounded by Adams and Hamilton. Livingston. Steuben, sherman, repeat the first oath to the new Constitution which he had labored to construct, and address in tender, truthful words his divided and feeble countrymen. The burden ol Washington's addresses was always Union. The Constitution had been adopted with difficulty, and was singularly popular iu many districts The fate of generations aud of a continent, Washington and his wise advisejs saw, rested upon the blend ing of the feeble, war worn and divided colonies in a compact body, and with wonderful patience, forbarance, resolu tion. they succeeded in attaining it The Union was perfected, and Washington for eight years mantained with vigor and decision the government which had been accepted by the majority agaiust domestic or foreign foes Nor on Inauguration day is it possible to purvey without gratelul satisfaction the long line of excellent and patriotic men who have renewed tbe oath taken by Washington, and kept if so faithfully Contrasted with the series of European rulers, they prove the general good sense and discretion with which our people have selected their Chief Magistrates The kings and priest, the despots and the constitutional monarchs ot the Old World have usually been inferior to the better classes of their subjects in morals and public virtue. Often stained by gross vices, they have corrupted genera tions by their example, have wasted the resources of the industrious in useless extravagance, or, torn by n evil ambi tion, have racked aud decimated the people with endless war. A 'dissolute George IV and William, the two Na poleons. Isabella of Spain, a throng ol petty potentate iu Ituly and Germany, the coa temporaries of our Presidents, have dishonored human nature by their vice, and oppressed mankind by their crimes. The successors of Washington, if they have not equaled, have, iu some measure at least, inherited the calm sense and patriotism of their founder. Adams honest, pure,' passionate, ambitious ; Jef lerson, the keen, subtile friend of man kind ; Madison, Monroe, or the second Adams, with some human failings, were nil worthy the republic they administered, and not inferior to the people they ruled The rude yet honest patriotism of Jackson is remembered by ail parties with sincere respect ; and if the careers of some of hi successors were tainted by the demoraliz ing influences of dying slavery, yet the record of our Presidential rulers brighten toward the close. We have had no George IV. nor any Napoleon. Tbe meek, unbending, faithtul Lincoln, purest ot statesmen, almost a second Washing ton. gave his life to the cause of union, and the nation named as the worthy sue cessor of Lincoln the man who had duue aiost to preserve it. The last three Presidential terms have witnessed the origin, progress aud close of a remarkable revolution, necessary to complete the union which Washington enforced, and which Grant and Lincoln founded anew. So long as slavery existed there could be no hope of domestic peace A slave oligarchy ruling a community of freemen could only maintain its power by . coar-eless aggressions. At length insane with an evil ambition, it plotted its own destruction The slave holders became the most effective abolitionists Hated by their own people for their tyranny and pride conscious that, the colored population was planning its own emancipation, they jet ventured to rebel It was the signal lor the emancipation ol the nation. Slavery fell with a fierce convulsion ; the triumph of universal freedom was perfected by the labors ot Lincoln and Grant. During the last three Presidential terms our country has been made the fitting home of the working man, of industry, of self respect ; aud the vast tide of immigration that is pouring in upon us from Germany and Scandinavia show with what joy the in telligent laborers of Europe avail them selvps of tin: oilers of freedon Our com munity is being rapidly swelled by the friends of liberty and equality; the in dusirious and the frugal are no longer frightened from our shores by the horrors of human bondage ; and within the next decade it is probxble that every section of the of the Union will be peopled anew troin the most worthy portiuu of the European population. Thus the new Presidential term opens iu union and peace. One or two ot the Southeru States may yet be disturbed by the lingering resentments of the lallen faction. But the majority ot their people have no desire to recall thetr former op pressors, and the whole mercantile and (arming interest of the South is laboring for a stable government. If has no desire to be ruled by the Ku Klux. or to drive away capital and trade With other nations it is the happy lot of our govern ment to have no complications and uo op posing interests. Toward our weaker neighbors we need show only tbe tender n ess of an elder brother; toward Euro peao governments moderation and good will. The barbaric passion for military glory which has destroyed so often the hopes of the laboring throngs of Europe we have never shared. Our wars have always been defensive. Wc may trust that our last battle has been fought, and that the victories of the new Presidential term will be won by the hardy strokes of labor iu the wilderness, aud, by the rapid progress of mental reform. The next four years will probably wit ness the most rapid advance known to our country's history. The immcnese influx of emigrants and the wonderful increase of trade cannot fail to build up our commerce, and revive the ancient su premacy of the American flag The ports of South America ami the Mediterranean, of China and Japan, are inviting our merchants and ouTshipping. The rail roads that cross the continent connect Asia with Europe. Every section of the country is busy with the labors of peace, and the industrious throng of active citizens are t-ue to the republic aud to each other. The consciousness that we are a united commuuity, founded by Washington, and saved from destruction by the devotion of Lincoln and Grant will deepen iu strength with each I'resi dential term ; aud in union wc shall find prosperity and peace. Harper's Weekly. STREET LIFE IN EUROPE. A LECTURE BY WEN DEL nilLLITS. Wendell Phillips lectured in Chicago a few nights since on ''Street Life iu Europe " He introduced his lecture with the story of the Vermont stage driver, who, approaching a gentleman in a tavern, said : "If you're the man that wants to ride in this here stage, I'm the man that's going to drive the coach." 