3Ei;3Mi,PBRS.ONIAN. caic5;;'0XiHr0 literature, gricnlturt, Sriencc, iHonilihj, aub cncral; Jntelligatrc. VOL. 34. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., SEPTEMBER 14, 1876. NO. 15. ' 4 Published by Theodore Schoch. TkiIM Two dollars year in advance and if not paid li.'foro th -nd of the year, two dollars and fifty tentt will ho rharjrt-d. X naper lisontinud nnttl all arrearages are jaM. except t the option of the Editor. ttrf- Advertisements of one sipiare of (cipht lines or loss, one or three insertions Si 00. Knelt fulditioital iu sert ion, ."( cent.s. Longer ones in proportion. JOII PRIXTIXG OF A IX KIXIW, rs?ct in the lik'hest style of the Art, and OB the most reasonable terms. J. IS. SHU I, I., 91. D. Second door below Burnett House. Residence 2nd d'mr west of HR'ksitc Quaker Church. Office hours s .) ! a. in, 1 to U p. ut., 6 to 'J p. lu. M:iv J"-, i r;-t r. II. S. MILLER, 1'liysiciuit and Surgeon, STROUDSBURG, Pa. )ffiee. f.irinerlr occupied by Pr. Seip. Residence with, .1. I. Miller, one door lu-low the ji-flcrsoniuti Olfice. i;!;ce hours, 7 to S, 12 to 3 and G to 'J. M iy ii, i tf. D x. ii:cii, Siirffooa Dentist. n:Tie. ii. .Ta. K.1 inr'a new bjiilJini;, nearly opposite theStroii.J.'ilHirK Jtuuit, aUmni.stcFcl lor extactinj; w hen deir-d. Stroiid-hnr;;, I'a. f.Tan. 6,'76-tf. - D ii. ;s:o. m'. jacxvsox rilYSlCIVN, SrRGEOX AND AITOI'MEIX Office in Samuel 11hh1's new ImiMint;, nearly oj-pi-;!ti th? ji'ist office. Residence vn Sarah street, :ih v. l'l inkliii. .Anirnsf S,'7l'-tf . .otarv ti:li. EAST .STKOllK?KUKii PA. Aeknowl-sljmriits taken and all business jH'rtainin t. the iU.-:' carefiillr exi-utrd. riKK-i'iN A THOMPSON', U-vil ltate Insiininee Agents. i:Ti''i. Kis:lr's nw buildin? n-ar the lVt. r. i-i ;r-:iihirgt P;u, Jan. 7, ISTti. D.VVII S. BA2I2, Attorney at Law, One l or anovc the "StrouJ.-burg llotiso," Stroudsburg, Pa. (Al lection promptly made October '21, 1S74. "WILLIAM S! TkEES7 Surveyor, Conveyancer and Real Estate Agent. Farms. Timber Lands and Town Lots FOR SALE. Office mcarlv opposite American IIoue an 1 'J.l door below the Corner .Store. March 20, lS7:t-tf. DR. J.L ANTZ, SURGEON & MECHANICAL DENTIST. Still ha his nftiee on Main .street, in the second story of lr. s. Waliou's briek huihJiiiR. nearly ojipwsil the ir n l-!ejr,r llr.e. and he flater himself that by cish tA..i, ...... ...... .. , f v...i.-t ill., tiutsl in met H lid ar-fitl auciuioii Ut all mutters pertaining to his pro- r -i r ii l l . ... T .11 ....... ? i. t f-s ia !'!!. liltll IS IUliy aoie III n (" t'uedeiijal Hue iu the most careful and killful mau- ner. also, to the insertion of Artificial 'IVeth on l:iibler. J'.l.L, Silver, or Continuous Gums, and perfect fits in all cart i usu red. M.ist persons know the preat folly and danpT of rn t r'iti ti their work to the inexperienced. or to tboselir in; at a distance. " April 1:5, IS74. tf. Opposition toHumbuggery! Th" iin lersirTied liere'.y annonnces that he has re-niiii-fj '..u-.irie.-s at t h oM'stanii, next door to Kiister i.vhiii,; Store, Main street, Strondshurg, I'a., and is f jllv prepared to ain-omiiiodate all in want of BOOTS and SHOES, m:He in the latest style and of cod material. Rpair- inc prcriut.tlv atteuted to. (iive me a call. J'ec. S, 1k7.V1t.J C. LKWIS WATHliS. A.OTIICK TltOPXIY lOX I5Y THE ESTEY COTTAGE ORGANS 1 Thce Ftiperior and lteautifullr finished in Ftrunients ro far eclipsed their competitor in volume, purity, sweetness and delicacy of tone, as to carry off the first and only premium pv en to exhibitors of reed Organs at the Monroe County Pair, held September 2-j, 1874. J'.tiv onlv the btd. For price list addrrsB Oct T-tf. ' J. Y.SKJAFUS, . APER -IIAKfiEtt, GLAZIER AND PAINTER, MONROE STREET, Nearly opposite Kautz'8 Blacksmith Shop, Stroudsburg, Pa. The undersigned would respectfully in form the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity that he is now lully prepared to do all kinds of Paper Hanging, Glazing and Painting, promptly and at ehort notice, and that' he will keep constantly on hand a fine ttock of Paper Hanging's of all descriptions and at low prices. The patronage of the public, is earnestly solictnd. May 16, 1872. Dwelling House for Sale. A verv desirable two utorv Dwelling House, contain ing seven rom., one of which isttunaoie for a Su.re Itoom, sit uate on Main '4;''t' in thtoron;h of Stroiidsburfr. The I building is nearly new, and every pan i of it in good condition. For