J 11 X I TT - MM n fi H ,N TTT J -I LldP Jj JjjJ -i 3 ZJ Qcuotcb to flolitto, literature, gritnlturc, Science, iHorcilitti, aui cticral Intelligence. VOL. 32. PuMislicd by Theodore Schoch, .. . : Si rj IT. .l.l:.: 1 i iTrti' n. ) cents, linger ones in proportion. JOIt lRIXTl.G OF AM. KINDS, ilu'liest stvl. of the fjntVi in the Art, and on the most reasonable tcrni Wickersham Normal School. UROrilEAPSVILLE, MONROE COUNTY, TA. ri .Kall 1741 Term of this Srhool will begin in the I' '' . , .. . Dk.uI U.tA.l.'.'j lt. . I. 1 lit' N tllNll IIUIIM', Jl ll"lulil-iWi uir. uil I. Li". s-(UIIU 4, and continue twelve weeks. terms: For tuition, for the term S3 00 Lrunv time 1' dinn ,1,c term, per week 1 00 ijt--av ihtaniins, in private families, per mouth 12 00 ,i ettra charges for the higher branches. fa'The School House has been enlarged and thor L.u"hlv repaired. iha'iiV.'ul for past patronage, I subscribe rayst-lf, D. E. SOEDLER, Principal. Jun: i, !?74. Ct DR. J.LANTZ, SURGEON & MECHANICAL DENTIST. S:il! has hi" office on Main street, in th second story if j)r. s. Walton's brick buiMin. neariv opposite tLe SirouiNi'iir? ll.ne. aud he rl.Uerjj himself that by e!j;b t?n vear constant practice aud the most earnest and raivful attention to all matters pertaining to hi pro fwiiou. that he is fully able to (MTform all operations In the di-ntal line in the most careful aud skillful man- B'T. Sptvi.il attention trivesi to savin? the Natural Teeth ; to the insertion of Artificial Teeth on Rubber, t'. silver, or Continuous (jums, and perfect fits in all ca.s insured. M'-'t piTS'ins tnow the frreat f.lly and danger of cn tn:tin; I h ir work.to the inexiH-rienrvd. or to those liv ing at aiiitaiice, April 13, 1S74. Jf. JJR. II. J. I'ATTEIISO.V, OPERATWC AD MECfllMCAL DEMIST, Hnv:,?:i '.ifatc-d in East Stroud.Omr. Ta. announces that h i.-- " jirciiarcd to insert artificial u-t-th in the most ii:it:!':il and lif-like manner. Also, Rreat attention civ.'ii tillitu' and preservinj; the natural teeth. Teeth fvtra.tnl without paiu by the use of Nitrous Oxide tlas. .All thi-r work incident to the profession done in the nioJ -killful aiid apppvi-d s-tyle. All work uttfnder) to j.riaiplly and warrant'tl. harpes reasouable. I'at-ri!i;.-jt' of the ;ubiic s.ilicitsl. itii":Mn A. Lmb'r's nw buildiup, opposite Analo mink House, lUil Stroiidsburg, I "a. ( july 11, '7& D R. X. Is. FECK, Snrsrcosi Hcntist. Ann'-nn"" tha; hating jusi returned from JVr.tal vK'X'-, he is fu'Jr preps ml to make artificial teeth in the nvist beautiful and life-like manner, and to fill de ayil t '-ili aceoriline to th most improved meth'id. T'-fih (-xtract.fi tt ithout pain, when desired, by the i:sir 'f Nit -oils xide (ia.s. which is entirely harmless, it'iairiiii; of illkin.ls neatly done. All work waranted. CiiS'-. -! reasonable. !.( .1. i. Keller's new brick building. Main street, S'roudtjur. 1'a. f Aug. ill '71-tf. Can yon tell why it is that when any en? H.ncs tn Strimdsbure to buy Furniture, they al ways inquire f-er Mccarty's 1'urniture Store ! N'tit. l'i.'G7. WILLIAM S. REES, Surveyor, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. Fam3. Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. OSre next door above S. Iiees' neir3 Depot nd 2J door below the Corner Store. March 20, 1873-tf. I) It. HOWARD IMTTKRSOX, Pityslcian, Surgeon and Accoucheur, (iicct-!sor to Geo. W. Seip.) 0;13ce Main street, Stroiidsburg, Pa., in Dr. S'jips building, residence Sarah ttreet, next Friends new meeting house. Prompt attention to caiis. to 9 a. m. " 2 p. m. " 9 p. m. O.Tice 1, " I 1 o 1 April 1C lS74-lr. D K. J. 12. SIII LL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OFFICE A KlisH'KNCK, AT ISDUJ QfEEN llOTL'L. All cases promptlj attended to. Office oiur. from 9 to 12 a. M., from 3 to 5 and to S r. m. tharea moderate. Consultations free. M JR. CCO. W. JACKSOY FiirsiCIAX, SURGEON AND Al'COl'CDEUB. n the old office of Dr. A. Reeves Jackaon, fisience, corner of Sarah and Franklin street. STROUDSBURG, PA. A'Jgtit 8,'72-tf JII UttEwER, M. D. ?fiYSICIAN AND ACCOUCHEUR, MOUNTAIN HOME. PA. IURICA. HOTKI,. Jle "uWriber would inform the public that ' feajt leased the house formally keptbv Jacob inru tlie Korouyh of Stroudsburg, Pa., Vtm eirred to en.tertan '1 wbo may patronize i'h f. e proprietor, 10 mrn- 1 I IK T H .1 . I .1 . nd n acconraoaation? at rnoaerate rates Wt f I Kf'are 110 P8'1"" to promote the rom- "c guc-sts. A liberal share of public VjUVTtf. I). Jj. PISLE. LK IKtrss: H0NESDALE. PA. 0st central locatioo ot aoy Hotel in town. 3 Mn I'. W. KJPLE & SOX, Ja::"' bireet- Proprietors. - J H. W ALTO IV, Kit lj L M 't ulinS formerly occupied hR . ,rs;on' aUtl otponitc tlie Stroud nirK( in sr"et' 'roiTd5httrR, IV. TrI,MSTo dollars a rear in advance and jf not ,'l U -foro tlio end of lhc year, two dollars and fifty ,'ts trill cliarrtl. - NJ p-ilr l'll',u', H arrearages are "..v.