-i - - -tor F UaH 3 a 10RTK Ti'r, rot ca trw. S ft:: s. ,1, itn. tin tn i i if: of" T as.! 0, orfc ila- pCT sis hi &i1 ft IK si it t i ue 3 B"F. SCIIWEIE11, VOL. XXXIII. ""Si T HELMBOLD'S! courouxD 5 . fLriD EXTRACT 3 SOCHU. FHAB3IACEUTICAL. i?ECiFIC REMEDY FOR ALL DISEASES ' or iu 1MW s ER I KIDNEYS. Iwrsf" :-,-i,:v. !..-! of Memory. Imliposi- : : htr:;. n rr Iii-;nes-N crhortnes of I: I w!:i Tiiontit of Disease, : Vi-;on. Y:izi in the Kittc. Chest, z :. Ruu f : l;:oi-i to liie Head, PaJt ::: :..'f. ainl L'ry rkin. ynr.itiji-i are ttliowel to po on, - .7-;,:; hrii' inic Fits Hn.t Con j io.:(.m V ...!. the constitution l- jiSVct.-I it rt-.aires the aid of an -rrn ti;.-4iciii to strengthen anil '-c sjsttai which ti at KslmbuId'sBuctiu" M EOES IX EVERY CASE. ISOLD'S BUCHU IS UNEQUAIXD -.Pi' -v-r.r known. It Is prescribed by (..uiMit piiyeiciaiu ail over the fj-frxat'-rrlicEa, Nervousness, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Aches and Pains, Debility, L"?y D:.eascs. Liver Complaint, Nervous Debility, Epilepsy, liia.l Troubles, l'aralysis, General Ill-Health. Pi Diseases, sciatio. Deafness, iJecliiie, Lumbago, Catarrh, Nervous Complaints, Female Complaints, &c. I fit Pain tn the Shoulder, Coueh. -'-s, ..ur Stmiiarh. Eruptions, Bad " i? - M-mtii. I'alpitation of the "ra;:i In tii-- K-ioii if the KMneys, k '.kii. otii.-r painful symptoms, -e t-i'iln-'-, of IysiK:iibia. Helmbold's Buchu hrignrates the Stomach, "'"insist p. thp tnrpM Liver, Bowels, . " ln-uithy action, in cleansing is ,f ' t :ill inipuriiH-A. ami imparting i ttr 1 vi-"r t the whole srstc-m. - 'iii in ie quite tuiut-H-iifc iu the nwxt htaiiatuig of its valuable ISa.ilit.3. ?&CE 1 PER BOTTLE Or Six Bottles for S5, ,Td to any address free from observa- iv"'"'8" may consult by letter, receiv-;t"- .i'"1' "'" '"'"n as l.y calling, by --tiic luiiuwiiig quely)ns: ?.U J'?nr name nnd post-office address, stale, and your nearest express i&rf'n.l sex? , "!iii.,iii UTfa '"--Instlct ' R,;'''it now and in health! : Y. " - ''ve you been sick t ' 1W u'!,!,,x i'm.color of hair anfl eyest ' tr iJou " IO"I"iiir or erect gait? '"",ul reservation all yon 'Wn.i,'., V'ur case. Knclose one dollar -n,..'u""a tf. Yonr letter will then ;urlr sJ"'"""n.aiil we will give you " 'Jr '" and our candid '' :4tJ i i.i ''ieians attend to eorres-'-aMu, '"'-tieis should lie addressed y' iuU:rt treet ruUjk H. T. HELM BOLD, rircggist and Chemist, Philadelphia, Pa. SOLD ETEKIWUE1 There was house of clsr. WTierein ths inmste sat all day. Merry an J poor; For Hops sat with her, heart to heart, Fond and kin J, Vowing be ivar would depart TU1 all at oace h changed his mind--Sweetheart, good by !" He skipped away And shut the door. But Lore came past, andlookinj la. With smile that pierced like suubeam thin Through wall, roDf. floor, Stood in the mioUt of that poor room. Grand and fair, Making a glory out of gloom Till at the window mocked grim Cara; Love sighed : "All lose, and notUing win ?" He shut the door. Then o'er the close-barred house of clay Kind clematis aud woodbine gay Crept more and more; And bets hummed merrily outside, Loud and strong. The inner sil.ntnesa to hide. The patient silence all day lon; Till etening touched with finder gray The bolted door. Moot like the ncit stops passing by Will be the Angel's, whose calm eye Marks rich, marks poor; Who, fearing not, at any gate Stands aud rails; At which the inmate opens straight Whom, tr j the crumtl ng clay house falls. He takes in kind arm silently, And shuts the dcor. Turning The Tables- Tom Hills, sometime huntsman of the ; rep'u?d that it was a matter upon his con Old Surrey Hounds, were once sent to buy j science. a fox in Leadenhall Market for service the ! "oll ' ace il u matter of conscience, next day. The commission was not at all j 1uacan." sai J the good-natured minister, to Tom:s liking ; but obeying orders, he j 1he3,r wUatu r.xle to town. mrf hi fov. n.l nntlin.. l.in. O'- j I 0 , securelv stranned- lesrs unwariL in mm. ' i J 1 : , . . , . . . i , - 1 riiMia TwLtil in Ilia ntrorfStnt Inrnnl litc horses head homeward. Somewhere about ! miilniMit lp ri-iMi'i 1 Strpiitli'ini Puiiinmn i . - ' ' to do euaaemy stopped vita the once . familiar challenge lite!" "My money !" ' Your money or your exclaimed Hills. "I haven't p t any ; I am only a servant ; and vou wouldu t take mr life, surelv f i The highwayman told him to look sharp, emphasizing the injunction by jiointiug a pistol at the huntsman's head. --v.cn, m man, .u uic muex, ou l uu uui. 1 - am .u, me, u, a ,c no money, I suppose you must have money's worth. You'll find something quite as good in my pocket here ; so pray help yourself i he robber s disengaged hand dived into . , . , I a xt . . i Tom s pocket lnstantcr. and JIaster IJej r" -cd'e tth closed as quickly upon it, cans- ing the fell- w to yell in dismay, and drop pistol and reins ; while Tom galloped off at his U-st pace, having his unwelcome ac - quaintance to bandage his hand and digest his disapiwintment at le isure. lu'iaur.j uis inuiaa cxjHTienccs, voionei .ueauowa i u itr lens ui ins iH'in oesi-i Ly f huiulreeis f'l pilgrims arm travelers, crying out azainst the- Ininias, or tlnir-reili rs, who not onlv gave their custodiers short weight. but adultiTutei! the flour fo abominably ' with sand that cak'-s made of it were utterly i uneatjwe. 