Rates of Advertising. One Square (1 lueli,) cne insertion - ?! OneRquare " out month - - Hon One Square " three months BOO One Square " one yesr - - 10 60 TwoNquares, one year -' - ' - J5 8o Quarter Col. n llali' " " - :,o e On " '.... joo to wept!) li 18 rUOLHMKI) i'.VKHY wkii;i:s))AV, I;V OFFICE IN ROiJiON A TJOKNKR'B rtlfl.DIM i:i.:.t srnrirr, T;oi;;rA,?,, rr ' 'iJ 4 J.rgal notices at established ralwn. . Marriage and death notice, grntis. All bills for yearly advertisement nil leeted quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must lie paid for in advance. Job work. Cash on Delivery. 'No Sul period I li: 1 i III il'll"! VI HI (III ! " 11). '. 1 fur :i Miorler 'oiTcfpondrii' i' ,! icitcl irmuall parts of the country. Ntiimlini w ill bo t.ikrn of nuonymous c-i r fi i i ! 1 1 1 ) H .itioJis, , ' VOL. XIII. NO. 51. TIONESTA, PA., MA11CH 1G, 1881. $1.50 Per Annum. i I 1Tff ffTrntr if 3JEWAHD Over a Million or Fro!.GuIImctt8's V IJ I I." hi WT VKiflney Pafls Have el rend y I been sold In this counLiy anu lu France; every I On) of which has given perfect MtiBiaccion ami has performed cures every Umo when used Re cording to diroo tions. We now gay to the afflicted and doubting one that we will pay the above reward for a sini;lo cose ot LAME BA.OH That the Pad fails to oura. This Great Rem edy will ponitively and pormanmitly cmro Lum5)M;o, Lama Back, Sciatica, Gravel, Dia betes, I iropay. Brifhts' Disease ol the Kid neys, Incontinence and lietmition ol the Urine, InflMinmntion of the Kidnoys, Catarrh ot the Hladdnr, Hich Colored Urine, Fain in the Hack, Sido or Loin, Norvom Weaknoss, and in (act all disorders ot the Bladder end Uti nary Organs, whether contracted by pri vato d peaiia or otherwise. L ' DI KS, it yon are sufTAiritig from Female Weak neso. Iiooorrhen. or anv disrn&eot tlio Kidneys, Bladder or Urinary Orguna, YOU CAN BE CURED ! Without swallowing nanaeoos medicines, by simply wearing I PP0F. GUI LM KITE'S FRENCH KBDSMEY PAD, wnujH cuntu ur ausoiiptiov. Ask' yonr drurxdst for 1'rot. Guilmette's French Kidney Pad, and take no other. II he haw not got it, send $3 and yon will receive the Tad by return mail. TErmoxxALa rnoM tiir rEurt.M. Judge Buchanan, Lawyer, 'J'olodo, O., says: Ono ol-Prol. Guihnut'e'a French Kidney Vd cured me of J,uiiil:uo in three wookn' time. My ease had been fcirnn up by tha host doe tors as Inonruhle. Uuiini; all this timo snntiiexi ontoia agoby Md pai l out lavye sums ofmonoy." Gi orte Vetter, P., Tolodo, O., says: " I 'snflcred ior Ciree years with Soiatiea and Ki ' uey Uiseaa. aod often had to go about on onttclien. I tu enlirt ly and permanently ' eno l attr weatring Frot. Guilmette's French Ki qey Fad fixir weeks." H'l'iire n.u. uoott, 1 live been a great wit'i J'rit;ht's Ukeaso H'l'iire n.u. uoott, syivama, v., wille: BiiUcror lor 16 years ol tuo Kidneys. For iLf 'A'5iS unable to cet out oi Vd: 1gimtin ol niemttoefcut they gave me "Jietnporary relief. I woKi'two of Prol. fiusttj . Lidnev Fads ai weeks, iand I .ft know 1 am entirelv cured." N i jis If. ilen Jerome, Toledo, O., says: "For 1 have botn conflned, a gteat pur of the je, to my boil witii Incnrrtiea aiv' .''emalo Cd. utuft. 1 wore one ot Uuliinotte's Kidney and was cured in one month. ' ft. Ik Green. Wholesale Grocer, Findlay, rwriteai " 1 sufl'ured 'ii yeai-s with lame . k and in thoa weeks wan permanently ed by we-u-inp oue ot Pixil. Guilmettes 1nny Fadi." ' :t. F. Keoiling, M. D , Drusgist, Logans ft. Ind., when sending in an order tor Kid- Fads, wrii : I wore oue of the first in we had en 1 I received mere benefit fiom bun anything I ever used; in iact the Pada ; ' o beUur general at;n!:u:tsla than any Kid ' f reuiedy wo ever sold. ' ? iuy .Shoemaker, Druggists, Hannibal, 1 1. 1 Wo are working up a lively trade iu V .irFads, and are hearing of good results m them every day." ' For sal by O W KOVAP.D, Tionesta, Pa. CENTS, POSTPAID TREATISE OIV TUB uousa am Tin X. ii f HIS DISEASES. Contulnlngan J ndex of I1 Hane, which art ves the Sym 1- i tonw, Oivie, and tlieUet I Treatmentof eaoh. A. 