iiiiifa itf 'itt Will Jil B. F. SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THB TJSION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLIN1WN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., SEPTEMBER 23, 1S74. NO. 38. Poetry. MFAXIftll OSU. BT HELX-f a. COXANT. Ou Iipa of blooming youth There tremblee many a aiKu, Which lives to breathe a troth. Then silently to die. Thou, who art my desire. Thy languishing sweet love lu aujha npon thy lips shall oft expire. I lore the sapphire glory Of those starry depths above, Where I read the old, old story Of human hope and love: I love the shining star. But when I gaze on thee. The fire of thine eyes is brighter far. The fleeting, fleeting hoars. Which ne'er return again. Leave only faded flowers And weary days of pain; Lteught recedes from view. And never more may pass Sweet words of tenderness between us two. The gentle breeze which plays On the water, murmuringly. And the silvery, trembling rays Of the moon on Uie midnight ses Ay ! all have passed away. Have faded far from me. Like the love which lasted only one sweet day. Harper s ilayaanr. "THE EARLY BIstD.- Daintily over the dew-wet grass. Tripped bine-eyed Hilly, the farmer's lass, Swinging her milk-pail to and fro. As she murmured a love-song, soft and low. Many a suitor Milly had. From the squire's son to the herdman's lad; But she smiled on all with a merry glance. And gave each wooer an equal chance. Now faithful Donald, the herdman's lad. The more he loved her the more was sad. "For what with the squire's son." thought he, "She never will turn s thought to me !" But down in the meadow he raked the nay. When Hilly went singing along that way. He watched her pass, and she cried, in jest; " 'Tia the early bird' you know the rest !" Then suddenly Donald grew so bold That the "old. old story" was quickly told; And blue-eyed Milly was nothing loth On that summer morning to plight her troth. ")h ! foolish Donald !" she cried, in glee, 'To wait so long for a hint from me ! Then merrily over the dew-wet grass Tripped Donald and Milly, his own sweet lass. -V . Y. Indepmlsnl. Zf iscellnn.y. A Strong Witneiifl. Some years ago lawsuit occurred oat West, growing out of the destruc tion of quantity of standing corn, be longing to a Mr. Wilson, by hogs owned by a Mr. Brown. Lotte owned eight hogs, and Wilson declared that they were all, in his fiield, and that, consequently, the havoo was immense. Brown protested that he did not believe any of his hogs were in Wilson's field, bnt if any at all certainly not more than one or two, and therefore the dam ages could not have been so great as represented, Wilson had a witness on his side named Jerry Parker, not a very bright young man, bnt noted for having a wonderful imagination. He came in late, and had not a very distinct idea as to how the case stood, but he had a very vague notion that it was for Wil son's interest to make the number of hog appear as large as possible. When he took the witness-stand he was questioned by v ilson lawyer, who asked ; "Jerry, did yon see the hogs in Mr. Wilson's corn-field, on the day in ques tion ?" "Yes. I did replied Jerry. "Do you know exactly how many there were ?" "No, I didn't count 'em I but 111 take my oath there warn't less than thirty." The consternation of Y ilson and ins lawyer at this unexpected reply, may be imagined ; and it was not lessened when Brown's lawyer arose and said . "Your honor, as my client has only eight hogs, it is very evident that those which destroyed Mr. Wilson's corn be longed to some one else, and I there fore ask judgment for the defendant." The court granted this request, and poor Wilson by having too strong a wit ness, lost the case Pwelry. One of the rarest qualities to be found in poetry is the originality which springs from the poet being overcome and mastered by his subject. Most poets necessarily choose their subjects, and having chosen them, do their best to identify themselves with what they describe, and te use the materials thus provided as vehicle by which they may teach or charm mankind. Some event in personal history, a love or a loss, may indeed for a moment carry the poet away on the tide of spontane ous emotion; but this cannot happen often in any life, not even in tie life of a poet That an interest so profound, an absorption so complete, should be produced by any set of events, that a waiter should feel as if his life were only given him to utter what is swell ing in his breast, is, and must be some thing accidental and extraordinary. But when it is present it always com mands and arrests the attention of readers. The strength and sincerity of emotion give an irresistible power to what is written. No strength of emotion or absorption in a subject will necessarily make a writer a great poet, for to be a great poet is the summing np of a vast variety of great gifts; but it will make the poem in which it is embodied a remarkable poem, provided that the expression of feeling is not wholly inadequate, and that the sub ject is in itself one the elevation of which others can realize by sympathy, even though they may not see how they themselves could possibly be car ried away by it Saturday Jl"t iew. From Maggie Mlrhler Diary. They who are led by their "feelings" are like paper kites driven by the wind quite as likely to be cast down one moments as to be elevated the next Praise from the wise man is like bread to the starving it encourages life. Hope to the downcast is .'ike a raft to the shipwrecked it bears hip over tha $ulf of despair and often rewards him with a pleasant shore. Suspicion is like a magnifying glass through it most triflng atoms are made to appear of false magnitude. Assistance from the selfish is like a pin neither can mend difficulties with out a stab. To need a coat is a better condition of circumstance that to need aprinci- w An enemy's sword is apt to be well sharpened. LESTER'S FOBTISE. BT A WILMINGTON LADY. It was sunset on a lovely evening to wards the close of June, when Amy Lester leaned from her uncle's carriage to take a last look at the home she was leaving forever. She had lived since her earliest child hood with an uncle who fairly idolized her and now he had died, and contrary to all expectations, had left the whole of his princely fortune to his sister, to whose home Amy was now going. It was through blinding tears that she looked back, for this aunt who had offered her shelter was proud and cruel, and Amy instead of being received as a