iiiiii ! , B. F. SCHWEIER, THE COXSTITCTIOS THE CXIOX AXP THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOI. XXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN. JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., JANUARY 21, 1S74. NO. 3. l'oefry, Advice C.ratis. Ia to am what y-ia t f D d I fceararlfhtr Were yt la wiMt, or Im .part? Ia lav with Poet? An yom qait At odd With luUf, tO aaeeit That Ja, with f-aia, ra-IUaee, erraco Instead of the etarloB taoae ht bay. Hare emlllag'.y aat yoar feet aad be Toward p-ilae where each low CB-wwlBtf He? A Po a axaker of aeree.: Om Who da ly c dae for hia dal'y bread. The blaed of bla heart ia rtjyiaea that caa HI braia la feaer with fear aad mi Laat tkat ha Bar. la epeakiair it. The toae of the Vere which c aet Mai i.ejewhare a t oftba li.laite Bjejewbero aat froaa tLe raet aaa die. Toa aed aat aaawer : I kaew year thoafLt To tall aaa that, ft lac tbata eiat ha thaw Waeee Mpa. Uka the threue at birde, wr amoM Calefy far eiag-iaf. It followe eloaa Taat G4 atte-U( thaai ta pack pltcb Aeo-pto their eea-a far eeraice, tbaa Mafclaf aar aaeera at a eoel ea which 8 aaa laid Bla pree.are, p-rilooe. A&d tab, U a eeaee. la trot ; h t t b la at -a eayrttral ; wa ehoald take Tha world la the era : w BBaet a at n-.e or eaee aaa eleeraace, for th eake Of dreaaaa, aad dreaeser. Aad I optae It weald atrika freeh heat la yoar Poet'e eeree U yaa drtpaod eoaae aloes lata hit wioe : They wm eaprea-y aadr a cor-. WU1 tkat larfolble truth T thlsci W Lira ehtaee -a year aa aetrel, rvjcir- ik-1-I aa lack of tie eieibie oosBfurrlajta, Tha UalUe gift! aad ffoode, thai w.J: Ua atacka aad dleldeade? Wblrh l K - Thaat veeTelyjad laplrat?oa r Hard caah la baad, aad tha eeaee !a bra-l TLat 70a ha Te (alad what yoa brir;De. f rf 1 la good, ao dtiab:, that a au ehja'.d be Caat la each weird aad ataf alar baM Aa dowar hta vlat-JB with Power to a BeaTea'e epleadure fi -anti r . where r- h lw: ealy tha f aria; ef lighted f : Bat la a hatband we amo4, (Lttlajr the gift T pr-jtha.'y p- :i Tbaeala which la current ia ibe wharefora t aboald adviae foa, dear. T glra yoa Irrieal aagraat aaeb AcaWiaat blat of a pradeat fear, A witboa: woaadlaf hiai OTer.aorb Will aerra to omlta his ineleat bf- powa ta leraN of lesser raaxe ; aeadlag him bark to hia rrawding tr p a. Wlaar aad aadder fir that rfcaog. TaUiMC tVood on the K7ir. At one iioiot, when we supposed we were comfortably holdics oar way in the cbaxDfl, m torch-light flared np.snd Hfaowed as Dearie g a acrappy bank. The thin, Innfr irow of the boat ran npon the land. Gangwa.va were lowered ; piasks were ran from tlie boat's side to the bank, two score negroes pprang from some myRteriona recess below, and assembled forward before the cap rttan. The shower of harmless ("parks from the torches oist momentary red gleams over the rude bnt kindly black faces. A sharp-voiced white man, whom we learned afterwards to call the "Wasp," because he always flew ner roaaly about, stinginST the sprawling negroes into activity, thrust himself among the laborers. Twenty stings from bis voice, and the darkey forms plunged into the darkness beyond the gangways. Then other torches were placed npon the bank, and long wood piles appeared. The Wasp flitted rest lessly from deck to shore, while the negroes attacked the wood-piles, and, each taking half a dozen sticks, harried to the deck with them. Presently there was an endless procession of black forms from the wood piles to theressel and plunging back across the flickering light, to the tone of loud adjurations and oaths from the Wasp. Now and then the dusky chain of laborers broke into a rude chant, beginning with a prolonged shout, such as "Oh ! I los my money dare !" and followed by a gurgling laugh, as if the singers were amnxed at the sound of their own Toiees. The Wasp, always kindly and well-disposed towards the negroes, despite his rough ways, broke into appeal, threat, and entreaty, when one of the darkies stumbled or lagged. Then it was that be cried raspingly, "You, Reuben !" "1'ou, Black Hawk 1" with an oath. "Come on there, you Washington! ain't you going to hear me P Sometimes the Wasp aped among the Degrees, singing tnem into sncn ac tivity that a whole wood-pile vanished as if swallowed by an earthquake. So it was that in two hours and a half, sixty cords of wood were transferred from the bank to the boat, and the Wasp, calling the palpitating wood carriers aronnd him, thus addressed them, "Now, you boys, listen. Ton Black ITawk, do you hear, you and these three, first watch I Ton, Reuben, and these three, second watch 1" etc The torches were dipped in the river, the light hissed dying defiance at the dark, and the great white boat once more wheeled around into the channel. S ribner't Magazine, SfaXUabi Gamrt at Oban. A correspondent describes the annual celebration of the national games of Scotland at Oban, a favorite watering place near Glasgow. These games con sist of manly sports, throwing the ham mer, wrestling, running, walking, boi intt. throwing and lif tins- heavy weights. and are presided over by the lords of the estates, and by them the prizes are awarded. The gentry of the neighbor ing counties attend, and in the evening a hall and a display of fireworks close the event. The people belonging to the Marquis of Lome's estate were the prin cipal competitors on this occasion, and the Marquis awarded the prizes. They were all dressed in the national costume, the different dsns wearing three dis tinct plaida. This Highland dress is the aaase that waa worn in the days of Wallace and Brace, and consists of a black silk velvet jacket, trimmed with gold or silver buttons; a plaid skirt reaching nearly to the knees; a plain sash of the same as the skirt, with stockings reaching below the knees, thus leaving them bare; a dirk with a jeweled head ia atnek in the stocking, the head just appearing above the top of it. The Marquis of Lome appeared in the plaid of the house of Argyll bright scarlet and yellow. The Marquis is an insignificant looking fellow in comparison with the stalwart, brawny chieftains with whom he moved about. He is very small, with a smooth, beard less face, very light hair, and very blue yea. He is'diffident and shy in man ner, and when cheered or toasted he blushed like a girL He moved among the people with an air of kindness, and aeemed to much respected and beloved by tnem. The hotel waa full of people from the aorrounding conntry, who had come for tha games and the balL The yachts wen gaily decked out in colored bunting: tha bag-pipers filled the air with strange, wild music; and a blaze of