&n limit XvpMniVA. 18 rUnLI'll M F.VJ5RY WKHF(-DtV, BY ,T. XI. XVTSINriE, OFFICE IN ItOBIKSOUT A EON'NER'W BCILm" ELM STREET, TlOSn.JT., ?A, TEni3, 11.00 YEAH. No Subscriptions received for a hrtwr p 'l icil than three months. Corrospondnneo nolleiloi Trorn alt -part or tho country . No notice will bo taken o anonymous communication. Rates of Advertising. Otj Square (1 inch,) onti Insertion - J! I'nnS.marn " one month - - n 0t fl One Square " three months -One Square " nno ycur - -Two Squares, ono year -QuarterCol. " C 00 10 Cd 15 r0 vM PnK s 'Ay Ky y A - 80 Oft - 60 CO - 100 CO Half " " One Legal notices at established raios. Marriage and death notices, gratis. All bills for yearly advertisements col lected quarterly. Temporary advertise ments must be paid for in advance. Job work. Oah on delivery. yOL. XIY. NO. 30. TIONESTA, PA:', OCT.: 18, 1881. $1.50 Per Annum. y X A n A Hnrffst Hymn. Wo have eecn tlio summer's glory on tho har vest fields again, Rejoicing In the sunshine and tho pure refroHh ing rain, And In gratitude and gladnoss we have reaped tlio golden grain. j Wo read a peaceful gospel, where the rich and poor are fed ; May the heroes of the harvoat fiolds havo bless ings on their head 1 Let earth's millions all bo gratoful for health an 1 daily read. We eco tha Ool of nature in bounteous love bestowing In every year of life, wo reap tho seed wo have been sowing, Till our barns are filled with plenty, and our cups aro ovei flowing. Wo havo entered on a calling that will novor know defeat ; Tor honor and for daily bread we work in sum mer's heat, E'cr reaping golden harvests of the finest of - tho wheat. May tho day ot war and carnage and cruel strilo he o'er, And temperance, truth and righteousness ex- tond from shoro to shore, Gathering in tho sad and sinful to be puro for cvormorel And when we send tho bread of lifo to nations o'er tlio sea, May we praise tho Lord with thankfulnoss for blessings puro and frto In this.life, and the bettor land in ages yet to be I . William Lambie. BEFORE A FALL. On Saturday evening I sat upon the doorstep, waiting for John and Jennie. We had been to choir meetings together all summer long Jennie was such good friends with me, and John was such gooi friends with Jennie. She lived just over tbe h 11 from our Louse, and John liwd juRt beyend that. Bhe waited till he came for her, and I wait ed for them both. I should not have thonuht of starting without them, and I sat q.iietly, not noticing the flight of time, i was thinking what a JoveJy evening it was, and that mother's china asters were coming into bloom, nd the crab-onul8 wore rii-niig, nud tbat I alw.ys thought crab-apple jelly the prettiest mother ever made. I was as peaceful as tbe old cat that fame and curled up I eside ine, and had no more thoucht than 6be of its being late. But suddenly 1 heard Jennie's voice calling uie ; it sounded so sharp, out of the quiet, thut I was resliy Btartled. She had paused at the gate and was saying, " Goine, Fhojbo 1" I knew iu a minute from her tone that something had wor ried her. I was wondering what it might b3 as I rose "and went down the with, and I supoose I wont a little 7 , slowlv. "Hurry, rnoaoor suecrieu , -uuu i you know we are late ?" But, instead ol hurrying, I stopped short, for I suddenly saw that John was not with her. Where's John ?" I asked. ' " I don't know," sho answered, short ly.' "Don't stand staring, rboobe I I tell you we're la! e." Now aomo people are afraid of Jennie when she speaks that way, with her cheeks red and her eyes snapping. But I am not; it only makes me a little cooler than 1 was before. I just stood still. Sho shan't drive me, if I do love " Suppose we are late ?" J said. " I think we might wait a little for him, just for once." "You can doit, then," said bhe, and walked straight on. I looked up tbe road and reflected. John was not in sight. If anything had happened to detain him, it was Jennie's company he would bo sorry to miss, so my waiting couldn't do him no good. I might as well go with Jennie. I ran and caught her before she had gone far. I suppose it mollified her to have made mo run, for she laughed a little as I came up. " You didn't wait as long as . y - III V . '1 . 1(1 !L did 1" she said, " Then ou did wait a while ?" , " Why, of course. Didn't I tell you it was lata V" " Well, you needn't have got mad aViont it. Jennie 1" " I didn't." said she, " or at least I was onlv mad at myself for waiting There is no reason why we should ever wait for John, or expect him to come with us every night, just because he lives next door. Ho never said a word about always escorting us. He's just let it be a matter of course, and I'm not iroinaf to have it so any longer. He might want to go with some of the other girls some time, and then just think how ridiculous wo should be, sit ting waiting for him. I'll never do it again. Next week I mean to start real early, and you may wait for him if you like. I'll not expose myself to being slighted again. I don't doubt he's gone the other way, by East side, to-night." . Now