-.i.t at the ution of the Kditor. THE PIGMY PEOPLE OF AFRICA. Repesentatives from a Strange Land A Puzzle for Darwinians. Tlie Khedive tpokc of a race of pigmies which had been discovered in the very heart of Central Africa, beyond the land of the jNiam-N yams, and advised us to look at two natives of the tribe which had re cently reached Cairo. On leaving the palace of Ahdeen, therefore, we drove im mediately to the palace of -the Nile, near Boulak, where they are now kept. On mak ing inquiry the soldiers in the inner court immediately pointed out two small boys (apparently), wearing the fez, and dressed in jacket and trousers of white wool. I should have taken them for children of some Ethiopian tribe at the first glance, and was not satisfied, until after a close inspection, that one of them was a full-grown man. The soldiers brought the pigmies for ward for our inspection. They came, half willingly, half with an air of defiance, or of protest against the superior strength which surrounded them. A tall DinkaV from the White Nile, blacker than charcoal, who ac companied them, spoke a little Arabic, and I was thus able to get a little additional in formation through him. He assured me that the pigmies were called Naam ; that their country was a journey of a 'ear and a half from Khartoum (probably the time occupied by a trading expedition in going thither and returning), and that the place Irom winch they came had the name of lakkatikat. The taller of the two pigmies, lubbel by name, was 20 years ol;l ; the younger, ivaral, only 10 or 1. The little fellows looked at me witl bright, questioning steady eyes while I ex uiiuueu anu measured tnem. lubbul was 46 inches in height, the less being 22 in ches, and the Inxly with the head 24. Head and arms were quite symmetrical, but the spine curved in remarkably from the should ers to the hip joint, throwing out the abdo men, which was already much distended, probably from their diet of beans and ban anas. Yet the head was erect, the should ers on the line of gravity, and there was no stoop in the posture of the body as in the South African bushmen. Tubbul measured 20 inches around the breast, and 28 around the abdomen ; his hands and feet were coarsely formed, but not large, only the knee joints being disproportionately thick and clumsy. The facial angle was fully up to the average ; there was a good development of brain, fine, intelligent eyes, and nose so flattened that, in looking down the forehead from above, one saw only the lips projecting leyond it. The nostrils were astonishingly wide and square ; the complexion was that of a dark mulatto. The boy Karal was forty-eighty inches high, with the same general proportions. Both had woolly hair, cut short in front, but covering the crown with a circular cap of crisp little rolls, lubbul sage showed it self on nearer examination in his hands, feet, and joints, as well as his face. He had no beard, but was evidently of virile years. I lifted him from the ground, and should not estimate his weight at more than sixty five pounds. The soldiers related that neither of the two had learned more than a few words of Arabic, but that they talked a great deal to each other in their own lanjruase t a recent meeting at the Egyptian Institute it was stated that the language of these piginies has no resemb lance to that of any other in Central Africa. Tlie country of Naam, or Takekaticat, or whatever may be its correct name, is re ported to be an equatorial table-land cov ered with low, dense thickets, in which the pijrmies hide. The Khedive told me that they are quite warlike, and by no means despicable foes to their larger negro neigh bors, since they are active and difficult to find among their natives jungles. Dr. Schwcinfurth supposes them to be the pigmies mentioned by Herodotus. The Darwinians will hardly find an intermediate race between man and monkey in them. Their curious physical peculiarities, especi ally the curvature of the spine, the wide mouth, with