B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THK UNION AND THI ESfOKCIMXST OF THB LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., APRIL 22, 1874. NO. 16. Poetry. The Kobin's Protest. "At Ml as th bird.," yoa say Ah, much jm know about It I We're bny all the livelong ear ; We can't got oo without it. " It tan't nacn to bnild a ae.tr Well, thea, suppose yon try It ; " Just work a week, and do yonr beet Tbere'd lot a bird come Biga it. To don't know where to lad ale thief a, 5or how to weave them nicely, ' And tz tbe stirks and straw aad strings. Each la ila place precisely. Toe caa't aceompliah that email taak With twenty times oar labor; Then don't be hard that's all I ask Tpoa yoar little aelfhbor. While wife ie sitting, tfa rough tbe day You'll hear my music ringing ; She'd Ure to death. Tee heard her say, If 'twere aot for my singlmr. And when the little oaee have come, I help about the worming ; Each day fall fifty we bring home. And never mind their equirmiaf . 1 ail oae month, and then away Ae fast as 1 can sknrry. With voices In my ear that any, Gh father, harry, hurry 1" Then, Just before they're taking wing, 1 must keep cioee behind them ; It wonld be sack a dreadful thing If some bad cat should dad them 1 There is the twilight concert too. And that must be attended. And now, it must be clear to yoa Our cares are never ended. For Urns we work the livelong day Ton cant pretend to doubt it Toa see there is no other way I And that is all about it. 31isscellnn. MUle People or Eastern Story. There is a singular fascination to young people in those mythological anomalies of Nature the little men and women of Eastern story and modern allegory. The dwarfs of the "Arabian Nights," the pigmies who, in the old mythology, waged such sturdy warfare against their foes the cranes, and the live and interesting diminntive commu nity of Liliput which Swift has made familiar to every household, are attrac tive playthings of young and even of older imaginations. And now comes the story that such a thing as a nation of dwarfs is not only not impossible, bnt has actually been discovered. While the redoubtable Schlieman has been digging up the flesh-pots of Troy, another Teuton with a like enterprising genius and good fortune in discovering the marvelous, and a name even more unpronounceable for it is Schwein fnrth has been penetrating far into Central Africa, somewhat to the north ward of the scene of Livingstone's operations, and there has, if we may believe his solemn statement, . found a race of sable "Pigmies." They are, of course, not an amiable, civilized com munity, as were Gulliver's diminutive friends of Liliput, but wild savages, black as Erebus, with big, fierce eyes, and ferociously shaggy hair and beards. To be sure, they are not very tiny, the average height of the males being four feet seven; but this is small enough to make them a marked exception to the rest of the known specimens of human ity. They are very fond of hunting.and even of engaging iu wars with their bigger neighbors, whom they attack with great zeal in large numbers; and the enterprising doctor suspects them of being cannibals. - He succeeded in inducing one of the Akkas the name of the pigmy race to go with him to Europe; but little Tikkitikki, having overfed himself with unaccustomed rich food in Egypt, to the great loss of the European curiosity-lovers, and the an thropologists of Germany died on the doctor's hands. It is conjee ted by Hchweinfurth that the Akkas are the aboriginal Africans, and he asserts that they appear, from their hairy persons and their decidedly monkeyish man ners, to bring man a degree nearer to Darwin's "missing link." Herodotus, it seems, asserted that there was such a pigmy race in the African interior, though his account implies that they were more wonderfully small than the Akkas; and bis other statements about eople "who nse their feet for umbrel las," and so on, have given incredulity to his statement about dwarfs. Kcene at Lynchburg. Returning from the bridge toward the town I came to a wide street stretch ing straight up the hilL On either side were stone pavements, crowded with negroes; colored children gamboled on the flags; colored mammas smoked pipes in the doorways of shops, where colored fathers sold apples, beer and whisky; colored damsels, with baskets of clean linen in their stout arms.joked with colored boatman from the canal; colored draymen cursed and ponnded their mules as they hurried down the hills; and colored laborers on the streets enveloped one in a cloud of suffocating dust as he hastened by. Towards the water sloped other streets filled with roomy tobacco warehouses, and with rows of unpainted dwellings; half way up the hill a broad and well built business avenue crossed at right angles, and there, at last.one saw white people, and the ordinary sights of a city. The plaintive sound of a horn was heard above the bustle of traffic; it nia8 in the hands of a negro, summon ing tobacco buyers to an auction. En tering the warehouse, one saw hogs heads of popular herb opened and in spected, and heard the familiar jargon of the auctioneer. Turning once more towards the as cent of the hill, I (came into an open air market, which for picturesqneness, vied with any in Italy or Spain. On the curbing of the sidewalk, and even on the stones in the middle of the square, dozens of negro women were seated before baskets containing vegetables.or varions goods of trivial description. One venerable matron, weighing, per haps, two hundred pounds, had her profuse chignon overtopped by a dilapi dated beaver, and was smoking a clay pipe. Many young women were cleanly and nicely dressed, and had folded back the huge flaps of their starched sun-bonnets, so that they seemed to imitate the head-dresses of the Italian maidens at Sorrento; and hosts of col ored buyers, market-baskets in hand, hovered from one seller to another, talking in high-pitched voices, and in a dialect which Northern ears fonnd diffi cult to understand. Leaving the mar ket, and yet ascending, I came to another broad street, lined with com fortable dwellings, antLlooking up.saw, still far above me, the 'Court-house,' perched on the topmost point Scrib ner's Monthly. If it be true that woman's glory is in her hair, then this is most emphatically the age of her glory; but it shines with borrowed lustre. MY FIRST LITERARY VEX-TUBE. I had always wanted to do something to help my husband ; he was poor, and his health was not good, and he had a family of four to provide for. I could churn and sell the butter