Oii THE TOUNU TEOrLE. Utile Impnilenr. It takes no many hours to make a day 1 It taken so many days to make a year I My seventh birthday seema so far away, And yet my eighth, they say, is nowhere near ! The robins' uest out in the cherry-tree Held four young birds, naked, and weak and small, A month ago ! so fast they grew, yon see, There's not a robin In the nest at all 1 They flew, f n'l grown 1 and I'm no bigger now Than When the nest was built that one can see. How robins grow bo fast, and girls so slow, Is Tory strange indeed, it seems to me. I wonder how 'twould eorm to be seventeen, And wear long drones like my Cousin Sue, She has a watch, the prettiest ever seen, And winds it all hersolf, as I should do. I s'pose I shall be married too, some day, As mamma was. I've seen her veil and dress; They're in the bureau draw, laid awav, She's saving them for me to wear, I guess. " I wonder who I'll have ! Not Cousin Joe I . Nor toasing Clare ! Maybe my Uncle Tim. My papa is the nicest man I know; Bat mamma's very sure she can't spare him! Joy AllUon. - " " ' Treaaarea from the Deep. "The Bea," says a writer who has deeply studied the subject, " contains in itrj bosom an exuberance of life, of which no other region of the globe affords any idea. Our forests do not afford an asylum to nearly bo many ani mals as do those of the ocean. For the Bea has its forests, long marine herbs, or the floating banks of sea-weed whioh the waves have detached. If we could plunge our glances into the liquid crys tal of the Indian ocean, we should see realized therein the fairy tales of our in fancy. Fantastic shrubs decked with living flowers, the richest colors glow ing everywhere; greens and browns, the liveliest reds, and the most intense blues. The sand is sprinkled with sea hedgehogs and sea-stars, of fantastic forms and varied colors. The Bea-ane-mones, like great cactus flowers, adorn the rocks with their crowns, or spread over the ocean like a flower-bed of bril liant flowers. The humming-birds of ocean, small, gleaming fishes, some bright, with a metallic splendor of blue or vermilion, some with a gilded green or dazzling silver luster, play around the coral bushes. Light as spirits of the abyss, the white or blue bells of the medusa float through this enchanted world." But if our coasts do not present us such a fairy land as this, they yet pro vide ns with many wonderful and beau tiful things. See, here is an oyster. "Not much beauty here," you say. No, but much to wonder at. He does not seem well placed for happiness, though without a doubt he has his joys. His life is spent between two heavy, stony plateB, with which he can secure himself. Those lovely things called pearls are, however, his speoial treasure. They are caused by wounds made by worms boring the shells and hurting their bodies. Pearly matter is thrown out freely ou the injured spot, which soon becomes a pearl of greater or less size. Of sometimes a grain of sand gets into the oyster's house and irritates him, upon which he coats it over with pearly matter. Here is a little crab. It lives, you see, in a hard shell. The shell doe not grow, but the crab does, and therefore he wants a new shell now and then. When he feels that he mast cast off his old shell he first of all gets into some bole, where he can lie safely while he is weak and helpless. Then ho goes with ontr f ood until ho is very thin, and his clothes hang about him, as we say. In this state a new shell, soft and clastic, forms about his body. Then the crab struggles and splits his old shell, and pnlls his long legs out of his boots. When he has got safely over this strange process the crab increases rapidly in size, and his new suit becomes in a fow days as hard as his former one. Here is a star-fish, or asteria, often called the five finger. Its mouth, you see, is iu the middle of the under side, and it is a great devourer of