flat but distinctly-marked lis, and the squareness and breadth of the nos trils, are not of a simian cliaracter. In fact, they look less like the chimpanzee than several of the tall and athletic negro trills. letter of Bayard Taylor. Prolific We find the following in one of the Cin cinnati dailies of a late date : "We haye be fore us a clipping from a copy of Liberty Hall, published in this city in 1816, where a most marvelous phenomenon is related the name of the physician being given of a Mrs. John Kelly, of -Mercer county, Pa., who had just given birth to five children, that being the second effort of the kind within twelve months, or ten children born within the year. The subsequent record of Mrs. Kelly is not known, but it is easy to see from whence the Gazette derived its fecundity of imagination." " ho was she i Greenville Advaiwe. Mrs. Kelly, rcfercd to above, resided iu Lackawanuoclc township. Mrs. Wallace, now residing in this place, remembers the circumstance of the birth of the ten children very well, having been present on both oc- Iv W s . i' f .....j .1... CUSloUS. iJr. -UagOUIU, 01 -ueieer, ins; physician. Mrs. Kelly duxl about a year after this event, but in the meantime had twins, having given birth to twelve children within twenty months. 31r. Kelley is still living, and now resides in Suaron. &iarps- vdlc Advertiser. A young lady is of opinion that, it takes more hard study to discover the front of a Dew spring hat than would win a case in the supreme Court against rauroad. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., JUNE We All Have Faults. lie who boasts of being perfect is perfect in his folly. I have been a good deal up arid down in the world, and I never did see cither a perfect horse or a perfect man, and I never shall until two Sundays come to gether. You can not get white flour out of a coal sack, nor perfection out of human nature ; he who looks for it had better look for sugar in the sea. The old saying is. "Lifeless, faultless." Of dead men we should say nothing but good, but as for the living, they are all tarred more or less with the black brush, and half an eye can see it. Every head has a soft place in it, and every heart has its black drop. Every rose has its prickles, and every day its night. Even the suu shows spots, and the skies are darkened with clouds. Nobody is so wise but he has follv enough tn Kfrx-k a sr-ill at V amty Fair. Where I could not see the fool's cap, I have nevcrless heard the bells Jingle. As there is no sunshine without some shadows, so all human good is mixed up with more or less of evil ; even poorlaw guardians have their little failings, and par ish beadles are not wholly of heavenly na ture' The best wine has its lees. All men's faults are not written on their fore heads, and it's quite as well they are not, or hats would need wide brims ; yet as sure as eggs arc eggs, faults of some kind nestle iu every man's bosom. There's no telling when a man s faults may show themselves, for hares pop out of a ditch just when you are not looking for them. A horse that is weak in the knees may not stumble for a mile or two, but it is in him, and the rider had better hold him up well. The tabby cat is not lapping milk just now, but leave the dairy door open, and we will see if she is not as bad a thief as the kitten. There's fire in the flint, cool as it looks ; wait till the steel gets a knock at it, aud you will see. Every Inxly can read that riddle, but it is not every body that will remember to keep his gunpowder out of the way of the candle. Heating Sick-Rooms. When the entire dwelling is heathed by a furnace or by steam, it will probably be unnecessary to have other means of warm mg the sick-room ; but the fire-place should be alwas ojen and kept ready for a wood or coal fire, whenever the patient shall ex press a desire for one. The fire-places are excellent ventilating flues even without a fire, but are nearly perfect when supplied with a wood fire, the brisk blaze of which creates a strong ascending current, and continually carries off the ever accumu lating exhalations of the sick-room. If there is no fire-place, a window open a short distance from the bottom, in the room in which the patient is lying, and one let down from the top in the other large room, with the door open between the two, win iorm an enectuai uraugnt during any but the warm days of summer, and will not be to strong for the most delicate