for a good price, and I could raise chickens and sell eggs ; and the product of the gar den was no small item, but I didn't like slavish toil, I didn't want a freckled face and sunburnt hands and a stout waist. It was easy work to write stories, surely ; anybody could do that ; love stories were always read with a relish, and, judging from the abundance of them, they were marketable enough. I consulted no one. I wanted to sur prise my husband some day ; I wanted he should find himself famous as the husband of the distinguished Mrs. , the new star that had arisen in the lit erary horizon. My children were very troublesome, the baby was teething ; I found that I could not write love-stories and hear them crying, and fighting, and falling and bumping their heads. I baked a jar full of sugar cakes, and made some molasses taffy, and drove a spike in the joists overhead and put up a swing on it, and did everything 1 could one day that I might commence my literary career on the following morning. I likewise sent to a neighbor's to borrow her little poor house girl to tend the children and be company for them. In the morning I went'to my bedroom np-stairs to begin my work. I had laid the plot of my story in the night, while my husband was snoring obliviously by my side. My plot was beautiful. Gustavus Le Claire, a runner for a city firm, was to fall in love with a lovely girl, an or phan, Melissa Melsina, the neice of the landlady at the village hotel, where (jrustavus had stopped for a few days. His friends were to oppose the mar riage, and use all their influence against me proposed union, She was to pine, and be sent away to her grandmother's: letters were to be intercepted ; he was to cut his throat with a razor, and be discovered in time to be restored to life. A tobacco firm were to employ him as a runner on a new route that wonld carry him away in an opposite direction. In time he was to forget her and marry another, and, at the close of a long life, fall into abject poverty, and lie assisted by his former sweetheart. He was to recognize her by a mark on her wrist, and she was to recognize him by a lock of red hair that grew on the side of his head. He was to die in her sheltering arms, murmuring : "Thine thine only 1" I knew if I could grow inspired while writing, that this plot wonld work a thrilling tale, and my humble name would become a househould word in my native land, and my fertile pen would be a resource of pleasure and of profit. I wrote two days, stopping to cook the three meals, rising early, churning after the family were abed, baking bis cuit to save baking bread, spreading up the beds instead of making them, sweeping in a temporary manner, and cuffiing the children instead of coaxing them. All this I did with my brows drawn in a thoughtful mood, and my pencil sticking above my ear. The third day I wrote, Harry, my baby fell downstairs and struck his forehead on the rough stone walL and cut a gash through to the skulL An Italian was in tbe kitchen with his little shoulder-stand full of gay nick-nacks, and Harry was hurrying down to see them. After he had cried himself to sleep, and I had recovered from my faint and fright. I resumed the pen. When be awoke he was unusually fretful, and I tried to keep him with m a T rrnvn him m v (dinners, and mv comb and brush, and a little silver bell. and everything that could possibly amuse him for even a minute at a time. Just when my story was reaching its acme, the baby wearied of all things, and kicked and cried most piteously. How could I come down from the delectable heights of fancy and tend a mortal child, when the children of my brain, my immortal darlings, clamored for my undivided attention? The thought was mortifying, aggravating how could I soar with all these human ties tugging at my heart ? I looked all around me to devise a newer plaything. A small mirror seemed to recommend itself. I held it before the baby, and he laughed aloud, while the tears like dewdrops hung on his long lashes. "See a baby 1" I said, "see a baby !" I sat him down on the floor and placed the mirror before him, so he could bend forward and look into it He shouted in his rare glee. I resumed my story, occasionally peeping over my shoulder and saying : "He sees a baby ! sees a baby!" , After while I looked around, thankful I had fonnd a plaything that pleased Harry, and I discovered him very de liberately sitting on it, peeping over first at one side then the other, to see how nearly it adapted itself to his ample proportions. The glass was broken into a thousand of pieces, and he sat there as delighted as a boy who has mounted a fractions colt for the first time. He crowed, he tried to tip np his heels into the air, and he threw back his head as though he was tossing a flowing mane. I really believe the little human baby, with a touch of the bully spirit that often comes with ma ture growth, thought he had that other fellow down, and that after some fashion or manner he was a little man victori ous. At last, after much tribulation, my inm itnn was written, revised. .GUUd .VJ , u .1 j " - ' copied, punctuated carefully, put into an envelope wiuioue ruiuug w """b u.i rtff Ttooannn it was a first attempt, I affixed to it the modest price ol ntteen dollars. Elated by the success that I was sure would attend my first effort, I wrote another story, called "My Grandmoth er's Prophecy." The grandmother was a snperetitioufl ow iaayf aim, lunuwiug a. i. - x. 4 UM whima art A nmnli psi et ma ueiifc ui uci. nuimio, oaaw v" over every event that transpired. One of her granddaughters came Buuueuij -a nncf -9 arrrrfl Yin1 r ill ft lil&CS. utruii m uwii v -t5Du - r and the old lady said that it was an in fallible sign tnat sue wooia receive &u a-A. Af a vri a CTtX Tl T1 A TTVVt,v1 I V- Tlie VUCJX VI iuiir3u I a - offer did come in a very droll, dry, bus iness-like way irom a renovate um widower in a blue silk cravat I thought I made a splendid story of the incident Oh, I seemed to feel tbe cool chaplet L-tu4 hrnur and to hear oi i ante uu my - -- - - the chink of the yellow twenty-dollar gold pieces in my numuw velvet wallet ... Life was very sweet to me in those summer mornings and noons and nights. I waited patiently until I thought it was time for replies to come, and for the newspapers to shout out the name of the new star, already in the zenith. Hadn't I for years felt the burning desire to write 1 Hadn't I felt that I was one of the anointed ! one of the few set apart ! I don't like to be laughed at, and yet i always enjoy a joke on myself as well as on