termi Ac., 'all at this office. I- 9. J'5"11- D'T you Know llial J. II. McCarty & Sous are the ouly Under takers in Stroudsburg who understands their business? If not, attend a Funeral managed by any other Undertaker ia town, and you will fcee the proof of the faot. June 18,"74-tf MASON TOCK, asm THE TURKISH HORROR. From the Chicago. Tribune. "j? It has been reserved for the Turkish campaign against the Christians to develop the most fiendish atrocities that have," ever been recorded in the annals of warfare be tween civilized nations. The savagery of the North American Indians, the inhuman tortures practiced by the Pacific Islanders, the cruelties of the Thugs, all have' some shadow of excuse, since they are. but a degree removed from the brutes, and have never had their savage instincts restrained by the iuflueuces of civilizatiou. The cruel ties of the Turkish " campaign, however, iuflictcd by a nation ostensibly civilized, arc not a whit less brutal . and savage, while their butchery is - much greater, owing to greater opportunities....1.' Where the Turkish horse shall pass, - no blade of grass shall grow," was the boast of the 'early disciples of the Propltct: Their, descendants; Jiave more than fulfilled the boast, for ' the Turkish army has not only destroyed crops, killed stock, burned villages, leaving a wide swath of ruin in its track, but it has also slaughtered gray-haired men, feeble women, and defenseless babes," so that" it has left a desert in its rear where death and desola tion alone reign; At l'hilipopolis and Adt iaiio'ple, Bulgarian girls arc sold daily in the market-place like cattle. Hordes of Circassians and I?a.shi-15azouks sweep through Bulgaria,' carrying off the most beautiful children for the harems. The' prisons are full of Bulgarians, huddled iu so closely that they are dying by hundreds for want of air and food. Priests are crucified on the highway. Female school teachers are hanged on the streets. Wo men are shot down after being outraged. Over one hundred prosperous villages arc in ashes, and thousand." of people are beg ging bread. In Servia these horrors are repeated. The Londou Daily News corres Kjndent writes : ''From the frontier district between Xisch and Alexinatz come now similar tid ings to those 1 telegraphed the other day as having been sent by Alempics from the western frontier about Bellina. Xo man who is not obstinately determined to be incredulous can question the truth of these .statements. Officers and soldiers who came down from the front authenticate them with tales of burnt villages which they have seen, the mangled bodies of children lying in the gutters among the charred debris, headless truuks of Servian soldiers in places where they had been fighting, men in the up-country hospitals with noses slit by knives as they lay helpless from their wounds." The Servian correspondent of the Xcw York Times corroborates the above.' He writes : "On the battle-fields, where the Turks have been successful, all the wounded have been mutilated, and by a refinement of cruelty have been left to die in agony, with their eyes dug out, their lips, noses, - and cars cut away. Not only do the irregulars, but the Xizams and the Bedifs participate in these atrocities, and weeping women tell you how their innocent babes have bceu tossed into the air by these ruffians, to be impaled "upon the points of their yataghans'. Through the whole Valley of the Nisharva, in the vicinity of Xisha, and not a priest or Christian teacher has bceu spared to per form religious services at the funerals of the dead." From Bosnia conies the same horrible story of Turkish cruelty. A Vienna cor respondent : "In the ulages ot I'ervan ana iimar 300 Christians were drowned after being tortured. At Pavics twelve woman were cut to pieces and thrown to the dogs.' At Jlatklovo sixty children were stoned by the Turks, led by one Fechira Fffendi, to avenge a relation of ZNIaj. Stocsvics Bay, killed at Bellina. At Sokolovo 180 young girls taken from the neighboring villages, were penned in a field, and after the pret tiest had been picked out for the harems of Fechim and Stocvics, the , others t were abandoned to the soldiery, and were violated and murdered. At laidan the Christian population assembled at market were mas sacred by a fanatical mob led by Hadji Omer Kffendi and 'another functionary named Abrahim Kurusovics Aga. The victims iu this case numbered threo thou sand." "Marikr