! ' CY rsrTiv. .... , SV jf ii . ii ! 'SC wH WWXw tm, www ; r I. B. F. SCHWEIER, THI 00H3TITCTI0N THI CHIOS AND TH1 1OT0KCIMKKT 0? THI LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. , 1 VOL. XXX. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., AUGUST 16. 1876. NO. 33. i CEKTURT TO COK. Where will these moving millions be A century to eome ? Will one of this Tut number ace A century to eome ? Wboll then arrive this breathing earth. The babe that yesterday had birth ? Where, then, the poor. Out toiling erotnlf And where these independent proud ? The great, the wise. The merry eyes ; And he that's bold. Not yet grown old ? Oh! others will stand in all their steed. While they he with UT unnumbered dead. Before that time shall Who'll meet round the homeejur fathers rear'd A century to eome ? Whose voices in these old balls be beard, A century to come ? Who'll heed the scenes that charm na now As time rolls on ss seasons go ? O'er yonder grafts-grown grown grave, wboll bend. And sadly say, Tia my dear friend ?" Oh ! birds may sing The flowers may spring The rivers will flow The forests still grow All nature then will be just as gay But ttrangm will be here, that day, A century to eome. a. M. i. "When Company Comes." "There, Jenny, this is all right now." They had becu clearing and rearrang ing their luxuriant parlor, and now that the work was done, the last particle of dust removed and everything set back in place, Mrs. Lane looked about her with the utmost complacency and there was a world of satisfaction in her voice as she said: "There, Jenny, this is all right now. Irop the curtains and then the room will be ready for company any time;" and she went out, closing the door be hind her carefully. Left alone, Jenny dropped upon a sofa opposite a large mirror, and look ing around the room with its graceful appointments, she sighed heavily, say ing to herself, "It is pleasant here with the beautiful sunshine streaming in. I do wish we could sit here part of the time instead of always staying in those dingy back rooms. I believe we should all feel better ; but then, mother don't think so," and she rose wearily to dar ken the room. An nour later Air. Lane strode rapidly up the gravelled walk, with all the haste which a hungry business man feels when approaching his borne at dinner-time. Turning the knob hur riedly he wheeled impatiently about and walked around to the side-door, muttering to himself: "I wish Maria wouldn't keep forever hiking that door as if the front hall was too good for a man to walk through in his own house." The dining-room was empty and dark, and after waiting a few minutes he pro ceeded to the kitchen where, as he ex liected, his wife and girls were just set ting the dinner upon the table. The room was hot, uncomfortable and swarming with flies, the floor was dirty and the air filled with the odors of burned bread and fried meat. Ilis brow contracted when he sat down to the ill-cooked meal that was served up on a soiled table-cloth beside a hot Stove, and he bit his lip in vexa tion that his wife did not think him worthy of any better treatment than that. But experience had taught him that remonstrance was foolishness. "I told you that I was going to keep the dining-room nice after it was paiuted and fixed up," she explained. If your cousin Eunice felt as if she must go home, I was willing to have her go, so we could shut up the front part of the house, and keep the furni ture from fading, and put away the best dishes. I never should have any thing decent if I wasn't particular with what I've got, and that is why I have to be careful of the best things. I have got the dining-room fixed to my mind uow, and I mean to keep it so as long as I can; we can just as well eat in the kitchen, when there is nobody here but ourselves." Mr. Lane rushed from the house as soon as had swallowed his unrelished dinner, leaving his wife to wonder that he spent so little of his time at home. "O, Jenny, w hat did you put ou that pink dress for?" Mrs. Lane looked up from her work in consternation, when Jenny came from her room an hour later. "Your old calico is plenty good enough to wear when there is nobody here, and do you go and take this right off and hang it away until we have com pany.' "I won't hurt it any, mother," the girl replied hesitatingly. "I am sure we want to look well for ourselves, and I think father likes to see us fixed up a little sometimes." "Nonsense, child. Do as I tell you ; and dou't you put that on again unless there is somebody here; it is setting Fanny a bad example, and I won't en courage such silly notions." Days and weeks went by, and the Summer slipped into Autumn, while the Lanes were still pursuing the even tenor of their way, save now and then when they were jostled aside a little by the advent of visitors. But they always fell back on their old habits, as soon as the company had gone, shutting up their pleasant roomst and putting away the prettiest and bes of everthing to save for company. It is strange how Mr. Lane could have been in a pleasant mood when his coffee was muddy it wasn't worth the while to make anything nice for one's own folks when the toast was burned, and the breakfast table looked so shabby with its old cracked dishes, it is strange how he could have been in a pleasant mood, but he smiled and looked kindly at his wife one morning, proposing w hat she loved to hear best of anything that she should go to a neighboring Til lage and spend a week with her dear old friend, Mrs. Darling. "The girls are so large they can get along very well without you for a few days," be said ; "then I will take them and come after you, so we will all have a little recreation." 