patient who is protected from the direct draught by the high-head board of the bed. In cold weather the window oix'ned at the bottom will often be sufficient. On very cold da's we may trust to an entire change of air several times a day, effected by raising all the windows for a few moments at a time, during which the patient must be thoroughly protected by extra blankets, and a shawl about the head. If stoves are the only means of heating apartments, a uperjetual burner (coal) may be used in one room to keep both at an even temperature, during day and night, but the sleeping room should be provided with a wood stoves ; the brisk blaze in this answering to some extent the purjose of a fire in an open fire-place. Many lives have been cut short by exaggerated notions in regard to fresh air. Air must le pure, but it should also be warm. To effect this there should be day and night a steady but gentle heat in the room of an invalid, accompanied by an equally steady and gentle current of fresh air. A Wyoming Ball. Miss , from Wilder's gulch, says a reporter describing a far-western ball, was elegantly attired in a handsome buff gros graincd buckskin dress, with army blanket overskirt, bottoin IoojkhI up with buckskin strings cut bias. Hair dressed a la Red Cloud, in which was twined a few sprigs of sage brush, the whole secured behind iu a bunch with a handsome pin made with a pine splinter and a buffalo's car. She wore an elegant mountain cat-skin cap, festooned with anteloje tails, secured under the chain with a rattlesnake skin. Her feet were encased in buckskin moccasins ornamented with beads and soldiers buttons. She created a big sensation as she entered the liall hanging hikju the arm of Mr. H. Bar ton, of Ilallville, who was dressed in the style of his locality buckskin breeches in boote, hunting shirt of the same, ornamen ted with beads and tobacco juice, an army belt of the latest pattern around his waist securing a pair of six shooters and a huge bowic knife, which set off his gallant figure to good advantage. Envious glances from both sexes followed this handsome couple, round the hall. Several ladies aud gentle men from the mining districts were pre sent, aud expressed themselves well pleased with the manner in which the party was conducted. Their frequent exclamations of delight, such as "red hot, you bet," "ain't it fruit, though," "hoop k," etc., plainly indicated that they were enjoying J : themselves in the host possible manner. A Good Sized Family. John Hcpner, of Heading,' Penn., claims to be the father of forty-one children by three wives. I he Eagle says: "He was born in 1815, and twenty-five years after ward IH W he married his first wife Germany. They lived happily together for eight years, when she died. During that time they were blessed with seventeen well formed children ; hence, at the age of thir ty-three Jlr. Hcpner found himself the father of quite an extensive family. The little ones came on earth as follows : Two pairs of twins, four sets of triplets, and one at single birth, seventeen in all. The chil dren of this marriage are now all dead. Mr Hcpner remained a widower but a short time for in less than a year after he married an other fair daughter of Germany. He was made the happy father of another child in the L""U1 01 r e"rury, 1 sou. un the Christmas following, in the same year, another was born unto him. Then they were blessed with twins five times in succession, and subse quently three more children at single birth were born unto them, making fifteen in tdl His second wife and himself lived together nine years and then she died. By the two marriages Mr. Ilepner at the age of forty two, had become the father of thirty-two children, ot whom only two are now hvinrr. Twenty years ago Mr. Ilepner and his se cond wife came to this country. He was then thirty-nine years of age. Three years afterward his wife died. Mr. Hcpner, not desiring to live in a strange land entirely alone, selected a third wife" in 185S. They are still living happily together, and dur mg the sixteen years of their married life nine children have been born unto them, each by single birth, making fort'-onc in all. His third wife was a widow with one child when they married. Hence forty- two children have called him 'father.' Of the third set of children oiiby three are liv ing, making hvc living in all, together with the extra one belonging to his third wife A Strange Remedy. A