has Gone to 'Bed." A young mau in the Sixth district had parted his flaxen locks in the most impartial man ner ; if there was a hair more ori one side of his head than on the other, the differ ence could not be observed. He had a tolerable good tenor voice, and he had mas tered a new song. The moonlight shone brightly down ou the greensward in front of the residence which held the maiden of his heart: The:youth crept softly 'up the sidewalk, and let out his soul in melody, " Darling, I'm. waiting , for thee, waiting for thee." He had hardly completed the second chorus when a window blind was cautiously opened, something " white was seen by the light of the inoou, and an old ish voice; not in harmony with the music, said; " It's all right, young man, but you needn't wait any longer ; Maricr has gone to bed." Baltimore Ncics. "Wherever I go," said anf ddcrlj'travr clerthe other day, "I find men wearing out their old clothes and hats j but the lar dies almost without" exception',, have brand new and expensive dresses. - A Baptist minister in Connecticut got nrtv ffota List week as a marriage fee. The bridegroom remarked that times were bard. . V BOLD ATTEMPT TO ROB A BANK. A GANG OF MASKED, ARMED AND MOUNTED MEN ENTER THE TOWN OP NORTHFIELD, MINN., IN BROAD DAYLIGHT AND AT TEMPT TO ROD THE BANK. THE CAUSIER KILLED AND THE ASSISTANT SERIOUSLY WLNDED TWO OF THE ROBBERS SHOT DEAD BY A CITIZEN CITIZENS IN PUR SUIT OF THE FLEEING VILLAINS. St. Pnul, Minn., Sept. 7. The Xorth field ( Minn.) special to the Pioneer&iys about two o'clock this afternoon tight men, well mounted, entered the town and proceeded to the bank. Three entered it and sprang over the counter, ordered the cashier, J. L.-Haywood, with a knife to his throat, to open the vault. At the same time all the persons in the bank, A. E. Banker, assist ant cashier, and Frank Wilcox, clerk, were ordered to hold up their hands. Haywood refused to open the money vault. His neck had been slightly scratched with the knife when still persisting the robbers put the muzzle of a pistol to his right temple and fired. Haywood fell dead. They then turned to Bunker anil ordered him to open the vault ; he said he did not know the combination. As the robbers made de monstrations toward him he ran out the back door. They fired at him shooting him through the shoulder. Wilcox was not in terfered with. While this was transpiring within the jcople of the city without were doing a good work. Two of the robbers were killed outright and one man wounded was taken away by his confederates. The robbers did not get into the vault, nor did they find the chashier's drawer, ex cept the nickel drawer aud a handful of nieklcs taken from it were throwu to the floor. Four of the eight men came to town before midday and waited on the north side of the bridge till the other four came into town from Dundoc. The men were moun ted, and armed with navy revolvers with catridges in the belt around their bodies. When the robbers crossed the bridge en tering the town, they drew their revolvers, and putting their horses into a full gallop dashed through the streets, shouting to the people on the walks to get inside, and or namenting their shouts with the most fiend- ish curses aud imprecations. Inle three men were engaged in the bank. the others stood on the street, threatening to shoot any one who interfered, and firing several harmless' shots. Pistols and guns were tiuickly secured by the citizens, and a young man named Wheeler, from a window of the opposite building, picked off one of the vilhans, shooting hun through the heart. Another shot, thought to be from Wheeler immediately after prostrated another, Avhen the robbers mounted their horses and beat a retreat. The third robber was hit, but escaped. A band of fifty citizens was organized and headed by Wheeler, started in pursuit. At last accounts the robbers were only twenty-five minutes ahead of the pursures and are almost certain to be over taken. 