filial jSSsk 111 fll HiJi f Citify B. F. SCHWEIER, THE C0I3T1TUTI0I-THE UHOI-AJD THE ESTOBCEMEIT OP THE LAVS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXVI. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 1. 1SS2. NO. 14. 1 I f i fl II on Diy gravs tbe auuimer gnua were gruw'.u;, Or Ueetl es wlatr w.aU acruaa It t.lowlnz, TbruHb Jojoas June or Usaolate Decm!r. - How lou, sweetheart, bow long would jou re member Uow long, dear love, haw long? "or orighteit erea would open to tbe snumrr. AaJ .waeieal amiis would, grei the tweet new comer, AuJ on jwng lip grow kisses fur tbe likinir, Wliau all tbe sararaer isi U to blMia are break lag How long, dear lore, bow lung? To the dim land wbere sad-eyed cbosta walk only, Wber lip are coM, and waiting bearu are louelj, 1 would not call yon from your Tou:ta'g warm tihstes. Kill op tour glass an J crown It witb ucw kiiv-e. Uow Ion, dear love, bow loug? Too ga m June yon niigbt be to regret me. Ant living up might woo yon to forget me; Hut an, aweethean, I tbuik you would remember Wben wind were weary in jour life's December So long, dear love, so long. CELIVS Kl-IXtlC The sunset s golden glory enveloped Margery Leland's little cottage home as it nestled at the foot of the hill ; and its long lines of slanting yellow light touched up each one of the shining curia as thongh with a magic pencil, as she swayed dreamily to and fro iu the red framed, cane-seat rocking-chair upon the porch. The light vauished and all was grey hued and sombre, and even so suddenly went tiie nappy dreams which bod been filling Margery's heart. Some half hour previous Miss (Julia Hynes had opened tne garden-gate, and walked slowly up the path bordered with tlowers sending out their sweetest fragrance at the approach of the dewy eventide, "Ootid evening, Margery. Is ma at home ?" 'Yes," said Margery, with ready courtesy, lining to greet the tall angular spinster. '"Will you walk iu ?" And she showed her into the sitting room, and called her mother. Ineii she stele softly out t j her old position and to her pleasant thoughts, until a name attracted her attention t-ie nanie ! With a smile parting her sweet lips, and looking out of her great dreamy eyes, she bent forward to hear what Pleasant thing Miss Hynes was saying about him for Warren May was to Margery tne synonym of all that was good and noble, and surely even the most curpmg critic could say nothing ill of 1dm. "bo your daughter's got a beau, Mrs. Leland. Well 1 never ! It seems only jjst a year or two ago that she wa run ning round catching butterflies with those chubby fingers of h' re, and now sh is alter higher game." How Margery's tender heart throbbed as sue listened. I ho oihers bad noticed his attentions, j and it was not imagination on her part but at the next words her pk aure l Vanished, j "Soi, Mrs. Lebuid." continued the sharp Voice, "you must not take ofljiice, for you know I have set great store by Margery ever since I nursed her through the fever, and she is jo.-t for all the world like my own flesh and blood, and something 1 hoard yester uay set me to thinking first, and lhn couiuig doau here to tell you." What could it be? Margery's fingers clenched themselves tightly in her impatience, and bhe held her breath so as not to lose a word. "You know I board at tue same plaie I with that young Miy, and to say the truth ; but tiiat's neither here nor there as far as Margery is concerned, if he hasn't any serious intentions in his politeness" to her, and I've heard it from lus own bps. "You see I overheard that editor, Sam Well-, teasing him about some lady, and you know it's easy to put two and two together, and young May spoke up, with a snap in those big black eyes of his "1'ou are mistaken ; I am no; en gaged fc the young lady, and have not ine slightest intention of being," "Then Sam Wells said something more iu an undertone ; I didn't quite catch it, and May said sharper than ever "I assure you, sir, the widow's daugh ter is too innocent to flirt with.' Margery waited to hear no more. With living steps she sought hc( own little room, locked the door, to le se cure from the intrusion even of her dearly-beloved mother, and throwing nersed on the b-d, buried her face in its suoy pillows, and aobiied as though ker heart would break. Tne next day there was to be a church picnic, and Margery had thrown her wnoie energy into the preparations. buch marvels of cake and pastry had grown uuder her nimble tinxcr lor the delectation of the children. buch achmg rnuMclea and tired wrists iroui the beating ol eggs to theiequieite loamv ligbtnet lor tne making of de licious trifles, and such Lapi y thought and fancies, tor Waireu was interested in tUe same bunday school, and they would be foliow-womers, and after that the ueiightlul rambles through bhady vistas in the woods that stretched at tne back of the chosen site for the camping-ground. .Now all was changed. . . It burned to Margery, in Ler girlish sensitiveness and mortiucution at the thought of her name beiug thus bandied from bp to bp in the village (for if Miss Hynes knew of it. otbe surely would;, as though she could mi. bear to meet her merry young luends lest her secret should be written upon her lace, but sbc would have died ratherthan have them think her the victim cf un requltted love ; bo she stee ed hersell t i . . .Iuiim mill went. An ULUturable soorn surged througn li.