Iiatos of Adv ci n nrnusHEf, every wuinwday, by WK.DUNN; Ol'FICE Iff ROBINSON & BONNER'8 BUILDIKQ ELM STREET, TI0NE3TA, PA. TERMS, $2.00 A YEAR. N, ?"1,J,or'Ptlon received for a shorter Priod than three months rn Correspondence xolirltoj frnn, all part "I M,o country. No notice will bo take. of "t.onymoun communications. rl S A) H fl O A All It One Square (1 lneh,)on Insertion One Square " one month - -OneHquare three month - i One Square " one year - - 10 o Two Squares, one year ... 15 0o Quarter Col. - - - .30 06 Half " - . . so oo One " - - - - 100 00 Legal notices at established rates. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work, Cash on Delivery. 11 mwmiimM. P VOL. XI. i0. G. TIONESTA, PA., MAY 1, 1878. $2 PER ANNUM. a. M - Irish Song. On Innihfalleu'a fairy Me, Amid the blooming bushes, We leant upon the lovers' utile, And lintenod to tho thrushes ; Wbcn arot I sighed to nee ber smile, And pmilod to see bor blindies. Iter hair wan bright M beaten gold, Aud soft an spider's spinning, Her clioek out-bloomod the apple old That sot our parenta ainning, And In ber eyes yon might bobold My Joys and griofa beginning. In Inulufallon'a fairy grove, I unshed my happy wooing, , To listen to the brooding dove Amid the branchea cooing ; Hat oh ! how abort thoac hours of love, How long their bitter racing ! Poor ciiHhat ! thy complaining breant With woe like mine is heaving. With theo I mo lrn a fruitless queat ; For ah ! with art deceiving The cuckoo-bird liaa robbed my nect And left n.e wildly grieving. The tfiiectfitor. - A Terrible Mistake. Dora QuiKl wbh the daughter of an Indinn General who died covered with famo, and left her alone and literally friendless in Bombay, where he breathed Lin last. Ilis dying words were: "0.home, my poor girl, to jour Aunt Arling'crd, at Elmidey, near Loudon, aud stay with her until joti are married to Walter." For (Jon. Guild and Col. Gary had been friends together and comrades in many a battle, aud had long ago affianced their motherless children to one another, the wedding to take place as Boon as the joung man had attained his ma jority. 80 here was the orphan girl nearing the end of hr journey, and gazing wiirtfully at tie strange and unfamiliar land of her brth. There was one clause in her dead father's will which had recurred to Do ra's mind with ever present pain, ever . i n Hi she had first heard it ; and that was, hhould hhe, upon making the ac quaintance of Walter Gary, refuse to marry him, the bulk of'her fortune should bo passed over to her cousin, Penelope Arlingford. That her dear father should think it neoe; ( ary to coerce her into compliant had rung from her many a tear. Whollj unversed in tho strong-minded ways ol some English maidens, she ha I nevei dreamed of disobeying him, or of choos ing a mate for herrelf. The journey was over at last. Miss Guild. fouud herself in a quiet oountry houte, surrounded by the most ' fervent assurances of welcome from hei ole surviving relatives, who, of course, knew all about her affairs, and treated her with tho most del icate consideration Mr. Arlingford was a bluff and hearty gentleman farmer; Mrs. Arlingford a reserved lady, who, however, seemed kindness itself, while Penelopo, the only daughter, aud Dora's possible rival for the fortune, was a gontle-fao. d chestnut haired girl of twenty, who greeted Dora by winding her arms around her and laying her cheek to hers without a word. - In the oonrxe of the evening of Miss Guild's arrival, while she was giving her aunt some account of her voyage from India," she observed her cousin Penelope standing out on the lawn, talking earn estly with a gentleman. It was a brilliant night in midsummer; the moon, white and searching as a great time-light, shone on the pair, and showed Miss Arlingford'a companion to bo not only young aud handsome, but also a lover. Ilia hand held hers, and his idately head was often bent in unmistakable adoration close to her tresses, while she leaned toward him in all the loving con fidence of a returned affection. Very soon they entered the parlor, and Walter Cary was directly presented to Miss Guild. And the lover of Peuelope I Dismay, consternation, fell upon the heart of the orphan. There could be no mistake every look, every action of the two betrayed it. She was affianced to a man who loved another. The cold touch of his baud on hers, the distant salutation, as if she were the merest stranger, proclaimed that