-.--..V.- u ' . . 1:1 1 B. F. SCHWEIER, TEE O0I3TITUTI0I THE TJJIOI AID TEE EHTOBOEMEIT OF TEE LAW8. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXY. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1881. NO. 30. Iiiiiftt Wj I ieh IS eau If !tt08l U arc j KchM n lAlu1 1 1 OE-AWAKE AND FAST-ASLEEP. . Mutht summer day came out of the east, ' Aad a dear little lad was Be, uos were red from utrawberrj feast. And his eves were blue as tb sea. at wnow hair was Mown bj the breeze, like pass in a windj place , HMiad torn his jactet in climbing trees 1 he laughed all over hi face. . danced in the elm, on the leafy spray wnere the ne-t of the blnebird swings, TiU the Kir-"" d wmted tne 8,eep ,WaT . ii mi.ler their painted wings. H, moot the stem of the lilies tall, uT,,ie the nodded in high sarpris . .1 mi.bed. with weir nngen. . , Tne .in-am from their golden eyes. The .lai-T hurried to wash her face in a drop of the silver dew, ndevervleaf in its lofty place ' The kiss of the sunshine knew. ne stuirre: chattered and combed his tail. That curls up over his spine ; Kua each red clover turned almost pale ' VheD the village clock struck nine. ror two little bovs, in two Utile bed. lay sleeping the raornuiK persou in his presence. He determined J wife whom everybody you, most of all to be so agreeable and deferential that J must consider disagreeable ?" fair she should imagine her ears had de ceived her. Conversation progressed very pleas antly between the two. "Nice girl to talk to," Mr. Dean decided. "Sweet voice, no giggle, no affectation." Jnst as he made this reflection, he en countered the eyes of Harry Sinton, and fancied he saw in them satirical amuse ment. Awakened by this glance to the conviction that he wits making himself the subject of mirth, he sought the side of an acknowledged Wile, and saw no more of Irene Pierce until dancing liegan. j She was standing opposite him, in a t set where the fashionable Miss Beutly j was his partner. This young lady was considered a very elegant personage. ! She wore a Paris dross, and the costliest Bert ! Dean's glance rested with satisfaction on Irene Pierce. Her face, undeniably pretty, her dress was a stranger to Paris, and had, perhaps, been made at home ; but it was accompanied by a smooth white neck and a pair of rounded arms. As Bert made these comments, and r..nuv part, said aarry oiuiwu, i: t i .Ija.u.tiKfi.Hl t Thin comnniiinn'a Fin not particular; a good little heart, ' common-place remarks, he decided to on.I a sweei leiupei . She hesitated a moment. "What do you mean ?" cried Bert, in amazement How to Live In Summer. Clothing must b considered, for it has much to do with our elasticity of movement. It is as yet a point of dis- pute whether cotton stuffs are the best "Vn Mlintl,.v. f..rr.tn r Aral ' many .H nn mg 01 ..,., r or women nothing is sweeter in sum- nieeting, she said, more composedly ; mer than a lres8 it a pitv we uo not ouiige me to repeat your words do not patronize linen more for adults; - . , - tn An thir t&nffled heala i mouhj tat . song. ornaments of any one in the room. I Hil inr " w ,i cl.l the snmmei . , . m u ih rnimliier (lit. -oh. dear, on, . w hat sleepv small loya I see : i wish. I wish they would wake and play With a Dright little dajike me." THAT I.ITTI.K EKMiHT. . ernrmre his l ix-n-fin for the next set. iliat, 'her hair shall be what color heaven He follnJ Limself repaiJ for Jarf ..leases.' Sot that I am afraid of for coulJ 8peak of her own intv-I like a pretty girl as well as sex without malice. Her conversation I auvou"e-but I don't insist on it as some- ( waJJ mteUigent which assured him she ,-ii .3 A t ... ......... . thing 1 ani enuueu kj. was lamuiar with tne best boots, ana The elegant Bert Dean smiled a snide hep cUoi(.e langtlage pieased him. All f contempt. this he discovered in the pauses of the -Hv (rood fellow," said he, "your i n i tileasod bim so well that powers of comparison must ie erj nj ungert?j at ner g;je rather longer liiuiteJ if you propose exchanging your flian mere 1! demanJed when dionsaud bachelor privileges ior bi. trilliug consideration. what do votl r Ueiir. Bert D au shrugged his shoulders. " Mav will expect me early," he said, au.1 retired to his dressing-room. Tie enienred from it an hour or so the set was over. On his homeward way, in company want ? Let ns ... , . - . , s; . . pnMM,n. tered some raillerv. He announced I don't know that 1 want anything , jjimif to j,ave found in Miss Pierce the I ata very well contented as I am. ' mosj agreeable girl he hail found in a Buthat would induce you to le- i,mg timej truly ladylike and intelligent, (mui a Benedict V" I 'You can't deny that her hair is red," "Let we see; I dou't wish tola un- laughed Harry, reasonable. Beauty is, of course, the "Certainly not ; but it was tastefully firlt requisite; wouldn't look at an arranged' Leirc without it. Merc beauty, how-, xhe nest day, in the afternoon, found ever is a very slight matter. I must Dean standing on the steps of the not W afraid of my wife's opening her i,ouse wliich belonged to Miss Pierce's lils. Of course she must sing, speak father. He did not tell his friend that several languages. Given all these, and jje had asked permission to call, but he a suitable income say twelve to fifteen jjj, thousand a year and I might think of g0 fonllJ Mrs. Pierce and her it then." daughter sitting together in the back 'What, nothing more?" asked the parlor, with their work. Irene was other, ironically, "I am afraid you go braiding a sacque for her little sister; too cheap." ' anl ner mother employed on something 'Bert Peau " said Harry, solemnly, ' more practical She had not "been well vou are a 'conceited fop! A good schooled, as the idea that she was to Man" one. I admit, and not originally leave the room did not occur to her. destitute ..t i.rains; but eaten up, de-. Irene did not look as plain as she hid toured bv iuonlinatc vanity; and I done last night, as her animated conver firmlv eswH-t to see von knocked down, sation dazzled him. There was an ' w , mrl with red ringlets." affectionate confidence lietween mother .uirU...,.