G ffl Ml ffl IMM KMlfirn1. JUi i 4IKllM)tlr KtHimirr . ' I B. F. SOHWEIEB, TEE OOI8TITTJTI0I THE TJII0S AID TEE EJT0E0EKE5T OP TEE LAW8. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXIV. MIFFLIN1WN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 8, 1880. NO. 50. j f FAREWELL, 0 SUMMER SCENES! Farewell, O Summer scene, no mors I walk these breezy, pine-c!ad hills ; No more for me the euDaet'a glow Or moonlight's calm the valley Alls. Ah ! not ones only, tbengh your forma Here fa.-led from my outward eye. In boon of darkness shall ye come To strengthen and to purify. FarowelL 0 summer friends, with whom 1 dreamed the sunny hours through ! Yann-oue y u wore no social masks, Cut gave the best yon bred and knew. Meet, part, forget ! you pass and fade, And leave my heart but half content ; Mill must I hope some nobler end loan Simply that we came and went. i'arewtll. O Sammer bopos, though dear. With willing beads I let you go ! breams cannot feed the hungry heart. Nor unworked sod fair harvest grow. Not ours be rest in stagnant pools. Nor idhng "neath a summer's sun, but strength to cnt deep channels out Wherein an earnest life may run. Lost in the Snow. My life Las been full of strange advent turts; for since I was a lad ef sixteen, till 1 reached the age if sixty-eight more than half a ceutury I was in the employ of the Hudson's Bay Fur Company. Some times I acted as an Indian trader, but for many years I followed trapping and pack ing. I am now eighty-five, and still a hale ai.d hearty old man. It U true that I can. not stow a war so large a quantity of buf falo beef as I once could; but even yet I ota hold my own with younger men at the trencher. Sometimes, with a few choice comrades, I would seek the trapping-grounds of the Shayenne or Assiciboin Indians, and trade with them for their peltries, which I would sell again to the Company's agent at a con siderable profit. At other times, while drawing a yearly salary from the Hudson's B.iy agent, I would be frequently sent in charge of dog-trains to distant points, to bring in the pelts from various caches ("hiding places'") where our trappers and hunters had deposited them. On one occasion I was ordered to go thus, with a large train and two companions, from a temporary post on the Mooso River, a branch of the Bed River, westward, to one of the northern branches of the Missouri. Some of our men had, the winter before, Diade a long cache of otter and bearer skins on the backs of that stream, and early ill the spring I was directed to bring them Uu , One of my companions, D'Arville, bad been of the autumn party; he was therefore sent with me as a guide. The otliT, Falardeau had cot been long in the employ of the Company, but was permitted to ac company us, at his own request, being desirous, as he said, to learn the country. We reached the stream, and found the cache all right; and. after stopping for a few days, to rest our dogs and recruit them on a good feed of buffalo meat, we started again on our return to the trading-post. We had traveled some three or four days, when on reaching one of the northern heads of the Shayenne, D'Arville the guide remembered haviog been toid by one of his comrades of a farmer trip, that, by taking another route eastward from that stream, we could shorten our distance to the Red River; we struck out in that direction. The route would take us through a treeless prairie of many miles extent. None of us bad ever attempted it before; but we would bare had no difficulty in crossing 11 Ma tun fcW-.r.dinw snow storm set in with such inlon.-o end frrauent chances of the wind that, af er struggling along for two days, with no cessation of it, we became con fused, and the guide confessed that he knew not where we were. In short, we were lost; and that under the most unpleasant of all circumstances; upon a wide and un known plain, oa which, even were it not for the blinding storm, no land marks ex isted to direct our steps. On eneaniDin the first night on this des olate track, we secured our dogs around us ,A wPre all so completely snowed in mat, the return of day, it was with much la bor that we could dig our way again to the surface. The snow had fallen to me aepin Af fi fret- To proceed with our sledges was out of .v- ,iPrtion. for the spring snow, ally falling, was without a crust. Leaving, .wfn. the sledges and packs behind us, lust as we had detached the dogs from them ;ht nrevious. we whistled on .:.v.r,.i .nimals. ana started onward, hop- W soon as the storm should abate, to be ble to continue our way towards the fort. ... snow continued to laii, mi imrrfble without snow-shoes, how we were to proceed. We therefore dug down to the ground, and determined to encamp .ni .1.. .nw should nave woiu and the surface be bard enough to bear our ... i mir scanty supply Of weight, '""6 - T wf should hold out. Wew ..W beneath the snow drift again; but our dogs, with the true instinct ol T then- : t mrk out for ine ioru 7 ZLa for us to hare followed them, ,ner wouH hare conducted us safely on . n-rht course - m.,nPd four days without food, .. rrriinn. Onthenightofthe Si day. 1VCS W ta 0Hr rru oy, r i- we threw our blanket. and buffalc .robe we SXTScl pairing of "T- ta iirht of another day, we . nneri in tne same J , -VraI'' rTrade D'Amlle, stiff and life- W'rr." .nn cold bad done ".Twart hunter. During wreed-nighthisbraresplHtyielded uodJlea- r.,.Ui from his painful assist him to regain hi. swol sleep, and M1"0, in mako on6 la !f,r detd companion to the wolves, for lL to? wSo attempt to bury ft,w As I was about to throw mrself br his aide, to sleep my last earthly slumber, an object glided swiftly past an opening in the snow near hit face, and riin. i the top, my eyes were gladdened by the gut of a rabbit bounding away towards a clump of willows, upon the margin of a spring not far off. This sight restored our hopes and flarainc pulses; and with recovered energies we set ourselves to work making traps for the an imals whose tracks were found in great numbers about the spring. By the time this labor was completed. we dug out a shelter in the snow, to await the result on the return of daylight. w nen tne moraine came, belore the lleht had fairly penetrated our shelter, without awakening me, my friend stole noiselessly out to examine the trapc I called his name; but received no renlr. At last, as I penetrated a little thicket, where naa planted one of my traps, I perceived dark object stretched on the snow. 1 approached it nearer; it was the cold and lifeless form of my poor comrade. He must have been dead some hours. He had reached the trap which had contained a rab bit; for by the spot were scattered fragments of the