fire ia tha early evening kept the scene lively until the boor for the ball, which was bald in a canvas pavilion jost the border of tha bay. I'SDEB TIIE SE4T. AS UNEXPECTED BAXLBOAD ABTEXTCBB. "Smoking car, sir T asked the polite porter, as he bore my raps and minor packages along the platform. I said yes, and he made me comfortable, and received Lis dime. Then the guard came to look after my well-being, bnt got nothing more than innocent grati tude, which was perhaps all he desired. I have no doubt that I did him injus tice in attributing his efforts to induce a fat old gentleman with a congh a lean old gentleman who was snuffy, and a middle aged gentleman enveloped in wraps, the lower part of whose face was covered up like a female Turk's, an evident window-thutter to enter my car in order to spite me. Duty to his employers alone made him endeavor to fill up ; bnt the anxiety to get as much room as possible for my money was strong within me, and stirred uncharitable suspicions. You may lead a horse to the water or un anti-nicotinian old gentleman to a smoking-car, but you can't make him get in ; and when each in turn put his head into my compartment, he jibbed, for some late occupants of it had been cigar, not pipe-smokers, and it was rather strong. So I was apparently left alone alone with all the comic weeklies, and a modern poem. The doors were hanged to, the engine whistled, the train began to move. It would not stop again till we got to Peterborough so that I was safe to be undisturbed so far. There were several seats, and I could occupy as many of tnem as limited number of members permitted. I almost wished myself an Octopus, to take full advantage of the situation. Calming down, 1 hung up my hat, put on a gaudy piece of needle work won in a bazaar ralne, lit my pipe, cut my papers, and began to enjoy my- sell. I sat in the left-hand corner, with my back to the engine, absorbed in a big law-suit. It is great fun to read a cross-examination, and watch bow a clever lawyer will make an honest man peri are himself. "It reads almost like a crime." I remarked aloud, "but then it is an honorable, lawful, and beneficial crime. Soldiers kill people s bodies. lawyers kill people's reputations all lor the good of society in the long run. While I was uttering the word "run," my ankles were grasped suddenly and firmly; then, before I could recover from the shock, they were jerked back ward under the seat with such force that I was thrown forward sprawling. I tried to rise, but my right wrist was seized, and the arm twisted till I was helpless, and presently I found myself on the floor of the caf, face downward, a sharp knee being scientifically pressed into the small of my back, both arms fixed behind me. My elbows were tied together, and then the knee was re moved, and my ankles were secured. During the latter operation I kicked and struggled. 'Hum 1" said a deliberate voire, "that will be awkward. Let's see ; ah, these will do " Tlicse were my sticks and umbrella, which some one proceeded to apply as splints to the backs of my legs, using the straps which had kept them in a bundle to fix them at the ankle and above the knee. When he had done, I was as helpless as a trussed turkey. Then 1 was turned over carefully and tenderly, and for the first time saw my assailant. He was a gentlemanly-looking man, well dressed in black coat and waist coat, gray trowsers, and neckcloth. His hair and whiskers were just taming grizzly, his chin and upper-lip were clean shaved, liis lorenead was mgn. his eyes prominent and fixed in their expression, 111s nose aquuine, tiis moutn a slit. He was of middle height, spare but wiry ; indeed, his muscles must have been unexoeptionally elastic and feline for you would never have thought, to look at him, that he could stow himself away under the seat of a railway car so completely. He contemplated me with his chin in his right hand, and his right elbow on his left hand, and said thonghtfally : "Just so. All for the good of society in the long run an admirable senti ment, my dear sir ; let it be a consola tion to you if I should cause yon any little annoyance." He took a shagreen spectacle case from his pocket, wiped the glasses care fully with a silk handkerchief, and ad justed them on hia nose. Then he produced an oblong box, which be un locked, and placed on one of the seats. After which he sat down quickly in the place I had occupied a few minutes before, a position which brought him close over my head and chest, as I lay supinely and helpless at his feet. "Do you know anything of anatomy?" he asked. I was as completely in his power as a witness in the cross-examining counsel's, and prudence dictated that I should be eqally ready to answer the most frivolous and impertinent ?nestions with politeness. I said that did not. VAh !" said he, "well, perhaps you have heard of the spleen? Exactly. Xow, science hes never as yet been able to find out the use of that organ, and the man who bequeaths that knowledge to posterity, would rank with the dis coverer of the circulation of the blood, and confer an inestimable benefit on humanity for the remainder of the world's lease. I propose to dissect you." "Ton will not get much glory by that," I said, forcing myself to seem to take this outrageous practical joke in good part. "An ungrateful generation may or may not profit by your discov eries, but it will infallibly hang you." "Xot so," he bluntly replied. "I am a surgeon, who once had a very consid erable practice, but I had to stand my trial for an experiment, which proved fatal, on one of my patients. The j ury, unable to understand the sacrifices which an earnest inquirer is ever ready to offer at the shrine of science de clared me mad, and I was placed in confinement. You see that 1 can act with impunity." And he opened the box. I broke out in a cold sweat Was it all real ? Conld the man be ia earnest ? "But," said I, "surely you can get dead bodies to dis sect without having recourse to a crime. And again, if generations of anatomists have failed, in twenty thou sand investigations, to discover the use of the spleen if you yourself have al ways failed hitherto why should you suppose that this one attempt should be more successful than the others ?" "Because, my dear sir," said the man with a smile of one who has caught a bright idea, "all former investigations, including my own, have been made on dead subjects, while I propose to ex amine your vital organs with a powerful magnifying glass, while they are exer cising their normal functions. " "What I" I gasped. "You will never have the berbaritv" and here my