unit mm - is ill B,F. SCHWEIER, ' . THE C0S8TITUTI0I-THE OTIOI-AffD TZE ETTOSOEMEHT OP THE LATB. Editor and Proprietor. . . VOL. XXXVII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PEXXA.. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 17. 1SS3. NO. 3. - . . - - - - - . . Ol.n TIM Eh. There's a neaanful gong on the slumbrous air Tout clrilli thruuiti the valley of dreams; It comes fr tio a cilme where the rosea were, AD'I a itinera: heart, and brijrnt brown hair Tbat wares In the morning beams. Soft ejea of azure, an I ejeg of brown. And saw-whitt foretieacls are ibere. A glimmering cross anil a guttering crown. A tDornj bed and a couch of down. Lost hopes and leaflets of pray r. A rofrT leaf and a dimpled han't, A ring a l a p ifrotcd tow ; Tiiree r!den rings on a broken hand, A tny track on the t-n iw white eaad, A tear and sinless brow. Ttiere'i a tincture of grief In the beautiful snng That sobs on the su.niner air. And loneliness fe,t In the fective thronj Sit Is down in the audi a II trembles ang from a clinic where the rose-, are. We heard It Bret at the dawn of dar. And it minifies with matin cliitiiea; I'.ut rears hsre itl--tam.l the beautiful lay. And its luelodr Boweth so swiftly away, And we call It now "Old Times." THE lEIFOFIKRiMlH. It is very Btnuipe, when we come to tluiik of it, on what small cogs and piv ts the -wheels of fate ruu, aud what a slight jnr w ill do towards changing the whole machinery ami apt it to rim. liiug in au entirely different direction. I It was a geranium leaf that altered tl;e whole course of ray life. But for the trivial 1 f picked by a yui:g girl iu a thcopLtliSb mord f bhcu'd not te sit ting litre to-day in thih pleasant dining room. w litre the bun cunes in through the vine-wreathed Trinrfows rnd falls upon the geianinm pots inside ; and this littie girl would cot be upon my knee, i.cr yomhr red-checked midden cn the veiaielah with young Smithtrs ; and neither wonld that very handsome nmtri n who just passed u;to the prxlor nave been m her present situation. Ji yon will listen an hour or so, will tell yon my story. It was past twenty years ago this summer that I married Carrie Dean. She was twenty one and I was twenty-seven both old econeh to know what we meant and what we were about at least 1 was. but Came was such a coquette that I used to think the had no mind of her own. Un, but she wan lovely I All rose colored and white and brown tressed, and pearly teethed, with the roundest. plumpest figure, as gran ful as a fairy in tvdry movement, ana with beautiful, shapely hands that were a constant de light to the eyes. I was just home from college and she was on a visit to my stepmother, her aunt, and my half sister Lilia, and her cou-in. I huve f een a good many girls ia my seven years at college, and some of the belles of the land ; but I had never yet had my heart stirred by any woman's eyes as Carrie Dean stirred it when my eyes met tiers in greeting ; and the touch of her f oft fingers completely set me afloat on tht sea of love. 1 was her slave fioui that hour cot her clave, either, but her passionate lover and worship er. And of course she knew it, and of course, liemg a finished coquette, she queened it over me right royally. Tliere was Fred Town, the country physician, and Tom D. l:tiu, the hand some otijff furnier, both as badlv oil as 1 was ; rud a pietty time we had of it. Fied and I old ciiunus in forcei days were at swordj' points now, and hated each other splendidly for a lew weel s. And Tom I held in the ntmit oon tempt, and railed at them both Leu ever oi ioit unity presented itself, for Carrie's edification, after the manner of men, and was repaid by seeing hei bestotr her sweetest binilea and glances ui.on them the next tune they met. Fred drove a splendid t-pau ot bays, and almost every day they dashed up the aeuue, ana dashed out a&ain wilh Miss Carrie's added weight. And Tom was on hand nearly every evi ning, and she was just as bwcet to one as the o'.lier, and just tlio same to me ; and that, was what maddened me. I was cot to be satisfied with a "widow's third" by any means, and 1 told htr so at last, and asked her how thb matter was to be settled. "Hove you better than those brain less fops kr.ow l ovr to love," I said, hotly ; "and cow decide between us." Hue liad listened to my love confes sion with blushing cheeks aud down cast eyes; but when i eiud this she turned uehantly on me. "Ttiey are no more lops than yon are," sne said, -even if tney have not sient seveu yeais in college Tuey are gentlemen and I can't say tuat lor every man ot my tcfjaaiiitancj." .nd here she snut tiie door between us witn a slam and left me to my pleas ant nieditauons, una half an hour Intel Iniit her at the gate w ith Fred, going out lor a ride, liicli was very (grava twg, 1 must oouIk&s. i thought over my conduct that night, and concluded that 1 had been a brute. Tiie next morning I louud Carrie at the duong-room winuow alone and bought her side. tSue had her hand among the leaves of a sweet-sceuted geranium, anu just as I approached she plucked a leal and twined it ami eg her braids, ire member how bright and green it looked among the dar. iockn. Carne," 1 began, "I fear I was very rude yesterday." I know you were," sue baid. looking lcdillcrently out of tue widow. Tins was a bud beginning, but I went on : "Bat, Carrie, I love youso, and when I see you with that Freu " But here Miss Carrie turned on her heel. "I am not going to listen to you while jou blander my friends," she said. "When you can 8ea; respect fully of llr. Town, 1 will return ;" and here she lett me again. 1 Kit the h juse then, and did not re . turn tiil alternoon. As 1 come up the path 1 met Tom Delano. Poor leiiow, he looked like the last rot-e of bU miner after a raiu. "Ciood-bye," he said, gloomily ; 'Tm going away. She has sent ine od, and I con t stay in the place. 