-rh.ui u bhe thought of War.en May's indignant denial of aoj meaning in bis alten lions to her. . What then was the signification ol words and lo.ka wiach had causeu -thrill of such new and strange happiness to iei meato her whole being ? bhe had gone to the repository of her treasures trifle iu thteiusclves, but rich in their precious meaning ue KiTeu the bud he had placed in ltT ri air, iu?uaui6 , . ;, sweeU-st rose-bud of the two, the bit of paper whereon the names in a game of consequence had been written, and in which Wairen May and Margery In land had been the leading characters in a series or comical adventures eudiugin marriage, and Warren had stolen an . opportunity to whfcper unobserved among the gleeful laughter "May it come true within a tweive- . i. ft i i - : 4 l.of kiim was His notes, too, full f those aweet a lovmg xuey snouid ail go together in one fiery holocaust. ud with ttiem the happy hopes and fancies which had Kuueu ner rue witn sucn delusive ra- J 1 J 1 l'r . aiance ol late, should fade away into as lies. He should not know of her pain. Sne would be the gayest of the gav wheu they met, no matter what tort ures she might suffer afterwards. Ai tuonj;h to aid in carrying out her designs, Reuben Gil man, the squire's son had Come home from college, and a-t Margery made h r appearauoe, look ing all the prettier for the heightened color upon her cheeks, and for the feverish brilliance of her restless dark eyes (the only visible traces of her mental suffering), he stepped to her u.uv ,jiu ruuuru uiieresi auu viaimeu her atwutiou as on old friuud. Margery, usually as retiring and bashful as a snow-drop, received him with a vivacity and emprcr,inent which pleased, while it surprised him, and from that time until the day ended, he constituted himself her devoted at tendant. Warren May came a little later, and as usual made his wav at once to Mar- Kery's side. lo his surprise she recognized him with a cool htt'e nod and (rave him no further notiee, becoming at once en grossed witU Rtuten, and qnietly lis tening to him as though, like to the ancient dame in the fairy tale, she ex pected to see jewels dropping from his lips with every word. Warren waited patioutly for a time, evidently expecting to assume his old position by Margery ; but instead she accepted Reuben's invitation for a ram ble, and they were soon out of sight in the sUady recesses of the woods. Warron looked after them, listening to the silvery ripple of laughter wnich occasion dly rang out from Margerv's hps. At last when he could see them no longer he turned away. "After all," he thought bitterly, "she is like the rest of her sex. I believed her as transparent in her guileless in nocence as a drop of dew, and as fr.e from coquetry as a baby. How has the sweet delusion vanished !" AVrth this sweeping conclusion he tried to banish his disappointment but in vain. It returned with everv thought of the sweet face which had lured bim lrorn his oflices and from a pressing law ciso, to baa 4 in its wrnsorne lignt, and which had then proved to him such a veri table "Wril-o-tiie-wisp." Aiany a pair ot origin eves smned a I welcome at tue handsome young lawver us Le sauntered leisurely along, but be contented himself witn a pleasant greet ing, and soon lelt the crouuds. "Oar promiaiug young lawyer seems to h:tve tired of tne scene aud gone home," b.-ud Reuben laughingly. "I wonder much at his taste. 'Ihere are crowds of pretty girls here even if I have monopoliziMl the queen of the fit. wnu a meaning look at Alargi-rr : lor he had heard the report connecting War ren's name wiLh that of Margery, and had formed a shrewd guess as to the cause of his absence. The girl did not refixiud in the pi quant, sprightly way which had made her bociety so laacinating to the young sq life through the ( him) swiftly-fly ing hours. An intense longing filled her heart to be again in Warren's presence. Sue bad kept up her rote of a frivo lous ligut-hearted girl, and had re sponded gaily to Reuben's compliments. bhe had gone to the picnic, ( uiiy in tend ing to act a part foreign to her ingenuous oieu nature, for bhe would have died sooner than show her wounds. But tne interniinableday had dragged slowly on, and never again would she expose heiself to such suilering. Alter this she staved at home so per sistently that it soon grew to be a sub ject of comment in the village. Then it began to be rumored about that she was going into a decline. Once it was mentioned at the table here, among other boarders, Miss Hynes and Warren May were seated. "L declare to goodness, . said Miss Hvues, ! can't for the life of me see through things " Them that s old are lelt to wither on the tree, and there's the prettii st young thing in the whole place a going as quick as you'd snuil out a tallow candie. Poor little Mar gery ! I've kuowed her and loved her since she was knee-high to a grasshop- v-: , Wairen a face cnangea as tie turneu towards Miss Hynes. "iid I understand you to say that it is little Margery Leland who la in fail ing health. Yes, with a scoruiui sum auu a se vere loot at the questioner ; mat s what you heard. Toor dove I .uroneu hearts am t as easy mended as bo uie may think. Anyway I'm glad I done my dutv. I warned her ma, I haven t much opinion of them that wheedles a girl's tender little Heart out ot her keep ing, and then drops off like that! " with a lorcible snap of her bony ringers. The irate spinsUr so evidently meant, battle that Warren flushed and was si lent. , .. It was no time to discuss a qucsuuu !..... vnnnir rrirl's name had been V liieu j o o know the mentioned, but ne mean w trntn. ... , There must be something uuuenj iu6 Mt-s Hynes' bitter words. . bo be waited until the rest of the boarders had left the room ; then he turned to her: "For Heaven's auke tell me what you e Hrni I Whose heart is broken, and what have I to ao with it 7 "Your manner beems to connect me with Alias Lelaud's illness; but as Heaven is my witness, I would wulingiy .a luiva her one pang !" bakes ahve, young man, to you mean to tell me that t . "Why any one with half an eyecould iV?:-..i.i -..tthe world by you; auVyet yol topped off all i U and fet ler pine like picked posy. "You are mistaken, aj th"MeMargery has scarcely spoken to me since the day of the picnic. "Howl have offended her I know notfthe fault does not rest "It may be that some mischief mv ker .SSowtey .can manufacture 9torte out of very btue founon. Let me sea. Tm uJ J wmJSng spinster turned a yeboisi.