i SCHWEIER, THE CONSTITUTION THI CHIOS AND THB ESFORCEMEXT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOT TYTY " ' ' ' as " MLFFLINTQWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., FEBRUARY 21, 1S75. NO. 8. THE AXStl or TUB TWILIGHT BT WILL WtLUCI HAK2TEY. When the long evenings slanting grow Id crystal rafters over the beach, Tbe roofs of heaven are almost in reach As I think of my Borrow of long ago. Ouoe more an old grief comes and wrestle. As Jacob wrestled at Jahbok's ford A dumb resistance, with never a word, Kiit tbe bhadow burdening down the trestles; And a long foreboding that seemed to grieve, Like the soldier who over his pallet hears Tbe whieper of patient, suffering yean, IVfore he is used to the empty sleeve; A I kifsed and cried over a cold, still face, Iii her bridal robes, on her bridal bed. And ever repeated, 8be is not dead; She will come out of her nestling place. With flahh of laughter and wreathing arms. The maiden's blush on the cheeks of the wife; She will come back to me, life in life, Iu the dower of womanhood's bridal charms. Or a coming step, I whispered, is hers; She siopt the songs that she used to sing; She conies, like the blossom exhaling spring. Through violet bed and the clover furze; And the still sweet dream shall a vigil kerp Tlie whole night long that she nestles near. Her vino breath fanning my cheek and ear An 1 he in her loose light arms of sleep. If I xerk her by day with the voice or hand. It ends in a doleful even-song. Or a taie of au ancient, forgotten wrong. To children who do not understand. lint after the twilight sheds its bloom Far over the meadows about our home Tbe unseen angels can go and come, Aud roll the stone from the mouth of the biuib. AuJ flie comes iu the dews of a paradise; A huly Messing around me steals; I feel her presence as one that faels Tlie teiitie light upon closed eyes. S when the eveuidm slanting grow Iu crystal rafters over tbe beach. The roofs of heaven are almost iu reach As I think of my sorrow of long ayo. llu-pr's Maytiziiie. IS KI.I.T. How a Woman I'onIm a Letter. Any day when yon have time yon can see how she does it by dropping into the post office. She arrives there with tbe letter in ber hand. It is a sheet of note paper enclosed in a white envelope. She baits in front of tbe stamp window, opens her month to ask for a stamp, lint suddenly darts away and looks at tbe letter to see if she made any errors in names or dates. It takes her five minntes to make snre of this, and then she balances tbe letter on her finger, and tbe awfnl query arises in her mind: "Perhaps it is overweight !" She steps to tbe window and aks the clerk if be has a three cent stamp, fearing that he hasn't, and she looks over every com partment of her porte-monnaie before she buds tbe change to pay for it. Tbe fan begins as she gets the stamp. Sbe sidles around to one side, removes ber gloves, closely inspects the stamp, aud hesitates whether to "lick" it on or wet her finger. She finally concludes that it wouldn't be nice to show ber tongue, and she wets her fioger and passes it over the envelope. Sbe is so long picking np the stamp that the moisture is absorbed, and the stamp slides off the envelope. She tries it twice more with tbe same success, and then, getting desperate, she gives the stamp a "lick," and it sticks. Then comes the sealing of the letter. Sbe wets her finger again, but the envelope flies open, aud after five minutes' delay she has to pass her tongue along the streak of dried mucilage. Sbe holds the letter a long time to make sure that tbe envelope is all right, and finally appears at the window and asks : "Three cents is enough, is it ?" "Tea, ma'am." "And this will go out to-day?" "Cer tainlv." "Will it go to Chicago without the name of the connty on it?" "Just the same ?" "What time will it reach there?" "To-morrow morning." She sighs, turns the letter over and over, and finally asks, "Shall I drop it into one of those places there ?" "Yes, ma'am." She walks np in front of the six orifices through which letters fall upon the table, closely scans each one of them, finally makes a choice, and drops no, she doesn't She stops to see where it will fall, pressing her face against the window until she flattens her nose out of shape, and she doesn't drop it into the place she meant to. Sbe, however, releases it at last, looks down to make snre that it did not fall on the floor, and turns away with sigh of regret that she didn't take one more look at tbe superscription. Important Invention Tor Making Bag. Two hundred millions sacks and bags are annually used throughout the globe. Of this vast number, fully a hundred million are manufactured in England, Nearly all are made by hand. At one of the late industrial exhibitions at London, a large reward was offered for the invention of a ma chine that would sew sacks with an over-stitch. Many attempts bad been made in Europe to devise one, but without success. Such a desideratum l,ai at length boen produced by a San Franciscan Mr. P. H. Garland after having studied and experimented on it for over three years. It works with a spiral needle, and is indeed an ingeni ous contrivance. It is said that the establishing a factory in that city for the manufactory of these machies is talked of. It is estimated that one hundred men operating one hundred of these machines, could annually pro duce 30.000,000 sacks lacking only 5.000,000 of supplying the entire ratfrj cast demand, which equals 35,000,000 annually. Heal nd parent Drain. People who fear that they may pos- -:ul I.