1 here are all sorts of rumors as to the robbers, many believing them to be ome of a gang" heretofore operating in Missouri aud Kansas. THE GROWTH OP THE UNITED STATES. The American nation began its first cen tury of existence with a population of 2, 750,000. It has now, by the best esti mates, 44,090.000. The area has been ex tended from 800,000 to 3,003,844 square miles. The developcnicnt of agriculture, under the pressure of immigration and the stimulus of mechanical invention, has been utterly without precedent. The value of manufactures has advanced from $20,000, 000 to 84,200,000,000. Foreign and do mestic commerce has taken gigantic strides. The development of mineral resources has not been the work of a century, but of fifty years. There were few banks in the colo nies in 177G ; there are more than C,000 now. Internal improvements and the com mon school system have kept pace with im migration. While annexation has quadrupled our area since the Revolution, it has contribut ed very little to the population. The pur chase of Louisiana, Florida, California and Xew Mexico brought in fewer than 150,- 000 inhabitants, and the acquisition of Texas and Oregon merely restored to citizen ship those who had immigrated from the United States. The aggregate area covered by popula tion in 1793 was 239,935 square miles- The main line of settlements ran 1,000 miles along the coast from the mouth of the Penobscot to the Altamaha, with an average extent inland of from 100 to 250 miles. A few pioneers had made their homes in the Ohio Valley ; there were two or three patches of settlement in Kentucky ; there was a village in Indiana and another in Michigan ; aud there were bands of adven turous spirits as far west as Illinois. The Louisiania purchase in 1803, supplemented by the Oregon treaty of 1846, added 1, 171,931 square miles to the national do main : the Spanish session in 1819 embraced 59.298 souare miles : the annexation of Texas in 1845, the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, and the Gadsden purchase in 1853, brought 957,451 square miles : and finally, Mr. Seward's Alaska, investment involved the acquisition of 500,000 square miles. The total area is now 4,008,844 square miles, or 1,042,000,000 acres, one half of which are public lands. In surface extent three nations surpass the United States the British, Chinese and Russian empires. The arable land under cultiva tion ia less than one tenth of tlie total area. A man walked across the East river, New York, on Sundjy. Insanity in the United States. The intelligent care of the insane, with a view to the restoration to health aud so ciety, is so recent that it may be dated, in the United States, in the present century. The time is even within the recollection of many now living when faith in the cura bility of the disease became general, even among medical men. Upon the dawning of the belief that insanity was susceptible of cure, hospitals began to be built, for the two-fold purposes of custody and treatment, for besides the difficulty of taking care of the lunatics at home, it was found that compattively few recovered. From this period hospitals began to be regarded as not only the best, but to most persons the only places for the insane. Hence an in creasing demand for the accommodation ; and though their numbers have multiplied largely, and have greatly increased in sizj, they are still inadequate to entertain all who knock at their doors, and with piteous appeals seek admission. In this connection may be noted a curious result of the estab lishment of new hospital facilities. The newer states, in estimating the hospital capacity necessary for their insane, have naturally consulted the census statitics to find what number to provide for ; but it is invariably found that when a hospital is opened for the accommodation of a given district, the applications for admission far exceed its capacity, largely outnumbering the statistics collected by the census-taker. The country seems suddeuly thronged with insaue people, and we are apt to be im pressed with the belief that this dread dis ease is largely on the increase. But the probable fact is that no such increase re ally exists. It is not unnatural that, mainly out of family pride the questions of ot the census-takers are often evaded, and the relatives of the unfortunate patient, seeing no benefit to come from revealing this '-skeleton in the closet," keep it from observation. But, promptly when an asylum is opened within their reach, free to all without pay, the curtain is drawn, and they come forward with their afflicted. That insanity does uot increase, prorata, at least in the United States, is proven by the census returns for the past twenty years, in icou this country had a popula tion of 23-1 91, S76, and a total number of insane and idiots of 31,3S7, or 1 in 37S. In 18G0, with a population of 31,443.322, there were 42.SG4 insane