hairy coat cf the animal. He had found the animal, and in the ea gerness of starvation he had devoured it alive; and the unusual stimulus of food act ing upon his inflamed stomach, must have thrown him into convulsions for the snow about him, where he lay, indicated as much. Alas! poor Falardeau. Xow, indeed, despairing of help, and throwing myself upon the ground, I awaited with resignation the period which would terminate my sufferings. Exhausted and spiritless, I soon sank into state of partial insensibility. I had become unconscious of pain. My hunger was for gotten; but I still retained a knowledge of my hopeless condition, and the desolate surroundings about me. As near as I could udge, in my dying state, I had lain thus. till the evening of the serenth day, when my dull ear caught the sound of a peculiar grating noise upon the snow. The sound was not unfamiliar to me; and as it became more and nore distinct, in its nearer approach to me. it awoke a train of memories; and arousing my sunken energies, called me back again to hope. Could it le that rehet was approaching that some kindiy human aid was in fcttrch of met Still nearer came the creaking souud.likc that of a sledge drawn over the frozen cru.tt of the snow. Yes, yes, human aid wsj at hand. In a few moments more, the sound ceased. and I heard a friendly voice aaluts me with the salutation of "Good morning" and the form of a tall Cheyenne hunter stood before me. It was but for a moment, however, that he remained, for leaving me, he hastened to make a fire from the dry twigs of I nc wil lows, aud In a utile time returned with a small cup of the weakest brotu of venison, a quantity of which he had brought with him on his sledge. A.s I swallowed the minute portion, all my pains r.'turned. It seemed as if my stom&cn was n fire. Rat the Indian continued to feed me with light nutriment from time to time, till, af ter a few hours, my hunger beoaoie so fierce that I could have devoured his entire store. But at length, as my stomach became gradually accustomed to the stimulus, he increased the quantity of broth, till, after twenty-four hours he ventured to allow me portions of the solid meat. It VTSS-lhus the faithful fellow watched over and nursed nrf till the fourth day after his arrival when, finding that I had. recov ered strength sufficient to be removed, be placed me on bis sledge, and after binding me like a pack of peltries to the cross-pieci-s, an J covering me with robes, he threw the leathern strap over his breast, and started eastward In the direction of the fort. Oa the way, the Indian informed me that the dogs had returned and that he bad been sent by the agent to hunt up the party, if they still survived. He had b- en out several days, scouring the plain in every direction where we would be likely to have passed. On reaching the willow thicket, he found the body of poor Falardeau. He also gave me the pleasant informa tion that we were about twenty miles from the post, which place we reached the same night, the generous fellow dragging me all the way, and halting frequently to relieve my raging hunger In a few days, after reaching comfortable quarters, I entirely recovered ray health and strength. As soou as I left my cot, the first thing I did was to reward the faithful Cheyenne, by giving him my best rifle, and the amount of all the pay due me. To this the agent added a keg of rum, ammunition, and blankets, sending the hunter to his lodge with even a heavier load than be dragged in from the plain. own aad auawtes. Whv Is one hour divided into sixty min utes, and each minute again into sixty sec onds? Why not divide our time aa we do our money, br lens, counting ten, or fifty. or one ! wndred minutes to an nourr i nis question was asked by an intelligent boy a few days since, and the answer given him may both, interest and instruct other young people. 1 he answer is mis: n e nave sixiy divisions cn the dials of our clocks and watches, because the old Greek astronomer, Hipparcbus, who bred In tbe second cen tury before Christ, accepted the Babylon ian system of reckoning time, that system being scxigesimaL The Babylonians were acquainted with the decimal system; but for common and practical purposes, they wonted by toti and turi, the toeto rep resenting sixty, and the taro sixty times sixty, or thirty-six hundred. From Hip parcbus, that mode of rockoclng found its srar into the works of Ptolemy, about 160 1 D-, and thence was carried down the atreem of science and civilization, ana fnnnd the war to the dial plates ot our clocks and watches. Better go supperleas to bed than run Is debt. A Tlsit to Dumas. The illustrious dramatic bade us wel come with even effusive warmth, shook hands with us most cordially, and declared that his friend was very wrong not to have apprised him of our coming beforehand, so that be could have shown us through the bouse himself. Had we seen every part of it f the library t the drawing-room ? the picture-gallery f If we chose to go all over it again he would be most happy to accompany us. But we disclaimed any intention of occupying so much of his time, so he declared be must take us over his Swiss chalet. This picturesque struc ture was bought by him at the Universal Exposition, was put up in his garden, and now serves as a place of deposit for a por tion of his overwhelming wealth of artistic treasures. What a delightful half hour ensued! Dumas talks as well as he writes, and there is a straight-forwardness and frank ness about him that is altogether captiva ting. He is a tine-looking man, tall, and of rigorous physique, with blue eyes, a pale yet healthful-looking complexion, and prematurely silvered hair and mus tache, The chalet, to which he conducted us was so crowded with pictures, busts, and terracotta, and other curiosities and works of art, that it would have taken a whole day to inspect them alL He pointed out to us a ghastly picture of a dead wo man with her baby trying to draw nourish ment from the lifeless breast, a study by Delacroix for one of his groups in his Atanacre of Scio. 'I hen he showed us a veritable art curiosity in the shape of a three-quarter figure of Luke painted by Meissonier in 1838, to fill an order for a publisher who was eettine ud an illustrated edition of the New Testumuit. tiiin nir ! ture was sold by the artist for six hundred francs. When we returned to the house, M. Dumas kindly brought down from his bed room the gem of his whole collection and displayed it to our admiring gaze. It is the famous Artist at Work, by Alessonier, painted in 1S53, when his talent was at its apogee, a small sized picture of such mar vellous execution of perfection, that ''the sense ached at it." And yet it represents merely a painter in a black, eighteen cen tury costume, with his uii powdered hair gathered into a club behind, seated before his easel with hisback turned to the spec tator. This picture, originally sold for 2,0H francs, was purchased some years ago by SL Dumas for lti.ixxj, and within the last few days he has refused GO.OIH) francs ($12,0011), offered by a picture dealer. Well, it is worth it. It is a Meis sonier of first quality, and such a work as the old man no louder has Use patience, or, perhaps, the ability, to execute. 