-t,- ,.....i.. ..1l..M..l...l 1 J aull UUUgllier uiui uc unu uvjl uici best society, and he found it, or some thing else, so pleasant that he largely outstayed the limits of a fashionable calL ktriu the most scrupulously exquisite! T . . l)etter not call again," he cmhtiou. He had some excuse for j,e went home ; "but what a matins extravagant demands alout a jpijgijtfjj companion she would be !" wife. His Cousin May, called him when j A week or two went by, and Bert all things were considered the first young 'adhered to his new resolution of not man iu society, and was casting her cauing but was unable to prevent him ey. around for a suitable match for from Watching for her. liini. Wlieii he entered her well-lighted .3Jav .. he asked carelessly of his rooms, they were already quite fulL He COU3jn oue eveningf "who are those niade a tour of the apartments, bestow- pj,.. ing a little languid u tice on two or three ( Q1 frieU(ls of miue she answered ; favored one:., and presently subsided ,excellenf sutantial people ; but why into a ch:,t with Mrs. Miller. This lady ,., was neither verv young nor particularly , tt j met them i,nt bere, and that j.retly, but he liked to talk to her, and j haye neard o tbem," so he ri'Uiaiued at her side. J ne gaj 'Mr. TVan," she said, when half an j "JJj-s. Pierce thinks home is the liest horn- .r more had elapsed, "I am afraid place for girls, so she does not go out the young ladies will hardly forgive me mUCh." for absorbing your attention so long. if Irene Tierce went out so little, there See there is a young lady qtute alone ; ,Was scarcely a chance that they should pray go and make yourself charming." j meet except at her own house. And did Bert turned his head. J he really care enough about the ac- "Whut !" he exclaimed, "That litfle . quaintance was it valuable enough fright ? Mrs. Miller, do le merciful!" for him to take trouble to seek it ? But Mrs. Miller did not smile. j Probably these questions were "I l-g your pardon," he said, I answered in the affirmative, as the next politely. "It was very wrong to speak J day brought him to Miss Pierce's door ; as I did." nor was that the only occasion on which "It was -indeed. I am afraid she 1 the neighbors opposite had the privilege beard yon, too." of seeing him. Again and again he "That is not possible !" he said, with 1 came, but, as time was going on, he raJ mortification. I grew strangely diffident Drawn day Mrs, Miller relented at the sight of by day to Irene's side, happy nowhere bis vexed countenance. else, he could affirm even to himself that "The only atonement you can offer," j 8he was more to him than a friend, she said, "is to seek an introduction and There had been a time that, to declare make yourself as areeable as you can. himself a lover, involved some sacrifices Perhaps she will forgive yon, or think ' on his part ; it seemed strange now mat she did not hear aright" "Must I ? Will yon pardon me on no other terms?" "Certainly not When I see the young hulv suulinz urwn vou von shall be restored to ni then," l,a aT.nnl.1 he anxious to m-iKO sucn a sacrifice, yet doubt, with anxiety whether Irene would care to accept it Some weeks of suspense went by, and he could wait no longer. One bright teenC and not till ' day, when favoring fate had left them a ; little while alone, ne spose not ery "Cruel! but I am oliedient And he eloquently, but stall sufficiently cohe rent iu search of an introduction. ! rently to make his meaning plain. Mr. Sinton chanced to be near at hand, ! Irene colored deeply, and refused him. aul opened l.U iicrl,tlv when he' At this he grew a little more self-pos- learned his friend's desire. "Know her'" li Jo! Prot.hesi..i nm;ntr l,er Kef,, re 1 sisted : was there a previous attachment we came, red ringlets and all. Didn't She blushed more vividly, and said no tbink, though, that your fate would be ' such thing existed. Wn on you so soon " i Was ere not some hopes for him, "Xonsens i ,r K then? Mieht not her resolution be I 3 i i rrrJ tn Viiowt W reftsonfl- geaseu, "66"-' Af v,nrKe T ! She declined to state them. He per- overcome ? Might not these resolutions cease to exist ? Oh, no ! Her resolution was unalter able. serious." "BecauM it is t,uch a serious matter ifbyon? Very thing I was saying; "tiGTC Tllir... 