'X'alle tfivUiutttll tleirliolpalclruBt f uaed for lb lIor',wiUi ttxo ordlnury done, etTeots, ana antidote when poison, A. rJ7itlt wltU an lSitara-vlntc of che J Ioi'hd's Teeth at differ out it(os with ltnles) for tell 1 In if the aae. A. valuable col lection of lteoelpte and muoh otUor valuable Infor mation. . IQO-PME BOOKI sent pot- i a i d to . ii y ad. dresHln the Fnited Ntates or Canada for 25CEFJTS. OLV.n RATES: t LOO 1.79 3.00 10.00 Ten Coji'' Twenty C :;i3 Ono Minii' C I - I'. Tl i I'. I. u. i msm d HON, I Ai K If-fl Worth St tl. Y. M M Wl -4.- W ' V" j 1 vs -Jh 'I t ; A Tho World ns I Find It, They Bay the world's a weary place, Whero tears aro never dried, Where pleasures pans like breath ou gran,, And only woes abide. It mny ho I cannot know Yet this I dare to sny: My lot has had more glad than sad, : Aud so it ban to-day. They say that love's a cruel Jest; They tell of women's wiles That poison dips in pouting lips, And death iu dimpled smiles. It may be so I cannot know Yot euro of this I am: Ono heart is found above tho ground Whose love is not. a sham. They say that life's a bitter curse That hearts aro made to aehe, That jest and song are gravely wrong, And death's a vast mistake. It may bo so I cannot know But let them talk their fill; I ljko my life, and lovo my wife, And in' an to do so Btill. FrriU'rUk lAiutjbriil'jr. A TERRIBLE MOMENT. I had just rejoined my regiment in India, tlio Forty-second lliglandevs, better known as tho Black Watch, after a year of fiick leave in Europe, and was Heated in my friend Major McGregor's cool and comfortable bungalow, gossip ing over all that had occurred in the coiis during my absence, when yonng Alick Farquharson, one of the Inver cauld Faninharsojis, strolled in with the, to me, pleasing intelligence of ' Tiger." "5y Jove, that old shikarroe, whut-vou-niay-call-'cm I never can recollect his name has smelt the beast, and tho colonel is for getting up a grand hunt, for the purpose of bagging tho brute and tho skin; the latter for Mrs. " mentioning a lady's name, tho owner whereof well, I will not repeat tho story. "Deil take the colonel," grumbled Sandy Mcrherson, who Kpoko with as strong a Scotch accent as any " braw chiel" north of the Tweed; "lie's a' the time speerin' about tigers and var mint, and if ane o' the laddies kills a beastie, down he pops on him for tho skin." " It would be awfully jolly to cut out this hunting expedition." I suggested. " And how ?" demanded Farquharson. J "Just to beat up a few beaters, get out to tho jungle, and pot tho beast while the colonel is ordering elephants 1 in impossible Hindoostanee." J " By Jupiter Olympus ! I'm with you!" cried Farquharson ; "but we must start I right away, for I heard Old Bagpipes " I I ho irreverent titlo by which our j commanding rJlleer was known, ac- quired from the fact of his ordering the pipers of the corps to play at chotohassuy, alias breakfast; tillin, alias ' luncheon, and dinner, till tho mess was i fairly "skirted" to death " telling 1 Gordon to look up the guns." ; " We shall start now !" I cried. " I havo brought out a capital pair of I double-barreled breech-loaders, . smooth ! bore the Prince of Wales brought down a stag of ten tyne with one of them at Mar Forest this season and a Snyder." "Then I'll look up the beaters and j,.old what-do-you-call-'em, the shikarree," I ' said Farquharson. Farquharson and I left the compound by diil'erent exits, having agreed upon a rendezvous. When we arrived at the trysting place I found the shikarree and half a dozen beaters, armed not only with rifles, but with rockets, the latter for the purpose of driving the tiger out of the jungle. I had taken the precaution of thrust ing a conteau de chasse, or deer-knife given to me, by the way, by his royal highness, tho Duke of Connaught, while I at Lord Fife's in my belt, and armed with my double-barrel J. lelt a match for any tawny denizen of tho yellow jungle. The shikarree assured us with con siderable circumlocution and after ex acting a solemn promise to save him from the wrath of sahib, the colonel thut a tiger had been hovering about this particular jungle for some time past ; that a cow had mysteriously dis appeared, and, having been hacked, its bones were found close by whore we wore then holding council of war. The jungle in which his Tigerian majesty was supposed to be ensconced was but a short quarter of a mile from camp, and of a very close and dense nature, save in bald patches, which yielded a goodly crop of boulders, or where a small stream cut it in two. A few stunted trees endeavored to beard the