correspondent who has visited the South Sea Islands, writes to the Boston Medical Times that a notion prevails there that the headache, neuralgia, and other cerebral diseases proceed from a crack in the head or pressure of the skull on the brain. The remedy is to lay open the sclap with a piece of glass until a hole is made into the skull down to the dura mater about the size of a crown piece. Sometimes this scraping operation will be even to the pia matter, by an unskilful surgeon, or from the impatience of the friends, and death is the consequence. In the best of heads, about one-half of those who undergo the operation die from it, yet f this barbarous custom, from superstition and fashion has been so prevalent, that very few of the male adults are without this hole in the cranium, or "have a shingle loose," to use an Australian phrase. It is said that sometimes an attempt is made to cover the membranes of the cranium so exposed by placing a piece of coeoanut shell under the scaly. For this purpose they select a very hard and durable piece of shell, from which they scrape the softer parts and grind quite smooth, and put this as a plate between the scalp and the skull. Formerly the trep hine was simply a shark's tooth ; now a piece of glass is found more suitable or less objectionable (if we may even so qualify the act). The part of the cranium general-; ly so selected is that where the coronal sagittal sutures unite, or a little above it, upon the supposition that there the fracture" exists. This bone-scraping remedy is likewise cm ployed in cases of rheumatism in old peo ple. The cuticle is incised longitudinally, and the centre of the ulna or tibia laid bare, then the surface of the bone scraped with glass until a large portion of the external lamina is removed. Hydrophobia. No one, remarks the Isxncct, conversant with newspaper literature but must have been struck with the great number of deaths from hydrophobia recorded dur ing the last three years in this country. From Sheffield we have an account of a man dying last week of the disease, in horrible agonies, while at about the same period a presumable rabid dog ran amuck among the inhabitants of Huddersfield, biting no less than six crsons. Five of these were immediately taken to the in firmary, where their wounds were cau terized with nitric acid and nitrate of silver. The animal a large sheep dog was killed, and an examination of its body brought to light a circumstance which leads us to think it possible that the dog's violence was due solely to irritation, and not to rabies. In the stomach (which was empty) a comman pin was found near the pyloric end, with its head buried in the coats of the stomach, the jxtint having penetrated through into the cavity, where about half an inch of it was free. As regards the prophylactic measures to be resorted to in cases similar to that which we have just recorded, we are sory to have to confess that the ar mament ot medical science offers no weapons capable of counteracting the dire effects of true rabies. Complete excision of the in jured part immediately after laceration lias been advocated by Mr. louatt and others whose experience gives weight to their opinions, while the pathological condition of the brain and medulla after death would suggest depletion after suspicious bites. We see that there is a new party looming up in Ohio. The time is rapidly approach ing when no man can afford to do without a party of hi ovu. 4, 1874. Word of Caution : There is no safety in taking the bills of the Osage National Bank of Iowa, without the strictest scruti ny. Nine thousand dollars iu 5 bills were stolen from the bank prior to being signed by the proper officers. The bank and the Comptroller of the Currency refuse to re deem these bills. The Treasury numbers (top of the right hand eerner) arc 550,958, to 551,407. The bank numbers just over the Cashier's signature are all over 1750 and these numbers afford the only means of detection. Thus national bank notes print ed from a general plate and for which the Comptroller of the currency holds national stock as security may be worthless iu the hands of an innocent holder.' A Steward on an Ohio river steamer was addressed by an uneasy and excited in dividual, who wanted him to put somebody off the boat. The candidate for a forcible disembarkation was pointed out, but the steward could see nothing out of the way. "You don't, eh ? Don't 3'ou see a man