others. I'll put my hands ever my lace while 1 tell it. A peddler came along with a fine assortment of Irish poplins. Now. always had a weakness for lustrous poplins. I am tall and slender. I knew a dress of dark green poplin would fall in such magnificent folds from my waist down to my feet, that I wonld be the admiration of all Lienox and vicinity. l had felt a desire to help my poor husband, Fudge 1 Wouldnt that be inverting the order of marriage? wouldn't that be making of myself the strong oak, and of him the clinging vine ? I, a free woman, able to earn my own living by my pen, wonld none oi this. I bought the beautiful pattern, and promised to pay for it as soon as I heard from "my publishers." I said this with a great deal of zest and satisfaction. The dress was twenty dollars. I could pay for that easily, and have money left and how nice that would be. Not another woman in Lenox could do such things as that, they were all burdens to their husbands. They leaned on them. Well, well, no Italian sunsets were finer than ours in Lenox ; no sunrise in the tropics softer, or mellower, or more delightful. In a few weeks came a bulky enve lope, accompanied by a letter. My beautiful love story of "Augustus the Kunner, and Melissa Melsina the Or phan" came back to me, and the letter read : "Madam : We shall not be able to use your story of 'Augustus the True Hero.' We return you the MS3., etc., etc Why wouldn't they use it ? Perhaps an ill-disposed clerk had sent it back to me ; or, maybe, they had organized rings, and favored no new contributors. I wrote back immediately, and asked why they refused it I wanted they should point out the errors, and if it was not worth fifteen dollars, perhaps they wonld pay me twelve for it ; and. rather than miss a sale, and because it was my hrst attempt, 1 was willing to sell it for ten dollars. I didn't mind making a little sacrifice. I could afford to be generous. I received no reply. I wrote again with a like result I hoped a better fate for the "Grand mother's Prophecy ;" but though I waited long and patiently, I never heard a word from it I presume it was con signed to the waste-basket The days were not so beautiful then. My . star of hope had gone down the sunsets and sunrises were very common. I wondered wherein had ever lain the burnished glow and the tender shimmer on the hazy hill-tops, and the soft, ca ressing touch that seemed to come to my glad face in the twilight breeze that dallied on the billowy meadows, and shook the over-ripe roses nntil their pale petals fell like fragrant flakes at my feet I took np the burden of life again s it was a little heavy at first ; its task; were often performed in tears, that fell freely when I thought of my great mis take. Though I shrank from facing the truth, 1 could call my error by no other name. How I hated the sight of my green poplin dress 1 It brought np such pain ful memories ; and then it did not har monize with my shawl, or hat, or veil. What a mountain loomed np before me when I tried to pay for it myself. I sold butter and eggs, chickens and berries, and cucumbers and radishes, and took in washiBgs and boarded the music-teacher, but 1 couldn't pay for it all myself, and I couldn't trade it off. It haunted me like the dead body haun ted Eugene Aram. At last, in a fit of despair, I cried right out one night, and owned np to the whole thing. I was very miserable; I hid my face in Joey's bosom, and with sobs that shook me like an ague fit, I confessed the whole truth. It was very humiliating, but Joey said it only made me dearer to him than ever, and that I must never play the strong oak again, and keep secrets from him any more. He said the public should never have the opportunity of criticizing his dear wife's pretty stories, that they couldn't appreciate them; a greedy gonrmand of a public never should tear from the sanctity of home her precious name, and flaunt it in the papers. He paid for the ugly green dress wil lingly, and the tender love-light in his blue eyes, as be did it, was worth more to me than all the huzzas and noisy plaudits of a hollow-hearted public. I never recovered from the humilia tion. My soul is sick yet, when I think of the bright dreams that for a few months dazzled my eyes, and bewildered and biasred my better judgment Starting Tomato Plant. As some persons may be in the same plight the coming spring that I was last as regards knowing how they are to grow a few early tomato plants, and have them stocky and first-class plants in every respect, I will give the details of how I managed to grow a few hun dred to my entire satisfaction. I took a small box, 12x20 inches. 6 inches deep and filled it with good garden soil, and put it on the kitchen stove-drum, and let it stay there till the dirt was thor oughly warmed through; then took a stick and made marks an inch apart, 4 inches deep in the dirt, cross-ways of the box; then scattered tomato seeds quite thick along the rows and covered them about i of an inch deep; then took a newspaper and wet it and cov ered the box to prevent the dirt from getting dry on top. The box was set on a bench near the stove after the seeds were sown and the following day set on the stove-drum again for the pur pose of keeping np the heat in the soil, being careful not to let it get too hot In forty-eigbt hours from the time the seeds were sown they had sprouted, and many had broken the ground; a few were near one-half inch high. Rural New Yorker. A Fan-Shaped City. imifar.lrm ia a verf stransre city.and unlike any other city in Europe. It is in the shape oi a iaay b isu wucu Five canals encircle the city in parallel nno TtutofMi around the out side. The streets cross these canals by drawbridges. There are six nunareu i i .Huclnff tliiu canals, and the UllUjJCS WVDOtug city is divided into ninety-five islands by cross canals. Houses front on these canals, and often have a wide quay.but sometimes the houses rise from the water's edge. These canals are filled .. . 