-hite t ..v, 'saJtes to mercy, young mfi i-m that miaarable being. I va don nothings, interesting only to t ""'"p- i wuat i told her ma. I s-ys." tumiugsuudeulvand confrrmtin; W arre:l. 'Mo yon rfm.mJr l,. ... thu verr room A RAVI ifr irk 4m V .1 1 . , . ' j - -r ' u tv vita that you wasut engage,!, and "di Jn't iiieauiooe.' and than when he lan "bed and said something else, doyou remem ber how you burst ont, 'Jio.air ; it is not so !' "The widow's daughter is too inno cent to flirt with r I just wanted to pu-, tne gin s motlier on her guard, aud I told her. If I've done any harm I'm sorry, and will try to undo it." Warren thought for a moment liefore ue coma recall tne conversation. Then he said sternly : If the precise words of Me w-n.. aud my true answer had been correctly repeated no harm would done, Miss Hynes ; but as usual a half- true version uas been carried ta Miss Margery's ears. "Mr. Wells asked me if 1 was en Raged to Miss Farren, my law-partner's sister, and I answered emphatically, No ; that I Lad not thought of such a thing.' "Then he said, 'How about the re ported flirtation witn the widow's daugh ter' Is it so? ' "And I answered imperativclv iu th negative, and gave my reason for it." "Ten I'm a miserable old creature, and shall be till I make it pirfcrtiy right between you and Door little Mar. gery, ana mat will be before twenty lour Uourt. or mr name's not nli nynes I 1 11 take the emir of hope down to ner una very night. . She kept her word; aud Mtrgery brightened at her explanation, like a drooping flower at the restoration of the sunliyhtaud dew. JJtffore many days she had recovered sninciently to see Warreu. As lie came into the room, a faint color fluttered up into her pale cheeks. one put out her hand. 'I am clad to see vou said aha. Then her sweet childish lips began to qttiver. WitU a sudden uncontrollable impul.se the young man gathers 1 the tender utile tluiig to bis heart. Oh, Maigary," he whispered. fave longed lor you as a man dying ol thirst longs for Uie cooling spring. " w ill you be my wife ? Then I shall be sure ot you ?" The muraiured answer was inaudible. for she had hidden her fiiee niwn his breast ; but Warren was satisfied. He knew that Mar-rery loved him. A f'riucft Wiu.out Nerve. Ii is httie less tlian miraculous thut a man so far udv:inced iu vela's as l'rince CLailrs of 1'rasoia shoul 1 tiad at his c-miii'md reserves of viialitr and recu- perativd force enabliug him t get over so severe on accid.-bt as oefed His Royal Highness Vine weeks ago. We are fclad, howe-vcr, b learn that the re covery cf tuia venerable prince, who entered up m his t2nd year toward thu end ot last June, is now pronounced complete by ha surgical attendants, and that his retoiu from Cassel to Reriiii has been decided upon. It is more than probable that tae resolution and seU-coutrol of which l'rince Ch.trles gave so many proofs during bis cany chdd hood uave iu no iueou.d lerable dsgree contributed to pull him through the pam and tedium ot an injury so dim cult to deal with as a fractured thigh. Among the many aucedotvS related ol his sang-froid and steadiness of nerve as a boy is the foiiowiug : On the 20th of Octooer, 1811, the prince being then 10 years and 4 months old, he was din ing at Wuatrau ca.-.Ue with Count Zie teu, the oidy ton of Frederick the Great's renow ned cavalry general. His host was a very ecceu.ric iiersou-invete-rately addicted to practical joking, and ujxju the occasion alluded to Lad pre pared an nnu-sually startling surprise for tue juvenile l'rince. Count Zieten rose during dmiier to propose the health of "the King, aud us the words left Ins lips a whole battery of field-guns, which had been posted just under the dining room windows, was fired off at a volley. Everybody present started, except the l'rince ui uu horn lus host s eyes were steadily fixed. Ooserving with grim satisfaction that the royal lad did not even wink, Zieten turned toward him with the question : "ot afraid of can non, eh, your royal highness T" Poiut ing to the walls of the apartment, lav ish ly adorned with portraits of oiiicers of the famous Zieten hussars the regi ment cf which his son, Frederick Charles, always wears the bcarlet aui- form l'nuee Charles quietly replied : Certain! y not. in such company as this 1" and went on with his dessert as though nothing unusual had been done or saul. Tun are at lalro. The stecial corresijondeut says that when the Kntish forces occupied the citadel of Cairo they found that toi lures had been uiflicted upon prisoners mat were horrible in their barbarity, re minding one of the old Iuqiusition period. Tlio prisoners had been beaten and racked if they could not pay money; they had been hanged up by the tuumos, by the ankles, by straps around their waists ; that their bodies had been bared, the skin over the hips and legs tightened by a coutrivance so ingenious that only a fiend inspired by batan could have devised it, aud then the lash applied, oue man making an upward blow alter nately with the downward cut of another until at last the flesh in pieces was lifted troin the quivering victim. Then, too, the bastinado, moct horrible of all pun ishment, was used. I saw prisoners who could not walk", and whose feet weie biniplv lumps of discolored flesh. Others I saw and talked to who had been flayed. Oue, au old man, seemed to be dying. Mad with the agony of Duin he had endured, he dashed away troni his tormeutors, and, running swif dy around the mosque, he jumped thirty feet down the rampart. When he reached Uie bottom he lay a crushed below, and then tuey brought him back and they flogged him again on the limU that were broken aSd on the bones that protrudes! through the flesh. The name of the brute wuo eritrad these atrocities is teuiiemau ZoLb Zini Pacha, a oolonel in the ar Ullery. by birth from Kantarah, by edu c7tiou a soldier, by nature a fiend 7T.T i w-inir discovered all the trheUeVMrZorab Pacha into Krehoe and ordered him to be . , t....