Hit Jovwt gltpublian. J9 riJBLISUED EVKRY WIDNE8DAY, BY JT. 33. "W OrriOB II ROBIKBOH & BOWHTR'B tnLDCIO ELM BTBXET, TI0NE8T1, PA. TBRMS, fLM A TEAR. - No Subscription received for a ahartflr period than lures months. Correspondence solicltod from all part of the country. No notice will bo taken ot anonymous communicationa. Rates of Advertising. One flqnare (1 Inch,) one Inacrtion - ft One Square " one month - 3 Ort One Square " three months - 6 00 OneHquare " ono year - - 10 00 Two Squares, one year - 15 Oo Quarter Col. - - - - 30 00 Half " " - 50 00 One " " 100 00 Legal notices at established rates. i Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisement o lected quarterly. Temporary advertise menta must bo paid for in advance. Job work, Cash on Delivery. VOL. XII. NO. 32. TIOKESTA, PA.; OCTOBER 29, 1879. $1.50 Per Annum. 0 Ti&i wen me Upfl nnd Downs. One day, as I liave heard it, mid, It phanoed a rag and bit ol load I at ia the konncl snug together In very wet aDd muddy weathor. The rag wns spoilod, and old, and torn ; Tlio bit of load wan hrnisod and worn; Two wails, whone worth, nt full nooount, Was ol such very small amount They woll together might remain, To bide tno poking ol the rain. Yet, low an was their present state, Thoy both had known a hotter late. The rag had onto been whole and white, In evoiy way had pleased the sight; And, in its timo, had helped adorn A bride, upon her her wedding morn; Lent to her figure and her lace An added, though unnoodod, grace, Nor thought such parting and distress Could o'er holall a wed'Vng dress! Tlio piece of load could not forget Its lortunos had boon nobler yet; For, moldod well, for uho ol one YIlo was his country's liiilhful son. II had though that was long ago Keen sped against that country's foe, And, guided by unerring hand, Had Blrttohod him lilulyss on the sand. Thorn ciuno a man, with hook and beg, AVIio boro away the lead and rag, And both were to a shop consigned, With many others ol thoir kind. Wheu winter passed, and summer camo, The foriner rag had changed its name To paper, and it might avow It no'er had been so white aa now. Moanwhilo, the le,id, so long despisod, Was altered an') was highly prized; For, inellei., purided and cast, It was a printer's type at Inst. Thry now, in this, their new condition, Wire pot into their old position; Drawu closer than before, to kiss, And And their upothesis. What greater immorality Thau helping genius not to die ? Scribner. IN THE ORGAN-LOFT. The light of n September suuset lay lull on the elm tree bought, nnd check ered the pavement below with soft rosy glooms, when a cub from the station stopped in ironl of the quaint brick building which did duty ns "seminary " to the Br.-u-ey theological students, and a young uirr got out of it. Even-song was in"grcss. From the ornate little Gothic clinpel which stood at right an gles with the long wing where tno stu dents housed, sounded ft Gregorian chnnt, rendered by n rhnrus of fresh manly voices. A little strip of closely shhvon lawn divided the chapel from the street. Its smooth green was broken now by long bars of pink light, and here . and there a reddened lenf on the ivy above glowed' like a carbuncle in the sunset lire. It was a pretty and peace ful scene, not at all resembling her pre conceived ideas of what America was going to be, thought AJhiee Trenchafd, as, after dismissing her cabman, Mie rwised a moment on the door-step be lf ringing the bell. A bird'i shadow flitted across tho illuminated grass; the chant softened and died ; a sleepy twit ter was audible In the tree-tops. From the far distance came the soft chiming of a bell. The sweet bell note and the dewy silence won her attention so long that black-gowned figures began to pour out of the chapel before she remembered what she had to do. Then she rang, and entered, but not so soon as to be unob served, and young Chasuble poked his chum in the ribs and whispered, "Hey! AY hat's that? A visitor to the doctor! It must be that girl from Nova Scotia, the dean's daughter, you know, I'll tell you what, she's pretty." . Faith rather than vision prompted this statement, but Frank Chasuble was jus tided in making it, nevertheless. Aimco was pretty, very pretty. With the slcn-der-waying figure which, with her rame, she had inherited from her Cana an mother, she combined that beauty 4 especially the dower of English girls, a'compclcxion of unequaled fairness truo roses nnd cream and lips as fresh and red as a dewy clove-pink. Her hair had golden glints in it, and waved na turally back from a white forehead, beneath whose pencilled brows looked out a pair of clear eyes, as blue and fear less as a child's,. in whose regard inno coace and ignorance were charmingly combined. For Amiee had been brought up in solitude by a shy bookworm of a father, and a? gentle rectangular old aunt, and this was absolutely her first peep into the wider world which' lav beyond her guarded school-room bound. Dr. Bracey, an