1 ISpISOII B. F. SCHWEIER, THE COHSTITCTIOJl THB TJXION A'D THE EXFORCEMEST OF THE LAW8. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLIN1WN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., AUGUST 19, 1874. NO. 33. I'oetry. CHAK;r. OF THE COTRT UKiu.tni:. Ilaif a yard half a rani Half a yard onward. Throuyli the first crunh-room, l'rtSHod the Four Hundred. Forward the Fair Krigade ! On to the Throne, they said : (in to the Presence Koom, Crushed the Four Hundred '. IT. Forward, the Fair brigade ! Was there a girl dixmared ? LVd though the chaperon knew Some one bad blundered. Theirs not to make complaint. Theirs not to e:uk or faiut. Tin irs but words iMiuot tKuut. Half the discomfiture of the Four Hundred. III. Crowds on the n-htof them. rowds on the left of them. Crowds all in front of them, Stumbled and blundered ; On through the courtier-lined RooniH uiost tremendous grind ! Into the Presence-room, Leaving their friends behind. Parsed the Four Hundred. IV. Flushed all their faces fair. Flashed all their jewels rare, Scratched ail their shoulders bara. Thrusting each other while Outmders wondered : Into the Presence-room, Taking their turn, they come Some looking very glum O'er trains sore-undered Kiss hand, and outwards back. Fagged, the Four Hundred ! V, Crowds to the light of them. Crowds on the left of them. Crowds all in front cf them. Stumbled and blundered Pack through more courtier-lined Kooms O. tremendous grind! J) Vi'n''j t'airity pined For ne or cnp o" tea; No sofas horse-hair lined. Not a chair or settee. Poor dear Four Hundred ! Tt Mothers to rage gave Tent, Husbands for Broughams sent, Yt'hile at mismanagement ISjth sorely wondered. Not till the sun had set. Not till the lamps were lit. Home from the Drawing-room Cot the Four Hundred. rlixcellany An Fait Indian Paper Cutler. ! I There is an Eastern air about the fol- lowing story, but it is not at all an im probable tale : MaDy years ago an Indian Rajah, who was a great admirer tit Lis English masters, and who had even learned the language after a fashion, frequently visited the Viceroy of Calcutta. On one occasion lie noticed a copy of the J-Ulaiburg li'iUic on the Viceroy's table, and borrowed it. Sjme time after he returned it; and, npon the Viceroy's inquiry whether he found anything interesting in it he re plied : "Oh ! yes, many beautiful things; bnt also many disconnected ar ticles." "How so ?' said the Viceaoy. "See here," said the Kijah. "This be gins with 'Hunting the Orang-outang," does it not ? And now turn over the page, and here yon have the 'History of Mary Stuart.'" The Vicery laughed. The book was uncut, and his vassal had read it through without discover- j mi? it. He therefore took from his table an ivory paper-cutter, with a beautifully carved handle, and ex-1 plained its use to the lwjah, who was much pleased, but could not help won dering how they contrived to print the inside of the leaves before they were cut open. This also was explained, and the lUjah departed, carrying with him the paper-cutter which the Viceroy had given him. About a year after, when the matter was almost forgotten, the Viceroy saw from his window a gallant troop enter ing the court, in the center of which was the Rajah, mounted on a young elephant. As soon as the latter per ceived the Viceroy, he cried ; "Do you happen to have an uncnt number of the Ediuburg Ji'cvifif t If so, please toss it to me." The Viceroy threw out the book, which was caught by the elephant and placed between his tusks, which, to his surprise, the Viceroy saw had Lad been turned into pa)er-cutters, even to the carved handles. In a mo ment the intelligent beast cut open the leaves and then handed the book to the Viceroy. The Rnjah dismounted, and, pointing to the elephant, said to the Viceroy : "He is yours. I return to you your paper-cutter alive." Relations of Animals 1'lant. and The animal takes from the air ox vgen, and turns if ' to carbonic acid; the plant takes f "Jbonio acid, and turns it back int. ,en, which has thus discharged Ynwrreat office of car rying carbon from the bodies of ani mals, and transferring it to the systems of plants. In what an interesting re lation do the two kingdoms, the ani mal aud the vegetable, thus stand to one another, not alone as respects the air in maintaining its constitution uni form by a mutual eutagonization, but also as respects their own structures 1 The elements of which plants are formed have all been derived from the pre-existing parts of animals; and the elements of which animals consist, from the pre-existing parts of plants. To tha classical scholar, what a beautiful commentary on the fictitious stories of autiquity are these modern discoveries! He calls to mind the metamorphoses that Ovid describes; the bore, perhaps, of Lis school boy life, the elegant amusement of his latter years. He re members how Daphne was turned into a laurel, and Adonis into a flower; the musical stanz is are no longer an empty sound, they are descriptive histories. The thing he has read of is actually so. These transformations.instead of being imaginary exceptions, are the common lot of life in this world. There grows not now a leaf that is not formed from the parts of animals that are dead; there lives not a solitary animal being which has not derived its constituent elements from plants. Popular Sci ence Monthly. A new way of killing alligators has been discovered in Louisiana. A two ounce can of nitro glycerine, with lighted fuse, is put inside of a chicken, the latter tossed to the alligator, and in a few minutes an explosion ensues and the carcass of the reptile float gently oa the waters. MATCH 3IAKEBS. In his "Social Photographs" in the last number of A ppleton'i Journal thug writes Junius Henri Browne of a very numerous class ia the society of the day : Marriage, as at present managed, is bo mucn oi an experiment that the person undertaking to bring it about necessarily assume great responsibility. Sentimentalists like to talk of the matches made in heaven. Many of these confronting as on earth are so ill made as to reflect little credit on the place of their supposititious origin. Heaven, it is to be suspected, is a false ascription for what, in most cases, is merely human and very fallible agency. Men and women, even when left to themselves, have little difficulty in per petrating serious conjugal blunders. For these they should have themselves alone to blame. If they fail of discreet election, the cause of failure