Jessie Sear. lived cn EaBt bide. John was the only fellow in tha village whom 6he could not possibly induce to liirt with her, and it seemed as if for that reason lie was the one she most wanted to make an impression upon. He said nothing about it, and kept out of her war. but even body knew ex cept Jennie, who might have known if she pleased that he disliked her. So when Jennio made that insinuation I ihmiodit it waa mv turn to be angry. I faced about upon her with the facts, Jennie Morris." said I. " you know juht U well as I do that you're the only girl ia this town John ever cares to go anywhere with. I don't sea how you can be so mean as to talk about him in that way I" ,'. Jennie a face got crimson, and she hung her head and looked quite cowed. I waH glad of it. - "I don t see whore he can bo, then," she murmured after a while. He might have sent us word if he was not going. Yon'll acknowledge it was humiliating for us to sit and wait for him." " I don't see why." " You'ro such a child," she said, pet tishly. ." If it is childish to be unreasonable but there I stopped. I saw Jennie's face was twitching, and her color came and went. She was always high-strung, swift and spirited, and to-night she seemed touchy and unnerved. I felt sorry for her, and thought we would talk about something else. I will expla n now what had detained John. Wo learned about it in good time. There was an Irish family living a little way from his father's house, They were always in trouble, and always keeping the neighbors in trouble. That night, just as John was ready to start for meeting, his mother came to his door, looking quite distressed. "John," she said. "Maggie Mo- Creery and her children are in the kit chen, and Peter has come home drunk again." 'Is he verv bad?' said John, who knew his neighbor of old. " Yes. Oh, John, he has given her a terrible black eye I She and the chil dren just fled for their lives, and they're crying and wailing so that I could hardly get their story out of them." " Well, what can wo do ?" " Why, somebody has got to go down, you know, John. He was a3 wild as a mad man. They left him crashing the dishes upon tho lloor and putting the bed clothes and furniture into the lire, Maggie is afraid he'll set the house afire, and he is in a fair way to do it, yon know, and burn himself up in it." The beBt thing ho could do, mut tered John. " You mustn't eay so, you know, dear. I hate to have you to go down there, but it s dreadful to tLmk of the yoor, raving creature just left to himself. Where are the others ?" taid John, "Why, Bess and Mark have gone to tho fair in Barton. There's only Bnell at home, and he's hardly old enough to tro down there alone. "No," said John, throwing off his coat. "I suppose I've got to go with him. Tell him to get a rope. We'll have to tie the wretch, and then send for the sheriff." "It's dreadful you should have to go, dear," said hii mother, pityingly, " and just when we were all ready for meet ing. The girls will bo waiting for you, to-j. But you'll feel sorry enough for MaarRip, poor thing, when you see her. And there's no time to be lost. You can hear l'eter cursing and throwing things clear up to our kitchen door. As John and Buell were ready to start, Maggie said : " bhure, Bur, if je see me cow in the road, wud yo plase drive her back forninst ye ? l'eter left the gate open when ho come in, and 1 was that distracted I didn't see the craytur till Bhe was gone. The byes will be havin' her in the pound in a gifly, and sorra a cint is Pettr after lavin' me to get her out again I" John did not see the cow. She was like the rest of the McCreery's, unex pected in her movements. But Jennio and I saw her, grazing along tho road side, with her head turned the other way from homo. I had a presentiment of mischief the moment I caught sight of her. I half stopped, saying: " There' Peter McCreery's cowl How could they let her get cut ? Now, if the boys put her in the pound they never can raise fifty cents to get her out. I've a srreat mind to drive her back a little wajs, Jennie, just to get her headed to ward home." But Jennie was too impatient. "Please don't Btop, Phcebe," Bhe said, "iti not your place to do it, and we're so late already. It was so late that all the pews on the girls side of the choir-gallety were filled, except the two farthest back. By eroinK to the head of one of these I could be among the altos. and Jennie, by going to the head of the other, could be among the sopranos, while at the same time we could sit to jyether. I was clad to be near her tbat night, and I knew she was glad to have me. she was so nervous. I hoped the sineinf? would quiet her, and so it did for a little while, but she could not get ouite out of her flutter. Proud as she was. she couia not nem casting a giance. now ana then, towara me aoor, anu occasionally she would give a little sigh. m . m .1- 1 She was uneasy every minute tut lie came. And oh, dear ! Bhe was a good deal more uneasy afterward. For will you believe it ? who should walk in that door beside