voice choked. "O yes. I have conanered that rrein dice against inflicting suffering which is natural to the mind enfeebled by civilization. For many years I secretly practiced vivisection upon animals ; I once had a cat, an animal very tenacious 01 uie. under my scapcl lor a week. But we have no time to waste in conver sation. You will not be put to any needless suffering ; these instruments are not my own, blunted for want of use ; I took the precaution of borrow ing the case of the gentleman under whose care 1 have been placed, before making my escape. While speaking thus, he took the hideous little glittering instruments. and examined them one by one. They were of various appalling shapes ; and I gazed upon them with the horrible lascination 01 a bird under the power of a snake. Oi one only could 1 tell the nse a thin trenchant blade, which cut you almost to look at it. He knelt across me, aaranged bis implements on a seat at his right, laid a note book, pencil, and his watch on that to his left, and took off my neckcloth and collar. murmuring: "The clothes are very much in my way ; I wish that you were properlv prepared lor the operation. It flashed across me in my despair that -I had heard of madmen being foiled by apparent acquiescence in their murderous intentions. "After all," I forced myself to say, "what is one life to the benefit of the human race ? Since mine is demanded, by silence let me aid you. Remove these bands, and allow me to take off my coat and waistcoat." lie smiled, and shook his head. "Life is sweet ; I will not trust you," he said, unfastening my waistcoat, and taming back the lapels as far as he could. Then taking a pair of scissors, he proceeded to cut my shirt front away, so that presently my chest was bared to his experiments. Whether I closed my eyes, or was seized with ver tigo, I do not know, but for a moment or two I lost sight of everything, and had visions ; a sort of grotesque night mare it was, the figures in which I re call bnt very indistinctly, but I remem ber that that the most prominent of them was a pig, or rather a pork hang ing up outside of a butcher's shop, the appearance of which bore a mysterious resemblance to myself. These delirious fantasies were dispelled by a sharp pang the anatomist had made the first slight incision. I saw his calm face leaning over me ; the cruel blade with which he was about to make another and a deeper cut ; his fingers, already crimson with my blood ; and I straggled frantically. My operator immediately withdrew his armed hand, and stood erect. Then, watching his opportunity he placed his right foot on the lower part of my breast bone, so that by pres sure he could suffocate me. "Listen, my friend," he said ; "I will endeavor not to injure any vital organ, bnt if you wriggle about, I shall not be able to avoid doing so. Another thing, if you" He was interrupted by three sharp whistles from the engine, so shrill and piercing as to drown his voice. "Impede me by these absurd convul sive movements, and I shall be com pelled to sever those muscles which" He never completed his sentence. There was a mighty shock, a crash as if all the world had rushed together. I was shot under the seat, where I lay uninjured, and in safety, amidst the most horrible din breaking, tearing, shrieking, cries for help, and the roar of escaping steam. 1 had strained the bands which se cured my elbows in my struggles, and the jerk of the collision snapped them ; so that when I began to get my wits together, I found my hands free. To liberate my legs was then an easv mat- ter, but not so to extricate myself, the I next thing I set about. The whole top of the car, from where the stuffed cushion part ends, was carried sheer away; and amidst the debris, which encumbered my movements, lay the ; mangled and decapitated body of the madman, who, intending to assail my life, had, by keeping me down at the bottom of the car. saved it. yionroing. The usages regarding mourning have varied much at different times and in different countries. Among the Jews, the duration of mourning for the dead was generally seven days, but some times protracted to th irty. It consisted in tearing the clothes, smiting the breast, weeping, going barefoot, cutting off the hair, etc, etc, etc Among the Greeks, the period of mourning was thirty days, except in Sparta, where it was limited to ten. Among the Romans, the color of mourning for both sexes, was black or dark blue, nnder the re public ; but under the empire, the men only wore black, the women white. Men also wore this mourning a few days, women a year, when the relatios was a very near one In modem Europe the ordinary color for mourning is black; in Turkey, violet ; in China, white ; in Egypt, yellow ; in Ethiopia, brown. In Arabia the men wear no mourning, The women stain their hands and feet with indigo, which they suffer to remain for eight days, daring which time they ab stain from milk, on the ground that its color ill becomes their gloom. In the Feejee islands, after the death of a chief, a general fast until evening is observed for ten or twenty days, the women bum their bodies, and fifty or one hundred fingers are amputated to hang above the dead man's tomb. The Sandwich Islanders paint the lower part of their faces, and knock out their fore teeth. Early aid Ieate Marriage. Marriage is conducive to longevity, and 6houid therefore be called in to a man's assistance as soon as he has com pleted, or nearly completed, his studies we say nearly completed, because, in many cases, the companionship of a wife is of great service in directing and giving a higher aim to the intellectual force. The intellectual elements of a man's nature, without the softening and humanizing effects of domestic love, might, at first sight, be expected to absorb the whole man, and render him a giant in mental achievments. Practi cally, it has, aa a rule, no such effect Few monks have distinguished them selves for original invention, for great thoughts, for an expansive philosophy, or anything implying superiority in the qualities which raise one man above another. It is beneficial to the most active mind to have the current of thought occasionally broken in upon, and diverted from the channel of sys tematic investigation into the calm, sweet delights of home life, of wife, children, of playful sportiveness, which gives to man in his period of greatest force something of the careless frame of mind which gives freshness to his childhood. As a rule, early marriages are better than late ones, both mentally and physically. The King of Denmark is said to be traveling in Italy