1 f T Mma na-" And Miss Pierce and Mr. Deanj Then he urged an explanation, and ere presently exchanging opinions on insisted on it as his right His suit was staple party-going topics. poshed with ardor, and Irene s agitafaon To do Bert justice" he sincerely re- 'poved that she waa not insensible But Pitted his thoughtless exclamation. with a great effort she somnianded her He as ungeutlcmanl y, he kn ew, andhe self, ... j W, besides so great a horror of female ! "I ahould be most unjust to you and "gliuess as to regard all subjects to it to myself," said she, "could I allow a th a painful compassion. The dread ( transient feeling to set aside my judg tbat Miss Pierce had overheard his re-' ment" M gave him just that sting of self ! "Transient ! O Irene ! reproach that one would feel had he But she silenced him. Uuded to the infirmity of a deformed 1 4Could I allow myself to give you a that evening." The room swam around Bert Dean. "That little fright !" Oh ! the sacrilege, the horror, of that speech ! Could he have made it and about that angel? Overwhelmed with mortification, he strove to explain, to say how entirely his feelings were altered. "Enough, sir," said Miss Pierce, with dignity. "Spare yourself the trouble of apologizing ; it is quite unnecessary, and altogether useless." And so she left him. Surely this was an awkward situation for a lover, particularly for Bert, who had contemplated arranging matrimonial affairs in such a quiet, well-bred way, He went home in despair. Could any woman even Irene, gentlest, dearest of vomen forgive such an insult to her vanity? li she could only see his heart, and know how long he had ceased to regard her as plain, in how many ways she was even beautiful to him ! But to explain this to her it was impossible ! He could never obtain her pardon. And her love ? That was too far and dear to dream of. Private life has its Napoleons, how ever. I hey rout impossibilities, and prove them to be the merest shams. A week from this dreadful day, Bert was sitting very much at home in the same parlor whence he had withdrawn so ignominiously, and Irene looked at him in a way that clearly showed that she had relinquished her "resolution, and sacrificed her judgment" 8Mt. A Detmiter who had business in a vil lage in Washtenaw county, Michigan, drove out there in a buggy, and, of course, went to the inn for his dinner. The landlord made no inquiries until af ter the meal had been eaten and paid for, and then he found opportunity to inquire : "Were you going out to 'Squire Brown's place?" . "No." "I didn't know bnt you were a light ning rod man and I was going to say that the "Squire has threatened to shoot the next one on sight We don't go much on them fellers around here, and rm right glad that you are somebody else. Maybe yun are going over to SuZe Hardy's to sell him some trait trees for fall setting?" "No." "Well, that's lucky. Only recently the Judge was remarking to me that the next fruit tree agent who entered his gate would want a coffin. The fact is, I myself have got to do some pretty hard kicking to pay for being swindled on grape vines, xou are not a patent right man, eh ?" "No." "Well, that's a narrow escape for you. We've been swindled here on hay forks, cultivators, gates, pumps, churns, and a dozen other things, and I'm keeping six teen dozen bad eggs for the next patent lighter who shows his face in this town. Perhaps you are a lecfcirer? "Oh, no." "Well, you haven't lost any thing. We never turn out very strong here to a lec ture. The last man who struck us lec tured on Our Currency,' but didn't take in enongh of it to pay for his supper. You are not a lxxk carvasser?" "No." "That's another escape. We've been laid out here so often that if an agent should offer to sell a $20 Bible for fifty cents, we'd suspect a trick to beat us. Strikes me now that you may le a lawyer ?" "No." "Good 'nuff. Last one who settled here had to leave town at midnight; and we don't want one any way?" Say, what are yon, any way ? " "A politician," replied the Detroiter. "A politician ! Then git ! For heaven's sake, don't stand around here if you value your life ! We've just impeached our poundmaster for embezzling the public money; and the excitement is so intense that the Democrats will ride you on a rail or the Bepublicans duck you in the water trough. Git up and scoot 1" Church Manner. Be on time. No one has a right to disturb a congregation or a preacher by being tardy. Never look around to see who is com ing in when the door opens. It diverts your own and other's attention from the exercises, and is discourteous to the eader. Never talk or whisper in church, especially after the exercises are open ed. Never pull out your watch to see what time it is when the text is announced.or during the sermon. Better to feed on a sermon than to time it Never lean your head on the pew rail before you, aa thongh indifferent to the preacher. Conform, if possible, in conscience, to the usages of the church in which you worship kneel, stand, bow accord ingly." ... 2 ever manuest your disapprobation of what is being said, by unpleasant sounds, or signs, or by hastily leaving. Do not fidget, as though the service were a weariness. Be quiet and decor ous to the very end. Do not put on your overcoat or adjust your wrappings till after the benedic tion. No gentleman ever defiles place of worship with tobacco. Never be one of a staring crowd about the door or in the vestibule, before or after service. Do nothing out of keeping with the time, place and purpose of a religious assembly. for children, cottons; for workingmen. worsteds. The heavy suits of men are weighing them down in summer, and clothes of serge are far preferable to those of thick woolen cloth. ery thin silk is a cool wear. The heavily-laden skirts of women impede the free action of movement much, and should be aim plihed as much as possible for summer. So also the headgear. Infants, if at all delicate, should not be allowed to go with bare feet; it often produces diarrhoea, and they should al ways wear a flannel band around the stomach. Another important matter is the changing of night and day linen among the poorer classes. It is terrible to think that a workinsrman should he down in the shirt in which he has per spired all day at his hot work. Let men accustom