1 SIIllBiB fly. sit B. F. SCHWEIEB, the cojrsTiTunojr-THE mnou-Aro the nrroECEMEirT or the laws. Editor and Pitprntor. VOL. XXXII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENXA., WEDNESDAY, DKCKMUEK IS, 1S78. NO. 51. lie! jSk art mS) v ; up i if 5 ! I : i i i t H v I' H Let 'a often talk of noble deeds. And rmrer of the bad ones. And sing about our happy day. And not about the sad ones. We were not made to fret and sigh. And when grief sleeps, to wake it; Bright happiness is standing by This life is what we make it. Iet's find the sunny side of men, t T be belterers in it; A light there is in every soul. That takes the pains to win it Oh! there's a slumb'ring good in all. And we perchance may wake it; Our hands contain the majic wand This life is what we make it. Then here's to those whose loving hearts Send light and joy about them! Tlianks be to them for countless gems We ne'er had known without them. Oh! this should be a happy world To all who may partake it; The fault's our own, if it is not This life is what we make it. My Uncle George. I "suppose you wonder George, why it is 1 have never married woudered ami most probably rejoi"ed for, at my deaili, you know, the old place will come to you, as it came to me, free from debt or incumbrance. I supo$e you have attributed my confirmed bachelor hood to some disappointment in love in early life, eh? Ah, well; I'll tell you the whole story. It may serve as a warning to you, I was going to say, only I do not believe in one man's experience being of any use to another. And as to warn' ings hah ! they never serve. But am in a retrosjiective mood to night; s if you care to hear the story, you shall." My I'ncle George and I were staying up at Barling, a small fishing-place of his in the Highlands, to which we re Mirted regularly twice a year for about a fortnight, in pursuit of salmon. had lost my father when I was four years old, and since tiiat time his broth er, my I'ncle George, had been my fa ther in all but the name. Indeed, 1 think we were fonder of each other than fathers and sons usually are iu these days. It has always been a wonder tome, and to every one else, that Uncle George had never married. Some people de clared that he had been hopelessly in love with the beautiful Duchessede and that it was for her sake he had re mained single; others hinted at some entanglement; while some maintained Kldly that Sir George Wyville wa married, and that I, his nephew and heir presumptive in the eyes of the world, should leok very foolish some day on the baronetcy ,and Wyville Cas tle, being claimed by the son of my un cle's old college bed maker. But to all these s;ories I turned a deaf ear. I knew enough of Uncle George to feel sure that there was not a shad ow of truth in all of them. My uncle often spoke of the Duchesse de as what she was one of the handsomest women and most finished coquettes of her day. But I felt certain that he had never cared for her; he would not have talked so much about her if he had. And as to an entanglement or a secret marriage, why, I knew all my uncle's affairs as well as I knew those of Char lie Baynsford, my bosom friend and brother otlicer, who had been gazetted as ensigu and lieutenant in the Fifth foot Guards the same day as myself, about two months before. X"; what ever reason my uncle may have had for remaining single, it was one that he had carefully guarded from the whole world. I was glad that I was going to hear it at last. I lit my pet pipe, about the coloring of which I was so anxious,and drawing my chair nearer to the tire, prepared to listen in comfort. "I was about thirteen, George, when I first saw Xora O'Byrne. I was at Katon then, and she was a flower girl in the streets of Windsor. The first day I eyer saw her I remember it as well as if it were yesterday it was a bitterly cold March afternoon, and she was standing outside the then only lio te iu the, place, sell:ng violets. To this hour I cannot stand seeing a girl selling violets in the street. I gave her all the uiouey I had in my pocket, and my heait with it. It is no use attempt ing to describe her. All descriptions of real beauty are futile. She was sim plest the lovliest child, as she was af terwards the lovliest woman, I ever be held. Iay after day I used to see her. I contrived to meet her quietly. I did all I could for her, and it went to my heart to feel that I could do so little. 1 used to give her food ; clothing it was of no use giving, for her mother took it away again directly, and pawned it to buy gin. 'I ueed scarcely tell you that Xora w as no common beggar-girl. Her fa ther had been a well-to-do workman, and during his life-time she had been to school, and had learned how to read and w rite; but after his death they had been reduced to beggary, through her mother's fatal propensity for drink. For nearly tw o years of my life I sent every shilling I could spare upon that child, and I loved her as I have never loved any other human being. And what is more, I kept my boyish love a secret from every one no easy matter, as you may imagine. "When I was fifteen I had a badat tack of typhus fever. I was staying at Wy ville at the time of the summer va cation with my uncle, Sir Rupert. He had a perfect horror of sickness, and of fevers especially; and directly I was taken ill he left the house to pay a visit to some friends near Windsor. He promised me that when the school met again he would ride over, and give the fellows at my house the latest accounts of me, . I did not return to Eaton till after the Christmas holidays, and Xora was gone where I could notleara. In vain I made Inquiries of different people in the town who knew the girl by sight. All I could learn was that