1 The preparations were speedily made, and Mrs. Lane departed having charged her daughters to do everything in her absence just as when she was at home, to let alone the sauces and sweetmeats, and all the dainties which she kept for visitors she had looked to them, and knew they would be sure and not to use any of the "company things." She and Mrs. Darling had been very dear friends in their girlhood, and, un like many others, bad kept their mutual attachment after thev were married. Tbelr husbands were chums at col lege ; had begun life at the same time, and under similar circumstances, and were now both of them doing a good and successful business. Mrs. Darling had two daughters, of about the same ages as Jenny and Fanny Lane,and then there were three younger children, black-eyed, fun-loving boys, "Nellie is at home," Mrs. Lane had said to her husband; "for she wrote to me last week; and I believe I shan't send her word that I am coming. It will be so much pleasanter to give her a surprise." It was evening when she stepped from the cars at the end of her journey, and taking a coach she went at once to her friend's home. "The front rooms are lighted," she exclaimed to herself with some con sternation as she stopped at the door, "I should so much rather have found them alone. Oh, dear !" "Mrs. Darling opened the door her self, ushering her friend into the li brary, and the two exchanged greet ings with all the warmth of their youger days. They were so occupied that Mrs. Lane quite forgot her first impressions until she went out to the dining-room to par take of the tea which Mrs. Darling as sured her was in waiting. Then when the cheerful murmur of happy voices floated out through the open parlor doors, her first impression returned to her, and looking up she said : "You have company to-night, Nellie? You must not let me keep you from them any longer." 'Yes, the best of company," replied Mrs. Darling with a smile, "my hus band and children. Fred has just goue out, though ; but he will be back by the time you have finished your tea, and then you shall see them all. Let me fill your cup again." ;'How odd," thought Mrs. Lane, "that she should open the parlor just for her own family." The evening passed pleasantly; and In the morning when Mrs. Lane arose, the air of comfort with which every bright room in the house seemed full, was very refreshing The morning meal was a simple one, but its tasteful arrangement made it very inviting, and Mrs. Lane partook of it with a keener relish than she had known for many a we,. Dinner was all ready when Mr. Darl ing came In from bis office, and as they sat down to the neatly-laid table in the shaded dining-room, Mrs. Lane thought she had never seen a happier circle, or eaten a better meal, though there was nothing sumptuous placed before them. "Nellie," said she, when they were left alone, "I told you not to go making company for me. I did not want you to get out your best dishes, nor put yurself to the least trouble on my ac count." "It is exactly what I have not done, Maria," she replied, "because I never do it for anybody. "I never saw any reason why I should take more pains for a guest than for my husband and children. "We occupy the pleasantest room ourselves, because we feel better when our surroundings are cheerful, and we always prepare our food and set our table carefully and neatly. Our meals are so much more enjoyable. "Then I let my company take me just as I am, sure if they come to see me they will be satisfied to live as I do." "Well, if you can afford to use every thing common and live In style all the time, you will get along, but we should come upon the town," said Mrs. Lane, a little sharply. An expression of pain flitted across Mrs. Darling's face when she saw how her friend had misunderstood her, but she went on, quietly : "I did not begin housekeeping in this way. I used to think that I must shut up the front of the house and keep the best of everything sacred to company. So we occupied the smallest, least plea sant rooms ourselves, used the plainest and homeliest things, and even ate our coarsest food when alone. "The consequence was we were never ready to receive company unless in the most formal way, and then it always made a great deal of trouble. We never could appreciate any of those agreeable surprises when our friends drop in un announced, and when trying to enter tain, guests were never so fully at ease In our strange, unused rooms as really to enjoy It much. "I thought the matter over and made up my mind that this was all wrong. My dear husband was doing everything he could to make our home pleasant and attractive, while I was just keeping him from enjoying it as he desired by my miserable ambition to appear well in the eyes of those who would never thank me for my pains. I was making him uncomfortable and worrying out my life for those who had comparatively no claims upon me; and besides I was forced to see myself a wicked hypocrite, forced to admit that my whole life was a farce, while I was all the time strain ing every nerve to make our friends think we were living in a style which we were not, and I saw this could not be right. "I resolved it should be so no longer. So I opened the parlor doors and threw back the shutters, used whatever we had of furniture or food or clothing as we needed it for our comfort, and when oar friends came to visit us, I would not allow myself to spoil my joy at see ing them, by doing a lot of extra work on their account, or worrying mil the time lest I should leave something un done that might make them think a little better of me. "Of course it seemed odd enough, and came rather hard at first, but I was satisfied it was the best way, and so I kept schooling myself into it till in little while I wondered bow I ever did otherwise. I am always ready for company now, and always ready to receive my husband with a smiling face to a plea sant and orderly home. "I know he has been a great deal happier since the first year, and I never half enjoyed anything then. "The effect upon our children is much better than if we taught them it Is no matter how things are if there are no visitors, for they learn now how to behave with propriety at all times, and how to use those things that are worth preserving. I always pity people when I see them trying to make a little display be fore their company, pity them for the thankless labor they are giving them selves, and for the glimpse of their pri vate life which Is just opened up to me, because I am quite sure such folks live about as it happens when alone." Mrs. Lane's face had changed ex pression several times as she listened, and when her friend ceased speaking she gazed at a picture on the wall op- posire ner ior a iuu nan minute in silence. "You would be surprised," Mrs. Darling