.1 1 B. F. SCHWEIER, THE OOISTmmOI-THE UHOI-AIB THE ElTOXOaOTT 07 THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXVII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 1. 1SS3. N0.3J. TUK RIVKR OF TIME, Broad, and deep and nwift the current Of time's rnghlng tide, Braring ou through sun and shadow As tbe season's glide, ' Face of friend and foe and lover. On its bottom wide. O the days when light was brightest, I ear, lost days of old! O the love that thrilled our pulses With a joy nntold! How their saddened memories only lu our hearts we hold. Heart that loved us, hopes that cheered us, Voice dear and mm. Thoughts that perished like the flowers 'Neath our treading feet. Through our tears we see them drifting With the river's beat. O onr Father, when the pamion Of this life is o'er, When the river bears us onward To the farther shore, May we hear again the voices We have loved of yorel May we find the flowers that withered At an earthly shrine, HlontouniJK again, O Father, At thy touch divine. Where our lives meet full fruition In that home of thinel Where deep harmonies forever O'er the npirit roll, Where the mocking past shall never Vex the weary soul. And the tired ones locate their hunters At the heavenly goal. A LEAK IX TI1K Itllur. Mrs. Drayton h:ul just put the tea kettle over the lire for tea. That bright, cheery New IIamsliire kitchen not even the driving north east rain, which iouml in barren's out side, could put a damper on its merry as.iect. Close to the window a bullinch whistled meditatively iu its cage ot woven wicker boughs a pomegranate tree on the other side was all sprinkled with scarlet buds, and the very Btriies of the nig carpet were suggestive of sunshine and cheerful thoughts. And Mrs. Draytou herself, one of those plump, motherly, good-natured souls who are born to make home happv was setting the table with white and blue-' edged cuis and saucers that had be longed to her grand mother before her. The bread was whiter than snow, the apple-sauce w as pleasantly flavored with cinnamon, ami a freshly baked loaf of "cup cake" occupied the center of the feast. She was reaching up for a little jar of home-made picKh-s, vnen a pair dnuiir nrnw iifirfltd her wast, and of a handsome lieanled face apieared on t' 'e level witii her own. " My goodness gracious !" said Mrs. Dravton, '"how you frightened me! But I do think, ilarry, you get more haruui-searuni every day." He lifted her lightly to the floor. " 1K you want any more eggs, moth er ?" he asked, 44 there are plenty in theliam!" 44 I've got enot.gh for to-day," said Mrs. Draytou, pouring the tiny pickled cucumbers into the plate. u . .i:.. ...1 .. ..i..Mu vaii I'linu " mischievouslv suggested the young man. A frown darkened Mrs. Drayton's face. 44 Harry," she said, "you've made a mistake J " 44 Have I, mother dear ? But you 11 find that I've not ! " "Kosalie Hartley is asejfish, heart less coquette!"' cried M-s. Drayton, excitedly. 'Mother, hush!" said the young man, tenderly putting his hand over her mouth. "She has promised to be my wife." 44 Oh, Harry! Harry!" "It is so, mother dear, and you must learn to love her for my sake. You will soon find how completely you are mistaken in your estimate of her character, and she will be like a daught er to you I" . ... Mrs. l'raytou sat down, still with the pickle-fork in her hard, and began to Crow there was nothing in the wide world that made Harry Drayton feel so uncomfortable as tears. A whole dic tionary full of remonstrances would not have melted him like one of those crystal drops. 44 Didn't you say there was a leaky siot over the kitchen chimney, moth er V" sud he. 44 If 1 go up and look at it now I can ierlmi see where the trouble is." And, thus speaking,he hurried away. Mrs. Dravton looked after him with tearful ejes, as she shook her head doubtfully. "There never was a better son," said she. 44 If he had only selected Celandine Hail I" . , . .. 1'oor Mrs. I 'rayton ! Y lieu she took the two pretty factory-girls to lioard, just to earn money enough for a new iiarlor canet, she had not dreanied that she was setting a trap to catch Harry s true and loyal heart. To be sure it had once or twice occurred to her mmd that little Celandine Hall, with her soft voice and dove-like-eyes and the "handy ways" that she had about the house, would make a very acceptable daughter-in-law, but llasalie Hart e, -the brilliant, tuey brunette with her loud, ringing laugh, her cheap jewelry, her abject following of the latest devices of thefashiou-pletes, the subrosa flirtations which si conducted with the foreman of the factory, the good-looking young miller down town the ??-riage-maker who was building the big LoJse under Hansom Iiock and her un tidy fashiou of leaving Celandine to care for the room which they occupied n cowmou,-all these Um.gs were an abomination to her mother-soul. " Why is it, she sa d to herself, in a sort of deration, "that sons jdwavs select the women for wives that .then mothers most dislike ? I'm ahnost sure Sat Kosalie paints, although I never uld detect her at it,-nd there were oulv three buttons on her boots jester Sav Areal womanly woman is as tidy with Iter shoes as with her gloves. And Mrs! Jessup told me yest erday that she was flirting d.sgracef idly j ah Mr. l'eckhani, that Sl. at the factoi y. What can Harry possi bl be thinkf. g of to trust his future to the cae of sud. a frivolous creature as t4nastheionfiir herentiy uirougu .. Mi8g shallow laugh echoed in be -Miss llartlev had once uecu . . ?SSal Uugh, and had ever aftei lost no opportunity of airing its 44 litea almost ready, Mrs. she asked putting her bkmde Lead into the roouL I ",Jrlv y this Aveninir. and we are to be eariy t "It will'be ady vryoorr Mrs. Drayton, so coldly tb , ItosUie, audibly remarked to her companion that "something had put the old lady ou t !" Celandine Hall followed more quietly into tlie large, airy room which was ueuicaieu to the use of tlie two factory girls. 