incognito. Bairenth. Baireuth (or Bayreuth.) the quiet Bavarian city, with its population of twenty thousand, has frequently occu pied a conspicuous place in the modem history of Germany ; but it will now attract more attention than ever before by the great operatic festival which Richard Wagner, the eminent composer. will soon hold here, and for which he has been erecting an opera-house of larger dimensions than anv of the thea tres now in existence. The tens of thousands who will flock to this tran quil and delightfully-situated place on that looked-f or occasion will find numer ous other subjects of interest in Bai reuth. They will find in the old city church the grave of the Margravine of Baireuth, the favorite and gifted sister offrederick the Ureat; they will be shown the humble house in which Jean Paul Fried rich Rich ter wrote his 'Titan.' and where he received the great of this world ; they will see at the royal palace the weird picture of the White Lady, and hear from the lips of the aged cas tellan the story of the wicked woman who killed her two children in order to marry her princely lover, and who, according to the legend, still haunts all the palaces of her family, the Hohen zollerns, and shows her white, ethereal form whenever an event of extraordinary importance is about to take place ; they will, finally, be conducted to the sumptuously-furnished bedroom where Xaoo- leon L reposed in 1S03, and where the castellan told him, before he retired for the night, all about the White Lady, in consequence of which the niiuhtv imncrator passed a restless nieht. and wrote in the moraine to the Emnress Josephine: "Baireuth is a very pretty place, and I ate there a good supper ; oui ine people at tne -ralais dinned a curious story into my ears about a spectre that is said to walk of nights about this old house ; and I dreamt of the ghost, being very restless all night." Baireuth was a village well known for its wealthy inhabitants as early as the time of the Emperor Henry L, but its growth was slow, its situation making it the ground for the hostile collissions between the contending hosts of South and North Germany. The ancient chroniclers relate that Baireuth was devastated six times in brief succession by the plague, and that, iu 1410. it con tained but one hundred inhabitants. But ten years later it had already five thousand people within its walls ; and, in 1433, when the fierce and cruel Iroco pius laid siege to it, and threatened to put the whole population to the sword unless the gates of the place were imme diately opened, the valiant burghers of Baireuth not only bade defiance to the presumptuous captain, but, by a sue cessf ul series of bold sorties, compelled nun to raise me siece. . The Hohenzolleras, to whom Bairenth was ceded, introduced such excellent institutions in the place, and afforded commerce and industry such satisfac tory protection, that many skilled arti sans left the famous Nuremberg, and opened new shops at Baireuth. The Jews, too, found an asylum under the liberal princes of the margravate, and, an unheard-of event in the German his tory of that period, in 14C2, a Christian was burnt at the stake in Baireuth for the assassination of a Jewish merchant. At the same time, the physicians of Baireuth obtained a world-wide repu tation, and, daring the next ccnturv, the new hospituls that were founded in the Old World were called Baireuth hospitals. The Emperor Chcrles V. was enred of inflammation of the bowels iu 103'J, by Andreas Flammer, a learned doctor from Bairentb, and, in commemoration of that cure, decreed, daring the war of Schmalkalden, when Baireuth had sided ith the Leformed cause, that the city 8h?n,,1J, no U Backed and bnnit BS less fortunate places, Daring the ensuing years, Baireuth had enlightened or luxuriant margraves. The former endowed the town with excellent educational institutions, while the latter enriched it with superb struc tures. One of them, the Margrave George William, transformed the city pond into a large, navigable lake, cover ing an area of upward of one thousand acres, and npon which he constructed a large gun-boat But the most prosperous and splendid period of Baireuth was during the reign of the Margrave Frederick, from 1735 to 17C5. Frederick was married to the Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia, the famous sister of Frederick the Great The two declared they would make Baireuth the Paris of Germany ; and, if they did not succeed in attaining so difficult an object, they certainly en dowed the place with many noble struc tures, and made it, in their time, for Germany, what Weimar became, a few years afterwards, for German art and literature, the seat and rendezvous of the noblest spirits of the Fatherland, so that Frederick the Great wrote, in 1757, to his sister: "Your Baireuth puts Berlin to the blush. But I have not near as much money as you." In German literature, Baireuth is known as the city of Jean Paul. It is true this great German thinker and poet of the heart was not born here ; but with special predilection to Baireuth he wended his way in his earliest youth, and it remained, with its lovely sur roundings, the object of his longings, even when he had become famous, and was a favored guest at royal courts. And, finally, he returned to his be loved Baireuth, and lived there to his last day, immortalizing the place by his most glowing and impressive descrip tions of its beautiful scenery. Three monuments have been erected to him in Baireuth. One is a small pyramid of dark -gray marble, covering his much frequented grave Another is a beauti ful marble tablet on the front of the house, in Frederick Street, 'where he lived and wrote his noblest works. The poet stands, on a pedestal of granite, as he was often seen in the market-place of Baireuth, in his long coat, with a flower in his button-hole. In his right hand he holds a pencil, in his left a sketch-book. Unfortunately his faith ful dog, without whom he never ap peared in public, was omitted. His study in his house on Frederick Street is still preserved in the condition in which it was left on his last day. Chips without number have been cut from the table on which he wrote "Titan," "Levana," "The Comet," and "The Invisible Lodge" Bat we must now tarn to the magnifi cent structure which Richard Wagner, the composer of "Tannhauser," is erect ing in Baireuth for the projected Wagner festival, at which, it is expected, all the great living musical celebrities from all countries will be present This opera house will be the largest musical temple of modern times. The building is now far