small shell fish. It is considered so destructive to oysters, that by old laws, every man was liable to be punished who did not kill the five-finger when he saw it. And what is this mass of jelly ? It is .i creature called the medusa, or sea nettle. It has received its latter name aoause it makes yonr skin smart when 'ou touch it. While the medusa is loating, many tentacles or nets may be i eon hanging from its underside. With tiiese it catches food. If yon take a medusa alive, you will find it impossible ! hold it in your fingers. It will divide into parts and fall a shapeless mass. Sometimes these strange animals may bo seen below a ship's keel, glowing like white-hot oannon balls. Perhaps the most wonderful crea t ares of all, if we consider their works, re the Polypi. These animals are of a i Uft, jelly-like substance, sometimes shaped like a bell or a pill-box. The sea-anemonea, as they are called, belong to this class. Jtound an opening or mouth in the upper side are arranged a number of arms, like the petals of a dal y, by maus of which the creature -izes his prey. The prey is sometimes 1 uite as large as the polypi itself, but t is sucked into the interior and there -stroyed; the shell, if there is one, be- vomited forth afterwards. This imal-rlower is fixed on a rock, along jicb it can slowly crawl. The polypi form the substances called ral aud madrepore. By their means , mouse reefs of solid rock, whioh stem ia mighty waves and form large islands, r,re raised in mid ocean. One of the most useful treasures of the sea is the Sponge. It is believed to be an animal, but the lowest of all ani mals. No feeliugs have ever yet been Uncovered in the sponge, though it has en pinched and tortured with red-hot ). It is pieroed in all directiofts by N, out of which opening streams of - itre being constantly discharged. inikM the creature sucks the its body by small pores, and t when it has drained it of ' ;iig matter. TIMELY TOPICS. A late invention combine an ironing table, step-ladder and a chair. The exact cost of the construction of the Paris Exposition buildings and grounds is now estimated at 45,300,000 irancs, or S'J.IWU.UUU. Liebig's experiment of curing intern rerance bv a Btrictlv farinaceous diet, has been tested in twpity-seven cases in this country with very good eilect. Professor Riley, the government ento mologist, estimates that the annual loss to agriculture in the United States from destructive insect! is not less than 8150,- 000,000. the Mississippi, Missouri anu vmo, nr being stocked by Professor Baird's fish hatching establishment with millions of shad eggs and California salmon. Frederick Hasse graduated at the head of his class in a German university, in 1870. He was heir to $80,000, and his prospect of a successful career could hardly have been brighter. A few days ago he died in St. Louis, where he had for a year been a porter in a medical college. An appetite for opium killed him. In some parts of China crickets are regularly trained for combat, by being kept in small, earthenware pots, with a little mould and a tiny cup of water. - - . . . ... . 5 and fed on fish, insects, boiled chestnuts and boiled rice. If they catch cold their health is restorod by rations of mosqui toes. At the cricket pit they are match ed according to size, weight and color, and a cricket that wins many victories is highly honored, and buried in a small silver coffin when it dies. TVin HmitliHnnian Institution, which has been engaged for more than a quar ter nf a (rnitnn: in ranenrcheR into the antiquities of America, and has during that time published many important mnmnirn on the snbiect. is about to issue an exhaustive work on American archraology with numerous illustrations and maps. The institution, therefore, in mi t inns to collect from everv available source whatever is known or can be ascertained by special investigation, of . . . n a i ?a the antiquities oi rorm America, ana u invites the co-operation of all interested in the work. Upon the appearance of rolling-chairs at the Paris Exposition nobody could be induced to ride in them. At last an old gentleman, being much entreated and being promised that the trip should cost him nothing, took his seat and was wheeled about. Everybody he met smiled, then laughed, then laughed louder, and presently he had a large Burrounding, In disgust he left the chair, and then foand that a placard upon it Baid that it was " especially use ful for elderly and weak persons, par ticulaily for men Buffering from the re sults of overdrinking. " The question whether postal officiuls have a right, nnder any circumstances, except by due process of law, to open letters or sealed packages in the mails, has again been answered in the negative by the Supreme Court of the United States. "Sealed mailed matter," says the decision, " is as fully guarded from examination and inspection, except as to their outward form and weight, as if they were retained by the parties forwardiug them in their own domiciles. The Constitutional guarantee of the right of the people to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures ex tends to their papers, thus closed against inspection, wherever they may be. No law of Congress can place in the hands of officials connected with the postal Bervice any authority to invade the se crecy of the sealed packages in the mail." France reckon two braves more. A fireman at Tarbes rushed among tbe burning rnins of a house to save his captain and a clergyman, who were buried beneath the floor in endeavoring to rescue the inmates. The fireman re mained trying to extricate the captain, but without avail, till the flesh peeled off bis hands and face. He has died from his wounds, has been buried at the nation's expense, and for a month his name will be read out first on the roll-call of every regiment in the army. Jean Plantier is a pointsman, and a few months ago, in endeavoring to close the gates of a crossing, he waa Btruck down by a goods train, and his arm amputated. Not a soul waa within reach, and aware that an express 'train was due, he tied up the bleeding stump, and remained at his post till a station-master, informed by the engine-driver that some accident had occurred, picked up the arm from the rail and snocored the hero. Lost Her Head. A Boston ietter'says: Everyone knows that among all the rest of our schools for women, there are ample means now for a woman who seeks to become a physician to make herself familiar with all the principles of practice and all tbe secrets of medfCine and surgery. A young student who has pursued her studies up to a certain point in another city came to Boston last winter and pro ceeded to visit a certain dissecting room to which she had been invited. Mount ing the stairs, she at last comes to the landing, from which opens the apart ment where the wonders of the human frame are, materially at least, all found out. Waiting to catch her breath, per haps to catch her courage, she over hears the following from the physician iu attendance upon the class: "There are not enough heads to go round. Bome of you must choose something else." The listener turned pale and leaned against the wall. She thought she would n t pay her visit that day. Bhe thought she would ro home and perhaps study a little further and ap proach the dissecting room a little more gradually. As she turned to carry this resolution into eilect, slie met the jani tor of the building, who was evidently, laiaumr wun visitors ana students in this stage and state of mind, for he said, enoouragiugly, "If you'll wait a minuto, miss, you'll be all right. They all of 'em leois tins wy at trie lirst start, But " misa " didn't wait that day. Curious Jicst of a Poisonous Insect. The nest of the tarantula, occasion ally found, excites the admiration