44 Goodness me !" cried Rosalie, with a start, 44 what is that strange rustling noise overiieau r is the bvuse haunt ed r" Celandine smiled. 44 1 suppose it is nothing more serious than rats iu the garret 1" she said. "Do, Rosalie, hang your waterproof cloak u. instead of throwing it on tlie floor ! There, tlie noise nas ceased now I" Nor was it all straiur. For r Ilarry Drayton, who had contrived to twist and writhe his six feet of humani ty into the merest cranny of space close under the eaves, in search of tlie leaky spot in the roof, was even then consid ering whether he had better twist him self back again, an undertaking not quite so easy as it might at first appear, or keep quiet until the girlsshould have gone down stairs. 44 They'll lauch at me." lie thniifrhr 44 They are always laughing, bless their neavts. i mink I'll preserve my incog nito. It will be only a minute or two before they go down to tea." Rosalie cave a tremendous vawn as she twisted up the yellow luxuriance of ner Hair, little recking that her afiianc ed lover was separated from her only by a trail thickness of lathe and plas ter! " How is that Greek knot, Celan dine V" she asked. " I want particu larly to have it look nice to-night, Ru dolph likes my hair in the ancient clas sic style." "Rosalie," said Celandine nail, gravely, "does Harry know where you are going to night ? " 44 .No, you goose," said Rosalie. Why should he ? I shall tell him I am going to a sacred concert with Polly rigut and her sisters." 44 Rut he will want to go with you." Then I shall find some pretext to put him off." "Rosalie," cried Celandine, "is it right for you to go to a jarty under Rudolph l'eckhain's escort, when you are engaged to Harry H;irtley ' " " 1 ou don't supiiose 1 am going into a nunnery, just liecause I hapiieu to be engaged ? " said Rosalie, iertly. " Rosalie " began Celandine, in dignantly. "ow dont go on lecturing me," said Rosalie, waxing impatiant, 44 1 have promised to marry Harry Drayton, not because I love him, but because I am tired and sick of the drudgery of this endless factory work. Harry Drayton is a country lout not half so lNihshed and charming as Mr. lVckham but lie's better than no hustiand at all. And Rudolph will be my lover still, like those dear Platonic creatures in the French novels, .because, you know" At this niament, however, there was a sudden crash from overhead, me plaster of the ceiling came down in a limey shower of pieces, directly into Miss Hartley's rouge-iots, and baliu-of-beauty ; and Ilarry Drayton, who, in the agonv of his mind, had writhed him self a little further than he had intend ed, descended most unexpectedly into their midst. Rosalie screamed hysterically. Celan dine looked as if she did not know whether to laugh or cry. Harry 1 toy ton sat up and rubbed his elbow-joints. 'I'm sorry to startle you, ladies," said he ; 44 but ujHm uiv word, I couldn't help it." And then he explained to them the precise nature of the dilemma in which he had been placed. 44 1 couldn t go iorward on account of the kitchen chimney," said he ; 44 and when I tried to back myself gracefully out, the ceiling gave way and down 1 came. Ami my collar is itiu oi rain from the leak in the roof, and I think I've swallowed alxiut a pint of lnue- dust" Rosalie turned first scarlet then white. 44 You were up theie over our heads," she said, 44 iu the garret comer." He nodded, calmly. 44 You heard all we said ?" " I am sorry to say yes," ho answer ed. 44 1 regret to le considered a 'country lout ' Miss Hartley, but as I don't approve of the Platonic system of love and lovers, I must beg to al dicate in favor of Mr. Peckliaui ! And now, if you will allow me to retire, 1 11 send up little Tim, the cowboy; with a Iwsket and a broom to remove some of this superfluous dust and lime from your floor." Miss Hartley wept ana newaiieu ner- self stormily, but she went with Mr. Peckham to the party, nevertheless, and Celandine stayed at home to sew buttons on the lieauty s boots. While Harry, as lie unfolded the newsiaier which had come by the evening mail, remarked incidentally : 44 Oh, by the way, mother, -that engagement of mine with Iiosalie is broken off I" Mrs. Drayton's face lighted up. 44 Really and trully, Harry V" cried she. 44 Yes, really and truly, mother. I don't think we should have suited each other at all ! Rut don't you want to hear how comically it happened V" And he told her about the leak in the rMiss Hartley changed her boarding place the next week, but little Celan dine remained. And Mrs. Drayton is already beginning to flatter herself that perhaiw Celandine may be hei daughter-in-law after alL Who knows how love might weave his warp and woof r rvrfecUy ttatikilad. When we made tne landing at the town . m T m. haa ntArflnw IirR of Walcrprooi, - reacted the second-story windows of J the houses. Od the roof of an abandoned grocery sat ragged darkey In tie most SompUcent manner, and a. the b(Uwung YK who had exhibited tue cT ervj the wTydown from Virkskurg. caught the name of the town and burned forward to the captaiD and said: . -Captain, theysaT this town Called Waterproof." Yea. ma m. 1M the water is all over