'If you have come to hear a lecture on "Street Life in Europe,'" said Mr. Phillips, "I'm the man that going to deliver it." Laughter and upjrbuise The first thing that strikes an American abroad i the great amount of individual independence. In this country we think we produce independent individuality, but here, the lecturer thought, we make a mistake. The republic tends to create a herd of raenr while a monarchy tends to create the individual One phase of this individuality was illustrate J by a story of Napoleon I. Once, while in Italy, he said that no Italian could make a boot. This remaik coming to the cars of ati Italian boot maker., the son of Si. Crispin sat down and manufactured a magnificent b o", which he presented to the Emperor. "Ah, exclaimed Napiueou. a he stamped his foot upon the floor. this is a boot. Make me another No." replied the artist in leather, ou said no Italian boot make, could make a hoot. I have shown you I cau make one : I won't make another 1" The American is governed to a great excut by the opinions of those about ttm In Europe the contrary h the case. The America'u bides his claws in the velvet. and feels around before he expresses him self; the Luglisbman is like a rough bit of granite broken ofl with a hammer ; the American is like a smooth pebble trom tne beach so slippery that you cannot boll him In Europe men carry the signs of their vocations in their clothing In Paris, some years ago," the lecture was refused admission by a sentinel to a public building because he wore a cap which, in France, was only worn by ser vants He finally convinced the sentry that he had another cap at home, and was permitted to go in Americans think it is an evidence of manhood to repress their emotions Homer made bis go Is whine an I howl, aud did not imagine that he was detract ing I rom the dignity of the god. much less that ol a man This is the sentiment in Europe After oue of the sessions id tbe French Assembly. Jules Favre and ihe orator Berryer fell upon each other's necks and kised and wept Imagine Sunset Cox and Ben Butler kissing each other! Laughter One thing that forcibly strikes an American in Europe is the lack of what he would call enter prise, that is, the application of brains to work. Ralph Waldo Emersou says: "A ankee has as much brains in bis hands as a Eurojean has in bis skull" We harness, steam, and send the lightning on errands. A genuine Yankee babv looks over the side of his cradle, plans a new one, gets nut a patent for it before he is nine mouths oil. Laughter Thedif ference between the Yankee and the European is illustrated by the above, iu connection with an anecdote of Horace Greeley. Mr. Greeley, when in France. once said to a Frenchman, who be saw mowing with a rusty oi l knife : "Why don't you get a good, sharp modern scythe? it will do hr'e times as much woik." The Frenchman's reply was fuller than the Tribune ever was: "Ah. Monsieur. I haven't three times tbe work to do." Iu Europe wood is sold bv the pound, ami bread by the yard The Italian wood sawyer places the saw be tween his knees, and rubs the wood on the saw. This, according to the lecturer, was the dead low tide of the application of brains to wjok. The high tide of ihe application of brains to labor is found iu the operation of one id' our grain elevators which the lecturer characterized as an instance of the Yankee skulking the final curse of getting his liviug by the sweat of his brow." The Europeans, he said, were nvtch more polite than Americans Ask a New 1 orker the way to Wall street, and he will send yon to a place hotter than the -Lh July. Laughter Ask an Eoglih man and it is a chance if he don't send you to the same place. Ak a French man the way to salon, and he will direct you with the greatest patficuhirify Ask a German the way to a place and he will go with you. In America everybody travels. In Europe the man who travels is a curiosity. This fact explains Mon tesquicu's remark that "Paris is France " Paris pulls down a King, and the matter is accomplished before Marseilles hears of it. Iu Europe almost everything is economy. The lecturer was once in siructcd in Italy by an officer of the English navy how to save a cent. The next place where we see Europeans is at church, the doors of which are always open. In the churches there is no hateful aristocracy of pews. He hail seen the blood of royal Naples kneeling side by side with the ragged hizzirotii both equal before God. In the matter of alms giving the Euro j eans ate far superior to us. In America we waste more than the Italians cat. and yet in that country he bad never sceri a beggar turned away f rom a house or store without having something given him as a testimony that better off owes: some thing to worse off. Women's work iu Europe is somewhat multifarious. They do two thirds of the work draw wagons, propel boats, dig, plow, and, in fact, perform all kinds of labor. A brother of the last Emperor of Autiia. who married his wife in Tyrol, married her because she