daughter, was to be merely the com panion of her haughty cousin Maude. While these thoughts were passing through her mind, the carriage stopped, and looking out she found she had ar rived at her future home. There was no one at the door to welcome her save her uncle who with joy beaming on his countenance assisted her to alight, and having sainted her in a kind and fatherly manner whispered in her ear, "my poor Amy you need not expect much welcome in there, (pointing to the house) but be assured that you will al ways find a staunch friend in your uncle," his eyea filled with tears as he spoke, but he hastily wiped them away, ana Detore sue bad time to thank him, the door opened and she was in the presence of her relations, her aunt merely gave her the tips of her fingers. without deigning to speak while her cousin Maude lightly kissed her on the cheea, and thinking that she had done ail that was necessary she drew back and stood at some distance from Amy. looking at her as if she were a living curiosity. The tears sprang to Amy's eyes at this reception, but she forced them back, and with proud composure leaned against the wall as if waiting to see what would be done next "Dinner is waiting," said her aunt "the servant will show you to your room, and when you nave laid aside your wrappings, you can come down and dine with us. but remember, this is the last time you will be permitted to be so familiar, bnt I suppose it will not make much differ ence, for being a servant yourself you will not object to eating with them. Amy's eyes flashed fire, and drawing herself up proudly she replied, "Aunt Esther you may call me a servant and treat me as one, bnt never, though you should close your doors against me, would I so demean myself as to sit at the table with your servants." Her aunt pale with anger, was about to strike her, when her husband sprang forward, seized her hands and holding them firmly, said, "I have hitherto remained silent and have listened with patience to all the affronts which have been heaped upon this innocent child and I will now speak as master of the house. Amy will not only eat with us now but always, and more than that she will ac company us to Saratoga next week, and Amy, my dear, if your wardrobe is not sufficiently filled, you can let me know, and your aunt will see that you are j properly provided for not a word now ?" (as Amy was about to thank mm) "but be off and get yourself ready for dinner as quickly as possible, or it will not be fit to eat," so saying he rang for the servant who conducted Amy to her room, he followed her with his eyes until she was out of sight and then re turning into the room he repeated to himself, "poor child, poor child." When Amy reached her own room, having dismissed the servant she could restrain herself no longer, and throwing herself on the bed she gave vent to a paroxysm of tears, having relieved her mind somewhat by this means she sat up and looked around. It was a small room with but one window there was a strip of carpet at the foot of the bed which looked as if it had been in use for several genera tions, besides the bed. a bureau with a small mirror attached to it a toilet ta ble, one chair, a wash-stand and an old bnt capacious closet comprised the whole furniture of the room, and after unpacking them, she again threw herself on the bed and sobbed herself to sleep. The house was all confusion for the remainder of the week owing to the pre parations for deparatnre, nevertheless Amy did not escape the taunts of her aunt and cousin, but sue bore them in silence, resolving that on her return home she would apply for a situation as teacher in some Academy, never dream ing of what was in store for her : At length the day of their departure arrived, and its close found them enter ing one of the principal hotels in Sara toga. "O, dear, me, how glad I am that we are here," said Maud, throwing her satchel on the hall floor, "Amy pick that np and take it up stairs, for I am not able I am so tired." "I cannot do it Maude," said Amy, "you see that my arms are already too full, and although you may think it I can assure you that I am not made of iron." "Mamma just listen how impudently Amy is speaking to me, Amy I command you to pick that up." "Excuse my impertinenoe Miss, said a young man stepping for ward, who had witnessed the whole scene, "Allow me to assist you, and he picked np the satchel as he spoke, and turning to Maude he said. "Good even ing Miss Meredith, will you present me to this young lady." Maude started and turned pale, for the stranger was none other than Mr. Carl Evans, the rich and handsome young lawyer, over whom all the young ladies were in ecstacies, Maude included. "O Mr. Evans, I am delighted to see you," said Maude, have you been here long." "Only since yesterday," he replied, and then repeated his former request She bit her lips with vexation, but replied, 0 certaintly, I had forgotten about it Mr. Evans this is Amy Lester, my wait ing maid, she is a distant relation of ours but ia very poor," then turning to him laughingly, she said, "now assist her if you wUL" He made no reply, but with a little smile lurking around the corners of his fine mouth, he relieved Amy of her load and and requesting the waiter to lead the way, he strode up stairs, followed by the two girls, one filled with antonishmentthe other anger, and having deposited the bundles safely in a corner of the room, he retired, not however before speaking to Amy and requesting that their acquaintance might be continued. One evening when they had been in Saratoga about a week. Amy was sitting on tha veranda, with her hands folded on a book in her lap, and listening dreamily to the musio coining through the open windows, when she was startled by the sound of footsteps and looking np she beheld Mr. Evans beside her. "O how yon frightened me Mr. Evans, she excloimed. 