sitting there humrinir a woman ?" "Well, yes," replied the steward, "but what of that ? Hasn't a fellow a right to embrace his wife ?" "That's just what I want to run him out for," replied the stranger, dancing around. "That's my wife, and I've stood it so long that I've got mad !" Mr. Clarkson, the agricultural editor of the Des Moines State Register, gives the Iowa farmers the following lesson or diversi fied agriculture : He says he went into a store in Hardin county and found there for sale dried beef and hams from Chicago, canned corn from Maine, com starch from New York, cucumber pickles from Ohio, common beans from Michigan, canned to matoes and cherries from Marryland, crack ed wheat from Illinois, cheese from Ohio, lard in cans from Chicago, axe handles from Michigan, and various other thiugs of which Iowa soil is abundantly prolific. . . , . Gov. Dix, of New York, has signed the Compulsory Education bill. By its pro visions it compels parents and guardians to give children of from eight to fifteen years age either in a school or at home, at least fourteen weeks reirular instruction every year in reading, writing, arithmetic, English grammar and treoixraplvy. It pro hibits the employment of children within the ages named at any labor during the time when the district schools are opened, and school officers are iriven authority to see that it is enfi jreed. LOCUST YEAR. Tlie correspondent of the Newburgh Journal writes : "We were reminded a few days since while digging about the yard that this is to be loevst year. Immense numbers of these little fellows, nearly full-grown, are now making their way upward, and are within eight or ten inches of the surface of the ground. They will probably put iu their appearance some time in June. They come every seventeen years." A darkey was trying to steal a goose, but a fierce dog raised an obi'ection, and Sombo retired. The next nnrht he tried it again, but a violent thunder storm interfer ed, and just as he had captured his prize, the lightning strrxk htm:, and nearly fright ened the poor fellow to death. Dropping the goose, he ran off muttering, "Pears ter me dere am a mighty lot of fuss made 'bout a common goose ?'' To Cure Splint. A horseman says : Take one ounce of spike, arnl bathe fhe afflicted part four or five times every day ; perhaps it will be three or four months before the splint is removed ; also, it will take off callous lumps that have been standing for years. I have tried it with success, and never knew it to fail. They tell a queer story about the doctors in a certain Texas town, who were all away ast summer to attend a medical convention. They were absent about two months and on their return found all their patients had revovered, the drug-stores had closed, the nurses had opened dancing-schools, the cemetery was cup up into building lots, the undertakers had gone to making fiddles, ind the hearse had been painted up and sold for a circus wagon. A few days since a necd' erson applied to a wealthy citizen for help and received the small sum of five cents. The giver re marked as he handed over the pittance. 'Take it, you are welcome, our ears are al ways open to the calls of the distressed." 'Ihat may be, replied the recipient, "but never before in my life have I seen so small an opening for such large cars." "Mamma, papa is getting very rich, isn't ic ?" Mamma "I don't know, why, child ?"' Bov "Cause he gives me so much money. Almost every morning after ueaktast, when balhe is sweeping the par- or, lie gives me ten cents to go out and ay. feally received short notice to quit. An Indian who r confined in jail at Walla Walla, Oregon, for murder, has een told by his fellow prisoners that ie will be hanged sure, and that he h;ul better get used to it. He practices every lay by letting them hang him as long as he can lear it, but still he says that he would rather be shot. , Never keep a jack of cards in the same poeket as ynir handkerechief. NO. 3. MISCELLANEOUS. It begins to' look somewhat as though a general Indian war were at hand. Forty thousand cattle &re said to have perished in Utah aud Nevada, during the winter. It has been estimated that the world" uses 250,000.000 pounds of tea and 718, 000,000 pounds of coffee ever' year. Nice place, that New York. There were over twenty thousand prisoners brought before its. police court during the first quarter of the present year. A Louisville man complain? that liia wife