went on, anticipating her first objection, "if I should tell you that this mode of living is a matter of economy, too, but such is the fact. "Sou see we set a plain table, and our food is simple all the time, instead of getting expensive luxuries for com pany, and then pinching ourselves in the vain effort to make it up. "This makes our table expenses actu ally less, while we treat ourselves as well as we do our guests, which is per fect justice, as you will see. "Good, substantial furniture will last a long time with a little care, even when in constant use, and if our ex pense in this particular are a little more than our neighbors who keep every thing for company, I am sure our greater happiness much more than com pensates," stroking little George's head tenderly as he came up to her with some childish request. The subject was dropped here, but in the few days that Mrs. Lane remained with her friends, she thought the mat ter over a great many times. It was hard for her to realize that she saw the family just as they always were In their common everyday life; that with them there was no such thing as company manners," or "company things." 'I enjoyed my visit a great deal bet ter, though, than if I had made them turn aside from their beaten track," she admitted ; "and I believe they do, too." "Wonder if Mr. Lane loves me as Mr. Darling seems to love his wife?" she would query; "or if our children think as much of their father and mother as their'sdo?" "llow devoted to each other they all are; one would think they each re garded the other members of the family as the very best of company;" and one day she even went so far as to ask her self, "Why shouldn't they?" Mr. Lane and the girls came at length to spend the last day of their visit with her; and when Mrs. Lane saw how thoroughly they seemed to enjoy it, she almost reproached herself that such days were so rare to them. 'Perhaps I might make their home a little pleasanter for them," she mused. "I am afraid our meagre life will seem emptier than ever now." The two friends were sitting in the library alone that last night, whither they had gone for a confidential chat after the others had retired. "Nellie," said Mrs. Lane, at length, "I believe I shall try an improvement when I get home." 'As you say, it does seem wrong to treat company so much better than your own folks, and I am so charmed with your more excellent way that I mean to try it myself," and tears came to her eyes as she thought of the better things that were in store for her good husband. The Lanes went home on the follow ing day, and if they turned back re luctantly, Mrs. Lane did not wonder, for she thought she had herself passed one of the happiest weeks in her whole life. She laid her tea table with unusual care that night saying to the girls that she could not quite yet bear so strong a contrast to what she bad been accus tomed to lately, '! think we will sit in the parlor to-night," she remarked when the lamps were lighted ; "we are so tired, perhaps it will rest us a little." When Mr. Lane came home to dinner next day, he was surprised to see the front door standing invitingly open, and his astonishment was still greater as he passed on into the dining-room and found a tempting dinner waiting there with plates for only four. "I thought we would begin to eat these pickles while they are good this year," said Mrs. Lane, as she passed the dish to her husband, "instead of keeping them to spoil as we did last year." "This is such a pudding as .Nellie makes sometimes," filling Jennie's sau cer; "Isn't it nice? And it isn't at all expensive." 'I think, girls," she said, when Mr. Lane had gone out, wondering in his heart what had come over his wife, "I think we won't use those cracked frag ments of so many different sets of crockery any more, at least on the ta ble. I believe the dinner tastes better when eaten from the white dishes, and there are enough for ourselves and com pany, too; we can be a little careful of them, you know." Expecting anybody to-night?" que ried Mr. Lane at tea, glancing at his wife's fresh dress and nicely combed hair. Yes," she replied pleasantly, "I hoped my husband would spend the evening with me." He did not need any urging; and after that he spent more of his evenings at home, and seemed to enjoy the so ciety of bis wife and daughters better than ever before. "I am doing as I told you I should," Mrs. Lane wrote to her friend, Mrs, Darling a month afterward, "and it works charmingly. Mr. Lane seems to love bis home as well as your husband does his now, and we are all a thousand fold happier. I feel as if our friends enjoy coming to see us a great deal better than they used to, too. I assure you we shall never go back to the old way of living. We are much happier now than when we thought we must save everything to show off when com pany comes." A French Critic Aaserleaa JLtTlaar The defects I have pointed out in your hotel management suggest their own cure. And to the careful considera tion of your people I would submit the following observations: In the first place, your breakfast Is a mistake. Usu ally, immediately after you rise from your beds, you partake of a heavy meal ol steaks or chops, garnished with po tatoes, followed by three or four eggs, and surmounted by hot rolls and buck wheat cakes. The digestive organs even of a healthy person are not now in condition to receive such a meal ; not till two or three hours after one has awakened do they recover from the apathy which sleep produces. In France, Germany, Italy, in civilized countries in the East, throughout the West Indies, among the English, Spanish, and French Creoles, the law of our nature is recognized and respected. You may be less prejudiced against my suggestion if I furnish you with illustrations from a colony of Anglo-Saxon origin instead of French. Let me submit the mode of living among the white inhabitants of Barbados, which is similar to that In most of the Antiles. On rising, a cup of. coffee and a biscuit, (the equivalent to the cafe au lait and roll of the French and Italian.) then a bath; then the males of the family proceed to their place of business, usually about 7 A. M., and at this hour professionals, mer chants, and bankers