1 am so sorry, he said, I did not mean to do so but seeing you thinking so deeply I thought it would be pleasant to know what those thoughts were sine they seamed to be so pleasing to yon, may I share them. "Q certainly," she said, "I was think ing how happy the angels must be, for they are listening constantly to mnsie buu ui unrea everyiuiug is peaceiui and happy. O, would I were there." one leaned her cheek on her hand and sighed deeply, looking np she beheld him gazing earnestly npon her, she blushed, and was about to retire when he said : "Miss Lester will yon walk around the porch with me a few minutes; I have something to ask you." She suffered him to lead her away, and when at some distance from the crowd, he said. Miss Amy, I have noticed how cruelly you are treated by your rela tions, do you think you could love me well enough to leave them and be my little wile 7 "air. vans l can not listen to you, for in speaking thus you are prompted by pity and not by love." "No, no, Amy, listen to me, I confess the first day I did pity you, but since then I have seen your goodness and patienee, and I love you now, my darling, deeply passionately, do you love me, will you be my wife. O think, darling Amy before you render me miserable for life." Well Carl, she said, I love you, but this is so sudden that I can not give you my final answer until to-morrow, so an revoir till then," and before he could utter one word of remonstrance she was gone. "Ah, well, I will try to kill time till to-morrow by going to bed," and light ing a cigar he went if not to bed, to his own chamber where he will leave him for the present The next morning Mr. Meredith came into the private parlor, where the family together with Mr. Evans were seated, glancing hastily around he espied Amy, and going np to her he said, "Amy, good news, good news 1 your late uncle left another will in which you are the sole heiress of his wealth, it was discovered only yesterday in a bundle of old papers. Esther, Maude, why do you not congratulate little Amy on her good lortune, lor my part 1 am glad, not only on Amy's account but also on my own, for this reason, that I may give up playing the gentleman. Well Amy what have you to say about it "Well uncle, in the first place 1 have to thank you for this both great and good news, and your kindness since I have been in your house, secondly, I forgive sunt Esther and beg her to accept half of my fortune, to Mr. Evans I will an swer yes to that question he asked me last night and I want Maude if she will consent, to be my brides maid. A .viarvelona F.Hcape. About ten years ago I was employed as night watchman in a sugar refinery in Greenock, a town where there are probably more sugar refineries than any other in Britain. That in which I was engaged was the largest in the place, and on account of its size tin re was another watchman beside myself. His name was Blackwood; he was a widower; and his only son, of about 12, used often to come and sleep in the little room where we kept watch. There was a large Newfoundland dog that was let loose at night, and used to walk ail over the refinery, and was worth half a dozen watchmen. Our principal amies, ui course, were 10 guaru against thieves and fire. " e Went there ftt eiguiociocaain gni,ana8iaia uiiBixBtroD(. constitution, however, served in me morn ng, at wnicu nour the men came to tneu work, ine little room where we sat was made especially for the watchman. There was a fireplace in it though there was never any need of a fire, for the sugar house was al ways so hot that any additional heat was unnecessary. Except two hard benches, and a shelf in the wall for a lamp.the room had no furniture. There was no inducement for watchers to go to sleep there. Blackwood's boy, when he came for the light, nsed to lie on some sacks and his father's great coat in a corner. Blackwood and I took in some cheap periodicals, and we used to read out these, or a newspaper in turn, till two or three o'clock, and then we dozed until it was time for ns to go. All our sleep had to be taken during the day. There were cheap trips on the Clyde in those days, as there are still, en Saturdays. Black wood had promised to take his son a sail, and asked me one day if I would accompany them. I did so; and went to Loch Lomond, and spent a very pleasant day, and returned just in time to go to the sugar house. It was in tensely hot weather at the time, and having done without our usual sleep, we felt very tired. The heat of the sugar house was not calculated to re fresh ns, and we could hardly keep onr eyes open. We tried reading.as usual, but it was useless. Before 10 o'clock Blackwood had fallen sound asleep. I determined to keep awake, and intend ed, after a couple of hours or so, to rouse my companion, and take a sleep myself, for I felt that it would be im possible to keep watch all night I must however, have fallen asleep un consciously, and have remained so for several hours. I dreamt that I was in the cabin of the steamer in which I had been that day, and that it was full of smoke, and that I was being suffocated, and could not get out 1 awoke as if I were struggling for life, and found the room filled with a stifling vapor, and felt an intense heat and I heard with out the crackling of flames. The sugar house was on fire. Blackwood was still asleep, and I knocked him np, and opened the door of the room. A cargo of raw sugar and molasses had just been taken in, and this was piled np on each side of the vaulted passage that led from the main door of the rennery. This mass was on ore. and was sending out dense vol umes of smoke; on the other side of ns were wooden stairs, which led to vari ous parts of the building, and these were also in names. The rennery Had evidently been on fire for a long time, and we could hear the shouts of the people without We were surrounded by the flames, and the heat was so great that it was certain we could not survive long. Blackwood and I looked at each other in dismay. His boy ap peared to be calmer than either of us, and suddenly cried out, "Father, the beer cellar ! The men who worked in the refinery. on account of the great heat to which they were subjected, had a daily allow ance of beer, which was kept in a stone cellar about twelve er fourteen feet un der ground. It was to this place the boy referred. The top of the stairs which led to it was surrounded by fire, bnt we at once rushed to it and de scended the steps. In passing the flames at the top of the stairs, my face had scorched ana my hair singed. The door of the cellar was locked, but with the strength of desperation, we dashed ourselves against it and burst it open. How cool it felt, after the fearful heat of the furnace we had just left I But how long would it remain so, was the question that Blackwood and I consid ered in a few hurried words. We had hardly closed the door when we heard the frightful crash of the falling roof of the rennery. and pieces of bnmt wood came hissing and crackling down the stairs. We rolled two barrels behind the door, which we did not fear would catch fire, as it was covered with