1 hop you are the happy one 1 do, honestly, Ah bue said her heart was given to another, and it's either you or Fied. I hoe it is you, and God bless you !" ilere Tom dashed away and left me etaruig alter him ia amazement. Given her heart to another I" I re peated, with a pain in my chest some where, "Well, it is evident that I am not the other, and that Fred is. Foor Tom poor me i Tue best thing I can do is to fo.iow suit aud leave too. 1 can never bee her the wife of another, and the sooner I am off the better." go I went moodily up to my room and packed a satchel, and got all things in rv ad in ess for a speedy departure. On my way up I met Carrie jn emergit g from her room, arrayed in Iter jaunty rldiug habit, and I could hear Fred's dep tones shouting "Whoa!' dowu in the yard below- I watched her trip down the stairs and out of sight, thinking that it was the last time I should see her for years, perhaps forever. When I bad strapped the last buckle on my satel el aud all was in readiness, I went dowu to say good bye to father, mother aud Lu'a! LiUn Van not in doors, aud my parents looked at me in amazem nt, "But, Alien, my son," pleaded father, "I had thought you would enter into business with me. There is a grand opening for yon, and I have held the position in reserve." "I thank you for all that, bat I want to travel a year or two before going in to "onsiues." was all I could answer ; and iny father gave up iu despair. iailiawas f-U 1 al-sent ; hut it was quite dark, and the tram wonld leave iu halt an hour, bo I kit a "good-by lor her, and pawed out into the had. It was a long, narrow hall, reaching the whole length f the l. crave, and ith several rooms opening into it ; bat an yet it was uxilu-htod and as daik as About haif-way through it I beard the street door open arid shut, and ! lli'illi.-lit lutuv nil. fnll oi.ki ii.t . .,. r moment later ran fall against some one enteimg. It is liilia," I thi uglit, and reaching out my arms caught her between thein. -I it you, Idlla ?" 1 said. But she did not answer, only twined her two arms about my neck. "Why, little sitter," I said softly, "do you love me o much?" F. r Ljila was cot demonstrative as a Usual thing, and I was surprised at her movement. "On, better than all the world beside, Allen 1" she said in a whisper. Aud then, as I lifted the face to ay lil, the sweet odor of geranium per fumed the air, and my heart gave a great leap. It was Carrie, not Lilla, whom I held in my arms 1 bhe was trying to disengage herself cow, but 1 suddenly caught her liht form iu my two stout arms, and, open ing the horary uoor, I carried hr into tue bril lunuy lighted room. H t face was hot with blushes cow, and her eyes lull oi tears. l"ou are too bad," she sobbed, "and I hate you !" But putt then she noticed my travel ling a Hire aud paused abruptly. Why, where are you going?" she asked with interest. T w as going aay, never to return " I answered : "Lut since vou said what you did in the lntli I have changed my miud. Crrie pouted. 1 was omy speaking for Lilla." ''Then I shall go, shall L aud leave you to marry Fred ?" "1 detest r led, she oriea. "And you love me better than all the world r lea." So tuat flirt was conquered at last aud I was the victor. But how did you know it was not Billa?" she asbed as we sat together. "L-j the geranium, leal tbat I saw you put iu your nair this morumtr." "Anu out l r that you would have tone ay and not come back lory eas?" "Ics, perhaps nt Ver come lmCK, but for that ted-tale leaf." Then we whl keep this leaf ajways," she said , taking it Horn her hair. Ana so we .ive. 1 procured a gold eu box, and lucre it is to day oue ot our dearest treasures. OI coutse 1 married Carrie, and of couioe that bioonuug matron is Che. Tom Delano did not uie of a broken heart, but married a lovely girl out West a lew months alter his departure; and Fred Twu is our laiuily physiciau and has a pre.ty wife of Lis own. An Auurr Iree. A gentleman of Virginia has a tree hicli is a species of acacia. It was grown from a seed brought from Aus irulia. The tree is now a sappling Borne eight feet in height, and it is in ul' foliage, au 1 growing rapidly. It is leguminous, and very distinctly shows the characteristics of the mimosa, or sensitive plant, Rjgu'arly every even' ing, about the time the "chickens go to roost," the tree goes to roost. The leaves fold together, and the ends of the tender twigs coil themselves np like the tail of a well-conditioned pig. After oue of the twigs had been stroked or handled, the leavts move uneasily, and are in a sort of mild commotion for a minute or more. All this was known about the tree, but it was only yesterday that it was discov ered that the tree had in it much more lile and feeling than it hod erer before been credited with. The tree being iu quite a small pot, one which it was fast outgrowing it wan thought best to give it oue of much larger size. Yes terday afternoon the tree was trans ferred to its new quart jm. It resented the operation of its removal to the best of its ability. Arriving at Lis residence about the time the tree had been transplanted, the gentleman fonnd the house in grand commotion. On asking what was up he was told that they had trans planted the tree according to orders, and the operation tad "made it Very mad." Hardly had it been placed in its new quarters before the leaves began to stand up in all directions like the hair on the tail of an angry cat, and soon the whole plant was in a quiver. This could have been endured, but at the sauie time it gave out an odor mot t pungetit and sickening just such a smell as is given off by rattlesnakes and many other kinds of snakes in summer when teiaed. The odor so filled the house and was bo sickening that it was found necessary to open the doors and windows. It was folly an hour before the plant calmed down aud folded its leaves in peace. It wonld probably not have given np the fight then La I it not been that iU time for going to roost had Mmved. Count Fitz James, of France, a di rect descendant of Charles It, is keep ing house in Washington. Walts RoniMt Ulsser. Speakiu? ot inm-rious to dinners in VVashiDirton, Presideut Arthur, whose dinner parties will begin soon after ew Year, will uw tue same