- UnVJ alivA will be dad to know that Dr. Doucbnt, one of the- leading physicians Ol ians, " Uined a prize from the French Academy of Medicine for his discovery of a method by which to distinguish real from anr.arent desth. The discovery is thus explained in one of the medical bulletins : When the temperature falls to twenty degrees above sero Centi grade, or sixty-eight degrees Fahren heit, death is certain. Sow Dr. Pou chnt has devised a thermometer-like instrument, whieh he calls a necro meter, so graduated that if when placed under the armpit of a person, supposed to be dead it marks zero, then life has indeed parted beyond any possibility of mistake. Of the merits of this in genious device, so far as any experi ments or performances are concerned, no account is given. THE DIVER'S STORY. iwZnght.m P10". with twenty fathoms of water above, and a stillness, as of death, about you, a Blender cord yonr only means of com munication with those above to be caught in tight place, I say, under these circumstances, is about enough to craze a man outright I I can tell you, sir and the old diver leaned back in his chair, and fixed his eyes thought fully on the roaring fire before which we were seated "I can tell yon, sir. it's often a toss of a penny with us, when Wijnee Ret in mmon3 ttie timbers of an old wreck, if we ever come to the sur face again 1 "I remember a pretty tight fix I got into when we were diving into the Conqueror, np the Sound, of the Con necticut shore. She was coming in from the Mediterranean, after a three years' cruise with tbe 'middies and went down in a gale in sight of home, with every soul on board. I was young then, and anxious to be the first sent down into her, for the sake of the reputation it would give me ; for reputation meant money, aud 'money,' you see, was the only reason Nettie and I were deferring onr marriage. You can understand how matters stood, and how glad I was when in receipt of orders to make the first dive into the old man-of-war. "The sea was running pretty high a" I was carried down in my heavy 'armor' from tbe deck of tbe steamer to tbe float along-side, where the ropes by which to haul me np again were fastened on ; the india-rubber tube, through which I was to be supplied with air, was adjusted, and I stood listening to my final instructions before being put overboard. " 'Now, dear boy,' said my old friend and instructor, Lott, the famous deep sea diver, who came forward to close tbe little gluts window in my helmet. Hake good care of yourself, and don't stay long below. The currents are swift and treacherous about here : aud keep au eye to your ropes, or they'll get tangled. Now, then, good-by, old fel low, and good luck to yon ; and with a pleusunt smile he closed tbe glass door before my eyes, and fastened over it the protecting wire netting. "They bore me up in their arms to the side of the float, where the hungry waves were leaping np, as though greedily opening their foaming frothy jaws to receive me. "I dropped into the waves with a splash, sinking swiftly down through the brilliant sunlit waters, which, though rough and boisterous at their surface, suddenly grew calm as I passed below. I glanced up at tbe sun, which appeared as a great bail of fire, but, growing smaller and smaller as I sank lower, it finally seemed like the tiny red spark of a candle, and then faded from sight. I noticed that tbe waters were lit by pale greenish haze, much like the effect of moonlight in a light, drifting fog ; but these observations were cut short by my realizing that I was near bottom, and looking below, I found myself over a bank of tall thick sea-weed. "Knowing that if I were once en tangled in them, they wonld hold me there for ever, I pulled the signal-rope violently, and my descent was checked just as my feet touched the treacher ous grasses. The tide bore me slowly along and passed them turning me around again and again in the eddies, and making my head giddy that I was heartily glad when I cleared the bank and stood at last upon the bright sandy bottom. The shells and gravel on the bed of the waters were most delicate and beautiful in formation, and ex quisite in design, but so tender