1 1 1 L .1 with ships ana smau oopw iurj pass through the city and unload at any point Tn Saratotra countr. N. T., one grain of Fultz wheat is reported as having thrown out nine stalks bearing 378 ker nels. Selected heads in the field con tained fifty, fifty-three, fifty-eight, and np to sixty-three kernels. The Experience or a Maa Wht Did Hot Bar Him Wife. The other day Mr. Slocum I don't know but what yon know him; he has been deacon and selectman and squire and pretty much everything in our Til lage was reading out lond from one of the papers about burying dead corpses. The editor didn't hold with burying of them,and said that burning or embalm' ing was the proper thing. When Slo cum had got through he said: "WelL there's Mr. Cutter, now; he knows all about embalming." And then he says to me, "Cale" my given name is Caleb "Cale," says he, 7ou've had expe rience in embalming, haven t yon 7 Says I, "By gosh !I should rather think 1 had." His remark set me thinking, and that's how it comes round that I'm writing my experience to yon. It's all very well for people to talk about em balming deceased corpses, but it's tbe Christian duty of those that have tried it and found what a plague they are, to expose the hollowness of an embalmed corpse. I've tried it, and there isn't the least particle of comfort in the thing. It happened this way. My wife died three years ago. Uied very sudden, too. it was something about her liver. There is a great deal of liver complaint that people don't know of. There was mv wife's cousin who came to visit at our house ten years ago. He thought he had the rheumatism, but I knew better. "Hank," says I, "you've got the liver complaint" "Liver be hanged," says he. "How can a man have liver complaint in his knees ! "The liver," says L "can break out anywhere. I know liver complaint when I see it and you've got it" Well, I convinced him after a while, and he took to taking some liver pills I dis remember the name of them just now. It was only two years afterwards that he could walk as straight as anybody. so yon see 1 was right As I was saying, my wife died, was remarkably fond of her, as any man ought to be whose wile was an orphan. and could bake the most beautiful pies in our section of country. She died on Monday, and that evening, as I was sit ting on the piazza, along came Dr. Sabin, Most likely yon know the doctor. A smart man; but s yon say, a little too fond of the intoxicating element 1 knew him when he was in the army, He was not an army surgeon, bnt he was in the embalming business. When ever he'd get a good paying corpse he'd come over to my tent I was regimen tal sutler and drank whisky in a way that was really disheartening. Why, I've charged that man live dollars a drink, just to try to exert a good influ ence over him, but he'd drink and drink so long as he'd got a cent left WelL I hadn't seen the doctor since the war, and was really glad to meet him again. He was looking very bad, and was pretty well used up. He sat down and told me what a streak of bad luck he'd had, and wanted to know if I could get him a job. Now, yon see, I wanted to help him along for the sake of old times, but the more I thought the less I could see my way. All of a sudden I happened to think about the embalming bnsiness,and I says to him, "Have yon done any embalming lately V "No," says he; "for the rea sen that deceased corpses are all buried nowadays. I only wish I could get one that the friends wanted to preserve," says he, "By gosh," says I, "I can give you a job now, right off, embalm ing my wife. She s laid out np stairs at this very minute." "Done," says the doctor. "And I'll make the pret tiest job out of her you ever saw yet." Ton see, I wanted to put a little money in an old friend's pocket and then I calculated the job wonld cost a good deal less than a regular funeral. The coffin would naturally be a dead loss, since it had been ordered, and as it wouldn t ht any of the children, who were small enough to roll all round in it I couldn't put it to any profitable use. Still embalming her was cheaper than burying her, so 1 told the doctor to go ahead and do his best WelL it turned out as handsome a corpse as I ever saw. I was real proud of it Her features were natural, though she was so well done that she sounded just like a piece of stone-work when yon tapped her with a hammer or any thing like that 1 paid the doctor ten dollars, and he went away contented, and I took my wife and set her np in the dining-room just between the win dows. Here my troubles began. The neigh bors began to find fault, and said I showed a sad want of feeling in setting her np in tbe dining-room and showing of her to everybody that came in. I couldn't convince them to the contrary, and so for the sake of avoiding strife and contention,. I moved her into the back hall after some of the yonng men had begnn to talk about getting up a subscription to buy a gallon of tar. Things went along well enough for a while, when one day I fonnd that the children had got her into the back-yard, under a tent, and was exhibiting her for a cent a sight to all the children in town. I just confiscated the money and gave my boys a good thrashing. "Spoil a spare child with the rod," says Solomon, "and when he is old he won't depart from it." That's always been my motto, and I try to live np to it I put her up in the spare chamber this time and locked her in. That night I heard a tremendous fall up stairs, and in the morning there was my wife fallen over on to the washstand and all the crockery smashed to pieces. She'd broke off her nose and one ear besides, and do my best I could not stick them on again with glue or anything. She always did stand very ticklish, and I often regretted that I hadn't asked the doctor to run a pound or two of lead in her feet just to keep her right side np. After this I stowed her up in the gar ret but I couldn't get a hired girl to stay in the place on account of her. I thought one time I'd trade her to Bar nnm, but happening to mention it to some of the folks in town, they con vinced me that it wouldn't be wise. I always did hate disorder and violence. The last thing I did was to put her out in the cornfield last spring, where she would be nseful in keeping away crows, and looked real attractive be sides. But the neighbors made an other row, and I had to put her in the barn. I'd bury her gladly, only I split np the coffin for firewood, and it seems ex travagant now to go and buy a coffin for a corpse that's been dead for going on three years, while there are so many charitable objects suffering for want of the money. Sol keep her out in the bam, and for what I see shell have to stay there. I thought at one time I could work her np for lime during our whitewashing season, bnt writing to the doctor about it he told me it was sac rilege, because there wasn't any lime stone about her, however much she might look like it I calculate, what with the cost of em balming her, the things she's broke by falling over on them, the cost of labor in moving her backwards and forwards for she weighs six hundredweight easy the embalming has stood me in at least thirty dollars. I