tierce rays of the Iudian sun, but King Sol had shriveled tip their foliage I until it was ot tho tawny yellow of the i jungle grass, that color so admirably i arranged to conceal the hide of tlio j tiger. " Ah ! " suddenly exclaimed the shi I karree, in a low tone, " it's all right, I sahib. The tiger is in tho jungle. Ah, j here's his pug" (track). " See how it leads right into it." , "That's a large 'fist,'" observed ; Farquharson. " es, saluD, it is one great pug. Great tiger great shiker" (beast) " for sahibs." The beaters, who, as a rule, aro tho most cowardly wretches in tlio world, now huddled together and held council in low whispers, their heads close, their eyes directed to the jungle, their burn ished bodies in attitudes suggestive of instant flight. The shikarree ordered us to beat that section of tho jungle on our immediate light h bting thu uiut dense, and where, in all probability, the tiger was now enjoying a post-prandial nap, good digestion having waited upon appetite. Tho beaters were accordingly assem bled, and Farqnharson took tho nar sido, while I took the other. With a sharp glance nt our gunlo-cks, and a general hitch to garments, wo prepared to go into action. " I say, old fellow," pleaded my coni-panion-in-arms, " won't yon give me the first shot ? It's my first tiger-potting, you know." "Certainly, Farquharson; I'll give you the whole thing. I shall only lire in case of aoeident." Little did I amaginc that my words were so soon to be proved prophetic. In a few seconds the beaters began to yell in chorus, and to Are bamboo rockets, and I can imagine Low dis gusted tho tiger must have been to have his siesta so strangely and no rudely broken in upon. "How those, chaps yell," laughed Farquharson. "Keep your eye on the jungle, Alick," I growled, " and let them roar as much as they like." I had been in a " tight box " before now, by having my attention diverted from business at which strategists are pleased to term tho psychological mo ment. Not a sign had tho tiger yet given of his presence. Not a blade of the long jungle grass stirred, save when a rocket fizzed into it, setting it on fire. The beaters were silent, a signal for tho shikarree, who held up his hand, while his head was parched on one side like that of a bird, in tha attitude of listening. .jj Hush!" Then came the unmistakable cough (generally called a roar) of a tiger. I glanced at Alick, to ascertain how the music agreed with him. He had paled a little, but his eyes were flashing and his lips compressed. " Wo havo him 1" he excitedly cried. " Not yet, old boy. There's many a slip between tho cup and the lip," I retorted. " Ho cannot escape." " Not if we can help it, but if he's lodia bagh a game-killing tiger we may lose him yet." There is, in my opinion, only one variety of tiger, although the animal, like nil others that I am acquainted with, is subject to a slight variation of appearance that may be more or less accounted for by his peculiar habits, which vary according to the locality and nature of the country he ranges over. In many parts of India over which I have hunted, the natives recognize three kinds of tigers, which they distinguish according to their habits and range, by the following names : First, the lodia bagh, or game-killing tiger ; secondkv, the oontia bagh, which lives chiefly upon domestic cattle ; and thirdly, the admee khane wallah, or man-eater, which latter, happily, are 'Jew'and far between. A single tiger will kill a bullock or buffalo every rive days, if ho gets the chance, often eating the hindquarter the first night, and hiding the remain der in a bush to consume at his leisure. Should he have been tired at, or dis turbed on his return to his quarry, he becomes cunning, and a great deal more destructive, killing a fresh bullock whenever he wants food ; and I have known tigers that have become so sus picious that they would not return to an animal they had killed, although they had only lapped the blood, and the bullock was almost untouched. On the other hand, I have known a tiger returning day after day to the car cass of the ox he had killed, and pick ing the bones clean, notwithstanding he had been twice tired at by a native shi karree. But to return to my adventure. The shikarree suddenly gave a low " coo" twice, which told me that he had