iron, and then we waited, while it began to grow hotter and hotter. It was quite dark there, althongh we were so close to the bright flames. I could hear Blackwood praying as he knelt on the floor of the cellar. He was a good man, I believe, and well prepared for the death that met him that night I soon felt the choking stench of burnt sugar, and on putting my hand to the floor, 1 was burnt severely. The melted sugar and scalding molasses were flowing down the stairs, and filling the place where we were. The floor sloped con siderably, and I retreated to the end farthest from the door. The heat was growing intense, and the vapor was stifling. I became unconscious, and how long I remained so I cannot tell. When I recovered my senses the heat had gone, and there was about six inches of water in the place where I was lying. This had come from the fire-engines, and was lake-warm. I could not feel this with my hands, as they and my face were fearfully scorched; but I did so with my toDgue. I had called on Blackwood, but there was no answer; and, by wriggling over with great pain for a few y aril 8, 1 found both he and his son dead. The scald ing sugar had reached the place where they were, and had apparently stopped there, lcould feel the hardened cake under the water. I conjectured that they, like myself, had become uncon scious, and had been burned to death by the boiling sugar. In the agony I was enduring, I envied them. Death had no alarms for me then. The time during which I remained in this place seemed like weeks. 1 had no hoe of escape, and as I knew above there must be an immense mass, formed by the parts of the building which had fallen. 1 had not strength even to reach the door. At last, when my pain had decreased a little, I fell asleep, or fainting, I cannot tell which; but when I awoke I felt somewhat relievl, and a longing for life. I managed jo get some beer, which revived me consider ably. I tried to open the door, but was unable. The silence which per vaded the place, and the consciousness of the presence of the tw dead bodies, had their effect on my weak state, and I knew I was becoming delirons. I re member I laughed hysterically, and began to shout When I stopped, I heard a faint sound far above me, this made me perfectly wild. There was a hammer.which my hand had accidently come against, and I took it and began beating an empty barrel in frenzy. Then 1 heard a shont from above, but I was mad now, and I remember, as if it were yesterday, that I attempted to strike my head with the hammer,and then I lost all recollection. When I regained my consciousness, I found I was in the infirmary. They told me that when the men were clearing away the rubbish, they heard a sound, and remembering the cellar, had dug down to it They thought at first that we were all dead; and it was not till a med ical man had seen the bodies, that it wa8 aiscovered that there was still some iife ieft in me- I lay there for months and was never ..ruuttail - A vnnv ,n.1 me in eooA Btead:and I was at last able to fill a good situation, which the own ers of the refinery kindly procured for me in England. Ten years have passed since then, and I am glad to say very few effects have remained of that ter rible experience. A Chapter ou Dos. After Milton, the civic dog finds him self born too late. History held the record of a day when the poet might have soared of freer wing in the high reason of his fancy, with his garland and singing robes about him. The traditions of a dateless ancestry must stir poor Tray to memories of a time when his race was honored and beloved of man; nay, worshiped and entreated with sacrifices. No occidental dog of well regulated mind desires to revive that uncomfort able distinction. Bnt mastiff and ter rier, bound and spaniel, shepherd and Spits, Newfoundland and Saint Ber nard, may boldly stand for justice in memory of the services of their kind. And even that nameless poor relation of prosperous canines.the "yaller dog" of country huts and city alleys, might beg for mercy. For these patient, faithful, taciturn creatures have been the unselfish friends and servants of man since that unamiable savage.roam ing the woods naked, suddenly be thought himself to make a coat of his companion's skin. In fact your dog is your only nnquestioning and abso lute lover. A man must bs agreeable to be thought agreeable by his friends; tender, to be cherished by his children; filial, to be deeply desired even by his parents. Rut hisdog will cling to him through evil report and good report; suffer, starve, die at his hands, and count itself happy in the opportunity. No animal has been half so celebrated in history, and none has half so well deserved that immortality. Was it not a dog that Plato swore by ? Did not the dog Alcibiades cost seventy minas, and astonish Athens even more by his sagacity than by his beauty? He seems to have been the only creature whom the coarse caprices of hjs master could not alienate, and certainly his wrongs would have justified his seces sion. That modern General, greater than the Greek, William of Orange, loved his dog as well and treated him much better The Merry Monarch, who kept faith with no man, and believed in no wo man, cherished his dogs with a tender ness that showed a possibility of genu ineness in that pinch-back character. Perhaps he inherited the trait from his grandmother. Queen Ann of Denmark, who tended a whole menagerie of these pets, and paid a very pretty animal bill to worthy Master Heriot, the court goldsmith, for their gold and silver collars and emblazoned blankets. It was reserved to that lady's successor, her present Majesty of England, to un earth the ugly terrier of Skye from its modest retirement, and present it to a sycophantic world, not as a pheno menon, but as a fashion. In short,the names of the royalty, nobility and gen try that have become famous as the pa trons and enconragers of dogs would satisfy Mrs. Jarley herself of their claims on genteel attention. But literature also has made them her own, and art has loved them. Who thinks of the great Sir Walter without Maida 1 What lover of Mrs. lirowning has not a tender thought of Flush? How can heroic little Miss Milford be separated from her beloved spaniel? Who of us ever read that perfect his tory of Bab and His Friends without a suspicions mistiness of vision ? Who is not grateful to the invisible beloved Schneider for the constant comfort which that tenderhearted, undeserving scapegrace, Rip Van