- ,,,t heavT irons on "" TheT screwed them SZZ toease bin of the nusenes of rtTvitr. He aid probably b. snow m an Vaw York city has 10,000 official. tiie daroage, I'm afraid 1 The girl must A Plea for Strap. The tnith is that the very rapidity of our life, the wakefulness and wasteful ness of our times, the straiu and driva f all pursuits, make louger periods of sleep necessary for us thsu people Iiy- iug m more quiet countries aud at a slower rate. We get tired enough if we are well, an I U we dt-n t get tired enough to sleep all over and clear tur.iujih, it is a sign of nervous disorder. Sleeping is something more than a lux ury for Americana, though the very op posite would be inferred from our habits. There is no way by which the wear aud tear, the drain and strain of American life can be neutralized but by large feasts of sleep every now and then, aud a generous allowance every twenty -four hours. Four hours work of a man who is thoroughly awake and vitalized, at the top of his fucilitis, are worth more for all practical business or literary or social purpo ea fhan fourteen hours of weary muscles aud iaJe.l nerves and flaccid impvlses. The m;m at his best is worth 100 jvr cent, more than the same man fatigued, depressed and de moralize L If hd h is no vital elec tricity playing through him, he is a weariuess to otliersjuid a burden to his own soul, if he is conscious of having oue. And to keep at this top condition of fibie atid faculty, he nrist le a good deeper and sleeping well. hen Mr. Uecher was a.sk -.-d how he managed to keep his coureir atiou so wide awake at a second sorviee, he replied: "iJy takiug a big doe of sleep iu tLe afternoon. L is nly sleep that keei my congre gation awake." TUe time given to sleep is not so much loss of lite, but so much guiue.l, and at a dvuhlv enhan ced valuation. It is easy to say "sleep much and well ;" but th: to are many people who cannot s et p much, aud the httle sleep tliey do get is disturbed and uurestful How to bleep is a question widen, in some instances, it nixes the skill of phy sicians to the utmost to answer. Per sons atllicted with insouiuta are often great sufferers, and their lives are short ened by the disease. There are persons who require much less sleep than others, aud it is useless for them to wo-j solt slumbers to their pillow, for they will not come. A peculiarity of consti tution ih not disease and sl oulJ not be doctored. With the majority of people sleep is regulated by habit, conveienc-j, wliiin. Tuey make it yb-ld to every consideration. People who wonld not ouut a meal on any account will throw away half their allowance of sleep for the merest triflj. They do not feel the importance of civiu'7 the system its fill of unconscious refreshing, and hire eu tcrtainers to clip on two or three hours from tine needed restorative in the even ing, and set au alarm clock to cuf away au hour t.r mere at daybreak. They seem to think tliey can s eal from s!e.-p with impunity, viheuitis prettv much tue only thing that punn-hes every pil f i ror of it as he poes along. Others destroy the possil.iii 'y of sleeping well by carrying all their cares aud trow Dies audgihfsand ambitions to bed wiih them, aud oue might as well seek rest ou a rack as wiih such bedfellows, 'i'hj ability to lay c fl' cares and peqilexities, bke one s clothes, aud daniu-s every -thi ig t:iat can excite the brain or uis turn the emotions, ni ly be gained bv coiiti mons cffjrt tven wh- u it is lct. Tbe Iiaafcii4 SHarfc. The shark-fishing of earlier duvs ia New EngUnd was a not unimportant in dustry. Then the great basking share, titorhitiui, was the chief game, and so closely were they followed that they were neany driven lrom the JLune coast, rarely being seen here at present One of the principal places for the fish ery was at Province town, Cai Cod. Here it was know n as the bowe, or bask ing shark. Captain Atwood had met with only three specimens, one of which had drilt.il ashore in a state of decom position. A fisherman visited the lat ter for the puriKtse of procuring a, slice for his heus, as is the custom at Pro vince-town, KTipposiu.; it to lc a dead wmde. Ascertaining what the animal was, he removed tbe liver and sold the oil (five or six barrels) in Roston for $lt)3. In 1S4S quite a unrulier of these sharks were met with off Cape Eliza beth, near the coast of Maine, and several were secured. A tradition ex ists among the eastern fishermen that aliout one hundred years ago the bask ing shark was taken in considerable numbers tor the oil. In btorer s pic ture of tiiis fish the features are very singular and striking. The nose is blunt, ihe gill opeuinga exceedingly long, occupying nearly the whole depth of the shoulders, and the tail is large aud curiously wmg'.sl at the extremity. Jarre 1 figures this fish, and says that it is called sunfish on the elsh ana Irish coasts, from the fact that it lies on the surface of the water, nearly motion less in the suu for a considerable length ot time. This writer says that tae lar gest specimen he has seen was taken ofl iinchton, and measured thirty-six feet m length. The term saillish is derived from the feet that the creature swims listlessly along the surface, exposing its dotsal tin like a sail above water. In Orkney it is called Jloe-mothcr, and by contraction Hunter that is, the mother of the picked dog-fish, which is there called yoc. Oue of the largest ot these fishes was captured some time ago on the Georges Ranks. It measured seventy feet in length, and wheu partly hoisted auoard the schooner, that was sixty lee t long, it burg five feet over each end. ine liver tilled several large barrels. The basking shark affords oc cupation to fishuimeu in ivauy countries. In some part) of Xewlouudhtnd it is harpooned, aud in Iceland there are several permanent fisheries, the spec or blubber being one ot the staples at r is emaea. lttnn a tear years me snara fisheries have greatly increased, aud now extend to Proves. The chief place is at eorkanck. where as many as 350 sharks, all the way from twenty-five to seventy feet long, are brought in every season! The oil is extremely pure, re sis ing the cold, and well adapted for lnbricaaon. briu-iccr a creater pnea at Copenhagen than the finest dacs of sea oil. rT.f atreota. Tlio foliewhiff ia the length cf the seven chief streets, of Pavis in metres Rae des Pyrenees, 3,515 ; Boulevard Saint-Germain, 3.150 ; Avenue Daume- snil, 3,030 ; Rue de Rivoh, 2,9o0 ; Rue Lafayette. 