gotten on a warm scent. Suddenly I heard a slight noise like the crackling of a dry leaf. I distinctly saw a move ment or waving in the high grass, as if something was making its way toward us. Then I heard a loud purring sound, and saw something twitching backward and forward just behind a clump of low brush and long grass, about forty yards oil'. " He's there !" I cried, in a low tone, to Alick, but without moving my eyes. "I know it." " Keep cool !" " Hang it all. I'm as cool as alet-tuce-leaf !" Another second and we saw the ani mal, its white chest shining like silver, its cars laid back, and its open mouth full of gleaming ivory teeth. "I'd like to stuff him in that posi tion," observed Farquharson. " Hush!" "Shall I let him have it?" "Not yet." The tiger advanced about ten ' yards or so in that low crouch j which (is the prelude to the spring. " Now, Alick!" I cried. ; Farquharson fired at the second I I spoke, letting the brute have one barrel. On receiving the shot the tiger j doubled its head and paws into its chest, and, turning completely over I head and heels, disappeared over a I boulder into the jungle. "I've hit him!" triumphantly ex claimed my companion. " You have." " I fetched him between the eyes." I "Not a bit of it; you struck him in ! Ihe chest, and 1 don't thiuk he's badly I hit." ' Clear that juugle a little !" shouted i l'ftiqviliiusoi), why, with all the rashness of the neophyte, was for dashing after the brute in hot haste. Wliile the men were tremblingly en gaged in obeying the orders, my prac ticed eye perceived a disturbance in the grass a little to the left of the spot at wliich the tiger disappeared. A " chuck " of the tongue against the teeth from the shikarree, confirmed me. "Look out, Alick, he's there!" I yelled; for Farquharson was already treaating I have no other word for it the grassy billows of the jungle in a frantic eagerness to grapplo with the quarry. Farqnharson had reached an open space, when the tiger leaped forth, and, with a tremendous bound, buried its head in Alick's throat, both their heads going down together. " Great God I lie's done for!" was my exclamation, as the blood gave a mail throb in my veins; then it became cold osiice, and I resolved to save tho poor fellow, if I could. It was an awful moment, and as I write I see the enormous head of that tiger, its gleaming eyes, its quivering wliiskers, its distorted upper-lip, its enormous form; while I also behold the face of poor Alick Farquharson, white as death, the terrible beast's nose touch ing his cheek, wliile beneath him lay his gun, the great paw of the tiger stretched out beside it on the yellow earth. I repeat it was on awful moment; but, thank heaven ! I was equal to the emer gency, and made my calculations with as much sang froid as a clerk might tot tip a row of figures in the assured safety of a counting house in the city. I was but ten yards ofl, and at that distance there was a considerable risk of shooting both man and beast; for, unless I let tho tiger have it in the head, it was all up with my friend. I leaped forward until I came within two yards. My heart gave one beat backward as I raised the weapon to my shoulder. I aimed at the side of the head, and the bullet went from ear to ear. The shot was mortal; the dark blood rushed from the tiger's nostrils a slight tremor passed over all his limbs, and he rolled off. Alick Farquharson, who scrambled up to his feet, very white, with his left arm besmeared with blood. His first words were: " By Jove 1 that was a shot. We've done old Bagpipes out of the skin !" I don't know how it was, but I flung myself on the young fellow's neck, and, hardened sinner that I was, burst into tears like a woman. It was rather lucky I didn't feel that wav half a minute be fore, wasn't it V" Al ick's wounds were not dangerous, and he was all right in a few days. Colonel " Old Bagpipes' endeavored to nibble the skin, but Farquharson didn't see it, and it now, I believe, dec orates the grand old hall at Invercauld which, as everybody knows, is the next residence to Queen Victoria's Highland home, Balmoral. The huge brute was eight feet eight inches long, including the tail, which was three feet in length. I have potted two man-eaters since that memorable day, but I hope never to realize -so terrible an experience