B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THB UNION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. M1TFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., APRIL 29, 1874. NO. 17. AT PEACE. BT WlIJJAJf WTXTEB. Green trees, and quiet fields, and (onset light V.t'-i li3!y silence, save for rippling leares. And b.rdi that twitter of the coming night OiUm j their mates, beneath mj cottage leaves These Fate hath granted for a little space Tj be companions of my pilgrimage. Tiling my grateful heart with Nature's grace, IL Sot nuremembered here the garish stags. Nor the wild city's uproar, nor the race, Fcr gain and power in which we all engage; But here remembered dimly, in a dream. As something fretful that has ceased to fret Here, where time lapses like a gentle stream, IliJ in the woodland's heart, and I forget To note its music and its silver gleam. ra. Cut never, never let me cease to know, O whispering woods and daisy-sprinkled grass. The beauty and the peace that yon bestow, When the wild fevers of ambition paws. And the worn spirit, in its gloom and grief. Sinks on your bosom aud there finds relief, Galaxy. ZMifscellanj-. r.N-tamitnquat iath'n I'mbrella. An African chief's umbrella is no con temptible thing, though to any accus tomed to the arms and impediments of civilized warfare there is something al most grotesque in the information con tained in a recent telegraph front the Gold Coast, to the effect that the pres ence of the old chief, Essamanquatiah, "whose umbrella was captured, "proved that serious work was intended. An other of the war telegrams states: "We also captured two sheep, some chick ens, and Essamanquatiah's umbrella." Apart from its prodigious size, the loss of a chief's umbrella in battle more than equals the loss of the standard of a European commander. Some of these African chiefs' umbrellas are of prodigious dimensions no less than 25 feet in diameter, 12 feet 6 inches in the ribs ! The latter are made of lance wood, and the covering is of gorgeously colored chintz in varied sections of crimson, yellow and bine. It is opened by means of pulleys and ropes attached to the "runner," and this unique para chute takes three or four men to open it. The pole or handle is of birch, about 14 or 16 feet high. Those used by the King are made of rich damask, and edged with golden fringe; while others are made of varied colored silks one of these delicate "sunshades" cost ing, perhaps, 25gs. or 30gs. Should the King wish to indulge in a "family picnic" his "gingham" could accom modate beneath its shade between 100 and 2)1 of his little household, and every occupant would be well sheltered within the golden fringe of his royal parachute. Some time before the out break of the war one of these umbrel las, munufac Lured at Bristol for ship ment to the Gold Coast, was erected in the large open space in front of Messrs. Furzel's sugar refinery, for the purpose of Boeing how many it would actually accommodate in case of a "shower." It was raised in the workmen's dinner hour.and the number of men who stowed themselves away beneath its ample cov ering wai fully 23). Memory of Fares. When a man has the winter's faculty of recollecting faces, and with it a quick and retentive memory of small la:ts, the continuation gives him great social power. This was Macaulay s case. He never forgot the face of a man whom he had met in society, and with the face be remembered all" the salient facts connected with the ownerof it. Few things are mora flattering to an ordi nary moital than being thorocghly re membered by a great lion with whom he has perhaps had a brief interview several years before. I donbt if this faculty exisU to any great extent among our public men; indeed, I have often been surprised at the absence of it. A Russian baron of the true divine-right fchool once maintained to me that this was an effect of republican institutions, or, what came to the same thing, that the opposite was the result of monar chical institutions. He said that king and princes were obliged to see a great many persons, wherefore Providence had conferred on them various means of being gracious to those persons, of which prompt recognition was one, Oatary. H urning the Dead. The sentiment in favor of bnrning the dead seems to be growing in Eu rope. A society has been formed at Hamburg, the members of which are pledged to dispose of deceased mem bers in this manner. Another in Zu rich, called La Sjciete de la Mori, has a similar object. The distinguished surgeon, Sir Henry Thompson, in late number of the Contemporary Jicview, discusses with force, clearness and spirit, the question of cremation of the dead. The British Medical Journal suggests the formation of a "Society of Increma tors" to carry out his ideas, and adds in support of the notion, "If a few hun dred men of notable character, ability and respectability, were to agree to commit their bodies to the flames after death.and make suitable arrangements, they might probably soon be imitated by many more thousands, and so the foul practice of committing rotting body to the graund.there to poison the soil which it encumbers, would be re placed by the more reasonable and cleanly reduction of the body to ashes by the speedy ageicv of the flame, Beaaty. A clever writer says "Providence meant women to make the world beau tiful as much as flowers and butter flie,and their is no sin iu tasteful dress but only in devoting to it too much monevor too much time.' 1 Ins is a most sensible view, and is the true ground of mediuniship between the one extreme of straight and rigid sim plicity and devotion of the best ener gies of a lifetime to vanity and tn rolitv. But, after all, what is this rage for dres but an effort after the beauti ful I The reason why the beautiful is notalwavs the result is because bo manv women are iguorant or merely imitative. They have no sense of fit ness: the short wear what belongs to the tall, and brunettes sacribee their natural beauty to look like blondes. That which is inappropriate is uever beautiful, no matter how fashionable, but who does not know some woman whose taste and training are so per fect that fashion becomes to her a means tf grace insteadof a despot so that even the worst of fashions seems