that even shells crumbled at my touch. "I hurried on with the current until I saw before me what I judged to be tbe great wooden walls of the Con queror, but on nearing it I fonnd it to be a reef of rocks, fancifully honey combed from end to end, and In and out among the little arched halls of these fern-covered chambers the fish were chasing each other playfully or hanging idly in the waters. "Passing around these rocks, I came upon a mass of tangled rigging, and a few steps further brought me to the man-of-war half buried where she lay, in tbe drifting sand, her spars and top masts crushed and splintered upon her decks ; her sails and rigging hanging over tbe side and resting upon the broken bulwarks. . "Great caution was necessary lest I should become entangled among the ropes or caught under the shifting timbers, and making my way slowly to the companion way, I sent up the signal : 323 . 7 . ('I am about to enter the vessel' I shall be in danger' 'Play out rope freely and give me plenty of air." "I made my way to the lower deck, and found myself in the forward cabin. It was very dark, and I groped about for the doorway, knowing that once in the main saloon, the deck-lights would enable me to see more distinctly. "Clearing the rubbish and drifting sand from about the doorway, I burst it open, and was about to enter when I paused, to summon courage before entering. A moment, and my nervous ness was over ; I put my shoulder to the door, shoved it back against the waters, and resolutely entered. An aw ful silence was upon everything a silence as of death. I was alone, at the bottom of the sea, in the saloon of the Conqnerer, and ciose about me were postured, like grim sentinels set to watch me in my work, the officers and crew of two hundred ! "Yes, there were the ill-fated men, as they stood when death overtook them on that awful night, when they were hurried from their berths on the alarm that they were sinking. Before they could reach the stairway, the mightv water had rushed in upon them, and they died where it had met them, at tbe threshold. , "The eddying waters carried tbem here and there through the cabin, but still, so close were they one to another, that J had to part them now and then to ruach the after cabin, and more than one turned, as I slowly passed along, and followed in the wake I made behind me. Their faces were often close against mv helmet, and it horrified me to notice that they all wore still upon their features the impression of the terror that had come upon them in death. "Yon mustn't think me heartless if I aay I went at once to my work, for we divers constantly go through such scenes ; and I knew well enough, before I went down, that they were awaiting me there. I felt it n,y " J?u would. 1 bnt 1 waB Bent dow? 7 do. certain things, and I had to start about still. I was dad enough when I stood again on deck, ready to go above with my first report, and gave a good strong pull on the signal- nassed. and I was terri fied at receiving no response from a second or third signal I .... "I pulled the rope again violently waited ttiu no repiy .- "Great Heaven! what did it all mean ? Had they forgotten me ? Were they to leave me there at the bottom, of the sea with that awful crew ? I no sooner realized my helplessness than an uncontrollable terror took possession of me, while horrible doubts and fears came crowding into my brain. Surely they would not desert me ! surely they bad not forgotten me I 1 pulled madly at the cord once more, and glancing up perceived that there was something steadily resisting my efforts from the masthead above. "Was it some monster who was play ing with my rope ? some great fish who was holding it in his jaws ? In my desperation I threw my whole weight on it, and it gave way, and fell slowly, silently on tbe deck at my feet ! ibe ragged, frayed ends, which had become entangled in the rigging, were in my hands, and the upper half of the ropes had floated far away with the tide. "I was alone at the bottom of the sea, with no means of signaling" my dis tress The India-rubber tube, which was my only means of breathing, was yet left to me ; bnt as soon as they should begin to wind in tne ropes ana tube, on some supposed signal from me, it would snap in two, and the waters would come in upon me. "I need not tell you of the wild terror which took possession of me ; yon could not appreciate it. I knew the men were close to me only thirty yards above yet I mnst die because I could not reach them 1 I raved like a madman, and tried to tear my armor from me, but its iron rivets held me fast. I shouted piteously, uselessly, through the silent waters, my cry going no farther than the wall of my helmet I was beside myself in my awful terror. I tried to pray, but I could not control my maddened brain. "I fell upon the deck at last, ex hausted in an ominous stupor a sullen despair