31. Dumas told me lie could never write in Fans, as he was so exposed to interrup tions. His just completed tliree-aci comedy which he wrote in six days, was composed at the country houe of a friend. lis pro visional title is Tin Jritiea of Bagdad. It is intended for the Coiucdie Francaise, and Al'Ue. Croizette is to take the part of the heroine, Lionnelle. He laughingly re mi rked that he did not write for young girls, and that his own daughters had never seen any of his plays till M lie. Colette profited by her marriage to go to sec the Filt SuturcL He spoke rather bitterly of tne fact that La Dame aux Vamelia has been played fully 3, (AH J times in the United Stales since it was first produce'!, ami bad never brought him in one single farthing. I agreed with him heartily, lor the non-existence of any copyright laws in our country, so far as the w ritmgs of for eign authors are concerned, is a positive thanie and scandal. He took from his writing desk and showed us a model in bronze ot a broad, powerful, fleshy hand the hand of his illustrious father, and also a model in the same material of an exqui sitely female hand, thai of the weil known water-color artist, Mile. Madeleine Ie- maire. And so, charmed with our runt. and still more so with our gracious and courteous host, we took our departure. Only a Cape aud a Sword. When Bonaparte first paid court to Mad ame de tieawiamais, neither fas ricn enough to keep a carriage, and the young hero, who was deeply in love, often gave the charming widow his arm when she went to visit her man of business, a no-J tsrv named Ranriaw - ' I Aiadame, who had great confidence in this legal adviser, who was a friend as well, went to see him immediately after her en gagement to Bonaparte, who, as usual, ac companied her but, from motives of deli cacy did not cuter lue co'ary s cabinet, but remained in an adjoining room, where sev. era clerks were writing. The door being imperfectly closed he here beard nearly all that was said during the interview, and especially the arguments used by Raguideau to deter Madame de Beauharnais from the marriage she ac knowledged herself about to contract. "Mark my words, madame, said the notary, earnestly, "you are about to commit a great folly of which you will bitterly re pent. Why, this man you are about to es po use has nothing in the world tin a cape and a sword." Said Josephine : "Bonaparte never spoke to me of this, and I had not the lain tea: suspicion that he bad overheard Ragi deau's contemptous words. Can you. B jurrinne, figure to yourself my astonish ment when, eight years after.on the day of his coronation, as soon as he was invested with his imperial robes, he said : "Let them go and seek Kaguideau; have him come instantly. 1 have some thing to say to him." The notary was promptly brought, ana stood much astonished before the Empe ror, who, with his peculiar sardonic smile, said to him : 'Eh, bien, monsieur ! have I nothing in the world but a cape and sword?'" melting or h lenlng. In the expression of affection the sense of smell, there is reason to believe, is older in use and dignity than that 01 taste or touch. Of a Mongol lather a travellers writes: "He smelted fram time to time the head of his youngest son, a mark of paternal tender ness usual among the Mongols instead of embracing." In the Philippine islands, we are told, 'the sense of smell is developed to so great a degree that they are able, by smelling of the pocket-handkerchiefs, to tell to which persons they belong; and lovers at parting exchange pieces of the linen they may be wearing, and, curing ueir separa tion, inhale the odor of the beloved being." Among the Cittagong Hill people again it is said "the manner of kiss.ng is peculiar. Instead of pressing lip to lip they place the nose and mouth upen the cheek and inhale the breath strongly. Their form of 8iech Is not "Give me a kiss," but "Smell me." In the same way, according to another traveller, "The Burmese do not kiss each other in the Western fashion, but apply the lip and nose to the cheek aud make a strong inhalation." Moreover, the Earaoans fa lute br "iuxtanosition of noses, accompa nied not by a rnb, but by a hearty smell." There Is scriptural precedent lor such cus toms. When blind Isaac was In doubt whether the son who came to him was Ja- I cob or not, "he smelt the smell of his ral snent, and blessed him." Competitive Trial of Sheep Dogs. At the international sheep show in Fhila delphia, one of the most interesting fea tures cf the exhibition was a trial of the skill of sheep dogs in managing their fleecy charge. The dogs were expected to take live sheep from a pen, drive them around a cours t about a quarter of a mile long, and put them in another pen provided for the purpose. The first attempt was made by an .hrghah dog called "Lad," which, in Sheltteld, England, is said to have carried off the first prize from twenty-eight com petitors. Everything being in readiness, the bars were taken down, and at a word from his master "Lad" j .imped into the pen and sent the sheep out in a hurry. They were very wild, and the large crowd present had a tendency to make them worse. They at once started around the north side of the course, followed by the dog aud his master, but had not gone a third of the distance when the ram at the lead made a break, and went through the crowd on the out side of the ring, cl.sely followed by the ethers, with the dog at their heels. In a short time the dog returned with four of them, but the fifth was still missing. After bringing them back, he went in search of the absent one, which he soon found and brought inside the enclosure. But instead of going toward its companions this refac tory ram started in the other direction, but was not followed by the dog, who went again after the stray four. After getting these started, another broke away, but was soon brought back, when all four again started around the course, the intention of the dog being evidently to pick up the stray ram when he same up with him. When the cog went to get the ram, it showed light, and took refuge between two stone