to them but a chain of roses. How numerous noover any man's ill qualities are. it is just that he should have doe praise for his few real virtues. rORK-TOSC TED. "Harry I" she gasped, in a strange, harsh, cracked voice : and. aa T mttrtA and looked up from my work, there was my wife coming towards me, with her arms stretched out, her eyes fixed, and horrible, ghastly look upon her white face, that made me drop my spade and ran to meet her. I caught her just as she was falling, when her eyes closed and she gave a shiver that seemed to snake ner whole body. This was soon alter we had settled ont in the nn eountrv. and thara only another but Here and there in those days; but, after years of knocking "' uumo. trying to get an Honest living and never succeeding, we had to make our minds to try Australia, and here we were, living in a log hut I had knocked np for myself, shepherding, and doing what little I could in the shape of gardening ; for that being my right trade, with all the beautiful rich soil lying fallow, it did seem a sin to me not to have a turn at it ; so, getting what seeds I could from Sydney, and adding to the few I had in my chest, I managed to make quite a little Eden of the bit of land I broke up around our hut. We were not saving money, not to any extent, but there was a roof over onr heads, and no rent to pay, lots of vegetables of our own planting, and not costing anything, plenty of pork to do, and, one sort and another, always plenty to eat; so that after what we had gone through in England, you may be sure we were willing to put up with such in conveniences as fell to our share, and as a matter of course, there were things to encounter out there in what some people wonld call a wilderness, though it was a wilderness that blossomed like a rose. There were times when we were in dread of the blacks, who had some very queer things here and there about; then the place was terribly lonely and ont of the way if you wanted the doctor; and Mary used to joke me because I never could get a pint of beer, but I found I could get on just as well with out it, and, my word, what a capital cup of tea we had out there. Well, Mary came out to me that day looking horribly ghastly that, being naturally too fast at fancying troubles in advance, I taw directly half a score of blacks coming to spear us, and some of them knocking out the children's brains with their clubs and not the first time either, but in a few moments the poor girl opened her eyes, and be gan to stare about her. There were no blacks to be Been. Little Joe was sit ting in the path playing, and, though I looked along the edge of the wood be hind the house. I could see no signs of danger ; so I began to Bee she must have been taken ill, and turned over in my own mind how I should get and help for her. Just then her face grew contracted again as her thoughts seemed to go back, and gasping once more, "Harry, Harry," she gave another shudder, and said, "the baby a snake 1" I could not see myself, but I know I turned pale, all the blood seeming to rush to my heart, for if there is any thing of which I am afraid it is a snake, even going so far as to dislike eels, of which there were plenty in the river, close at hand. I don't know how we got there, but the next thing I remember is standing at the hut window, with Mary holdicg little Joe tight in her arms, and me looking through at the cradle where onr little thing of nine months old was lying ; sad my heart seemed to be turning to ice as I saw nestled in the foot of the cradle, partly hidden in the blanket, but with some of its horrible coils in full sight, and its head resting upon them, the largest snake I had seen since I had been in the country. The feeling was something awful, and 1 stood there for a few moments leaning upon the ronnd handle of the hoe I had caught up not able to move, for my eyes were fixed upon the head of that hideous bc-ast, and I expected every moment that the baby would wake and make some movement sufficient to irri tate the snake, and then I felt that the little thing must die. What should I do ? I asked myself as the horrible feeling of helplessness were off. If I crept in and reached the cradle side unheard, I dared not chop at the beast for fear of injuring the child, for I could see that some of the folds lay right across it I dared not make a noise, less the next moment the child should wake as well as the rep tile, for I knew the rapidity with which the reptiles could wreathe fold after fold around the object they attacked ; while if of a poisonous nature, they strike in an instant Thoughts came swiftly enough, bnt they were unavail ing, for to wait till the baby woke, or to go in and attack the snake, seemed equally dangerous. .Even if I made a slight noise the danger seemed as great, since, though the snake might wake first and glide off, the probabilities were just as great that the child might wake at the same time. And so I turned over the chances again and again, my eyes all the while fixed upon the two sleeping occupants of the cradle, whose pleasant warmth had evidently attracted the reptile, "I went in and saw it there," whis pered my wife, and, then, without taking my eyes for an instant from the snake, I whispered the one word "Gun," and she glided from my side. I did not know then, but she told me afterwards, how she had carried the little boy to a distance and given him some flowers to play with, while she crept back to the hut snd reaching in at the kitchen window, brought me my gun. for I had not stirred. And now, as I grasped the piece in my hand, knowing as I did that it was loaded, it seemed of no use, for I dare not fire ; but with trembling hands, I felt in my pockets to see if there was a bullet in them, and then softly pulling out the ramrod, I unscrewed the cover of the worm, drew the wadJing, reversed the piece and let the shot fall pattering out, when I softly forced down the bullet upon the powder, examined the cap and stood ready waiting for a chance ; for I thought that the shot might have scat tered, and if ever so little might have injured the child instead of its enemy. And there we stood for quite half an hour, watching intently tuat horrible beast completely nestled in the blanket, expecting