and sank into uncon sciousness. When I recovered, I was calm prayer came to my lips, and with it a peace and resignation to my heart. "I closed my eyes quietly, and waited for the death I was powerless to defer. Waited for it with my head laid on my arms as I used to sleep in the dear old days at home. Waiting quietly for its coming, praying God that it might come upon me gently, and asking that I might fall into unconsciousness when it was close at hand. " What I crazed t Was I mad, or was this a new torture for me in my last moments ? I had laid quiet bnt a moment, when I started np in terror, uttering a cry a weak, miserable cry, which died on my lips as I sank again on the deck and closed my eyes to a terrible sight before me. "1 had left the cabin door open, and freed the imprisoned dead men. One of the dead sailors had floated np to the deck, and, by some horrible chance, the tide bore him directly toward me. Was I to die surrounded once more by those ghastly sentinels as a death watch? "He was borne slowly along on the current, bis eyes wide open in an awful stare, his arms outstretched, as though to embrace me, welcoming me to the unknown worhi. I fell prostrate on the deck in my terror, but he floated on slowly, the tide casting him np against me, when he fell at my side. "I canght him, in my desperation, to fling him from me, bnt his arms closed tight about me in an iron em brace, and his face was close to mine the faoe of old Lott, the diver, who had come down through the waters to save me, and in whose stoat arms I was borne up, and carried insensible to the boats above. "We saw what was wrong right away, dear boy,' he said to me afterward, when the ragged ends of your ropes floated to the surface. There was only one way of reaching you, old fellow, and I can tell yon we flew around lively. We had no "bell" to go down to you in, so we just fastened some weights to my feet, and ropes to my arms. I took a rubber month-pic between my teeth, and dropped overboard. The water oppressed me fearfully, and I couldn't have stood it more than a few minutes. In that few minntes I fonnd you, old fellow, canght you in my arms, and signaled them to haul us np mighty CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION OF 1876 THE AGRICULTURAL BUILDING. quick. I couldn't have stood it much longer, dear boy, for it was killing me.' "I took bis dear hands in mine, and looked into his good, honest eyes. With a swelling heart I told him in such words as I could, of my gratitude for his heroio efforts when he came down through the waters at the risk of his own life to save mine." Almost an Adventure. Tbe first time I visited England, under the influence of a few days' im pressions I wrote to a friend : "Eng land is a picture of happiness and a dream of beauty. AU her meadows are green, all her window-curtains are white, all her mutton-chops are tender, all her chambermaids art beautiful. The idea of a war with such a country is simply absurd." As I continued my walk along the crowded Strand, a low pleasant voice, almost in my ear, said "Don't look be hind, sir." If anything was likely to make me look behind, it was just that. But I didn't. I kept my course without turn ing my head. Presently again : "If you want some very fine cigars, very cheap, follow me." 1 did want some very fine cigars, and though I was bearer of dispatches their being very cheap was no objection. I also wanted another thing, as the reader no doubt has begun to suspect. My excuse is, I was a great deal younger then than I am now. In a few moments a sqnare-shonldered, decently-dressed man passed before me and crossed the street ; so did L lre8ently he turned a corner : so did I. He crossed again : so did L He walked onward a considerable distance : so did L Ue entered a narrow dark alley : so did L After a variety of turnings and windings toward the very worst part of the town, through a region of squalid misery and pestilential air, he turned into a gin palace ; so did L There were a n timber of rowdy looking ladies and gentlemen with red noses standing at the counter, bat no notice was taken of us. My silent pilot, always without turning his head, crossed the gin palace and passed out of it in the rear, made his way rapidly along a gloomy, solitary court, entered a dirty, dismal-looking, unfurnished room, and out of that into another : so did L We were now in a small dark chamber, with only one win dow, about two feet square and ten or twelve from the floor, so that nobody could look in or out. Strange as it may seem, not till this moment did I think what a foolish thing I was doing. "Now, sir !" said my new friend, who, as I found when he turned his bead, was anything but a handsome fellow. He unlocked a large closet crammed with an ample provision of cigar-boxes. "Just look at them cigars I They're the best in the whole world and at the