and idiots, or 1 iu 733 ; and in 1870, with a population of 3b,5y.i,933, there were 01,909 of that class, or 1 in 023. In England during the same period, there was an average of about 1 in 450 ; in Scotland, 1 in 4G0 ; in Ireland 1 in 400; in r ranee, 1 in GOO; and m Australia, 1 in 524. These reports, if accurate, show a favorable condition in this country as compared with others. Scribners Monthly. THE CHAMPH0R TREE. One of the most useful and magnificent productions of the vegetable kingdom that enriches China, and more particularly the provinces of Kiang-si and Canton, is the camphor tree. This stupendous laurel, which often adorns the banks of rivers, was in several places found by Lord Ambert's embasy about fifty feet high with its stem 20 feet in circumference. Ihe chmese themselves affirm that it sometimes attains the height of three hundred feet, and a cir cumference greater than the extended arms of twenty men could embrace. Champhor is obtained from the branches by steeping them, while fresh cut, in water for two or three days, and then boiling them till the gum in the white forms of jelly ad'eres to a stick which is used in constantly stirring the branches. Ihe fluid is then poured into a glazed vessel, where it concentrates in a few hours. To purify it, the Chinese take a quanity of finely pow dered earth which they lay at the bottom of a copper basin, over this they place a layer of camphor, and then another layer of earth, and so ou until the vessel is nearly filled, the last or topmost layer being of earth. They cover this last layer with the leaves ot a plant called po-ho, which seems to be a species of Mentha (mint). They now invert a second basin over the first, aud make it air tight by luting. The whole is then submitted to the action of a regu lated fire for a certain length of time and then left to cool gradually. On separating the vessels the camphor is found to have sublimed, and to have adhered to the upper basin. Repetitions of the same process complete its refinement.. Besides yielding this valuable ingredient the camphor tree is one of the principal timber trees of China, and is used not only in building but in most articles of furniture. The wood is dry and of a light color, and although light and easy to work, is durable and not liable to be injured by insects. The biggest corn story of the season comes from Mt. Carmel, 111., where, it is asserted, on the farm of William Johnson is a stalk of corn, the top of which is forty feet from the ground. There are two ears of corn growing upon it at the distance of thirty odd feet from the level of the sur rounding country. An exchange says: "If the inside of your teapot or coffee pot is black from long use, fill it with water, throw in a small piece of hard soap, set on the stove and let it boil from half an hour to an hour. It will clean it bright as a new dollar and costs no work at all. ; A Inscioos ucw fruit has been discover ed in Queensland, combining the flavor of the pineapple and pear. MR. DALRYMPLE. THE GREAT PEMBINA 'AGRICULTURIST CUT TING 13,000 ACRES OF WHEAT. From the St. Paul Pioneer-Press. A gentleman who came down from the Xorth Pacific the other day gives the fol lowing intcsresting notes in relation to Dalrymple's great farm : The auiouut of ground sown to wheat, this spring, was 13,000 acres. Harvesting commenced Monday, with nine self-binders. The machines were run fifteen hours without rest, except the ordinary stops for oiling, lunch, and dinner, and the result per day is ISO acres. One man is employed to each team, and twelve men follow the machines, shocking the wheat as soon as it is cut. The entire 13,000 acres were to be cut and shocked during the week ; stacking and threshing of course follow. Dalrymple is harvesting his crop for about one-fifth of the cost required under the system in vogue ten years ago. At the time harvest ing commenced, it was estimated the yield per acre from the entire tract would not be less than twenty bushels to the acre. Grass hoppers had done but little damage, the excessive hot weather came too late to blast the crop, and everybody who saw the wav ing grain pronounced big wheat farming on the Xorth Pacific a success. The farm on which the crop was grown consists of 30, 000 acres, on which next season there will be sown to wheat 9,000 acres, the sod of it having been broken this season. During the breaking season Mr. Dalrymple had as high as 100 teams