momentarily that the baby would awake, while my hand trembled so that I could not hold the gun steady. One minute I was thinking that I had done wrong in changing the charge, the next minute that I was right then I fancied the gun might miss fare, or that I might slay my own child. A hundred horrible thoughts entered my mind before little Joe began to cry out to his mother, and she glided away whi e I muttered to myself, "Thank Heaven I for she was spared from seeing what followed. . . As if at one and the same moment the child and the snake woke up. I saw the baby's hand move, and its little arms throwa oat, while from the motion beneath the blanket I knew that it must have kicked a little. Then there was a rapid movement in the cradle, and as I glanced along the gun barrel, taking aim, there was the whole of the horrible reptile exposed to view, coil gliding on coii, as it seemed to nn tne wnoie cra dle ; had my gun been charged with shot I should have fired, so as to have disabled some parts of its body ; but with only a single bullet, I felt that the nead mnst be the part attacked when opportunity offered. Glide, glide, glide, one coil over anotner quickly and easily, as it were untying its knotted body, while now the head elowlv rose from where it had been lying, and crept nearer and nearer to tne cnild s lace, the forked tongue darting in and ont sod playing rapidly on either aide of its hideous mouth. I could see the glance of the snake's eyes, snd expected every moment to hear the little one shriek in terror, as the low ered head rested over her breast But no, the child lav perfectly still for a few minutes, and then I stood trembling in every limb as I ssw the snake's head drawn back, and then begin to sway to and fro, and from side to side, the glis tening neck of the beast gently undu lating whilst the tongue still darted in and oat of the dreadful-looking mouth. Now was the time when I should have fired but I was too unnerved 1 and laying down my gun, I seized my hoe, meaning to attack the beast with its stout handle ; but my hand fell paralyzed at my side aa I saw the little one in the cradle smile and laugh at the gently undulat ing head of the snake ; while, as the agony grew to be greater than I could bear, in seeing the little white hands try to catch at it aa it swsyed to and fro, my powers seemed to come back. I snatched up the gun, and as the snake's head was drawn back prepara tory to striking, I pulled the trigger, when the sharp crack of the peroussion cap alone followed perhaps providen tially, for in my trembling state I might have injured the child. Then I saw a rapid wreathing of the coils in the cra dle, and as the tail of the snake glided over the aide, everything around me seemed to swim, and I tried to catch at the wall of the hut to save myself from falling. But that soon went off, and gazing in at the window, I tried to make out the whereabouts of my enemy, as I recapped and tapped the gun, so that the powder might ran np the nipple. The snake was nowhere to be seen. and darting in I seized the child, and carried it out to its mother, when, now feeling relieved of one horrible calamity, I obtained my shot pouch from the kitchen, rammed down a charge upon the bullet, and cautiously went in search of the reptile. I knew he must still be in the part of the hut we used for a sleeping place, and after cautiously peering about, I came upon the hole where it had taken refuge an opening between the roughly-sawn planks laid loosely down to form a floor ; while, unless there was an outlet beneath the woodwork, I felt that the beast must be there ; and to make it more probable, there was our cat that we had bought a kitten in Sydney, gazing with staring eyes down at the hole. Jut then I heard a soft rustling be neath my feet snd as I looked down, I could see between the two boards the scaly body gliding along. The next moment there came tne loud report ol the gun, the place was full of smoke, there was a loud scuffling noise, and as 1 looked down between the boards where the charge had forced a passage through, there was no sign of the snake. "Harry, Harry 1" shrieked my wife just tt hen ; and on rushing out there was tne beast writhing about in tne path, evidently badly wounded, while some crushed down flowers by the hut wall showed plainly the pole of commu nication. I never saw snake writhe and twist as that creature did, but I was too excited then to feel afraid, and a few blows from the butt-end of my gun laid it so that there was only a little move ment left in its body, which did not stop for an hcur or two after I had cut off its head with an axe, I should have liked to skin the boast, but I could not master my horror. 1 measured it though ; fourteen feet three inches long it was, snd as thick as my arm ; while as to its weight I saw the cradle rock to and fro heavily as it glided over the side. Snakes are scarce now in these parts ; for there isn't a man in Queensland thai does not wsge war against them, and where there was one settler then, there are scores now. Cattell'i Magazine. The Clepsydra 1st Renae. It is not very often in these progres sive days that we find the ancient methods of measuring time in actual employment The sun dial, it is true, occasionally serves as an ornament to some country lawn, but little depen dence is placed on its slowly creeping shadows. The honr glass has disap peared from the pulpits of parsons; for twenty minute sermons, instead of many-headed dissertations prolonged through hours, are now sufficient for the spiritual needs of their flocks. The divided candle exists only in history, and is linked with the story of good King Alfred. But the water clock re mains; not in this country, to be sure, but where it was used a thousand years ago. Julius, Csesar, tradition tells us, found by its aid that the summer nights in Britain are not the same length as those in Italy. Cicero relates that the length of speeches made by Senators was regulated by clepsydrae sept in the Senate Chamber; and the same parlia mentary practice, which now holds in our own parliamentary halls, of a mem ber yielding the floor for a certain num ber of minutes of his time to another speaker then existed, for a grave Sena tor often gave so much