1 lie coione-i 11. terminea to pun- ish the cheats: and this is how he did it. "I told," says he, "some riiable men of mv escort to go quietly into the bazars, and ' each bur flour at a separate being j careful to n-e whose shop it was. Hie Jour was brought to me. I tested every sample, and found it full of sand as 1 nassed it under mv teeth. I then de-sired .... - 1: . . , 1 , ! all t:ie persons name-eiianM iu ;,; to me, with their baskets 01 Hour, tiieir , . weights and sc-ales. M-niy aiterwara nicy i arrived, evidently s-jsptcting nothing, and , were placed in a row on tiic grass before Fair,y pai(, h(T own ni wasti,e Pari my tent. 'Now,' said I, gravely, eaeh of j Emn dmil wn0i answPnrig a wet-tooted ' you is to weigh out a seer two poumtsj 01 , your flour ;' which was done. j " 'Is it for the pilgrims;' asked one. ! "'o, said I, quietly, though I had much ; difficulty to keep my countenance. 1 ou 1 must eat it yourselves. 1 "They saw that I was in earnest, and j offered to pay any fine I imposed. , "Xot so, I returned ; you nave niaac 1 many eat your Hour; wliy snouia jou object to eat it yourselves V 'They were'horrihly frightened; and amid the screams of laughter and jeers of , the by-tanders some of them actually began to eat, sputtering out tue iiau-nioisicncu flour, w hich could be heard crunching be tween their teeth. At last some of them fiim" themselves on their faces, abjectly be seeching pardon." And so, with a severe Humming Wri. aehnonition, they were let off. Xo more There are about ten thousand diffcr was heard of the lad flour. ! cnc kjnds kn0wn, and these are classed It is a pity rascals at home can not ! j ouc hundred and thirty famiiies, one be served in the same way, pure iooa would he the rule, if the concocUrs and venders of vile make believers were liable to compulsory consumption of their own wares. , ,. . Sir John McXeill, a shrewd Scotch diplo matist, trained the repute of being the only European who ever got the belter of a derv ish During the New Year's festival the ish. Dunns the Xew lears ie-su , Pcreiim religious mendicants ply their voca-1 tionmost vigorously, not merely asking ior i i ., .i,.mnilinT such sums as they : deem proper, according to the rank of the j A dervish tried to extract an -! giver. "sant tribute from Sir John, and the ambassador proving obstinate, proceeeled to ! ;t ,,non him :" that is to say, he csiao- lished himself in Sir John's garden, just be r,. i5 Kiiidr windows, and relieved his feelincs 1)V making a .ime . 1.:.1,.na ItllUHlUItin dr and nishU The diplomatist was in- i cUned to make short work of the nuisance, but was w arncd that violent measures would he dangerous. ...... f him if vou can. said his Persian advisers; "but do not touch him. Sir John sent for a bricklayer, and gave the order: "Build a wall all round that howling beggar in my garden, and then The SeWwi looked on composedly while the wall slowly rose round him, and made than before: but when the roof- j a bo awoke to in" process comments, . , LwledMthatit was really intended to entomb him alive, he clambered over the to entomb bin. a , the naiu THE MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, shire living was held by a company-loving parson much in request at marriage merry makings, whose clerk was equally welcome at christening tea-flshts. These two wor thies contrived to fall out : so it came to pass that when the clerk was due at a tea party, he found himself obliged to foreiro the anticipated muffin feast by reason of the parson requiring his attendance. He bore the disappointment with tolerably Rood grace, hoping for an opportunity for re taliation. It was not long coming. On Sunday-morning advised that the clergy man was going to dine with a newly wed- dixl pair, instead of giving out only part of the hundred and nineteenth psalm, the wicked fellow said, "Let us sing to the praise and glory of God the humlrcd-and- nintteenth psalm all on't" Ikfjre his victim was well aware of the treat in store the musicians were fairly on their way, re solved to go through their task, come what might It was weary work, hut they gravely persevered. Sometimes only one instrument accompanying a single voice was to be heard; but singers and players were determined to do their duty, and held on somehow to the end ; and the parson had to dine at home, inwardly confessing the tables had fairly been turned upon him. The liev. Dr. Maclead, father of Dr. Norman Macleod. tassinr throucli Hie j -J o - j crowd gathered before the doors of a new i church he was about to open, was stopped I by an elderly man with : "Doctor, if you I please, l wish to speak to you. Asked if ! he could not wait until after worship, he " l"' uull"r' "'"lean, "liie mat ter is this. Ye see the clock yonder on the , , new church. Now there is reallv no clock lht'K' n,y the face of 0DC ? thcre U no "uiu wi-ic, ouij onec in iwcive Hours; anu i in TNV llinil f llt IB tmmr rfn- vwiniv nn.l - 7; - I 4""'- aaiAirfc iiiu tvuaiiimx; luai mere i ... . .. tie llT' n I the Lord. I The doctor promised to consider the mat ter, "uui, saia ue, '1 m glad to see you looking so well, man. "You're not young. I rcuiemlier you for many years; but you have a tine head of hair still." '"Eh, doctor !"' exclaimed the unsuspect .ng Duncar "now ve're joking. It's long j my ir. 31 looked shocked, and an- igwered, in a tone of reproach: "Oh Dun-1 can , puucan ; you poins Int0 lhe Uouso I of the Uwd with "lie on your head ?" He ' , , , howl no more of the he on the face of the frjUrcn j r Al-meritc-d repartee w dealt by a n mi(lshipmnn to the dtcr of a K. c n ft ba Kivcn ,,v the Mtvf ,0 ,he : naV!l offlcrn nQ the padlJc jTbe nii(ldv was MJ cnouch to tUc I yom ,a(U. t(J him f(; ,)t,r partlMT dear no, .aiu tUC supercilious Dall Ma never allows me to dance, with miekhipmen." Somclnxly let her know : the middy was a Lord, and she repented, ana reminded Inm that he was engaged to I her for the next dance. ; The youngster however, was not so easily mollitu d. and rcmcmbrnn? the ladv had :native blixxl in her reins, smilingly replied: i over in olio days, 5 hours, 4S minutes, i ' )h dear, no. Ma never allows me to'.W seconds? Much more surprising. dance with smaws." : Said one piay-going young fellow to an- other: ! '"I was at the Gaiety last night for the sixteenth time, and took a look round the pit to see if you were the-re." But nowavs disconcerteel bv the insinua- thc su, ,icct of bis ..dia!r retorted; theGaietv. Vcu can't seethe pit! ' j vis;tor-g request for the loan of a pair of siipp( rs, by Riving, "Certainly, my dear, if yon think mine will fit you,' received , lie cjCTer rejoinoer : "I dare say they will, if TOU tcu vour nlIU,i to put a cork Jp insidu them." ..you have given me Scotch whisky; 1 agj f0T Irish," complained a hurried im- lj;bor "ver mind,n said the publican; "fancy it's Irislu" The man drank up the liquor, and made f,,r tue door. "Stop!" cried Boniface; "you haven't pam me. "Xevcr mind; fancy I have, customer, and away he went. said his of the largest of which is the humming bird, which has about four hundred different species. They live mostly in very warm countries, and are so beau tiful that Audubon, the great natural ist .lle.1 them the "irlitteriiig frag ment of a rainbow." They have orcen and gold body, and a red throat . . , it collar. Their nests are n .nch w.ulC) an,i an ncu deep, and they will EsUt anything that comes ., ,i,on, Tiiev will live for weeks on i,oney. or sugar and water, and will j become very tame. If not frightened thej will come year after year to t'ie same flowers Too Trusting. "Mary Jane Marsh, didn't I say to last week that the next time you came ..i.-rra of drunkenness lie i " v " - I should send you up lor sixty ujjsr asked his Honor of a flve-ind-iorty le - male. "I think you said so, Juuge, uui -i inh f;iiLh In vou to III I II ls X believe you'd do any such thing," she re"Well. you trusted too much. You are regularly booked." "And I'm regularly sorry Your Honor, because I can never believe in rou aeain. It's a sad day when a man loses the confidence ot the public in his word." .. ?peak well of the absent whenever . h,v a suitable opportunity. Xevcr I . k.a anltali eonrtoriuuuy ; i r thpm or of anvbody. unless J , f them pr allybo.ly; un ess spe d u legs juu aivc. ,. ., ,n(,nt or MSS7d ShSX- " C05SnTUTI0ir-THE UfflOS-AtfD Bee Kanchlnc In California. This is a famous country for bees and the making of hoaey, and at many a breakfast table in dLstant Europe to-day the waffle is spread with sweets that have been filched from tlio hearts of a thou- uuu -.uiornta flowers. In the n.nmi, oi aimost every canon there is a bee ranch or apiary, whose owner grows inuoient and prosperous from tl. i.w... of his industrious subjects. Here there are no long winters with dearth of flowers, through which the patient workers must be nursed and fed In order that they may live until theopen ing of the next field season. These bee-rauches are models of neatness and domestic comfort, and the profession of bee-keeping is rapidly becoming popular among persons of little uhvsi- cal strength or small financial capital, or both ; such as maiden ladies, broken down ministers, bachelor students, and those dilettante fanners who fancy that the royal road to bucolic happiness lies through the flowery beds of a bee-pasture. Their expenses are as light as those of a hermit in his cage, and what stores of honey are laid up arc so much clear gain, as the bees board themselves while they work, and work unceasingly in preparation for the winter whTeh never comes. When the hive is full the cakes of comb are removed, the liquid Is strained from the cells, and the empty cups arc replaced to be filled again and again. This economical pro cess prevents a waste of labor and time in the gathering of wax and the build ing of new bins in the store-house. Walking out in the morning in the green brushwood of these chiuh you hear a loud and continuous buzzing of wings, and, although there may not be a flower in sight, it Is as ceaseless and strongasinabuekwheat patch or clover field at home. This humming of bees is nature's tenor voice, as tlio roaring of water is her bass. There is a cure for homesickness in the bees mono- . tiinp pvpn thntiirn trip nutrtnra tlipri-if Pertly wiTa, as, indeed, many of ' ' ' ! these are. In such a country you can la such a country you can-1 not feel utterly lonesome and lost. The Most Wonderful of Calculating Iloy. Whca Bidder was ten years old lie j answered in two minutes the following j question : What is the interest of X' 1,1 U ! for 4,414 days at 4.'2' per cent, per an- j num. The answer is 2,431 10s O' l. A fewmouthslater.wheu hewasyct tlev en years old, he was asked, how long would aVistera one mile cube be filling if receiving from a river 120 gallons per minute, wiUiout luiermiasiou r.an ( two minutes he gave the correct an- swer, 14,300 years S-'j days 12 hours and 4 minutes. A year later he divid ed correctly in less than a minute 4t;S,ry2.413,."i3 by 9,070. I have tried how long this takes uia with pen and naner- ami. after ietrlii! an Incorrect ' j. a,uj a,ur;0r minute, ! ,.i,t fi,,,h ii, sum o.,; mr. " v. v ... - rect result, (51,G.".,.H and 5,873 over,) ! n alxut the same time. At twelve I years of age he answered In less than a j minute the iuetioii, if a distance of ! Hj ; inches is passed over in a seconl of j ti,.. i.ntr n.