should be sought within ; and to be honestly so sought, they must direct their own destiny. How few there are who do, however ! One wonld think, since marriage chiefly, if not exclusively, concerns the persons entering into it, that they would be permitted to exercise their own judg ment in such regard. But they are not. As a rule, all their relatives, friends and ordinary acquaintances, are more active, more outwardly interested, than the contracting parties. This activity and interest, though often commend able, are oftener impertinent and prag matic. Relatives and friends cannot well be indifferent to so momentous matter as the nuptials of those they esteem and cherish ; but ordinary ac quaintances have no call for the solici tude they affect wherefore, perhaps, they affect so much. Certain minds, especially feminine ones, seem to have a constitutional be lief that the majority of men and women are unable to marry properly without their aid. They are constantly acting on this belief, appointing themselves emissaries of Juno, ministers of Hymen. Benevolence may prompt them to this at first, though by indulgence a habit is fixed, and the habit ultimately be comes a passion. These are profes sional match makers. They never see I a bachelor or maiden, a widower or j widow, without feeling an nrgent desire j to change his or her celibate condition, j i Neither he nor she. in their opinion. : ought to be consulted about the change. Few mortals thus they reason know what is best for them ; such knowledge is geuerauy reserveu ior outsiders, j whose discernment should be clear be- i cause disconnected with the sympathies , or affections. They have a vague : apprehension, in opposition to Malthus, i auu lue aemonsiraiea iacis, mat ine planet will cease to be peopled, nnless ! - ' . " a- ti A a j ckum; ui prupuguiiuu. alio urat UlUJ of both sexes is, as they conceive, to Ka ,-n,l w lw, K. fla ; i.n ; cannot make them see that they are i liable to error ; that many things are needful to matrimony ; that the wisest , course is to let the delicate question arrange and answer itself. I The masculine match maker is rare yet he exists. He never has the tact. energy, perseverance and ingenuity of his feminine fellow. He conhnes him self mostly to the practical and his own sex ; deals largely in his counsels with facts and figures, and adroitly, per chance unconsciously, misrepresents them. He is invariably a husband and he never tires of making this statement as if there were nothing else than his word to show for it. Any objections which may be offered he is ready to overcome. If a bachelor put forward poverty, he is told, in the face of the plainest arithmetic, that two can live as cheaply as one ; no reference being made to the corollary that one and one in conjugal circumstances commonly make three, four, five or six. Having been for some time a spouse, he is pre sumed to know of what he speaks ; nevertheless, he speaks untruth. Only in ceftain conditions, rather exceptional than otherwise, can one person subsist for the same price as two. In these days matrimony is likely to more than double expenses. Howbeit, when the exact contrary is affirmed by those who have had experience, it is not strange if the falehood is credited. If the bache lor should say that he is unacquainted with anybody whom he wants to wed, the matchmaker immediately proposes to introduce him to a score of girls, eo full of physical, mental, and sooial per fections that they might be thought to have had their birth in a contempora neous romance. . There is Clara, for example. She is a charming creature, abounding in sweetness and beauty as a rose itself. She has no money, to be sure ; but she is t etter than a fortune to any man. Jane is not so lovely in person as she might be, albeit she is a pattern for her sex, modest, discreet, generous, high minded. Entirely domestic, she would render the humblest home happy ; would consecrate herself to wifely du ties. Kate Is simply magnificent, a trifle forward, mayhap, because she has been so much flattered and petted, but loyal and loving at heart, replete with superb possibilities. She is the kind of woman whose affection, once fixed, knows no shadow of turning, who loves once and forever. In this sort of recommendation, how ever, the masculine match maker is not an adept. He bestows on it little in sistence, being conscious that it is an intrenchment on the feminine domain. As has been said, facts and figures, or a misrepresentation of them, are bis spe ciality, and he never feels quiet secure while dealing with sentiment. He is skilled in spreading a mist over the in evitable, and in disposing of nn welcome particulars by pleasant generalization. What he is ignorant of he asserts with dogmatism ; what he cannot even guess at he predicts with complacent rash ness, as befits the foolhardy mortal who advises marriage on abstract principles. The true and temperamental match maker is feminine. She seldom ban gles, seldom gets put into quandaries from which she is nnable to extricate herself. She instinctively avoids facts, or their semblance, for ahe feels she is not quite at home with them. Sensi bility and idealisation are her forte. Like an eipert captain, she frequently succeeds by masking her designs; brings that to pass which she appears to oppose. Secretly she selects the twain she intends for one another; brings them together as if by accident ; leaves them alone with deep deep pre meditation ; comes and goes out at ne right moment; j circumstances ; prepares surprises , arranirea emotional OCnOUmcni: OO twmMtpil ia aha with the joining them in wedlock that she takes no time to consider whether they are mutually adapted or not. Once united, she imagines they will adjust themselves by some unknown law that create harmony from disharmony, converts ansipathy into sympathy. But the question of their agreement, of their happiness, is remote, altogether sec ondary, in her opinion. She fancies she is responsible for nothing except their marriage. Having achieved that, her task is discharged : Fate must pro vide the rest The addition of another pair to the bead roll of matrimony is glorious triumph, always to be counted to her advantage. Why it should be, what merit there is in hymenal meddlesomeness, prece dent or logio would be puzzled to show. Still, such is her belief, and the belief is ineradicable. She fancies she has a vocation to slip the matrimonial noose about the necks of her acquaintances, and