lowest prices. Seven and a half pounds. Seven pounds. Six pounds. Ye can't get them cigars anywhere in the whole United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland without paying twice as much. Mr. So-and-so" (naming a son of one of the leading members of the British House of Commons) "has just bought for fifty pounds." "Fifty pounds 1" exclaimed L "My good fellow, I don't want fifty pounds' worth of cigars. I am going in a few days where I can get cigars as oheap as these. I'll take a hundred, or, if you like, two hundred, bnt I sha'n't take any more." The man looked at me with a very curious expression on his bad, ngly face, and pressed his lips hard together like one who has difficulty to control a fierce gust of passion. Then he an swered : "Ye don't think 1 brought ye here, and exposed myself and my den to ye (for, ye must know, we're smugglers), only to sell ye a shillin's worth of cigars, do ye? If ye're gentleman, as I supposed ye was, ye'll take enough to pay for trouble and risk." There was a pause. "If ye don't like cigars," said he, perhaps yell take some other goods." As he spoke, with a sudden energetic movement he threw open the trapdoor at my feet. I looked into it. Black as midnight, A most cheerful object under the circumstances. He stepped down and instantly rose again with an armful of articles. "Camel-hair shawls," aid he "real cashmere India shaw's, both sides alike. Brussels lace, velvets, jewelry. Ye can sell any o' them arti cles for three times what I charge." "Magnificent 1" exclaimed I with af fected admiration, for I was not con templating the elegant articles, but my own elegant position. I perceived I was not only in a smuggler's den, but in a robber's cave. Not only robbery, but murder was written in every linea ment of the ruffian's faoe and sounded in every tone of his voice. What was I to do ? Whatever I did mnst be done quickly. While he arranged the wares for my inspection I measured his pro portions. He was far more than a match for me. Besides, had I been strong enough and bold enough to spr.ng upon him or to attempt to knock him down that trapdoor with any chance of suc cess, a cry or whistle would no doubt bring to his assistance accomplices as irresistible if not as numerous as the army of Roderick Dim ; and even a bearer of despatches in that case would be handled rather roughly. I saw but one course, and that doubtful and dangerous, but the only one my impru dence had left me. "Well, old fellow," said I with a familiar air, "I tell you what, such a chance does not come every day. If you'll give me one of those articles cheap enough to make a real profit, I'll take something." "Oh," said he, "je shall have em just as cheap as dirt ; only ye must pay before ye leave tbe room." "Well," said I, "let ns see if we can strike a bargain. Unfold that shawl ; hold it np so that I can see it." He held the shawl broadly up with both hands, his face and half his body hidden behind it. "Splendid!" saidL "Hold it higher. Farther back so that the light can fall on it. Now, what's the damage ?" "It's worth three hundred pounds, I give ye the honor of a gentleman. Ye shall have it for fifty pounds." "Hold it a httle farther back," said L It's worth the money, and 111 tell you what I'll take; I'll take w.y leave .'" I dashed to the door. By the mercy of God it was not. locked. . I slammed it to after me and flew on my way. Not Byron's steed, the "Tartar of the Ukraine breed," with Mazeppa on his back, not Camilla skipping o'er the un bending corn, got over the ground much faster than I as I leaped across that gloomy court, burst into the gin palace and out of it again, and winged my breathless and inglorious flight away from my pursuer, whose tread I could hear approaching nearer and nearer behind me. By what heavenly instinct, by what unseen guidance, I threaded that dark, filthy, and not very nice smelling labyrinth of turnings and windings 1 know not, but I did thread it and suddenly fonnd myself in one of the open, respectable streets. Tbe tread of my pursuer ceased : I was safe. LippincotC Magazine. oplsm. The production of opium in Asia Minor, which in former years averaged annually from 2000 to 3000 baskets or cases, each containing 150 pounds, has of late years mnch increased, and the crop now averages from 4000 to 6000 baskets. Out of this quantity, which is shipped at Smyrna, tbe United States take over 2000 cases. England at one time consumed a large proportion. The Dutch East India Company also for many yaars has purchased!, large quantities annually to send to the Islands of Java, Batavia and Sumatra, and of late years the consumption gen erally has largely increased, especially for North and South America and the West Indies. Turkey opium is always preferred in England before that of India, as it contains a much higher per centage of morphia than either Indian