-.nr in.-i.ej ni lm r:ipil however, w.is his success, when 1:J years old, in eleaiing with the question, whatistuecuue rootoi s.'i,..ij,j..,?. 002,ljd? lie obtained tne answer n I two and a half minutes, viz, '.lil.537 I do not believe one arithmetician in a thousand would get out this answer correctly, at a first trial, iu less than a quarter of an hour. But 1 cinfess I have not tried the experiment, feeling, indeed, perfectly satisfied that I should not get the answer correctly ia half a dozen trials. Xo date is given to the following case : "The question was put by Sir William Herschel, at Slough, near Windsor, to Master Bidder, and an swered in one minute : Light travels from the sun to the earth in eight min utes, and the sun boinu 9S.O00.0JO of miles ou", ol course, this is quite wrong, but sixty years ago it was near enough tothe accepted value, if lightwould take six years and four months traveling at the samo rate from the nearest fixed star, how far is that from the earth, reckoning 30."i days and six hours to each year, and 2S days to each month?" The correct answer was quickly given to this pleasing question, viz., 40,033, 810,000,000 miles. On one occasion we learn the proposer of a question was not satisfied with Bidder's answer. The boy said the answer was correct, and requested the proposer to work his sum over agaiu. During theoperation, Bidder said he felt certain he was right, for he had worked the question In another way, and before the proposer found that he was wrong and Bidder right the boy told the company that he bad calculated the question by a third method. M- The Tannine Wolves. It is said, a traveler In Germany writes, that whenever several of the larger wolves associate together for niisehief. in the German forests ami ,htir neUhherhoodthere is always a numerous tram ol smaller ones to fol- j low jn the rear, and act 83 auxiliaries iii the work of destruction. Two i.irze wolves are sufficient to destroy the most powerful horse, and seldom more than two ever begin the assault, al though there may be a score in the gang. It is no less curious than amus ing to witness this ingenious mode of . , If there is n0 gnow or but lit tic on the ground, two wolves approach in tUe mfjst I)ayf a(l carei ssmg man ner, lying, rolling and fri-King about. until the too credulous and unsuspici ous victim is completely put oil his guard by curiosity and familiarity. During this time, the gang, squatted on their hind-quarters, look on at a dis tance. After some time spent in this way, the two assailants separate, when one approaches the horse's head, and the other his tail, with shyness and cunning peculiar to themselves. At this stage of the attack their frolicsome approaches become very interesting it i approacues uccumc i", uu.i..-i.. i. rtKM earnest; the former Is TIE LTfTOBOEMEJT OF THE LAWS. PENNA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, mere decoy, the latter is the real assail ant, ind keeps his eye steadily fixed on the liamstring or dank of the horse, The critical momementUthen watched, and the attack is simultaneous; both wolves spring at their victim the same moment one to the throat and the otliCr lo t,ie Hank and if successful, wl'ieh they generally are, the hind one never lets go his hold till the horse is completely disabled. Instead of spring ing forward or kicking to disengage himself, the horse turns round and round without attempting a defense. The wolf before then springs behind to assist the other. The sinews are cut, and in half the time 1 have been des cribing it the horse is on his side; his struggles are fruitless the Tietory is won. At this signal the lookers-on close in a gallop; but the small fry of followers keep at a respectful distance until their superiors are gorged, aud then they take their turn unmolested. Witches at tlio Lewes. Xow, my sou Koileriek my young est son, who Is twenty-one next month was last year at the herrin fishery at Fruzerberg. One night he went ashore, aud met a strange woman and man walking. They did stop, and did ask who he was, and where he did come f.