John but Jessie Sears ! She did look pretty that night. There was no denying her good .'coks even when you d lost every bit ot iMtn in her. To-night she wore a new pink muslin dress: a thin, fleecy white shawl was round her shoulders, and one point of it was laid over tho brown pull's on her head, but not far enough to hide the pretty pink rose she had stuck be tween them. She was all smiles and brightness. We usually sat near the front, but Jeswie spied where wo were to-night the moment she came in. John, however, did not eee us. He pushed toward tie front row, and Jessie of courso foil? red him. Bho did "not mind it that every eye was upon her. She was as composed and complacent as possible." Somebody moved up to make room or her and John found a place across the aisle. Before she was fairly seated she had contrived to drop her hand kerchief, and John was obliged to stoop and pick it up for her. I saw his facu then. It was not gay and smiliug like Jessie's, but he looked pale and tired. It somehow set me considering. When had first seen him coming in with Jessie my heart had stood still, and then was bo angry I could have shaken my fist at him. But now I began to be confused in my thoughts about him. There he sat, the same old John, and I couldn't believe he was a traitor. Yet, what had brought him here in Jessie's company ? The more I cooled down, however, the more sure I was it would be explained in some way. But of course my feelings couldn t help Jennie at all just now. I knew she had jumped to her own con clusions. How she straightened up 1 There wore no sighs and no more turn ings of her head. The color was fixed in two bright spots upon her cheeks. She looked right at her book and be gan to sing so clear and strong that I was startled, and was afraid everybody would notice the change. John knew well enough where she was by this time. He gave one half glance round, that was all. Poor innocent John ! He told us all about it afterward. Well, as I was saying, Jennie sang firmly for verse or two, then she suddenly ceased. "What is the matter?" I whispered, for I was frightened about her. "Imtoo wicked to sing words like these. Bhe said. She did not Bing another note tbat night, but when the meeting was about to close, she whispered to me: "Now Phcebe, muid you don t loiter. We re nearest the door; get outside just as fast as you can, before the people get round us." Now in my heart I would rather have lingered a little just for tho chance of learning something that might explain it all, but of course I couldn t refuse to do as Jennie said. Wo got out the door quickly Jennio first, though I hurried as fast as I could. Unce outside she took hold of my hand and started off liko a deer. Tho sky had become over cast, and it was perfectly dark. It was one of those hushed, breathless nights that sometimes precede a summer rain storm. It seemed as if the very crick ets were smothered by the dark and the silence. We ran headlong, but wo knew the path well enough, and it was toler ably smooth. We got well away from the" crowd coming cut behind us, and had turned off tbe main street and were half-way down the second hill beyond.. I was going to ask Jennie to Btop run ning, lor I was out oi Dieatu, wnen some obstacle in the path struck our feet from under us. We fell headlong over a mass of something hairy, soft and warm, and our heads and hands were thrown. sharply against the gravel be yond. We could not recover our senses before tho heap ever which we had fallen began to rise under us. I was rolled to one side, Jennie to the other, and with a snort of dismay and dis pleasure Peter McCreery's cow switched her tail across my race and gauoped on into the road. She had been lying across the warm gravel, and we had run full against her. When I began to recover my wits I heard Jennio laughing in a weak, hys terical way : then she began to sob, and then to half shriek again with laughter. I elowly picked myself up, lame and bruised, and very much sur prised to find that no bones were broken. Half the plaited flounces of my dress that had got over the cow s horn was ripped off and dangling under my feet. I could dimly see Jennie sitting on the path where the cow had leit her, weaving to and fro, her face in her hands, crying and laughing both at once. I went to her, asking if she were hurt. "Can't you ee t up. dear?" said. "Just try and see. The folks will be coming along pretty soon." I thought I already heard feet upon the path, and I did not want anjbody to see Jennie quite like this. She made a crreat effort to control herself and to get upon her feet. I took hold of her to try and help her. But no sooner did she attempt to raise herself than she fell buck with a little cry of pain, and then began to laugh again in the same distressful manner. "I can't," she said. "It's my foot, Phcebe. The cow trod upon I o uui can't stir. What sh J.l we do ?" ' By this time I hau aaught her ex citement, and was near to giggling as insanely as she. " What shall wo do I echoed. But now there were approaching