could have buried her for twenty and had none of this bother besides. And' that s why 1 want to tell yon never to embalm a de ceased corpse in no circumstances. Never mind what the papers say. I've had experience in the business, and if I were to lose ten wives I'd bury them cheerfully rather than be bothered with an embalmed one lumbering np the honse and fit for nothing whatever. Sagceationa Aboat Coffee. . If you buy your coffee already browned, says a correspondent of the "Country Gentleman,"1 always brown it over. This develops a better flavor, and increases the strength. The reason is that the desirable qualities are made available by the heat.lmt go biu kajr.iin CTatliiallv. and niav be broticht out again by heat as before. In conse quence of tins, coftee should always be browned, or browned over, at the time it is wanted to be used. Then it is fresh, with all the flavor and strenirth develoed. It will benefit it to keep it corked np tight after it is browned. It should never be left exjxmed to the air in this condition, as it will lone its strength, and alworb odors that come in routaet with it Hence the grocery taint of the coffee of commerce, both the browned and the unbrowned. as Nrth have the proiK-rty of absorbing, being good disinfectants. In purchas ing iret the raw material. The browned is often an interior or defective article. colored to hide the defect. The lest way is to get a sample and test it. If good, secure a Quantity and keen in a dry place and pure air, nsing it as wanted. Mocha and Java are the hest kinds. Grind coffee tine, or, letter. pound it in a mortar. This crushes and reduces it to a condition to take in water the better, so as to extract its subBtanee.whieh it will readily do when finely reduced: else more or less of the strength will remain unolitamed. J coarsely ground coffee after it hatl passed through the cotlee-pot, re-dned it and iiuule a fair cup out of it. You not only get all or nearly ail the streuirt h but vou m't it readily, so that the taint of the vessel is little perceptible; if the vessel is ot stone or earthen, not at all lo avoid lonir standing in the vessel to settle, add the white of an egg and a little water to the ground coffee before it is Rtecved. and mix well: leave not a dry dust. Let the quantity of water and egg le sufficient to moisten, and no more. If more is added, the egg will cook: and as it holds the coll'ee, the water cannot well reaeh lt.and vou will have a weak cup of coffee tasting of the egg. it is a nice tmng to apply the eirir nronerlv: but when so done, it will clarity the liquid, making it sparkling and clear like wine. IS ever, never boil coll'ee. When will people learn to heed this important injunction T It has been preached time out of mind, but seems to do no cood. Look at the amount of poor coll'ee that is made with its strength (toiled away, what is not eft in the coarsely ground mass. J he letter part is readily thrown off by lxiilintr the extractive matter, much of which is objectionable, taking its dace. Steep, then, as you would tea, triiiirinir to the boilintr point but not exceeding it. A few minutes will suf fice, stirring in the meantime the sur face occasionally, so as to expedite the settling. At the Springs. The routine at all the springs is mnch the same. Tbe hotel is nBually a roomy building, surrounded by porches or verandas, and stands in the middle of a green lawn, dotted with the white oak or some other of the superb trees abounding in the Virginia mountains. In the hotel the ball and dining-rooms and the general reception parlor are grouped; while in the small neatly painted, one-story cottages, ranged in rows, en oi -distant from the hotel, the visitors are lodged. There is a host of attentive and polite colored serving men and women, ex-valets and ex-nurses of the "before-the war" epoch, and thev will tell you, with pardonable pride, "I used to belong to ole Mars' ," men tioning some name famous in the an nals of slave proprietorship. Here,one can thns establish the charm and seclu sion of his own home, and combine with it the benefits accruing from a sojourn at a watering-place. Society, which is usually very good, crystalizes in the parlors of the hotels and in the ball-rooms, where bands of colored musicians discourse the latest themes of Strauss and Gungl. When one tires of dancing and of the promenades to the "springs," there are the mountains, and the strolls along the ridges thou sands of feet above the level of the sea, where the air is always pure and in spiring. There is no gaming, save an innocent whist party by some sleepy old boys who lurk in the porches, keeping ont of the strong morning sun; there is no Mara toman route of carriage and drag; no crowded street, with ultra style predominant in every costume; nothing bnt simplicity, sensible enjoy ment and excellent taste, in the sunny mornings the ladies and their cavaliers wander about the mountain pathways; dress does not exact homage nntil dinner-time, and the children join with their parents in the strolls and prome nades, followed by the venerable 'aunties, black and fat, who seem in dispensable appendages to every South ern family having yonng children. Scribner's Monthly. Cereis, Jntlaa Tree. This tree divides with the elder the ignominy of leing that on which the arch traitor hung himself, neither le gend lieing worth the trouble of sifting. It is a native of the south of Europe, antl several countries of Asia from Syria to Japan; and is a handsome low tree with a spreading head, easily dis tinguished among the Leguminous order by its simitle glabrous, kidney shiied leaves, and by its pnrple flowers, which are produced abundantly in May before the leaves, notoulv from the young twigs,but from the old branches, and even the main trunk. The flowers are succeeded by thin brown pods about six inches in length, which re main on the tree all the year. These are not generally produced in this country (England) unless the plant be trained against a wall; but in a warmer climate they perfect their seed in abundance, and afford a ready means of propagation. The leaves are re markable for their unusual shape, for the pale bluish green of their upper surface, and for their sea-green hue be neath. The flowers have an agreeable acrid taste, and are sometimes mixed with salad, or made into fritters with batter, and the flower buds are pickled in vinegar. This species is known as Cereis Siliquastrntn, from the conspicu ous appearance of its seed vessels. The reason American girls refuse to enter domestic service is that they