as that which Alick Farquharson's rash ness so happily or unhappily afforded me. A Seventy-Five Dollar Goat. One of them was a stockman from Western Texas named Bob Gazely, and the other was an old Galvestonian named" Colonel William Griswold. They were talking about stock-raising. The man from Western Texas said, impressively : " I tell you what, colonel, there is more money in goats than in any other critter that eats Texas grass. People will keep on raising fine horses and cattle, and lose money by it, while there is more money in one goat than you can shake a stick at," and he went on to tell of the rapid increase, the price of goat-skin, etc. "You are right," replied Griswold. " I am a goat man myself. I've got a goat in my yard right now I wouldn't part with for seventy-five dollars." He must be a fine animal. He is half Angora, I reckon.) II must see him." "Come along, then." After they had trudged about an hour they reached the residence of the Gal vestonian. The goat was tied up in an outhouse. Tlijl Vestera Texas man looked at the goat with a bewildered air. " There ain't no Angora in that goat." " There is money in him for all that," responded tho owner. The stockman felt the animal all over, looked at tho texture of his hair, and then said: " I can't see any points that goat has got over any other goat. Did you say you paid seventy-five dollars for that scrub V" "That goat cost me seventy-live dol lars, and 1 1 expect to get my money back." " Well, you couldn't get out of me." " I am not trying to get it out of you, but I hope to get it out of the goat. But, I'll tell you candidly, if you had chawed up my vest pocket with seventy five dollars in it, like that goat did, I'd have it out of you somo way or other." Then tho stockman caught hold of hifi own vest, and laughed until a crowd began to gather. ltilrettn Now. It cost Colonel Wilder, the noted po nologist, 2.V) to obtain the original camellia from which those to be found iu America were grown. It was imported about forty yetus. go, OCT OF THE WHITE HOUSE. Hew Koine of I lie Prenldentallave Relived Feature of" Inauguration liar" Hi-Idem been or Heard. Before the building of the southern front of the treasury department, which rendered a change of the inclosure of tlve White House necessary, there was an entrance facing Pennsylvania avenue a stone archway, with a large weeping willow growing on each side of it. Mrs. Madison, who was a very bright womau, when congratulated on her hus band's inauguration and occupation of the White House, said: " I don't know that there is much cause for congratu lationthe President of the United States generally corses in at the iron gate and goes out at tho weeping wil lows. John Adams, who was the first Presi dent that occupied the White House, was crashed with shame and filled with indignation when his old friend, Thomas Jefferson, defeated him in the presidential election of 1800. He took what vengeance ho could by continuing to make appointments up to a late hour on the evening of March 3, and the next morning before sunrise lie left the White House and the metropolis forever. Washington had attended at his inaugu ration four years previously, but he could not bear to witness the swearing in of his successor. Retiring to his farm at Quiney he devoted the remain ing twenty-five years of his lifo to political correspondence. I Jefferson, Madison and Monroe in turn attended the inauguration of their successors and decorously vacated the White House for their occupation with the best of feeling. But when General Jackson was elected there was a differ ent condition of things. President John Quincy Adams Mas bitterly disap pointed becanse he had not been re elected, while his successful competitor was incensed by some abusive articles which had appeared in the official "organ." When General Jackson came to Washington, saddened by the sud den death of her whom he loved so de votedly, he refused point blank to call on Mr. Adams, regarding him as her tradueer. Mr. Adams was equally unwilling to participate m the triumphant inauguration of his suc cessor, and he removed from the White House on the third of March. On the fourth, as he was taking his customary horseback ride in the vicinity of Wash ington, the booming of cannon announc ed to him that his successor had taken