themselves to good washes every evening liefore they sit down to their meals, and to changes at night that they may take np a dry shirt when going to their hard day's work. Frequent change of linen is abso lutely necessary anyhow, a night and a day change, This change alone would help to stay the mortality among the children, if accompanied with other healthy measures, such as sponging the body with a Little salt and water. Where tenements are very close, wet sheets placed against walk will aid to revivfy the air and absorb bad vapor in rooms. All children's hair should be cut short; boy's hair may be cropped and girls' hair so arranged by nets or plaits that air passes freely around the neck. Light head coverings are essential in summer, for the head must be kept coot The most serviceable dress is that which allows art; to pass freely around your limbs and stops neither evaporation of the body nor the circulation of the re freshing atmosphere, In summer you may breathe freely and hohtlv, you can not do so with your stomach full of un digested food, your blood full of over heated alcohol, your lungs full of vitiat ed air, your smell disgusted with nau seous scents, your system unable to carry out the natural piocess of diges tion. All the sanitiry arrangements in the world will do no good if we eat and drink in such a fashion that we are con stantly putting on fuel where it is not needed, and stuffing up our bodily draught, as we would that of a heating appliance. Our ignorance and our bad habits spoil the summer, that delightful season of the vear nothing else. How Much to Eat. Having tested a number of meals in a general way, eating more or less rach time, find out as near n cxar be wle.t i the proper amcunt for a meal. Begin with a very light breakfast of ordinary food, such as you have been accustomed to, and note the number of hours you can go without feeling a want ot more food. For a very light breakfast, say one roll, a cup of coffee and a very small piece of meat, three hours or less will be found the limit This is not offered as a role bnt as a suggestion, for it makes a vast difference what you do- daring those three hours. A given amount of food will go further in manual labor than in mental labor, as brain work is more exhausting than hand work. The next time try a little more, and in the course of a dozen breakfasts you will learn to judge pretty closely what you require to carry on your work till the hour of the next meal. Having found out just what you need, never, on any consideration, take more. Never mind how nice steak, how tempting any food may be, shut right down on the whole eating business the instant yon have had enough. Too little can be repaired by eating a light lunch before the next meaL Too much can not le repaired, and yon must pay for indiscretion. In all this there must be plain common sense. JJo not imitate the invalid who kept a pair of scales on the breakfast table to weigh his daily bread. Eat and be satisfied, and then stop. Artificial Refrigeration. ice-making and refrigerating machines are constructed so as to utilize this property possessed by all volatile fluids. If the ether be placed in a metallic ves sel exposing a large surface to water or any ' other fluid which requires to le cooled, all the heat necessary for the volatilization of the ether must be taken from the water ; the volatilization of the ether is assisted bv means of an air- pump, and the ether vapor is then con veyed tlirongh pipes to another vessel also s iu rounded by cold water, where it gives np the same amount of heat again, and is thns converted back into a liquid In this way a comparatively small quantity of ether will cool or even freeze an indefinite quantity of water, and the whole of the ether can be con densed again into the liquid state. In stead of ether, liquid ammonia, sul phurous acid, or other very volatile sub stances may be used, and a variety of complicated mechanical arrangements are introduced to assist in the volatili zataon, condensation and preservation of the volatile agent used. These me chanical arrangements have been so far perfected that even water itself has been used as the evaporating agent, and ice has been successfully produced by such means. Great cold and even ice has also been produced by the expansion and con traction of atmospheric air by machines constructed on a similar principle to those we have just referred to. The production of cold and even ice by artificial means is now a necessity in many industrial processes. According; to the continental systems of brewing, great cold is required not only during the actual brewing process, but also for months afterward while the beers are maturing in the cellars. In this coun try the natural production of ice is very uncertain, and some winters may pass without sufficient being formed to be worth collection, and even when ice is plentiful here we have no suitable ar rangements at hand for storing and pre serving it for use in warmer weather. For these reasons many ingenious con trivances have been devised for the arti ficial production of ice, and it may not be uninteresting to give some explana tion of the theories on which these ma chines are founded. When a volatile liquid evaporates, a large amount of heat is necessarily absorbed by the re sulting vapor, and is rendered latent or imperceptible to the senses and the thermometer. This heat is taken either from some of the remaining liquid or else from the medium in which the liquid is in contact The cold produced by evaporation is very evident with a