it, you see The name is inconsistert with facts. "Oh, they didn't have reference to the U,wa itself in ca"iD 5t WaUrproof," -There are 21 cities along ;the line of the Mexicjm " -- gregate iopulatiou of syb.UW. Feaas of the Catakllls. The Catskill or Katzberg mountains, were so named by the Dutch on account of the catamounts with which they were infested. The Indians called them the Ontioras or Mountains of the Sky, by reason of their cloud-like ap Iiearances. Their traditions held that among these peaks was kept the treasury of storms and sunshine for the Hudson vallev. guarded by a iiowerful spirit, who kept day and night impris oned, letting them out one at a time, This spirit made new moons and cut up red ones into stars. These mountains with their dark and wide spreading forests (abounding in those days with a great variety of wild game) were iloiiiit less grand hunting grounds for the In- uians. Settlers of the upier Sliandaken valley in the neighborhood of Pine Hill often, while tilling the soil, found flint and arrow heads, etc., which assures us mat they frequented that part, and aside from that, the scenery and inter est of the region to-day fully equals the quaint ness of the old legion. The mountains are rugged and wild, many places of them never yet trodden by the toot of man. full of picturesque beauty The forests abound in cold and sick ling springs, which wind their way through ravine and meadow toward the Hudson or Delaware, ferns and wild flowers grow on all sides, and the smell of the green moss and foliage, deejieued by the dew and borne on the cool air, is delicious. The wildest and most unsettled irt of the Catskills are iu Ulster county, and in the towns of Shaudaken, Har deuburgh and Denning and surround- uig the Slide Mountain, which is the highest of the Catskills. The highest peaks were always said to be in Greene county until the iist few years. Measurement has decided the matter differently, and it is now a well known tact that the old Slide is the Highest leak in the Catskills (lieing 4,"J2J feet), and surrounding it the scenery is wild and romantic. Ieer and bears are yet to be found in that iwrTof the luoun tains, For the past lifty years the eastern face of the Catskills in the neighborhood of the old mountain house and nearest to the Hudson has been a resort for iwople seeking rest from city cares. At that time the Southern or Sliandaken Catskills wery a genuine wilderness, and very little was known of them. Occasionally an artest or siortsinaii followed up the deep defile of the Fsopus Creek, through the Shaudaken Valley, and crossed over line Hill to the headwaters of the Del aware. Shaudaken is an Indian name, the definition being 44 Swift Water." and it is quite proluble that this valley derives its name from the swift flow of the Fsopus. The scenery along its banks is enchanting and cannot le equalled in the Catskills. Trees, Logs and Lumber. Up the Saginaw In a wide region, reached either by the river or its tribu taries, the great pine saw-log, often three feet iu diameter, has its birth. Pine forests, now rapidly thinning out, once covered several thousand square miles arouniLtlie headwaters, enter ing that lumber region in the Lite au- tuinu, the lumbermen establish canqis, 'round which during the whole winter long the axes resound, the toll trunks fall, and in sections are rolled to the adjacent streams for the spring floods to bear away. Floating down to the main river, the Ikmjui men pick out out each owner's logs as identified by the brand, and gather them inside the booms, which may be curtly described as long tree-trunks chained together at the ends, often inclosing a smooth wat er surface of several acres. The coves of the Saginaw called locally bayous, a term borrowed from the Lower Miss issippi are esiiecially adapted for the gathering and organization of these log armies, lhe military metaphor, in deed, has jieculiar fitness here, for the logs are mustered side uy side in coni imuics, held together by a roi fastened to each log by a device not unlike the domestic clothespin. As these logs down stream are worked up by the tire less mills, these upier boouis are drawn uixui for more, until the freezing river finds them quite empty, and another winter conies ou to yield its tresh su)4- l''- . Rut the saw-log s story becomes most dramatic as it Hears the mill and, loos ed from the restraining roie, is sU-ered into the guide of oicu water that leads up to the wooden slide. Enter now the great hunber mill, and we shall be in at the saw-log's death. Down the slide on a wooden railroad runs a heavy truck, titted with two cross hues of heavy iron teeth. With a plunge it dashes lielow the water, stiil holding its place ou tlie mils. Then three giant logs are floated above iu At a signal the steam is let on, the machinery re versed, the strong chain holding the trucK tightens, and the truck itself be gins to ascend. The sliarp teeth catch the logs, which, in a trice, are lifted dripping from the water, whisked up like twigs 1UU feet to the null, and roll ed off opposite the first set of saws. These sas are two in number ; one set below is of tlie buzz variety, jierhaps siz feet in diameter, and cutting, there fore, through a three-foot log ; but as this semi-diameter is often insufficient for a big log, a second and smaller buzz placed above and in front of the first, cuts the slice, which otherwise might still hold fast tlie slab. One of the larirest Iocs weighs a numlier of tons, and human strength alone would ntver sullice to turn it after one