of bolh old and young, and, indeed, nothing could be more ingeniously con trived. It is a subterranean lionse about the uize and shape of a ooeonnut of medium growth, and is mndo of small pebbles and grains of sand glued together with some viscid matter. Its interior is lined with a silky material as fine and white as satin. Just at the surface of the ground is a circular open ing nearly an inch in diameter. Into this fits a little door or lid made of sand and fine gravel glued together. This lid is lined with the same silken stuff as the nest proper, and at one side has a hinge made of many strands of the same. This door the tarantnlar can open and close a pleasure. When the lid is closed it is almost impossible to find the nest, as owing to the Band and gravel on its upper side it presents the same appearance as the surround ing ground, from which wore gathered the materials of which it was construct ed. ffrtf nnsi -A tt t VMM Hffya U7TVQT tXXTa SOOTHING 8TRTTPhas been nsod fnr nhil.lren with never-failing success. It oorreots acidity oi me siomacn, relieves wina oouo, regulates the bowelR, enres dysentery and diarrhwa, wriAfhnr ariaincr fmm f AAtlhinor nr ntliai. a.u... An old and well-tried remedy. 25 cts. a bottle. Cramps and pains in the stomach or bowels, or in any part of the body, no matter how severe or what the cause, can be relieved bv Johnson's Anodyne Liniment used internally and externally. More than twenty rears ago we had chills and fever, and the recollection of it make us shake even now. But this disease no longer terrifies ns. Parsons' Furgative rills are a sure preventive. Snob names as Dr. O. W. Holmes. Washing ton Irving, and Ex-President Van Bnren, have borne testimony to the efficacy of Whitoomb's Asthma Remedy, which is for sale bv Druggists. Accidents will happen, and it is best to be always prepared for them. Sufferers from Cuts, Burns, Soalds, Wounds, Bruises and Sprains, will find immediate relief in the use of Grace's Salve whioh also cures old Sorest Felons, Corns, Ulcers, Ac Itemerabrr Thin. That when you buy a can of Doolev's Yent Powder you take no chances, for it is warrant ed absolutely pure, full strength, and full weight, and it cannot fail, if properly used, to produce the most positive and satisfactory re sults; not only in biscuits, rolls, muffins and fanoy cakes, but in all kinds of batter griddle cakes as welK CHEW The Celebrated " Matchless " Wood Tag Flog Tobaooo. Thb Fiohbkb Tobaooo Cokpaht, New York, Boston, and Chioago. The Orealeat Dl.oarery or ipe Ave I. Dr roblaa' oeebrated Venetian Liniment I 80 yean before the public, aad warranted to onn Diarrhea, Dyaentaryf Oolio, and Spaama, taken internally ; and Oroop.Ohronio Rhanmatlem, Bore Throat, Onta, Bruiaea, Old Bore., and Paina in the Lunba, Back, and Oaeot, .iternally It haa never failed. No family will er be without 1 after orjoe giving it a fair trial. Price, 40 oenta. D TOBIAS' VENETIAN HORSE LINIMENT, In Pint Bottle., at On Dollar, la warranted inperior to any other, or NO PAY, for the oore of Oolio, Onta, Brnleea, Old Sore., eto. Bold by all Drnggiata. Depot 10 Park Place. New York As the time has come for the renewal of subscriptions, THE SUN would remind its friends and well wishers everywhere, that it is again a candidate for their consideration and support. Upon its record for the past ten years it relies for a continuance of the hearty sympathy and generous co-operation which have hitherto been extended to it from every quarter of the Union. The DAILY SUN is a four-page sheet of 28 columns; price by mail, post paid, 55 cents a month, or $6.50 per year. nn . . . . ad Who does not know the WEEKLY SUN ? It circulates through out the United States, Oanadas, and beyond. Ninety thousand families greet its welcome pages weekly, and regard it in the light of guide, counsellor, and friend. Its news, editorial, agricultural, and literary