slabs. The dog barked furiously, and in vain attempted to dislodge the stubborn animah The dog was about giving it up, when his master, instructed him to go back and fetch the ram with him. The dog started with renewed courage, and charg ed the infuriated ram. Instead of the ram running away, it lowered its head and re pelled the attack of the canine. After be ing repeatedly butted, the dog caught the rani by the ear, and by dint of sheer force, led the animal to the pen. This trial con sumed about twenty-five minutes. A Scotch collie named "Oscar" did not have so severe a tussle as "Lad," and accom plished his task in twenty -one minutes. Other dogs were also put on trial test, and the awards were made later in the week. All of the dogs are endowed with incredi ble intelligence and sagacity. Ths origin ot toe Plow. The origin of the plow and wheeled car nages was a subject of a paper lately read by Mr. Taylor before the London Anthro pological Institute. He believed that the first agricultural implement was a pointed stick, which at a later stage of development was bent at the end into the form of a hoe and had the point hardened in the fire. After the lapse of ages a large implement of the same shape came into use. It was not employed like the hoe or "hack" but drawn by men or oxen. Among cur own Indians, in the traditional lore of Sweden, in Egypt's picture of a remote past, there are more or less district traces of the above transition. Greet, Egyptian, Chinese sev erally possessed the germ, so to speak, of the modern plow, the spur was next slioa with iron, the more efficiently to fulfil the purpose of l he vomer or share. Virgil lived at a time when the plow hai reached rcrr high stage ot perfection. It was then constructed with a wheel and an up ward projecting handle, like the best form of plow in use in Europe in the eighteenth ceniury, and, it might well be added, uKe the plows still employed near Mantua anil enice at the present day. Lr. lay lor is unwilling to concede that the plow was the progenitor of the vehicle of to-day; he as signs that honor to the sled, as is more probably just. It would soon be found that the introduction of rollers beneath the sled would facilitate its tractian. But as it was not necessary that every part of the roller should rest on the ground, the diame ter of the middle was reduced with obvi ous advantage. Slowly in this way the wheel solid throughout and rigidly attach ed to the axle, came into existence. The wheel and axle of Scythians revolved to- .. -r . ,v, .,;., ,,,0 wheels fixed on axles which revolve in bearincs like forks open below. From the ludc harnessing of the yoke attached to the horns or withers of oxen at first, the ad vance to the present method was also grad ual. But it is easy to follow this and the other improrements in the plow and wheel ed vehicles up to their existing condition through the aid of recorded history. "A rieaannt Uirl." A traveler In Norway, last summer, came to a village early one morning, and was struck by the air of gloom which per vaded the street. Unable to speak a word of the language, he could not ask the cause of this, and concluded that some sickness or financial trouble had fallen upon the community. As the day wore towards noon, however, the houses were closed, shop-windows were covered, ali trade and business ceased. It was a death, thent Presently he saw the people gathering for the funeral. There were the village offi cials, the noblemen from the neighboring chateau, and apparently every man, wom an and child in the village. It must be some dignitary of the church who was dean, or some county official. As he stood watching the crowds passing down the lit tle rocky street, he caught sight of the face of a German known to him. He beckoned to him. "The town has lost some great magnate, apparently" he said. "Ah, no. It is only a young maiden who is dead. No. She was not beautiful nr rich. But oh, such a pleasant girL monsieur! All the world seems darker now that she is dead!" It is a singular fact that, when we reach middle life and look back, it is not the beautiful, nor the brilliant, nor the famous people whom we have known, that we re member with the keenest regret; but some simple, sincere, 4 pleasant" soul, whom we treated as an every-day matter while she was with us. Go into a family, or a social circle, or even into a ball-room, and the woman who has the most friends there, as a rule, is not the belle ner the wit, nor the heiress, nor the bsaulv; but some homely, charm ing little body,, whoso fine tact and warm heart never allow her to say a wrong word in a wrong place. The "pleasant women" are the attrac tion that everywhere holds society and homes together. Any woman, however poor or ugly, may be one of them; but she must first be candid, honorable, unselfish and loving. If she is these, the world will be better and happier for every day of ber life, and as in the case of this poor Nor wegian, it will "seem darker when she is dead." Germany annually eoniume 7,300 600 tons of rye ; the staple food oi the working classes being rye bread. Tbo Effect of romta Vpoa Rainfall. The effect of clearing land of its trees, according to the opinion of many meteoro logists, engineers, and other scientific stu dents of the subject, is to diminish the av erage rainfall of the country thus cleared, to lessen the outflow of the rivers, and also to cause such concentration of the amount of rain and snow within short periods as to increase the danger of floods to a marked extent. This theory was formulated most fully in 1873 by Sir Gustav We., chief en gineer of the improvements in the Danube River at Vienna, who supported his opinion by very ample calculations as to the de crease in the volume of water discharged by the five principal rivers of Central Lu rope. Since that time many opinions have been expressed by experts, some affirming, others denying, the correctness of Sir Gus tav's theory; some have claimed that the fact of such a decrease in the discharge of the rivers cited has not been satisfactorily established; while others, admitting that the decrease has gone on, deny that this fact is sufficient to prove the accuracy of all, or even any of Sir. Oustav's conclu sions. The latter has, therefore, recently published a second treatise, in which he says that for six years he has shunned nei ther labor nor expense in obtaining as many and as reliable technical hydraulic meas urements and data of different streams as possible; and he has come to the conciu sion that his theory has been proven to be correct. Sir Ousts v gives voluminous tabular ex hibits of observations taken on a number of large rivers