steps upon the walk that we both heard Jennie knew them in a minute, and that minute restored her to herself, "Phcebe." sho said, firmly, "I'll tell you what we must do. You must run home and tell father to come with the wagon. I'll creep up hore off the roadside and keep perfectly still, and nobody'll know I'm here till you come back." " But I can't leave you alone so bad ly hurt. I can't, Jennie !" "Please, Phoebe! please, dear I Somebody is coming 1' "I'm glad of it," said I. "Some body ought to come and help us." "But. Phoebo. Phoebe don't let him find us it's John 1" " I don't care if it is; I'm glad of it, and iuKt reneniber. if he was going over to East ide with Jessie Sears he'd not - be here now. You've been too quick, Jennie; there's some mistake." l'oor Jennie could onij give a Jittie moan of pain for answer. Her ankle was beginning to hurt her badly. Lit tle as her moan was John was near enough to catch it, for that instant we heard his anxious voice calling: "Girls! Phoebe, Jennio, are you there?" There was silence for a min ute, then I spoke out: "Yes, John, we're here, and we want you." "Yon want me! What is the mat ter? What made you run away from me? I got out as fast as I could to catch up with you " Dear ! how troubled, and how kind, and how full of comfort too, his famil iar old voice sounded. "I'm so glad you've come !" I cried. " Jennie is hurt." "Jennie hurt 1" Ah, you should have heard the tone of his voice when he said that; I almost felt a3 if I ought not to be there to hear it; why, there couldn't have been more feeling in his voice if she had been his sister and mother and wife and child all in ont 1 I guess John was pretty well worn out with what he had gone through at McCreery's, to say nothing of having wanted Jennie's company all the even ing and missed it. And sometimes to be tired out and sacrificed in the service of others softens and opens a person's heart before he knows it. He knelt down beside Jennie and lit a match to look at her. I hope it was not wrong for me to havo taken a glance at the two faces that match lighted up John's so troubled and devoted, and Jennie's sciatched and tearful, pitiful, wistful. Questioning. He spoke right out like a man to the silent cry of the heart. "My darling, he said "my darling, what is the mat ter ?" That was more than Bhe could bear just then; she wavered as sho sat, and fell back in a dead faint. John sprang to raise her head, and I ran to the brook to sop my handkerchief with water to bathe her face. I begged John to let mo run home at once and Kend the wagon. It was plain he could not bear to leave her, and I ran on as fast as X could. I was back acaiu before tho horse could be harnessed, bringing with me camrhor and cologne. But Jennie had recovered her senses before I arrived. I heard her talking in a low voice to John before I reached them. What he ea;d to her I do not know, but she was meek enough now as humble and grateful as poBsiblo when wo lifted her into the watron and got her home. And how heroic she was while the doctor was setting her ankle. At least they all said she was heroic ; but it is my private beliei sne did not ieei tne least pain for sheer happiness, and therefore there was no virtue whatever in her keeping as still aB a lamb. I told her the next day that she did not deserve her happiness, and she owned sho did not. I asked her if Bhe w?.s not ashamed thut I, who was only his friend, bad stood up for John more stanchly, in my mind, than she who was his lady-love. It was only an accident, his appear incr with Jessie at tne cuoir meeting A youraf man from woodvine nad Been over to meet her and detained her until it was late. On his way home he had brought her in his buggy as far as the church, and left her in the vestibnle. Right there she had met John, and hud made as much of the opportunity as she knew how. Would you like to hear what else John did that night? When we had brought tho doctor and gone again on errands to the druggist's, . and then stayed by till ho could learn that Jennie was made as comfortable as possible for the night, without saying anything to anybody he got a lantern and went to search for that unhappy cow. He found her. drove her home, and shut her into. Mrs. McCreery's yard. The poor woman did not know till long afterward who had done her the kind ness, Sprivfjfield Rep ublica n . Novel Uses of the Electric Light. Several jockey clubs of the South are discussing the plan of lighting up their race courses by lines of powerful electric lamp3, and having their races run at night. One great advantage will resnlt from this. The spectators, as well as poor horses, will be protected in summer from the broiling rays of the sun. A company is now negotiating- with the government for a contract to light the city of Washington by placing around the dome of tho capitol a aeries of powerful electric lamps, ag gregating several hundred thousand candles in brilliancy. It is proposed in this way to light the city to the clis tance of a mile in all directions better than it is