volatile fluid like ether; when a little of this liquid is placed in the palm of the hand an intense feeling of cold is ob served; the ether, in evaporating, must absorb heat, and therefore takes it from the nearest body, which is the hantLand thus produces a corresponding reduction of temperature. The evaporation of volatile liquids is greatly assisted by a reduction of pressure; and, thus, if a little ether be placed in a shallow dish, floating on a thin layer of water, and the whole be placed under the receiver of an air-pump, there is not much difficulty in freezing the water by a rapid exhaust ion of the air; in this case the vapor o ether is renewed almost as fast as it is formed, and fresh quantities of liquid ether are thus volatilized. The various A Railway Tunnel throaeh a Volcano. The rocks which constitute the south ern island of New Zealand are for the greatest part of the archaic type, con sisting principally of gneiss, granite, mica-schist, phyllite, qnartzite, and fel sitie rocks. They are partly covered by palaeozoic strata, which are folded np into innumerable troughs and saddle backs throughout the province of Can terbuiy, and which partly belong to the carboniferous period, so that there are prospects for a future discovery of coal beds. By far the greatest interest, however, is offered by the extensive vol canic phenomena of the island, and among them the extinct volcanoes upon the Banks peninsula, east of the town cf Christehurch, are prominent This peninsula, now only connected by bands of low and recent deposits with the main land, was once a complete island, only formed by volcanoes, which rose up from the bottom of the sea. The special con st rration of such an extinct volcano has been'nade visible by a tunnel of 2,620 met ? 1 length upon the railway between d'T Jt tinToh and Littleton which has 'pureed through the walls of. a voleani cone and thus has laid bare its structure of successive streams of lava and beds of scoria?, ashes, and tufa?, which are again intersected by dikes of younger volcanic rocks. This is perhaps the first volcano through which a railway has been constructed. Another peculiarity of New Zealand is the extremely frequent occurrence of bones of those large wingless birds, which by the aliorigines were called "moa," and which belong to the family of the Dinornithiihe, of whom the larg est representative has reached the con siderable height of ten and a half feet; the largest deposits of these bones were found in the Point cavern and the marshes of Grenmark. There is now no donbt that these gigantic birds were contemporaneous with man, and that an early human race were moa hunters in these islands, who lived upon the flesh of these birds at a time when the glaciers extended still very much below their present boundaries, for lKines.tools, and other remnants of these early moa hun ters are frequently met intermingle with boies of the now extinct Dinor nithidse. ratehea of Red Snow. Prospectors returning from the Holy Cross country, Colorado, and especially from the head of Cross Creek, report that the ground is covered with red snow. In the almost inaccessible defiles of Mount Shasta, in California, is the only other known place in the United States where this is seen. In Polar re gions it is a familiar sight, and no ex tensive traveler there returns without a description of it The broad fields of everlasting snow that flank the northern coast of Greenland are flaked with the strange red blood, and further toward the poles miles of it stretch as far as the naked eye can reach. The phenomena is due to the presence of minute red anamalcuhe in the snow. A microscope detects its presence, bnt how it got there is a difficult question, and one that has never been quite satisfactorily ' answered. The red snow in this region is first seen at the head of Cross Creek, where it may lie observed in patches of intense carmine, varying in area from as large as a man's hat to twenty feet in diameter. Taken in the hand and closely examined, nothing can be detected that gives it color, and it melts into clear red water, leaving no stain. Further on, in some of the steep gulches with which the country abounds, the bottoms are entirely covered with the strange sub stance. In some places the color is vivid in the extreme, while in others it fades to a faint pink, producing an effect not readily described in words. Old pros pectors, who penetrated the region two years ago, say that there was no snow of this description there, and its fall can scarcely have antedated this year. Still higher, and at the very foot of the mountain, the red snow disappears and nothing save the pure white coverlet greets the eye. How the same tiny in sects that sent the Boreal can find their way to the inaccessible Holy Cross, is thing beyond human ken, and will be a problem for the scientists of the future to ponder over. Pkisoskr, have you ever been convicted "No, your Honor; I have always employ ed first class lawyer. A Remarkable Counterfeit. The counterfeit twenty-dollar silver certificate, pen made, recently received by the secret service of the treasury, has been examined by very many experts, and is considered a remarkable piece of penmanship. There are many defects in the note, but the most interesting re lates to the manner in which the secret service office came to suspect the proba ble designer. Shortly after the note was discovered by the treasury depart ment it was discovered that the wording on the back was grossly defective in the manner of spelling. For instance the word "customs" was