Winkle, finds in his dumb companionship? To how many of us are not the only remem bered events of the evil reign of King John the signing of Magna Charta and the death of Oelert, the hound? To how many does the mention of contem porary English art bring np, first, the dogs of Landseerf What countless stories of canine sagacity, fidelity, courage, self-sacrifice, crowd all our memories to justify that pithy saying of Hamerton, "I pity the man who" can live a dogless life ?" Never was there a more pathetical exnioitionoi persecuted innocence t!iau the condition of the typical dog to day. And. as usual, it ia Madame Bumor, ignorant and bigoted, who has wrought the mischief. Thus it is. Ages ago the long-headed Egyptians, careful in all things, observed that the Nile rose- annually with the heliacal rising of a certain brilliant star. This star they named Sillor, the File. And because its coming warned them to their ter races above the reach of the flood, they politely typified it as a dog, or a man with a dog's head. The Latins adopted the star as Sirins, but forgot, or never knew, the significance of its name, and tony and fable assigned it an increas ing influence on the heat, and a conse quent balefulness. Hippocrates and Pliny reported the popular belief that on the day of the rising of this star wine turned sonr, dogs went mad, all other animals lsgan to waste, and man to droop. The Komans even sacrificed a brown dog to the evil-mined lumi nary to appease Lis rage. We moderns go farther, and seemed inclined to slay the whole race because the imaginative Egyptians complimented a useful star with canine attributes. It is probably useless to remind the believers in the malevolence of Sirins that that slandered orb twinkles at the comfortable distance of two trillions two hundred billions of miles from our proper planet, and that the illustrative cannon ball, traveling at the rate of fonr hundred and eighty miles an honr, might reasonably desire to rest before the end of the five hundred and twenty three thousand two hundred and eleven years which it mnst take to reach there. Under these circumstances certain minds would doubt whether the ap pearance of the dog-star kindled the tires of our blazing July and Angust And their donbt would gather strength from the well-known fact that the pro cession of the equinoxes constantly pospones the heliacal rising of the ill- repnted summer visitor, and, in the course of five or six thousand years, will bring about its annual advent in frosty November. Science declared long ago that hy drophobia was not a midsummer mad ness, and that the practice l muzzling i dogs was a nseless cruelty. Every year, notwithstanding, the large cities are subject to an epidemic of panic ter ror eoui-erning rabies, and of panic barbarity toward its possible or impos sible victims. Perhaps it is not too much to say that the fostering of the lowest instincts of the gamin by the establishment of the dog pound, the system of rewards for dog taking, the publication of the horrible details of ! dog torturing and the spectacle of the selfish and crnel vindictiveness of a whole community toward one dumb 'Animal tliraf.m a m-utl .1 1 1 rrc r Ia society than the unhindered bite of the maddest of quadrupeds that kills the body, and after that has no more than it can do. Let us have a spasm of sense. Worthless and dangerous ours should doubtless be dispensed with, but quiet ly, privately and painlessly. Ail other dogs have a right to their harm 'ess ex istence. They have a right, also, to an nnmnzzled nope and unlimited water. Thus cared for, July develops no more rabies in the poor creatures than January. Men are certainly more irritable in the blaze of midsummer. We have no right to expect a superior virtue in the uncatechised dog. if be is teased and trifled with, he very prop erly remonstrates in the only way open to him. It is wisdom to "be patient with him as with one another, and leave fellow-dog and fellow-man as much as possible to themselves on these scorching days. A mad dog is a most horrible fact, and well nigh an unknown one. A mad man is hardly more agreeable, and, alas, by no means uncommon. Just now there seems to eome hundreds of thousands in this city alone, and a mental quarantine from which they could be discharged only when cured appears a more neces sary restraint than a dog-pound. Chrintian Union. A Mexican Town. A recent letter-writer says that one Mexican town will generally serve as a pattern for all, though there may be individual departures from the rule The oddest feature of Mexican houses is the spouts which carry off the rain from the roof. These spouts are of clay ware, are cylinders, and some two or three inches in diameter at the mouth which projects over the sidewalk, or where the sidewalk often should be. With their glazed, dark-red color, these conduits look just like so many cannon thrusting their muzzles out some two or three feet from the front walL The stranger who first sees these spouts can compare them to nothing so filthy as the cannon planted in a breastwork and thus, as he casts his eyes along a block, the latter looks for all the world like a fort But let him be underneath them when a genuine Mexican thunder show er comes on. and the discharge will be of a character that will leave no doubt in his mind either as to quality, or quantity. The roofs of houses are here made flat, generally of tiles, overlaid with tin or asphalt, or other kind of material. The floors are of red tiles, some two or three inches thick, and about nine inches square. Some of the ceilings of the better class of houses are formed of tiles of some design or figure, in some of tha floor tiles are figured and various patterns. A California I'pas. About one half a mile over a moun tain from Bartlett Springs there is what is called the " gas spring. This is probably the greatest curiosity of the mountains. The water is cold, but bubbling and foaming as if it boiled, and the greatest wonder is the inevita ble destruction of life produced by in baling the gas. No live thing is to be found within a circuit of 100 yards near this spring. The very birds, if they happen to fly over it drop dead. We experimented with a lizard on its de structive properties by holding it a few feet above the water ; it stretched dead in two minutes. It will kill a human being in twenty minutes. We stood over it five minutes, when a dull, heavy, aching sensation crept over us and our eyes began to swim. The gas which