-om. "From Loch Invcr,"says he. "Aud so do we," says they (which was siugular, as he did never set eyes on them before) "Come with us, and we will give you a drink " of beer or of rum, or of whisky, or of gin, I do not rightly mind which it was what eller. You must know sir, that each boat, at the herrin' fishery time, takes a woman on board to cook meat and wash for them; there wiil be many women go to sea in this marner. Well, they ask my sou at the tavern, "D'nl you have any good luck with the herrin' to day" "Xo, very bad." "Did you yesterday?" "Xo worse again." "Ah ! but," says she, "you will have to-morrow." Well sure enough be ,M 111 hi1 ry ininr rrnr.s r n-rr n' .im ili.l rot ftT. . ... . ' r . j ior nis s nare mat one uay. it was a j wonderful thing. But he did tell me I that that gold did do him no good; he I had no Idea how it did get spent what- etl'er. That day be did go looking abo.it after the man and woman all over, but he did never see them again ; I did not here of bis ever again seeing them. "Roderick ! I do hope rou will never again have anvthinir to do with 'these vi itches." "Xo, father, I will never again, so long as I do live." Ho Is away to Frazerbsrg this year again. a.uKi nsr or another witch In the Lewes, 1'3 rear agone. She llved'at Stornoway, and diel sell winds to sail ors. One of our Loch Inver boats did not get away that autumn for weeks. The w ind was almost dead against them. Well, ihey did go to her, and ..-. !.,- l.. I I si,A ffve tmm hhi.-fc sfrlnn- tied with .i , ...! i 4-n inlet- iviiue.-, uiii. sain, ii utciiiHj; aw a-10 ,0rrow. Xow, if the wind is ot streng enough, loose one knot; if ev0I1 then it is not enough, loose the c.L-ond : but on vour life ! on vour life! litina loose the third!" Well, they got oil" sure enough next morning with a fair breeze: and then the skipper loo.-ed one knot. Ou the boat sprang, and the wiini rose. Soon lie loosed the second, and thev tore over the wave. i,-ian,i were very soon over the Minch !iear Loch Inver They got to the cn- t ranee of the harbor near the store house ye ken it? on the right and the .-kipper says, "We're a" richt now; if the deil himself withstands ine, I will loose the third !' lie did loose it, and though so near home, the boat was only got a-hore iu little bits! She was al though broken up! The men were all saved. Jluneil for Five Hours, He was a Sweele who had Anglicised his Swedish name into S. I. Lewis, lie had worked for some yean for the Central branch, Atchison, Kansas, but latterly had been well-digging. The well had caved in from the rains and was bring walled up again. He had gone down to remove the old curbing and the fatal mass of saud had fallen In anl crushed him. There was no doubt that he was dead, and , poor fel low, he had a wife aud two little chil dren. There was soaie discussion as to whether it were better to send word to his wife that he was dead or to leave her to hope for a while. So the people talked, and occasionally some one would look down the well and shudder to think of the livid corpse crushed under the heaped up saud. All this time the man in the well was alive. He could hear every stroke of the ham mer ol the men who were making the curb, but he thought it was thecarpen tcrs across the street. He could eveu feel the earth vibrate a little. A board had fallen over against his back and crowded him against the side of the well. There was water about him; he could hear ic drip, aud mixeJ up with the sand were rocks and pieces of boards. He was as cold as death, and the mass above him reached he kuew not how far. He thought, however, he would work his way up the side, and so he did, inch by inch, wearing his finger nails almost to the quick. Life is dear to a man with wife and children, aud so poor Lewis worked and pressed the saud back and kept getting on and up. Then there was another fall of sand, and he was almost in uespair. He mounted in this way for six or eight feet. In the meantime the people had got roused and began to hope that it was a live and not a dead trail in the well. Fifty men relieved each other in digging, and a crowd of sympathizers stood about. Ai last they could hear the buried man's voice. Then he was almost uncovered, but the board which he had at his backall the way up reach ed over his head. He called for a saw aud cut it off, and at 2 o'clock in the at tcrnoon. over five hours from the time the sand fell, ho w as taken out alive, without a broken bone, or bruise, or scratch, only stiffened with cold and worn out with diggins like a ino.e for hi3 life. EqnaUons We hear much nowadays about the extraordinary speed shown by this or that horse at some race meeting. These time tests are regarded as much a part of the record as the winning of the race itself. But while the general public may be satisfied with announced results some of us would like to know more about the contest than is told in the brief statement that "Karus trotted mile here to-day iu 2 13," or whatever t may be. It has become so that a frac tion of a second makes a great differ ence in the record as well as well as in the value of a horse; and yet it seldom happens that two men in the timbers' stand agree as to the exact time made, While it is true that in the well regu lated mind of man, the will posesses supreme direction over the whole cur rent of thought, policy and action, can it be said with positivene.s that he who occupies the position of a timing judge on a race course has a well-regulated mind? Sensation aud perception are the two things most intimately con nected with the proper timing of fast horses. The horse speeds around the course, he approaches "the wire," and amid great excitement, passe i under it The timer, who may or may not be im bued with this same excitement, or who may have an active or an inactive brain, sees the horse and becomes con scious of the fact, but he is not done yet. There has to go back from the brain, o to speak, an electric spark along the nerves, which produces a