neither she nor her mother had been seen since the beginning of September. I was nearly i ramie with anxiety. I give vou mv word, George, that never but once gain in my life have I felt i.el,i., like the utter grief and desolation of mat tune, when I thoughtof Xora, with her extraordinary beauty, thrown upon tne w ide world w ith no other protec tion man that drunken old mother. "Well, time passed on, and when I was eighteen I left Eaton and w ent into me uuards. My mother took a house on Hartford street, and I lived with her. I went every where, and was made much of. I was heir to Wyville Castle and fifteen thousand a year to say nothing of the baronetcy ; aud I could have married as my uucle aud mother was always telling me almost any body I choose. But I did not choose. Strange as it may appear, I never met a girl I could care for never met any one who could nia'.e me forget for one mo ment my childish love. I grew tired of everything sooner than most men, and at twenty, having obtained several months' leave of absence, I started for a tour in the Eat with my old friend Baynsrord. who was then Captain Fel lowes. When we were at Smyrna I received a letter from my mother, tell ing me that my uncle was going to be married. As I had been taught from childhood to consider myself his heir, you may fancy, George, w ith w hat feel ings of disgust I received the intelli gence. My mother wrote a Terv illegi ble hand, and moreover always crossed her pages, consequently deciphering her letters was no easy task. I could not make out the name of hit uncle's fiancee, although Fellow es and I sat up half the night trying todiscover it. My mother said Sir Rupert had met her in Paris, and I thought the word w e could not decipher looked like a French name. London w as no place for me now. I decided, and determined to leave the Guards and exchange into some regi ment going to Canada a country I was particularly anxious to see. We lin gereu a good deal of the time on our way home, and were a great part of the time in out-of-the-way places w here we saw no newspapers. Thus I missed read i ng the an nou ncemeti t of my u ncle's marriage. When I arrived in town I heard of nothing but the extraordinary beauty of Lady Wyville; aud many were the warnings I received half in jest half in earnest not to fall in loye w ith my aunt. It was very odd, but I felt no curiosity to see her. On the contrarv, the idea of making her ac quaintance was rather repugnant to me. I left a card for mv uncle iu Gros- venor square, a day or two alter Ire- turned home at an hour w hen i knew she would be out; and I declined, on the plea of a prior engagement, an in vitation that I rsceived to dine w ith them the following evening. "A few nights afterwards there was a large ball given at the Russian Em bassy. 1 heard, directly I entered the house, that my uncle -nd his bride were there; but there was a great crowd, and I never caught sight of them. Towards the end of the evening just as I was going away, the Duchess de came up to me in the conservato ry, and told me that my uncle and aunt were just then on the staircase. 'You must come and see her, George,'.she said to me; 'she is per fectly beautiful.' "I made some commonplace reply, such as that it was only very pretty women who ever admitted teauty in others, and then, w ith the little duch ess on my arm, I went to greet my un cle and his bride. "She was dressed all iu white not the faintest trace of color about her and her lovely face turned as white as her bridal w reath, as the came face to face with me. It was Xora Xora whom I had last seen in rags, barefooted, ask ing alms from the passers-by, and now met again thus at an ambassador's hall. and talking to a foreign prince ! "Mr uncle introduced me to his bride, aud I made a profound how, and with a face as white as her own, congratula ted her on her marriage, aud expressed the gratification I felt at making her acquaintance. he gave me such a look, poor girl r I knew then that she had never forgot ten me. I passed on witu me uucness nto the ball-room, and I felt rather than saw that Xora turned to look after 'Is the not beautiful?' my compan ion asked me w ith levity. 'Ah, I was right. I could see you were desperate y apri with her. What is it you Eng- hcall it? Love at first sight, laae my advice, won ami, and do not see too much of your lovely aunt.' " 'I shall follow your advice, 1 said; 1 mean to see as little of her as possi ble.' 'Something in my voice made my companion glance up; and then, with true tact and good breeding, she has tened to change the subject. She was a kind hearted little women, in spite of her trifling language. I knew that never again to me or any living being did she recur to what she Had noticed more than she chose to say I felt cer- i. I never saw Xora again so as to siieak to her during uncle's lifetime. I exchanged at once Into a regiment un der orders tor Canada. There I re mained three years, until the death of Sir Rupert recalled me to England. Xora had no 'children, so I was nown Sir George Wyville. 