of the water as remained in his clepsydra to a colleague who was thus enabled to obtain a lon ger or an extra water time for his speech than would have been otherwise at his command. If a legislator in those days, however, was interrupted by ab surd questions something after the fashion which occasionally appear when our learned representatives in dulge in discussions on patents or was embarrassed by the somnolent habits of his associates during a long-winded speech, he did not ask permission to have the latter printed and distributed at the country's expense, but simply stopped the flow both of his water clock and his rhetoric, and calmly waited till the house became ready to listen to his further remarks. The clepsydra of antiquity, in fact, while really a very useful and ingenious invention, of course was very crude in form, and of not of very nice construction. The clock stands in a pond in the Pincio, the latter being a very elegant public park, located on the summit of the Pin cian Hill, one of the famous seven emi nences on which Borne is built The grounds are a favorite resort for the people, and serve the same purpose to the city that Central Park or Fair mount Park does to New York or Phil adelphia. The apparatus, in its present form, is the invention of Padre Embriaco, a Do minican monk, and from the pages of Vllhixlrazionr, a new illustrated weekly published in Home a significant fact, by the way, of the influence toward pro gress exerted by the new regime in Italy we take the following brief descrip tion: The water is led by pipes to a reser voir in which a constant level is main tained, and from an orifice iu which the stream escapes into a receptacle divided into two compartments. iielow tne hitter is an arrangement in the form of an anchor, the curved portion of the latter serving as a rocker on which the divided receptacle vibrates. 1 his oscil lation takes place under the entering stream; so that when one compartment is carried down by the weight of water within, the second is raised to receive its supply. A pendulum, beating sec onds, is suspended from two springs. parallel to and equidistant from the resting point of the rocker, and reeu lates the movement of the receiver. The springs are prolonged in the direction of tangents to the curve of the anchor arms and maintain the pendulum in motion with a constant force, so that each oscillation of the latter corres ponds to one of the rocker and of the receiver. The water from the latter falls upon balanced mechanism, which is so constructed as to oscillate every second minute, and to transmit motion to a suitable train of wheels, which move the hands upon one or more dials in the usual way. The sounding apparatus consists in a cylindrical reservoir, which is suspended by chains to the axis of a wheel and is arranged to empty itself every fifteen minutes. Its weight turns the wheel, and thus sounds the hours and the quarters. Water is carried to the res ervoir when empty, by a simple siphon arrangement. The case of the clock is of cast iron, made in a handsome rustic design, in excellent keeping with the general sur roundings. e should imagine our in ventors could easily devise a simple form of similar apparatus, which, mounted in some appropriate casting from the iron founders who make that class of work a specialty, would form an elegant and useful ornament to either private or public pleasure grounds. Depth of Lake Champlala. The United States Coast Survey of that portion of Lake Champlain lying between Burlington Harbor and Bonse's Point is now completed. The results of this work are embodied in three elegant lithographed charts, a set of which has recently been forwarded to the Trustees of the Plattaburgh Academy. One of the most striking and to citizens of Plattsburgh inter esting features of this survey is the de termining of the depth ot water in Cumberland Bay. Inside of a line drawn from the point of Cumberland Head to Crab Island, and thence direct to the main land, the greatest depth is less than 60 feet, and at no point for two miles south of Plattsburgh dock is a greater depth than 20 feet found, at a distance of 80 rods from the shore. The greatest depth between the dock and breakwater is 13 feet; in the vicin ity of the Oakes Ames slip it is 9 feet, while inside a line drawn from that point across to the Nichols' place on the "Point" the depth is only from lj to 3 feet Dredgings around the mar gin of the bay reveal the fact that there are immense deposits of sawdust mixed with fine white sand, and this is un questionably the main cause of the gradual reduction in the depth of water, which we know is constantly going on. Very near the east shore of Cumberland Head the depth of water increases abruptly, .showing a deep channel between the main land and South Hero the deepest soundings being 193 feet, about midway and on a line from "Wilcox Cove" on the Island to "Gravelly Point" on the main land, while in a direct line from the Cumber land Head liht-house to Gordon's dock, the depth for four-fifths of the distance is 1G2 feet From the south end of Isle La Motte to Rouse's Point the deepest place is 67 feet between "Horse Shoe Shag" and east side of Isle La Motte, and the greatest depth between "Catfish Point" and Fort Montgomery is 23 feet just north of the railroad bridge and a short distance east of "Old House's Point" about one-fourth of the distance across. The deepest soundings in the "Broad Lake" seems to be 333 feet ' several points opposite Burlington and near Colches ter Reef, just south of the light-house. Offlremblean Point the water sinks abruptly to a depth of from 65 to 122 feet, and very near Port Kent dock a depth of over 100 feet was found. The shallowest sounding near the southwest point of Valcour Island is given as 31 feet It was in this vicinity that the "Royal Savage" was sunk almost a cen tury ago, and the impression has pre vailed that the water here was much shallower. These charts embody a great amount of usefal information. Lacustrine Dwellings la Ger many. The remains of ancient habitations raised on poles are of rare occurrence in Germany, and hence the discovery last year of the debris of such structures in the bed of the river Elster, near Leipsic, awakened a lively