she is not content unless she can do so periodically. When she hears that any body has been married without her manipulation or manoeuvring, she feels hurt, wronged in some mysterious wsy, and resolves to make amends for her loss by never permitting the slight est opportunity to slip thereafter. The feminne match maker has no regular method ; she varies her process according to the emergency. To keep her connubial motive concealed, often requires more delicacy and ingenuity than she can master. Moreover, it is prone to imperil the prosperity of her issues ; she must have recourse, there fore, to direct management. After pnt- ting two persona into nuptial nomina tion, and arranging their convention, she confesses with them apart ; sounds them for their thoughts, feelings and opinions, respecting one another. She mentions to Mr. Jones, as if casually, that Miss Brown is very amiable and engaging ; so simple and unobtrusive, too, in mind and manner. that one must know her intimately to appreciate her. She cannot avoid no ticing that the young lady has been much impressed by him ; that she evinces a decided partiality for his company, which he should deem com plimentary. for her taste and discrimi- nation have always been subjects of remark. In the society of Suss Brown sue does not hesitate to praise Mr. Jones ; to intimate that he has talked of the lady incessantly since last they met. and that be is manifestly smitten. Thus are the first seeds sown and they rapidly germinate under the foe tering care of a few weeks, or months at farthest, she has brought the couple to believe, by cunningly administering to the vanity of each, that they are genuinely in love with one another. She ought to be aware that, soon after they are united, they will be likely to discover their mistake, and jar and clash until divorce or death relieves : them. But what of that ? Is is not one more marriage ? Is it not another chaplet laid upon the brow of the social : intriguer ? j had ghe ooserved Mr. Mark. I well Ana JJ.1B8 baowmuca in conrerru.- I tion, than she determined to wed them. ; if possible. Her natural insight may tell her they are antipodes ; that they can no more mingle than oil and water. But, then, if she should have the good luck to hide this fact from both until they have taken the desperate step. what a victory for her ! The very diffi culty of the enterprise whets her ardor. Discharging the thought of what they must suffer, she remembers only what satisfaction she shall enjoy. While they are waging domestic wars, she is intent on new triumphs new slaughters of individual peace, new creations of the bitterest disappointments, new blastings of sacred expectations. The match maker would seem to be malignant, at least criminally heedless of the happiness of her neighbors. She is not necessarily either one or the other ; she is, generally, but unmindful of the danger and difficulty of her self- appointed work, one fails to compre hend hnman nature ; has no suspicion of the requirements of the individual. Because marriage often brings comfort. mutual contentment, the best that life has to offer, she thinks, without think ing, that it always does so, irrespective of the conditions under which it is con tracted. Experience teaches her noth ing. If her own nuptial experiment has been unfortunate, she imagines another will be fortunate. If she has drawn a prize in her connubial lottery, she fondly believes there are scarcely any blanks. She is conscientiously wrong -minded. By trying to do good, she does incalculable harm. By seek ing to sow the wheat of happiness, she sows the tares of misery, and she re mains in ignorance in that she gathers not the harvest. Let her bear this in memory : If a man and woman cannot discover in one another sufficient rea sons for marriage, it is not probable that a third person can make the dis covery they should make for themselves. Let those who fail to detect sufficient cause for conjunction remain apart, or tarry for a later oyportunity ! If professional match makers could see half of the wretchedness they have engendered by misdirected zeal, they onld be overwhelmed with regret. suffused with repentance. They would take no further risks in the peace of others they would be humbly thank ful if they had themselves escaped the biting woe of a bad selection. Every man should do bis own marrying, as he must do his own dying. The difference between the two often is, that in death his troubles end ; in marriage they have only begun. Facta. Some men who pride themselves on their common sense and whenever a roan boasts mnch about that, it may be assumed that lie has very little sense, either common or uncommon will maintain that all knowledge consists of facts, that everything else is mere talk and theory, and that nothing has any value except facts. Those who speak so much of the value of facts may un derstand the meaning of facts;but they evidently do not understand the mean ing of value. For, the value of a thing is not a property residing in that thing, nor is it a component; but it is simply its relation to some other thing. We say, for instance, that a gold dollar has a certain value; but the value does not reside in the coin. If it does, where is it f Our sense cannot grasp value. We cannot see value, nor hear it, nor feel it, nor taste it, nor smell it. The value consists solely in the relation which the dollar price bears to something else, just so in regard to facts. Facts, as facts, have no sort of value, but are simply a mass of idle lumber The value of a fact is not an element or a constituent of that fact, but is its rela tion to the total stock of our know ledge, either present or prospective. Facts, therefore, have merely a poten tial and, as it were, subsequent value, and the only advantage or possessing them ia the Doflsibilitv of drawing con- ri's"mgto"the ideahe princiPTerthe M7 tb(.mf 0nr know- J -t fanta lint nf the relations which facts and ideas bear to themselves and to each other; and real knowledge consists not in an an acquaintance with facts, which only makes a pedant,but in the use of facta, which makes a philosopher. The Strngtle for Wealth. No one can settle down in a European city or village for a month, aod observe the laboring classes, without noticing a great amerence between their asp rations, ambitions and habits, and those of corresponding classes in this country. He may see great poverty ia a continental town, and men and wo men laboring severely and