contraction of the muscles of the arm, and a motion of the thumb and finger follows. These press the spring, aud the hands of the watch are stopped. U'lt the activity with which all this is accomplished differs iu men materially. At best, the nerves transmit their share u the work at the rate of only seventy feet asecoud, which is less than double the rate of speed at which the horso is moving in the same period of time. There exists a phenomenon called"per- sonai equation," aud so long as quick- i wittcd persons and slow-witted persons are to decide the speed at which race horses travel, just so long will the time test be an irresponsible one. Iu making i he common observation of the exact moment when a star travels across the due vertical wire intersecting the fit-Id j of view of a telescope some astronomers always anticipate the event, aud others allow it to pass before they succeed In noting it. This is by no means the ef fect of inexperience or maladroitness, but is a persistent characteristic of each individual, however practiced iu the i-jf1r-ri!n? observations he nar In. The iiiT.-.n. Iwf ween the time ora' man's noticing the event and tiiat of ' its actual occurrence is called his per sonal equation, and is carefully a.-ee r- tamed for every assistant Iu every lab- 1 oratory, ine adaption ot a similar plan on our race courses can alone give ; u f 1 1 A i(trrjitr lima tunila Ktf ft -t '. IS 3 LIIVJ I II L, Ltllil UlitVlli L' V liorsej. j Too Tollte for ;noanlers. The elitil beaches of this sandy coast have been considerably stirred over an event that will be heard around the world. You know what Xarragausct is at least you know what It has been, for the place, I believe is yours by dis covery. I would not like to say how many years ago you and Deietor Gama- , licl Bailey and his lovely family found by mere accident, that op'posite New port was a beach quite as lavorable to bathing, and adjoining it was one hotel and one boarding house. The one was Whalley's, lineal descendant of Whal ley; the other a crude little place, half tavern and half boarding house, filled with people from Fhiladelphia. In those days one left the railroad at Kingston, and wended his weary way to the 1'ier by an old fashioned coach. At the Tier there was one horse, known as Old Smooth Tooth, that could be hired at a dollar a day, with a vehicle thrown in, that impressed one with the belief that, it had been Xoah's family carriage, aud had yet clinging to its wheels, some of the mud left from the flood. Primitive days and primitive people. I remember the Taylor people took on airs and pre tended to look down ou the Whalley's. They were poor snobs, whose pocket books would not permit life at New port, so they aped Newport at Taylor' A good story was told of General Schenck ancnt this tavern. He was out bathing one day, when he encoun tered a couple of females splashing in the breakers, and very courteously of fered his services to them. After a lively time the General escorted his damsels to the bathing houses, and coming out himself was met by a grin ning friend. "I say, Schenck, we have enjoyed a laugh at your expense," he cried. "How so?" responded the grim M. C. "Why dout you know you have been bathing two ol Taylor's servant o-irls?" "Well, responded S., "I thought they were too polite for board ers." Tame Hornets. There is no accounting for tastes Mrs. Lincoln, of Boston keeps two big pot lions, and now we hear of a West ern farmer w ho has domesticated a lot of creatures that belong quite as appro- , . r .1...-.- l.. I..t.i I,,. priateiy vut ui uwi, .. j says: "In the middle ot my parior i have a curious republic of industrious hornets; their nest hangs to the ceil ing by the same twig on which it was so admirably built and contrived in the woods. Its removal did not displease them, for they find in my house plen ty of food, and I have left a little hole in one of the panes of glass that an swers all purposes. By this kind usage they have become quite harmless. They live on the flics, which are very trouble some to us through the summer. They are constantly uusy eaieiiius m, even on the cyerds of my chliureu. i.y their assistance I am but little troubled with flics. All my family are so ac customed to their strong buzzing that no one takes any notice of them, and though they are fierce and Tindictive, yet kindness has made them useful and harmless. Fast II or mod Pergonal 1S79 The Century riant. The American aloe, or century plant a rarely fi ne rpeciraen of which is now growing in Brooklyn, and about to ll it f tuilil.,,,, raafiltaj tli.t iMi.f.uitinn which 'results t!f.rs. . ,e,ner.,tP climates. Its growth here is so slow that its popular name is derived from the belief that a full term of 100 years is required before the blossoms appear But in its native soil, in tropical and semi-tropical climes, extending to the thirty-second parallel on either side of the equator, it corae3 to perfection in much less time; often in twenty or thirty years. The samo plant never blooms more than once. When the time comes the nVwer-stalk shoots up with great rapidity from the centre of the crown, around which the leaves radiate, growing often fifteen or eigh teen inches a day, until a height of thirty and sometimes, in an exception ally vigorous plant, of forty feet Is reached. The arms of this stalk, like those of a branching