usually done by street gas lamps. Pearl fishing, it is now thought, can be conducted with great success by means of submerged electric lights in place of the old mode of employing divers. Incandescent lamps of the Edison form will be let down to the ocean bed, making it as light as the Burfaco in daylight, whilo operators with suitable grappling tongues, at tho sur.ce, will pick up the pearl oysters and deposit them in crates sunken for the purpose at the depth of a hundred feet or more. Look out, now, for a supply of those lovely gems, larger than have yet been B03n, eince aged oysters can be taken from a depth fur beyond the reach of the old-time diver. ' SCIENTIFIC NOTES. Meat immersed in molasses has been n reserved for months. Ether is so volatile that it cannot be poured from one vessel to another with out lots. Sugar, like salt, takes the water from animal substances, and thus prevents putrefaction. Dragon's blood is a resin which ex udes from various trees. It is so called from its red color. Oxygen to the amount of five per cent, of the quantity inhaled disappears at every breath, absorbed by the blood. The partiality or antipathy (o certain odors is unaccountable. The Italian ladies who dread the rose delight in rue. An essential oil is obtained from cloves by repeated distillations. It.is a common trick to mix cloves thus de prived of their oil with others. Case-hardening is a process by which a thin coat oi steel is given to iron. The steel can be hardened to that par ticular depth, leaving the iron soft. The annual cotton plant as cultivated m America attains its growtn during four months, though it continues to de velop seed and fiber for a longer period. Native bitumen, pit coal and naphtha are now regarded as products of tha decomposition of organic or vegetable matters beneath the surface or the earth. ' A paper lately lead before an English society 6tates that British heads are growing smaller, the dimensions hav ing shrunk on an average one-seventh of an inch during the last quarter of a century. The chief use of sulphur in gun- powder is to increase its combustibility, which it does in consequence of tho low temperature at which it burns. But the larger the proportion of sulphur tho weaker will be the powder. A telegraph wire in India is stretched botween the summits of two hills each hill being 1,200 feet high across tho Kistnah river. The span of wire is overUOOO feet in length, and is be lieved to be the longest in the world. The only engineering appliance used in stretching this cable was a common windlass. Tho cranium in giants is usually small in jelation to their stature, but oiten enormous in aDsomio measure, although their intelligence is generally small An example was Broca s giant, Joachim, credited with a very slight imount of sense, let this great imbe cile had a huge cranium, and his brain weighed nearly as niuoh as that of Cu- vier. Skhi Grafting, Hitherto in skin grafting it ha3 only then possible to use 6km or mucous membrane which had been taken from the living. Dr. J. H. Girdner, of New fork city, has, however, succeeded in removing a portion or tne skin or a Geiman who had committed suicide six hours before, and in engrafting it on the arm of a child which had been struck by lightning. The grafts took well, and the resnlt was that the thud was much less disfigured than might have been expected, considering tho nature of its injuries. Speaking on the 8ubiect, Dr. Girdner says: It seems to me that any one who has witnessed, as I have done repeatedly, skin taken from the dead body several hours after death return again to life, adhere to a granulating surface and with surprising rapidity send out pro longations of delicate skin in all direc tions, covering the surface with a new skin comparatively free from contrac tion, must agree with me that skin grafting is in its infancy, and that when men of ability have given it more atten tion and found out the possibilities of the proceeding, we may expect to see frightfully contracting cicatrices which follow burns and nam removed by ex cision, and their places filled with a skin almost as perfect as tho surround ing, and which has been removed from the dead or living body or another person. Mouth Breathers. Dr. Wagner says that habitual mouth breathers can be at once recognized, as the practice stamps itself indelibly on tho physiognomy. The retracted lips, open mouth, receding gnms, proirau- ing teeth, diminished size oi the orifices ot- the nostrils, tne wrinmes oi me outer angles of the eyes, Aid tho lines extending from the wingil of the nose to tho angles of the mouth, give tho person addicted to this habit a silly and sometimes idiotic expression. Iho nasal ducts, being vacated, like disusod roads that grow up in grass and weeds, become the seat of polypus and other diseases; the sense of Buiell is greatly weakened no altogether lost. A Mild Winter Predicted. A mild winter Is being predicted by some meteorologists. As the excessive heat of the summer 18 attributed to the increase of solar radiation, and