es capes here is the rankest kind of car bonic acid, hence its sure destruction of life; also quenching of flame in stantaneonsly. Cnhim (CaL) Independent. . ! In the ObiKrrer, the Rev. Charles P. Bush, D. D., gives an interesting ac count of some remarkable savages which have come under his notice : The beautiful Island of Sumatra, two and a half times as large as all New England, is inhabited by about 4,500, 000 people, among whom hardly any missionary effort had as yet been made. Parts of the island were in possession of the Dutch, and other tribes were in habited by independent tribes of prin cipalities, among whom the Botta peo ple, or Butacka, were represented as the most Intelligent and interesting; a tribe or nation of about 350,i)iH) souls, ocenpying the interior central portion of the island, immediately south of the Atchenese, with whom the Dutch are new at war. The Bataks were generally mild and inoffensive, though fierce and revenge ful in time of conflict In one respect they were the most remarkable people anywhere to be found educated can nibals. They had a written language and books, and most of the peopl oonld read, and yet thsy were canni bals. They had an alphabet of their own, consisting of twenty-two letters and R, , m. -. , w w uju-fc beasts, who have learned to look upon : so many words into his thoughts that quite original, yet simple and melodi- , jonrneT a9 . task the dog, .voat he always obscures and frequently con ous, much like the Italian, written like ! M -.,,,, i,. .nA thVm. . 3 our own, from left to right, and easily learned, and much nsed in all that re gion. I heir books are written on the inner bark ot a species of palm tree.their pen consisting of a mere twig, or a fibre of a leaf, their ink made of a certain gnm and the juice of the sugar cane, tor orilinary purposes they also wrote upon smooth bamboo sticks, sometimes two inches in diameter and two or three feet long, making a letter, it might be big enough to knock a person down -ouvenieut for lovers delivering their own epistle if they should not be gra cionsly receiveiL Their literary works were really nu merous and yet not very wise, consist ing largely of books of divination, jug glery and tne most absurd fables about the origin and destiny of the great Hatta nation. It will le seen, there fore, that thev had some ambition. If I , - ,, . .. they should receive the Gospel they -v t... , e .c ,v i. i . Yi i i uiuern. rcniues, uiucu vi me isiauu ! was nominally Mohammedan, and. t . i i . . . i i i. .i .1 i , . j- . . , one above and one lelow-oue goo.1 A till AHA liarf lnf tliiiir iilaaa v - ,wj ami uncertain, auu mey leu pay greater homagi evil spirit than to the good, as they had l -' most to lear irom him. And yet, strange enough. French in fidelity aud intidel books had found their way into that conntry. The mis sionaries met one of the former, who denonnced the Bible as "all a lie," al though he confessed that he had never read it, but boasted that he had read Voltaire's insane tirade against it no less than ten times. And, after all, this cannibalism was of a modified type. They did not seem to feed on human flesh for mere love of it; nor was it their settled habit,as with some other people, to have regular feasts;but portions of the flesh of their enemies, slain in war, were tasted, as if in revenge, or as denoting complete triumph. The missionaries we,e, how ever, invited to one feast, for which a boy seven years of age had beeu seized and killed and roasted, to be eaten for the sins of his father, committed six years Lefore the little fellow was born. The missionaries respectfully declined the invitation. Thai fir prune. I have not Wen very successful, says Max Adeler iu the Daiibury Neivs.wiili my exM'riiiH'ur in grape culture. I bought a vine some time ago, anil the inaii w ho sold the cutting to lne en joined nie to lie careful to water it thoroughly everv day. I did so. but it didn't seem to thrive, fine day I asked my nei'lilMir, Pitman, what he thought was the matter with it. and w hen I mentioned that I watered it daily he said : "He gT.icious, Adeler, that'd kill any one ! A grapevine don't want any ar tificial watering." Then he advised me to discontinue the process and to wash the vine with soapsuds in order to kill the bugs. .My anxiety to know why it didn't thrive was relieved some time afterward by overhearing a man in the cat s remark that "some men kill their graiteviucs by tin ir mimed toolcry in piiitiu soap suds on 'em.'' He said that all a gr.i)H--vine WHiited was to have the eaith arou.id it loosened now and then with a spade. Then I U j.mii to dig around niv vine every morning, but one day, w liile engaged in the exercise, Coolcv came and leaned over the fence and said : "Adder, you'll kill that there vine if you don't stop digin' at it. Notion' hurts a vine wnss than tlist in tinT the soil around the roots, now mind me. That vine don't want liothin' but to lx trained up on a trellisan' fastened with wire.' 1 ordered a trellis that aftcrnon,:ind tied tender shoots of the vines to the cross pieces. The jobcost me -'A. hi the following Tuesday I read in my ag ricultural paM-r that if a man wants to ruin a graH-vine, the quickest wav is to tie it up with wire, as tne oxidiza tion destroys the bark. So I took oil the wire and replaced it with string. I was talking alHiut it to the man who came over to bleed my horse for the blind staggers, and he assured me that then; was only one sure way to make a gravevine utterly worthless, and that was to run it up ona trellis. In France, he told me, the vineyard owners all trained their vines on poles, and that was the right way. So I got the axe and knocked the trellis to pieces, and then fixed the vine to a bean-pole. Still it didn't thrive very well, and I asked a nurseryman near me to V!n' and look at it. He said he con come, lint he knew what was the mat ter with that vine as well as if he saw it. It wanted pruning. I ought to cut it down within ten feet of the roots and then manure it well. I did cut it down, and emptied a bag ot gnano over it; but as it seemed sort of slow, I insisieu on ine nurseryman coming over to examine it. He said that Ins fee was? 10 in advance. 