advanced, but, notwithstanding the enthusiasm exhibited in the enterprise by the friends of Wagner, some diffi culty has recently arisen on account of an insufficiency of funds, and there is fear the great festival may have to be postponed. Wagner has designed to make this festival the crowning triumph of his life. If the project succeeds, the admirers of the "music of the future" will be able to hear the compositions 01 tiieir great representative nnder cir cumstances infinitely more favorable and imposing than were ever accorded to any operatic maettro before. And if Wagner achieves his purpose, he will shed new lustre on the city in which he reaps tus new laurels aeiigntiui jiaireutu. Silu ManaCtctnrea la America. The monthly Statistics of the Silk Association of America for November show a decrease in the amount of ex ports of Sl-35,317, as compared with the corresponding month of the previous year. The report famishes a detailed statement of the quality and value of the importation of silk manufacture to this port for the month of November from 1866 up to the present year, and for the first eleven months in each of the intervening years, and embraces upwards of twenty classifications of silk goods. The principal items of the im portations are included nnder the de nominations of silks proper, satins. crapes, pongees, plushes, velvets, rib bons, laces, silk and worsted and silk and cotton fabrics. The value of the importations in these goods during the past month was $324,746, of which 85 12,375 was thrown upon the market The largest amount of silk manufactures imported in the month of November during the last seven years was in 1871, when this class of goods reached 2,012,805. The amount of imports for the first eleven months in the year 1306 was $21,808.067 ; for the corresponding period of 1357 it was $15.619,000 ; in 1863, S18,004,554 ; in 1869. $1,166,301, and in 1870, $24,244,326. In 1871 the imports during the same period rose to $32,324,542. Daring the first eleven months of the present year the imports have fallen to $23,633,106, which shows decrease of $.726,486 as compared with the imports of the same period in iii. mis anorus conclusive evidence of the rapid growth of silk manufactures in the United States during the last twelve months. The figures quoted represent only the foreign gold cost of these articles, exclusive of freight and duty. The steady increase shown in the value of the imports of raw silk daring the last seven years may be taken as a further illustration of the progress of this branch of American manufacture While the imports in silk goods have been decreasing, it will be seen that there has been a yearly increase in the value of the raw silk imported .into this country. In 1866 the value of the imports in raw silk re ceived at the ports of New York and San Francisco was $1,501,803 ; in 1863, $2,462,201, and in 1872 the value of the imports daring the same period of the year rose to $6,767,341. When these f rf? !ll!?,In.C"!fna,!'tth.th! Jf"",Ji ,u "81,, . silk manufactured goods, it will be at once apparent that the day is not far distant when American manufactured silks will be brought to such perfection in style, texture and finish as to com pletely shnt out the products of the looms 01 i,cgianj, r ranee and omen European countries. California YTood-CIiopper. It is in the logging camps, that a stran ger will be most interested cn this coast; for there he will see and feel the big ness of the redwoods. A man in Hum boldt county got out of one tree, lumber cuongh to make his house and bam, and to fence in two acres of gronnd. A schooner was filled with shingles made from a single tree. One tree in Mendocino, whose remains were shown to mp made a mils of railroad tiee Trees fourteen feet in diameter have ' affords an admirable picture of the par been frequently found and cut down; tial civilization of the times, with its the saw-logs are often split apart with ; splendor of display and its want of the wedges, because the entire mass is too . simplest decencies 0 the present large to float in the narrow and shallow Mattresses were first made of straw streams, and I have even seen them ! wool, then moss came to be used, and blow a log apart with gunpowder. A j feathers, and finally curled hair. The tree four feet in diameter is called un- trouble with all matresses of these ma dersized in these woods: and so skilful ! teriala is, that they become by nse are the wood-choppers that they can make the largest giant of the forest fall jnst where they want it, or, as they say, "drive a stake with the tree" The choppers do not stand on the ground, but on stages raised to such a height as to enable the axe to strike in where the tree attains its fair and regular thickness; for the red-wood, like the sequoia, swells at the base, near the ground. These trees prefer steep hill sides, aad grow in an extremely rough and broken country, and their great height makes it necessary to fell them carefully, lest they should, falling with such an enormous weight, break to pieces. This constantly happens in spite of every precaution, and there is little doubt thai in these forests and at the mills, two feet of wood are wasted for every foot of lumber sent to market To mark the direction line on which the tree is to fall, the chopper usually drives a stake into the ground 100 or 150 feet from the base of the tree, and it is actually common to make the tree fall upon this stake, so straight do these redwoods stand, and so accurate is the skill of the cutters. To fell a tree eight feet in diameter is counted a day's work for a man. Harper's Magazine. How Ciaui la 9Iade. It is very easy to make gas, bat it costs much trouble to purify it, that it may bum well and give off no noxious odors. Below is a sort of gas catechism which conveys a good deal of important "light" on this subject: "How do they make gas?" "First, they put about two bushels of bituminous coal in a long air-tight re tort This retort is heated red-hot. when the gas bursts oat of it as you see it burst out of soft coal when on the parlor-fire The gas passes off through pipes. A ton of coal will make ten thousand cubie feet of gas. The gas, as it leaves the coal, is very impure." "How do they purify it?" "First, while hot, it is ran off into another building; then it is forced through long, perpendicular pipes, sur rounded with cold water. This cools the gas, when a good deal of tar con denses from it and runs down ta the bottom of the perpendicular boiler, half full of wood laid crosswise Then ten thousand streams of cold water are spurted through the boiler. Through