he was resolvod to ignore the contract which was between them. Dora shrank into the darkest corner of the room, and bitter disappointment filled her soul. Very soon, however, the conversation going on around the table arrested her attention. Wa'ter Gary was telling Mr. Arlingford and Penelope an account of a strange murder which had lately oc curred. "The man," said he, "was rather a clever chemist, and accomplished his purpose in a manner Favoring more of the exploits of the 'Arabian Nights' epoch than those of our day. lie gt possession of her journal, and impreg nated ita leaves with a sort of volatile poison, which she of course inhaled the first time she made a record in the book, the result being a mysterious death which no one could account for." The eyea of Penelope Arlingford were fixed upon the narrator with a pulsating eagerness which arrested the attention of the orphan. "What could it have been?" she al most whispered. "Don't believe it," remarked Mr. Arlingford sententiously. The lovers were gazing at each other, and there was a half smile on the feat ures of each. Boon after this, Dora, being consid ered weary after Ler railway journey, was conducted to her bedohamber by her cousin, who again embracing her in a mute, clinging fash: on, hoped she would re -t well, and left her. Not one word had been said about her betrothal to the young man in the par lor. Her claims had been whollv ig nored. Her cousin waa likely not only to rob her of her inheritance, but of her husband also. The young girl retired to bed with a reeling or desolation at her heart which may be easily imagined, and foil asleep weeping bitterly for her old. happy In- dian life, when she was the idol of her father and a darling of ber ayab. She woke or rather she struggled back to consciousness with theBe words running through her mind " the result being a mysterious death, whicn no one coma account lor. ' It was a disagreeable remark to occur to one in the middle of the night, and it roused her to a preternatural wakeful ness. She began to ponder over the events of the past evening, when suddenly something struck her ear which sent all the blood tingling to her heart. It was like the trailing of a long tans liu robe over the thick carpet, which covered the uoor, and a cautions rust ling of paper; the one sound following the other with the slow and regular monoiony 01 a machine. The nicrht was at its darkest, and the head of the bed was in an alcove, so that a view of the room could not bo had; but Dora divined with a choking of me nreatu, tne meaning or the strange sounds. Penelope Arlingford was in tho room ! Before she retired Dora had read a chapter from a large BiWe which lay on her table.- She perfectly recollected placing it on the end of the sofa near the window when she had finished reading it. She felt that her rival was on her knees before that book, impregnating its leaves with the "volatile poisoa" w hich Walter Cary had spoken of, and that as she finished each leaf, and turned it Mowly over, her long muslin sleeve swept the edge of the book, making the stealthy sounds which had aroused her intended victim. Dora lay bound hand and foot by a feeling which almost stopped the beat in ft of her heart. Remember, she had crown no amid scenes of passion and violence; she had o en among tne helpless ones at Cawn p re, when the Sepoys massacred the'r vi tims in cold blood; and death was not so strange a weapon in the hands of a young girl, to her, as it would be to us; nay, it seemea the one weanon bv which Penelope Arlingford would most likely strike for love and wealth. ' Motionless, her eyes distended, the cold dew of agony dripping from every limb, tho orphan girl lay and listened to this evidence of treachery. All at once, a board at the side of the bed creaked, as though a wary foot was passing over it, and the long swish of the garments followed. Tliea tho door softly burst open as if without hand, a flow of air from the pannage rushed across the girl's rigid lace, and she heard amid the suffocatinc throbbings in her ears, the first crow of some neighboring chanticleer. Her terror ended in a swoon. When she came to herself it was broad daylight. I he golden sunshine was Ivinar across her pillow, and the perfumes of the red uoneysuc&ie came in inrougn uie open window and filled the pretty chamber. All seemed innocence and peace around her, but the bouI of the orphan girl was filled with astonishment. She could scarcely arrange her thoughts at first, so terrible was the ordeal through which she had passed ; Dut at length sue saw that she must leave the house immediately ; that she must relinquish both her affianced and her fortune, if she would feel her life safe. 