of its sides has been slabbed. Just here comes in a beautiful piece of powerful mechanism. At the touch of the lever a stout beani, arnieu wiui iron teeth, rises by the forest Titan's side. It snatches the wood, and in less time than words can tell it me log is tumbled over, and the framework, rushing back and forth with amazing speed, has driven the edges of the tree athwart the saws, until the once rough stick stands forth a symmetrical square. Then, in another instant it is shifted below the gang, a set of ordinary up right saws placed an Snch apart, and of ten with thirty or even thirty-five blades. Below an ordinary circular planer revolves in front of the gang and smoothes the lower edges of the boards. The immense piece of timber is run through in a few moments, and what was five minutes before a rough tree trunk has passed into the inch boards of commerce. Xor does the work end here ; for the slabs are passed to a new machine, which grasps them with ahnost human intelligence, and whatever part of them can be made so become laths. Other machines take tlie harder woods, ash, elm, or oak, and convert thein with equal speed into staves, barrel lieads or shingles; and finally the otherwise useless debris passes to the furnaces to feed the fires of the engine. There is seen little or no sawdust around the Saginaw lumber nulls for the reason that it is all used for the furnace flames ; and, in general, tlie evele of utilities by which one branch of the great industry is made to feed or supplement another seems as rounded as human ingenuity can make it. Sometimes, particularly in the more modern mills, the routine as tlescruied is varied by lifting the logs from the river ou an endless chain ; and a nuiu- ler of minor mechanisms fill out the de vices by which the lumlier is cut and distributed. One ingenious machine, working double emt ry wheels, sharens the buzz saws on both sides of the teeth during a single revolution, and re quires no attention beyond simply tlie fastening of the saw muni it and the unfastening after the work is done Another flattens out, by a clever me chanical expedient, tlie teeth of the saw, so as to cut a wider rent and pre vent clogging as the cut becomes decid er; hually. a system of elevated rail roads takes the lumber-laden trucks and distributes the boards at the points in the yard or on the whart whence they are to be shipied. Some addition al conception of the size and importance of the industry may be derived from the fact that the Michigan Central Railroad Conitiauy takes awav from one .station here lot) carloads of lumber tor each day of the working season, to say nothing of the large quantities shipped from the river by the Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad line, ami even large shipments by the lake barges. Inland Wballng. On the lake front, Chicago, stands a blue-minted flat car, on which is a huge skeleton with a '"story." It is of inter est to all, for it is the skeleton of "the whale." 1 Ins was known from Maine to California, and there was some talk at one time of sending his lordship to Luroiie. L very one knew "the whale," and it has lieen gazed uimiii by millions of pcoplu in its dav. It belonged to Mr. Ired hnglehart, and he organized what he called "the Inland Whaling Company." lips meant Ins emploves. side showuien. ticket sellers, etc. They had another car built, somewhat like a freight caboose, and with bunks, tables, stove, and cooking-plice, all in very comfortable slta). This car was also IKiinted blue, and both had "Inland haling CouiiKiuy'' on the sides. Ihese two aud a baggage and tent car com pleted the train. The whale was stretched out in flabby fchajie upon this flat car, aud great roties and chains kept the 'huge mass of flesh from roll ing off. The attendants had a mixture containing carbolic acid ami other dis- nfectJints to ivour over his shiny brown hide, and this oieration was continu ally being doue while on exhibition. The mass, was therefore alwavs moist. When the train struck Chicago, adds the News of that city, which was the headquarters, a side track was built on the lake front, the tent pitched, and the whale on his car was run under the canopy. A little box-ollice was opened, and that was hL Rut it was enough. Crowds poured in to see the monster of the deep, and when the deep-voiced talker explained the capture, weight, habits, etc., of the animal stood up like a pigmy beside the whale, every oae was well satisfied that he had the worth of his quarter in seeing such a curiosity. It was the only one on ex hibition. Now they should visit him at the lake front. All that remains of hiin is a lew flapping pieces of canvas and rot ting hide, while the frame work, bones. ind flesh are gone. In their place is a lot of shavings, old barrels, sticks, dirt. and the frame proves to be of stout hickory, bent into whale shae. These are the bones. The shavings were the flesh. Some quicklime has eaten up considerable hide or skin, but the tail, ah, the tail w;is genuine, though the rest was a delusion and snare. Cat vrpll lars. The hairy caterpillars are now infest ing the trees, and an eminent entomo logist in New York was recently ask ed: 44 Do not the birds eat these caterpil lars y " asked the reorter. "No. I know of no bird that will eat them. The sparrows did eat the measuring worms that were so plentiful here a few years ago, and that nuisance has now about disappeared. The pre sent nuisance is what is known as a hairy caterpillar. They multiply very rapidly. I have counted 'S'A eggs in a sjnice about 11-10 by inches. Each one of these eggs was capable of becom ing a caterpillar." 