ob ject to anything approaching menial employment; what they want ia hyme-nial Of What are we ilaele ? "From dust thou art, and unto dnsl thou shalt return." Our bodies are composed of many materials. It ha been said that all the metals iron.gold. silver, etc., may be found in the blood; that lime, chalk, clay, etc, also metal liferous bases, may be fonnd in our bones; and that each individual man is an epitome of the universe. In him are rivers, lakes, oceans, mountains, forests, and something of everything existing. Alan is at once a plant an animal, a man and a spirit If he lives true to his constitution, he comes into close relations with nature and with God. In our artificial civilization many live months, if not years, without set ting foot on the ground I They live in dwellings warmed by artificial heat; lighted by artificial light They breathe i . .i i . , i luipuro air: eat aruncuu ioou, eooaea in the most artificial manner. In fact when we consider the great mass of the "best society," there is bnt little about which is not artificiaL They have arti ficial teeth, artificial complexions, ani ficial calves, bustles and breastworks ! They are powdered, perfumed, crimped, cramped and squeezed into such un natural shapes that they may not be classihed by the naturalist They are nondescripts. Now what is wanted for the healthful perpetuation of the race, and for the enjoyment of life.is that we should live in harmony with the laws of our being. We should keep close to nature; should breathe the pure air of heaven; should touch the earth walk on it work in it Hence, the necessity of the garden. There is something life-giving, as well to the human as to the animal and the plant h pntting our feet and onr hands on mother earth. Is there anything in the mnd bath the sand bath or a bath in the earth? Tea, verily, in all these. There are Indians who dig a trench, from two to three feet deep, in the clean, soft, dry earth, and wrap a blanket around tha agne-and-fever pa tient and bury him in the ground, with a ttibe through which to breathe, at his nose. There he is left nntil he becomes smoking hot the steam rising from the ground like the smoke from a coal pit when he is taken ont, washed off, and wrapped np in dry skins, and placed away in a wigwam to sleep. He comes out it is said, free from the ague and fever, or from rheumatism, skin dis ease, or other infirmity which the earth-bath and onr modern wet-sheet pack is nsed to remove. When swine, long confined in dry pens, on dry plank noors, become constipated and burn ing up" with fever and inflammation, are let out they seek at once the swamp, a mud-puddle, in which to bathe and draw ont the disease and the devouring fever-heat This is na ture. Those who plow, spade, hoe, plant, weed, prune, trim, and work in gardens, are more likely to enjoy good health than those who do not True, all may not work in gardens, or on farms, bnt all may walk on ihe ground. (Except prisoners and lunatics, who are inhu manly deprived of this blessing.) And all may breathe pure fresh air. These suggestions are made in the interest of those who wish to live hygienically; and we count a good garden one of the means by which it may be attained. Good taste demands that we cultivate beautiful flowers. Good husbandry demands, as a matter of economy, that all who can shall have a good garden. Good health also de mands it. It is one of the civilizing, not to say Christianizing, institutions. Then hoorah for a garden, with peas, beans, lettuce, beets, cucumbers. squashes, melons, etc Strawberries, grapes, raspberries, cherries, plums, peaches, pears, apples, eta Whatever else you have, or do not have by all means have a good garden. I'p m Tree. A Canadian yonth has proved to his complete satisfaction that Milton's de finition of jealousy as "the injured lover s hell" may be accepted, so far as he is concerned, at least in the most liberal sense. He became possessed of the idea that his inamorata received the visits of other admirers than himself. and to satisfy his jealous suspicions he concluded to take advantage of a dark night and station himself in the branches of a tree which overlooked the window of the lady's sitting-room, He had hardly accomplished this some what dinVult feat before the curtain of 'the golden window of his silent watch" were cruelly and closely drawn, and his vigil was rendered fruitless. As he prepared to return to the earth he became aware, from the deep mouthed hayings which greeted his ears, that a large dog was anxiously awaiting his descent, and for two long hours he desperately, but necessarily somewhat qnietlt, endeavored to induce the animal to retire. Hut the dog was as faithful as Byron's boatswain, and the unlucky lover's smothered en treaties and imprecations were alike un availing. He was thereupon compelled to select the most comfortable crotch the branches of the tree afforded, and resign himself to a night of dismal un rest W ben the hrst streaks of dawn enabled the half-frozen fellow to get a glimpse of his tireless watcher, he found, equally to bis disgust and relief, that the dog was his own I The sudden ness with which the baffled lover finally reached the ground is said to have been remarkable, and the soliloquy in which he indulged shockingly profane. laaaalty Asm Bar Anita. Don Francisco Velasoner informed me, in 1870, that he had a powderwhich made the ants mad. so that they bit and destroyed each other. I made sev eral trials of it and found it most ef ficacious in turning a large column of ants. A little of it sprinkled across their paths in dry weather has a most surprising effect As soon as one of the ants touches the white powder it com mences to run about wildly, and to at tack any other ant it comes across. In a couple of hours round balls of ants will be found luting each other, and numerous individuals will be seen bit ten completely in too,while others have lost some of their legs or antennx. News of the commotion is earned to the formicarium and huge fellows, measuring three-quarters of an inch in length, that only come out of the nest during migration or an attack on tbe nest of one of the working columns,are seen sailing down with a determined airis if they would soon right matters. As soon, howeverois they nave toncnea the sublimate, all their statebness leaves them; they rush abontjtheir legs are seized hold of by some of the smaller ants already affected by the poi son, and they themselves begin to bite, and in a short time liecome the centre of fresh balls of rabid ants- The sub limate can only