'Oh. papa! my papal" went woor Dora, ".you have niade a terrible mis take 1" When she joined the family, in answer to the breakfast bell, she was in her traveling dress, and her trunks were all repacked. " Why, cousin Dora, what is the mat ter ? Are you ill, dear ?" exclaimed Penelope, in a soft, cooing voice, which seemed habitual to her. Dora turned her back on her midnight yisitor, and striving to speak calmly, said to Mr. Arlingford : "I wish to go to London to day, sir. Please allow some one to drive me to the station." There was a pause of consternation, then they all with one accord began to plead with her to change her mind, and noneof the three were so urgent and tender about it as Penelope. "Just try us, dear cousin !' she en treated. " Of course you will be lonely at first everything is so different but who will make you happier than we can ? Has anybody offended you, dear Dora ?'' "No," answered Dora, shuddering; " but I shall prefer living alone." " You are so young, so ignorant of the ways of our towns," said quiet Mrs. Ar lingford, here chiming in anxiously, "it is a mad thing for you to think of, child." " I must go,1' responded the orphan, averting her pallid face that the dark misery of it might not be Been. So, when the persuasions of himself,' and the pleadings and tears of his wo men availed not, Mr. Arlingford got offended, "Let her please herself, Peu sie. King and order Sam to bring the carriage round." Dora swallowed a enp of tea, and choked down a morsel of bread, aud then she went back to her room to put on her hat. Locking the trunk took but a few moments. She flnnc hernnlf iinnn a nl,,;. an1 0 - - mjivu M MMM.M. I MUM wept silently, feeling herself to be the mum uesoinie ana menaiess being on me iace ot tne earth. What should she do in London ? Go to her father's lawyer, and tell him she did not wish to marry Walter Gary, then live alone in such lodgings as the remnant of her fortune could afford her. Ah ! it was, indeed, a terrible mistake, that clause in the will. Bnt into the midst of her musings stole a sound which thrilled her once more with awe. The swish of a garment, the rustle of a patter, iust as it aroused her lnatnitrtif. Dora gazed upon her like one bereft 111 JtniBuu. .The large old Bible lay quiet enough Bnd cloned ATlint.ly vliAra aha liol nlawu? J ' ' . . . 1 WUU it no living thing wob in the room but 1 i uerseii. And then she saw the whole mvst.erv The window was partly opened, and a slight puff of wind had blown out the crisp white curtains in the room ; then receding had sucked them outward through the operture, while the impris oned air, running up the blind, had caused the tissue-paper hanging at the top to rustle. There came another puff--the trail of the curtain over the carpet, the rustle of the paper hanging. Dora sat OSVTAtmt nf Mia winrlrmr !ia- - o o " " , - face, in its astounding thankfulness, a niuuy ior an artist. At this moment Pene.lone nnmn in She had been weeping. "The carriage is ready, dear cousin," sighed she tremulously. Dora Tiassed her hnml rvr hr (nra- head, then facing her rival, asked, in a hurried tone, " Were you up last night any time, Miss Arlingford ?" prise, " about four o'clock I rose and closed my window. The wind was rising." "Did you hear a cock crow as you did so?" "Yes I did. Whv do vnn ftRfc dnr9 Stav ! T knnv vrhv I Vrai vrara fi-itiVifun. ed by hearing a broad creak beside your oeu : 1 snouia nave tola you aDout that board ; how stupid of me." 'I heard a board crenlr " onil llnra scarcely believing her own ears. ' "Yes, it ought to be fastened down. It runs the whole breadth of the bonnn and when I tread on dne end of it in my room the other end creaks in this. Lis ten !" She ran anrona the rsAtuuitra ahnttintr . I "D the door after her, and in a moment the veritaoie creaking commenced, accom panied by the clicking of the latch of the door, which hud n rtriflp1 Tlnm When the young lady returned the ex pression 01 ner cousin s features was so mightily altered that she exclaimed : 4 Whv mv AavMner irirl T An f kinlr wasted to leave us because you thought the house was haunted." "Per Terhat8 ves " falter Ad Tlnm wistfully gazing