2,789 ; Rjulovard x'ereire, 2 540 -.Avenue des Trocadero, 2.410. The shortest street is situated in tne i.artof the citv near the Bourse. It is the Rue Brognari, 23 metres long, with only one house fronting upon it A Auwitimua Lt'r. A dav or two ago a widow ciiled the policeman on that beat into thd house ana uilorrned lam that she bad a very serious case on hand. Sonie one had writ ten her an anonymous letter, and she wanted the officer to trace out the guilty I arty if it look him until January, lf2. "What was in the letter?" he aj-kel "I will read it. It liegius : 'My dear friend," and goes on to say that the writer has fallen in love with my read cheeks, flparrlmg eyes and dimpled rtiin." "He must lie a bliudmau," blunt! oosmrvea tne oincer. "i da t see auy red cheeks or dimples. "Perhaps you don't, sir," she coldlv replied, "Lut I will read further. H says that my image is constantly liefore his eyes, aud that I am the subject of his dreams." "Well, that's all right," said Uie offi ec-r, "unless he lets the image bother his eyes when a butcher-cart is aroun.L He is evidently mashed." "And further down he savs that the siillitof getting off fie street car sends a thnll through his whole svstem. "Very likely, madam that is, if you catch your foot and sprawl on the ground. I think I knoiv tiie old Coon who wrote that letter." "Old coon!" "Yes, an old cojtish tiotrn here who has had three wives and seventeen chil dren." "Sir ! how Jare yon imagine that he would write to me?" "And I'll see that he is arrested." "No, you won t ! I warn you not to interfere in this case in any manner." "Rut I thought you wanted the guilty punished ?" "Who said I did? I simply wanted yon to trace it oat and give mo the name of the writer." " Sj that you could prosecute him ?" "Xo, Sir ! I wauted to know if he was in earnest, and if he was -you see you know I would " " Y'ou'd write him that if his condnct was repeated you'd appeal to the law ?' "I think you needn't bother with the ca.se ar ail ! sue remarked, as she swal lowed a lump in her throat. "You don't soem that is you appear that is. good day, sir !" "And wh it s'le wanted of me," said the officer as he we'it back to his beat, wis to assure her th'it soma one rea'ly wroto t'le letter in earnest, and that he probablv me:uit all he said. Once snr: of that sli! would hive answered it." C4uu!tt!liu la Fiji. It was only jeoplj who had leen kiilcd that were considered good for food. Those who died a natural death were never eaten invalidity buried. Rut it ccrtiiniy is a wonder that the isles were Lot altogether depopulated, owing to tbe Lumber who were kill- d. Thus, in Xameua, iu the year 1801. fifty bodiei were cooked for one feast Aud wheu the men of Ran were at war with Verata they carried off two hnnlred and f-ixty lgJies, seventeen of which were piled tn a c inoa and seut to liewa, where they were received with wild joy, dragged absut thd t-wn and subjected to every species of indignity ere they dually reached the ovi-ns. Thea, too, just thiuk of the number of lives sacri ficed iu a country where iuf inticide was a recoguized institution, and where widows were strangled as a matter of course I Why, on oue occasion, when there had beea a horriblo massacre ol Xamena people at Vina, aud upward of one hundred fishermen had been mur dered, and their bodies carried as oo' oAi to the ovens at Ran, no lens than eighty women were strangled to do honor to the dead, and corpses lay in every direction about the mission station. It is just thirty years since the Rev, John Wataford, writing from here, described how twenty-eight victims had been seized in one dav whde fishing. They were brought here alive, aud only stanned when put into the ovens. Some of the miserable creatures tried to es cape from the scorching bed of red-hot stones, but only to be driven back and buiicd in that living tomb whence they were taken a few hours later to feast their barbarous cantors. He adds that more human beings were eaten on tliis little isle of Lau than anywhere else in Fiji. It is very hard, indeed, to real ize that tbe peaceful village on which I am now looking has really lieea the scene of such horrors as these, and that many of the gentle, kindly people aronn J me have actually taken part iu them. Fuol tor Invalid Soidivi. Sol long ago. dining the absence of the E.Dperor, ao tnglteh visitor wi shown through one of the imperial castles near Berlin, lie looked upon every! rung wi;b the most utter Uockney supercihoiisoes, until, ssy the ftory-lellers, be came acro-s a collection of walking sticks, when one of these, a sturdy piece of hickory, quite cap tivated his fancy. Long and longingly be gtzed upon it and handled it, nor did bis admiration decrease when his guide, the steward's daughter, informed bim that it had been cut from the forest ana fashioned tnt shape by the Ejiperx's own baud?. At last however, he was constrained to tear himself away (rotu the object of h:a fancy, but just as he wis leaving the castle his admiration ot the stick blazed forth be yond control, and d. awing a handful o! sovereigns from his pocket he injmated to bis fair guide that by so much she wo.eu become richer it she would allow h'vn to hear away the coveted cane. Of course she (Dumed the temptation indignantly. ami he wentawsy disconsolate. Well, tne iirl told