'She might as well have waited for me,' I thought bitterly. I met her once at our solici tor's upon business, just after my re turn home, and that was the last time I ever saw her in the world. She lived entirely in London, doing an Immense deal of good, I believe, among the Irish poor. But her career of usefulness was a short one. She only survived Sir Rupert four years. To me she died the hour when she became his wife. She wrote to me once after she became a widow, telling me all the circumstances of the marriage-how that Sir Rupert had rescued her from a life of beggary in the streets, and sent her to school for four years, an-i that then she had felt herse'lf bound iu honor and gratitude he c-oncluJed her letter by expres- singa hopethat we might still be friends. Friends! I had no more friendship to ouer her than I had love to offer any woman; ami mv uncles willow was sacred in my eyes. "I never saw Xora agaiu. "I believe the world talked a good deal about my strange conduct towards my aunt, and pronounced It to be 'very bad taste,' now that I had come into the title and estate. . Only the Duchesse de , gave me credit for having some good reason for thus avoiding Ladr Wyville. There, George, you know tiow the story of my life why I have remained a uacneior all my days. I was not aware that there is any particular moral to be deduced from my talc, unless ij is 'Only to fall in love in yourown rank of life.' a piece of advice that was very irequeuuy given to me when 1 was young. I hope you w ill profit by it better than I have done." Tne Cat. " What is this?" That is a cat. Do you see the beau- mui curve to ins back? If vou con tinue to be a good boy you shall some day have a thousand cats." " Are cats a useful animal?" " Yes, very. If it wasn't for the cat every house would be overrun with canary birds." "Are cats very brave?" " Yes. They'll hang around a corner for four hours to get their claws into a poor little mou.se, not one fortieth part their size." " What food do cats prefer ?" "A $20 mocking-bird is their first choice. If the family are not able to keep a luockiiig-bird, the cat must put up with an oriole or a German canary. It is only when suffering tor food that a cat will accept of a sirloin steak." "Cats can't siug, can they?" "Xo; but Idess 'em ! they keep try ing to learn how ! They have got so they can sound the first four notes on the scale, and they are determined to get the rest.'' "What time do they sing the sweet est?" "At night, between the hours of 11 I'. M. and 4 A. M. You have probably read items about bold, bad men flinging bootjacks, sticks of wood and other missiles at singing cats. Don't ever associate with such people. Cats have as much right in America as anybody else, aud it is only the meanest kind of folks who will try to keep them from rising up in the world." " Xobo.Iy knows, as no cat ever had a fair show to see how nu.nv years he could put in. After he has lain around one neighborhood for fiften or twenty years somebody murders him cold blood." " Io cats suck children's breath ?" "They d,). Mothers should let their children eat onions as a preventive. Plug tobacco will answer the same purpose." A Four-Toa frith that Stopped a Steam ship. A collision between a steamship and a gigantic fish, took place theothor day in the vicinity of the 'l ong 'long Is lands. The Messageries Maritime? steamer Anadyr, on its voyage to shang hai, was suddenly brought to a stop by a violent shock. The cause of the collis ion was found te be an enormous ray or flat fish, estimated by those on board to weigh from 8,000 to 10,000 pounds. The monster was lying asleep on the top of the water when its repose was rudely disturbed by a "dig In the ribs" from the stem of the steamer. After the first alarm had subsided, efforts were made to haul the creature on board ; but, owing to its unwleldiness, all attempts in this direction proved fruitless, and the A h, doubtless even more "shaken" than thfjssengers on the boat, was reluctantly allowed to move off and seek such remedies for the injuries it had sustained, as are to be procured in the mysterious deep. Sayings from the Chinese. Dig a well before you are thirsty. The ripest fruit will not fall into your mouth. Great wealth conies by destiny moderate wealth by industry. The pleasure of doing good is the only one that does not wear out. Water does not remain in the mountains, nor vengeance in great minds. Let every one sweep the snow from his own door, and not busy himself about the frost on his neighbor's tiles. Every to-morrow has two handles. We can take hold of it by the handle of anxiety or the handle of faith. Fat Man Hade Happy fcoses CI roiuiiu. Prattvha. Ala- July 20, 1S78. Botasic Medicink Co., Buffalo, X.Y. Gentlemen. About three months ago I commenced using your "Anti-Fat." at which time my weight was zia pounds. By following your directions carefully, 1 have sucoeded in reducing my weight to Ijs pounds. 1 pis is an very satisfactory anu pieasam; uui jusi previous to my commencing the use of your medicine, I had purchased two suits of fine clothes at a high price, and find to my dismay, that they are entirely useless to me now. n hen l put one oi my coats on, my friends U 11 me it looks like a coffee sack on a bean pole, and when I put the pants on well, descrip tion fails. My object in writing is to ascertain whether you have not, in con nection with yojr medicine business. an establishment where your patrons, similarly situated, could exchange these useless garment lor omers tnai wouiu fit. I think you ought to have some thing of the kind, as it would be an in ducement for many to use the Anti Fat, who now object to using it, in conse quence of the loss they would eustaln in throwing aside valuable garments. J ust turn this matter ever in your mind. A "Clothing Exchange" Is what you want In connection witn your Aou-tai business. Yours, truly. GEORGE BOYD Who Is powerful f He who can con trol bis passions. Who Is rich? He who is contented with what he has. Xever fall to tell the truth. If truth ful, yon get your reward. You will get your punishment If you deceive. To-morrow Is tne day on wnicn iuw men work, and fools return. Driving Off the Fos;. On a late passage of the steamer Ere m on the Hudson she was detained below Albany by a heavy fog. Captain Roe was standing near the pilot bouse on the lookout, when he was