the oath of office in front of the capitol. The then ex-President remained iu his own house on F street (nearly opposite the F.bbitt house of to-day) until spring, and he received many acts of courtesy from the citizens of Washington, includ ing a salute from a volunteer military company commanded by Colonel Sea ton, one of the editors of the Xaliunul Intelligencer. It may not be amiss to say a word or two abont the inauguration of General Jackson, when, for tho first time, the President-elect was escorted by military bodies as he rode on a spirited horse from the hotel at which he had lodged to the capitol. After he had taken the oath and gone from tho capitol to the White House he was waited upon by a motley crowd, which soon drained tho barrels of punch which had been pre pared, broke the glasses and behaved like a drunken mob. Such a scene had never before been witnessed at the White House. When Martin Van Bnren was elected as General Jackson's successor it was a political family arrangement. The two went together from the White House to the capitol iu a phaeton made from the wood of the frigate Constitution, drawn by four gray horses. After Mr. Van Buren had been inaugurated in front of the capitol the two returned in the same vehicle to the White House, where the new President received his fellow citizens. At four o'clock in the after noon Mr. Van Buren formally received the foreign ministers, who, with their suites, wore the full court dresses of their respective countries, and he rather astonished their dean, tho Spanish min ister, by addressing them as " the Dem ocratic Corps " instead of the "Diplo matic Coips." Four days afterward General Jackson bade farewell to the White House and returned to his be loved " Hermitage" to end his days. As the expiration of President Van Buren's official term approached the al dermen and common council of Wash ington City followed the custom aud passed a vote of thanks to the outgoing chief magistrate for the interest which he had taken in the prosperity of the national metropolis during his four years administration. These thanks were not acceptable to Mayor Seaton, who, with other whigs, had been excluded from the hospitalities of the executive mansion by President Van Buren. So tho editor-mayor formally refused to approve tho complimentary resolutions, and transmitted a veto message to tho city government giving his reasons for this marked slight. Mr. Van Buren was greatly annoyed, and took good care to have tho White House ready for the occupation of his succes sor, General Harrison, whosestay there was brief. Mr. Tyler's family were soon sum moned from Virginia to the White House, and while lie was President he married the estimable lady who now re sides here, who turned over tho White House to Mrs. James K. Polk, now a resident of Nashville, Tenn. She was succeeded by Mrs. Zachary Taylor, a matronly old lady, who loved to remain in her room vpstaira and smoke a corn cob pipe, while her accomplished daughter, then the w ife of Colonel Bliss, tho President's private secretary, pie- sided over tho hospitalities of the man sion. Tho Taylors left shortly after the death of " Old Rough and Beady," and Mrs. Fillmore, came, aided by her daughter. They extended the hospital ities of the White House to General rierce when he came (heart-broken over the loss of his only child by a railroad accident) to be inaugurated, Mrs. Fillmore left the White House on the fourth of March for a hotel, expect ing to go South on a tour with her husband, but she took void and died a few weeks afterward. Mrs. Pierce's J(ife at the White House was saddened by the loss of her darling son and clouded by a dread that her, husband might become intemperate in his habits. These fears, fortunately, were never realized, and General Tierce was probably more poimlar at Washing ton than any other occupant of the White House has been. Hospitable and generous in his disposition and cordial in his manners, he was beloved by all who knew him. Correspondents of whig newspapers were among tho I guests cordially welcomed at the White jiouse, and the departure of the Fierces from Washington . was regretted by friends and foes. They went on the fourth of March to the residence of General Cass, since transformed into the Arlington hotel, where many thou sands