44 Is there no other insect that preys utKn these i " 44 Yes ; there is a sort of fly, the tachina, but there are not enough of them. I am satisfied that the only way to save our trees is for the authorities to employ some one to kill them off. Roys could do it. It would require some one to climb the trees and collect the worms and eggs and bum them." 44 What is the course of propaga tion ? " 44 First you see this bundle of eggs I have sioken of. They are laid by the females on the cocoons. In about four teen davs these eggs are hatched into caterpillars. The caterpillars live.utwn the soft part of the leaves of the trees. You may see plenty of trees now with out a whole leaf. Then the trees in time die of lung complaint, for the leaves are their lungs. Each caterpiL lar will eat say twelve or fourteen times its weight of leaves, until it gets to be about an inch and a tenth long. Each caterpillar discharges its skin about four times before it gets its growth. It then weaves its cocoon of silk and the hair of its own body, and then under goes its change to the chrysalis state and becomes a moth. 44 The sjecies is well known to ento mologists," continued Mr. Edwards. 44 It is indigenous to this country, and has been known ever since entomology was studied here. It was described by Abbott and Smith iu 1SD2-4 among the lepidopterous insects of Georgia. You may imagine how rapid must be their increase when one insect lays 34 eggs. Fortunately, the rain kills many, aud other causes intervene to keep down the supply. I was glad to see that the voracious insects spared tlie tulip trees. 44 The destruction of our city trees is pitiful, and some decisive action is need ed to prevent its further progress. When very hungry these caterpillars will eat pear and apple trees, and the possibility that they may yet be numer ous enough to get into that sort of busi ness should be stiiticient to stir up some ollicud action to prevent it." .. . A Heidelberg Fire. The alarm was given by horsemen galloping about and blowing shrill blasts on a bugle. Crowds pour out. Nobody knows where the fire Is; there is no alarm-bell ; . aud the duiberate wav in which things go on is a curious contrast to the methods and ways of the Ameri can fireman. 44 It was over lialf an hour before the crowd got on the right scent. Some one had discovered smoke slowly creel ing out of the upier windows and from the tiled roof of a three-story building on the Hatiptstrasse. in the centre of the city; and in due course of time tlie tide of travel set in the right direction When I arrived at the scene of conlLur- ration, or rather of smoke, 4 found crowds of siiectators, but I could dis cover no signs of any firemen or lire en gines ; neither could I see that any at tempt was oeing made to get the lire under control. .Many of the men and women had wooden and leather buck ets and tin pails in their hands, which they had brought with them, but no one seemed to know for what use they were intended. Among the few who had not deserted tin premises when the smote was discovered, there was evt uenuy a great ccusternation. V in- dows were thrown oin or hurriedly smashed out, and 1 never witnessed be fore such a shower o worldly goods de scending from a burnmjr building. It was the old story over again of people losing their heads, or rather their senses. at a tire. Looking glasses, wash bowls, and pitchers, all varieties of crockery, on paintings, bric-a-brac, pieces of tur uiture, mantel ornaments, etc.. were raining down from aLove on to the pav ed street "with as little ceremony or care as they would have been if thrown out of the crater of a volcano. At one of the second story windows, at least a hundred ieet from the smoke, 1 saw two or three men and as many women straggling with an upright piano, which they were endeavoring to force out of a window, but, luckily for the piano and its owner, the opening was too small. .Meantime the smoke increased, but no other evidence of flames apjieared. lime uissed. Mr. Ruggles asked an American student if there was no fire organization, and was told there was. Rut where are the firemen 't Why aren't they here to put out the fire ?' Oh, they 11 be here by-and-by ; they have gone home to put ou their uniforms. They are as particular as if they were going to a dress parade. most of them stop to slave and have their boots blacked.' And the building on fire all the while y " 4 To be sure ; but you can't hurry them ; they are not afraid of the tire's spreading or the building's burning up They are not so used to this kind of usiness as we are m America ; they don't have the practice.' More minutes went by, aud there was a stir in the mass of beings who were quietly gazing at the smoke and still descending shower of household goods from the windows. The crowd oieucd right and left, like the waters of the Red Sea on a iarticular occasion, and iu the oten inissage apieared a line carriage drawn by two spirited horses. Lying kick at Ins ease ou the back seat was evidently a military otlicer of some high rank. He was iu full uniform. even to his sword, spiked helmet cap, and the inevitable goid-lmwed sjiecta cles. 1 saw by the sensation his arrival had created that the was some distin guished General. I asked a German near me if it was the Crown Prince Rlsmarck, or Von Moltke, but the man stared at me with astoiiishiueiit through his siectacles, and that it was neither ; it was llerr Weisengarten, or some such name, the Freiwillige