candlestick, bear the cup-shaped flowers, which have no remarkable beauty. The aloe belongs to the agave family of the order of Amaryllidaceic. The leaves are thick at the base and terminate In a sharp point, it is one of the most useful plants found in Mexico and Central America. From the fibres of the leaves a thread is obtained which can be wo ven into cloth aud twisted into ropes, and these leaves make a substantial thatch roof. A part of the stalk is used for foot, and the hard pitby centre at the base forms a good whetstone, as silica enters largely iuto its composition. while the fermented sap of the aloe, or maguey, as it is called, is an intoxicat ing beverage known as pulque, which is largely consumed by the natives. Large specimens of the century plant are valued highly hy florists here, and as much as several hundred dollars is not uncommonly paid for a fine one. A Stranger's None. Some ol tliOij chaps who wear their elbows down thin leaning on saloon counters have an artificial fly with a line thread attached to the back, and sometimes these toys can be handled to : the amusement of asmail crowd. When an unknown man fell asleep in a saloon ! the young man w ith an artificial fly was j there. He took position behind his vii-tim. who was lvm-v tiactc on m chair, and presently the fly alighted on ' the stranger's no?e, walked up the bridge and down, and settled for a mo- j menton the rvteud. The sleeper ncv- er moved i jr. The fly w ent over V. re ,.oIntp ti. wmur of encrrrrry' -.oneu over to the right, I aud came el'u to the grand stand on I : tue ceau run, dui me sieeper siepi on. i It iieiran to appear that he was used to I . hes am, s0 t,K. ;amc changed. By ,til.kill, a trough one of these', sticking a pin through one of these j tops yoii4.an make quite a bee of it, the ... . pin being the stinger. ! I nneii the "tee - nrcciwe'a on i:ie granger's nosC everybody expected to see a sudden start, but it e'.id not e-ome. Altera jab at the tip end the "1p" crawled along up, waiting lor develop - merits, and getting in an occasional sting, but not even a sigh escaped the sleeper. The young man w ith the in- sect was getting tired, when the stran ger lazily opened his eye, slowly rose up from his chair, and coolly remarked : "Xow, then, if you have got through fooling with my nose, I'll fool with j yours lor awhile !" I It isu t iikcjy that pameu ar young , man w ill ever dang e arttUe.al flies any , more, lie was uouoieu up, Mraiguivu-j ed out. choked, mopped and slammed so thoroughly that his appetite w ill run lueiiitkuui'iuui a. t...w days to come. When passed tha stranger the cvclone had ; culled jn I drank it. and said to me wnuc-iuccu crowd on the bench : "Gentlemen, il any more of you see j anything peculiar about my nose, please call around and let ine know !" Two Little Shoes. Charley Bunnell was running mes senger on the J.M. and I. II. It. and tells this story: "Bluff old Jack Mills, rough, but kind hearted, was the en gineer. About a mile and a half this side of Columbus there is a fine stretch of road, and Jack had 'pulled her wide open" to make up lost time, and the old engine aud traiu were rocking along at a rate of about thirty miles J.u hour. A country road runs parallel with the track here for some distance, and finally crosses it. But a short dis tance, and finally crosses it. But a short distance from the crossing, ou the day referred to, there was suddenly discovered a man, evidently half drunk in a two horse country wagon, and in it was his w ife with him. The man wa-s standing up driving like mad, but the train was so close upon him that no oue dreamed of his attempting to cross, but making a sudden turn to the left, he endeavored to cross the railroad track. By the time the wagon was fairly on the track, the locomotive struck it, sma.-hed the wagon to spliu- .ers killed the horses, and mangled to eleath the man and woman. The train ran some instance ociore u couiei ue stopped, and when it was finally j checked Bunnell went forward and j found Engineer Jack Mills, swearing bouri Arstoekholm, Sweden, the longest like a trooper, his engine all 'mussed,' j day has eighteen an I a half hours. At and he was damning the drunken fool i Hamburg, Germany, and Dantzic, Prussia, in the wa'on lor his criminal careless- j the longest day has nineteen hours and the ness which brought on the accident, shortest five hours. At Borneo, Finland, ii i . , ,,., i ... , ,, the longest day has twenty-one and a half. Jack was hot. A he turned to get ou tue"3horte91ttwoamla half. At Wardhuy his engine to reverse her and return to , jn x;orway lhcd.iy last9 from the .!,, ,)f the fcene of the accident, his eyes j to ,ue 2:!d of juIVj without inter caught sight of a tiny rair of baby's ruptfon; and at Spitzlie-rgen the longest day shoes, which had been among other of u three months and a half. At New York, the purchases of the man in the wagon ! the longest day, June ltj, has fourteen hours and knocked out. They had fallen on j the boiler of the locomotive, and there they rested as gently as a dove sitting in a cannon's mouth. A flood of recol- lections of the little ones at home watching and waiting for their parents ,i ,i 'i., . te who would never come-thoi.ght,, " may be, of the little lect at home was too much for the true aud tender heart of the rough and hardy engineer, and he leaned on Charlie Bunnell's shoul- Editor and Proprietor. NO. 39. der and sobbed aloud. 