at her. " iou poor ntue darling, murmured Penelope, in a voice of deeD comnas- sion, and she took Dora s unresisting A I I naua in ners. "Why would you not tell me ? Don't you knov, Dora," and a smile played on her lips, "that we ought to love each other very dearly ? We are both going to marry a Walter Cary, and be the closest sort of cousins." " Are there two Walter Cnrvs 9" eiac ulated Dora. "What I" cried Penelope, her coun tenance slowly crimsoning as the situa tion burst upon her; "did you ima gine" She never completed the sentence, but snatchinc np the noor. tired little nmhfin in lier hnnnm atraino.l ln there, and kissed her tearful, smiling iaco witu muses wnicu were ruuy re turned. But Dora never revealed the wholA nf her terrible mistake. Ar Royal Female Gambler. Priucess Souwaroff, during a recent Btay at Suxon les Baines, happened one evening to have an extraordinary run of bad luck while gambling. Her neigh bor, a retired tradesman, sympathized with her, and begged to be permitted to place his purse at her diaposal. She refused at first, but the desire to continue play was strong enough to overcome all her scruples, aud she finally aocepted, borrowing $2,000. The money was punc tually repaid, and the lender, M. Dela grange, was delighted to find that the princcFS had condescended to make use of him, and that she invariably spoke to him when he met her in the Casino. He thought he bad acquired the privi lege of being considered among the inti mate friends of the princess, and when she again asked him for an advance of 92,400 he complied with alacrity. This sum remained unpaid, and an arrange ment was made by which the lender was to call on his fair debtor in Paris at a stated time. The princeus, on her re turn, refused to receive as one ef the habitues of her receptions the retired tradesman, who, exed at the apparent slight put irpon him, began to clamor for his money. He wrote to the Princess Basilewsky at St. Petersburg, to com plain of the treatment he had received from her daughter, and receiving no reply, began an actton against Princess Souwaroff, who has been ordered to pay at once under pain of seizure. There is no doubt that walking is a healthy exercise no doubt, except in the mind of the boy who is sent on an eira'nd. lie believes in sitting on the fence. The oldest living man in the world is near Bogota, South America, aud he claims to be 180 years of age. FARM, GARDEN ASD HOUSEHOLD. Afedlral Hint. REFRESHING) DeTNKSTV Vvvv-aa Ttr.il one and a half ounces of tamarinds with two ounces stoned raisins and three ouuees cranberries, all in three pints of water until two ninta and add a small piece of fresh lemon peei, wnicn snouia be removed in thirty minutes. Oatmeat, Muhh. This simple dish is extremely palatable for breakfast. with cream and w.'ll salted. It is very easy of digestion and is remarkably nu tritious. It is also considered the best possible food for dyspeptics and young children, making but slight demands upon tne aigestive organs. To Keep the Feet Wabm. Previous to retiring at night, and before undress ing, remove the stockings and rub the feet and ankles briskly with the hands. During the day wear two pairs of stock ings composed of different fabrics, one pair of silk or cotton, the other of wool, and the natural heat of the feet will be preserved, if the feet are kept clean and the friction of the same is not omitted at night. For the Teeth. The following is an excellent wash for the teeth : Dissolve two ounces of borax m three pounds of boiling water, and, before it is cold, add one tablespoonful of spirits of cam phor and bottle for use. A tablespoon ful of this, mixed with an equal quantity of water and applied daily with a soft brush, will preserve the teeth, extirpate all tarttarous adhesion, arrest decay and make the teeth pearly white. Meat for Invalids. The following method of rendering raw meat palatable to invalids is given in the Industrie Blaetter : To 8.7 ounces of raw meat from the loin add 2. 