approached by a venerable gentleman of 'rural ap pearance. The boat was pushing for ward with half sjeed and great caution. "Captain," said the stranger, "why don t you drive off the fog?" "Just the thing I should like to have you tell me how to do." "I'll tell you bow an old German frlerdof mine years ago did it," and the passenger commenced by saying "In the rich valley of the Mohawk there is a quiet little village called Spraker's Basin. Many years ago, be fore there was such a thinga a railroad in the State of Xew York, the veritable Mr. Spraker, the patriarch and founder of Spraker's Basin, was keeping a tav ern a mile or so from the village, upon the thoroughfare known as Johnstown Road. Spraker's as it is generally called, was in early times the great reu dezvous for the Mohawk farmers, w hile journeying to Al'jany w ith their wheat, ud of the Jefferson and Lew is County drovers. Xow and then a Xew York merchant on his trip to the Xorthern settlements was to be seen before the great wood fire in Spraker's tavern. This class of travelers were held in much resjiect by old Spraker and the honest Dutch farmers on the river. One of this class accosted the old man on the (torch one foggy morning, w ith : Mr. Spraker, do you have much of this sort of weather, down here in this valley?" ' "Oh, yees, put we tout mind it. Mr. Stewart, I has a way of triving it off ish no matter at all, tih fog." "How's that, Mr. Spraker, I should like to know the process of driving off a fog?" "Well, I will tell you; I take a tram. and goes out and feeds te pigs, and if te fog dou't go off pretty soon, I take an other tram, and den 1 goes out and fod ders de cattle, and if te fog ain't gone by dis time, I takes another dram, and deu I goes out aud chops wood like thunder, and if te fog don't go py dis time, I takes another dram, and so on Mr. Stewart, 1 keep a doin' till the fog ail goes away." "Well, upon my word, Mr. Spraker, this is a novel uiode of getting clear ol a log. now manv drams did vou ever take of a morning before you succeeded in driving off the fog?" "Let me see; about two years ago, I think I had to take about twenty trams, but it was a tarn foggy morning." -flie Kijtb F.lixlr. A woman and boy slow Iy approached the station. They were mother and son. The boy looked serious and the moth er was doing a great deal of talking. She said she'd heard that they hud opened a museum at the station, and she asked John Henry if he'd like to go iu and see the animals. "Spose they've got any snakes?" he asked. "Lots of 'em." "And baboens?" "More'n a dozen." "And stuffed bridegrooms? " Yes, heeps of 'em." The boy had his suspicions, hut curi osity overcame them, and he finally consented to go in. As he entered the parlor the mother winked at Bijah over Ids head, whispered the one word "Elixir," and she was gone before John Henry could realize the situation. "I am glad to see you, my boy," re marked Bijah, by way of breaking the ice. "Where's them baboons?" demanded the loy, a3 he looked around. "My son, th e w ay of the trangressor is hard, no matter whether the spelling book sa3-s so or not." 'Where's that stuffed bridegroom?" shouted the boy. "He has gone out for a walk in the mellow sunlight, Johnny, but come up stairs and I'll show you the Elixir." "You can't fool me!" "There is do fooling about this. On the contrary, this is a very solemn oc casion. Come o;,." The boy susjiected th worst, and making a dive to get under the table he upset it and came near getting out doors. He was finally secured and ele vated to the second story, the door locked, and as he was placed in the big chair labelled : "Meditatiou" he had made up his mind to die in the last ditch. "Your mother didn't have time to explain your conduct, or detail your history," remarked Bijah in a fatherly tone, ''but I think she w ants the Elixir applied on general principles." "Murder!" shouted the boy as he tried to get out of the chair. "I should like to sit here and study your disposition, mused Bijah, "but time flies, and I am leetle a bit anxious to try this new spanker." . "Dou't you dare !" shouted the boy, having a dim idea of what was coming. 'You observe, my son, that I fasten this sheet-iron pad around my left leg as a protection. If you feellike biting, bite away. Then I place the Elixir handy, bring you out of the chair, so, bend you over in this shape, and now we are ready lor business. Let me re mark at this stage of the proceedings that my heart aches for you." "Maw ! Maw !" screamed John Hen ry Your dear maw is far, far away, my son, aud I am now ready for busi ness. Here I go." He went. The sound of a shingle striking a boy was heard iu the land. It was also felt In the land, but from the first stroke the boy snut his teeth together hard and refused to utter a sound. He had been there before, and he didn't believe it was going to be much of a shower. "I hate to do It, but !" remarked Bijah, as be worked his elbow with more zeal, and the silence was broken only by the deep-toned whacks of the shingle. It wis shingle vs. boy, and the boy had bet ten to one that he would come in ahead- After two minutes' steady motion Bijah let up and kindly inquired : "Jly son, do vou now feel a if you owned this town ?' "I feel as I'm a mind to!" was the brief reply. 