extending over periods of more than 100 years in some casts, and in nearly every case it is found that the river surfa-e has been lowered to a marked degree. The rivers cited are the Upper and Lower Rhine, the Danube, the Elba, the istula, the Oder, the Moselle, the Main, the Theiss, the Tiber, the Fo, the Seine, the Glommun (in Norway) and the Mississippi. In reply to the objection that the lowering of a ri ver's surface may be due to the deepening ot its chanueL and not to the decrease in the volume of water discharged, Sir Ous tav admits that the channel beds are some times raised and sometimes lowered; "but," he says, "if from the numerous gauge readings submitted by me are eliminated those which were taken on stretches of the stream in which changes in the bed of the river took place, we will still find some rivers or stretches of stream which lie either in a natural unchangeable bed, or which have been improved from time immemori al and are m permanent condition. The most scrupulous expert must admit thii. on such rivers and stretches we can justly as sume that the decrease in their stages i. ., the sinking of their surface, indicates a decrease in their volume ot water, since it would be impossible to explain the phe nomenon in any other way. Sir Uustav claims that the destruction of forests, necessarily coincident with the advance of civilized habitations into new countries, not inly diminishes the aggre gate amount of rainfall, but it increases the tendency to floods. This is, of course, equivalent to saying that the rainfall (which word includes all atmospheric aqueous de posit, such as rain, snow, hail, dew, etc.) is concentrated into briefer spaces of time, during the year, instead of being equally d stributed; and as this concentration mu t have a detrimenial influence upon agri culture, the importance of the subject ex tends beyond its effect upon rivers alone, which is the only point of view taken by Sir Gustav Wex. it therefore deserves double attention in this country, where droughts are so often such serious causes of crop failures. 1 he observations of the Mississippi re corded by Sir Gustav were made at Nat chez, Miss., and extended over a period of 11 J years. They showed a mean annual fall of seven-tenths of an inch in the sur face'level of the water, while the highest stages averaged nine hundredths of an iucn higher each year, and the lowest stages thirty-nine hundredths of an inch lower each year. A Femsle Monk. Matrena Ivanovna, a Russian peasant girl of two-and-twenty, has recently ac quired considerable notoriety in her native I laud through the fact that, under the mo nastic designation of "Father Michael," she succtviicd iff passing several months in 1 sue su curriug the least suspicion on the part of her feilow-aionks than she was other than she seemed to be. Forced by her father to marry a peison whom she detested, she disappeared from her home on the day suc ceeding the wedding; her clothes and two long plaits of her "black hair" wow found, near the Wolchoff river, as well as a letter in her handwriting, stating that rather than live with her bus) tan d she bad resolved to drown herself. Her relatives forbore any further inquiry, and mourned for her as one dead. She,however, dressed in man's clothing, applied last March for admission to the above-mentioned monastry, and was duly received into the fraternity on proba tion, taking the minor vows, and otl'.ctat ing as coachman to the prior. There is no knowing to what ecclesiastical dignities she might not in time have arisen had not unkind fortune decreed that a native of ber own village should have been sent to Staraja Ladoga by bis master for correc tion at the hands of the brethren, his offence being inveterate drunkenness. Promptly recognized and denounced by this indiscreet toper as Matrena Ivanovna, a friend of his youth, "Father Michael" was handed over to the police authorities by the indignant monks, and is now await ing trial for imposture uon a religious community a crune liaely to be visited with severe punishment in Russia. Fight Between a Dos" and a Donkey. A singular encounter between a dog and a donkey was that which occurred in Blackpool, England. A retired gentleman, named Weddington, owned a fine young donkey and a splendid mastiff. One sunny day the donkey was grazing in a field, when the dog rushed at it m a ferocious manner and fastened on to its nose. The donkey did not decline the challenge, for it at once shook the dog off, bit it about the head and shoulders, trampled on it, and tossed it about. The dog "again seized the donkey, and a crowd soon gathi red, but all efforts to separate the combatants were of no avail. The dog repeatedly fas tened on the donkey's nosa. Blood flowed profusely from both animals, and at the end of half an hour the owner appeared a pen the scene and fresh attempts were made to part them, but without success. Alter the fight had lasted half an hour, the owner decided to have the dog shot, as it had by that time fastened with a firm hold on the donkey's nose. A gun was produced and the services of a good shot obtained, But so savage was the fight that it was difficult to shoot one animal without kid ing the other also. At last aim was taken, and a bullet put into the dorg's head, and it dropped to the ground. When the smoke cleared away the dog was dead, but the infuriated donkey had returned to the charge kicking, biting and tramping on the dead dog. It was with great difficulty Ue I donkey was at last driren off. Ths Golden Eacie. This noble bird is spread over a large portion of the world, being found in the British islands, and in various parts oi i-u- rope, Asia, Africa, and America. The col or of this bird is a rich blackish-brown on the greater part of the body, the head and neck being covered with feathers of a rich golden red, which have earned for the bird its popular name. The legs aud sidis of the thighs are grey-brown, an J the tail is a deep gray, diversified with several regular dark-brown bars. Ihe cere and the feet are yellow. In its immature state the plu mage of the golden eagle is differently ting ed, the whole of the feathers being reddish brown, the legs and sides of the thighs nearly white, and the tail white for the first three-quarters of its length. So different an aspect does the immature bird present that it has been often reckoned as a separate species, and named accordingly. It is a truly magnificent bird in point of size, for an adult female measures about three feet six inches in length, and the expanse of her wings is nine feet. The male is less by nearly six inches. In England the golden eagle has long been extinct; but it is