faring mean ly, and a Hopeless gap existing between classes; he may see the poor virtually the slaves of the rich; but he will wit ness a measure of contentment and a daily participation in humble pleasure to which his eyes have been strangers at home. There is a sad side to this pleasant picture. Much of the appar ent contentment and enjoyment un doubtedly come from the hoplessness oi tne struggle lor anything better. An impassable gulf exists between them and the educated and aristocratic classes a gulf which they have recog nized from their birth; and, having re cognized this, they nave recognized tneir own limitations, and adapted themselves to them. Seeing just what they can do and cannot do, they very rationally unaertaae to eet out of me just what their condition renders at tainable. There is no far-off. crowninsr gooa ior tnem to aim at, so they try to get what they can on the way. They make much of fete-days, and social gatherings, and music, and do what they can to sweeten their daily toil, which they know must be continued .... . . . " while the power to labor lasts. In America it is very different A humble backwoodsman sits in the pres idential chair, or did sit there but re cently; a tailor takes the Highest hon ors of the nation; a canal-driver be comes a powoi.'ul millionare;a humble derk grows into a merchant nrince. absorbing the labor and supplying the wants of tens of thousands. In city, State and national politics, hundreds and thousands may be counted of those who, by enterprise and self-culture, and self-assertion, have raised them selves from the humblest positions to influence and place. There is no im passible gulf between the low and the high. Every man holds the ballot, and, therefore, every man is a person of po litical power and importance. The ways of business enterprise are many, and the rewards of success are munifi cent. Not a year.nor, indeed, a month, passes by that does not illustrate the comparative ease with which poor men win wealth or acquire power. The consequence is that all but the wholly brutal are after some great good that lies beyond their years of toil The European expects always to be a tenant; the American intends before he dies to own the house he lives in. If city prices forbid this, he goes to the suburbs for his home. The European knows that life and labor are cheap.and that he cannot hope to win by them the wealth which will realize for him the dream of future ease; the American finds his labor dear, and its rewards comparatively bountiful, so that his dream of wealth is a rational one. He, therefore, denies himself, works early and late, and bends his energies, and directs those of his family into profit able channels, all for the great good that beckons him on from the far-off I golden future The typical American never lives in the present. If he indulgas in a recre ation, it is purely for health's sake, and at long intervals, or in great emergen cies, ne aoes not waste money on pleasure, and does not approve of those who do so. He lives in a constant fe ver of hope and expectation, or grows sour with nope deferred or blank dis appointment. Out of it all grows the worship of wealth and that demoraliza tion which results in unscrupulousness concerning the methods of its acquire ment, so America presents the anom aly of a laboring class with unprece dented prosperity and privileges, and unexampled discontent and discom fort. There is surely something better than this. There is something better than a life-long sacrifice of content and en- jopment for a passible wealth, which. however, may never be acquired, and which has not the power, when won, to yield its holder the boon which he ex pects to purchase. To withhold from the frugal wife the gown she desires, to deny her the journey which wonld do so much to break up the monotony of her home-life, to rear children in mean ways, to shut away from the family life a thousand social pleasures, to relin quish all amusements that have a cost attached to them, for wealth which may or may not come when the family life is broken up forever surely this is neither sound enterprise nor wise economy. We would not have the American laborer, farmer and me chanic become improvident, but we would very much like to see them hap pier than they are, by resort to the daily social enjoyments which are al ways ready to their hand. Nature is strong in the young, and they will have society and play of some sort. It should remain strong in the old, and does re remain strong in them, until it is ex pelled by the absorbing and subordi nating passion for gain. Something of the Old World fondness for play, and daily or weekly indulgence in it should become habitual among our workers. Toil would be sweeter if there were a reward at the end of it; work would be gentler when used as a means for securing a pleasure which stands closer than an old age of ease; character would be softer and richer and more childlike, when acquired among genial, everyday delights. The all-subordinating strife for wealth, car ried on with fearful struggles and con stant self-denials, makes us petty, irri table and hard. When the whole American people learn that a dollar's worth of pure pleasure is worth more than a dollar's worth of anything else nnder the sun; that working is not liv ing, but only the means by which we win a living; tne money is good lor nothing except for what it brings o comfort and culture; and that we live not in the future, but the present, they will be a happy people happier and better than they have been. "The morrow shall take thought for the things of itself." may not be an ac cepted maxim in political economy, but it was uttered hy the wisest being that ever lived in the world, whose mission it was to make men both good and happy. Scrtbner't. Old Paper Menej Items. Prof. Sumner's book ia encouraging. as showing that we are not much worse than our ancestors, and discouraging as showing how litttle we have learned by experience, or how ignorant we are of even recent history. His condensed accounts of the continual issues of pa per money in the North American Colo nies should be read dy vaose wno oe lieve in inconvertible paper. Those who think it any advantage to buy at low prices may be glad to learn, that whan ha Rritiah Parliament paid to Massachusetts its share of Louisburg, .v.;h it wanantnaA from th Cniouea (amounting to 138,619, and this amount was sent out in coin, used to cancel the outstanding paper, then worth about nine per cent), while, of course, a "panic and "shock were ex pected, tne only "shock fell on "Rhode Island and New Hampshire, who found their trade transferred to the 'silver colony,' and their paper suddenly and Heartily depreciated. The west India trade of Massachusetts had been largely done through Newport. It was now transferred to Salem and Bos ton. In 1692, in Connecticut "there were four prices 'pay,' "pay as money,' money and 'trusting.' 