6 ounces of shelled sweet almonds, .17 ounce of shelled bit ter almonds and 2,8 ounces of white sugar these to be beaten together in a marble irortar to a uniform pulp, and the fibres separated by a strainer. The pulp, which has a rosy hue and very agreeable taste, does not at all remind one of meat, and may be kept fresh for a considerable time, even in summer, in a dry, cool place. The yoiK or an egg may be added to it. From this pulp, or directly from the above substances, an emulsion may be preparea wnicn wiu oe rendered still more nutritious by adding milk. Household Hint.. TtATSTNR. TtaisinM am rnndArArl nm'to digestible if boiled or Bteamed before using them in cakes or pies. An Idea for Mothers. Baste a piece of needlework on the bottom of children's cloaks; this takes the place of a white dress in the street, and, is far more easy to do up. To Destroy Cockroaches Where borax and insect-powder have failed to exterminate cockroaches, sprinkle the floor with powdered white hellebore; they will eat it and be poisoned by it. To Clean Bottles. Cut a new po tato into small pieces and put them in the bottle, along with a tablespoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of water. Shake all well together in the bottle till every mark is removed, and rinse with clean water. This will remove green marks of vegetation and other discolora tion?. Hard crust in bottles may be cleaned off by rinsing with water and small shot. Cleansing Fluid. For washing al paca, camel's hair, and other woolen goods, and for removing marks on furni ture, carpets, rugs, etc: Fpur ounces ammonia, four ounces white Castile soap, two ounces alcohol, two ounces glycerine, two ounces ether. Cut the soap flue, dissolve in one quart of water over the tire, and add four quarts water. When nearly cold, add the other ingre dients. This will make nearly eight quarts, and will cost about seventy-five cents. It must be put in a bottle and stoppered tight. It will keep good any length of time. To wash dress-goods, take a pail of lukewarm water, and put in a teacupful of the fluid, shake around well in this, and then rinse in plenty of clean water, and iron on wrong side while damp. For washing grease from coat-collars, etc, take. a little of the fluid in a cup of water, apply a clean rag, and wipe well with a second rag. It will make everything woolen look bright and fresh, OnioBn for Poultry A writer whose poultry were infested with vermin thus details the successful use of onions as a remedy : I began at once by chopping the onions line, and mixing with corn meal and hot water. After standing a short time it was fed to the poultry, and in less than three weeks the little pests had entirely disappeared. I used to take onion tops and cut them up fine and mix with the meal, wetting it with sour milk, or clabber (when I had it), to feed to the chickens one or two days in a week, until they were large enough to eat grain or small corn. I never lost a chicken with the gapes during the five years I was there. My neighbors would say that because I was in a new place was why I had such good luck in raising chickens. I told them about feeding the onions, and they found them very good. I told them I should lose many of my early chickens, just as they did, if I followed their example, in giving twenty-two chickens to one hen the first of April. There would be a half dozen or more little chicks on the outside f the hen that her feathers could nt cover, in a cold frosty morn ing. Three feeding a wek in the spring and a part of the summer is suffi cient. I seldom feed the onions in the fall or winter. My neighbors have the same good reuulta iu feeding onionc. Fashion Notes. Lawn ties are embroidered profusely wiin vanegateu biik. " Mother Goose " is the new style of Silk sun shades bearing the owner's monogram are a novelty. Queen Anne and Japanese styles of iuiniture predominate. Fashion's demand for jet still con tinues, and it will be worn more than claire de lune. Swiss neckties, with the end braii'ed in colored silk, will be worn with sum mer dresses. Burlap mats are made with successive Bquare bands of colored merino, cat stitched down with colored floss silk. For watering-places are dressy cos tumes of damask silk of light quality combined with plain silk often of con trasting color. Unique scarf pins in Japanese designs are shown ; one composed of two small canes with fan of cloisonne enamel at tached. Satin will be much used for trimming summer drosses. Some of the new gren- aaines are trimmed entirely with black satin. The new colored embroideries are used for trimming children's white dreases. Those with scallops of blue or cardinal red are prettiest. The little Marseilles ' coats are made with carrick capes and the. cloth coats finished with little vests like the gar men of grown folks. For evening dresses garlands are made in all styles, and, as