'What! haven't 1 got down to your feelings yit ! Jist wait a moment !" The lad was adjusted and the Elixir again applied. The arm rose higher and came down faster, and at the fifth stroke a new stratum of soil was reach ed. At the tenth the boy wasn t sure which would beat. At the fifteenth he concluded that he was a goner, but just then Bijah halted and asked : "My son, do you think you run the house?" "I kin run half of it," replied the lad, suddenly taking courage. "Am I growing weak in my old age?" sighed the janitor, as he reached for a new siKinker, "or is this an iiuus al case?" It was simply an uiisual aase. The new spanker started off like a dose of buckshot and had only got the regular motion w hen the boy gave in. Before the shingle let go he was ready to promise anything, He took the most solemn vow to stay in nights, go to Sunday-school, quit fighting and earn money for his mother and as a proof of his desire to reform, he took a table spoonful of castor oil w ithout a w ince. "Don't you shudder when you rea lize what a narrer escape you've hail from the gal I us?" queried Bijah, as he wiped off the sjioon oil his elliow. "I do, and I shall always love you." "One day longer aud you might have turned out a pirate. 1 tell you, boy, a shingle of the right size, la!-l on the right spot, will put new and better thoughts into a boy's mind as -lire's your born. You can't mention a single great man iu this country, frun l'eter Cooper to Brother Gardner, who didn't get his regular dose of the Elixir when a boy. You can now sit w ith me down stairs and learn a lesson in history while I darn my socks." vt lien the mother came sottly in, a look of maternal anxiety on her coun tenance, Bijaii was pusiilng a darning needle threaded with pink twine through an xl0 hole in the heel of ky-blue woolen sock, aud the boy was reading aloud : "Is the hen on her nest? Yes, the hen is on her nest. Is the sun up? Yes, the sun is up, aud uo good hoy w ill laugh at a man who is blind?" The Elixir is a success. All order by mail promptly attended to. Aatonfelilng Jugglery. Ill Ielhi, India, we saw the celebra ted basket "trick," which Is sometimes poorly imitated by professional jug glers in this country. A native pro duced a basket and a blanket, aud after permitting us to see that they contained nothing, inverted the basket on the ground and covered it with the blanket. We paid uoatteiitioii to his incantations, but kept our eyes fixed on the basket and the space around it, resolved that no boy should be smuggled into it or out of it without seeing him. What made the triekfstill more wonderful was the tact that the performer stood in a clear space, and we could look dow n upon him as he proceeded. He went through the customary act of thrusting a sword through the insterstices of the basket, when the cries of a boy were heard as if in mortal pain issuing from the basket. Turning it over, there w as a boy apparently unhurt and seemingly enjoying the fun. Restoring the bask et, with tiie blanket over it, to its for mer position, w ith the boy under it. the juggler went through the same in cantations, and then running his sword uinlcr. the blanket, tossed it away from him. Turning over the basket, no hoy was to be seen. So far as anything could be observed there was nojiossible place in which the little fellow could be concealed. Another feat quite as tonishing we saw iierformed in the streets of Constantinople. An itinerant magician showed us a cane which had the appearance of being of wood and very knotty. This he tossed in the air as high as he could, and when it touch ed the ground it took the form of a live serpent, with blazing eyes and rapid movements. It looked like a dangerous specimen, and one which no man would like to approach. Catching up. this monster the fellow coiled it round his neck and fondled it, while it writhed and exhibited the most venomous quali ties. Throwing it high up in the air it fell to the ground the same cane w hich we had handled at our ease. Corn fttaik Nutfar. A Westmoreland county, I'a., farmer and scientist, has discovered a process by which sugar can be made from the common field corn-stalks, at a cost of three cents per pound, and the plant being only slightly inferior to the sugar car.e of Louisiana, and containing two per cent, more saccharine matter than the beet root. The name of the discov erer is Mr. F. S. Stewart, and his pro cess, discovered after several years' ex periment for crystalizlng the liquid, is as follows : The costly bone black and carbonic acid are no longer required. The stalks are cut after the ear has ar rived at an age suitable for drying or cauning the full value of the corn crop being thus obtained entirely inde pendent of the sugar growth and sent to an ordinary crushing mill. The juice placed in pans, after being heated to ISO degrees, is then heavily limed so as to make it exceedingly alkaline. Af ter being decanted and impurities re moved, a liquid dioxide of sulphur is then introduced in suflicient quantities to make the syrup highly acidulous. As impurities are precipitated, they continue to be removed, and more dio xide of sulpur added to keep the syrup in its acidulous condition, until the syrup Is reduced to the deusity ueces sary to form sugar. It is then thrown into a cooler and allowed to crystalize, edraining being performed by a cen trifugal machine, or other modern pro cess. The color of this sugar as it comes from the draining machine is much better than that of ordinary cane sugar, the syrup of the cane being red, while this is nearly w hite. A Mythical BarStory. Hugh Dougherty was introduced all around Carson the other day as a State Senator from California. This reminds one of a little joke practised by that jolly San Francisco Bohemian, Dan. O Council. Dan was on the train going to Eureka, when he fell in with a crowd of Englich tourists. If there is one think particular that Dan likes to manipulate, for practical jokes, it is a British tourist. He opened the ball by paying the porter of the train four- bits to come along occasionally and ad dress him as Governor." The porter earned his money aud was earnestly