spelled "costumes," and the word "tender" was spelled "tendre." This gave rise to the belief that the counterfeit was executed by a noted German forger who has figured to some extent in the West, and at times at Cincinnati His penmanship, especially in the execution of counterfeit bank notes, has on more than one occasion attracted the attention of government officers, and in each instance the work was marked by faulty spelling. The suspected forger was reported to have been in Cincinnati at the time the note was received in the treasury, and the chief of the secret service division at once telegraphed to an agent in that city to keep the man under surveillance. For several days nothing more was heard of the matter. A special agent was sent to Cincinnati to look further into the affair. This officer, upon arriving in Cincinnati, discovered that the bird had flown, and that the officer originally instructed to shadow him had leen on a protracted spree. The Youncer and Elder Booth. Plenty of Honey. NEWS IX BRIEF. The Duke of Argyll is nearly dead with the gout. Na oleon'a "X" on the Seiue bridges is beinir chiseled off ! Phi .-ulclphia is to havesevenil iiectn It 1 me oaors oi years oi coo&ing, wuicu poncem -u. were reinforced in the preparation of j There w to lie a revised Xew Testa- everv meal. Seated at the tAble a filthy . ment M "Lsh. A traveler writing about his fare while in the South, says of one of his stopping , places: The dining room below was dark and dismal, and was pervaded with ! negro appeared and took my plate. "What have you for breakfast ?" asked. "Meat'n greens," was the reply. "Nothing else?" "Corn bread and coffee, lioss." I had never had courage to attack dish of "meat and greens;" but Booth is now forty-eight He was only nineteen when his father died, but he had seen the latter in some of his best characters, and always considered him one of the greatest tragedians of the day. This is no doubt the case, bnt the unfortunate man was so utterly destroy ed by strong drink that he never could take that position to which he was naturally entitled. No engagement could le relied on unless the manager locked him np for the occasion, and hence he only found employment at the cheap theatres, where people tooktkeir chance. How strange to think of Booth playing Richard III, in the Chatham theatre to an audience made np of news boys and other plebeiau, who beheld his grandest flights at twenty-five cents ; pit half-price. I have often paid my old fashioned shilling for a seat in the latter in order to see Booth thunder in the crooked-back tyrant, which was his greatest role. Although deficient in point of stature, his appearance was very impressive, this being chiefly dne to his countenance, which waa one of tremendous power. His evee were very large and rapidly expressive of the varied passions which are represented on the stage. They were finely set off by a Grecian nose, bnt the latter was, when I saw it, marred by a blow which he had received from a fellow-actor in self defense, and which may be thus ex plained : Booth never played except when under the influence of brandy, and hence he was often dangerous. His imaginary foes became real and his sham fight sometimes had a murderous appearance. On one occasion, when Tom Flynn was his antagonist. Booth drove him into the corner and was about to run him through, bnt Tom warded off the thrust and then knocked him down with his fist The play was at once stopped, and Booth's nose thenceforth bore witness of this strange affray. Eating with a Knife. Japan is now snptortiucr six kuve universities on the European plan, . The population of New Sonth Wales j is, by the recent census, 750,000. Bo. .ton is going ahead with her pro I ject for a World's Fair in 18S5. There are 585 Chinese children in a the San Francisco public schools. I i A tricycle, propelled bv steam, has seemed to have no choice, I let the leen made in Geneva, Switzerland, durkev bring me a plate of that delict-' The Comtesse de Chambord has able compound. "Meat in the Sonth, ' ,1"s' F'"1'8'11"! S"2,000 to the Pope. T nnrl.t at.iI..;,, n,n. amnUl luuv.n ! One lierson in every six of our 50.- -the only kind of meat, except chick-1 132' l"" " urch member. . . r. , . Mrs. Abraham Lincoln is pro- ens, that W often used by the poorer j nounce1 Wyond by her classes m the country. The "greens" j cians. " " are generally cabbage-spronts, and the j Three or four ounees of oU can be bacon and the "greens" are boiled to-' extracted from one hundred pounds of gether until they are not oidy thorough- water. ly cooked, but until the whole mass is ' The yield of wheat iu Texas thid pervaded with the fat of the pork and Tcar iTon M to 20 bushels per the flavor of the smoke by which it was , re" . , T. . , ... , ., I Gov. iioyt has lieen made a doctor cured. It takes an appetite for a north- of ,aws v th Uuiversit ,lf Penv,Va. em man to relish such a dish as that. ' of Los Angeles i church, to cost and a stomach that never rebels to di-1 gest it There were other attractions in that breakfast The "coffee" was "home-made," that is. it had been raised I The Presbyterians are preparing to build $10,000. Kaniraroo tail soup is now canned A subscriber says we have many authorities on the subject, bnt I would like to see a sensible, intelligent opin ion as to how far the knife can be made use of in eating, without one's being considered ill-mannered. The short est answer is best not at all, in polite society. Bnt what our correspondent perhaiM means is : What sense or rea son is there in the