her father about it, and he carried Uie story to the Eoiperor on his return to the castle, a week later. And when Kit- ser Wnhelm heard It, he laughed a right nival lamih and exclaimed : "If tbe fcl'ow bad offered me to much good gold for the stick, I would have taken it and turned it into the fund for the invalid soldiers." Ex-Governor Stone, ot Mississippi, owns a boot and shoe store st luka. . ?frwtnnl!awt Fog. Next to its dogs, Newfoundland's f:i:ne rests on its fogs. The Arctic current, driving southward and along the coast, meets the Gulf Stream and con. lenses the warmer vapors, just as a glass of ice-water gathers drops. The mists comparatively seldom penetrate inlaud, but in 5ne direction or another they hang around the island with a weird darkness like that of smoke, aud closing in a "tea turu" they call it here make navigation ou the cruel coast as dangerous as ou any waters of the globe. Hundreds of stout ships have steered to wreck in the mists ou the rock-rib-lied shores, and a winter's journey to St John's is more perilous than a trip to Europe, the AllaD steamships some times using eleven days for the 5(0 miles from Halifax to St John's. A spot tiaditional with disaster is "Mis taken Point," a little west of Cape Race, so called becanse of the dithciilty of distinguishing it in the fog from the cape itself. Here, within a few days of each other, the steamships Washington and Croin well, iu 1S77, ran ashore and were lost, with some seventy lives, not sold escaping. From the heights above the fishermen saw corpses aud wreckage churning against the lower cliffs, but only two bodies were secured by an adventurous seaman, who went down the face of the rocks by a rope. Internally, as a whole xcept, per haps, in ti e track yet to be penetrated by the railroad Newfoundland is an unpromisiug region a laud of continu ous rock, here aud there covered with boggy wastes, and with vast areas where old firs, killing the low firs, have left wastes of dead trees that tire the eye with their monotony aud expanse. The summers are brief and moderab-ly warm, the springs marked by a mar vellously sudden burst of vegetation, the winters about as cold as those of New England, and attended by deep snowfalls. Along some of the roads are seen now lines of sbtkes as tad as small telegriq)1! poles, placed at short iuter- aL, to mark out thd winter path. The Vermont toll-house keeper who, after the Li snowfall, put out the not is.?. Toll taken at the second story wiiulu after the next storai please drop the liange down the chimney," wouid have found a raie field for his dr jllery on these scull-Arctic winter roads. New foundlaud has lakes without nnmber, some of tiicui six'y miles long, and teeming with trout She has wilderness here game are abundant; she raises fiue vegetables, and she, lat j iu Auut, placed fresh strawberries on our table. But as yet she yields to commerce little except copper, ore, seals, and codfish. r people, as a rule, are so backward as almost to be archaic, and here, at St Johns, the watchmen from ten o'clock to daylight call the hours. Exclti bug the ailedged hotels at St Johns, the country still licks essentially triose pnme elf meats of civilization, a el -a i bed aud "square" meal. Marshal t'aiu-obwrl'a Huuianre. Marshal Canrobert Inhabits a small hotel in the Rue de Marignnn. Like most French soldiers he is careless of luxury, and busies himself but little about thj fine arts. The first thin;; that strikes one ou entering is a httie perambulator hidden away under thu staircafe; the walls are covered with the most modern engravings, water-color sketches aud photographs, which do not speak well for the uiarstml's taste in lea beaux arts. Aud now I would ssy a few words of Madame le Marecnale. At the close of the Crimean campaign, oue evening at a reception held at the mimstere des nuances, as Marshal Canrobert entered the saloti, a young lady, whose remarka ble beauty was not a httle enhanced by her simple dre-s ot plum white tulie. came with shy boidu-aa up to the hero aud said: "Monsieur le marchale will do with me as he did witn the Russians, aud make me dance." You forget, mademoiselle, that there is an aroiistice now. 'And a free pardon and amiu-stv for my boldness, 1 hojie?" ithout replying, the man.kal offered the young lauy his ar-u, aud, bringing her up to a young othcer who hapjeneM to be standing near, said: "lenez, Monsieur! Dance this qua drille with mademoiselle, and bear iu mind that to-night a marshal of I ranee envies a 8ub-hetUcua.it!" Before many years hail passed the voung and beautiful Miss Flora Muc- donald, who had aspired to dance witu the coadjutor of Marshal Pehssier, had become Madame 1 1 Marechal Canrotiert. After having waited a few moments in the salon above mentioned, a servant announces that M. le Marechale is ready to receive you, and, mounting to the secoud flour you are ushered into the prcsei.ee of the old warrior in his Ueu a sini le room, without any oruamujl but htiered with bool.s bearing ou mill tary matters, newspapers, matisetc. etc. Marshal Canrobert is alout seven ty, and of medium height. His fcray hair is very curly, aud the easembie ol Lis lace is uust agreeable, the foreuead being l igu aud intellectual, aud the glance lrm his eyes kind but keen. brilliant ana penetrating, ilia carriage is stern and resolute, but tbe back is a httle bowed, and the head inclined to one side when the marshal speaks. Thu tone of hia voice is splendid; it nugs. and the slight southern accent lends an irresistible charm to the bold, frank, soldierly words of greeting witn wincu vou are made welcome. A Lars Wall. The Chinese wall is the largest wall ia the world. It was built by the first Emperor of the Tain dynasty, about 220 B. C, as a protection against Tartars. It traverses the northern boundary of China, and ia carried over the highea hills, through the deepest valleys, across rivers and every other natural