old college friend of Canon Trenchard's, had taken Nova Scotia, the year before, as the objective point of Lis summer vacation, and had then and there fallen in. love in a fatherly way with his friend's (laughter. " Poor dear little thing, "he called her in his thoughts, for she seemed to him cooped ud and lonely, quite unlike the girls he was in the habit of seeing at home, and he plied her father with entreaties and arguments, till at length he won reluctant consent for a visit to "the States" during the en suing year. This visit, for one reason and another, had been postponed till now, so here was Aimeejust arrived, with three months of delightful novelty and adventure before her, and bringing a heart as unhackneyed as a baby s to meet thorn, whatever they might prove to hold. As may well be imagined, her advent created a tumult among the "Bracey Boys." Absorbed as these young gentle men were supposed to be in devotional observance and theological lore, inter vals more or less existed during which it was both possible and natural to notice the propinquity of a pretty girl, and when both prettiness and propinquity were so unusual, these intervals became more rather than less. Aimee had hardly been there a week, had attended matins and even-song not more than a dozen times under the wing of demure Mrs. Bracey, before half the seminary were her avowked slaves, and the other half showed symptoms of yielding. One and all, in greater or less degree, were charmed with the fresh beauty of the young English girl and expressed it in their different ways, by action, or by silence, which is sometimes as eloquent a thing as action. Aimee enjoyed her honors modestly and Jraeekly. A little consciousness crept gradually into the frank eyes, a shadejof innocent coquetry, perhaps, into the manner that was all ; and no harm either, pronounced Dr. Bracey, as he watched this gradual unfolding of the womanly instinct. He loved the girl, and it pleased him to see her having "a good time," after the fashion of her age and sex. "It will do her all sorts of good," meditated this worldly-wise old thcologue, with a chuckle, and he rubbed his hands approvingly. Simple Dr. Bracey! The momentary amusement ot his protege was all he had in his mind. It aid not occur to him that happiness, most happiness, has to be paid for in one shape or another, nnd that the settling day, when it comes, is rarely a pleasant one. Among the crowd of admirers is always one who stands pre-eminent in a girl s funcy. In Aimce's !.: - -i. ..v.i ii i wis une wita iiiiuk vu:muui5. iiv w3 the handsomest young fellow in the sem inary, for one thing. His views were " high," but that was no objection to the church-loving girl; and as tho only son of a rich man, lie had it in his power to express and adorn these views with all tho ornamental touches with which modern arts essays to decorate an aus tere faith. Nobody wore such waist coats as he; his bands were miracles of fineness; the little cross at his button hole was nn antique gem. The secret grief of his life was the wearing of the inevitable student's black gown ; its con solation, the contemplation of a drawer full of advanced garments, embroidered rtoles and the like, with which ho pur posed to bedeck himself the moment Hint ordination should set him free to do as he liked. He was altogether a fascinating combination enough ' to kindle the fancy of any girl; and Aimee was in the fair road for a heartache when "something happened, of which I shall now proceed to tell you. Among the little maid s accomplish ments was a fair skill in water-color drawing, and it occurred to her some weeks after her arrival to turn this to account for tho benefit of Dr. Bracey, "the dear old doctor, who had been so very, very kind to her." She had once heard him express a wish for a view of the interior of his beloved little chapel, and with some shyness she offered to make one. Tho doctor was charmed with the idea, and carried Aimee off at once to decide on the point of view. The students were absent for the brief Thanksgiving vacation, so there was no one to disturb the pair in their examina ation and discussion of the building. A view of the east end, with the apse and the tll lancet windows over the altar, including a glimpso of the carved stalls on the right, was finally chosen ; and as the best place for the artist proved to be the organ-loft, a small square space, raised about five feet above the aisle, Dr. Bracey installed Aitree there, showing her how conveniently she could set her self, and how she could regulnte the light at will by closing or opening the curtains with which the loft was in closed. " And here is a shelf for your things," he added, exhibiting a ledge at the back of the organ. " You might leave them there, if you like, and save the trouble of (carrying Ithem to and fro. Nobody will meddle with them. The organist sits round here, you see, and the bellows boy is blind, poor fellow." With this he