is an inflationist. She blows him up every day, and makes him circulate until he ae tuiilly feels he is' beyond redemption. A Hartford baby performed tln mar velous feat of falling from a fourth story window without being seriously hurt. Which shows how hard it is to spoil seme children. The crusade in Ohio has injured many branches of business. Among the coopers, hoop makers, iron workers, box makers, &c., many laborers have been thrown out of employment. The shipments of wheat from MonJreaf since the opening of the season are about 400.000 bushels, aud the stock there now is about 1,000,000 bushels, with Lrge stocks at points in Western Canada. "Father," said a cobbler's lad as be was pegging away at an old shoe, "they say that trout bite good now." Well, well," replied the old gentleman, "vou stick to your work and they won't bite you." On Monday night, at Newport, four- miles above Easion, Martin Cunningham, a railroad labor, stabbed and killed a far mer named William Smith, in a ouarrel at a dance. The murderer was arrested. Tlie town of North Providence, R. I. . has one pauper to support. This individual has a farm all to himself, with c:.rriage, horses and cattle, food provided by contra'.-t and a poor master and family to tike c;-re of him. Returns from all the cotton States indi cate that in all except Texas the area planted in cotton, this season, . is consider able less than last season, while the acre age of corn is ab6ut correspondingly in creased. X good brother in Miami conr-ly, whi!e giving his experience, not long ago. said, "Bretherin. I've been tryin' this riiL-h unto forty years to serve the ."Lord and git. rich both at once, and I tell yer, it- mighty hard sleddin'." "Here's your money, boy, and now tell me why your rascally master wrote eighteen teen didn't fetch it Among the EuropeiYi' economies is: the gathering up of segar-tips, cut off before smoking, in Dantzic one boy is fed, cloth ed and schooled, each year, from the pro ceeds, and in Berlin a small osylum is sup ported by him. It i.i Estimated that not less thrJn' cne' hundred thousand northerners have, dur ing the winter months, visited the south on pleasures or business. The daily amount of money disbursed to hotels and 'railroads must have been nearly a million of dollars. A citizen of Detroit, who removed ta Lone Tree, Nebraska, several years ago, writes to a tobacco hou?e in the former city to send him five pounds of "fine cut" by express, adding : "I am a candidate for Sheriff of this county, and I think a judicious use of five pounds ofgiod tobacco? I can secure 200 majority.' A man bought a hbrse. It was the Grrt one ho had ever ov'ned. lie saw in a news paper that a side window in a stable mak-s a horse's eye weak on that side ; a window in frout hurts his eyes by tlie glare ; a win dow behind make? hint squint eyed ; a win dow on a diagonal line makes him shy when he travels ; a stable without a window cukes him' blind. He sold the horse. The Shelby (Ky.) Courant relates how about six months ago an old negro woman of that town was seized with a great longing to bo able to read the Scriptures, and communica ted to her friends her intention of attend ing the night school for colored people, with a view of attaining this end. As she was sixty-five years old, and did not know a let ter of the alphabet, the idea was regarded as an evidence of approaching imbecility, and she was laughed to seem by all those who knew her. But this did not deter her from her purpose. She went to school, an.J now, strange but true, is able to read th Bible with the utmost ease and ecuracy. The case is one of the most remarkable on record. We should not have believed that a Scrant.cn jury could be found capable of getting up the following verdict, was it not vouched for by the Kcpnh'can of that city. The verdict was rendered a few days ago in a case. of some prominence in that local ity : "We the jurors in the ease of Collins vs The city cfScranton do say that our city Fathers have been neglieut in not se curing that place on the Hydpark Hid where the accident hapeued and we blame the Driver lor going down this hill ou that frosty morning therefore to punish both Partys we do find one Hundred & seventv fivc Mars 1.75 00 far 1'1'T So av at.. ivntio auuui liiub eom.eiiqtt.Loie sum. l ci sure, sir, I can't say; but if you'll excuse me. sir, I sort o' reckon 'twaf because seven- lsitrTC? nl,nt tU..t- . 4.!!. 1 ... 1.11 (