style of invitation as last year, which was on a large card and read : The President requests the hoior of the company of , at dinner on u Thursday was the usually the day of the week be cbose la-t year for his dinners wtuch was the day nacbineton preferred when President. I have before me, says a writer, copies which I have made from the original invitations of several ' Fresi dents. First, of course, comes oue of General Washington's. This 1 have copied from one in the possession of Mr. J. C t. Kennedy, whose grandfather, Maj'W El liott, was one of the engineers who laid out this city. The invittiim reads : The President ot the United States and Mrs W astiinTtou leanest tht pleasure of Cumpaay to d;ue on next at 4 o'clock. , 17!). An answer is requested. Mr. FJ.niore, while President, bad one etyje of luvita'ioo oa mile-paper and an other on a large ciriL Sometimes Mrs. Fillmore's name appeared with his and sometimes not. One style was worded : The President requests the . faror of 's company at dinner on Thursday next at 6 o'clock. An answer is refr-ectfuHy requested. Another style used by him substituted the word honor fw favor. One of Mr. tlu rhannn's, which JiKl;e black's daughter, (Mrs. Hornsby) has, reads much the same as Mr. Fillmore's: The President requests the houor of -Mi ss Black's company at dinner on Friday January the 8 h, at t o'clock. An early answer is reqi-sled. irencrai urant s runner Invi'ations gen eral y read ''the President and Mrs. Grant request the honor of," etc., but when rhey gave the reception in honor of the ngof the Sandwich Islands, the invitations were worded : lne rresiilent ot tbe uuited Mates re quests tne compmy of at the recep tion in honor ot b:s Majesty, the Kim; ot the Hawaiian lolauc! on Thursday evening Uecemlier lain at o clock. This is tbe o.ilv iuvitation of a Prealdent which I have found, except tbat of Gene ral Washiiigion, where the form "Presi dent of the L nited States'' is used. As Las been mentioned. General Washington invited gue-U to dinner at four o'clock, Mr. Fillmore at live o'clock and Mr. Bu chanan at six o'cl.ick. President Grant's and those of President Hayes were at 7 o'clock, while for all that P.tsmeut Ar thur had last winter half past seven was tbe hour naiued and the dinner usually tegan at elirnt. General Washington's invitations were k-oiuu up in a very flue styie for that era, out he frequently, as I find from the writ ings of his contemporaries, extended vT l.aJ invitations, either in person or through one of his secretaries, to Vifflcial charact ers, members of Ombres, strangers or citi zens ot distinction." John Adams, when consulted ly a.-lii g-on as to rules ot etiquette soon after the r inaugura'ion, recommended this and mud that 'such in vitations should always be extended with out fonnality." ievcr heless it was con sidered during the very fiist vear of Wasi Ington's admini9tra!iin a mark ot his fa vor when any oue received an invitation t ) dine with him and aa intimation thai i be course of a public man bad excited bis displeasure when no suca iuvitation was tendered. For lHstancp. Senator Maclay wrote De ceuibcr 16 lTb'J, tliat Mr. Izir.l gave hi;n "ciear hiuu ot nU lo-s ot character at court and of tbe direct influence of tbe Piesident with members ot Congress," in stanced in exemling invitations to them. iaciay had lost favor lcaU--e he wanted votes by l alloi in the Sena'e on Washing ton's nominations, and Senator Izard told him that all the other sL-oalors had been to dine with the treat niaa. A week later. Washington atieu ied a session of tbe Sen ale in person, accompanied by General Knox, the Secielary of War, to advise with the Senile atiout a treity with In dians, and tbe day of b.s secjnd visit to that tK!y Senator Mttclay was called out by the doorkeeper to speak to Colonel Humphreys, oue of th3 President's house hold, and was by the latter verbal ly invi ted to dinner with the President on the following Thursday at four o'clock, that being Monday. Senator Maclay writes : "1 really was su prised at tbe . invitation, it will be my d:uy to go; however, I wih make no inferences whatever. I am con vinced ail the dinners he can now give or ever could, wdl make no difference in my conduct. "When the dinner occurred the com pany were President aud Mrs. Adams, the Govern' and his wife, Mr. Jay (Ubief Jusiict) and wife, Mr. Dillon and a lady, perhaps his wife, aud Mr. Smith, Basset and Maclgy, Leir and Lewis, the Presi dent awl Mr. Washington sat opposite each other in the ninldle of '.he table, Thu custom Has always ueen followed at a dinner given by a Prlsieent who has s wife, but 1 presume few know how far hack the precedent for It goes. Tne two secretaries, Lear and Lewis, each sat at one end ot the table. It was a great din ner and tbe bent of the kind 1 ever sat at. Tne rixim, however, was disagreeably warm- This wus in Angu C President Arthnr has revolted against following this prece dent, tbcubt it is the general compiaint tbat other host or hsleses here do have their rooms, even in winter, too warm. I beard President Arthur last win'er when giving orders, just heiore one ot his din ners was readv, to open tne windows aud cool the house, lie added, laughingly, ti rniua to another lady and myself: "1 here is an engineer here who has been so ac cuslon ed to overheating the rooms that, having reinoustraU d in vain, I feel tempted to order bim to be slain and his body thrown in fie river. But a man cannot do everything he wants, even if he is President !" To return to Washington's dinner, the writer of the description continues: "First was soup, fish, roa-ied and boiled meats, cr.mmoD, fowls, etc. This was the dinner. The middle of the tab!e was garnished in the usual tasty way wilh small images, flowers (artiflo.al), etc The desert was first appie pies, pudding, etc.; then iced creams, jellies, eir,; thea watermelons, niufk-meloos, apple, nut?. It was tbe most solemn dinner ever I sat at," con tinues Maclay. "Not so health drank, scarcely a word said, nntil the cloth was taken away. Then the