'Trusting was an enhanced price, according to time. 'Pay' was barter at government rates. 'Money' was Spanish or New England coin, also wampum for change. 'Pay as money' was barter currency at one tnird less man government rates. A six-penny knife cost twelvepence in P7t eightpence in pay as money, and sixpence in coin. One of the new socialist devices for cheap money is as old as the "banks," i. e., as understood about 1700, "a batch of paper money issued either bv the government or a corporation." ine bills for one of these "banks ' in Pennsylvania were printed by Frank lin, who says. "It was a very profitable job.and a great help to me;" but though issuea at nve per cent on mortgage of land in each county, according to tax able assessment, the result of the schem shows that Franklin was the only one who fairly profited by the wretched device. The issue of bills to "make business brisk." and attempts to "grow up" to exoessive issues, will be found not to be new in our times. With the Revolutionary War. paper money flowed afresh, and in 1780 was worth two cents on the dollar: and some who had faith in paper promises left basketsfull of it to their children. Col. Pickering insisted that Congress should authorize contracts to be made by him as quartermaster-generaL pay able in specie, and was thns enabled to obtain supplies for the army. "It ought to be noticed," says Prof. Sum ner, "mat this continental paper was vaunted as 'the safest possible cur rency,' which "nobody could take away'(L e., export) "In 1814 all the banks, save the New England banks suspended. Specie went to New England because there was a sound currency and low prices there, and went away from the Middle and Southern States because displaced by redundant paper and consequent high prices." Some contended that silver had risen, and that the paper dollar was an ideal unit Interesting and instructive accounts follow, of the banks, and the currency up to the present time. The second part of the book contains an account of the English Bank Restriction; and the Appendix contains the justly celebrated "Bullion Report," made by the Select Committee to the House of Commons in 1810. Old and Acir. Camp 4'nre lor uysprpsia. Quite as sure is the relief from dys peptic troubles; for although the diet of (-.imps would be at home, for the dyspeptic, but a mode of tardy suicide, the steady, bin, not too severe, exer cise aud the constant exposure rarely leave a man after a few days much fault to lind with the most evil dis posed stomach. Among our lakes and streams the bill of fare of the camp is by no means a bad one, but it would be a slicx-kiiijT one at home. There is always hah fried, or broiled if you are wise, or perhaps, if you have a taste for delicacies and want the trout at its liest, you will cook it in paper, when it is a thing to remeniler. Birds, es pecially ducks, are rarely lacking, and in the Adiroudacks venison is abund ant enough. Then it is easy to carry cauned ami dried vegetables, Wans, potatoes, biscuits for bread, condensed milk and the inevitable pork. If I wauted a comparative test for the ab sence of dyspepsia, I should say that when a man can relish a bit of well dried, crisji pork on the top of a stew of duvks, aud can wind np with a big onion eaten raw with salt, he might be regarded as tolerably competent to comiiete with the proverbial ostrich. I think it was that good fisherman, the late Dr. Itethmie, who said that a good part of the value of wood life was in the fact that you crave onions and can eat them. In fact, there is always a row in camp when the onions give out, and the new men often won der at starting why an old woodsman is so very particular shout having plenty of onions; but in the wilderness and in armies ouions are at a premium. I remeiulier once, in paddling along the shores of a lakein Maine, we espied a log cabin in a rough clearing, and, pulling the canoes up,sct off to see who was about, with that odd craving for new faces which haunts men after a few days of lonely wood life. We found four children with measles, the mother recovering from pnenmooia, the father down with a lively chill im ported from Illinois, and the grand father with a dislocated nngcr. we soon put the last right, and then,draw ing water cool from the spring, with a few lemons and white sugar, we made them a drink which called down npon us unnumbered blessings. Next my little medicine case came into use for the first time in several summers; and so by and bv. leaving them our remain ing lemons may I never do a deed of greater self-denial! we went away. As we were shoving off the old man came down the hill and stopped us guessed, as we were doctors we ought to be paid. "Well," he said, "you done us a heap of good, and we was kind of mournaome before you come." 1 felt that the new word mourn some was worth many fees, and so guessed in re ply that we wouldn't take anything. But maybe you d nave tins," lie urged, with an air of triumph. "Them's what no man will refuse;" and so say ing he threw into the canoe a rope of somewhat ancient onions. 