called to pay their parting re- ! spects. Whilo General Pierce was the most popular of Presidents, Miss Lane, the ! niece of his successor, Mr. Buchanan, eclipsed all other ladies who have pre I sided over tho White House in courtesy, I in hospitality, and in her reception of all, whether they were her uncle's po j litieal supporters or opponents, i The exodus of Mrs. Lincoln, 'of the ' daughter of President Johnson, and of Mrs. Giant, as each one sncee ssively left the White House, is well known to every Washington reader. Ben Pa-ley I'ow-p, in. Washington Republic. The Migration of Birds. Familiar as this migration of birds is to us, there is, perhaps, no question ih zoology more obscure. The long flights they take, aud the unerring certainty with which they wing their way between the most distant places, arriving and departing at the same period year after I year, are points in the history of birds of I passage as mysterious as why they select a moonlight night to cross the Mediterra : netui. But that their meteorological in stinct is not unerring is proved by the fact that thousands are every year drowned in their flight over the Atlantic ii7wl other rcinw Xoetlicrii Afn'cn, mid ' Western Asia are selected as winter quarters by most of them, and they may ' be often noticed, on their way thither, to : lumg over towns at night, puzzled, in spite of their experience, by the shifting lights of the streets and houses. The. . swallow or the nightingale may be some times delayed by unexpected circumstan" ees. Yet it is rarely that they arrivo or depart many days sooner or later, one year with another. Professor Newton considered that, were sea fowls satel lites revolving round the earth, their ar rival could hardly be more surely calcur lated by an astronomer. Foul weather ' or fair, heat or cold, the puffins repair to some of their stations punctually ou 'a ! given day, as if their movements were I guided by clock-work. The swiftness of ' flight which characterizes most birds eu ! ablesthem to cover a vast space in a brief I time. The common black swift can fly ! '27C miles an hour, a speed which, if it I ... ... -IK 1 il Vtfl count oe maintained ior less xnau nan a day, would cany the bird from its winter to its summer quarters. The largejpurple l switt of America is capable ot even ! greater feats on the wing. The chimney I swallow is slower, ninety miles an hour ! being about the limit of its powers; but ' the passenger pigeon of the United States ' can do a journey of a thousand miles ; between sunrise and sunset. It is also '' true, as the ingenious Herr Palnien has ! attempted to show, that migrants during : their long flights may be directed by an ! experience purtly inherited and partly ac quired by the individual bird. They i often follow the coast line of continents ami invariably take, ou the r passage over ' the Mediterranean, one of their routes. 1 But this theory will not explain how they . pilot themselves across the broad oceuns, ! and is invalidated by the fact, familiar to every ornithologist, that the old and young birds do not journey in company. Invariably, the young broods travel to gether, then come, after an interval, the parents, nnd finally the rear is brought up by the weakly, infirm, molting and broken winged. This is the rule iu the j uutnmn. The return journey is accom ! plished in tho reverse order. The dis j tanee traveled seems, moreover, to have no relation to the size of the traveler, j The Swedish blue throat performs its ! maternal functions among the Laps, ami j enjoys its winter holiday among the j negroes of Soudan, whilo the tiny ruby I throated humming-bird proceeds an ! nually from Mexico to Newfoundland ' and back again, though one would ' imagine that so delicate a little fairy ; would be more at home among tho cacti j and agaves of the Tierra Calliente than ; among the firs and fogs of the North. 1 Loudoit tftuinlitrit. I .lohn Duncan, a poor Scotch weaver' I has presented the University of Aber deen with Ins herbarium of nearly British plants, collected by him whilo mining about as a harvest laborer over the Southern districts of Scotland and the north of Fngland. In his extreme old age this self-educated devotee of science is dependent ou parish support. Michigan supplies half the pin tin -ber ue'l in the United StM.