still found in some plenty in the highlands of Scotland and Ireland, where it is observed to frequent certain favorite haunts, and to breed regularly in the same spot for a long series of years. Their nest is always made upon some elevated spot, generally upon a ledge of rock, and is most lnartisticaUy constructed of sticks, which are thrown ap parently at rand lm, and rudely arranged for the purpose of containing the eggs ami young. A neighboring ledge of rock is generally reserved for a larder, where the parent eagles store up the food which they bring from the plains below. The contents of this larder are generally of a most mis cellaneous descript'on, consisting of hares, partridges, and game of all kinds, Iambs, rabbits, young pigs, fiali, and other similar articles of food. An eagle's nest might therefore be supposed to be an unpleasant neighbor to the farmers, but it is said that the birds respect the laws of hospitality, and, provided that they are left unmolested, will spare tne nocks of their immediate neighbors and forage for food at a consid erable distance, in hunting for their prey, the eagle and his mate mutually assist ecch other. It may here be mentioned that the eagles are all monogamous, keeping them selves to a single mate, and living together in perfect harmony through their Uvea. Should, however, one of them die or be kl led, the survivor is not long left in a state of widowhood, but ranishes from the spot for a few days, and then returns with a new mate. As Uie rabbits and bares are generally tinder cover during the day, the eagle is forced to drive them from their place of concealmealinent, and manages the matter in a very clever and sportsman like manner. One of the eagles conceals itself near the cover which is to be beaten, and its companion then dashes among the bushes, screaming and making such a dis turbance that the terrified inmates rush out in hopes of escape, and are immediately pounced upon by the watchful confederate. The prey is immediately taken to the nest, and distributed tothe young, if there should be any eaglets in the lofty cradle. It is a rather remarkable fact, that whereas the vultures feed their young by disgorging the food which they have taken into their crops, the eagles carry the prey to their nests and there tear it to pieces, and feed the eaglets with the morsels. When in pursuit of its prey it is a most audacious bird, baviug been seen to carry off a hare from before the noses of the bounds. It is a keen fish erman, catching and securing salmon and various sea fish with singular skill. Some times it has met with more than its match, and has seized upon a fish that was too heavy for its powers, thus falling a victim to its sporting propensities. Mr. Lloyd men tions several instances where eagles have been drowned by pouncing upon large pike, which carried their at aulan under water and fairly drowned them. In mote than one instance the feet of an eagle have beeu seen firmly clinched in the pike's back, the bird having decayed and fallen away. Brazil Alligator. Enormous numbers cf a'Jigators have, it appears, been observed frisking along the lower courses and in the marginal swamps and lakes of the Amazon, and even as cork trees, in the beneficent economy of nature, grow up, and expand and develop a bulky epMetaitS- eL-barkr 0T the. preordained purpose ot stopping bottles, so, no U.rtlDV are amiable reptiles accredited with a mis sion of utility to the manufacturers of porte-monnaies, card-cases, shooting -boots, aud other articles fabricated of the now fasbiosable alligator skin. A Brazilian paper shrewdly draws the attention of wtallhy and unoccupied Lnglishuien of this remarkable increase in the ground game of a charmingly salubrious, though somewhat sultry district An industrial enterprise i f great profit might, it is sug gested, be combined with excellent sport, and, as the idea is fast spreading England that the land cannot much longer support both the farmers and the rabbits, what could be better than a migration of sports men to the equatorial home of the noble a h gator, whose bids is a natural target for rifle practice, and, if not too much riddled bv bullets, is in brisk commercial demand. and rules high in the quotations of the leather market There the alligator frisks and frolics, there the stealthy turtle prowls, and, despite his furtive habits, falls an easy prey to the wilier and more intelligent hunter. A daring agile Alderman, with a brace of ritlea, good legs and lungs, a sal amandarine constitution and no objection to niosquitos, might stalk down six or eight alligators before breakfast, and saunter homewards with a middling-sized turtle under each arm. Winter is coming, the Nile is getting overdone by tourists, and the midsummer of an infinitesimal latitude never from the teeming mud and fragrant, health-breathing slime of the stately Ama zon. Let enterprising Englishmen, then, accept this inviting hint of the Brazilian journal, and join the next excursion to the Amazonian swamps. Houes and Streets of Gold. Most of us remember hearing in the days of our babyhood ef a certain marvelous city in fairyland whose streets were paved with gold and its nouses built 01 the same precious metal. Day by day fairyland is losing its marvels, by their realization as commonplace facts of our own actual hum drum hfe. The bouses and streets of gold form no exception. The first have been found at Leadville and the other at Las Flacitas, in New Mexico. At the Colora do mining center, a person of an inquiring turn ot mind, struck by certain intimations in the bricks of which his house was built, a id a sample of them assayed, and found that they panned out we fear to say how many hundred dollars to the ton, but quite Kraeh to make the erection of a new building on the ruins of the old one much better than an economy. At Las Placitas the city architect has discovered that the ledge of rock on which the village is built contains a vein of gold 9,000 feet by 300 wide, and yielding from $2,500 to $5,000 to the ton. Corner lota in Las Placitas, we mar sarim. will soon be quoted at figures that will throw Fifth avenue into the shade. Ancient Romo. The Romans were keen, business-like men, who never pretended to be above trade, even though they were of superior rank or wealth. It did not cost much to keep a man in the early centuries, Uie year ly allowance for a slave being thirty-seven dollars and a half, while a free laborer hv ed for forty-four dollars a year. Corn was the main stay, fifteen million bushels being consumed annually, aud oil and honey were used in large quantities. Among the rich, epicures were more common and more extravagant