prohibition, by so ciety, of the use of the kinfe in eating? That is a harder question ; but the sufficient fact is that society doesn't need to furnish reasons. In the realm of etiqnetto, whatever is, is right As a matter of fact, it is doubtless alarm ing or unpleasant to many people to see a knife put to the mouth ; it sug gests a possible cut, and too nearly re sembles shoveling in the food. A man may know that he will not cut him self, and declare that he lifts no more food than his neighbor does on a fork, bnt society says that it is ill bred, Ibid until the custom changes, people had best conform, unless it is a matter of conscience with them. As Hamertou says, in a parallel case, you may see no reason why you cannot come to the dinner-table with your shooting boots and jacket on, and bring your dog with yon, if yon are clean and your dog well bred. "Very welL Society will not argue the point, much less concede it. It will simply drop or taboo yon. ii it is essential that a mail shall eat with a knife, or in his shooting jacket or that he shall take np his plate in his hands, or drink ont of the bottle, or discard both knife and fork on the plea that 'fingers were made before forks, he had better dine alone. That is the way it seems to us. Conformity is the best wisdom in minor unessential matters of custom and fashion. on the place in the form of chicory or , m Australia and exported in great qunn- barley, hail leen badly burned in roast- uues- ing,was sweetened with molasses or 77 ceas,VVhtt' V,.atU,le ; , . ... . cotton acreage of 1879-80 waa 14,VJ,- not at all, and cream or milk was a lux-! Qyij ury unknown. Shanghiu has a scheme for an Intel I survived this fare three or four . national Exhibition in 1882 under cou meals, piecing it out lietween times with sidenitiou. canned meats and fruits which I bonght, Mr. James Russell Lowell is said to and then I accepted an inviation from a I be co"lctiug materials for a memoir cf gentleman of the town, who lived in a j Hau)i'orVt;. t, i . i t . ... , , . . , One hundred and nineteen uieuiliers civilized way, to stay a day or two with. of the House of Commons voted agt.inst .My radical mends then announced that adjournment on the Derby Dav. 1 had been "captured by the Ku Klnx." and lost all confidence in my reports. I fared lietter in a little town iu east ern North Carolina, which I once visited on a similar mission to that which took me to western Alabama. There waa no hotel in the place, but a widow, whone husband had kept a whisky saloon and was killed in a fight, maintained a very comfortable boarding-house where stran gers were entertained. The first day at dinner we had roasted chicken. At snpper fried chicken was served, and at breakfast fried chicken appeared again. At dinner the second day the servant brought on roasted chicken fricasee. WTiile I was at the table at snpper the second evening the landlady came in, and, with some signs of confusion, said: iiT 1 . 1, , , -a nope you line cnicKen, sir. 1 see you don't eat the bacon." I said that I did like it, and that she cooked it very nicely. "Because," she added, "there is not a pound of fresh meat in town, and I don't know when there will be. I own two steers that are old enough to kill, but they are down in the Dismal somewhere with.Colonel Jones' herd. I hadn't heard from tliem in more than a year until last summer, when they came out and I tried to get some one to shoot one of them for me, bnt didn't succeed. I couldn't do it myself, yon know, and now they have gone back, and the Lord only knows when they'll come out again. It is very hard for a lone widow to get along. There s no butter in town either. The steamer will lie np in a day or two, and will probably bring some. I have plenty of honey, if yon like that." "Here'a Your Pan. He told the Superintendent he wanted a pass to Chicago. "Ah, you're a worthy citizen who has been roblied and who wants to get home," said the Superintendent "I see snch every day." "No sir, I'm not," said the petitioner. "You're dying of a wound received in the war, maylie, and want to see home once more." "Nary a wonnd, I played sick and stayed in the hospital while in the army. "Did, eh ? W ell maylie yon've got a child dying you want to see?" "Not a bit of it" "Now, well I reckon I can guess your yarn pretty soon. Yon once saved a train on this road from lieing wrecked." "No, I didn't" "Well, what in thunder is your excuse for asking a pass ?" "Jnst this. I'm a beat and a bum. I want to get to Chicago and don't want to hoof it I come to ask a pass on clear cheek," "Well, bless your impudence, I like it Here s your pass. Wild Sheep of the Sier In the months of May and June the wild sheep of the Sierra bring forth their lambs, in the most solitary and inaccess ible crags, far above the nesting-rocks of the eagle. I have frequently come upon the beds of the ewes and lambs at an elevation of from twelve to thirteen thousand feet above sea level. These beds are simply oval-shaped hodews, pawed out among loose, disintegrating rock-chips and sand, upon some sunny spot commanding a good outlook, and Mirtially sheltered from the winds that sweep those lofty peaks almost without intermission. Such is the cradle of the little mountaineer, aloft in the very sky : rocked in storms, curtained in clouds, sleeping in thin, icy air ; but wrapped in his hairy coat and nourished by a strong, warm mother, defended, from the talons of the eagle and teeth of the sly coyote, the bonnie lamb grows apace. He soon learns to nibble the tufted rock-grasses and leaves of the white