may be found at their offices; at about ten A. M., a large portion of their duties for the day are performed. The letters are read and answered. So much responsibility is removed from their minds that they are now in a fit condition to digest a sub stantial meal. They now return home for their breakfast, when they partake of fish and chop, accompanied by the inevitable rice, and followed by fruit, the whole washed down with claret or bitter ale, and a cup of coffee or tea after the meal. The next and last meal for the day is dinner. This is usually taken between 5 and 7. And if possible this meal should be taken after the day's work is over. You will eventually become a nation of dispeptics if your men of business will persist in dining in the midst of their hours of business, and refuse themselves suf ficient time to masticate and digest what they eat. The Galaxy. The History afa Shall. Until within a few years past, says the Elniira Advertiser, there has been in the possession of a prominent family down the Chemung river, from Elmira a few miles, an object that possesses a history of its own the skull of a human being. It was put Into a rather strange usage, as It had been rigged up for a chipmunk's cage, and set on a bench near the kitchen-door. Out and in through the eye-holes ran the little ani mal, grinnning at the by-standurs from the mouth, and munching its corn and nuts while watching from the nose. Right in the centra of the forehead of the skull was a small bullet-hole. When Sullivan's army passed through this valley, an adopted son of the Indian corn-planter, named Watt Baldwin, pre ceded it as a scout, as he was thoroughly Iosted in Indian warfare and knew the country as well as he knew his own door-yard. On the day before the fa mous battle at Baldwin's creek. Watt was scouting about the hills between the army's camp at the foot of Newtown creek and what is now Wellsburg. Carefully making his way through the woods, his quick eye saw the head of an Indian pop up from behind a log at a short distance from him. lie placed himself behind a tree and watched. When the head came up again he fired, and there was one less Iudian in the Chemung valley. Ten or twelye years after the close of the war, the scout with his grandson was walking ou the hills in the vicinity of the occurrence. "Lotey," he said, "Cornplanter killed an Indian somewhere about here and left him." Let us see if we can't find him. He fouud the tree from the shel ter of which he had fired, and presently the log behind which the Indian had Iain. After some further search and digging, the bones of the fallen brave were discovered with the bullet hole in the centre of his forehead. And out of the skull was the chipmunk's cage made. Lnnl(T Talk. At first the infant cries, and employs its vocal organs in the same way as its limbs, spontaneously and after the manner of reflex action. Spontan eously, too, and because it finds plea sure in being active, the infant later exercises its limbs, gaining the perfect use of them by repeated essays, and by a process of selection. From inarticu late it thus passes to articulate sounds. The variety of intonations which it acquires evinces in the child great de licacy of impression and of expression; hence the faculty of forming general ideas. All we do is to aid it in gras ping these ideas by suggesting our words. To these the infant attaches ideas of its own, generalizing after its own fashion rather than ours. Some times it invents not only the meaning of a word, but the word itself. Sev eral vocabularies may succeed to one another in its mind, new words oblite rating old ones ; several different sig nifications may successively be at tached to one word ; several words in vented by itself are natural gestures ; in abort, it learns a ready-made lan guage as a true musician learns coun terpoint, or as a true poet learns pro sody ; the child is an original genius, which adapts itself to a form built up bit by bit by a succession of original geniuses. If there existed no language it would discover one, or find an equi valent. Popular Science Monthly. The income of the Texas State gov ernment U nearly nan a muiion jess than its expenditures. I 1 Yltallty. In spite of certain alterations, the ty pical features peculiar to the houses of Guise and Lorraine were transmitted to all their descendants through a long series of generations. The Bourbon countenance, the Conde's aquiline nose, the thick and protruding lower lip be queathed to the house of Austria by a Polish princess, are well known in stances. We have only to look at a coin of our George III. to be reminded of our present royal family. During Addison's short ministry Mrs. Clarke, who solic ted his favor, had been requested to bring with her the papers proving that she was Milton's daughter. But as soon as she entered his cabinet Addison said : "Madam, I require no further ev idence. Your resemblance to your il lustrious father is the best of all." The Comte de Pont, who died in 18C7, at nearly a hundred, told Dr. Froissac that during the Restoration he often met in the saluns of M. Desmousseaux de Givrc, prefect of Arras, a man at whose ap proach be shuddered as he would at the sight of an apparition, so wonderfully was he like Robespierre. M. de Pont confided his impression to the prefect, who told him, smiling at his prejudice, that the person in quest on passed for Robespierre's natural son ; that in fact, it was a matter of notoriety. Next to family likenesses vitality or the duration of life is the most impor tant character transmitted by Inheri tance. The two daughters of Victor Amadeus II., the Duchess of Burgundy and her sister, Marie Louise, married to Philip V., both remarkable for their beauty, died at twenty-six. In the Tur- got family fifty years was the usual limit of life. The great minister, on the ap proach of that term, although in good health, remarked to his friends that it was time to put his afftairs in order ; and he died, in fact at fifty-three. In the house of Romanoff the duration of life is short, independent of the fact that several of its members met with violent deaths. The head of this Illustrious race, Michael Federovitch, died at forty nine ; Peter the great was