than in the modern world. For tunes were spent on single banquets. Men were absurdly lavish. And yet everything was very cheap even in this extravagant city. The market reports stiow that lamb and fish were only six cents per pound, beef four cents, fish two cents, a pair of quail thirty cents, eggs six cents per dozen, wheat sixteen cents per peck, four pounds of large grapes two cents; chickens, per pair, thirty cents; five to ten heads of let tuce two cents. . The Romans were not very fond of any meat save pork, and this ibey consumed sparingly Beef was not popular, being used mostly for sacrifices. Game and fish were favorite articles, and many choice imported fish brought large prices. The common people could not afford many luxuries, as wages were low. The yearly pay o! a journeyman mechanic was from ninety-five dollars to one hundred and twenty-five dollars and board. Food cost forty dollars and clothing fifteen dol lars per year. From the account of Forbi ger it seemed that goods were very low. A pair of shoes cost thirty cents; one pair of woman s gaiters, thirty cents; one felt hat, one dollar; one tunic, sixteen dollars to thirty-six dollars; one togs, twenty dol lars to twenty -eight dollars. A man could get a share for two cents. The Romans spent large amounts on other luxuries be side those of the table. The imports of flowers, perfumes, ointments and dresses from India in one year amounted to two million two hundred thousand dollars. In furniture they had their decorative art crazes, the citrus wood tables being favor ite articles for squandering money upon. In Cicero s tune it was not unusual to spend fifty Ihousand dollars for one of these tab les, aud Seneca, the stoic, who prated of the virtues of abstinence and the rice of luxury, owned five hundred of them. farming- In Busts, The report comes from SL Petersburg that native cereals are so scarce in Russia that large quantities of American corn and Chilian wheat are selling at the capital. Al though eminently agricultural, only 271, 000,000 acres a small area comparatively under cultivation. In the central bell of the empire the soil, mostly black mold, is extremely fertile, seldom requiring manure. Ihe system oi tillage is mainly the three-field system, as it is called, in which one-third of the land is allowed to lie fallow. In the south and south east the fallow system peculiar to that country is practiced. It consists of raising hree or four consecutive crops from the same land, anil then permitting it to stand idle for five or six years. After that time the soil begins to grow feather grass, regarded as a sign of returning fertility. Husbandry has un dergone great general changes since the emancipation of the serfs, to whom a con siderable portion of the hind has been trans ferred in freehold. The landowners hav ing lost their former right to the labor of their serfs fiml it advantageous to decrease their tilled lands, or lease parts of it to the peasants, often in return for half the crop. Agriculture suffers materially from wai.t of proper means of communication, causim? the grain to be very low in the locality where it is raised. The chief cereals are 1 . . " wheat, grown as far north as latitude eix ty-two deg.t rye, barley and oats. Buck wheat and mulet are produced in the south, and from these and rye comes the staple food of the inhabitants. Hemp snd flax are also widely raised, and flaxseed Is used for food by the lower orders during the continually recurring fasts, embracing mire than six months out of the twelve. During the last forty years potatoes have been extensively grown, the government having done much to encouiage and aug ment their growth after the famine of ISotf. An area of 4o6,0J0,000 acres is covered with woods, but timber is so liberally used by the Russians hi building houses, heating, fighting, making carts and household uten sils aud in other ways, that the supply is 'sti&duy dinnniauing. In the north of the czar s dominiduA irora ninety to mnety-nve percent, of the territory ' covered with forests, which are very scarce in the South. W ood, the pnnciiai article of interior com merce, is floated down the rivers from the treelul to the treeless districts. The wheat product of Russia is generally so large that it annually exports large quantities. Of the wheat exported into Britain in 1875 eighteen per cent, of it came from Russia and forty-fire per cent from the United States. Boats A tries. The discorery of diamonds in IS 60, the adoption of ostrich tanning on an increased scale at about the same period, and the subsequent spread of Angora goat farming have been special providences to South Africa and have given a great impetus to trade and settlement. Since about 1870 the recorded export of dismodds has been at the rate or upward of $12,500,000 a year, while it is estimated that twenty-five per cent, of that amount finds its way through the colonies and out of the coun try in private hands. There Is still no de crease in the amount of stones discovered ! and several new fields have been lately opened up, among them being a valuable field of which the Free State rejoices ;n the possession. Ostrich farming has developed Into a large industry since it was first adopted, about fifteen years ago. Tea years ago the annual export of feathers amounted to only about $500,000. while ths year's ex port will amount to about $5,000, OoO. Angora goat fanning is no doubt destined to eclipse eren these; as the finest and rarest breeds from Asia Minor hare been found to thrive as well on the Karoo lands of the Cape as in their own native plains and hills. 'Ine hair produced is of the most excellent quality and the Cape An gora is rapidly establishing a high reputa tion in the London markets. The wine farms of the Cspe, once so celebrated for the delicacy of their produce, are again re ceiving attention and efforts are now made to obtain from the English Government such a revision of the wine duties as will enable the colony to enter the home mar ket in competition with France and Spain. The principal exports of the Free State are wool and skins. The Transvaal exports but little as ytt except ivory and the skins Of wi!d animals. The flourishing colony of Natal now sends out increased quanti ties of sugar, which it psoduces in excel lent quality. V iih the Increase of productive wealth public works and railroails have kept good pace. The first experiment in South Afri can railways having been started about I860, much progress has of late years been made in this direction. There are now three systems of railroads in the Cape Colony, leading from the three principal seaports towards the interior, intended