the mist and rain, and between the wet sticks of wood the gas passes, coming out washed and cleansed. The ammonia condenses, joins the water and falls to the bottom." "What next?" "Well, next, the gas is purified. It is passed through vats of lime and oxide of iron, which takes out the carbonic acid and ammonia." "What next?" "The gas is now pure It passes I through the big station-meter, then tnrougn tne main ana pipes, uu 11 reaches the gas-jets in your room. Then it burns, while yon all scold because it docs not born better." Da Chailra has been discovered in the interior of Norway, evidently re gardless of lectures or lyeeums. Concerning Beds. During all ages, from the earliest times, men have displayed their inven- . : 1 . - , 1 , - , . uoa iu uesiguing oeas wnicn snould gratify their natural love for comfort, for elegance, and for luxury. Ia the pre-historio times the dwellers in the caves most probably followed the sug gestion given them by the animals which they drove out from their rocky dens, in this early stage of the "straggle for existence," and made their beds of leaves. From this condition to provi ding skins for the coverings of their conches, was a great advance, and with their increasing ability to dominate their surrounding conditions, and pro vide the materials for gratifying their natural as well as artificial wants, this step was bat the first in a long course 01 invention and improvement applied 10 Deus. Among the Romans and the Greeks, as well as the other nations of antiquity, such an appliance as a mattress was un known. They made their beds crjon conches of wood, which were covered with skins, furs, woolen and other stuffs. Their luxury in beds consisted only in using more expensive covermga, replaeinff a sheep's skin by a titer's or substituting for a rough woolen blanket one 01 liner textare, or a shawl of silk embroidered in gold and silver thread. These improvements, or those consist ing in replacing the wooden bench which formed their support with one of oronze, or even 01 gold or silver, was reaiiy only a display or greater wealth. but could not be considered in these days an advance towards securing the advantages 01 a comfortable, luxurious, and healthy be In the early period of modem history, beds were almost universally, in Eu rope, nothing bat bundles of straw. As late in England as the times of Queen Elizabeth, when no carpets were used, and the floor was strewn with rashes, the beds were hardly anything better, and a wooden bench, or any rude frame work which lifted the bed above the floor, was a luxury. Erasmus, in his letters, describes the social condition of the people daring the reign of Henry VII f, and was disgusted at the state of the floors. The rashes, he says, were so seldom changed, and became so damp, that the feet were constantly kept wet, and thence colds and con sumption were quite common. In the dining-rooms, he speaks of the filth collected on the floor among the rashes; the bits of meat and bones thrown to the dogs, who fought around the guests' legs for them; the beer and wine emp tied upon the floor; the slices of bread, used as plates for eating their meat on, and then thrown aside, altogether giv ing as no very high conception of the neatness and hue breeding of the time. leth of Queen Elizabeth," an accurate t rom JJeiarocue s tine picture of idea cm be gained of the trained of the beds of roy alty at this period, and consequently those of the common people can be im agined. By a careful study of the times, and from all the contemporary evidence bearing npon this point, Dela roche was enabled to reproduce the scene with a truthful accuracy of detail. ! The queen is reposing upon a bed formed by spreading cloths upon the floor. She is covered with richly em broidered spreads of velvet, bordered with golden fringe. The moment chosen is when she is upbraiding the Countess of Nottingham for keeping back the ring Essex had sent to his royal mistress just before his execution. "The queen herself is gorgeously attired, as was her constant custom, but the comparison between the brilliant coverings of the bed and its position, one which now would be considered as in the dirt matted and hard, and have to be re made. Besides, too, all of these ma terials have a greater or a less tendency to retain the bodily exhalations, and in all public places, such as hotels, hospi tals, and other institutions where the beds are used in turn by a number of different persons, the danger of conta gion, and the difficulty in any case of keeping the beds hygienically clean and pure, according to the demands of the present medical standard, is very great, if not impossible. Voltaire at Feruex. Voltaire was over sixty when he built himself thia magnificent retreat Yet the score of years that he lived here was probably the busiest of his life. Dur ing the summer he composed walking in the shadows of his trees ; in the win ter he worked mostly in bed. He al ways pretended ill health, but managed to toil fourteen hoars a day. His sec retary slept in a little recess above Vol taire s bed-room, and at the least noise at night came down to write nnder bis master's dictation. In this way this busiest and cleverest of men made up fur the interruptions of society. Many stories are told of the importunate who came from far and near to see the in tellectual wonder of his century. None better than the following, which I have never met in English : One day an un known person demanded to see the Lord of Feraex. "Tell him that I am not here," shouted Voltaire "But I hear him," urged the stranger. "Tell him that I am ill, then." "I will feel his poise; I am in that business." "Tell him I'm dead." "I'll bury him; it won't be the fint one, either, I am a doctor." "Well," exclaimed Voltaire, "that's an obstinate mortal; let him comoin. Now Sir, do vou take me for a strange ani mal ?" "Yes, Sir. for the Phoenix." "Do you know, then. Sir, that it costs twelve sols to see me ?" "Certainly ; here are twenty-four. I'll come again to-morrow." Voltaire was unarmed, and lav ished all manner of politeness npon his visitor. Ilirper't Magazine. Proverbs. Proverbs in general are more read than followed. We hear often of the expression "the more the merrier." Now go and ask a couple of doting lovers, if they believe in that sort of thing. They would undoubtedly think that two was company, and three was a crowd. One thing is certain it is hard, very hard to crowd that idea into the heads of some that is or that was to be mother-in-laws. When I sparked Mariah McGoozleum, her dear mamma always helped to make up the crowd. Bat for that I might have had the gall, if she would have had me I can't for the life of me, see why some mammas so far forget themselves, as to forget that they were once girls, and once con sidered three waa a crowd. The old aying is that "an honest man's word is as good as his bond," bnt that's "too thin" (Shakespeare again) now-e-day.a It might have been so . at the time of the flood, when the world had a good washing, but it won't wash now. Youths Column. fader The Weather. -Dirty 'aya ha' h Se-t ember. ApnJ, Juna aod SoTemtvr ; Kruai Jaoaary ao to May The raio it raineta erery day ; All tbereat have thtrt.