Feuerweher, which meant that he was the chief of fire department The great oflicial slowly got out of its carriage, and, after carefully adjust ing his siiectacles, took a long stare at the building from which the smoke was issuing. Then he approached a little nearer and took another stare. Evident ly not satisfied that it was smoke, he went over to the right of the building. and gazed long and earnestly at the roof and windows ; then he moved a distance to the left, for another view. 1 he scene ramiiuled me of the story of the bluejay in Mark 1 wain s 4 Tramp Abroad,' where the inquisitive bird was so nonplussed at the disapiwarance of the acorns down the knot-hole. 44 As soon as the man became satis fied at something or other he went back to his carriage and rode away. 1 inquired where he had gone, and was told tliat, having become convinced that there was actually a fire, he had started to order out the fire engines. lhe firemen now began to make their apiiearance hi squads of twos and tlirces and half dozens. They were all in gay uniforms, similar to that worn by their chief, only not so rich. Handsome swords dangled by their sides, aud their brass helmet caps glistened in the sun light. No engines had yet arrived, nor was there any evidence that tlie fire buckets were to be brought into requi sition. Several American students were getting excitefl, or rather mad, over the slowness with which everything is done. One of them proposed that they should run through tlie streets, giving the alarm in American style, and see if it would not hurry up the engines. It was no sooner proposed than off they started on a run. At the end of two or three, blocks they commenced screaming at the top of their voices, feuer I feuer I which in English means fire, and pronounced the same. I heard tlie familiar alarm echoing through the streets for several minutes and then it stopiied suddenly. There was an omi nous silence. 1 did not see the students again Unit day. 1 heard during the af ternoon tliat they hae been arrested by the police and locked up tor creat ing a disturbance in the streets. They wont undertake again to give an alarm of fire in a foreign city. 44 hue this little mcident was trans piring, the attention of the crowd, who were still idly gazing at the building from a safe distance, was attracted bv a fresh horror, but one of a most ridi culous nature. An immense German, of Daniel Lambert proportions, sudden ly apieared in bis night shirt at a bay window on the first floor far removed from any jwssibility of fire, frantically screaming for helix. He had evidently over-slept himself from the effects of a keg of beer drank the previous evening, when tlie unusual noise in the street it was about 11 o'clock in the forenoon suddenly awoke him. With a clear head he would have quietly dressed himself and walked down one short flight of stairs into the street ; but in his sudden fright he imagined the build ing above and around him was a mass ot burning cinders. 44 His fright was terrible to behold, I could see him tearing around the room like a mad bull, his big eyes standing out like those of the giant in the fairy tale. He smashed out a window with a chair, aud, thrusting out his head, screamed wildly to the people. 4 Mein Gott ! will neimand mien vetten ? Ich verbrenneheir wosind meiue Freundey Kommt doch schnelle !' which in En glish would lie, 4 Mr God ! will nobody save me 't I burn here ! where are my friends? Come quick I' Two or three friends finally rushed up to the man's chamber, and after a few minutes' alisence apieared with hint on the street, all dressed except his hat aud coat. I never saw a more happy man thau this big, burly German, He boiled over with gratitude to his rescuers, and fairly hugged and kissed them as they led him away to a beer- shop near by. " Ry this time two fire-engines had arrived, each of which was securely tied with rojies on a large platform dray, and drawn by two horses. They were not over five or six feet long, and looked like the small machines we have in America for sprinkling our gardens and lawns. The chief of the lire de- artmeut again made his apiiearance in his carriage, and it looked as if the warfare would soon commence against the smoke, which was gradually de creasing in density. 44 A new dilhculty here sprung up. Most of the firemen who first arrived had disapiieared and were nowhere to be seen. The chief, however, seemed to comprehend the situation. He call ed two or thiee of his auli. and irave them directions to go to all the beer s!ioi in the neighborhood and summon the delinquent members of the fire corj to their duty. In due course of time they were mustered together, formed in line like a body of infantry, and their chief with a drawn sword marched up and down the ranks, and gave each one a critical inspection through his gold-bowed siiectacles. apparently satisfied that their uni forms were in good order, and their boots well tiollshed, he made them a short sjieech, complimenting them on their line apiiearance, and told them not to hesitate or falter in their comliat with the devouring element of fire which they were expected, as pitriots, to subdue. Part of the siieech. during the cheering, 1 could not understand, but presume he told them that if any should fall while iierforming their duty, and were obliged to 'give up the ghost ' and their lieer a grateful country would give them a big funeral and see them handsomely buried. He then told them to break ranks and proceed to busiuess." E-tian Olcoverle4 la Ktnue. x he ia di s. ignazio is a