rushing up to Dan with : "Governor, did you want anything, sah !" Presently one of the tourists re marked : "Mr. O'Connell, I see you are called Governor; 'ave you the 'onor hindeed to be hau hinciinibeut hoff th hoflice?" "Yes, replied Dan ; "I have had the honor of occupying the gubernatorial chair of this State for five years, and expect to be re-elected in the fall."' "Hy ! hindeed; quite hextraordinary for one a ha so young." "Yes, I d look young, and I am proud of the fact that for a men of 50 there are few better preserved speci mens of physical humanity in this State. I came to this coast in 'VX almost dead with consumption, but the glorious cli mate of California and the still more bracing atmosphere of Xevada had the delightful effect of rejuvenating my en tire syttem. I now hunt the grizzles in my liear park with as much ardor " j ni beg pardon," interrupted one of the tourists, "did hi understand you to say a bear-park ?" Yes," continued Dan, without mov ing a muscle, "I have a range of four hundred acres, well stocked with griz zles, black bear and the Rocky Moun tain varieties. It is but a small park, but amply sufficient for w hat little re creation I need. It is but twenty miles from here, and if you can spare a couple of weeks, my horses, dogs, aud guns aud bow ie knivesare at your disposal." 'Really, though, your kind hoffer is happreciated. But is there any danger, you know. "oh, yes, of course; an inexjierien ced Land gets a tittle nervous when closing iu ou the monster w ith the bo wie knife, but if you do not care to take risks, you can shoot them w ith the rile. My hoy was killed last week, but he was too impetuous by half, and it was partly his fault. I might have in terfered in time to save his life, but the fight was a fair one, and I hadn't the heart to fire at the brave beast from be hind. A true Xevadanand '4t'er never takes so noble an animal as the giizzly at a disadvantage, even though his own flesh and blood be at tuke. But to change a subject, the recollections of which are painful (here Dau wiped away a tear), let me invite you to my deer park at Elko, w here a thousand bucks roam at large and my hounds are the best iu the State." The tourist promised to come and spond a month, and are now doubtless looking for the O'Connel preserve. Game on the Hea Shore. Wild geese and duck are the leading game birds or. the coast in the vicinity of Atlantic City, on the ocean. The outfit to hunt these birds consists of a light skiff or small hatteau, weighing only about seventy-five pounds, so as to be easily hauled over the meadows, not exactly the perfect sneak box of Barne gat, but similar in appearance and use; a large lot of wooden decoy ducks, an excellent double gun ; breach loading preferred. Besides most of the duck sportsmen own a yacht, or a chare in one, tine, cosy, decked ami cabined, aliout twenty-five f?et long, with one huge sail. The boats are provisioned, so that their owners can siend a week at a time on board with three or four companions, sailing along the creeks and hays between the mainland and the sea. The more stormy the weather the greater the chance of plenty of ducks. They are hunted to much that they go to sea all day usually, but in high winds and rains they remain in the bays aud the ponds on the marshes. At dusk and dawn each hunter ler.ves the yacht iu his skiff, and taking separ ate places, generally within hau of each otiicr, they set out and anchor the decoys, haul their boats on the marsh, cover them from the sight of the wary ducks by pulling grass and seaweed and throwing it over them, and then ecretc themselves along the bank and wait for the flocks of ducks to approach and settle among the decoys. Here in the bitter, freezing weather and storm they wait for hours, when a flock ap proaches, imitating their cries to lure them to settle among their decoys within gunshot, and if successful iu luring them near enough, shooting both barrels among them and nimbly slipping in fresh charges, and, if possi ble, firing away again. They launch the boat and secure the killed and wounded game, and hide for another shot. The ducks visit the fresh water ponds and slashes for water. Hiding near these the gunners slay numbers. As they weigh about five pounds to the pair, it occasionally becomes burden some to get the ducks home. It is a common thing here for gunners to start for the inlet, the boat houses or Higbee's, at midnight with a skiff, de coys, gun, and go five miles to a haunt. prepare for game and secrete himself before day. The money value of a pair of black ducks is generally seventy-five cents, but the fascination and excite ment of the pursuit attract many who would not sell the catch for money. Gunners are not always successful, sometimes returning with none or but few. Wild geese are not plentiful, and very few persons have outfits here save a few of the old-time gunners. Geese were killed more frequently here years ago. It is related that nocks of geese used to lignt in a Dig, ueep pond where the United States Hotel is now located. Wild geese aommand about one dollar each, and are superior in flavor to ducks. Other game is abundant here iu its season In May and August im- niense flocks of bay birds abound, aud coinpri.e every variety of snipe species common to this latitude, among them curlew, willct, plover and yellow legs, Gunners come purposely in May and shoot them in numbers. They are also attracted by decoys, painted to resem ble them, and are supported by sticks to w hich they are fastened, being run on the mud flats ou which they alight and feed, the runners lying near at hand. A nice bed of grass or trash I made, from which the gunner shoots and loads at will. To show the