President, taking a class ot wine, with great formality drank tbe health ot every individual by name 'round the table. Everybody hxi'ated hiui charged glasses, and eucii a butt of health, fr," and 'heahh, madam,' and thank you, madam,' never bsd beard he roic" "The Indies sat a good while and the bottle parsed about, but there was a dead silence almost. Mis. VYasuington at last withdrew With the ladies. I expected tbe ipn would bemn. but the same sutin- as remained. The Presideut told of a New England clergyman who had lost a hat and He smiled and everybody else laoghed. He now and then said a sentence or two on some common subject, and what he said was not ssniss. The President kept a fork m bis band when the cloth was t-ken away, I thought for the purpose of .pick ing nuts, tie eat no cuts, but played with tbe ferfc, striking on the edge of the table with it. We did not sit long after tbe ladies retired. Tbe President rose, went up stairs to drii k coffee tbe com pany followed. This precedent ws fol lowed at President Arthur's dinners last year. Kancr Artlelaa. Fancy wares, and tha new and pretty things in what may be called secondary jewelry that is small articles in silver and enameled or filigree wares that take fancy forms, are almost uniformly pro duced this season in noma Istiapes of in -J sect or animal lift. Sporting men and women find inkstands, table-lamps, can dle-sticks, pen-racks, paper-weights, watch-stands, table-bells, and many other things, all manufactured from hoofs so finely prepared, and so beau tifully counted with colored metals and silver as to be at once artistic and highly ornamental. One of the hand somest novelties of this description con sists of hoofs forming U e centre to a tripod, the double wax lights of the lamp burning clear under exquisite Venetian glass shades. This lamp cost from $120 to 3200. A new form of pen- rests is a rustic garden seat aiade in olive wood, and furnished with ponhol holders, paper-knife and the like. Scon ces, or candle brackets, are no longer backed with mirrors bnt with brass plaques, chased, or worked in repousse. Brass ornaments are one of the great desiderata; a brass clock aud small candelabra for side-pieces, or portrait plaques oi Rulieus, or Moliere, or Rem brandt, or Schiller for the halL The cost of the first is beyond all but the rich, a fine brass cloct with side-pieces being worth from $250 to $500, but the pLques axe more practicable. Some of a moderate size may be purchased for $25, though the average is $50. The imitations of Benares brass turned out bv machinery, are of course much cheaper, but we are speaking now of genuine hand-wronght articles. Brass burcars, chandeliers and candle-sticks, bra.- fenders and crate fixtures, and brass clocks and plaques revive the burnished glories of the past, but require an amount of labor which the peor have not time to perform, and which the neb only can afford to pay for; so, naturally, the nse is somewhat limited. What is cot brass is plush cow-a- days, and still fashionable are the pitisb coyered frames which amateurs have found so convenient tor exercising their brushes npou. But even here the new craze asserts itself. Instead of apple blossoms, an owl sits in the corner look ing wise, or a small cockatoo is perched upon a rastic branch. The sides of the frames of pictures orsmull beveled mir rors are cot equal, bnt much broader at the foot aud off side than upou the other, and it is upon the eff side that the bird or other decoration is placed. The plush bag, or poucr, has become an institution. The brg is satin-lined and sometimes leather uiouuted; it is more uurably finished than the pouch. and is Carrie i in the hand. The pouch is auspeudeu from the siii. aud forma part of the looping of a dress; it may be of leather, but is often of embroid ered satin or covered with a network oi pearls ver silk. Velvet pouches, with engraved silver clasps aud chute-lame to suspend it from the Bide, are sold as jewelry, and are sometimes eet with precious stones, though nsudly the mounting is of wrought silver only. These cest from $35 to $50, and up ward. Jewelry, unless it is very rich, is now almost whooly coufiued to a fancy laee piu and earrings, to serpen tiue brace lets, and one or two bangle rings. The new pins are simple, but odd. lhe bar is a solid silver pin with enlarged head, which serves as a perch lor a snail, a beetle, tiny bird or a small row of flies, lLcre is a small eonilowcr brooch which is very pretry, with a bee upon it; but these designs are easi ly coarsened and made oommou-louk-mg by being executed in au inferior manner and with very cheap mateiials. A hew fiower series in lace pins has the charm of especial sentiment at tached to each one; as woodbine, friend ship; fern,suicenty; primrose, youthful affections, and periwinkle, rtnicni braoco. The novelties in bracelets are the Ile lene, which is sll-holding, anucofsiats of a flexible cod which tan tens itself to the arm; a shopping bracelet with pennl attached, aud one of woven wire which also coils around the arm, aud takes the place of the serpeut bracelet. Small articles of real ivory, or shell, make charming presents to persons ol refinement who cannot afford such pur chases, and fan never comes amiss to a lady. The three kinds ot tans most approved are the rich feather fans with pearl or tortoise shell, or amber sucks; the fans of clear point lace, with gold wrought sticks, on ivory, pearl or amber; and the fans painted on satin by rent artists and mounted in accoid- ancs with their cost. Slowly Kvcoverius;. "Sir !" cried a well-dressed man, whose face was purple with anger, as he walked up with head erect to another citizen on C street Virginia City, re cently. "Sir, I understand yon have been speaking of me as a fraud and liar." "Well," responded the person ad dressed a man with a yellow sack coat aud a big tlouch bat, who was leaning against sn awning post, "that's aa true as gospel. I think you are a liar and a fraud if ever there was one. "Ton do?" cried the other, growing pale and