departed, leaving Aimee to her task. She worked on through that quiet afternoon nnd the next, and so success fully that her work became absorbing and full of interest. On Monday the students returned. Frank Chasuble walked home with them after even song, was asked to tea by Mrs. Bracey, and spent a long evening with Aimee over the piano. Never had he been so charming, so devoted. Her thoughts were fuller of him than of her drawing as, early on Tuesday afternoon, she be took herself to her perch in the organ loft, secure, as she supposed, of three hours' solitude before the tinkle of the service bell at six should warn her to flee. She had just got well to work when the opening door and the sound of foot steps and voices startled her attention. Peeping from between the closely drawn eurtains, she beheld, to her surprise, the greater part of the senior class entering the chapel. There were Arthur Burns, Vedderbake, Bensen, Frank, of course, that quiet Mr. Challoner, who always looked at her so much and said so little, Gregory, Tom Esher and a dozen others, all of whom she knew by name at least, and most of them personally. What could they be doing here at this hour P She had never happened to hear of what the students called "practicing Tues day," on which monthly occasion the senior class met to rehearse and criticize each others' sermons. But the mystery soon explained itself, for presently Arthur Burns mounted into the pulpit and began to read from a manuscript, while his classmates, grouped in various unconventional attitudes, listened atten tively. The discourse lasted about fifteen minutes. When he finished, the others proceeded to comment. "The ending was decidedly poor," put in Frank Chasuble. " You just stopped, that .was all. There was no finish." Well, what better can a fellow do than stop when he's through?" asked tho speaker. " lie can perorate. Ho can round and embellish," retorted Frank. " Any one can stop. It takes a cultivated man to stop eloquently." " We'll have your kind of stop now." said his friend. "Forward, march. Chasuble; it's your turn." So Frank swept up the aisle and as sumed the desk. His sermon was very fine, thought Aimee very fine indeed. She peeped from between the curtains, her eyes shining with amusement at the thought of how little they suspected who was listening. Then a naughty thought popped into her head, and she began penciling sentences down on her drawing-paper. She would learn a few by heart, she decided, and quote them as if accidentally in the course of conversa tion. How amazed they would look, and what fun it would be! "Well, how was it?" asked Frank, rather vaingloriously, as he returned. "Very well written," said that sjuiet young Challoner, "but nothing to it, Frank. Words, just words." Th at de sirable quality, frankness, was certainly prevalent at the Bracey. "What do you mean?" demanded Frank, fushing angrily. "How is a discourse to be expressed except in words, I should like to know?" " It is well to have something behind them " began Challoner, but his voice was drowned in acclamations from a chorus of Frank's special cronies. "It was first-rate. It was capital. No one could take exception to a sylla ble in it " and Aimee, unseen in her gallery, clinched a small fist and shook it vindictively at Challoner. It was out rageous that her hero should be thus at tacked. How did he dare?" The two hours sped by. the last ser mon was preached, and the class dis persed. A few lingered on their way out to discuss the events of the vacation. Aimee, who had been glad to see the move, shrank back into her shelter again. She felt more than ever how awkward her position would be were it discovered that she had been there all the time. " We had a most gorgeous service on Sunday at St. Allen's," said frank Chas uble, who had perched himself on the back of a bench directly below the or- fan-loft. "I went with the Dixons. liss Dixon is a raving beauty, I can tell you." "Was that the reason you didn't come back Saturday, eh? I heard you tell MissTrenchard you would." " I dare say I may have said so in a weak moment; but there was metal more attractive where I was, my boy." " All I can say lis that Miss Dixon, or Miss Anybody else, has got to get up early in the morning if she wants to beat Miss Trenchard," declared Tcm Esher. " She's the prettiest girl I ever saw in my life. I declare, In that blue dress she wore to matins to-day, she's stun ning." " " That's just all you know about it," responded Frank, indolently, "She's well enough as country girls go has got pretty hair and eyes, and all that: but sha can no moi e hold a candle to Nettie Dixon than she can fly. No English girl ever born ever did compare, or ever will, with a tip-top New Yorker. There's a total lack or style, you see. They don't know how to put on there clothes, or to show'em off after they got 'em on. That blue thingumy Aimee wears on her head would be laughed at on Fifth avenue; I assure you it would." (N. B. Frank