the combinations are such that a diversity is allowable, all tastes are easily satisfied. The prettiest sacques with carrick capes, omit the middle seam in the back, and none of these English gar ments have long seams from the shoul ders. For costumes to be worn in the morn ing very thick linen that is at the same time light and fine is used, and trimmed with frills embroidered in hiprh colors. especially in red or blue with black. The Scotch and Madras gingham dresses are charmingly cool and fresh looking. The bars and stripes are of two or three colors on a white ground. and the new combination of colors are adopted. Large collars and cuffs of white lace are sewed on the dark silk dresses that will be used for summer, and the neck and wrists of the dress are finished with a row of loops of narrow ribbon the color of the dress. Very few dressy wraps are made in sacque shape. There are, however, some of heavily repped silks or of Sicilienne make in the simplest French sacque shape, single-breasted, medium long, and smooth over the tournure. . A Jeweler's Joke. Mr. Smiley, the undertaker, got it into his head the other day, that his eye sight was not what it used to be, and that a pair of spectacles would be bene ficial to him as well as to make him lock more venerable. So he proceeded to Mr. Karat's jewelry store, in the next block, to purchase the desired article. The obliging Mr. K displayed his whole stock of spectacles for his cus tomer's inspection. Mr. Smiley would try on a pair, elevate his head, then lower it, then look over the tops of them, meanwhile holding a newspaper before him. One pair was for younger eyes (so he said); another pair was for older eyes, and bo on until he had tried on all of Mr. Karat's spectacles. Not one pair could he find that was suited to his sight Now the patient Mr. Karat was at times fond of a joke, and informed Mr. Smiley that he had a pair that he used himself sometimes, and he might try them on, and perhaps they would suit him. Mr. Karat took from the drawer a pair minus the glasses, and after carefully wiping them inside and out, adjusted them over Mr. Smiley's pro boscis. After going through the usual per formance with his head, Mr. Smiley said : . " Why, they eeoni better. I can see as well with them as I could without I them twenty years ago. I'll tike these. They just suit my eyes. " A New Railroad Pass. A new style of railroad pass has just been patented by a railroad man which is somethiug of a novelty. The idea is to provide a pass which can be used by none save the person to whom it is issued, and the pass seems to meet the requirement. Around the pass proper is a margin, with a description which, by the use of a punch, may bo made to fit anybody. After the word " nge " appear a series of figures out of which the person issuing the pass punches tho figures corresponding with the age of the one to whom the pas is issned. Then after the head " shape " follow the words "slim," "medium," "stout," "corpulent." After "color of hair' come the designations " black, "brown," "gray," "light," "auburn." Af ter ." color ol eyeB," come "black," " brown," "gray,"' "blue," "hazel;" and after "beard" the terms " none," "full," " side," " chin," " moustache." Thus, supposing the man to whom the pass is issued be a dark, slim man, with black eyea and beard a la Napoleon, the issuer of the pass would punch the word " slim " under " shape," " black " under " eyes " and " hair," " moustacho " and "chin" i nder "beard." The pass could then be transferred only to a man chancing to answer just the above de scription. This idea is certainly a novel one. Items of Interest. "A want of the age" Hair. Matters of interest Coupon?. "Beautiful He of the Sea" wha'e-oil. "Tirao out of mini" is the olrfett lunatic on record. A fashion writer says : Patched trou sers will be muchworu this season. There is no necessary connection be tween a serial tale and a monkey's tail, simply because both are continued. Cats can't live at a greater elevation than 13,000 feet above the level of the sea; but they thrive splendidly on a ridge-pole. The New Orleans Picayune sayt: " Love cannot live on bon-bons." "No," says the Boston savant, "but love can live on beans. " The entire alphabet is found in these four lines: God giveB tho grazing ox his meal, He quickly hear the sheep's low cry; Dut man who tactes his thiest wheat, Shoald joy to lift Lis prajRes high. Even the life