obstacle. Its length is 1250 miles. Including a parapet of five feet, tbe total height of the wall is 20 feet, thickness at the base 25 feet, and at the top IS feet Towers or bastions occur at intervils of about 100 yards. I Thrifty Farmiur. A great deal of the work in the newer farming distric's is done by men of t mall means, who often have not finished paying for their land. Sometimes they complain that it is hard to gel ah, a-1, i.nd is true indeed that many draw- bucks exist which it is hard to overcome. No matter if the crop fails the family must be supported, the ordiuary ex lnses borne, aud the taxes and interest provided for. All this, however, being admitted, the agricultural truth remains that failure of tenest comes fiom waut of care and economy, want of olservatiou, nd want of energy, or stated as a whole, thnfriness. Of no industry on earth can it be more truly said that "a penny saved is a penny gained." Yet there is no icdustry snhjeet (o so mich waste as this, none that needs more care to pre vent leaks, and few that receive less. A firm rightly considered is a network of industries, a vjst combination of ma chines. Xc thing must be allowed to go to waste. Indeed, this seems absolutely unnecessary with the varied opportuni ties of diqiosing of all that is useful and using all refuse as a fertilizer. But this is not half the story. It needs every energy to develop the cajmeity of th soil to receive fertilizers, to assimilate them, and to give them forth again in bountiful crojMi. He must le-im how to cultivate the soil, how to dram it. When the soil and c'imate will produce thirty bushel per acre, why raise half that quantity? When sixty bushels of corn can be raised per acie why raise only thirty ? On laud that can be made to produce two tons of hay why be souteut with oue ? If it bo lack of fertilization apply that U be obtained to half the laud. If it be for lack of Libor to give proper cultivation, far better to work half the laid and let the balauce grow what it will, tc be fed off by the stock. The new farms may net be fitted for high f;a-uiing, but good farming can be everywhere applied. There is no n.d of raising two head of cattlo to produce the same meat that cau easily be grown in one, nor of feeding two sheep to pro duce wool that oue can easily grow. Nor is this a complete statement of the manner in which success is wrought out by the toiler. The farmer, all other things Wing eq ud, who is most accus tomed to studying crotis elsewhere, re ports, sti. titties, methods of farming and all that, wiil gather the greatest profit from Iils investment and labor. When everybody is piautitig a certain crop he will not hasten to enlarge his acreage of that crop. Wueu ;iy crop is a drugou the market he wi 1 not hasten to igu-tre its cultivation the following year. Farmers more thau any oih ir el iss of people may live well at a little expendi ture of cash. O i a thriftv 1 irin nearly all that is eaten can bj produc.s.1 on the farm. Iu con-ideratiou of the fact that a Urge proportion of the go xl thi igs of life iu the food line van be aud are growu ou the soil of our own climate, it iy. b.. meid ible to sec how poorly supplied are mail y farmer's tables with these same articles. Theie c in e au endless rouud of fan ts ml vegetable i for the whole three htiudied and sixty-five days of the year. Ihe whole list o: graius and meat can le h .id, all of the best i dity aud a cost price, no middle-man's commission or retailer's profi", a.l-le 1. It is true tuat the lackol rea.ly moue-y often prevents farm improvements. Money could le used to g'od advantage if onlv mouev could be had. Ealtor is dly, and ou new farms it dx-s not bring rea ly returns, while most of it gaes iut-i capital only in the way of jor ruaueut improvements. Hand labor es pecially is expensive and slow, and the tardier must as wxu us jKjKsiole avail himself ol ad the help attainable iu the way of machines aud mechanical helps. in newer neighborhoods tanners c.n club together for purchase of stock or implements otuerwise quite beyond their reach. Thev can buy mowers, harvest ers, seed drills, ditcners, dredjicrs.ievee bunders aud many other useful and la bor saving implements ; always remem bering that the occasions are few wheu it wnl pay to run iu debt for any of these. Pay day always comes and the eMMt'tutioiis oiteu full short. 1h9 Pna Treat? Ground. Close to the Delaware River, near where Beach and 11 mover streets, Puiladelphia, mterseet, there sto-xl the great elm beneath which the treaty between Penu and the I u liana was signed. It require some nice calcula tion, tit this late day, to locate the exact spot upon which the famous elm tood. due monument which com memorates the great treaty stauds upon a piece of ground which divides the premises of a coal merchant from Bjach street. The ground iiikju which this mouuuient has been erected is hie prop erty of a Mr. Vaudusen, and the city occupies it by nis jiermissiou. the monument is many yards from tne spot where thd historic elm stood, and tiie double elm which grows beside it is but a growth from a sucker cut from the parent tree and planted sixty years ago five years belore tho Penu Society erected its marble memorial obelisk, the inscription upon which cm scarcely be read. Initials are carve-l all over it, and the dilapidated feiicd parity sur rounding it is in a fair wav to fall to piece. Rebe hunters have had their own woy so long that the moumueut folks as II it might have had au attack o o i ar le smallpox. The fences about it are decorated with the advertiseuiente of quack mediciues, unappreciated jour nals and theatre attractions. Every tidug about presents a most uuinviiiag picture, decorated with drinking saloons, orachiue shops and h very sti'bies. The ground upon which it stands is not even t'ae property of the society, and it 1 may be removed at any time. The in scriptions upou the oOeliak are as fol lows; ou the front: "Treaty Ground of lluaoi 1'enn and the Imiiau Natives, 1C, Unbroken Faith," on the rear: -W illiam Penu, born Joii, died 171H;" on the left: "Placed by the Peun Society, A. 1. 