short, nar row lane, which le;ids from the Collegio Romano to the tribiuie of S. Maria so- pra Minerva, crossing a portion of the ground formerly occupied by the "Is- eum et Senqcuiu" of the ninth region. r, very lime excavations have been made on either side of the lane, to build or to restore the houses which line it, some beautiful specimens of Egyptian work manship have been brought to light. Considering that no excavations have ever been made underneath the public ground, anil considering there was no reason why, in the very centre or such promising land, other relics of the fa mous sanctuary should not exist. I asked the Archa-ological Miinicqia Commission to try the extieriment, and my proposal was accepted at once, lhe works began on .Monday, the Slth of July hard and difli;ult works, because we had to dig to a deptn of twenty feet between houses of doubtful solidity, propping everything ou every side. i u-st to apiiear, at the end of the third day, was a magnificent sphinx, in black basalt, the portrait of King Amasis. It is a chef d'a-uvre of the Saltic ieriod, brought to perfection in the smallest details, and still more interesting for its historical connection with the con quest of Egypt by Camhyses. The car touches bearing the King's name aj Iear to have been hammered, although not so completely as to render it unin telligible. The nose, likewise, and the ureus, the symbol of royalty, were in jured at tlie same time. The explana tion of such circiiuisiauces is given by Herodotus. When Camhyses occupied Sals, Amasis had just been buried. The conqueror caused the body to be removed from the tomb, to be flogged and otherwise insulted, and finally to be bm'ued, the maximum of profanation from an E'yptiau jioiut of view. His name was erased from the monuments which bore it, a natural consequence of the "inemorue dainuatio." This sphinx is the surviving testimonial of tliat eventful catastrophe. When, six or seven centuries later, a Roman Gov ernor of Egypt, or a Roman me reliant from the same Province, singled out this work ot art to be stnpied over to Rome as a votive offering to the Iseuin Campense, ignorant of the historic value of its mutilations, he had the nose ai.d the ureus carefully restored. Now both are gone again; there is no danger of a second restoration, 1 may remark, as a curious coincidence, that, as the name ot Amasis is erased from the sphinx, so the name of Hophries, Wis predecessor, is erased from the obe lisk of Minerva, found in the same Iseum. In these two monuments we ossess a synopsis of Egyptian history between O'Jo and 520 B. C. The second work, discovered on June 17, is an obelisk of red granite, in scribed with hieroghyphics. The lower portion only appears on the side of the trench, and we are still anxious to ascertain whether it is broken or not. if tlie monolith is entire it will be of the same size as the one in the Piazza della Rotondo. The cartouches show the name of Ramses II, the Sesostris of the Greeks. We thought at first that the obelisk, like tliat of the Pan theon, was a Roman imitation; but Professor ScliiapurellL, the eminent Egyptologist, who came over from Florence at the first notice of these extraordinary findings, considers it to be an origual work, which would be long accordingly to the fourteenth century before the Christian era. Croim In the W tt. The condition of wheat in Indiana ou July 1, was OS tier cent., iu Ohio OS, and in Illinois ol. lhe area of turn in Indiana was lol per cent., in Ohio 104, in Illinois 104. The condition of corn in Indiana was SI, in Ohio &J, and in Illinois 85. " There is a full acreage of oats. The condition of the crop in Indiana was t7 per cent., in Ohio 102, and in llliiuis 91). Live stock is iu good condition. The hay and flax croi are alwve 5W ir cent. The Farnttr. on the basis of these aud of scattering reiiorts from other States, estimates the wheat crop of lSS-'i at ?J,l)UU,UUU bushels. Dot Mldilletoa's Utriligs. Doc Middleton, whose exploits as a highwayman, brigand and desperado are a part of the early history of Colo rado, Wyoming and Nebraska, who has been serving a five years' sentence iu the penitentiary for stealing cattle in the North lark, was discharged from that institution lately, aud imme diate boarded the east-bound tram. He informed the prison otlicials that he was going to a new country where the name of Middle ten was unknown, and where he would have an opportu nity of leading a new lifa among stran gers. During his long imprisonment he behaved himself like a man, and conformed himself to the rules of the prison to the letter, not receiving one black mark. A few days ago before his discharge, while at work in one of the fhops of the prison, and intently reflecting on the few days nitre of prison life, he put his fingers too near the buzz saw, cutting it off. The prison physician attended to tlie finger, and the next day Middleton reirted to the warden that he was ready for some light work. He was told tliat he might go into the hospital for repuirs, If he chose; but be answered tliat his service belonged to the State and he was ready to put in the time faithfully. During the early days of the Black Hills excitement Doc aud his gang operated on the road between Cheyenne and Dead wood City, at times varymg the business of robbing stage coaches by stealing cattle. Once he was cap tured and tried by a crowd of cowboys and sentenced to be hanged. His arms and legs were bound, and he was mounted on a horse and driven under a limb of a large tree, from which a roie hung. A noose was made