to concentrate at the diamond fields, taking in branches through the Free State. Natal has a line of seventy miles, from the chief seaport of Durham to Maritzburg, the capi tal, an extension to be made either into the Transvaal or to the diamond fields. There are now in the Cape Colony 1,000 miles of railroad in operation, and the cxtentions of the various lines, which should be com pleted in the next five or ten years, will add another 1,000. In this branch of trade there is a good opening for American enterprise in the ex portation of passenger cars. The only cars in use on these lines are the English, but the American cars are much bettor suited to the country and would soon become pop ular. The lines are long, the stations a considerable distance apart, and what, with warmwealher and limited accommo dations at the stations, the American cars ould snpply such conveniences as would be highly appreciated and which are not to be had on English cars. 1 he climate of South Africa proves to be one of the healthiest in Ue world, espe cially for pulmonary diseases, and English and European consumptives and other in valids are now resorting thither in increas ing numbers, owing to its having been so highly recommended by some prominent medical men sent out to report upon its climatic conditions, Traders and travelers have gradually extended their sphere of operations in late years, until now there is hardly a tribe or clan from North of the Zambezi to the Cape who have not had some acquaintance with the white man. A trading expedition through Dawaraload la now no novelty, and a hunt to the Zun bezi is a boy's adventure from Kunberley or Pretoria. Invorors. ArtfTEALiASS. Divorces have never been sanctioned in Australia. Jaws. In olden limes the Jews had a discretionary power of divorcing their wives. Japans. If the wife be dissatisfied she can obtain a divorce by paying a certaiu sum. Thibetans. Divorces are seldom al lowed, unless with the consent of both parties, neither of whom can afterward re marry. Mooes. If the wife does not become the mother of a boy she may be divorced with the consent of the tnbe. and she can marry again. Abtmbixiass. No form of marriage is necessary. The connection may be dis solved and renewed as often as the parties think proper. Siberians. If the man be dissatisfied with the most trifling acts of his wife, he tears her cap or veil from her head, and this constitutes a divorce. Corxax. The husband can divorce his wife at pleasure, and leave her the charge of maintaining the children. If she proves unfaithful he can put her to death. SiamksS. The first wife may be di vorced, not sold, as the others may be. She then may claim the first, third and fifth child, and the alternate children are yielded to the husband. Akctio Region. When a man desires a divorce he leaves the house in anjer, and does not return for several days. The wife understands the hint, packs her clothes and leaves. DnrE ad TruKOMAS. Among these people, if a wife asks her husband's per niUsion to go out, and he says "Go," with out adding "but come hack again," she Is divorced. Though both parties desire it, they cannot live together again without being remarried. t .... tonus ibim u th? parties choose to separate they break a piir ot chopsticks or copper com in tne presence of witnesses, ny which action the union is dissolved. The hnsnand must restore to the wife the property belonging to her pnor to her marriage. A ejucan Indians. Among some tribes the pieces of sticks given to tue witnesses of the marriage are broken as a sign of di vorce. Usually new connections are formed without the eld ones being dissolved. A man never divorces his wife if she has borne him son. Taetaus. The husband may put away his par ner and seen another when it pleases him, aud the wife may do the same. If she be ill-treated, she complains to the magistrate, who, attended by the principal people, accompanies her to the house, and pronounces a formal divorce. Chinsb. Divorcee are allowed in all cases of criminality, mutual dislike, jeal ousy, incompatibility of temper, or toj niu& loquacity on the part of the wife. The husband tunot sell his wife until she leaves him, and becouifs S slave to him by action of the law for desertion. ' A- son is bound Vt divorce his wife if she displeases his parents. CiacAsiASs. Two kinds of divorce an granted in Circassia one total, the other provisional. When the first is allowed tho parties can immediately marry again; where the second exists the couple agree to separate for a year, and if, at the expira tion of that time, the husband does not send for his wife, her relations may de mand of him a total divorce. Gbkoiass. A settlement was usually given to a wife at marriage for support in case of a divorce. The wife's portion was then restored to ber, and the husband re quired to pay monthly interest for its use during the time he retained it from ber. Usually the men could put their wives away on slight occasions. Even the fear of having too large a family sufficed. Di vorces scarcely ever occur in modern Greece. Hindoos. Either party for a slight cause may leave the other and marry. When to.h desire it there is not the least trouble. If a man calls his wife "mother," it Is con sidered indelicate to live with her again. Among one tnbe, the "Gores," if the wife be unfaithful, the husband cannot obtain a divorce unless he gives htr all the property and children. A woman, on the contrary, may levre when she pleases, and marry another man, and convey to him the entire property of her former husband. Romans. In olden times a man might divorce his wise if she were unfaithful, if she counterfeited his private keys, or dtank without his knowledge. They would di vorce their wives when they pleased. Not withstanding this, 621 years elapsed with out one divorce. Afterward a law was passed allowing cither sex to make the ap plication. Divorces then became frequent on the slightest pretexts. Seneca says that some women no longer reckoned the year by the consuls, but by te nutntr ef their husbands. Su Jerojie spejks of a man who had buried twenty wives, and a woman who had buried twenty -two hus bands. The Emperor Augustus endeav ored to restrain the license by penalties. A rtMarkall soiar protuberance was lately observed by M. Thollou at the Paris Ol erratory. The protuberance rose rertically as a thin luminous jet, moving at the nto ot about tweuty mile3 per second, to a height eqnal to one-four:h of the sun's diameter, or about 215,000 miles. After rising, It gradually decreased In brightness, at the same time enhtrgiug to prodi gious dimenaioca. li ! 1 W t i V arn out, laid down to die. J. P -0-- -f-