interest. The dis covery was made by Ilerr Jentzch, of the Geological Institute of Austria. The order of the visible strata at this point is as follows: At the base is found a hirer of sandstone, on this a lacus trine clay. Both of tliese belong to the upper portions of the quarternary rock. In the clay are two beds containing the remains of plants, and among these are found leaves of the willow and oak. fruit of the .doer, and sundry other veg etal fragments. Above these occurs a layer of roots some inches in depth, which shows that the surface of the soil remained at this level for a considerable period. The upiwrmost layer, two to three metres thick, was produced by an inundation. The piles discovered by Jentzsch in the bed of the Elster are set in the clay and covered over with this silt Tliey are arranged in circles, with their lower ends pointed, and their upper extremities connected by horizon tal ties of oak. Among the animal re mains found here are the lower jaw of an ox, with its teeth, stags' heads, the lone bones of some mammal yet unde termined, and shells of the unto and anonda. No traces of human remains have been found, though fragments of pottery and charcoal are met with; also, two stone hatchets. A lady ws wishing she had some t'ling to read that would be new to her. "Take vour Bible, mother." said her daughter. Proverbs anel Mottoes of Shaltsv- peare. There is no virtue like necessity. Courage mounteth with occasion. He tires betimes, that spurs too fast betimes. Small showers last long, but sudden storms are short With eager feeding, food doth choke the feeder. Though death be poor, it ends a mor tal woe. The ripest fruit falls first Out of this nettle danger, we pluck the flower safety. No word like "pardon," for kings months so meet Tell truth and shame the devil. Oxen at a stall are better cherished, still the nearer death. Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown. A man can die bat once, we owe God a death. He that dies this year is quiet for the next The first bringer of unwelcome news hath but a losing office. Grief is proud and makes his owner stoop. j When law can do no right, let it be j lawful that law bar no wrong- Oft the sight of means to do ill deeds makes ill deeds done. Most subject is the fattest soil to weeds. Wise hearing or ignorant carriage is caught, as men take diseases, one of another ; therefore let men take heed of their company. How ill white hairs become a fool and jester. There is some soul of goodness in things evil, would men observing distil it out Nice customs curt'sey to great kings. A crafty knsve does need no broker. Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just It is a great sin to swear unto a sin, but greater sin to keep a sinful oath. The thief doth fear each bush an officer. The bird that hath been limed in a busb, with trembling wings misdoubteth every bush. Small herbs have grace, great weeds do grow apace. Two may keep counsel, putting one away. What must be shall be. He that is robbed, not wanting what is stolen, let him not know't, and he's not robbed at all. They laugh that win. Rich gifts wax poor when givers prove unkind. A knavish speech sleeps in a foolkh ear. Who covers faults, at last with shame derides. Anger hath a license. Love reasons without reason. Yon cannot make gross sins look clear. To revenge is no valor, bnt to bear. He's truly valiant that can wisely suffer. The learned pate ducks to the golden ' rooL When beggars die there are no comets seen. Cowards die many times before their deaths ; the valiant never taste of death but once. As fire drives out fire, so pity, pity. The evil that men do, lives after them, the good is oft interred with their bones. Some that smile have in'their hearts millions of mischief. There are no tricks in plain and sim ple faith. There's beggary in the love that can be reckoned. Every time serves for the matter that is then born in it Some innocents escape not the thun derbolt Tis better playing with a lion's whelp than with an old one dying. He that will have a cake out of the wheat, must needs tarry the grinding. In the reproof of chance Lea the true proof of men. 'Tis mad idolatry to make the service greater than the God. The amity that wisdom knits not, folly may easily untie. He that is proud eats up himself. Fear makes devils of cherubims. To fear the worst oft cures the worst To be wise and love exceeds man's might Perseverance keeps honor bright One touch of nature makes the whole world kin. Those wounds heal ill that men do give themselves. The end crowns J1. Thanks, to men of noble minds, is honorable meed. The raven doth not hatch a lark. Few love to hear the sins they love to act Tis time to fear when tyrants seem to kiss. Home-keeping youths have ever homely wits. They do not love that do not show their love. Truth hath better deeds than words to grace it Timd is the nurse and breeder of all good. Use doth breed a habit iu a man. Sometimes we are devils to ourselves. Sancho To be Carried In Yonr Pocket. Keep good company or none. Never be idle. If yonr hand cannot be use fully employed, attend to the cultivation of your mind. Always speak the truth. Make few promises. Live up to your engagements. Keep yonr own secrets, if you have any. When you speak to a person look him in the face. Good company and good conversation are the very sinews of virtue. Good character is above all things else. Your character cannot be essentially injured, except by your own acts. If any one speaks evil of you, let yonr life be snch that no one will believe him. Drink no kind of intoxicating liquors. Ever live (mis fortune excepted) within your income. When you retire to bed, think over what yon have been doing during the day. Make no haste to be rich, if you would prosper. Small and steady gains give competency, with tranquility of mind. Never play at any game of chance. Avoid temptation through the fear you may not withstand it Earn money before yon spend it Never run into debt unless you can see your way to get out of it N ever borrow if you can pos sibly avoid it Da not marry nntil you are able to support a wife. Never speak evil of anv one. Ba iust before you are generous. Keep yourself innocent, if ; yon would be nappy, save wnen you are young, that you may spend when yon are old. Read over the above mtTima at least once a week. Every man mnst be alone in the world. No heart was ever cast in the same mold as that which we bear within Animal nitrations. A correspondent of the Popular Sci ence Monthly, writing from Colorado, says that grasshoppers (locusts) migrate solely on account of an enemy a dip terous insect much resembling the house fly, but larger, quicker and gray ish in color, owing to the white hairs at the edges of the articulations. This in sect deposits its eggs in the upper p.