1 accepted the honorarium, and we paddled away down the lake. Dr. Wier Mitchell. Animals and Fire-arms. That crows and many other species of birds have little fear of man when he is unarmed is a familiar fact, and sug gests that they fear him chiefly because of the weapons he carries. In Scotland, where shooting was prohibited, on Sun day, crows aud rooks were gentle, and fed around buildings witbont concern. Singularly enough the same thing was observed of animals by Dr. Tristram when traveling in the wilderness of Moab, where the sound of a gnu is quite rare. He says: "We were struck with the sagacity which all the wild nimals showed in the matter of fire- i rma, little familiar as they can be with tl em here. As it was Sunday, we stroll ed or sat down among the ruins without our fowling-pieces, and were conse quently objects of indifference. A fine fox sat and looked at us a dozen times among the stone heaps, and just walked away, keeping almost within gunshot all the afternoon. The Sakkr falcon sat calmly on his favorite perch, and allow ed us to reconnoitre him on Sunday, while the eagle, owls, sand-grouse, and partridge, showed a partridge, showed a similar contempt for unarmed Europeans." Popular Science Monthly Tor Aumm. Ilew Figs are Dried Im Smyrna. At a meeting of the Fruit Growers' Association of the Galf States, Mr. Geo. A. Faunce gave a description of the mode of preparing figs at Smyrna, Turkey, which may be the means of en lightening many persons why they hsve failed in making a merchantable article of our native fig. Mr. Faunce describes the soil in the neighborhood of Smyrna as being of volcanie origin, the climate mnch cold er than ours, and surrounded by high mountains covered with snow. Of the fig there are three varieties generally grown there; one a large pur ple fig, much like those seen in the neighborhood of New Orleans; a large yellow, and a smaller kind which is not much thought of and is never shipped. The trees average the size generally seen in our gardens. The fruit is very dry and rather insipid, and when fresh is not used by the natives. The crop ripens about the 28th of August, and they are shook from the trees and thrown on the ground in the sun where they are allowed to remain a few hours; they are then packed in hampers and brought on the backs of mules to the baaaar or market and thrown into nilea twelvn or fifteen feet I classes by women and children, and na'tfiil wit linn t fnrthep nrenaratinn in- to ooies or cartoons. Figs are generally shipped on sailing vessels, the hold of which is kept well ventilated by windsails and the hatches kept open. There is also a small white worm or maggot which bores a noie in the bottom end of every flg; these worms are in such abundance that they crawl over the vessel and drop into everything. Our informant has often seen the skippers trying to clean the stem of his pipe which was full of the vermin. When the fruit arrives at its destina- tion, if it is dry and covered with grape sugar, it is considered in good order; if dark and of a shining appearance, it is in process of heat and decay. ' Beneflt of Laagfeter. . . , , . , It is said by good authority that there is not the remotest corner or little inlet of the minute blood vessels of the hu tha. Kit- man body that does not feel some wavelet from the convulsions occa sioned by good hearty laughter, and also that the "central man." or lite principle, is shaken to its innermost uepths, sending new tides of life and strength to the surface, and thus ma terially teuding to insure good health to the persons who indulge therein. The blood moves more rapidly prob ably caused by some chemical or elec tric modification occasioned by the con vulsion and conveys a different im pression to all the organs of the body as it visits them on that particular mystic journey, when the man is laugh ing, from what it dors at other times. t or this reason every good hearty -7 , . ! , r lauga in wuicn a person inuuiges ieuu? . K " ""b" vital forces. We doubt not that the j tin, wrill rnm irl.cn nhtrai.-ima n cetling more importance than they now do to the influence of the mind upon the vital forces of the body will pre- scribe to the torpid aud melancholy pa- tient a certain number of hearty peals ; of laughter, to be undergone at stated . periods, and believe that they will, in so doing, find the best and most effec tive method of producing the required effect upon the patient. Our advice to all is, indulge in good, hearty, soulful laughter, when the opportunity tillers, ami, if you do not derive material bene fit therefrom, charge us with uttering false principles of materia medica. Drinking la the Last Century. Oar ancestors could without any diffi culty find a place to wet their whistles. The grand jury of Philadelphia declared in 1714 that of all the houses in the city nearly one in every ten sold drink. John Adams, referring to PownaU's remark about every other house being a tavern, says that country towns within his observation had at least a dozen taverns and retailers of intoxicating liquors. The keepers of these places had a great influence at elections, a fact he regrets. One of the Bland letters, written from Virginia in 1765, tells us that a Mr. Bannister "has been very much engaged, ever since the dissolu tion of the assembly, in swilling the planters with bumbo (rum), and I dare say from the present prospect will be elected a burgess." About the middle of the century complaint was made that Harvard undergraduates were in the increasing habit of "frequenting taverns and ale-houses" this was before the college was "pleasantly and conveni ently situated in Parker's bar-room" and also of using wine, beer, and dis tilled liquors in their rooms. They shared, too, in another prevalent fault of the time, that is, "profane cursing and swearing. The Oalary for August. Orlsjla af Great Jlea. St. Andrew, apostle, was the son of a fisherman; St. John was also the son of a fisherman; Pope Sixtus V., was the son of a swine-herder he was also one; Aristotle, of a doctor; Boccacio.of a merchant; Columbus.of a wool-comber; John Basth, of a fisherman; Dide rot, of a cutler; Cook, of a servant; Hampden, of a carpenter; Talma, of a dentist; Gesner, of a bookseller; Sal vator Rosa, of a surveyor; Euripides.of a fruit-woman;Virgil, of a baker; Hor ace, of a denizen; Voltaire, of a tax collector; Larnothe, of a hatter; Fletch er, of a chandler: Masillon. of a turner: 1 ameriane, ot a stiepneru; uninauit, oi ; a Knlrof Italian At a MiiHcaf MnllOftV s-if ' " r " " , . . y-v - a i. . " """ "i V..i maker; Sir Samuel Bowditch, of a sil versmith; Ben Johnson, of a mason; Shakspeare, of a butcher; Sir Thomas Lawrence, of a custom-house officer; Collins, of a hatter. Gray, ot a notary; Beattie, of a laborer; Sir Edward Sug den, of a barber; Thomas Moore, of a swordmaken Rembrandt, of a milier, Heniamin Franklin. of a chandler: diual Woolsev, of a butcher; Napoleon, of a farmer, Lincoln, of a backwoods- j mn ,mm irei-ailve KlaaacM. j Do the doctors know that half the wives in the world die of this com- plaint! -lie never spoKe an unsinu word to nis wue." 1 es, out uiu ne re- member, now and then to speak a kind one t Did he have any sympathy for her "bodily and mental ills I Or was he blind and deaf to both, treating them with that cutting indifference which in . - .1 - i : t 1 I me-c-n' L"sV"""t .UCJ:. "" ;u ; ,u:. Tot. young girl from the warm atmosphere ef a