or Persian ; it is on this acconnt that the greater portion of the opinm used for medical purposes both in Europe and America, is the production of Asia Minor. The price of this opinm in the market has advanced much of late ; fifteen years ago the average price was about 1.75 per pound, and it now re alizes about $5 per pound, though the fair character even of this product has been tarnished by a system of adulter ation which has prevailed during the last two years. jLsasV.r'A 'Zi-. C EXTE.WI II. FXPOMTIOV OF Tbe Agricultural Building. One of the most impressive sections of the Centennial Exosition, in view of the interests of tbe great West, and of tbe cbiss so powerfully represented in the present day by the t.range or ganization, will certainly be the "Pal ace of the Patrons of Husbandry," as it might appropriately be designated, but which in the nomenclature of the Centennial Commissioners is simply THE AGRICULTURAL I5UILDIXG. This fine structure, having in its imme diate vicinity a stock yard, with divi sions for horses, cattle, sheep and swine, and poultry houses, will lie located north of the Conservatory and on the east side of Belmont Avenue. The ground plan of this department, cover ing an area of alout ten acres, is a par allelogram of 510 by 8JU feet; con structed chielly of. wood and glass, it will consist of a long nave crossed by three transepts, both nave and tran septs being constituted of truss arches of a Gothic style. This is intended for the reception of every kind of agricul tural and dairy implements and uten sils, except of course such as are pro perly included in the machinery depart ment. Such an exhibition aided, as it will be, by tbe fraternal feeling which now exists among the iarming profes sion, cannot fail to inspire a lively in terest in the present, and be productive of substantial benefit in the future. There will also be arranged in this sec tion specimens of grain, and products generally, which, considering the wide area and capabilities of the soil, should insure a national display of vast impor tance, and place the Agricultural inter-. ests of this country in a position to compare favorably with other develop ments of the national progress during the past century. The Farming frater nity should certainly take a lively, ear nest, and liberal interest in making this department in particular, and the Centennial Exposition in general, an undoubted and proud success. An eminently effective method of identifying the Agricultural interests with the culmination of the Celebra-; tion would be a mass convention of ranee delegates'' from every State in the Union, meeting in Philadelphia on the Fourth of July, lSTii, and pro ceeding in a body to this section of the Exposition. Such a demonstration, and fraternal meeting, would be in ac cord with the spirit of the order, and the assemblage of Patrons of Hus bandry, representing every variety of soil culturist from Maine to Texas, would be in itself an imjiosing and in teresting national spectacle. The Woman Who I.ivert as Lone ahe Wanted to. The legend says there once dwelt on the island of Falster a lady of rank who was extremely rich, but had neither son or daughter to inherit her wealth. She therefore resolved to dedicate it to a pious nse, and caused a church to be built which was both spacious and magnificent. When it was completed, she had the altar candles lighted, and going through the choir to the altar she cast herself on her knees and prayed to God that in reward for her pious gift he would add as many years to her life as her church should stand. From time to time her relatives and servants died, but she who had made so foolish a prayer lived on. At length sbe had no longer relative or friend. Sbe saw children grow np, become aged, and die, and their children again grow old, while she herself was wasting through extreme age, so that she gradually lost the nse of all her senses. Sometimes however, she recover ad her voice, though for an hour only, at midnight on Christmas. On one of these nights she desired to be laid in an oaken coffin, and placed in the church, that she might there die, but that tbe priest shonld attend her, every Christmas night to receive ber commands. From that time her coffin was stood in the cbnrch, bnt she has not been permitted to die. Every Christmas night, the priest goes to her, lifts the lid of the coffin, and as he raises it, she rises slowly np. When sitting she asks, "is my church yet standing ?" And when lfex,t&-:3&kf -11.1 the priest answers, "Yes," ahe aighs and says : i ' Crtxi jr-anf that mv chnpcb w-rr burnt ; for thru uuly wuuid my aiacua be wmW. She then sinks back into the coffin, the priest lets the lid fall, and comes not again until the next Cbristmass mid n:pht tolls from the high church tower. JLjiiie and School Louimille, Ay. Daily Bread. It is an interesting fact that the Oreek