1827, to mark the site ol trie Great Enn Tree;" aud on the right: "Pennsylvania Founded, lt'Sl, l.v Dveds of Peace." NEWS L liKIKr The E iglish dutv ou tobacco amounts to some 1,000,000 a year. Egvpt loses 33-V).no..).000 br the war, of which -jKt),U0vl,0o) is in cotton. The n n. J. Pr x?t rK aott issiowlv recovering tro a s- vere attack of m laria. Bret H irte will soon have "The Luck of Rouring Can p" ready fur the stage. The capacity of theice-housesalonir tbo Hudsou River is more than 1 0oX.- ions. At least twee ty -one post-office towns in the Ceiutl S-at's lear th. name of trjirfild. Mr. Kussel, of B.iti Run fame, re ceives a pension of a year from the London 'J'iint. Sixty thousand acres of Sorthwjc tern Iowa laud are said to lie owned br oue Chicago Bim. Illinois h.ia over 3.0 K),I) X people and 11,000 liquor saloons and average of 272 to each sal jou. The d m ai d for houses is largely ahead of the snppty iu ail tue towns of Northwester.l Iowa- Palestine, Tixis, r.iises apples eighteen ine'hes iu ciicumferei.ee aud weighing tweuty-two ounces. Improvements of th value of 8: K) have bjeu undo iu Little Kick, Ark., during the presjut year. One Daveuport (Iowa) cL'ar manu facturer employs over 2i'J persons a id turns out about &RJ.0 10 ik.t mouth. Great Britain has now loUMX) S-m- day scaool teuperance organizations, witu more than l.OUO.UOO members. There are in the United States and Canada 77o Young Men's CUrutiaa as- sociatious, nuiubrmg y',375 uieailters. Henry M. Slauely, the Airieau ex plorer, is at Lisbou, from wheuce h. will proceed to Brussels t visit the king. A Loinlou lunatic fasted 21 days, and then died, while food'w.ts beiag f . -reed down his throat, of excite.ueut an 1 ex haustion. The t-pleudid oyster i ol th- newly discovered North S- a beds of ab-iudred square miles lio iu wat-r ov-jr t-veutv fathoms deep. The consumption of tobacco in France during the pxst five yeais has averaged 5-1, U )d t us, thnse "the cou sumptiou iu lsJi A leather b H has jilst b.!ea made in Uartfurd, Coan , wnic'i is au inch thick, 3 inches wide, aua li"i feet long, and weighs !,!) I pouu.ls. There are- ia Lnckiio.v aud Cawu pore. luilia, 1 publishing houses en gaged pnn.-ipally iu w-vUug auti-Caris-tlan books, tr.iets, and pcriovlieal.s. A iiioveoieut is afoot in Brazil and Portugal ior the erection of a monu ment to Pedro Alvirez Cabral. til.) dis co .-rer e-f the foruii-r country. Since the fi.t od well was om-ued in 1:M the product of the wells has ad de l fcl.iVM.OoO o(l,i to the weal.u of tu L'uite.l Slates 1:1 th- valu.- ol the criliL oil aud its products. Tb'i late blguor Ptsoualc Fa vale. of Naples, lelt leu thousand francs to cllJ 1,1 Roudou, to foi oi a fuud trota hlcu luarmige p-ntieusof 3J0 ira-s each are to be paid t girls betweci the agts ol sixteen au 1 tweuty-Uvj. It is pr.-tty woll settled that a healthy man who lives to Le 70 years of age, iu hts life eats 7,W i-ouu Is of meat, 72 barrels of llour, 1.5JJ (touuds of butter, ys; d zeu egs, MJ puunda of ciieeM:, lo-t bushels ol potato, ami 1,70.1 poll!.-is of lard. John Fiimel, ;f Teiiama cotiLtv, California, owns a ranch containing lo, acres. He recently l-;ased a ranch in Coliua coii.ity containing 2tR),iH)i acres. The two ranches bonier on tho Sucrauieiito river fr thirty-two miles. Arizona lias 111 post offices. Fol lowing are some of tho principal, with the sa aries attached : Tombs toue, S'J, x) ; Tucson, f2,sV; Presort t, 32.1iM ; Pl.oijix, S!,7iJ, uud Giooe, gl,3. It ls estimate i in it thy Sjuta his this seasou pu.l to the North $rJ,0lKJ, IH for wheat g.J,tMl,MU lor corn. 72,001 ,0l)J for moats, an-1 abjtit 825, OtMl.lH") lor hay, butier, chee-e, oats, ai'ples, potatoes, etc. '1 he vineyards of the Los Angeles district, Cid., are la-l.-u with unprece dented stores of giajK;s lhisye;ir. The crop is estimate'! ut over 75,OX,lH)i pouu.ls. or 37,5U0 tons. Tue.se are worth lieariy Sl.iAH l.tXW. A New Mexico papier r.-p-jrhi that recently a large a route fell near Piaoa Altos, crushing several trees, aud that a Mexican who saw it reported that a piece of the uioou had lalieU. TUe skeleton of a large m tstodon has just lieeu unearthed up;u the farm of Joseph Mitch-.1I, neir I'arw, Ky., but nearly ail tue bones crumhlea upou In'lilg exported t the air. Before leaving Russia for Central Asia General lcheruaiulf m xl a pil grnnagd to thj tomb of Skolmlcff, aud placed a'ova it a superb silver itnagv of Saint Mijha 1, the dea 1 chieftain's patron saiut lu life thd two generals were rivals, but, wrtual, Kteat adiurers of each otuer. A clergymen out in Iowa City pro tecta hia ponltiy yard against tuieves with a cordon of bjehives. A marauder cuauot enter the yard at Dight withoni upHL-ttlug a hive, an I then tbe pion, paison lies stiil and laughs at tn r sound of wil l yelis gradually dyiug away iu the distance. Father Peter Joha Bockx, the Gen eral of the Order oi Jesuits, is now in his eighty seVdUth, year, and uu decli ning health has of late given rise b much speculation couceruing his proba ble successor. He bai beeu at the heal of the Ooder for nearly thirty year. The number of acres disposd of ao der the homestead an 1 timber acts the fiscal year of lHSi was almost 5.UX),0(1U ia excess of thosd for In the western states thd number of acres was 9 2)5,317; in the southern states, 2, 52,87, sua in the t -rritorirs, 5,JJ.- Gene-ral Sir Edwia Beauaont John sou. K. C. B., who we r medals and clasps for thd tSutlej and Punjab cam paigns, as well as lor the sieges aud capture of lAdhi aud Rucknow iu ail of which he saw active service and who was lately a member of the Conn ed of the Governor General of India, arrival iu Ne York, a day or two ag, by the Suvi. Ya 5t 17 V' ' i w- - (l "I r i I i'e HI u n i v