scarcely fifty three. The Empiess Anne died at for ty-seven ; the tender-hearted Elizabeth at fifty-one. Of Paul's four sons. Alex ander died at forty-eight, Constantine at forty-two, Nicholas-at fifty-nine, and the Grand Duke Michael at fifty-one. In the houses of Saxony and Prussia, on the contrary, examples of longevity are far from rare. Frederick the Great, in spite of his continual wars and his fre quent excesses at table, was seventy- four; Frederick William III was seven ty; the Emperor William, in his seventy-ninth year, is still hale and hearty. In all the countries of Europe fami lies of octogenarians, nonogenarians. and centenarians may be cited. On the 1st of April, 1716, there died in Paris a saddler ofDoulevant, in Champagne, more than a hundred years old. To in spire Louis XIV with the flattering hope of living as long, he was made, two years previously, to present that monarch with a bouquet on St Louis' day. His father had lived one hundred and thirteen years, his grandfather one hundred and twelve. Jean Surrington, a farmer in the environs of Berghem, lived to be one hundred and sixty. The day before his death, in complete pos session of his mental faculties, he divi ded his property among his children; the eldest was one hundred and three, and, what is still more extraordinary, the youngest was only nine. Jean Gol- embiewski (the oldest man In the French Army, If still alive), who accompanied King Stanislas Leczinski into France, belonged to a family centenarians. His father lived to be one hundred and twenty-one, bis grandmother one hun dred and thirty. All the Year J.'iimd. The Wealth fBlherla. Jt is needless, says the Paris Temp, to estimate all the sources of wealth pertaining to this immense region, which is at least three times as large as EuroH; ; unfortunately vry little of it is available, owing to the scarcity oi the means of transport. Russia Iras long been aware of the necessity of creating routes in order to derive all the benefit she might expect from her Asiatic provinces, rich in gold, silver. platinum, copper, coal, marble, and, in the South, wheat and rye Great im provements have already been made in the navigable rivers, where the boats are now enabled to go against the stream by means of steam-tugs, where as betore they used only to le bnilt for one trip down the river, and then bro ken uu for firewood. Still the number of steam-tugs is very small, and there is, therefore, no relying upon escaping the risk of being blocked up by ice for seven or eight months. The problem of improving river navigation is a very difficult one in that country ; the Gov ernment is willing to provide the funds. but a feasible plan has not yet been hit upon. Some engineers propose cut ting a canal thirty-five miles in length from the Kel to the Yenessei. so as to open a direct route irom ijumen to rtiacuui ity me uui, uie icui, me jciiu- lin, and the Tell on one side, and the Angara on the other, as far as Lake Baikal, and thence by the Selenga to a point not twenty miles from Kiachta. Hut this plan would require the widen ing of seventy-eight narrows, which as yet none bnt the boats of the natives can venture to pass. Hence, railways will have to be executed, where pe riodical inundations and enormous ac cumulations of snow will present ob stacles of a different nature. For the present there is but one line in con templation, that of Oural, or Ekathe riuebunr. which will start at Pern and end at 'ijumen, with branches into the several metallurgical centres, such as Nillii-Iagtiilis, North of Niaski, and South of it, Zlataouist. Ekatherine burg is an important centre where the iron of the Oural is worked, and ame thyst, rock-crystal and topaz are cut in establishments belonging to the Empe ror. A City Oae Ha ad red aad Eighty Thaa aaad Tears old. In a current number of the Orertand a California geologist reviews the ge ological evidence of the antiquity of a human settlement near the present town of Cherokee, in that state, and es timates the age of that most ancient of discovered towns to be not less than 180.000 years ! The data for all such calculations are necessarily uncertain, as they are derived from the present motions of the continent and present rates of erosion ; still, from the changes that have taken place since the pion eers ot prehistoric California lett their traces on ita ancient seashore, there can be no doubt that thousands of centuries must have come and gone. The traces in question are numerous raaally Like stone mortars, found in undisturbed white and yellow gravel of a subaque ous formation, not flaviatile, under lying the vast sheets of volcanic rock, of which Table Mountain is a part. In one instance a mortar was found stand ing upright, with the pestle in it, ap parently just as it had been left by its owner, in some cases the mortar have been found at a depth of forty feet from the surface of the gravel underlying 1 able Mountain. 1 he dis tribution of the mortars is such as to indicate with great positiveness the former existence of a human settle ment on that ancient beach when the water stood near the level at which they occur; a time anterior to the vol canic outpouring which Table Moun tain records, and anterior to the glacial epoch. The recent geological history of that region may be briefly summed as fol lows : Previous to the placing of the mortars in the position in which they have been found, the early and middle tertiary sea level had receded to the position of the coal Ix-ds underlying Table Mountain, fully one thousand feet below the level of Cherokee. Sub sequently, in the pliocene period, there was a lurtner subsidence of about hi teen hundred feet, something like six hundred feet occuring after the mor tars had been abandoned. All this, as has been noticed, took place before the volcanic outflows which covered up all the ancient detritus of the region, in cluding that of the ancient rivers (whose gravels have furnished so much of the gold of California). The geologi cal age of the river period was deter mined by 1.4'squerenx from specimens of vegetation, now extinct, collected in the survey of the ancient livers; spe cimens indicating a flora of the plio cenn age, retaining some characteristic miorene