word translated "daily" in onr version of the Lord's Prayer epiotmirm is a word fonnd nowhere in Greek lit erature, saered or profane, except in this divine petition, as given by Mat thew and by Luke. Its literal meaning has been discussed by Origen, Chry sostom, Theophylactus in short, by innumerable fathers and commentators, ancient and modern. In various Latin versions of the Gospels, in my library, I find it rendered miper-tubntantialein, unjKi-irntrm, rwfidiantim ; but though Jerome seems, in using the first, to sup pose spiritual bread implied, Rome has not followed him, but uses in her mis sals tirfidianuit. Tbe King James translators showed great wisdom and a thorough compre hension of the original in their transla tion by the use of the word "daily," for. though no idea of the succession from day to day is to be found in the Greek word, yet the whole idea of the Greek is contained in the English sen tence, "Give us this day our daily bread. Probably no intelligent person uses tbe words of the prayer without the clear idea that he asks on this day the proper, necessary and customary supKrt of evsry day, which man needs "daily." Tue fact that the Lord's Prayer in the original Greek version, contains an important word found no where else, seems to me worthy a note. Onr Social Mle. Sime people never make acquain tances, but shut themselves np from their kind Use an eyster in bis shell ; while others and by far the happiest are never at a loss for cheerful com panionship. It is not hard to make ac quaintances if we set about it the right way ; but it is useless to hang back for every door to be opened ; we must push them ourselves. Said a lady to us the other day, "I never make any acquaintances when traveling. I wish I could." Said another. "I get ac quainted with everybody. I talk to tbe woman who sweeps the ferry boats, and to any decent person who happens to sit by me in the cars. I find every human heart is human, and then I can learn something 1 didn't know before from every new acquaintance, or com municate information that may be val uable to them. We are all apt to stand and wait for advances from each other; to indulge a captions disposition, and criticise where we should commend. The cultivation of a genial, charitable, benevolent spirit will not injure any of us, and will benefit the community in which we live, and add constantly to the number of our friends. Orderly Habits. Men are admitted to be more untidy than women. "One boy creates more trouble in a house than three girls," says msny a suffering mother. But, after all, she's to blame for it ; there's no real reason why a boy abould not form tidy habits. One of the benefits that the mother of sons can confer on her own sex and all the world beside, is to form in them the habit of putting things in place. This can be done only by following them around and re quiring them, when they are through with a library book, to put it on the shelf where it belongs ; wheu they take off their overcoats to hang them on the rack ; when skates are unstrapped or boots taken off that they be pnt some where else beside ou the hearth rug or nnder foot ; when slippers are removed that they at once rest in their appropri ate case. The law of habit thus formed will gradually extend its domain till it includes everything the boy handles or calls his own, and exercises an influence on all he is and does. In a house in habited by such men and boys, "put ting things to rights" will occupy very brief daily interval. TlBIaTTOL To kill time Take a horse and sleigh it. Sweetening one's coffee is generally the first stirring event of the day. Attila, so historians say, often dined on horseback. We prefer canvas back. The sentinel who did not sleep on his watch had left it at the pawn broker's. Tbe fisheries on the coast of Scotland during the pant season have yielded more than 8,000,000 of herrings. Wheu a naughty little boy breaks a window, he should be punished, on the principle that panes and penalties go together. The boy's new trowsers. copper-fastened throughout, and plated at the knee so as to be impregnable to frictioa are known as the "knee pint ultra.'' "What," said a teacher to a pupil, "makes yon feel uncomfortable after you hve i'oie wrong ?" "My papa's big leather strap," feelingly replied the boy. A Scotch divine recently praying said : "O Lord, give unto ns neither poverty nor riches," and pausing sol emnly a moment, he added, "especially poverty." Th Americans being the better look ing, of course had an advantage over the Englishmen in the late interview ing of Venus and got more than their share of smiles. A cake of ice sawed out by an Iowa City man bad frozen in it a bass, which is described an being perfect to the end of its fins, and having all the appear ance of swimming. The best defense of lying that we ever read is the remark of Cbarlea Lamb, related