harnessed horses so well It has been said that the word home is not to be found in the French language, and consequerictly we imagine thpy have riot homes there. The lecturer has seen houses in France in which might he found five or six generations of the same family. The prejudice against color, so strong hi America, has no place among Euro peans. At St. Peter's, in Koine, Mr. I'hilliys heard a sermon dcliverd in a most melodious voice, and when be moved toward the. priest to- note his personal - appearance, be was afonisbed to discover that the speaker was ti negro Thi struck hiru so forcibly that he exclaimed, "I must be 4UUU miles from Bcstoa." Italian Children and Their Masters. The Italian street musicians' masters, says a New York paper, are ever can tions, running., suspicious, an I on ihe alert for an evidence of di itioTachou or treachery on the part of the child r. n i They watch them by night while' asleep ; they exercise a strict surveillance no r l hem by day. In every well orusniir.fi family there is at tea-f one tein ile. a eno e' of the utmost brutality of expreesion. who', conveniently disguished, peran.bul.itt y the city, unrecognized by the children'. and at night has a pretty heavy sore' i against tne uuusptctiug w mdcrers. Not only the masters, but the feui iles. in ad ditioii to iliLMr other self iu.po-ed dunes. make daily forages uon th mnLiu i.i food "What." was asked of an informant., do you consider the gieatest cause of complaint V "It is the food, sir. It's bad- in qua! iry, the worst that can te cooked' up. arid it is not hall enough lor the hungry oues." "Where does it cou.e from "Every dirty place You see, while we are out playing, the niastenr iq.eiid the day about the markets, wharves and grocery stores. With their honks au l nags i hey gather all the cabbage Icax e they can find thrown away ; then the po tatoes that have rotted, and the apples', aud all ouch things, with which tu make soup " "Where does the meat come from ?" "The same places. They have fo buy meat sometimes, but they generally ptck up the old livers, ha-lets. dirty fief, ainf heads, that have been thrown away They make uioney out of everything! ashes, rags, scraps of iron au J old p pers." "How about the cooking V "That is very simple. You've seen the big pots and kettles iii' the rooms, haven't you ? Well, the old women woik all this stuff into soup, because it's cheaj and easily fixed Occasionally we have' macaroni, but this tasteless, sickening .soup is the principal nourisbtnent.-unless you call dry bread and cold water good."' "I). the boys complain much i.ftho insufficiency or bad quality of their b-od?" "Very seldom ; they dare not I've Known some poor fellows so hungry that? they'd spend five or leu cents lor buns, or peanuts or apples, to eat ; and when they came home short of money, the mas ters bad given'them stud to" make tbeic stomachs Mk. and then Watched tor what they had eaten." "What is the result of such an inhu man course '!" "Why a fl iggiog, or application of the bastinado." "Can't the boys evade pnishment ?" "Only for a little while They mayv stay out all night, thinking they'll make" up the sum the next day ; but no matter' where they hide, in ash boxes, coal bins, empty wagons, wood sheds, any u here, t be boss'll niiely find ibetli out. and ihetv they're treated worse than if they fan. a' home at once Sometimes the mm and1 women will travel about wilh a child too young to go out playing, and beg money, after telling all sorts of bad stories Be sides using the children so themst-lv they olten hire ihe feeblest I .(. king u prolesiii(al beggars al so much a' day.. Then the old rascals blister I heir eyes-,, and think they ran get noire money by calliug the children their own." Raising Giants, King Frederick William, of PnissiV, father ol Frederick the Great, dctermiu ed fo raise to order sol liers whose statue should meet l is views of what grendier to serve loyalty should be. The army was his hobby, and tall men his sprv) admiration. He had a regiment at I".f daui that was the talk of the World, on account of their heals an I shoulders be ing far above ordinaty humanity. There were three battalions ol 00 each. 2.4;iD in all. perfect Anaks, flic shortest ot the men being seven feet and the tallest nine. Such lofty beings were piocured lion, all countries in Europe without regard to cost. James Kit k man. an lrih recruit. could not be ha t till $(i,00 were paid Tall men were decoyed and put into ser vice at all hazards. Next be compelled tjieui to marry unusually tall women, whether they consented or not Prui is rich in very tall subjects, the dc-cen I ants of these gigantic grenadiers; these are far taller than the lull blooded Ken tui-kians. Iii spite of the eecenrric Majesty's ef forts, however. Nature would have her own way. and the children ol such paieu lage were xvA all tall at niaturi y Then again, until her law come into operation p. . thwart the mon iclr's ambit-ton to develop a race of monster meu Short in- n very generally prefer tall wives, and till w oneu dapper liite. husbands Of course there' is no very philosophical way of iiccounf f ir taste, but such is ihe fact There is a growth limitation to j l ints and un'r m ils. On reaching the predestine- di v mensinsv ih..sr avtive attizan ihtt bnild up the body, as far the law of limita tion requites, cease la oritg. an I a per manent type of H2e. is thus established It is iirtpo-sihlo t go counter to:hoe laws and raise giants (f JMiy kin. I A f w individuals, transcending their kiiidi-.f in altitude, are apparently accidental, or at least are beyond explanation but anomalies in I bat respect, like m .n.vtr.i.-i -ties, cannot be perpetuated through geu IS: ri r , if ' i. i n 'Is1 t j i vi t -1 i'