departments make it essentially a journal for the family and the fire side. Terms : One Dollar a year, postpaid. This price, quality con sidered, makes it the cheapest newspaper published. For clubs of ten, with $10 cash we will send an extra copy free. Address "PUBL How Not to Hore. None of the books of etiquette 1 hat we have yet read give prescriptions whioh will cure the tendency which most of ns have to bore other people. The reascin'is that none of us suspects he is or can be a bore under any possi ble combination of circumstances. The supposition is bo wild and absurd as to be discountenanced at onoe. And yet so often are we bored by other people that it would only be reasonable for us to conclude that we too might sometimes place ourselves in the same unenviable light. To know when to come and when to go, when to be silent and when to speak, what to say and how to Bay it, to be properly aware how to express those thousand little tones and acts which en dear one, it is difficult to explain pre cisely how, is either a natural gift or an art obtainable after long years of train ing. Yet he who is not master of these things will run the risk. Bome time or other of being considered a nuisance. We nil ought to learn how not to bore. We owe it to our neighbors as well as to ourselves. It is a knowledge we exact from them. If they do not betray it we feel personally aggrieved and are apt to consider them, for a time, our enemies. One certain way of not boring is never to give people too much of our com pany. This is a rule difficult to observe. There are times when we are too ready to believe that our friends want us more than they really do. We take their pro testations literally, and when they say they could live with ns forever and a day, we positively give them tho day. This is a great mistake. Proba bly six hours of the day would have been quite sufficient. But we are unwilling to believe that our fascinations are bo weak as not to stand a longer trial, and yielding to that weak prejudice in our own favor we become immitigable bores. It would be well if we could hold the hand-glass up to our failings in this re spect and see ourselvee as we really are. To the average Athenian the dearest spot on earth is the Greece spot. Thk Millkh and Mim.wbioht. The boat milling paper. Sample copy free. MiMPStm A Uadlt, Cincinnati, O. 50.000 AGENTS WANTED. IsrOAT ALOffOK FKKK. Laughton, Wilson a Go., Qhioago. $ 1 0 & $25 KA'httXZ Novelties Catalogue & Outfit Free applioatio on ion to J. H. BUFFORD'S HONS, Mannfaottirinc Publisher 141 to 147 Franklin Street, Hoatun, Maea. Established nearly fifty yean. MJf?YASIF&SCMFCO. 265 BROAD WA Y. A V WEEKLY If (TH If 711 isnE3"W" tore: , git KNT WANTFO Vnr the and rnM Mlina notorial Rooka and Rihlea. Prtoee rerinoed o.i percent, a nnreae, ,inM' Hook and Bible ltooee, IJiiladelphie, Chicago, or St. louia. AUethtaaatfMa CHAPMAN'S CHOLERA SYRUP Onr i Daen'nry, liarthr-a and Summer rinmplaliita of dhilrtren. Price ftOo. flKOKOK MOOK R, Proprie tor, (irent Falla, N. H. Ho Id by eUlrn miaia. room in TWO HOURS, loc. worth will kill more flics than $io wort!, of V CSi aoia ejr 1:1 DiPOGIlTttJJ Eriay. Botanic Medicine Co Buffalo.N. V Vfho VTants UacMnery? We hare for tale over 1 ,gOO new and aeoond hand raaohjnea at p-ioea far below their true ralne, eompria. In NtW.AIII.L. and JKNFR AI, WOOD. WOKKINU MACHINERY of erery deaoriptlon. Portable and Mtatloaary NT RAM KNUINK and no I l.K KM from 1-2 to HOO h. p., WATKK WI1KF.I.M, OKINT MILL, MAC'IIIKKY AIAMIINIMTH' aad BLACKMMITHM TOOLS of every variety, PUMP FIRE APPJt. KATU, COTTON and WOOI.RN MACHIN ERY, BKI.TINtJ, CIRCULAR HAWH, NIIAFTIXJ, PUM.EYM, etc., etc., all folly deaoribed in onr printed Liat No. 17, with prise annei ed, whioh w will mall to the eddreee of any party dealr big maohinery npon receipt of atamp. Slate plainly jnt what machine or maohlnee yon arx In want