attrac tion of these decoys, and the iiuuiilation oi ineir wnisinng, large nocks are sometimes enticed back, and settle to me aecoys again ami again, ivillcues do this, but they are the simplest birds and most easily deceived of all. Blue heron are among our game. They are seeu standing on the marshes, or flying about and slow ly settling down. Thev are a large crane, of a bluish or dark dove color, and standing w ith bent neck they are about five feet high, aud when flying with head and legs straight are nearly six feet, with about five feet spread of w ings. They are all along this coast. A Mueer old Fwr. I he Karl of Dysart, who died last week, ied a curious life. Like the Duke of Portland he was averse to being seen He had lodgings in Norfolk street ; no one was ever admitted into his room, and all correspondence with the outer world was carried on by means of a small slit, cut in the door, through which, messages and their answers were passed. As he was rich and pen urious he managed to accumulate an enormous sura of money, a large portion of w hlch he had invested in the deben tures of the London Southwestern Railway Company. The title of Earl of Dysart was originally granted to one William Murray.who was the whipping boy of Charles I. The lad rose to be a Gentleman of the Bed-Chamber, w hen a committee of the House of Com moos memorialized the King "to remove that vile person from his councils." William Murray left one daughter who received a patent as Counters of Dysart. from Charles IL, and married Sir Lionel Tollemache, and on his death, the Duke of Lauderdale. The lady used to boast to her second husband that she had saved his life, when taken prisoner by the Parliamentary forces, by "submit ting the to familiarities of Oliver Crom well." Before I had heard of this, I confess that I had never thought of the great Protector in the light of a filrt The father of the Earl just deceased was engaged.before he inherited his peerage, in some curious electioneering practices. He bought a number of small houses at Ilchester, which then returned two members. In 1802, most of these ten ants were bribed to vote against him, so he pulled down 240 houses and erected a workhouse, iu which their late occu pants w ere lodged. In IMS, a majority of the remaining electors voted against his candidates, on which he turned 100 of the inhabitants out of his workhouse in mill winter into the streets, "pour encourager les autres." At the next election there was still a majority against his candidates, when he gave up the struggle. His will is to be contested on the ground that the late Lord Hunt ingtower made a will during Lord ; Dysart lifetime, bequeathing all he could to his illegitimate family. The law of wills is some what complicated, and It would require a dozen columns of this journal to explain why Lord Dysart.s will should be attacked because of the testamentary dispositions of Lord Huntingtower. Everyday Lord Dysart had sent to him, in Xorfolk street, the number of cabbages cut, of peaches on the trees, of eggs laid, and of chickens on his estates. He made his investiga tion through an aged domestic servant. One day an oid la iy walked into the Southwestern Railway Company's office and asked whether there was not aii issue of some sort of guaranteed stock. The clerk said there w as not an issue of some sort of guaranteed stock. The clerk said there was. "Quite safe?" said she. "Oh, yes, old lady; you need not be afraid of your money. Do you want to put your quaiter's wages in it?" "Well," she answered, "if you please, be good enough to give me J.G0, 000 worth of it, aud here's the money"; and with that she untied a big pocket from under her dress containing notes to that amount, and presented the pocket to the clerk. A year or two ago, his Lordship thought that he would go out, a thing that he had not done for many a long day. "Bring me my boots," he said to the aged domestic. She brought him the only pair that he had. They were Hessians. "Xow call a hackney coach," he continued. When he went down and found a cab before his door, driven by a man with a large cape, he was in a state of utter amaze ment. He directed himself to be taken to Hauipstead. When he reached Regent's Park he insisted that the driver was going the wrong direction. "This is not the way to Hauipstead." he said. "Where are the covers in which I used to shoot pheasants?" Sad and astounded be returned to Xorfolk street, from which he never emerged alive. How to IMaronrajEe a Minister. Go to church only occasionally, and when you go, go late; take no part in singing, but keep up whispering. Find all the fault you can; point out his deficiencies before your children and others. iHui't aid his work, but despise his lack of good sense. Tell tales to him about the people and their criticisms of him. Tell him how much his predecessors were thought of. Keep away from week-day meetings. Get up gayeties, particularly some enter tainment near the communion season. Require him to be present everywhere. Keep back his salary. Keep talking about general dissatisfaction. Patient continuance in these prac tices will surely drive away both the spirit and the minister of God. Show me a people whose trade U dis honest and 1 will show you a people whose religion is a sham. Vomiting Yesurio. The actual crater of Vesuvius Is ploced almost i&.an amphitheatre, three fourths of which are enclosed, while one-fourth is open. The enclosing walls rise above the bed of the crater from 230 or more feet, in some part apparently composed or sulphur. The diameter, judging by the eye, from ou. side to the other, is about 3J0 yards,and the whole of this area is filled with lava on Are, but crusted on the surface with