of a paragrapher has its bright spots. Pittsburrh Dispatch. And well it is for him, when they do not concentrate upon his nose. Detroit Free Press. The horse will eat ten hours out of every twelve ; and the hog never knows what it is not to be hungry. The crew flies six miles, and the wild pigeon sixty au hour, but the humming bird beats all things on the wing. The wild turkey can run faster than he can fly, and any man who is a good walker can tire a deer out in twenty-four hours. The fox is the hardest animal to catch in a trap. and a muskrat the easiest, and the meadow lark is the shyest of all the birds in the air. The spider is the only creature that catches its food in a trap, and a sheep will live without water longer than any other domestic animal. We have in Hart County. Kv.. a man ! by the name of William Bowman, who was thrown away in the Appalachee Mountains, North Carolina, when an infant, and was found by an old bear and adopted as a cub. At the age of about ten years he was captured, tied hand to foot, and then his captors found that he could not talk, nor could he be persuaded - to take any rood but milk, which he sucked from a bottle.howing that he had lived solely by the nursing of the bear. Bowman is now a farmer near Omega, and any one doubting the truth of this statement can have it verified by seeing him. Hart County Three Springs. house-cleaning. The houiekeeper giveth a oheerful hop, na wo near tne iuuaioai nippertynop Of the mois'y, misty, maddening mop. And lo, the maddening horrors runh Athwart our goals at the soapy guxh Of the slippery, slimy soruuhiog-hrush. From ear'y morn till evening gloom We hear the scratching in hall and room Of the boisterous, huuily bobbing broom. And now there eometh a woesome wail That angurs a gon'rally gusty gale From a man with his leg in the scrubbing-pall. Curious Habits of a Curious Bird. ( A naturalist CM. Velainl accompany ing the French expedition to the islands of St. Paul and Amsterdam, in 1874, for tho purpose of observing the transit of Venus, has lately published an account of the fauna and flora of these islands. In the description of the birds that were met with, the penguin has a large space by reason of its very curious and always entertaining' habits. The penguins be gin to liy in the month of September, and countleFS numbers annually assem ble upon the islands of St. Paul and Amsterdam at the time of breeding. M. Velaiu observed the birds at their nest ing stations with the deepest interest, and came to the conclusion that, instead of being the stupid animal they are pop ularly considered, they are really gifted with uncommon powers. A synopsis of 31. Velam s account, which is given in Nature, says: "At the time or the arrival or the ex pedition (October), the birds were pre paring to hatch. Each pair kept en tirely to themselves. Each nest ha I two eggs largo, nearly round, of u dirty white color, but marked here ami there with a few russet spots, lio! : birds partook of the cares attendant c. the incubation and took turn about c the nest. The bird off duty would ur once make for the sea, faithfully return ing at the appointed time, and never failing to waddle direct to its own nest, though no human being could see a difference between the thousands that were strewn about. Sometimes the whole camp of birds would have to bo traversed ere the nest sought for would be gained, and a bird trying to make a short cut would be sure to be attacked by those whom it disturbed, for they are not at all tolerant of one another; and in this they also prove that tbfcr are not Btupid, for surely neither suipia people nor stupid birds ever quarrel. On M. Velain arriving in their midst, they would one and all set up an im mense and beyond-all-measure stunning cry, soon they would calm down and seem not to mind' his presence. Tlf incubation lasted for five weeks. Tht little ones made their appearance cov ered all over with a fine, close down, and looked like balls of line, gray-col ored wool. They soon got tired of th comforts of their nests, and began to as semble, together with their little broth era and bibters of the sme colony, ks large infant schools, which are preskl. i over by some of the sedate old biril -. Many times a day, at stated intervj' they are fed; tho other portions t! spend in sleepiug and talking and h tie fighting. Space will not jx i i to refer to many curious detail their swimming lessons. "-'Jribune.