gritting his teeth, "Tou do, eh?" res, I do, and don't yon forget it. ' "In that case," retorted the well dressed man, speaking with concentra ted ferocity, "1 must request yoa to consider yourself no longer on my list of exchanges, " aud turning upon his heel he strode away. The man with the yedow sack-coat tottered into the nearest saloon, and at last accounts was slowly recovering. Hospitality in Ciacho rilnse For the last two miles our journey led through dense forest, and it was nec essary to march in single file so narrow was the path. We soon, however, no lioed that wo were approaching a clearing and no sooner, scarcely, bad this fact dawned through cur minds, than the village was presented to our astonished eyes. It consisted of about two hun dred huts and around each of the huts w. re a number of dogs, all of whom came forward in a body and made such a horrible din with tneir yelping as would give one a very fair idea of Paudemo niuin. Iu the centre of the village stood hut much larger than the rest, sur rounded by quite a pretty garden. Dif fering from its neighbors, the entrance w large enough for a man to enter walking erect and was po.-sensed of a "dtfT. There were several "bull's-eye" windows, evidently the remains of some uortnnate vessel, while over the outer walls of the hut viuea had been trained and now covered them with a mantle of the most beautiful gTecu. This was the residence of the Indian chief. A finely formed a id mU-lligeut-looking negretrs opened the door of the bnt for onr ad mittance, ami in broken Englis bado us welcome. The interior of the dwelling appeared almost as strange as the ex terior snrronndings, and its equipment was a sort of cross between a ship's cabin aud a native hut, It was sepa- I rated into to apartments, a palm-leaf matting separating the two rooms. On the walls were hung a cumber of articles peculiar to the country, snch as antelope heats and quaint carvings the product of Dative ingenuity while upon arough lookipg table were displayed the tnsks of elephant and rhiuoccrcs, a few well used volumes, a sh;p's chart and several trinkets, both of native and European manufacture. We hade been but & few minute's in tue nut when we were aroused by a great noise outsido, and uioa goiug to the door we found that the natives were making preparations for a great barb -cue in our honor. Immense quantities of yams, cocoanuts, dates and a variety of other fruit had been gathered, while a number of mountain goats and antelopes had been slain aud their carcasses lay upon the sward where onr dusky friends were en gaged Li removing their skins and other wise getting them ready for the feast. From every tree on the borders of the village large crowds of monkeys looked down and performed gymnastic evolu tions from bough to bongh, evidently overjoyed at the prospect of obtaining a siiare of the gool things thtt. sho nld remaiu after the people of the hamlet had retired to rest. By and bv tbe din A a large horde of jackals, who had leen attracted to the vicinity of the vd lage by the savory smell of the roast ing viands, was added to the songs of the natives, the discordant notes of the birds and the chattering of monkeys, and the whole com '-ined to make oue of the most in for nil seriets of sounds that had ever grated npon the human ear. The use of brick as a minding material. both burnt and unburnt, dates from a very early period. Burnt brick is recorded in tbe Bible to have hen used in the erection of the Tower of Babel. We have the tes timony of tierodotiis to the effect tbat burnt brizks were made from tbe city thrown cut of the trenches surrounding Babylon, Statcmen's of travelers show that the Babylonian brick is very much like a tile, being from 12 to 13 inches squat e, and 3 J inches thick. M.ist of them bear tbe name inscrioed in cunei form tf Mcbuchaduezzir, whose buildings no doubt replaced those of an earlier age. I hey were sometimes glazed and enatn eled in various colors. S-mira-nus is said by Diodorus to have overlaid some of tier towers with surfaces of enameled bricks. Sun-dried bricks ere exclusively used in aucient times, especially ia Egvpt, where the mnnufart'ire was considered a most degrading employ men, and as such formed the principal part of tbe occupation of the Israelites during their bondage, alter the death of Juseph. These Egyptian sun dried bricks were made of clsy mixed with chopped straw, which was lurnisbed to the children of Israel by tbeir Egyptian taskmasters, before the application of Moses to Pharaoh in their behalf. After tnis the obligation was put upon them to furnish their own straw, which appears to have been Ike tbe last straw upon the camel's back too much to be borne. It appears from the details given that the Israelites worked in gangs under the superintendence of one of their own na tion, who was provided with all the nec essary tools, and then held personally res ponsible for the labors of his men. Some Egyptian bricks were made without straw, anc are now found as perfect as on the day when they were put up, in Die regi m of Amonopohs and Tnotnies, whose names they bear. When made of iiile mud they needed straw to keep tbein together, but when formed ot clsy taken from tbe tur rent beds on the edge of the desert tht y held together without aid. Among the paintings at Thebes, ene on tbe tomb of R'ksbata. an officer of the cwurt of I'hot mcs HI (ii. C. 1400) represents the en forced labors of captives, who are distin guished from the natives by the colors with which they are drawn. Watching over tbe laborers are the "taskmasters," who armed with sticks, are receiving the "tile of bricks' and urging on tbe work. The process of dig-gins- out the clay, of moulding and of arransjug, are alt duly represented. The process oi manufacture in Egypt was very similar to that adopted at the present time in that country, l he clay was brought in baskets from the 3 tie, thrown into a heap, thoroughly saturated with water, and worked to a proper temper by the leet of the laborers. This apiars to have been done entirely