be used effectively in dry weather. One can indse something of the pa tience of Hoosiers from the statement nf an Indiana naner that twenty men handled over thirty-five cords of wood to get at a rabbit, which escaped after all. Youths' Column. Thb Miseries or Boyhood. Does the boy hope, some cold winter morn ing, to economize time by a hasty toilet, and turn himself over for a wee bit nap after the rising bell, there comes a voice np the stairway : "O Johnnie 1 John-n-i-e I" with lingering persuasiveness. "Get right np. Tour father says he wants yon to have all the paths shoveled before breakfast If little Jennie is np and ready for breakfast that is all that is expected. She has nothing more important to do than breathing on the frosty panes to get a view of Johnnie at work. Does the boy get np early to get his skates sharpened "Don't make that noise in here t" Does he try on those idols of his heart to see that every strap and buckle is in order "Have not I told yon times without number not to put on your skates in the honse ? By next spring there won't be a rag of carpet lft flow does little Jennie manage to keep her skates in good condition ? hy, she appeals to the head of the household. "Pa. can't Johnnie bore a hole in this strap for me ?" "John, fix yonr sister s skates ; and they re fixed. if Johnnie tries to play in the house. he is told to put away that top or those marbles, asked if he can't keep qniet a minute, and advised to take a book ami sit down. On the contrary, just so soon as he hurries home, and snatches np "Robinson Crnso" or "Swiss Family Kobinson, and becomes oblivious for a time of his unhappy lot be is roused anew to it by the paternal voice. "Come Johnnie, put np that book, and go find the cow. she hasnt come home. Jennie, who is very busy putting her refractory, doll to bed. wonders how Johnnie nows which way to turn to look for the missing animaL Perhaps he catches a granddaddy-long-legs, and repeats that familiar rhyme which com pels him to point out the road Johnnie must take. Johnnie being interrogated as to that subject on his return, slings his cap defiantly into the corner, in the gronndsweil of his discontent snatches np "llobinson Crusoe" again, mutters something under his breath about 'girls' and "geese," and is again absorbed in his book. "Come now, Johnnie," says the mother, "don't go to reading again. It's eight o'clock." Five minutes elapse. "Johnnie, did you hear me? Jennie's gone np stairs." Five minntes more on the desert isle, and a childish voioe is heard at the stairs landing. Ma, can't Johnnie come to bed ? I'm afraid." "Now, Johnnie, I shant speak to you again." A brief, a very brief. respite. "Oh ! only to finish this chap ter." "Ma I Ma I" louder and angrier, "I'm coming down if Johnnie don't come I Mayn't he come ?" Enter the paternaL ''John, what are yoa np for at this hour ? Shut np that book and go to bed I Why, Pussie, why aren't yon in bed?" "I want to kiss you good-night," pleads the sweet little fibber. "Bah ? she's afraid of the dark ; that's the matter," defiantly retorts Johnnie, going np stairs two steps at a time. "I ain t neither. Can t he stop plaguing me ?" "Come, John, let yonr sister alone." That's all the sympathy a boy gets I Delicate Neujr. Nellie is my neighbor. She wears pretty dresses of soft material, gay ribbons and odd little aprons, fanciful hats, and a great abun dance of flowing, enrly brown hair. A pretty little girl to look upon, I have questioned to myself whether the prettiness was all outside. A little chance one day showed me. Back of the honse where I live, just round the corner from Nellie's home, there live two more children. They are brother and sister also, bnt not so for tunate as Nellie and her brother that s, they have not so many pretty things about them. They wear old and faded clothes, roll old hoops from barrels, or amuse themselves with bits of sticks and blocks or anything they can pick np in their scanty yard Neither tree nor shrub grows in the narrow place round their home; no flowers or green things whatever. Tet all day long they play, happy and con tented, with what they have. Nellie went flying past the other day. ribbons and curls streaming, with two great bunches of red berries swinging in her hand. How wistfully the nonr little French children looked at those red berries ! I could see how much they wished they had some. Nellie saw toe. I knew the rapid glance she took time to cast upon the other children showed her the eager longing upon their soiled but bright faces. Would she care? I watched her now attentively to see what was the inner adorning she wore. While 1 was still looking and thiuk- mg, back rushed the little girl, her cheeks almost as red as the pretty things she held in her hands, her little slippers hardly touching tbe walk, and as she came opposite tbe small house she again turned her large gray eyes with a very searching look at the children in the door. She did not stop, but I saw an earnest, benevolent look upon her sweet face that drove away the little bitter thought I was entertaining of her. Still she held close to her pretty berries. I had dropped the matter from my mind after a few moments ; the little French children were out of sight when softly Nellie came back round the cor ner, past the high board fence at the end of which tbe small bouse stands ; and stepping along with a slow, light step, she dropped both bnnches of ber ries close to the open door, and without waiting to see them picked np, rushed away. It was a very little thing, bnt it showed me that Nullie had a pitying spot in her little heart I hope to see more of her. Children's Hour. Tbe Legend ! the Felt Hat. There are is a legend among the hat ters that felt was invented by no less a personage than St Clement, the patron saint of their trade. Wishing to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Sepulchre, and at the same time to do penance for sundry nnexpiated peccadilloes, the pions monk started on his journey afoot As to whether he was afflicted with corns or kindred miseries, the ancient chronicle from which this information is derived is silent ; but at all events, a few days' successive tramping soon began to blister his feet In order to obtain relief, it occurred to him to line his shoes with the far of a rabbit This he did, and on arriving at his destina tion, was surprised to find that the warmth and moisture of his feet had worked the soft hair into a cloth-like mass. The idea thus suggested he elaborated in the solitude of his cell, and finally, there being no patent