forms. After the volcanic period the land rose again, the time of emergence em bracing the glacial period and the new eroding period in the sierra, during winch the slates and the hard nieta morphic greenstones and the granites were slashed with canons three thou sand feet deep by the action of ice and running water, lakingthe rates ol continental movement determined by Lyell. our geologist calculate that tht time required for thechanges thus oat lined could not have been less than eighteen hundred centuries. For a period so long preceding the glacial epoch as the time when ancient Chero kee was buried by the waters of the ad vancing sea, his estimate is certainly not extravagant, though it does tran scend so enormously the time men have been accustomed to allow for a man's residence ou earth, A t'hlaese Kellarlaas Praeesslaa. In its many turnings the path again led the visitor to the near neigh Itor hood of the river. More music of the same kind, but somewhat more solemn and sonorous, was audible upon the right. From behind a clump of trees and ham boos, in which a snug home stead lay euiliowered, emerged a long procession. In front came the musi cians, then several men carrying staves, men a gayiy-dressed object on a triumphal chair, and then a body of men and a very few women; all of whom together perforce movingalong the narrow path insinglefile made np a goodly show. I pon the triumphal chair was seated, in gorgeous robes of scarlet, with a tiusel crown and jewels, a diviuity of wood with a piuk com plexion, a long black beard, and Aryan features. Thechair was borne high on the necks of four stalwart coolies; and by its side, steadying it as it swayed to and fro in its passage along the nar row way, walked with dilticulty.owing to the narrowness of the path, a grave citizen of the higher class. Lictors, bearing stout staves, formed a body guard. All bearers, lictors. musi cians wore a peculiar head-dress, a kind of tall riower-iK't-shaped hat, with a brim not unlike those seen in illus trations of the life of ourEnglish Puri tans. As the procession passed in front of the homesteads, the inmates came out and exploded whole strings of crackers. In front of many houses small altars were placed, on which were burning slender scarlet taix-rs, and little sheaves of incense sticks placed in censers of brass or earthen ware. Children were brought out by their mothers, and taught to render obeisance to rhin rhin, as the expres sion in the "Pidgin" dialect is to the image as it was carried by. The blasts of music grew louder anil louder, gongs were sounded, more crackers were ex ploded, and the procession turned on to wind about among the fields. Strange and grotesque as it all was, it still re minded the spectator of the periodical outings of St. Spiridione to blew the vineyards of the olive-groves ef Corfu. Its meaning was thus explained in "Pidgin7' by a bystander who had a slight knowledge of that wonderful dialect. Thrice a year the divinity is carried forth in solemn procession, that sickness may be warded off from the country. A collection of tumuli lying in one spot, rather closer together than was usual, formed quite a hillock on the unending plain. Thither the procession wended its way, and on the summit of the eminence, iu front of a table beneath an awning, the image was deposited. -An attendant fired off four barrels of a quaint petard, volleys of crackers were exploded, and a lire was lighted on the ground before the image. A Itonze with completely shaven head, then advanced, recited a long prayer, and scattered bowlfuls of cooked rice on all sides. Piles of Chi nese offertory money, made up of gold and silver paper, were offered np and burned in the fire. The Bonze rang a bell and said more prayers; the image was lilted up in its chair, and the pro cession moved onward on ita way. A small temple stood not far off. In its main ball the divinities were being re galed with a sumptuous bSnquet. Three long tables covered with viands sweetmeats, fruits, vegetables, and the inevitable roasted pig were stretched athwart the pavement of the ball. At the upper enp of each were placed three images, both male and female, all bedizened with a tawdry finery of tin sel and inferior silk. Here w as a veri table tectiUrnium; on a small provin cial scale it is true, but perhaps not an inexact reproduction of the great -f mm Jru held ages ago in the Roman Capitol. Crowds of peasants were standing outside looking on. In the court in front were piled strange look ing instruments of music fifes, trum pets of prodigious length, and gui tars made of snake-skin. Fortuia h tlu He new Bra las. A brain attains its highest utility, as distinguished from its highest devel opment, observes a medical contem porary, when it cannot only absorb from others and direct its own further evolutions, but can also organize and regulate the working of other brains under its own superintendence andcon trol. This power it is which enables the rising merchant or manufacturer to utilize other brains, either to nse them for purposes of comparative mental drudgery, or to perform higher work nnder the immediate superintendence of the ruling brain. By such means the single brain can multiply its work in definitely by a well selected series of other brains under its self, a few brains of comparative high order regulating the working of numerous brains of a lower order, which perform the purely mechanical mental work. Such is the organization of a first-rate business in full working order. Develaaaeeat af the Vlalla. Three hundred years have not passed since the violin began to rise from its original obscurity. When it was in vented we do not know. Like most good things, Topsy included, it was not born ; it "growed." It was gradu ally developed from some yet undis covered germ, like, if we are to believe the Darwinites, the human creature whom it delights by expressing his emotions and his sense of audible beauty with inch unrivaled facility anil power. It began when the first vibra ting string was stretched across a reso nant surface, which answered the dou ble purpose of sounding board and support; rude examples of which are found among the most barbarous peo ple. This is the beginningof all stringed