'Ju.-t look at them little shoes, Charlie,' he said, be tween his tears, 'I I didn't mind so much running over that drunken fool who tried to cross ahead of us when ho - Mnt, but the little one, Charlie, the little kid that' waitin' for 'em, that'i too rough!" The Rattlenake. ft has been observed by some natur alists that If we withhold water from snakes when about to shed their epider mis, they are thereby prevented from divesting themselves entirely of the old skin. I always kept a small bird,s bathing cup, filled with clean water ence a day, in the case containing my crotalus. The first skin he cast off, iu July, was entire and without a blem ish. At the seconel change, however, about the last of September, I removed the cup one night, intending to replace it shortly afterwards, but I forgot todo so. The next morning I found por tions of loose skin all over the floor of the case, and much more hanging iu shreds from various parts of the body of the snake. Other parts seemed not to be detaehed yet. I had not sup posed that the ophidian wasquite ready for a change. He was over two mouths in divesting himself of his torn trousers Was it due to the fact that water had been withheld at the last time? Both changes occurred in tiie night, and l failed to observe the interesting pro cess of divestmeut. To test the ques tion of so-called blindness oe-ciirring during the time when the pupil is cov ered by a whitish film or thiu mem brane becoming detatched, and occlud ing the sight of the eye, I placed some very active mice repeatedly in the case during the period of change of epider mis. The ophidian attacked the mice in quick turn, without even missing his first victim. On other occasions, however, when his sig'it was uneb structed, I hav seen him strike at aud miss the mark repeatedly. After mak ing a lew misses he would then strike about with intensitieel fury. The snake never without first striking his victim. He did not eat more than two mie-e at a I meal, and sometimes an hour lapsed be fore eating the second one. He never killed his prey wantonly; on the con- j trary he permitted luie-o to keep his company white ni3 appetite was ap peased. Cuttlnr Class With Sci-tsora. Many persons may not be aware that glass can be cut under water with great ease t0 araost any shap by siply I uslug a pair of shear or strong scissors. I ? u pfaiir" to iticore success two pcinU must ru nttpnrlerf t First and moti" uitiHjrtaui. mw gi um-i w rp quiits level , tlie water whlle the scis)M aro applied, and, secondly, to avoid risk, it is better to begin the cuUius: by t.lVi ftnr-m.n nil.,.PJ ,, fh ,.rner anJ alonff the eJ,es a j sc reduce the shaiM? gradually to that required, as if !. ...,.,., ms,e to ..,.. i.,.;! I at onoe to the fchape we KOtM cut a j (Uoe of carJ board, it will most likely j break where it is not waned Some ij.iuj3 of glas3 cu milcU better than , otIiers tie softer glasses being the bet j for this purpose. The scissors need , n, ttfl all .h n4 t!.,.ir action d. not appear to depend on the state of the c lges presented to the glass. When the operation iroes on well the irlass bre!lks away from the scissors in small pieces ju a straight line with the blades, Tb-is method of cutting glass has often q( when a iU.dmowl bas at hand au j segments, and though the edges are not ! so smooth as might be elesired for some purposes, yet it w 111 answer in a great n.i,i,..,.i.k ir ma" ""'" r strictly louoweu, win always insure Adventure With a Snake, Kobert G. Pillow, a son of the late ex-Con feilerate General Pillow, lives on an Arkansas plantation, across the river from Memphis. A few days ago, accompanied by Aleck, one of the col ored men on the piace, he was out hunt ing a wild hog that had been seen in the vicinity. Pillow had a gun and Aleck had armed himself with a pint bottle filled with whiskey. The hog was found and shot, and just as Pillow went tip to the writhing animal an Im mense "cotton-mouth" snake, whose bite is fatal as that of a rattlesnake, fas tened its fangs on the calf of his leg. Pillow is not easily frightened. Ho took in the situation in a moment, and' instead of exhibiting alarm he turned to his companion and quietly remarked : "Aleck, I think I'll try a little or that whiskey now," whisksy basing consid ered an infallible remedy. II poured j every drop down his throat without j stopping to venture any remarks as to its quality. Then shouldering his gun he rapidly walked to the house, a half mile distant, where he drank the con tents of three ordinary glass tumblers filled with whiskey. He was soon in what he calls a "Niagara Falls of a per spiration," which rapidly expelled the poison and saved his life. For a day or . two after he says mat lie was uio sick. .... j est man ia all Arkansas. Length of the Dajs. At London, England, and Bremen, Prus sia ih lr.nrrct iiv has sixteen and a half anel hlty-six minutes; at .uomrc-ai uuee-n and a half hours. But the longest day of , 7 u that at the polS where it lasta . jor jx months, and is succeeded by a night I equally as long. '. Ti i - When a person is overheated and ex- I i,a,ls,te J, both ttic hands and feet should i bathej jn coi,i water, and something warnt snouiu oe iaen at ucc um. lemonade, ginger water, or somethiug of that kind. i LVlilv ' J