had no more than once praised said "thingumy.") "She's a nice, soft little girl enough, Aimee Trenchard is, but she doesn't stand anywhere beside a dozen girls I could name. As for Netty Dixon, she's a real ripper." Poor Aimee! The blood tingled in her cheeks ns if she had received a sharp, sudden blow, as these words fell upon her ears. She was too stunned to move, and sat perfectly motionless intier seat as the conversation went on. "Well, if that's your opinion of Miss Trenchard, I think you'd better leave off hanging about her as you do. You might give another fellow the chanco if you don't want it," remarked Tom Esher. "My dear fellow," responded Frank Chastfble, in an indolent tone, "you're quite welcome. I can't help it if a pretty girl the only pretty girl who happens to be on hand too likes me better than she does the! rest of you . It shows good taste on her oart, but really it's not my fault. I don't give myself any particular trouble to please the little thing, and I don't see that you are called on to take up arms in her behalf." "And I think," put in a quiet voice, "that you are speaking in a very im proper tone about a lady. Miss Tren chard is the loveliest girl I ever saw, and the sweetest. Sho is a thorough lady too. and as gentlemen we are bound to respect her name as much ns we should herself were she present." It was Ralph Challoner who spoke. He looked straight into Frank Chas uble's eyes, and that worthy quailed under the glance. "I'm sure I meant nothing," he muttered, uncomfortably. "No one admires Miss Trenchard more than I. do. I don't know what you mean, Challoner." "Yes, you do," retorted Ralph, with the same quiet decision; "you know perfectly well what I mean."' But Frank did not seem inclined to take up the gauntlet. There was a moment of silence; then the young men moved away. If Ralph Challoner could have seen the look in Aimee's eyes as she peeped out at his retreating back, he would have been a very happy man, I think. But with all the glow of gratitude, the soothing which had come to her morti fied spirits with his chivalrous words, calmness was impossible now that the moment of reaction was come, and for half an hour Aimee wept as bitterly as a girl can weep. It was for the ship wreck of shallow ideal that she wept, as well as from wounded pride. Had she learned to love Frank Chasuble, the pain would have gone deeper ; but, as a re cent writer has told us, there is such a thing as "imagination-ache," and the suffering it causes, though not vital, is hard to bear. So Aimee wept on and only succeeded in drying her tears in time to appear at tea, when that useful plea of " a head-ache " accounted for her pallor and dejection. Frank Chasuble found MissTrenchard " changed somehow " from that time forward. She was less accessible, less easily interested; he even detected a gleam of mockery at times in the smile yrhich met some of his impassioned sal 1 les. She was far more attractive to him i n this phase. He became piqued, inter estod; eventually he fell In love, as he vrould have termed it. Aimee had her r evenge, if she wished it, in the mortifi es .tJ.on with which he received the gentle buA decided "No" which ended his suit. Butt he never heard from her or from any on. else the tale of the orcan-loft ad TPn. turn. That she kept for the husband no. other than Ralph Challoner who tn.ree years later visited remote Nova cvcoria and bore away a bride. To him she confessed that the dear love which to his surprise and rapture, met his so fuliy and completely, was born in the little curtained space, the reward of his manly interposition on her behalf; and knowing this, the chapel is still the Mecca of his imagination, the place to w b ich his memory rocs back to pluck thut fairest flower ofromance which is th recompense of all true and Happy rruanhood and womanhood, whether cincai or iay,in England, or in America, or- isewnere. narper's liazar. A Great Engineering Work. A few years ago an American engineer directed the attention of the Russian government to the feasibility of connect. imc wjq uiuiou nuu x itn ii aeua uy a ca nal, and the important results that would follow its execution. Russia has had many matters to occupy her atten tion of late, but this project has been :j 1 Ji r uujj wuBiuciuu, lb appears, ior recently works have been commenced by M. Dardloff. an eminent Russian enmneer. by which it is intended to unite the. lilack and Caspian seas by the aid of the Don and Volga rivers. " The Caspian Sea is located in a great basin below the ocean level, and for ages the great rivers Volga and Ural have deposited in the Caspian the soil of the vast regions which they drain. Hence" the dimen sions of the sea have become contracted. and. large areas of what remains are growing unnavigable. Moreover, the surrounding country is, in consequence of the diminution of the water-space available for evaporation, becoming sienie, ana commerce diminishes. As the Caspian sea