instruments; and from this the pro gress is divergeut in two lines ; one of which passes through the lyre, the harp. and the lute, and ends in the piano forte, theotlierpassing thronghcrowth, or crowd, and the violas in their vari ous forms, and ending in the violin and the violoncello. The distinctive cha racteristic of the violin family is that upon them the musical tone is produced by drawing the bow across the strings, and the various musical notes by the pressure of the player's ungers upon me strings at various in tervals. It is this direct communica tion of the performer with the strings, both iu the production of the musical vibration and in the stopping, as it is caueu, oi i ne note, wnicn gives me instruments of the violin family their peculiar expressive power and their unapproachable suieriority. it is the human touch uimiu the cord which makes its tone so touching, which gives that tone its human quality, in which it is not only without equal, but with out a rival, it is a kind of direct com niunication with the soul of man. which gives the violin, alone among all must cal instruments, a soul." 1 here is no emotion which the violin cannot ex press, from that of the mere conscious ness of serene happiness, and a sense of beauty, to that of the profoundeat and most agitating woe that can dis turb the human heart. It laughs and chatters; it weeps and wails and shrieks and sobs, with the utterance of a ruined happiness. When Beethoven, at the end of the funeral march in the Heroic Symphony, makes the great instrument, the orchestra upon which he played with such divine mastery. sob forth the theme in broken phrases, it is upon tne violins that he depends ior tne utterance ot mat grand emo tion. Modern music would be impos sible without the violin. The Uahtsy. Hot Days af the t'eatarr. The present boiling weather makes interesting a retrospective glance over the hot weather our ancestors had to endure. M r. J. A. u heelock, of Hart ford, contributes a record of the hot test days of each year for the past cen tury, in which it is noted that the heat of the Centennial year is not without parallel. In 177b' the wannest day for the British was July 4, but the IMi ot August was the warmest day for Con necticut, thermometer 103 degrees in the shade. Other days of extreme heat were July 3, lTUO, 110 degrees ; August 4, 1791, 115 degrees; August 1-1, 17D3, 108. From this no very warm weather was noted until 188, Julv 4, 107 de grees. In 1840, July 10, showed 110 de grees, and the same date in 1807, loo. The warmest days in the past ten years were : 1806, August 4, 100 degrees; 1.8H7. July 19, 100; 188, July 7. li; 1809, August 4, 104; 1870, July 17, 13; 1871, May, a). 98; 1873, July 4. KW; 173. August 9, 10-J; 1874. August 19. 104; 1875, July 6, 15 ; 1870, July 9, 102 ; Sev eral cool years are noted in which the temperature did not rise above 100 de grees, the hottest days being: 1873. Angust 11. 9S ; 1801, August 4. 96 ; 1811, August 17, 98 ; 110. August 10, 93 ; 118, August 35, 98 ; 15, August 19, 90 ; 1X33. May 30, 99; 1855, August 6, 98; 1871, .May 30, 98. It will be seen that the hottest day during the last century oc curred August 4, 1791, when the mer cury stood at 115 in the shade. The coldest summer was that of 110, when the mercury rose only to 93 in the shade ; a cool, wet summer, with frost every month during the year in the .Northern States. During the past 100 years the highest point of mercury oc curred only three times in the month of May, aud the balance in July and August. The Miafariaaeaa'a Kaanaa Warn a a aha Patafaafal sfvirl aader the Mlote. A gentleman who has just returned from Cherokee County, Kan., is full of remarkable reniiuiscenses of the grasshoppers infesting that vicinity. lie will stand around tor an Hour, re lating the hairbreadth escapes of the x-ople whom the hoppers have com pletely overrun, and who are leaving their homes and fleeing from the fear ful scourge. One of his most credit able stories is to the effect tliat, a few weeks ago. a woman dug np a panful of dirt in which to plant some flower seed. She put the pan under the stove, aud went out to see a neighbor. Upon her return, after an hour's absence, she found seven thousand bushels of grasshoppers generated by the heat literally eating her out of house and home. They first attacked the green shades on the windows, and then a green painted dustpan. A green Irish servant gial, asleep in one of the rooms. was the next victim, and not a vestige was left. The stove and stovpipe fol lowed, and then the house was torn down so they could get at the chimney. Hoards, joists, beams, plastering, cloth ing, nails, hinges, door-knobs, plates. tinware, everything, in fact, the bonse contained, was eaten up, and when she arrived within a mile of the place, she saw two of the largest hoppers sitting upon end and playing mumble peg with a carving-knife for which should have the cellar. St. Louit Globe. Haaltaa Laeew In England the manufacture of lace is carried on chiefly in the counties of Buckingham, Devonjtnd Bedford. The work is mostly done by women and girls at home. The best known of the band-made laces is the Honiton, so called from the town of this name in iHsvunshire. where it was first made. The high rank held by Honiton lace in recent years is attributed to the fact that Queen Victoria, commiserating the condition of the lace-workers of Devonshire, and wishing to bring their manufactures into notice, ordered her wedding-dress, which cost 1.000. to be made of this material. Her example was followed by her two danghters and the Princess of Wales, and Honi ton lace has continued to be fashion able and expensive. In making it, the designs, which otten consists of sim ple sprigs, are formed separately, and then attached to the ground. The Honiton guipure has an original char acter, almost unique, and is said to surpass in richness and perfection any lace of the same kind made in Bel gium. British point is an imitation lace made near London. A ppletont' A merieam Cycioptrdia. Children are often spoiled because they get no credit for what they do well. Of censure they get their due ; but of praise, never. They do some thing which they feel to be praisewor thy, but it is not noticed. When a child takes pains to do well, it feels itself paid for every endeavour by praise and the most unsophisticated child knows when praise is due. NEWS IS B&H7- Ex-Senator Revels has been elected President of Alcorn University, Mis sissippi. The Chinese Navy consists of forty five ships of war, and the army eon tains 1,200,000. A man in Northampton County Pa. has contracted to ship 75,000 school slates to Japan. Ben Franklin is the democratic candidate for Congress iu the Eighth Missouri district. They estimated that the lloosae tunnel would cost $3,500,000, and of course it cost $10,000,000. Poole, the Ixmdon fculor, left a for tune of $750,000. His business will be continued under his name. Ex-Governor Gaston, of Massachu setts, is president of the New Boston Post Publishing Company. Kansas exiiects to export over 20-. 