a skin some inches deep of lava that has been chilled. All who have crossed the Mer de Giaoe, at Chamouni, are aware of the character of iu for mation ; the deep, intensely blue lints of the crevasses, the huge boulders of ice, the uncertain and irregular character of tho blocks, and sometimes the fantas tic shapes; assumed. Imagine jnst the same formation, but substitute heat for cold, intense fiery red color for the blue, and the appearance of the crater may be realized. The surface of the lava blocks is black, contorted into myriads of forms, hor, rough, aud somewhat brittle, and lying more or less at one level. Looking between the cracks or down the "crevasses," how ever, the glowing fires a few incle. below our feet, an I in t e blocks whereon we were standing, were seen W hen the mouth of the volcano shower signs of movement, ten mouths since it was not raised much above ;he rest of the bed. Its ten months activity, how ever, has enabled it to raise a cone almost in the centre of the crater, at least a hundred feet in height, very wide at the base, converging at the summit like a sugar-loaf, but with the summit of the loaf removed. With a pulsation as regular aud as marked as that of the piston of a steam-engine in full motion, did the huge mountain carry on its work, so that now we were clearly able to understand w hat was meant by "every puUation of the vol cano being duly registered at the obser vatory." Clouds of smoke aud fumes were Issuing from the summit of the coue now densely dark, as if a fresh supply of coal had been heaped on the hre; then intensely light, as if the engine were blowing off steam; tneu most beautifully aud delicately tinted with the tenderest rose piuk, as if an artist were testing how best to combine the loveliest tints of his art ; then a pale salmon a little while; and then, as if five thousand torpedoes were simulta neously exploded. The hue mountain seemed to heave, and forih from its mouth issued immense quantities of molten lava, shot scores of feet high up into the air apparently, at tho mouth. all in one body; but, there, separating into millions of pieces great and small, all glowing with most intense red heat that can possibly be seen. With a powerful opera glass we silently watched the visiblo operations of the volcano. Each piece as it asceuded into the air was separate; no piece was partly red and partly black, but was on fireman d at red heat throughout; mostly the lava emitted fell back again into the bosom of the heaving mass, but with every emission, quantities, large or mall, fell on the outside of the mouth, and thus we saw readily, how the coue had gradually, but continuously, in creased iu sizi and neight. Every now then, a huge mass would drop out "'de, and then would be heard an im mense crash, followed by va-st quantities of lava rolling dowu the sides of the eone. As we stood watching, at inter vals there seemed to be the tiring of ten thousand guns of mightier calibre than Krupp's, and we -oou found that this was i be precursor of. a grand display. Up rose, possibly one hundred feet above the cone, an immense mass, spreading in the shape of a lady's fan, and presenting one of the most niaguill cen sights the eye of man can ever see. Aud this upheaval was not a thing for which we had to wait till our patience was exhausted, and to wonder if ic would be repeated or not, but was con tinuous and incessant and almost seemed as if every renewed expulsion were grander than its predecessor, or as indi cating a trial of actual strength prior to the great event proposed to be com. pleted. As we descended to the crater, the rain had ceased; vhilst there It again fell heavily lor a time; then the whole surface seemed "frizzling, aud hissing and steaming," as the two bodies came into contact; the thunder overhead was pealing like the roar of fifty parks of artillery in concert, and the lightning flashed with intense viv idness; then the rain and thunder and lightning ceased, and there was a per fect calm, nothing to lie heard beyond the "machinery" in full vigor aud "steam up," then the sunlight light eued briefly the whole scene, deepening impressions that time cai. never erase. As the day was drawing ou. It at last became necessary to think of returning to Xaplee. With much effort and the aid of our helfjer, we again uot out of the crater to the summit, but our descent was to be by another way from that by which we ascended. It w is down the side of the mountain, at a far uiore acute angle than that now proposed for the roof of St. Alban's abbey, but being of loose friable material?, similar to those we have previously described, there was little danger of rolling to the bottom. Stepping out bravely, ami making long strides, with the foot and leg half-way up, plunging into the mass at every step, our American friends made the descent of the outer cone in nine minutes; we traveled it more leisurely, and took from twelve to fif teen. The Hermitage was soon reached and at once taking carriage we started for the hotel. Think little of yourself, and you will not be injured when others think little of you. I HiTBforM'ny yars past I'scl In my own faiallv, ant recoruiue"l- d to the families i.f my conKrx"'". s liie best reoieilv I ki.ow of for I'oiitflis. colds aud liicplerit Cnusntiip Ion, Dr, Jnyue'g Kxp-torant, sml also Ja- ner- sanative llLs as a remedy for cusiivencas. Biliousness and Impurity oj the Bluod. M . cniitldenee In Ibeifre t value of tee 'LMiMic-s, increases tne loujfrl ue tltein and nus rve their won derful beaiui-reM.'rtnir effects. They have IP ren umverMl i-altslu-tlon In all tlie InuUlea to w m 1 have recommended ttiern. ke u.-. Dcwllur, late P of hereau Baptist Church. New York. L