by the (light-colored) cap tives, tbe (5ed) Egyptian shunning tte work which must have been oppressive and unwholesome as possible in tbat cli mate. The clay when tempered was cut by an instrument res mbing very much an agricultural hoe and molded in an oo long trough. The bricks were then dried ia tbe sun. tturut bricks were used in Eypt for river walls and hydraulic works, but not to any great extent. Ejclosut es of garden or granaries, sacred circuits encompw sing the courts of temples, walls ot foctiflca- . lions and towns, dwelling bouses aai i tomb; in short, all but tbe temples thpin . ! in K. i. . ,1 ... . I selves were of crude bnck. i nd so ere a' was tbe demand that the Egyptian Gov ernment, observine tbe profh which wo ild accrue from a monopoly of them, under took to supply the pubic at a reduced price, thus preventing unauthorized per sons from engaging in tbe manufacture. Tbe Jews learned the art of brick niakin in Egypt, and that tbey used ii greatlv is proved by the complaint of Isaiah tha! the people built altars of brick instead of unhewn stone, as the law directed. Tbe Romans used bricks both burnt and un- burnt, in crest profusion, leaving their suu-oruvd bricks in the air for four or five years to harden. All the great existing - 1 ruins of Rome are of this material. At the decline of the R m.an empire the art of brick making fell into disuse, but was revived in Italy after tbe lapse of a ft centuries, lhe medisvaL ecclesiastical and palatial architecture of Italy exhibits many fine specimens of brickwork and ornamental deiigns in terra cotta. In Ho land and tbe Netherlands the scarcity oftone necessitated a sujstitute, aud leu, ut an early period, to the extensive u it brick, not only for domestic but for eccles iasttcal buildings. Tbee countries abound in fine specimens of brick work, otte-o done in two colors combined, with great taste, and producing a very rich result, a3 it is to be seen in the celebrated exam p es at Leenwanlta, in Fiiesland. It is worthy of remark tbat in the fens of Lin coinsb le -and Norfolk, wti-ire we would naturally expect the same n-.aterial to be used, the chu'ehes, many of which are exceedingly fine specimens of architec ture, are limit of wmall stones, and I? have been brought a great distai.ee upon pack horses. Iu modern times nowhere do we find greater perfect inn in the art of brick making and laying than in Holland, where most of tbe floors ot the houses aud the treet8 are paved with bricks. M'nlern bricks are made f different material?; clay, sand and ashes make ex cellent bricks, while good brick-earth is found in some localities. Loam and aiari in Eugland are considered the beat ingred ients Upon the materials employed de pend the quality of tbe bricks and tbe pur poses for wbich they miy be used. Tiiey are pressed ana dried by machinery to a great extent now, though vards are often started in the country where suitable clay is iouna, ana Ducks made by manual labor. The finishing and ornamentation, of which so muc1! is doue, is of course accomplished iu larger pieces, where ex- peni-nced workmen are employed. De tails in the plans of buiMins are oftea delayed untd it is known wbat kind of brick is to be used. 'I bis being the rase oi course omy in places woere only a certain cumber of whole bricks can be placed, as between window ledges, sills, caps or stone quoins. The util ty of biii k as a slang word is not to be d. nie L To call a man a brick is to compliment him exceedingly. In one word you tell h.m be is useful, upright, absorbent, reteutive, that his family history cin be traced fanner than that of most men, and, above a!', that he is not msde of "commm clay." Cttal by Cujoles. Major P. Ru-sell, the sheep man, savs that coyotes do not bother sheep much in Montana. They will, however, keep around tbe sheep at a distance aud howl in the early morning and at night. The shepherd dogs he considers a great pr-- tection, as they will rnn the coyotes off, although they canuot whip them. Re cently, however, the order of things was reversed, and a band oicoyotascoiTaled a valuable shepherd dog and ran him off through the hilLs. The absence cf the dog was afterwards, fortunately, soon discovered, and herders, mounted on fleet aud snre-footcd horses, followed in search. The uo was at length seen at a distance, completely surrounded by about ten of the cunning coyotes, w ho were successfully driving the poor faith ful creature away from the camp. At intervals the dg would attempt to break his cprdon of wild herders and return to his charge, but the fierce animuls. anticipating the movement, would close their ranks and ptescnt a snarling un broken row of shining ivory. At the ap proach of the horsemen the cowardly coyot-S at once dropped their fails and disappeared almost aa suddenly as if the earth had opened im and swallowed them. K-bbit Mioortns. Rabbit shooting is alays good fun, in woods, in gorse, in Hedgerows, iu rough grass, whatever the kind of cover, there is no more nveiy spt rt. In low wood, where you can se-.; to shoot them as they get np iu front of you, it li", perhaps, at its best, capital sport is also to be had outside, after the covers have been well beaten, espe cially if the holes Lave been stopped; the rabbits then lie iu the hedgerows. in the stubble, in the grass, wherever thej can find anything to hide them, but mostly in the hedges, and a couple of men, one on each side, with a span iel or terrier to find them, may have a days shooting ss good as almost any kind of sport which the gun affords, Rabbits forced out of a hedgerow by dogs go at their best paee, and any one who can kill them well may call himself good shot, whatever his practice at other kinds of game may be. The chances are, however, that a good rabbit-shot is a good al -round shot, though tue converse by no means holds good, for many men can kill pheasants and partridges very well who miss live rabbits out of six. . The ihwuMl Iuhl In spite of the recent opposition to the channel tunnel on the English b'de, the work seems to be poshed