is much lower than the Black and Mediterranean, if a communi cation were opened between them, the watt-r rushing in would eventually raise the Caspian to a level with the Black sea, and in the former there would be a magnificent harbor, secure from enemies. Thus, also, there would bo opened a direct highway for steamers from Odessa to tho northern shore of Persia, greatly to the commercial ad vantage of Russia. This enterprise will be one of the vast engineering works of tne age, ana will require many years for its completion. aurpcr s Jiazar. A Revengeful Son-Iu-Law. The German criminal code contains some laws that have no counterpart in American statute books. Such is that which prohibits, under heavy penalties, tha llun rif inclllt-inn l.nmi.ffo aKmif lln emperor, a law under which there have uccu vcijr liimij jjrotteouiions in me past year. Another is tho curious statute prescribing punishment for behavior in violation of the respect due the dead. This Jaw is eaid to have been rarely made the occasion for prosecution, but a case has just been before the circuit court at Berlin in which it has been applied. Several months ago the widow Langen heim was interred in the church vard at. Weissensee. She had been possessed of am pie weaiui, dui ner numerous chil dren, with one exception, were greatly disappointed in their expectations, the bulk of her property having been be queathed to one daughter. Unable to restrain the rage and disgust aroused by this discovery, one of the sons-in-law of the widow, a provision dealer named Hackmeister, presented himself at the interment, and as the grave was about to be closed stepped up to it, and, in the presence of the priest and the assembled mourners, with loud expressions of con tempt, spat upon the coffin. He was ar rested and prosecuted, the attorney for the eovernment demanding that he should be sentenced to six months' im- firisonment. The court was merciful, lowever, in consideration of the rarity of such an oflence, and imposed fourteen days' confinement. How a Bog Fooled his Master. . A newspaper that is printed in the town of Palmyra, Wisconsin, the Enter prise, tells a story about a dog which it says is true, every word of it. The dog, whose name is Tiger, belongs to a sur veyor, now at work in theserviceof the United Stat.'s government in that part of the country. One day not long ago tho surveyor saw that Tiger was asleep near the edge of a thicket, and he thovght he might have some fun with him. So the surveyor shouted out: "Catch him, Tiger; at him, old dog." and jumped into the thicket, as if a deer, or at least a rabbit, had been seen. Tiger, of course, went bounding and barking in, but very soon returned with his tail between his legs, seeing that a triok had been played upon him. Now comes the good part of the story. Tiger made believe that he was going to sleep again. In about three hours he all at once sprang up, set his ears and eyes in the direction of the thicket, gave a loud bark and leaped forward. The surveyor followed, think ing that Tiger had found some game. When Tiger saw his master parting the bushes curiously, he gave a peculiar " Ah wooh," and went back to his sleeping place wagging his tail, and satisfied that he had paid the surveyor back for fooling him. The total amount, of Knthrncita minor! in Pennsylvania during the coal year, endintr SeDtemher fith. was 17.1Q3 275 tons, an increase of 6,601,043 tons over me product oi tne previous year. The bituminous coal mined was 2,372,563 tons, an increase of 156,073 tons. The total coal nrodnet for the vear wj 1'L. 4U5.843 tons, against 12,738,727 tons for tne coai year loa. In a barber shoo a comh and hrnsh always play the leading parts. TIMELY TOPICS. The year 1879 will pass into American history as a year of wonderful agricul tural prosperity. The cotton crop is larger by half a million bales than ever before, the tobacco crop 12,000,000 pounds greater ; and the sugar crop ex ceeds by some 200,000 hogsheads nil pre vious yields. These are crops which be lorg almost exclusively to the southern half of the republic. In behalf of the Northern States tte excess of products this year over the crops of any previous year is, according to the Chicago Journal of Commerce, 20,000,000 bushels of wheat and from 80,000,000 to 100,000,000 bush els of corn. The hog crop also is larger this year than for a number of years past if it be not the largest ever raised. Reviewing the reports on theMadras (India) famine submitted by Dr. Cor nish, sanitary commissioner of that presidency, the commission has arrived at the following conclusions: First, that the same atmospheric conditions which produce scarcity of food produce also epidemic diseases ; secondly, that a large proportion of the mortality of a famine season is due more to epidemic disease than absolutely to want of food, although the destructiveness of an enidemic is in creased by the fact that people half starving or in iea are less able to with