spiraea ; his horns begin to shoot, and before summer is done he is strong and agile, and goes forth with the flock, watched by the same divine love that tends the more helpless human lamb in its warm cradle by the fireside. " To Keep Shaded Places Green Especially in the front yards of dwell ings, both in town and country, which are much shaded, we often see the ground completely bare, not a living thing being perceptible. Sometimes there are many nearly nude, straggling limbs lying upon the ground or very near it which are unsightly and every way worthless, that ought to be cut away. This would give room for the growing there of seme plant or vine that would be adapted to it, and which would not only recover the naked spot and make it a "living green," but would be adding very much to the general ap pearance of the premises. The best vine for this purpose is undoubtedly the per iwinkle. It will grow almost anywhere in the shade if the proper attention is given to it, but not otherwise. It is a beautiful vine and will densely cover the ground, producing nearly the whole season a pretty bine flower. Weeds, however, are its deadly enemies. It can not fight them. Steadily they will en croach until they drive away our favorite and occupy the field of battle. A little help now and then, however, will defeat the common enemy and allow us to en joy the cool-looking, popular evergreen tut many years without renewal. Employment is given by the rail ways of Great Britain and Ireland to aliout snO.'MtO personn. Lord Beaconsfield'a late London residence, with its furniturp, is adver tised for sale by auction, The Mexican government has de posited in the city of Mexico $145,000 for American claims. In the anthracite coal regions, since the beg'.nriiug of J8U9, there have been nearly lV0O deaths by accident The Marquis of Lorne will, it is stated, continue in office until the close of his term in December, 1882. Notwithstanding his blindness, the British Postmaster-General is an expert angler, -,nd lately had some good sport, ductic- of wool in the United States for the year 1880 was 2tJO,000,0)0 pounds, au increae of 32,000,000 over the clip of 1878. The New York Indicator figures that the wheat crop of the Union will fall short of the yield of 1880 as much as 125,000,000 busheLs. The trustees of the Lemoyne fur nace at Washington, Pa., have almost made up their niinds to quit the crema tion business. Prince Bismarck is Knight Grand Cross of sixty-four orders, more than half of the existing number of snch dis tinctions. The United States carried 8.250,000 tons of merchandise at sea in 1880. Swe den and Norway 9,150,000 and Great Britain 52,000,000 tons. The Japanese Mikado is to have a new palace at Yeddo, which is to be built entirely of wood, and will cost nearly 5,000,000. Governor Colquitt of Georgia, is re ported to have recently made $70,000 by the side of a coal mine in which he and General Gordon were interested. Senator Wade Hampton is collecting full data aliont the burning of Columbia, for the purpose of fixing the responsibil ity for that act on Sherman. Fifteen States produce now, as iu 1870, more than 99 ir cent, of the to bacco of the United States, though it is reported in twenty-two other States and six Territories. The census of Ireland shows a H)- nlation of 5,159,849, lieing a decrease of 252,538 since 1871. The population is composed of 2,522,804 males and 2,037,- 035 females. Recent shipments of honey from California to Great Britain have been received with great favor. An English order recently calls for 58,000 pound cans. The fisheries on the Pacific coast, a recent census return shows, employ 16,- 40 persons and Itli boats valued at $104,695. The total amonnt of capital employed is $2,748,383. The silver coinage bill became a law three years ago last February, and un der it over 80,000,000 silver dollars hava been coined. A farm in Mid Kent,Md.,wluch was sold within the past twenty years for $112,500 was put up the other day at a reserve of $45,500, but there was not a single bid. Liast year Switzerland was visited by 1,400,000 foreigners, among whom were 28,000 Englishmen, 20,000 French men, and no less than 900,000 Germans and Austrians. There were only twenty-three miles of railway in operation in the United States in 1830; in 1879 there were 86, 497. During the year ending with March last 6,113 miles were constructed. Prince Bismark has given, a reluct ant assent to the marriage of his son Herbert to the Princess Carolath. This lady is d-scrilied as a very handsome. and gifted with all the accomplishments of her race, the Hartzfeldti. It appears from some of the police reports that in London alone there are ' no less t'tan 30,000 regular thieves, 150, 000 habitual gin drinkers, and 150,000 people living in systematic debauchery and vice. The total nnmlier of newspapers now published in Greece is 129,55 of which appear in Athens alone. Most of them are of very little value, either from a literair or political point of view. The: will, as contained in eleven dif ferent papers, of the late Pope Pins IX, who died on Feb. 7th 1878, has recently been proved in London, the personal es tate in England being sworn under . 800. The New York City Directory for 1881-82 is out, and contains 285,477 names, an increase over the previous year of 11,761. The population of the city is estimated at 1,257,544, or 60,964 more than, when the census was taken. --r ;';'.V iZ frt mi -(t.jV-.J !'. ' r 1 f-H -Hi '.,- m Si m iP ;'!' ml : vrlt ; A ' ".'Hi' !." ;i ifc.ii. :M .rV!r '& m i;i.;tltf 1 Si ft ,1 .6 -X5