rapidly forward from the French end of it. Iu fact, according to English journals of Sovember 25, nnu.n a ly good progress, had recently been made. Starting from Smdgate, tad French company had l lied to a distance of 4G7 yards, au d was making a fair ave-rage daily advance ment. Li the .early part ol the work they experienced difficulty from the water they encountered while boring thorough the gault, but they had now got to the gray chalk, and the temped rary dislocation had been overcome. Thus their greatest engineering dilffculty war, therefore, now a thing of the past. At the English end the work is practi ally abandoned. I ha Ta -- -) in vruea rncjeiiot Some riders clioese to take no regular meals at all during their journey, pre ferring to carry with them some plain aud simple food ami drink, like a meat biscuit and a bottle of cold tea or muk, and to partake of a little very frequent ly as tbey go along not even caring U dismount for the partaking of the re- treshment. We nndersU&d that thi t ...... plan answers very well indeed when a long distance has to be m-tde and there is little or no time for rest. It is better. nevertheless, to dismount take a light meal of mixed food, Test for a good long time to let digestion have full spring, aud then on agidn, gently at first, brisk ly afterward. Such a p!ur gives good digestion of the foeid, quick and excel lent distribution of it over the body for nutritive purposes, aud a healthy and sharp appetite for the tneal.tli.tt is next to come. The diet itself cau scarcely be too simple. Animal food sh. nl J be fresh, not salted, and well cooked; light auimnl foods like fish an 1 fowl and mut ton are very good tc work on: erjS and milk are very good. A couple of esgs beaten well up in a cup, mixed with hot water, sweetened moderately with sugar, antl treated with a small quantitv of milk so as to make from half a pint to three-quarters of a pint, is wi;h utile biscuit, an excellent snstaining meal for ttusu to whom eggs are easily digestible. To those who can digest it oatmeal porri Ige is very good to break fast on; and to all who cau digest niiik. milk is lightly thickened with wheat meal ia most substaining. Bread bhould be taken in moderate quantitv, and fresh vegetables and fresh fruit ore al ways iu chiracter when not token in excess, some fruits which lor a mo ment seem extremely refreshing while on the travel become a cause of thirst if the day is very warm. I notice this particulary in regard to orange., the most tempting perhaps and the most easily obtained of all fruits. Of drinking during tricycle exercise I must sneak with some care. It is cot yery difficult to leuru tricvele without desire for too much drink of any kind. But if the beginner does not leara to breathe through the no.se, if he ac- qiure the habit of bres thing throngb tne month, he u sure to acquire also the desire to take liquids far too freely lie will become so dry in the month he will feel he cannot get on unless ha has something to quench his thirst, aud that is an evil habit even thongh the think be as innocent as the purest water itself. The first point, therefore, u to drink as little as possible; to drink as niucu as win nil np tue loss that is made by evoporatm of the water from the body and not any more. What the character of the drink sljall be is not very diffieu't to answer, and what it should not be is answered with iess diihealty, for co'tandy of all things aaiu it should not be an alcoholic stim ulant. Ou this hist named point we wlO are advocates fr tolaJ abstinence from all alcoholic beverages haye se cured, beyond any mistake, a fine score from trieyeliug experiences. Those who are to some degree in optiosition to us on the general question, I mean those who stilt hold that alcoholic drinks are in their right place as luxuries and should not be denied as luxuries, are with us if they are practised trieyclists, iu expressing that alcoholic stimulation is fatal to good sure, and siat dued work. Sun OIyel an liupui . Fifteen years ago me daughter of a nch and prosperous mail, living in fine style oo Fifth Avenue, Sew York, went out in a carriage ostensibly on a shopping expe dition. At Stewart a t'ore she left the CHrci'ure.iiiid her coachman waited for over two hours, uutil finally, becoming anxious. be made inquiries. The young lady had disappeared, and though a great deal of money was s(Hnt and much effott made to discover htr, there was no trace. Tue j ears passed and the detective who bad worked on the case very faithfully aud auxijusly, roe by degree s to the rank of police captain. One cold night, i'lsl after Curisinias, four or five of his officers tn- leted the station with eight or ten intrxi- cated women in their custody. Oue or two were crying over their arrest, and the prospect ot a prison; ot beis were fierce in their oatbs at the mie ference of the police with their orgie, while others aaiu were sulky. ? lauding a little apart from tbe group of prisoners the Captain noticed a tall woman about thtr y. and be saw that she bad once been beauii'ul, though now h r face wai disfigured by a btu sc oa t: e cheek and a black welt under the eye. 1'nere was, however, an air of refinement snout the woman that attracted the police captain, and be eyed her curiously while the serueaut recorded the names of the prisoners. Suddenly the woman bockoued 10 hint. "Captain do you know me?" was her question . "So." Didn't you once try to find 3Iia Urice ?" "Yes." "Well, I'm her. 1 ran away just out of pure devUlry, and I've nad my full Share of it. G xkI heavens! Why did you do it?" "On, I don't know. The notion ca:ue into my Lead, aud 1 obeyed the iui pulie. :And where have you been all this time'" ' Right here in the ward, under your very nose. You never suspected me though 1 siw vou often enough. - "ndhave you not repe .ted of the step?" -rtepenteoi" tnd the words thrilled in the captain's ear like the wail ot a lo3t so-iL U-'penteJ: On, God, yes! Bat it was joo Ute." It's never too late." "Y es it is. But it's not too late ts die." And befoie