-rt of the locust's abdomen, when the lat ter is resting on the ground, as it can not do so when flying. Its favorite moment of attack is just as the locust alights from a flight or a hop. In a few days the larva or maggot is about a quarter ot an inch in length. Soon the locust dies, when the larva eats its way out and burrows in the ground for transformation. Sometimes four of these larva; will be found in one locust I first noticed this in the summer of 1871. In 1872, when a flight of locusts began to arrive, the fly destroyed nearly all that came during the first two weeks or until cool nights seemed to stop its multiplication. In 1873 1 had an un usually fine opportunity to observe the locusts as they hatched in incredible numbers upou my farm and devoured my crops. During the whole summer the fly left the locusts no quiet, but drove them to most desperate straits to avoid the attacks; so that as soon as the locusts acquired wings they flew away that is, what were left of them, for I estimate that not one 'in fifty es caped death. In places where the irri gating ditches prevented them from crawling forward, they were piled two and three inches deep. The ground during the cool of the day would be dotted with white maggots crawling off to find burrows. The locusts did not leave on account of famine, for there were ample fields of grain and other crops untouched; and they would some times abandon a field when only slightly eaten, .besides. I nave seen the swarm floating all day in the air when still, and constantly alighting and arising, as hunger impelled from above, or the fly from belo. I do not find this fly men tioned in Tenney's work on "Entomol ogy." If comparatively new, there is hope that it will work the destruction of the locusts. I also believe the latter can b readily destroyed by the com bined efforts of man, as they hatch in exceedingly small areas. The prairie dog ( Cynmnes ludovicianus) is migratory, although it moves slowly, accomplishing hardly more than half a mile a year. Apparently, their object is to obtain fresh food, for they eat root and branch as they go. The leaders are, invariably, the young, who are constantly driven out by their more mature and powerful brethren. Their vacated holes are occupied by owls and rattle snakes, but whether these prove enemies or not I do not know. I strongly suspect that the cause of migration in the lemmings is the para sites which infest their bodies. These, after a few years, increase to such num bers as to be unendurable; then the lemmings set out and are never knwn to return until they have overcome tneir enemies in me uirhi. Ancient Athenians. The Athenians of old were a light and fickle people, constantly seeking after new things, and soon tired of the old, and much disposed to make novelty.the standard of merit A winning cause, in their eyes, seemed generally a just cause which very highly commended itself to Athenian favor. And this was never more the case than at the time when the power of Philip seemed broad ening to imperial dimensions, and all efforts to check him vain. So we can easily imagine how strong a feeling there was at Athens, after the defeat of Cbseronea, in favor of abandoning dead issues, overcoming all prejudices, and learning that broad national patriotism which, flinging to the winds the tradi tions and sentiments of the past, would merge Athenian, Theban, Spartan au tonomy into one grand Greek empire. But though neither patriotism, pride, love of liberty, nor wisdom was left to the Athenians, one virtue they still had reverence for their forefathers and love for their memory. And they had, more over, among them one man in whose breast the flame of trne patriotism and love of liberty burned as brightly as it ever had done in the days of Miltiades; and he dated,in words that have echoed down to our own times, to tell his coun trymen the truth. He told them that success was no measure of justice; that there was something greater than suc cess, and that was Duty. He told them that they had done right in fighting for their freedom, though their dead cov ered the fatal field of Cbsronea, and the shadow of the Macedonian sarissa already lay black over the Acropolis. "No," cried he, in that fiery burst that thrills us to this day, "you did not err you did not err, Athenians, in taking this great hazard for the liberty of yonr country no, I swear it by those who fell at Marathon " Power of Prejudice. A gentleman was one day stoutly asserting that there were no gold fields except in Mexico and Peru. A nugget dug up in California, was presented to him as evidence against his positive assertion. He was not in the least dis concerted. "This metal, sir, I own, is extremely like gold; and, yon tell me, that it passes as such in the market, having been declared by the assayers to be indistinguishable from the precious metal. All this 1 will not dispute. Nevertheless, the metal is not gold, bnt auruminium; it cannot be gol d , because gold comes only from Mexico and Peru." In vain was he informed that the geological formation was similar in California and Peru, and the metals similar; he had fixed fn his mind the conclusion that gold existed only in Mexico and Pern; this was a law of na ture he had no reason to give why it should be so, bnt such had been the admitted fact for many years, and from it he could not swerve. Keep the Children Warm. Dr. Brown-Sequard, in a lecture at Boston the other night said: "The application of heat to children is ex ceedingly useful to help their develop ment. If the air they breathe is cool, and heat is applied to their limbs, but not so much to the body, they certainly grow faster. There is no question that in northern