-ooe V ithoot a bU-Kaed g earn of mn ; Anil if any f taeni bail two-aDd-tbirty. 'llialv'd be Inal aa um aud tan'e a aiirtt- " Mioic Squares. I will give three positions of a square of four figures to a side : Firat poftltion. I A 13 3 a lu u 1 7 11 IS 111 It Second pueittt'11. I SHU 1 1 II II 1 10 li 4 14 Tuird pnaition. I 11 13 14 II 7 li 10 4 a I The second position is obtained from the first by inverting the two middle vertical columns, and the third from the second by inverting the two middle horizontal columns. It will be observed that, in the third position, each vertical column, each horizontal column, and each diagonal column sums up 31. Ia a square of eight figures to a side, invert the four middle vertical columns, and then the four middle horizontal columns. In general, invert the middle half of the vertical and horizontal columns. After discovering this rule, I applied it to a square of twelve fi pares to a side. and so simple is the process that I wrote down not the first position or the second, bnt the third, at the very first dash, and without mistake X subjoin one with eight figures to a side, so that the application of this principle may be seen : Third position. 1 2 5!) 60 61 C2 7 8 9 10 51 52 53 51 15 24 32 40 43 49 50 11 12 13 14 55 56 57 53 3 4 5 6 63 61 23 46 45 44 43 13 17 31 3S 37 36 35 26 25 39 30 29 28 27 34 33 47 22 21 20 19 42 41 16 Tho sum of each row is 260. The reader may try his ingenuity in constructing as many tables as he pleases. Ascertain beforehand what each column should sum up, by the usual method of arithmetical progres sion. I bus : the sum of the series 1, Z, 65x64 3, 4, 5, etc, to 64, is 20SO. Di- 2 viding by g, the number of vertical or horizontal columns, we get 260 for the sum of each. For the series 1, 2, 3, on to 144, briefly, each vertical column 145x144 -143x6870. 2x12 I found a square of six numbers to a side rather harder, and one of fire to a side quite troublesome The reason was that the above method is not appli cable By approximating it however. as neirly as practicable, and then using tentative means toward the close, I succeeded in both cases. These tables are not useful in the ordinary sense of that term ; they do not teach ns how to measure com cribs or survey farms ; bat they may interest pupils in arithmetic and may cultivate the necessary bnt irksome art of adding up columns of figures. Let the teacher take an ordinary checker-board some winter evening, cnt oat of card or leather sixty-four men, namely, round pieces of the size of a nickel ; number them from 1 to 61, and set the boys and girls to work to construct a magic square. My word for it they will go at it with an interest such as the rule of three has failed to awaken. JZnnte and School. Yorso Fish-Hawki The young fish hawks are the funniest things you ever saw, awkward, misshapen, and yet with such a wise, dignified expression 1 1 watched for several hours a couple learning to fly. They sat balanced un easily on the edge of the nest, solemn and grave as judges, and looked as if they had come ont of the shell knowing everything. The old birds were coaxing and going through' various exercises which I suppose were the first princi ples of flying, and the young ones tilted about and rolled over and finally got fastened in the sharp branches of the tree. The mother and father fussed and scolded, "Bill ee, Bill-ee, Stu-pid-i-ty." The young are very slow in learning to fly, and I nave heard that they often linger in the nest long after they are well able to help themselves, to be fed and waited npon, till driven away by the parents, who beat them out with their wings, and peck them with their sharp beaks. I don't like to think this, but it may be so, for one day we found a young bird drooping on the fence He allowed us to come very close to him, and we discovered that his wing was broken. It was not shot so he mast have fallen in his effort to fly. No birds were near him he had evidently been deserted. He looked forlorn and pitiful, so we took him home and pat him in the wagon-house The children were very attentive to him ; they eut up fish for him pounds of it and tried to amuse him as if he were a lamed child. Bat it was of no use he drooped still more, and then died, and was buried with martial noise and pomp. He would not have been a successful pet, for these birds have a lonely, isolated nature They seem to have bred in them the wild, untamable spirit of the wind and wave, and if deprived of their free, soaring flight and their sportings in air and water, they wi!l languish and die. Si. Nicholas. Ant axd Lioht. Did yon ever think of the difference between air and light in the way they come to ns ? Yon can not catch the sunbeam in your fingers ; yon cannot shut it up ; you cannot even feel it It seems as thin, as intangible as the air itself. Yet the air penetrates everything ; it creeps through ; it glides under; it goes behind. There is no escaping it ; while the sunbeam is turned aside by every obstacle What if light moved as air does, instead of only in straight lines? Do yon see what would happen ? There would be no shadow; no escape anywhere from the piercing brightness. The thick green leaves would not turn it aside ; there would be no coolness of the woods ; no "shadow of a great rock in a thirsty land ; no nse at all for hat brims or sun-umbrellas. Some One seems to have planned very, wisely and kindly, in this one little law of light to keep ns all comfortable and happy. Then the sunbeam itself, though it looks like a simple gleam of brightness, is really a bundle of different colors tied up together, an! each color has a different office to perform. The artist can separate the r.iy into its original colors, and letting tiicm fall upon his prepared plate, will show you that it is only one or two of the darkest rays that have anything to do with printing his wonderful sun-pictures. Said Mrs. Jenks on her return from church: "When I see the shawls of those Johnsons, and then think of what I