that in crease ii due to violent disturbances and the sun's atmosphere, where spots of vast magnitude, following a period of Quiescence, began to show them selves in May, and have continued since, it is argued that the temperature in Arctio latitudes is and will contiuuo to be above the average, and that com paratively mild currents of air will bo wafted down upon us during the winter months. SUN DAY READING. A Ilnd Ktnte f Titling. An old missionary once said to Ilev. John Wangh: Years ago I pet out to labor m In diana. A friend, who had been a long resident, was with me to give me such information as might be necessary. I remarked that the land around us was low and poor quality. " True," said he, " but wait a little, and I will show you as handsome a praitio as God ever made." We rode on. and gradually tne iana spread out before us, rich in its soil and beautiful in its carpet of verdure. " Do you see," sid he, that uric house yonder ?" " Yes." " Well, the owne mg in it has had two sons hung You eee that stone house?" . .. . Certainly." ' ' You may think it remarkable, but the builder of it, who lives thro,4)as two sons in the State prison. You can not fail to see that house on the left?" "I do." ' Well, the resident of that has had . ,i i a son hung, uurtner on, qo you see that grove and that house pretty well set back V" "Yes." " The man living there has a son in the State prison. Over there you can see another residence. "Yes." " You may think it incredible, but the man living there has also had a eon The fads stated led me to as my in formant: How came these things to happen The record is black as any I have ever' heard. 'Do give me the explanation." I will do so in brief. When I set tled on the other side of tho marsh thoR6 eople Hettled there. The land, as mignt nave Deeu iorseeu, piuvcu very productive. They cultivated corn, ...1 i i i wheat, oats, and planted orcnuros. j.u markets paid good prices. They soon came to be wealthy. The grain mar keted in the fall left them little to do in the winter; so they gave themselves up to dissipation. They built neither a church nor school-house. Their chil dren grew up idle, ignorant and vicious. Their apples were turned into cider, and their winter evening3 were given up to conviviality. Soon cider was not strong enough, and other intoxicants came into use. lhey nad irequeni par ties, and these parties meant dancing, and the dancing meant dnnking, and the drinking meant a tlrunken revelry, the drunken revelry a fight, and the fight meant too often a murder. Ihese are but the outlines. I need not en- largo upon the particulars. Ht-liiclous News and Notes. The jjutherans havo only twelve com municants among the colored people at the South. There aro said to be 30,000 out of 40,000 townships of Fiance opened to Protestant preaching. f Syria, it ia said, has eighty foreign preachers, 300 native helpers, l.UiiU Christians and 50,000 church-goers. The sale of Bibles has recently been very large in Bulgaria, and there are signs, it is said, of deep religious in terest. The Presbyterian churches in Europe and America have raised a fund of $45, 000 for the support of Waldensian pastors in Italy. The Methodist Episcopal churcn nas five pastoral charges and threo church buildings in the Black Hills, and is about to build another church in Dead wood. Tho number of white Baptists in the State of Alabama is said to be about 76,000. In the last year $7,718. bO was raised for State missions. Thirty mis sionaries baptized 1GG converts. The American United Presbyterians aro about to establish an institute in Sealkote, India, with literary and theo logical courses extending over nino years, five years preparatory and four years in the seminary course proper. The reports from the camp-meetings held during tho past summer speak as rule of good attendance, weu-oc- haved audiences, and excellent preach ing, but the conversions were not con sidered proportioned to the numbers in attendance. The Methodist Episcopal church has in India 4,068 church members, b.buu native Christians. i. 10:5 secular and 0l. . .,,),,,- ftn V'"-. d un- ahtv foreign and na- tive ministers and pastors, and 124 un ordained preachers. Princess Eugenia, tho Bister of Oscar II., king of Sweden, has recently or ganized a society of ladies at Stock holm who devote their time and means to a mission in Lapland. She has also formed at her castle a sewing ecnooi ior missionary objects, and also a bazaar which she supplies liberally ia order to raise money for missions. The Congregationalist churches in tho Ohio association have gamed ouu members in the past year, liie asso ciation inoludds seventeen churches that are in Pennsylvania, West Vir ginia aud Kentucky. The total contri butions for benevolent purposes amounted to 03,518, an increase of $27,1(51 over the year before. There are 230 churches in tho association a gain of five. The steamer Cuzoo, of the Orient Line, has arrived at Plymouth, England, from Australia, with an experimental shipment of fifty tons of meat in good condition.