laws in existence in those days, he gratuit ously presented to his fellow mortals the result of his genius in the shape of felt hat varieties. "Throwing mad" may miss the ob ject, bat always defiles the thrower. Never desert a friend. Ton may some day get yonr deserts for so doing. Ton will not anger a man so mnch by showing that yon hate him as by ex pressing a contempt of him. The wife of a New TofY clergyman receives all the marriage fees paid her husband, as her allowance for pin money. The manufacture of wrapping paper from rice straw is now successfully carried on at a new factory in Savannah. Swiss Silk is reported to be super ceding that manufactured by France and England as the beet marketable quality. Two blast furnaces recently put into operation in California, will, it is said, supply the entire Pacific coast demand for pig iron. Commanding officers of British naval vessels are no longer permitted to per form the marriage ceremony on board their vessels. The following question is respectfully addressed to the clergy : "Whether a person who sits in the gallery of the church is responsible for deeds done in the body?" It is pronounced an ominous sisrn when a man who has been married scarcely twelve months begins to be tray an abnormal interest in the causes of lock-jaw. An amateur farmer wonders "why on all this fair earth the ground is spread bottom side np, so that it must be turned over with a plow before crops can be raised." An ancient vagabond was arrested bv the police in Paris, recently, who iu subsequently ascertained to be a nephew of Danton, the notorious leader in the first t rench revolution. Corn meal, heated and placed in ban. is recommended as a substitute for hot water bottles and snch like appliances, for restoring warmth to the sick. It is said to weigh less, retain heat longer, and does not chill when cold. The area of land known to be rich in gold deposits in Colorado is about 7,200 square miles, lying in various parts of the Territoryf on both sides of the main range. There can be hardly a doubt but that this extent will be largely in creased in coming years, for new dis coveries are constantly being made upon the foothills and plains. There is said to be a single arsenio mine in Cornwall, the monthly product of which is sufficient to destroy the Uvea of five hundred millions of human beings ; while, if the amount of white arsenic contained in the adjacent store houses were judiciously administered, in suitable doses, to every living crea ture, this globe of ours wonld be com pletely depopulated. Miss Kate Fields has been writing some of her lively letters to the Tribune this time from Spain. "Madrid,' she says, "goes to bed at eight A. 51., breakfasts at one P. M., takes a siesta before going to the bull-fight at four, drives afterward, dines at seven, and later begins business. There are those abject enough to retire at night and rise in the morning. They are shop keepers and secretaries of legation pos sessed of conscience. Conscience emu lates the lark. It rises early." A traveler writing of his Oriental ex periences, says : "One of the most pathetic instances of pure Orientalism that ever came to my knowledge is re lated as a positive fact While the children of the Abeih school were play ing together one day at recess, two small girls fell into pleasant dispute as to the size of a certain object play thing, perhaps. One said, "Oh, it was so very little !" and the other asked, 'How little?' Then the missionary looked out of the window, and heard her answer. "Why, a little wee thing.' Then the other pressed her still further, 'Well, how little ?' to which the girl replied, unconscious of the poetry or the pathos of her comparison, 'As little as was the joy of my father on the day I was born !" "I tell yon," says "Old Cabinet," in Scribner's, "when a man who has been surrounded with pure influences I do not mean with austerity or fanaticism, from which he would be likely to suffer reaction when a man who has breathed no atmosphere bnt that of moderation and decorum looks back upon his own life, and trembles at his hundred hair breadth 'scapes from nttvr rut; , of one kind or another, he cannot help won dering what keep the unprotected classes from going altogether and ut terly to the bail. It was one of the best saints ont of the calendar who declared himself competent to commit any crime under the sun of which he had ever heard, and what it is that keeps the average sinner from going straight through tbe criminal list it is hard to telL" A new religious sect has recently sprang up into existence in Bussia, and in a marvellously short time hatl gath ered hundreds of converts. The fair sectarians for with one exception they were all of one sex dwelt in the Rus sian town of Porchov, and were named Seraphinovski, from their founder and teacher. Father Seraphinaa. Their creed was implicit bebef in their rever end leader ; their practice consisted in catting off the hair. Women were eon verted into crowds, and soon there would have been little or no long hair left in Porchov, when the police were moved to inquire into the subject They discovered that Father Seraphinaa had a brother who dealt in coiffures, and that monk and barber united to drive a very pretty trade in the tresses sacrificed by the devotees. The seraphio doctor now lies in prison, with leisure to med itate on the disadvantage of combining religion and business. The following explanation is given of the origin of the word "filibuster." Tbe river Yly, in Holland, is said to have furnished the name flyboat, in English in Spanish, Jiibote, or by softening the first syllable, filiboteXo a sort of small fast sailing vessel of about 100 tons burthen, which in the seventeenth century were held in high estimation, on acconnt of their fast sailing quali ties. The buccaneers of the West In dies, who began their depredations on Spanish commerce in mere row-boats, as they acquired the means of a more formidable outfit selected these craft aa best suited to their purpose. Hence they became known in French as JilU bustiers, aad in Spanish as filibusters, an appellation gradually extended in those languages to any kind of pirates. By a still more extended meaning in the United States this term has come to be applied to designate any military enter prise set on foot and prosecuted against tbe government of any State or country where no war exists, by mere adventur ers seeking to overthrow snch govern ment and destroy the domestio insti tutions of its people for the enrichment of the adventurers themselves.