loving, cheerful home, and after a ; few weeks of devotion leave her to i battle single-handed with new cares ! i 1 x i and new duties, and to bear sickness with what courage she may, and go their ways into the tangled paths of life, without a thought of the responsi bilities they are shirking or the solemn vows they have really broken. No wonder so many happy brides ripen in to irritable dissatisbed matrons, who seem to have lost all real delight in living. Youths Column. measuring the Baby. W meaTOi-rd nAnam bahT Airsm-M tb- (ittaire wail -A luy trn-w at the thifwlioM. AuJ the boy vu jiul aa liL A iMyal tigt-r-ul?. Wi h (kju of purr and of ffi'M, And a heart of xwtiUt-d chllrc, 1 be lrariraut dew to bold. Without the blackbird whixtlM. High up in the old roof treii. And to aud t ro at the wind- w The rl roM- rucked h-r bea ; Anil the wee pink nets of baby Were nerer a moment stiU, Snatching at nhine and nhadow 1 bat daucvd at the butice-sLL Ay ! fa a darkened chamber. Wiii- the HUhiuc shut iwit, Th-oiufb t-ant that fLl nke bitter r-in. We mea-mred the baby W day. And the ittle bare feet that wera dimtl-'l And sweet an a bu.l.hiiK roe. Lie Hide by Hide ton-ether lu tile huau of a loutf repoee. Tn fmtn the dainty pill w. White an the riM-'n dawn. A fair face lay Hunting W ith the lutht of hea Ten thereon : Ana the dear little han-le like r leav. a llropped from the rota, lay atiu. Never to catch at the eun-tiiiue That crept to the aurouded 8llL We nieanred the aleepinfr baby With nbltone whi e as -mow. For the shimiiil roeewoo-1 canket i hst waited him below. And out of the darkened chamber We went with a cinldle-ia moan : For to the beiifht of the eiul-. aiitf'-W Our dear little oue had growu. ! Oceek FarESDS. Tobv was a big or j ue naa grown too oia to worn : so ne i used to stay all the time in the barn - yard, and had a stall under a ehed in the warm corner. Peep was a poor little motherless cuicaen, wun not enongn learners on to keep the cold off. He had to hunt np his own victuals ; for nobody thought of feeding him : so he used to peck meal in Tobv's feed-box, and Toby never refused to let him. Sometimes Peep sat on Toby's horn ; and, when it grew colder, he roosted on Toby's broad, warm back. When Toby got sleepy in the daytime, he j would low for 1'eep to come and sit on j his horn while he took a nap. I By and by a little brown pig, seeing 1 how happy Toby and Peep were to- j gether, left all his kinsfolk, and went I to live in the shed with them. Piggy air.t in ti.a .i. k. ov.k.'. .1.1..'. ' n.i m,, ru.. i.i . i.i ii -i,' " - ever he was fed. till Teen and I'iggv came to eat with him. At last the butcher came and took Toby a ay; and poor Peep and Piggy were left to mourn for their dear old friend. But they loved each other all the better, and slept side by side in the , BtT- henever yon saw one, you were , sure to see the other. If Peep found : any thing to eat, he was sure to divide it with Piggy ; and, though both were homelv fellows, it was a pretty sight to 1 see them together. j , . ! J1A5SE&S. .uanners are more im-1 iiuiiiiui tuau uiuurr. a uiT wuu is nte and pleasant in his manners wiU fc Mend and will not make emie, Uood behavior is essential to prosperity. A boy feels well when he Joes well. If you wish to make every- body pleasant about yon, and gain , friends wherever yon go, cultivate good j manners. Many" boys have pleasant j manners in company and ugly manners ! for home. We visited a small railroad town not long since and were met at the depot ; hv a litMu 1 11 . r .1 f olwi.it .Wan st ' years, who entertained and cared for us, in the absence of his father, with as mnch polite attention and thoughtful care as the most cultivated gentleman could have done. We said to his mother before we left her home : "You are greatly blessed in your son ; he is so attentive and obliging." "Yes," she said, "I can always de pend on Charley when his father is absent. He is a great help and com fort to me." She said this as if it did her heart good to acknowledge the cleverness of her son. The best manners cost so little, and are worth so mnch, that every b y cau have them. The Steeples. When we look at the steeples of a city piercing the blue bky we should ever regard them as so many friendly beacons calmly aud gratly di recting us to look up above mere mate rial things to the calm, peaceful serenity of heaveu, of which the bright firma ment is a symbol. When the dark clouds of adversity hang around us like a funeral pall aud their thunders would seem to rend our very souls, let us look up to the friendly Eteeple which points to God's bright sun and heaven's smiles beyond the clou is, remembering : - Tr'iTiMe" will not last foeerer : Ihedjrk.-st day wi.lrsay- rri 1 1 m 1 , . . . . , The miserable selfishness of some nave friends been torn from us hose fellows U enough to make a man bright smiles no longer cheer us as we ashamed of his sort. So mnch as they pass on the rugged pathway of Lie ? do expect when tLey re selecting lhen let us look at the friendly steeple j ; Fooi down in riorida, for in spanned by the bright bow of promise, ; Btance ! He advertises for a wife, and and promoting us to the Eden of rest- I ne jet9 the pnbljo know tnat he maBt the pilgrims home. Let us learn be none of your "common doin's." Im lesson from the friendly steeple "True prjmis. she must have a cow. Also a greatness consists in moral grandeur. ! gooll feather bed with comfortable That our thoughts should be elevated j ijnen. Likewise $500 in good, genu andpure. Ihiit the tendency of our ; ine Greenbacks. She must comprehend aspirations be heavenward, and i-hat we ata to nhnvA all that i low and ' are to rise above all that is low and grovelling and aspire to that pnrity whose birthplace is God's throne. The BrsT-BoDt. Aa old red cow : came in at the gate to eat the fresh young grass. '"How do you do, old cow ? Have you a calf ? Why do you ' come into our yard ? Where is your J home ? yoa ma eat J the grass, bnt do not touch the trees. The cow ate and ate. Then Tom's kid Nan came to the gate, looked in, ! and at last lan in also. "How do you do, Nan ? You, too, may eat the grass, and no one must say ' 'Go out !' " I Then the cow spied the kid, ran up j to her, and tried to hook her, and drive i ..Wnat m .einsh busy body, you old cow , Trho gaTe on iVe, praTt to come into the yard ? Suppose Mary had run at you, and said, Go out !' Ion should have let an eat, as you were doing, in peace, selfish old red cow You are Lke some