at work. The furrows turned were six miles long, and the teams made but two trips a day, traveling with each plough, to make the four furrows, twenty-four miles. The location of this farm is eighteen miles west of Morehead, Minn., in the proposed new territory of Pembina, and this is not the only big fram in the vicinity, but is the "boss" fram of a dozen or more running from 500 to several thousand acres. BR0WNL0W ASKS A QUESTION. Ex-Senator Brownlow says in a late is sue of the Knoxville (Tenn.) Chronicle : " Gov. Tildcn lays great stress upon the burdens of taxation we are compelled to en dure, and the weight of them we are not disposed to controvert. They are heavy and grievous, and every time we are pressed with their weight we feel like hurling anath emas at those reckless Democrats who im posed them upon us. The great teptiblic was getting along very well in 1SG0, in so far as the prosperity of its citizens was con cerned ; and, although the government credit was bad, it took but 00,000,000 a year to run it. There was no national debt of any consequence. Hence there was no internal revenue necessary, and the great army of office-holders which have grown up out of the war to fasten and fatten on the people did not exist. But the Rebel De mocracy having failed to elect a Presdent at the ballot-box, revolted and tried to de stroy the republic it had shown itself unfit to govern. It waged a rebellious war against the union, to preserve which taxed the en ergies and resources of the loyal people for more than four years of bloody war and ten more of quarrelsome and laborious peace. The national debt is, for the most part, a Democratic debt ; and if the principle of indemnity insisted upon in the late FraDco- German war had been carried out in clos- iug up their rebellion, it would not have been the people of the United States but the rebel democracy that would have had to pay that debt. What right have Tihlen and Haul rules, both symjyathizers icith re bellion, to arraign the party which saved the Union, for levying taxes to pay the interest on the National Debt and make an nual reductions from the princijal ? It is not those who pay, but those who make debts that should be arraigned ? " A SPENDTHRIFTS RUIN. One of the most interested spectators of the parade when the Boston Tigers pas?ed through the city, says a Xew York corres pondent ' of the Boston Journal, was a young man under thirty. He had been an ardent military man for a longtime, genial, liberal and popular. Three menths ago he was in robust health, and was of a stout, stocky, rugged build, capable of enduring everything. He never knew a day's sick ness until within a short time. He has been a generous liver, and had ample means to gratify his taste. Six months ago his father died, and he took a large business, the fruit of twenty years' industry, and was of indomitable perscverauee. The young man threw off the aesceticism of his father, and launched out generously. He was just the young man to have hosts of friends He treated them like a prince, and entered on what is known as "fast life." First his business failed Then a Wow struck him that crippled his health. In three months from a florid, energetic,' robust frame, he became a mere skeleton, and now his own mother would not know him. He is aTound everywhere : among his old haunts and old friends; for his doctors have told him that there is no help for him ; that he has just two months to enjoy himself in, to look on the pleasant things of life and be as happy aa he may. Then he will lie down to rise not again "till the Heavens be no more." He talks cheerfully about the matter; counts the days as they run along ; and when his young friends are in the midst of their hilarity he points to his attenuated frame and says, ''Remember, boys, it was fast life that did this to m. Hendricks is pardoning Voters out of the Indiana penitential ies. There are 41 Roman Catholic churches in Brookly n, against G iu 1850 and1 18 iu 18G0. Forty-one cities of the United States hate an aggregate debt of almost 000, 000,000. If you wish to get sheep cheap, go to Oregon, for there the meek creatures are sold at a dollar a head. Notwithstanding the hard times, about $1,500,000 have .been expended in base ball so far this season. Spurious quarter-dollars, very well exe cuted, have coma into extensive" circulation. So look closely after the change you trkc. AVild geese are going South, which