1 paid him and he came. He looked at the vine a moment: then he smiled: and then he said, "By gosh, Adeler, that isn't a grapevine at all! Its a Virginia creeper." o l have kind ot knocked ott on gmie cultuie and am paying more at tention to mv rahhnee. A return has been issued showing the number of dogs registered in Ireland in the year 1873, and the receipts and expenditure under the dog regulation act of 18G.J. The total number ot dogs registered was 302,307 ; the amount of license duty received was 30,230, and after payment of 12,039 for expenses incurred in the administration of the act the surplus of jC 18,191 was paid over to the counties, towus and town ships. 1, . ..i T' i "a"iruV'K the team, a strap was put agreed to protect the Mohammedan re- a,K(llt Jlis nock Ue WjW u.iX , t ligion from all assault and interference posj from without; but the Battas were ( The poor fellow drooped his tail an 1 ' simple heathen and beyond Dutch hu illtelijK0Dt countenance expressed ; control. They believed lu two gods. ; ;..,., .i; ......'. it., i Column. The nrsoET Doos of Siberia. Poor fellows ! Hungry from morning until night ; hungry all the time except during the short snmmer, when they go a-fishing and help themselves ! I wonder how their drivers would like to wait all day long for the first sign of breakfast ; bnt that is just what the Siberian dogs who live at home are re- qmreu to uo even wnen tney travel ail , . . . , . aT ' That man is voted a bore who per- Dismal fate to be kept at starvation j talku botut nimst;i' wUen TO, point so long, and then to get only a , Wlsh to Ulk nt yourself small piece of dried salmon to slaep ! Sjras women get up a reputation for upon. If some wise dog would travel ; amiability by taking a little boy into to that region and howl a little about j the omnibus with them and making emigration I th.nk there would soon be : him stand up and give his sent to some too many dogs about tiix. Mr. Bush, i body about twenty times during the who traveled through a portion of trip. Siberia a few years ago, tells us tnat when a journy over the frozen rivers of Siberia is about to be made the natives are astir at daybreak, and having called and whistled their dogs they harness them no in pairs to lone seal thongs, fastened between two trees, preparatory to attaching them to the sleds. With the exception of a few u 1 1..-;..,- i i ; i , l c,iiiuuii-JllWllC, llUUt-lUlllUt i are wild with excitement and delight at . seeing the light sleds dragged from heir shelter. They sometimes set up a barking yelping and howling that may , be heard for miles on the still air. and ; are so eager for the start that there , danger of the seal-thong being broken. and the whole band rnshiug off pell-! : mell without the sleds. JIr. Bnili tells j ot one poor little dog who excited all his sympathy : "In making np tne teams only thirty dogs were selected out of the large number in the village to draw out three sleds. Of those left behind one poor little fellow had manifested the greatest delight at the prospect f journey. Nonej.imped higher or barked louaer luan he. and iroru the commence - wrui u tne rep;tiai.iou iiv up reaily to le harnessed. wuen he saw that tlie others were! attached to the thong, and that no attention had been paid to him. he i aiieiuion nan oeen pain j walkeJ to the team' a0l, nth an nir i : i. 'I'liri I'aiaut iwt uis fi(iet) in lllf o( patierj(.a. took his ! l:n.. tt. . r i...: i Nliii.,..l T.. ...-.,f i.; I I ' ' ' ... lit . it. A I i.il ill riu l. V I ' IJ1 . l iii. u i n u t uinui'iniiuiuirui, .it ! evidently felt the denial as acutely as I . J i couM an u,)rnan being. rifteen, i twenty, and sometimes thirty dogs are ottn , li ... I atta.-hed to one fled. "1 he characters j A standing antidote for poison by of these dogs are as diversified as those oak, ivy, etc', is to take a handful o"f of human beings. They are possessed quick-lime, dissolve it in water, let it of great intelligence au.l acuteness. ; stand half an hour, then paint the poi frequently outwitting their masters, i a.)ned rt with if. Ti.r f, j Some are reserved and dignified, seem- plications will never fail to cure the jmg to fully reaiizo the obligations ' most aggravated case. Toison from i which devolve upon them, and euterbees. hornets, snider bites. e. is in- lcto their duties with conscientious ze, , , These dogs are placed at the head of the train to set a good example to the young rattle-brains who follow them, . . Yorso Mechanics. There is no class of the commnuity upon whom the fu ture welfare of the country more essen tially depends than npon the rising generation of young mechanics. If they iu luicuiL'rub, Buuer. luuusircoiis ana ...l...1of ., , 7ZVi i t t -"" of conscientious duty to pay the l J g f-preacher and the printer-two classes enillTtZ 1 f ,'l COnJact. ? of the community that suffer more by the mechanics, and especially the young ; P toetu r- mechanics, will form, in conjunction! -An old gentleman in Maine is pre with the young .armers of the country, I paring for the good time to come. He a bulwark against monopolies and cor-' uas caused to be erected in the cenie rnpt politicians, and save the republic. ! tery a gorgeous monument to the mem If, on the other hand they are ignoraut, ory. of himself and wife, setting forth idle, dissolute, and consequently poor, ' their virtues, Vc. and leaving the ami dependent upon those who are ! dates of their deaths to he filled in willing to trust them if our mechanics i whenever those events may happen. It should unhappily leeome snfh a class ', ,s said that his chief delight cousists iu they would soon be converted into the watching the throngs of gaping msties mere tools of a few rich and artful men, assembled around the monument to who, having first stripped them of every admire its beauty and ponder over it sense of self respect, and every feeling sculptural adornments. &'LtVir-nU? cfitizens' nIJ nf e! When a man has beeu out iu the them as passive instruments for pro- worIl, . , y earnj hi mpat nW 1 tV OWf I?blV0r bjf.t3 J drink in any other business than l n .e.nactmpn f af, ' thatofschl-keeping. it is astonish- tZ Z t !? B0b0dT bnt ?tal ' ir bow cornea, "d few and base demagogues with whom , Wlth ,bat 8we he ,;atn( tJ ,lttla they originate. ! 