the Captain could pre vent she bal drawn a small pistol and shot herself. The poor creature lived tor two days, and wnen she d e J it was -o the arms of her father. The mother had died a lew years before of arief. This is a true story and shows now much stran ger real hie is than fiction. A Sew Enghuidcr pat an owl in his cellar to eaten rats, and the rata ate the 4 SEWS IS BR Twenty-seven women wo- kin? ui a chain gang weie a sail sight at Atlanta. Enroim must buy T'J.O1)!) tons of meat, and 3i5.0M),m.iO bmshels of grain abroad this year. The potato crop of Europe is re ported forty per evnt. be le'W tiiat of last season. Out of the 618.000 i eoplo of West Virginia thtra are eS.WO who cannot write. Baltimore is endeavoring to take the school commission out tf the el niam of ward poiitn-s. The Washington ni mutuant tT'ew 9t) feet dtirinj; this year. A lother quarter of a million ia asked for to uontiuiie the work. Among the new drnirs in use are lieor seeds, corn silk, eleoii nit's foot. aud chewstick, in thu form of liuid ex tracts, Two vars ao Wesson. Mis. . was only a pine f nvst. It has now a cotton irnJl employing l,:iu hands, and nearly 3,000 iuna itatits. The vount'est imvi tor on the re cords in Waliimrtoii is Walter Sevegold. a lad 15 years i ue, of Bristol. Pa., who has pite-iiteil important linprove meLts iu ruliiii mill machinery. "That want of g--ur-ai curtesy and universal grae-iut sn- .-.s, which is a very raal want among t'e Linyl sh mid.lieclas ses," is a viiriis t.:!c:i ir..ui London The exports ;' p-i.visarua from the United State's UitHt'g ti -3 ,-!iYi"i months which ended ea Soven.br ;i'ih last, amon-iti-d in VLil.ieto i-t.Si-J.li'jaaiust f 120,315,1 ;.! d.iri.!g t.io ce re-txuding period of 1-vd. Two ninety-foot lathes, said to among the l.u;i t in the world, have been mad by tin S-mtti lW tou Iron Works. E.ie-h lathj co:. talus Ii 10,00') pounds of iron. l't,cv s-.c to l e us-d to byre out cans' u. Manufacture ct linked caka m the north of Franco tire aliened to ad ulterate their products ftl.tii spent m aze from distiile-ries, and tii.it, of course, the usual p; reehtae of oily matter ia not preset. Suit was brought by the city of San Francisco a'uiu-t d. C. Fioenl to re cover taxes on t'iDO.OOO worth oi min ing stock in Se-vaaa. He proved that the mines are oiiai.ted in California and won the suit. A diver, at f00 yards' distance from the persons communicating w;:h him. can conver-e with ease with jH-rsous above water by means of the telephone, aa was recently proved by Mr. Ware-, of tbe Iiver .Ueare Commissioners. Tue heod-urii-es of the lathes' iu 1776 were remarkable for their enor mous height. The ctii'are of a bello ol fashion was described as "amoiuitaiu of wool, hair, powder, lawn, muolin, net, lace, gauze, liobou, flowers. featbcjra.anel wire." Among the trees which crow iu Alaska is ooe called the yellow cedar. which has a fragrance somewhat like at of sainl.il w ood and near I v as marked. It is a griinle-s wood, of straw color, aud the Russians formerly built many ships of it, for w hich pur pose it is admirably adapted. Sew Jersey has 313.520 children of school ae. lhe average art u-iauce upou the public schools is 113,012 ; 41, 5li0childreu are in the private scUoois. Tue school receipts of tae State during the past year were $iH ),701 M. Oi the 3,504 teachers i.a'Jl are women. Tue value of Sew Jersey's school pro perty is $'6,270,778. In the year 175 1 eight bales of cot ton grown hi the United States were sent to England, wht ie, upon arrival, it was seized and condemned by order of the Privy Couueil, ou the fcrouud that so large au amount of cot tou c m J not possibly have beeu raiseil in America. This year the cott ju crop of the United States w ill be not f ir froji 7,100,000 bales. Mark Twain failed to auswera letter written to him by Seij-;:mt B.dl;uitiu.. Alter waiting a reasoiialdo time the lat ter wus so exasperated at not receiving an answer that he mailed Twaiu a sheet of paper and a )otitagu stamp as a geu tle reminder. Mr. C. emeus wrote back ou apobtal : "P.t;.-raudst.t!i,.p received; please seud au envelope.' A Uridlev ;('al. i farmer hunts gee se with a cow. It is stated that he has trained the anim ii to walk out to wilele atl ickof ge-eae have settled down ou the graiu, I'rowsing all tiie way uiou. he walking aioucsitii ou tlio off aide from the geese, an. I wneu Uwar enough he cow lies d wu and ho snoots into lita flock. Ex-O ivernor Horatio Seymour has uiven to the Citutoit colhtettou of MSS. in the Sew Yon; bu.e L.br.iry a manuscript deed oi l.iaatio-a "leorge Washington and (ieorge Cunto'i, ot tUo City ol Se Yori, E-rfiuires," to Sa thaniel (Jriiliu, of Whilestuwn, Mont gomery couufy. i: boars date of July At Rome a bron.e- vodve Uani, three feet high, has beeu iound with the names of four ioas genUemeu, tn wit : S. Tettins, T. .V;inius, L. la'tius and P. Tw-tlieuus. it is shaped like a cornu copia, with thee wicks, is n ited, and has a large hole ou top f t pouring in the perfenied oj. The tiiurp caj of the cornucopia tits into a kind of scab bard, to which :t is Listened with a movable locket. Qaeen Victoria has at length eoii-scnteatoadm-.ttii.it "she is groniu old," for the new Egyptian, medal tbat she recently distriuuCed reprove jts her face of 1&)'2, and not of )9l2, us it has appeared on tiie stamp, coins and medals. In her own time she has dis tributed medals for six lmuaj cam paigns, three for South African afiairs, and one each for the Crimean, Cniuuse, Abvs-sioian and Ashtutoe coiijicts. Tlu Big Wood. The Big Woed ef Minnesota are rightly named, for they cover 5000 square miles, or 3,200,000 acres of sur face. These woods contain only hard wood growths, including white aud black oak, maple, hickory, basswood, elm, cotton-wood, lomaiack, an3 enongh other varieties to make an aggregate of over thirty (Efferent kiuds. This hard wood tract extends iu a belt across tho middle of the Stale, and arrontKlmg its north-eastern corner is an immenstf pine region covering 21.0CK) sqaar miles, or 13,440,000 square acre?.