is considered to mean that winter will come early and stay long, and be very hard, as geese are great gazers hito futurity. The milk in the Xcw York Democratic breast is curdled. Seymour the great dairyman, refuses to come oftt of that cheese, aud tells his tormentors to go awhey. A woman in Council Bluffs, Iowa, has sold out her husband for a cow, calf and and 820, and the man has gone back to his first wife, from whom he had been divorced. The American Bridge Company has the contract for building the Poughkeepsie bridge, which is to take Pennsylvania coal in to Xew England by rail. All Poughkeepsie has subscribed aud looks for work out of the enterprise Ohio now exceeds all others of the West ern Commonwealths in her contribution of Centennial visitors, the registry at the State headquarters showing not less than 400, and occasionally as high as 000, fresh signatures peT day.- Sealing wax is no wax at all ; nor does it contain a single particle of wax It is made of shellac, Venice turpentine and cin nabar. Cinnabar gives it the deep fed color, and turpentine renders the shellac soft and less brittle. There is a horse at .tackson, Mich., that is fifty-one years old. He was foaled in Clarence, r.rie county, an. i., in island his name is Romp. He hasn't a single puff or windgall on his legs, and does a good day's work every day. The Fall Ritcr mill?, for the first time since 1873, are all running on full time. Orders are received for goods enough to occupy six months or a year. This revi val is the prelude to a general return ta actkity throughout XeW England. The Philadelphia street railways in the year 1875 carried S5,3S7,331 passengers and earned $5,G31,31G, of which 81,9G2, 93G was profit. The cost of the roads be ing $3,318,471, the profits earned are equal to nearly one-fourth of the cost. A white school teacher named Harris was assassinated at Anderson station. Tenn., Saturday night. It is reported a misunderstanding in the district as to the selection of a teacher is supposed to be the origin of the murder. Grasshopper stories have come to in clude the following :: One of the "little fellows" is said to have been captured on :Vugust 2 1 near Fillmore, Nebraska, with a label on its neck "Custer City, August 10, showing that it had hopped oOO miles in fourteen days. A cool young gent, all of the modern days, entered a menagerie with a cigar in his mouth, when the proprietor politely re quested the "visitor not to teach the other monkeys bad habits. Ihe young man proved himself equal to the occasion, by producing his cigar-case and saying, "Try one." The African pigmies who were captured and taken to Italy three years ago, are now receiving experimental instruction at the hands of royal educators, although the English Geographical Society asserted that they were incapable of instruction. These wild dwarfs have proved otherwise. They are now intelligent, affectionate and grate ful. They speak Italian with elegance and clearness of enunciation, and read and write with facility. Their handwriting is good, and their thoughts are expressed in their written compositions with clearness and simplicity, and with wonderful originality. They also read Latin with comprehension and intelligence. The eldest, Tibo Tukuba, studies arithmetic, and adds, subtracts and multiplies mentally. He also has a passion ate love for music, and from hearing the lessons given on the piano to others is able to repeat them by car. RecrTIts for the Harem. Doesthis Christian community realize that nearly every week scores of young girls land at our wharves, and are shipped, under guard, to Salt Lake City, as extra wives for the Mormon bishops and prophets ? They are brought here by steamer under strict guard ianship, a train is in readiness for theru as soon as they land, and while they are pass ing through the cities of the Gentiles, a su perintendent and a watchman are stationed at each door to keep the lambs of the flock from straying. These are slaves held in bondage of soul and body, and not brought from Africa, but the Christian lands of England, Denmark, Sweden and Germany, and other European nations. They are preferred as wives, because they are more ignorant and more easily handled than the American women. It is useless to talk of the sad fate of Circassian slaves in Turkey, while such things are permitted among us. There is a chance here for missionary effort, j right at our doors. A". Y. Com. Adv.