1 funding the principal countries of f 1, M f hlnrJ.;rt" ,9 ' Europe, and stating the latitude and of any other profession that "kuowl- lo ,le of rinci , citie9perhap. edge is power.' Blind Billy. We have a canary-bird in onr house that we are all very fond of. We call him Billy. He is a very sweet singer ; dui he cannot see. ' , , -. , , , ... , , . - . An architect says he has been in the , Iol;R Jm f7ohe was in a cage with hnbtt for n"a:iy years of bedding hi other birds; aud, in a quarrel, poor rating slates in hydraulic cement, in lilly got his eyes pecked so badly, that . tead of having them nailed on dry in he became entirely blind. The children ti, nun-l l,;K i,m ...n. have to take great care of him ; for, if his perch is not put in the same place every time, he cannot find his food. But I lielicve Billy sings mnre than birds that are not blind. When he hears the twitter of sparrows in the garden, or the singing of the tea-kettle on the stove, be seems to think it his duty to sing. And, when his cage nangs in a window on a sunny day in winter, he sings as thongh he thought : summer had come. Whenever I hear Billy sing, it makes me tn ink of the two great poets, Uonier and .Milton. They were blind ; but, like our Billy, they sang sweet songs. It is said that Homer had to beg for a living. Our Billy sings for a living; bnt he does not beg. Two kind little girls, Lena and Lu, are careful to keep his seed-cup fulL When yon hear wise men talk about the Tariff, remember this : When the Moors held the south of sPain tbey made all vessels that passed 1 toll at the little town of Tarifa, accord- i and lino, the bait being a worm or a ing to the value they carried. Thence : red rag. In Switzerland they are liter came the word tariff, found in all ally raked out of the water, precipi European languages. It means prop- j tately retiring the rake the moment it erly a list of roods with the duties that arrives at the border of the pooL must be paid for bringing them into e paid for bringing them into the country. The dat,i is the money, i the tariff is the list in Eastern markets, made away in tne mmm interior of Minnesota by what is styled the "new process for purifying mid The deepest mine in Cornwall is Do- dlicgs" a process thus far kept se coath, now about 360 fathoms, or 720 cret This flour is heavily bodied and yards, from the surface. The workmen of such consistency that when thrown descend and ascend by means of men- ' into the air it does not fly off in parti engines, and Captain Josiah Thomas, cles, but descends into the hand in a the manager, as an illustration of the mass. It requires one-third more wa- healthy condition of the workings, states that one man has been working and in kneading it into dough more la in the mine for forty years. During bor is required. The bread, it is all that time he has lived at Connor claimed, will remain fresh for a long Downs, a distance of five miles from time. The yield to the bushel of grain the mine, so that he has been walking is not known. It is claimed that by the ten miles per day in addition to his : "new purifying process" it has been labor, and a calcucation which Captain found in Minnesota that Spring wheat Thomas has made shows that this man can be made into the highest price flour, has, daring his forty years' work, 1 and that the same can oe done with the walked 120,000 miles, which is equal to other kinds of wheat There are now a journey five times round the earth, j about 20 miles in Minnesota in which or half the distauce to the moon. ' the new machinery has been iutroJuced. Ui-ifticss. Duty on dry goods That of llll-i bands to buy them. The good huti'i life is like the moun tain top, beautiful because it is near Heaven. The Japanese census shows only three thousand criminals in a population of over thirty-three million souls. The woild is waiting for the discov erer who will explode water. The diffi culty ia that water when heated goes off in steam. If it would only explode, IM. 1 1 . .1 " "UI 08 "r more P"e" , gnnIowder. The man who talks everlastingly and promiscuously, who seems to have an ...v..,....!,,. ," : i i . lAuauntirsc IUOKIULUS VI BIH1UU. riUIU ..D t fiml t wh fc . , u A wU, fl fimnUereJ horse Wl , oft deb'ftte he jjj te j man we t, , w, u, , fo " Help somebody worse off than yonr- sou. au.l you will feel that yon are ' better off than yon fancied. Yon may snoaue an angry man by bearing with him, but not by answering him : that . i as if the steel should try to make the 1 flint leave off giving sparks, by striking : it again. ; Give a ram the necessaries of life and uo wants the conveniences. Give him : 1Il0 conveniences. anJ he craTes for th, luxnries. Grant him the luxuries, and j lie sighs for the elegancies. Let him have tlio elegancies, aud he yearns for the follies. Give him all together, and he complains that he has been cheated ; both m price and ii.ilitT of the arti cles. S mo very clever inventor has suc ceeded in applying electricity to music an l there is a possibility that the ex isting defective orchestras will be re placed by musical automatons warran ted to play with correctness. Will no ouo invent an automaton actor who will - - do lr the author what the new machine : a. i. i r""i" uo ior me composer reu ! " independent of sticks ? 1 stantly arrested by the application of eual parts of common salt and bicar- ; bonate of soda, well rubbed in on the ' place bitten or stung, j An experienced editor pays a high and dese.red compliment to the fair patrons of the press. "Women," he says, "are the best snbscribers in the wrll to newspapers, magazines, etc. We have been editor for forty years, and never lost a dollar by female sub- ' ;""ers. A uey seem io luaKe 11 a poi III -:i 'n. . t - . spelling with ease and accuracy many of those puzzling words which always send us to our Welxder Unabridged. It is astonishing how we shed our learning as we get older. ject to be rattled by the wind, and to be broken by any accidental pressure. The cement soon sets and hardens, so that the roof becomes like a solid wall. The extra cost is 10 or 1") per cent, and he thinks it good economy, considering only permanency and the saving iu re pairs. But besides this it affords great safety against fire, for slate laid in the usual way. will not protect the wood underneath from the heat of a tire at short distance. The free trade taking place in frogs ; is attracting renewed attention in Paris. ! The markets are said to be full of their , hind leg! strung on a piece of osier, . and selling for a few sous a dozen ; : when spiced and served hot, hissing . like snails, they have nnmemns ad : mirers. The frog is very prolific, lay ing about 4'K) eggs ; frogs also are de I voured in immense numbers by water serpents, eels, pike and river fowl ; I wolves even are said to be partial to them. They are caught by nets during torch-light, which dazzles them into . , . . new nour is maamgua appearance ter in mixing than in our ordinary flour,