by Leigh Hunt, that "truth was precious, and not to be wasted on everybody." The Chinese have names which cor respond in frequency with the Browns and Smiths of Ango-baxon Christen dom, Those most frequently occur ring are Chin, Chang, Wang and Shib. which are the equivalents of "gold," "long," "prince" and stone." The most bounteons vintage France has known, tbe statistics sav, is that of 1874. Not less than 2,000,000 hectares (800,000 acres, there-abouts.) have been cultivated as vineyards, and the pro duct is estimated at 75,000.000 heoto lites (or 1,687,500,000 gallons, very nearly). During the year 1371 the life-boats of the National-Life-boat Institution saved 543 lives on the British coast, and saved 15 vessels from destruction. The institution also granted rewards to fisherman and others, for saving 170 lives during the year, making grand total of 713 lives saved. The duties of a schoolmaster in 1C61 were as follows : "To act as court messenger ; to serve summonses ; to conduct services in the church ; to lead the choir on Sundays ; to ring the bell for pnblic worship ;to dig the graves ; to take charge of the school, and to per form other occasional duties. Hence the compound word over-worked. In the city of Cognac, France, there is an establishment fitted with an au tomatic indicator to guard against fire. It is simply a thermometer so const roo ted that when the mercury rises to a certain point it starts an electric alarm, which rings a bell in the proprietor's quarters. It provides against fire as the ordinary burglar alarm against thieves. The villa in which Michael Angelo was born, and in which he passed his childhood, is now occupied by a lineal descendent of his old enemy, Bacclo BandinellL There are in the villa several paintings attributed to the great artist, including that of the so called Satyr, tbe upper portion of which only remains ; and these are also two chimney-pieces said to have been sculp tured by him in his youth. The following test may be applied to quartz to determine its annferona character: After being well ground and calcined it shonld be treated with a bath of iodine or bromine water, and allowed to digest in it for some time. Then a piece of filter paper should be soaked in the solution, dried, and burned to ashes in a mnffie. If gold is present the ash is purple. One penny weight of gold to tbe ton may thus bo detected. At Mons, in Belginm, this is the way the public "interviews" the manager when it has a grievance. During tbe play some one in the gallery shies a folded letter to the stage, and as it falls all the interested pnblic call cut, "Read it ! read it !" There is no peace till the letter is read ; then, as it contains some charge against the manager, that gentleman has to come forward and ex plain. It is not a bad institution, but they have just decided in the courts that it is "disorderly." The following marriage certificate was recently found among some old ar chives of the town of Norwich, Conn. There was no date of the year, bnt the penmanship and paper both bore testi mony to the extreme age of the docu ment : "Married, at Norwhich, Sunday evening, 31st of December, Dr. Eaoch Smith, so called, aged t', more or less, a renowned collier, to the amiable and accomplished Miss Mary Melony a cel ebrated tailoress, aged 26 next grass: H"W plfaunr It ta to e Turkrya aad belM gr a." The good people of a certain town in the West are, or have been, in trouble about a schoolmaster hired without suf ficient precaution. It being discovered that he spells "soldiers" "wflge.r," and "kerosene" "ceronene" and that he has many other bold opinions concerning orthography, the school committee have requested him to leave. But he refuses. They fasten the school-house door. He breakB it open and "keeps school" in spite of them. They have asked him to go, begged him to go, of fered him money to go, bnt he still keeps on teaching that "sodger" spells "soldier." All but fifteen pupils have been taken out of the school ; but if there were no pupils at all he wouldn't g- A machine has at length been con structed which will travel at a speed of nine knots an hour for 300 yards, and at a lower speed for no less a distance than a mile. It will maintain any direc tion impressed upon it, and it can be launched either trom a boat or an iron clad, by night or by day. In short it is a kind of explosive fish, which in obedience to its masters, will swim for a mile toward an adversary at which it may be directed, and will strike a dan gerous blow. If ships at a distance of a mile can be struck with certainty by a mechanical fish discharged from a harbor, no anchorage will be safe, and when two fleets approach one another each will have to encounter innumera ble foes. Every sea and harbor will practically be a mine of torpedoes, and any vessel of light construction must be hopelessly doomed.