of, and don't buy nntil yon bare oarefiiUy read oar liat of the areateet banraina ever offered in the war of new and aeoond-hand maobinee. Low apeoial freight. aa obtained for onr ooatomera to any aeolion of tbe United Bute or Oanada. Addreea S. F. FORSAITH & CO., Machinists anil General Machine Dealers, MANCHESTER, N. H. N. B. Village and Town Fire Knginea, Hoee Car riagea. Ladder Trnoka and Fire Kiinipoiente a apeoialty. Send for Fire Kngino circnlara. Homes in Minnesota, FORTT MILLION bnabela of Wheat, making EIUI1T MILLION barrel, of Flaar, wort,hover FIIIt Mllliaa Del lap., TI1IUTY.VIYR Ml fK MILLION boaheat of OaU. Corn. Rve. worth ov.r Term re. Barley. Kaotwh Baolwheat, and PoUktoea, alv ftlllflsa Dallare. Fnnr knn. dred and eleven Haa . af Hlene. The GreMeslMUIingCcunProflDCt try In foe World Th. seat Water Power " la the United Sute.. Oaa haadred aad tweaty taaa.ajid Moree Power at St, Anthony Fall alone. V1T8 III DKKI MILLION FKFTof lambercawed URKAT HIJMIl far Oaalea WHEAT LAN DM. IMMENSE BHiTlOl HT?np!878. Nothing like it ever known. Twaaty P Tarea Haadred Mile. f KallraaaT, Ul aod.rery train crowded. Land offloee be. egad with throng, at aupllcant. Wlaoonain, Iowa, aad Raaaa. ala eoaatna. We invite the warld Into tn iEj PIRR STATB OK THE NlMtflaWB-iT? twenty Five Million acre, of land awaiting aettlement a ftrjn Freis Eoines.Frse SQOls.fresLaii(ls. IR77 PanTphlet of Klghty Page, with a fln. AVI I 1 1 Mi; will be aent. poat-paid. ta KYFKY APPLI. CANT everywhere, ta every roaatrr, tba world v.r. Appy to JOHN W. BOND, 8cc'y of Saaua Board arjaaaalaraiiaa. area and rive FLO I7K1KU MILLS, nfteeabao- nt. raal.Mlaaaaa A- J" . W- r.r-r4et- l(W -X... LL.uiti, - w. Af-ta, t'aiM.as, Ilk ; - , J ' i 11. W"X i 1 1 . 1 a F a IT E a r 3R of the Bwmrw'g BuoufWint Triornm, for oonght and onldt A4JKNTN Send for oatalogae rednoed prloea--neir atx-. Oontlnentnl tlhromo tin.. It S Warren Ht, W. Y. flTT rtf Q KKVQI.VKPN. Pnoe I lit free. Addree 3 U i.1 O Qreat Weatern Onn Worka, Pittahnrg, Pa HDP I tTfl '"'"'l P"'' "! UNO onl; unuAHSr.v;;.n'.nv:nJ y VWi. PIANOS nly w I it ft. (treat WaKhington, N. $7 A PAT to AvftntH M.Tnii.nj( fnr tfa Flrirld V iHllor. Trrmn And Outfit Km. Adilmmi P. O, VIUKKKY Anyimtft. Mulna, CLOCKS K. IN-KAMAM V VO.t 8tiprtor in dwiijra. Not ftqaftlMl In quality, or a tlmk4um . Auk your .!wlr for lnBt Fl k O Th flholniwt In th world Import!. L I Jl iOft priowi I.rr-t Dotupwit 111 Amiirioi tfiplft rtiol plAPtM uTAryhndy 'I r an continually incrwHSinc Ajrent wnntud THrywImrn- bnt lnduo irint lont wnt tim Bnd ftr itroulr to KOH'T W F.lil,H, 4 U Vtpy St., N.Y., P. O. Ho Yl. $10. $20. $50. $100. Inveated jndioinnalv In Rtnoka (Option, or Privllegee)' I a anre road to rapid fortune. Full detaila and Oltioia Ntook Kiohang. Report, frre. Addroaa T. POTI'KU WIOHT a HO . Baakera, 3ft Wall Street, NewJYork GRACE'S SALVE, JoKltavii.l.g, Mlnb., Deo. 17, IK77. cr. FbtrUt: aent yon an eta. for two boiea of tlraee'a Halve. 1 have had two and have need them on an nloer on my font .and it iaahnoat well. Reapeotiully youra, O. J. VAN Mmr). Prlre XJ) eent. a boa at all dnigglata, or eent by mall on reoelpt of rent. Prepared by NKTII W. FO v I." tV StINN, Ht Hamaon Ave., Hoaton.Maae. fa v I i . . 1 Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sour Stomach, Sick Headache. TRAPR MARK. DR. DECKER'S CELEBRATED EYE BALSAM 19 A 8TJRB CURB For INFLAMED, WEAK EYES, HTVEH and MORE EYKLIDN. SOLD BY ALL DRU0O1STS. DEPOT. BOWKIIT.H, . NT BY MAIL, r-Ulv S.taa A Safe and Reliable Subntlluto fur tlulnlue Tho only 25 cent AGUE REMEDY I TAX THE xxr cvnv.n and all MALAKIAL WISKA8KS. eld ay I1 Dnvtllli. Mallad FREE rtcol,,! otpilra, Wrtla to IHTNtua nine CO., ' Wnoarra a aita-r, Kr.iv Veaa, for tlitir tn coet Imu.Ii, nillvl lu llm raadaia ut ttile paper a aj ffr tf u am.l lattuu. SUN SiMO to $8.00oS. I ySETHTHOMAS KGL0GSS ; keepoood Jr lU I NYnU gM 5$UVL SUN - st.