000,000 bushels of wheat this season, against 12,000,000 last year. Col. Drum, Sheridan's Adjutant General, has a war-inspiring name, and we trust ne win never be beaten. A boy, twelve years of age, is now in the Virginia penitentiary. Serving out a sentence of three years for horse stealing. A set of wheels was lately taken from the baggage-car of the California and Oregon express train, which had run oi.mjo miles. The carriage in which Lafayette rode at his reception in Baltimore in 1824 is still in daily use in that citv. in a good state of preservation. The famous firm of Harper . Brothers has changed its title to Harper Brothers t o. r leteher Harper is the only original "brother" left. Davenport, Iowa, celebrated the Centennial Fourth regardless of ex pense, ami had just $31 left in the city treasury when she got through. The Supreme Court of California recently examined thirteen students who applied for admission to the Bar. and refused to admit any of them. The Boston ladies paid $3,500 for the Old South t'hiirch. This motto is prepared for the famous edifice : "The Meu of 10 lite women of 1870. Six and a half million of dollars was the sum in round numbers raised last year for all purHses by the three great Prcsbvteriau bodies of Scotland. Parker rillsburv, of anti-slavery fame, and now nearly seventy years old, has just celebrated the ninety-first birthday ol his mother, at llcnuiker, N. 11. President Pierce did not make a change in his Cabinet while he was President. Grant, in seven years, has made tweuty-six, au average of four to each office. Georgia has some 40 cotton mills. which in nearly every instance paid a dividend during the past year, while many New England mills were run ning at a loss. The great Atlantic cotton mills at Lawrence, Mass., will probably resume work by September, reorganized. The company's property is taxed on a valu ation ol fl,oOO,000. Mr. J. H. Ring is said to have filled the longest consecutive engagement of any actor iu America, having played continuously in the Boston Museum since August !, 18o3. lacob Harness killed Isaac White in Anderson County, Tenn,, in 183, and after a lapse of thirteen years, he has been sentenced to be hangod on the first of September next. A fishing schooner at Caie Eliza beth, Me., took in her seine at one haul the other day 900 barrels of mackerel . She could only hold 3t)0 barrels, and had to give the other 000 away. The American Medical Association n 1 hiladelphia admitted lr. barali Hackett Stevenson, of Chicago, as a member. Mrs. Stevenson is the first lady member admitted to the associa tion. In Ireland ouly 0S.75S persons out of 5,409,435 own any land at all, and of these, only J2.M4 have more than an acre, the remainder owning among them all ouly 9,005 acres, chiefly house projieriy. The Staiidish Monument Associa tion propose to erect titty feet of the shaft of the monument at Duxbury, Massachusetts, this summer. When finished the shalt will bu eighty-five feet high. The largest neirativi; ever produced by means of photography was recently exhibited in San Francisco. It was about three lect long and two feet wide and the perfected apparatus cost the inventor over $12,000. A Presbyterian minister, formerly of Pittsburgh, acted recently as umpire n a game ot base ball at M. 1 aul. His congregation very foolishly took oflense at it, but it has not transpire. I that they have decided as yet to lay the ease be fore the presbytery. Prof. Marsh, of Yale College, has contracted with lr. Field of Spring field, Mass. for the use of certain lauds near that city, and has workmen at work engaged in quarrying out "bird tracks," some excellent specimens of which have been secure I. One Frank Bartlett climbed to the top of the flag-staff on the State House dome, at Hartford, Conn., the other day, causing $100 to change hands in bets. The staff is 54 feet high painted and very smooth. He had no "creep ers," but was allowed halliards. The fall of the railway susiensioii bridge over the Niagara river, just be low the falls, is predicted by the Buf falo express. Its theory is that iron which is suspended either vertically or horizontally becomes granulated and brittle, and tends to break when set in vibration. The Iondou Echo prints the names of 30 or 40 members of Parliament who have declared their purpose to visit Philadelphia after the adjournment. The list embraces the names of some of the most eminent men in the kingdom, and they will no doubt receive a cor dial welcome. The oil region of Pennsylvania has dropped out of general notice, but that business there is steadily prosecuted is shown by the fact that 195 wells were bored in June. The average daily yield of these new wells wasabout four teen barrels apiece, and twenty-seven were completely dry. A horseman passed through Lafay ette Mo., the other day, and on his way from Texas to Michigan. He was mounted on a mustang, which had car ried him all the way, 1,500 miles, with nothing to eat except what it picked up along the roadside. The man's entire baggage consisted of a blanket and a lariat. Colonel J. II. Rion, of Winnsboro, Ala., has the diploma given John C. Calhoun by the faculty of Yale College certifying that he obtained the degree of LL. D. from that institution. The diploma is dated the 10th of September, 1822, and is signed by Jeremiah Day, President of "i ale College, and Elisba Goodrich, Secretary. 1$ 1 . 1 ' 1