stand disease: thirdly, that a point in the process of chronic starvation, when nutriment no longer sustains life, is often reached before people can obtain or will seek relief at a distance from their homos. Some idea of the magnitude of the telegraph business in the United States may be gained from the annual report of the Western Union Teieg raph Company, which shows that tho company has at present 82,987 miles of line, 211,506 miles of wire, and 8,534 offices. During the year 25,070,106 messages were sent. The OA Til t Q 1 fitrtolr rf ta Pntnnnn xr ia 4M I HTQ 410, and of forty and a halt millions of net income in the last thirteen years, a nine less man twenty millions nave been paid in dividends to stockholders; six and a half millions paid for interest and principle of bonded debt; more than thirteen millions added to the plant, in the construction and purchase of now real estate, all of greater value for the . i . ... us.u oi ui company man tneir cost; and three-quarters of a million remain as surplus in the treasury. At the recent meeting at Montpellier of the French Agricultural Society the majority of the proprietors whose vine yards have been ravaged by the phyl loxera were of opinion that they must look to the introduction of vine stocks from America as the only means of meeting me trouble they are in. Ex periments have proved to the satisfac tion of some of the most experienced members of the commission appointed to investigate this subject that certain American vines offer a vigorous resist ance more especially in respect to the peculiar formation of the root, the tis sues of which are exceptionally thick to the dreaded plague. On the other hand, it is apprehended that these vines will only be a success in certain portions of France. The failure in the grape crop is quite as severe as the failure in ordinary agricultural produce in Eng land. The 300,000 hectares under vines, which represented in a great degree the wealth of the department of Ilerault, are gone. Fortunately, Frenchmen are not in fat years unmindful that lean may follow, or the condition of things would be very serious indeed. Words of Wisdom. It is always safe to learn, even from our enemies ; seldom safe to venture to instruct even our mends. A quarrel, nine times out of ten, is merely the fermentation, of a misunder standing. Every man throws on to his surround ings the sunshine or the shadow that ex ists in his own soul. Tf i u tv rkVi Inovw linur 1 v er a winn may look among the crowd without dis covering the face of a friend. There is a great deal of unmapped country within us which would have to be taken into account in explanation of our gusts and storms. Honorable age is not that which standcth in length of time, nor that is measured by num ber of years. But wis dom is the gray hair unto men, and an unspotted life is old age. Good intentions are at least the seed of good actions ; and every man ought to sow them, and leave it to the soil and seasons whether they come up or no, or whether he or any other gathers tho fruit. Nature seems to exist for the excel lent. The world is upheld by the ver acity of good men ; they make the earth wholesome. Late is sweel ana toler able in our belief in such society; and actually or ideally, we manage to live without superiors. Sleep. In a recent work on "Sleep." Dr- Mortimer Granville objects, without re. serve, to the use of narcotics in order to produce it. lhey produce not sleep, but a counterpart of it. When a man says I will take a sleeping draught in order to got a auiet night, he speaks in parables. What he really says is, I will poison my self a little, just enough to make me un conscious, orslightly paralyze my nerve centers, not enough to kill. He declares that if people I troubled with sleepless ness would resolutely set themselves to forming the habit of going to sleep at a particular time, in a particular way, they will do more to procure regular sleep than by any other artifice. It is not so much matter what a person does to produce sleep, but he should do pre cisely the same thing, in the samcjway, at the same time, and under 'nearly as possible, the same conditions, night after night, for a considerable period, say three or four weeks at least. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Japan has fine macadamized roads on which the bicycle is coming into high favor. The pain of a boil can be endured when some other man gets it in the neck. IHcagune. Statistics show that of the 969,000,000 people inhabiting the globe, 3,000,000 die each year of consumption. The ordinary life of a locomotive is thirty years. No doubt it would live much longer if it didn't smoke so much. In Massachusetts recently, a frog was found on the top of a church steeple 180 feet from the ground. It was the most aspiring croaker ever heard of. IHca xune. St. Louis has just found out that Mary Duffy, an Insane pauper supported at the poor-house for the past four years, has $1,300 on deposit in one of th? " """ banks. A sportsman was boastinir vestcrdav of having shot a rabbit. "But it was not in season," said a friend. "Oh. yes," was the reply, "'twas seasoned after I peppered it.'' Oil Vity Derrick. A new temperance movement in Great Britain takes the form of a joint stock company, with a capital of $5,000,000, in shares of $1 each. It proposes to open temperance houses all over the kingdom. Of an experiment in Bristol, England, for the lighting of the streets by the em ployment of reflectors for the gas lamps, the result was the production of fifty per cent, more light with less than halt tho number of lamps. , Mr. Sommerville of Manchester, Eng land, has devised a scheme for connect ing France and England by means of a tunnel made of cast iron, which would be floated and sunk in sections to the bot tom of the channel. Much interest has been felt in Florence, Italy, at the discovery of over six hun dred paintings belonging to the masters of the sixteenth century, laid away to rot and perish in government buildings ; the authorities intend placing them in the royal gallery of the Uffizi. A party recently visiting the Daly river, North Australia, appear to have met with an alligator far larger than anything hitherto seen. Nothing but the head was visible, but this 13 de scribed as being about four feet in length and two feet six inches in width. On being fired at the monster disappeared. A gallant act was performed recently by the daughter ot the illustrious Italian patriot, a girl of twelve years of age. She was taking a bath at Civita Vechia. when a young man who could not swim got out of his depth, and at his cry for help the girl swam toward him, caught him as he was sinking, and brought him "'TSS8 safe to land. Herr Johann Boch, a well-know painter of Germany was killed by a stroke of lightning some weeks ago while tak ing a walk in the neighborhood of a Bavarian village, where he had been passing the summer. It was beginning to rain, and he opsned his umbrella, which almost immediately thereafter was struck by a thunderbolt that killed the unfortunate artist instantly. A black mark, extending from the head downward, showed the course the elec tric fluid had taken. The gold chain that Boch wore could not bo found, and is supposed to have been consumed; the coin about his person was scattered in all directions, and his clothes were torn to bits. He was about fifty years of age. Life iu Sweden. A correspondent of the London Times, traveling in Sweden, speaks of the gene ral well-to-do condition of the country. Each of a dozen small towns which ho visited had its school house, its church, its newspaper and most of them had its public garden; the streets were paved and lighted with oil lamps swung across as theyt were in old Paris ; the houses were trim and neat. The people were as neat as their houses. Ho did not meet half a dozen beggars since ke had been in the country Even in Stockholm he saw no signs of poverty, while a crowd ed opera liouse, overflowing cafes and brilliant shops betokened an easy opu lence. There is a general level of com fort in Sweden without any violent con trasts. The army and navy of Sweden cost only a trifle. Tho national debt is only $50,000,000, and has been solely employed in the constructiou of railways. All tho children go to school and over ninety per cent, of the people can read and write. The subdivision of property is such that in tho country the greater part of the population own their own fiirma ATnir i lnnliiirr a frini. rni n t ed out from a hill near his house forty -properties, thirty-six of which belonged to present owners, themselves the culti vators of the soil. A Girl's Awful Fate. The horned stinger of tho Staked plains is ono of the most deadly snakes in the world, though luckily it is seldom to be met with. It is very quick in its movements, and is said to be provided, byway of defence, with a sharp, venom ous tail, which it brings in contact with any object which arouses its anger. Of this reptile the Fort Bend (Tex.) Snag tells an awful and improbable story, ono too horrible to bo repeated were it not for tho circumstantial account given, Tho facts as stated are theses While gathering berries, a young woman of eighteen, daughter of David Slicer, of Dutch Cross roads on the Little Big Sandy, was attacked by one of these snakes. Terrified, she fell to the ground, when it fastened itself to her face, and vibrating its deadly stinging tail compelled the persons who had now come to the poor girl's assistance to keep awav The reptile is then stated to have then made its wav. right in the presence of two or three horror-stricken people, into the girl s nioutn ana rapiuiy disappeared down her throat. Of course death ensued in a few minutes. Scarcely has tho warm bieiith ol gummer die J away, when cougha and cokla, thoueavunt couriers ol (hingtimuH UiHcano, show thrni sulves. Dr. Bull's i'ugh Syrup always curua them, and moot ijuictAy too. 1 I