have to wear, if it was not for the consolations of religion, I don't know what I would do." m- "Vavieties. A pretty foot and ankle get up stairs easier than those not so pretty. The Elizabeth an horse collar is the newe t equine fashion out West The Masonic brethren at Barlington, Kant as, propose to build a temple I wonld not give a straw for a man's religion, whose very dog and cat are cot the better for it. Vinnie Ream has a large Newfound land dog who paws visitors. Why won't his mistress pause, too ? A little girl was once asked the fol lowing question: "What is faith?" She replied, "Doing God's will anl ask ing no questions." "Aleck" says he has trouble in hia family. His tea year old girl, Cathar ine, dabbed herself "Kitty," and has gone by this name, till just now little Harry insists npon chancing his name to "Doggie." He says "he has as good a right to play he is a dog, as she has to play she is s cat" It is estimated that over 40.000 chil dren under one year of ago, die annually in England (including Scotland and Ireland) of diseases prod need by im proper diet, given them through mis take or through ignorance, and of only two diseases, convulsions and diarrbosa. Besides these, many other complaints. sometimes fatal, are produced by im proper ieeuicg. uoaen n ora. There appeared recently in the obitu ary columns of the Philadelphia Ledger notices of the deaths of ten persons men and five women who had lived to or beyond the advanced age of eighty years, to wit : Iemuel Swain, aged 80 ; Andrew W alker, 80; Lvdia P. Johnson. 80 ; Cornelius McLaughlin, 80 ; James nuteninson. W; Sarah Ustick, 86; John D. Shafer. 86: Mary Kodsers. 87: Mar tha Fairies, 91; and Martha Lowry, 93. An English woman has set an exam ple which American husbands will doubtless commend to their wives for imitation. She made a will giving all her property to het husband, directing that her wardrobe should be sold to de fray the expenses of her funeral, and expressing the hope that her dear hus band snould straightway marry some nice young woman who would be a good housekeeper. Such delicate considera tion is certainly beyond praise. It is a pity that some hnsbandi wonld not try to emulate it Marshal Bazaine has taken the place of the "Man in the Iron Mask," on the island of Sainte Marguerite, but except as regards his innocence or guilt will fail to furnish debating societies with as interesting questions for discussion as his predecessor. St Magnerite is one of the largest of the Isles de Lerins in the Mediterranean sea, opposite Cannes, France. It is about three miles long and less than a mile broad. The Marshal has been sentenced to seclu sion for twenty years, bat it is expected that he will be allowed to return to France after a few years of exile, and if not there will probably be abundant opportunities for him to escape con finement presented by tha changes of government so characteristic of French politics. Upon the Eubjei't of taxation, a num ber of important decisions have recently Deen made iy me supreme uourt 01 the United States. One of them denies the right of the State to tax imported goods in the original package, on the gronnd that the right of importation carries with it an unrestricted right to sell the goods. Another decision denies the right of the State to tax national pro perty or the national credit in the form of the public debt, the ground taken being that the right to tax implies the right to destroy. Another decision de clares that for pnrposes of State taxa tion the port of registry of a vessel is the domicile of the vessel. The power of a State to tax bills of lading, or any form of commercial paper passing be tween the States, is denied, hence it is a restriction on domestic commerce. Another decision denies the extra terri torial operation of the tax laws of the State, it being declared that a State has no right to tax a corporation on its shares, bonds or coupons, which are held outside the State. A little circumstance has just come to us through a friend of the parties. wnich we are tempted to make public It is as follows: A couple very well known in the country are at present ar ranging terms for a separation, to avoid the scandal of a judicial divorce, and a friend has been employed by that Hus band to negotiate the matter. The latest mission was in reference to a valuable ring given to the wife before marriage by the husband. For this he would make a certain much desired concession, i he mend made the de mand. "What!" said the indignant wife, "do you venture to charge your self with such a mission to me? Can you believe that I could tear myself from a gift which alone recalls to me the days when my husband loved me ? No ! this ring is my only souvenir of happiness forever departed ! Tis all (and here she wept) that I now possess of a once fond husband." The friend insisted. The lady supplicated grew obstinate grew desperate threatened to submit to a public divorce as a leaser evil than parting with the cherished ring and at last confessed that she had sold it six months before. A correspondent recently wrote to the Philadelphia Ledger an account of what he supposed to be the fall of "a piece of the moon," on Christmas eve, the falling mass "leaving a bright comet-like tail behind it" in its descant to the earth. The direction of its fall is not stated, bnt it is a noticeable f Jet that the Virginia paper of a late date give accounts of a meteorological phe nomenon which occurred on the same evening, and which may have some con nection with that noticed by onr cor respondent in Philadelphia. About eight o'clock in the evening there waa a great flash of light in Fauquier county, Virginia, accompanied by a distinct vibrating motion of the earth, and followed immediately with a report like that of a cannon. The light and sound seemed to move from east to west The falling luminous body ob served by the correspondent was pro bably a meteor, and the account of the Virginia phenomenon is similar to those given of falling asrolites. These mete oric bodies sometimes burst with a load noise, and their particles are scattered over a wide extent of territory, and sometimes the force of the explosion grinds them into dust which falls harm lessly and leaves scarcely any sign of its presence There are several theories to account for the fall of meteors, the most plausible being that they are scat tered fragments of nebuluoe matter, circling throughout space, and which are made luminous by friction from contact with the earth'a atmosphere whenever the orbits of tha meteoric matter and of the earth happen to eroaa each other. 1