girls and ooy. hat are never willing to share! Thb "Great Cux:k or ErBRsm." j A Washington lecturer says that the earth's orbit has been widening out for 20,000 yean past, and will continue to ! do so tor 20.000 years to come. It will then begin to contract, and will con tinue to do so for 50.000 years. The eccentricity of Mercury has been sieaaiiy increasing ior me ias aw.uuu years, but has nearly attained its limit V i . -it i : In about 5,000 years it will begin to ! and water wheels are made or it, to dirninish and will continue to do so for j gether with fences, ropes, furniture. more than 100,000 years. The orbits ' of the planets must go on oscillating in this manner as long as the laws of nature remain unchanged, forming what a French writer has called "great clocks of eternity, which beat ages aa ours beat seconds." Varieties. The rifleman's creed Creedmoor. Milwaukee is now known as Chicago's left boot. Is the Black Hills expedition a dark business ? Another triumph of the female sex. A man has made his escape from a Georgia jail by the aid of a hair-pin. Lawrence, Mass., is one of the few cities that can boast of never having had a murder within its limits since its incorporation. A marriage was broken np in Duluth by the young man making an unexpec ted call and finding the poodle dog playing with his true love's glass eye. When anything is forbidden to be done, whatever tends or leads to it, ss ' the means of compassing it, is forbidden at the same time. Latin Law Maxim. It is not enough that we swallow truth; we must feed upon it, as insects do on the leaf, till the whole heart be j colored by its qualities, and shows its food ia every fibre. . Smart woman "Doctor, what do you think of women for doctors ?" Doctor i "They are invaluable, madam, to our profession. We derive two-thirds of our income from them." ""g uuuu u sometimes more 1 ea8y impressed than a weak one. For example, yon cannot so easily convince i fool that you are a philosopher as eon- in philosopher that you are a foot . The son of Emir had red hair of which he was ashamed, and wished to dye it But his father said, "Nay, my son, rather behave in such a manner that all fathers should wish their sons had red hair." To our mind babies resemble wheat I in many respects. Neither are good for much till they arrive at maturity. Both are bred in the house, and flotvrr in the family. Both have to be cradled, and are generally well thrathed before they are done with. Deaths take place, the world over, at the rate of one every three seconds, and births at the rate ot one every two seo onds. There is a sense of profound relief in the thought that every time a man goes out of the world, a baby and a half are coming into it. Cicero, who was born 106 years be fore Christ, wrote : "I consider this world as a place which nature never intended for my permanent abode; and I look on my departure from it not as ljing driven from my habitation, bnt simply as leaving an inn." A pet-canary having escaped into the 7arJ was ooBht bT favorite cat, but ""stead of devouring poor Dickey, puss gently brought the bird indoors and placed it in the hands of her mistress. whn , atT.iar.i .n,i iK.r,,.i to find scarcely a feather injured. A papyrus manuscript, found in an Egyptian tomb, has lately been trans lated by a scholar of Heidelberg, who " auuress oi nam- " nations oi ui eartn, detailing minutely all the causes which Jetl to 'he exodus of the Jews from the 'and of Pharaohs, n, mr,,,;! ., a,.. m'uino anj iettrs in England. One of the most beautiful works of recent Eng lish design is a massive vase in gold and silver in honor of Alfred Tennyson, adorned with illustrations from his principal poems. It is said to have been made by Emanuel of London. The Burmese Ambassadors are called in Paris those unpleasant looking bun dles of faded silk and foul linen. They make night hideous at open air con certs and theatres, and make day still more so in the Bois, at races, reviews everywhere. They should be women, and yet their beards forbid one to in terpret that they are such. They are the most ill-favored and apparently ec centric exotics that ever came from the tropics. An instance of rare honesty, and showing how a dog may desire to pay his board bill, is said to have recently occurred in Fitchburg. A lady saw a dog frequently about her house picking up odd bits which had been thrown out, and one day she called him in and fed him. The next day he came back, and as she opened the door, he walked in and placed an egg on the floor, when he was again fed. The fol lowing day he brought another egg to pay for his dinner, and on the fourth day he brought the old hen herself, who, it seems, had failed to furnish the reqnired egg. the whoie ,rt ,nJ my8tery of tending cj 11 i . children. Small-pox she must have ouiau-pui bad, and also measles. Sincerely we hope that this Florida donkey will be swindled. The late Edward Everett condensed into a single brief paragraph his esti mation of what constituted a good edu cation. Here it is: "To read the Eng lish language well, to write with dis patch a neat, legible hand and be mas- ter of the first four rules of arithmetic. so as to dispose of at once, with accu- racy, every question of figures which comes up in practice I call this a good education. And if you add the ability to write pure grammatical English, I regard it as an excellent education- These are the tools. You can do much with them, bnt you are hopeless with out them. 1 nay are tne foundation. and unless yon begin with these, all your flashy attainmenta,a little geology. and all other ologies and osophies, are ostentatious rubbish." What would a great portion of the I nations of the earth do without partio ' ular plants and fruits ? Take away the potato from the Irish cabin, and star vation comes. Famine already has it hold on Bengal on account of the rice crop. The bread fruit is to the West Indian both food and clothing. Heaven sends it ind causes it to grow, and the lazy natives asa notaing lunaer. auu yet all these yield to the despised bamboo. We go fisb;ng with these poles: the Chinese eat them. The usee to which it is put render it a national benefaction. Houses, boats, . 1 . muia c. hats, umbrellas, ail varieties oi weap- ons. lamowicks. pencils, brushes, pens. squeducts; telescopes and a thousand other things of daily use. We might almost say that were the bamboo to perish suddenly from off the earth, the whole Chinese Empire wonld eoUapse. a 4 s ,1 J X w