climes, children who are not well clad, and are not well cared for, in regard to the heat surrounding their body, do not grow so well as child ren who are submitted to the influence of heat There is one thing which in this country especially is most hurtful an(1 dangerous, and that is heat applied to the lungs. It is perfectly well known that the mortality of children in this country is enormous in the summer months, and that chiefly through the in fluence of heat on the lungs and on the belly. Digestion and respiration are disturbed, and death comes, as yon know too frequently. More care could easily be obtained in that respect" Youths Column. Ths Dog asd thi Bkkf tea. Did you ever hear of a dog that tried his paw at nnrsing? I have a true story for you of one named Plato that, while his mistress was sick, busied himself about almost everything, up stairs and down, as if he thought nothing would be done just right without bis superin tendence. One morning he watched the lady's mother making beef-tea ; he noticed the whole process, from putting the beef into the saucepan to dishing the hot savory soup with slices of toast The meat was given to him, and this part of the proceeding he did not un derstand. He would have been glad to eat it if he had felt satisfied that all was right ; but holding his appetite in con trol, he sat looking at the meat as if considering, and after awhile concluded that the patient would be cheated out of the best part of the affair unless he concerned himself to see that justice was done. With a self-denial worthy of imita tion, ho watched for an opportunity, and as soon as possible carried the beef in his mouth up stairs and into the lady's room. She was asleep ; and jumping on the bed so lightly as not to wake her, he laid the moist ragged morsel on the sheet close to her face. But this was not enough. He thought there was still danger that she might be robbed of it so he stationed himself at the door to bar out intruders. Soon some one tried to enter. "Woof ! woof 1" said Pluto, in such tones of de termination that he woke the lady. She happened to put out her hand, touched the meat and screamed with fright. Pluto was laughed at, but loved the more for his self-denying though mis taken kindness. Ths WbrVs Reorrra. It was on morning early in the spring, a few years ago, that we heard an unusual twitter ing outside our bedroom window, above which is a deep thatch. On looking up. we saw two curious festoons hanging from it. apparently in motion. It was. in fact, two half circles, composed of little wrens clinging to each other by foot and wing, to the number of twenty or thirty. Tney clung together thus for the space of about two minutes. It might be more or less ; for as we did not mark the tlms by a watch, I could not with certainty say now. They twit tered mournfully all the while, so dif ferent to their usual joyous little song, then saddenly, as if by one consent they in a moment broke loose and flew away. On descending shortly after ward we found a dead wren lying just under the window over which these festoons or wrens had been hanging a few minutes before. It looked as if these affectionate little creatures had been singing a dirge over their dead friend below at least we could think of no physical cause for the unusual ap pearance. From that time the wrens deserted that locality for more than two years. On speaking of this to one who had made natural history his study, he told me it was called the '-Wren's re quiem," and was an established fact though very rarely seen. Possibly some one of our older readers may be able to throw light on the subject Masked Poets. L Far-reaching, continued through time or space ; And the part of a wheel in the outmost place. A flat thin fish, that is nearly round : And an animal, chased with horse and hound. IIL Of a thing, the tinniest, smallest bit ; And a row, with one over or under it IV. The musical call of the gentle kine ; And a measure for measuring fabrics fine. V. To believe, or trust, or suppose, or think: And a path o'er a stream, from brink to brink. YL A royal laurel with just three feet ; And a man who works with a goose s hett Six men of our land, of the poet-kind ; Yon must guess off their masks, their names to find. Answer : Long-iellow (felloe) ; Bret Harte; Whit-tier; Low-ell; Trow bridge ; Bay-yard (Bayard) Taylor. Good Advick. A good rule is never to be certain nntil you know, and then stick to it It is told of an uncertain boy, who in school was called upon to do an example upon the black-board. After he had begun, the teacher cried out "No !" and the boy stopped and begun again. After he proceeded a little way, the teacher again exclaimed. "So I and the boy stopped, and was ordered to sit down. Another boy got ' up. He begun, and alter a lew ngures were made, the teacher cried out, "No !" "Yes !" said the boy, and went on and finished the solution. "Why, that's the way I was doing it," whined the first boy to the teacher. "Just so," replied ths teacher, but yon were not certain that you were right Yon never have thoroughly learned your lesson, until you are certain that you have it Unless yon are certain, yon had best go and study it all over again. This is the true way to learn, lie certain of every thing, as far as you go. and then if somebody says "no 1" you can say "yes," and prove that yon are right afterwards. Word Sqcabz. A trench. A territory. A candle. A game. An animal. ITCH Aninier : D I D A H O R S E. T C H APE H E S O K S A Svilk. Nothing on earth can smile but human beings. Gems may flash reflected light hut what is a diamond flash compared with an eye flash ? A face that cinnot smile is like a bud that cannot blossom, and dries up at the stalk. Laughter is day, and sobriety is night and a smile is the twilight that hovers gently between both, and more bewitching than either. Self-renunciation is not surrender flto character, etc, before they are ad will. The will is never so strong as in j miited, and they obligate themselves to giving up, for principle and the common obey all orders of the executive earn weal, self-interest or sensual delight mittee. Any lady wishing an escort has only to apply to the president of the Because fourteen persons said a fifty ! society, naming the evening, and a cent scrip picked np on the floor of a ! yonng man is detailed for the purpose. Detroit horse-car was theirs, the eon- j As soon as a yonng man becomes en due tor coolly settled the matter by put- j gaged he muat withdraw from the or ting the money in his own pocket I ganization. arieties. He who saves in little things can be liberal in great ones. There is no joy like that which springs from a kind act or a pleasant word. True goodness is like the glow-worms it shine most when no eyes except those ot Heaven are upon it There were 4,116,730 bu-hels of salt produced last year in Michigan, being 000,000 more than in the previous one. The Dubuque people, after a good deaj of wrangling, have decided that society has no reason to look down upon a woLaan because she wears mnskrat furs. Experiments are being made by an English railroad company to ascertain whether steel tubes can profitably re place those of copper and brass in loco motives. The reputation of a man is like his shadow; it sometimes follows and some- time8 precedes him; it is sometimes longer and sometimes shorter than his natural size. A Pennsylvania couple lately had the bad taste to be married in a graveyard. This festive incident caused the worst pun we ever heard ; for some wretch said : "But then, you know, it's ceme teriaL" Immaterial, indeed 1 The maximum cost of transporting railway freight last year, between New York and Chicago, was 7 mills per ton per mile. The total cost of moving freight by canal (horse power being used It towage) is 5 mills per tnn per mile. EIv Chanel. EIv dam. London a building cf much historical interest was sold recently by an order of the High Court of Chancery. It brought 5.250, and was bought op behalf of a gentleman who intends to preserve it aa a chapeL During the past ten years, the screw has entirely replaced the paddla in transatlantic navigation, the weight of murine engines has diminished one half, the steam pressure has quadru pled, and the consumption of coal has decreased two thirds. The young ladies who k.ve taken to jumping for prizes will finu it a health ful, if not graceful, exercise ; but they must be careful to avoid the damp ground, or they may be attacked wit 'a the jumping toothache. Screws of all ordinary sizes are now made in England by rolling bars of heated iron between two peculiarly grooved plates. Two boys with one machine are able to make 29 ewt of fish bolts for railways, by this process, in nine hours. The oldest stove, probably, in the United States is that which la still in u-e at the Capitol in Richmond, Ya. It was made in England in 1770, and was 60 ysars in the House of Burgesses in Virginia before it was removed to the Capitol, where it has been for 30 years. The editor of a new paper recently started in Nebraska, gives a very good reason for doing so in his "salutatory," as follows: "The object in view in the establishment of this paper is procuring of means wherewith to buv bread and butter, and good clothes." Such a can did admission probably will not go un rewarded, and the means employed, if properly directed, doubtless will bring forth the object in view. The Rev. Dr. Porteous, in a lecture on humor, tells us that "the ancients knew how to laugh and the benefits of laughing. The world has had so much divinity in the last twenty years that it now wants more wit, more cheerfulness, to give a silver lining to the dark cloud." He thinks that we Amerioana are "saturated with humor and cannot help ourselves ;" but that our wits are not capable of seriousness. The water colors of the present Lon don exhibition consist mainly, accord ins: to the Spectator, of "sunny glimpaaa of green fields and flowery brook aides ; stretches of breezy moorland ; wave washed beaches, and sea-girt cliffs ; re minders, in short, of pleasant summer sojourns or wandering, or generally of lite beyocd brick walls and smoky streets; some freili flower-studies to afford spots of gay color, and a few nicely-painted heads or rustic figures to give variety." The following touching little story is told by a correspondent of the Port Jervis Gazette: "An old hunter told me be once was back in tLe monntains, manyyeara ago, chopping. That day a fawn ran up and lay down terribly frightened at his feet. He grabbed his rille, for he heard the powerful springs of a catamount coming. It was in pur suit of the little fawn at his feet He fired and killed the animal, when the little deer rose, left for the forest He said he never afterwards wanted to shoot a fawn, that one having placed so much confidence in him." Statisticians, relying on figures that never lie, give man one year of mar- ried felicity before he dies, is divorced. or consigned to a lunatic asylum. These not too generous statistical opportuni ties have been grossly and ungallantly neglected. Garrett J. Banta, a middle aged man of New Jersey, married the lady of his choice on Saturday, made his will on the day following, and hung himself on Monday morning, thus inti mating to the world in general and his wife in particular that two days' experi ence of that sort of thing was enough for any able-bodied New Jersey man. Mr. Banta's pedagogue had evidently failed to teach him ordinary politeness. Dr. Nicholas Belleville, the famous French physician who nettled in Tren ton, New Jersey, in 1778, was a keen observer, and generally spoke to the point although be was a trifle profane. In lecturing before a class of students, he would sometimes wind up with this remark: "If you have patients of good sense and they need no medicine, only advice, explain the matter to them, but if you are treating d d fools give them bread pills." But few of the physicians of the present day act upon this sensi ble advice. The majority try to make their patients believe that they are much sicker than they are, for the greater the cure or rather the apparent cure, the more startling the bill. A number of highly respectable and strictly moral young gentlemen of St Louis have organized an association, to be known as the "gallants' club," the object ot which is to furnish young ladies who have no regular beaux an escort to church, concert lectures and places of amusement. All members k.M , nn,l.nm i m jtxAminatinfi aa ' " !Uw