and tied under his neck anil the horse driven away, leaving Middle ton suspended in mid-air. Two of the niemiiers or his gang hapi-ned to lie in the neighlior- hood, and after the cowboys had ridden away they cut Doc down, and after two hours' hard work resuscitated him. For several years after the occurrence it was claimed tliat Doc's ghost haunted the territory, and innumerable stories were written of its exploits. One night the ghost attacked a stage coach, and one of the more courageous passengers shot at and wounded the ghost, which proved to be the veritable Middleton masquerading in the guise of a ghost aud carrying ou his usutU avocations. During the early part of the year 1475 Middleton and a pal planned and exe cuted a bold bank roblieryat Dead wood Citv, which was for a long tune laid at the door of the James gang, and Pinkerton's detectives ?ieut thousands of dollars hunting them, while Middle- ton with his swag remained quietly in Deadwood laughing in his sleeve. Of the 40,000 Indians located on reser. rati "rns in the Southwest, the Narsj tes, numbering 15,000, have become largely civilized. Their possessions in hordes, cattle and sheep are great and valuable: I his tribe is nearly self-supporliag, and in few years will he no burden to th2 Gov ernment, nuue sun noiuinir wis iriuai i relation, their system of internal govern- ,npt u nnl hiat. and f.ir the rvl ( meat is exact and just, and for the good o( a'L Only occasionally do the younger bucks ally themselves with the predatory Indians and go on the warpath. Essen tially the Navsi )es are gooJ Indians, how ever strange this anomaly may seem. Tbe Z mis, a smill band of ancient stock, closely allied to the Azti'cs in many of their peculiarities, are found on a reserva tion in the middle western portion of Mexico. They have many interesting characteristics as a tribe, but some of their customs are even more barbarous than esthetic. Then- moon dance, at which time thj young men are received into tbe brother hood of warriors, is an orgie of a most heathenish nature. During the latter pan of the month of March ot each year all tbe tribe are assembled at once place, guards are thrown out on all sides, and no white man or Indian belonging to other tribes U admitted within the festive circle. Around a huge lire blazing high they dance and sing in unrestrained merriment under the mellow influence of mescal, a fiery whisky distilled trom the cat us. At about mid night the young men who are to receive the honors of warriorhood, and thereafter to be be known as braves, if they success fully undergo tbe ordeal ml iuitialion,conie into the circle dressed in the uniform of a ratagoniaa chief, less the nose ring and ribbon. With keen-edged knives they make two vertical slits in the flesh on either breast. and having fastened there to a lariat of raw bide abiut thirty feet in length. uicb is held at the other end by a stake set firmly in tbe ground, they begin tbe ildest incantations, moving to and fro in skipping and dancing attitudes, while the warriors are indulging themselves in the innocent amusement of hurling the toma hawk, sharp pointed knives and other missiles of sporting barbaric ingeauity al the novitiates, who in tbe wild delirum ol stolid heroism must endure their fiendish suffering until the flesh breaks away and releases tUem from tbe cruel thongs. Tueir ceremonies are now inaugurated for a duration of seven days, when ail the tribe apiiear, from the Oldest to the youngeit. only dressed in nature's primitive garb. Tneir practices in the succeeding festivi ties are so hideus it is revolting to think of them. And these- Indian?, too, arc wards of the U jveromeit. A Yard of Kninl. Charles Petermau, a fanner living just, outside the city, states the Kansas City luites, has probably the longest beard possessed by any man in that place or vicinity. He is rather a short man and the lieard, which is over three feet in length, fails below his knees. liut few people would notice anything eculiar about his apiiearance, because lie keeps this hirsute appendage tied up in curl pipers and hid away within his vest. In addition to its length, the beard, which covers almost the entire face, is very thick, and is surmounted by an immense mustache. "How long have you been growing that beard?" he was asked. "Oil, this is only a seven years' growth. 1 have had it nearly as long Ijefore, but it was so inconvenient that 1 cut it off. Its length now is due to my friends, who insist upon seeing how long it will grow. My wife puts it up in pipers every morning as religiously as she puts up her own hair." "Any other members of the family affected in the same way V" "I have six brothers and nine sisters, all, except one brother, living iu Ger many. All my brothers have extraor dinarily long hair. My brother living in this country is in ermillion County. 111. His beard is a pure blonde, and is fully as long as mine, which, you see. is black. My brother's head," contin ued Mr. l"etenuau, "was as destitute of hair in manhood as a billiard ball." NEWS IN BRIEF. Even dynanute is adulterated. Portions of Greenland are sinking. Freight cars are now built to carry 40,(100 pounds. Detroit has akiluuceof 5-Vi4l,l"0.71 iu her treasury. Tlie females oiitnuimVr the in ilei in Alabama 17,247. Dublin castle was built earl v in the thirteenth ceuturv. Coffee houses iu Dston are prov ing very profitable. Six thousand Aui.-ricau' are re-iid-ing in Paris at present. There are reported to ba 70,iHK) lawyers in this country. They swanu bees w ith a tin pan in Lynchburg-Va., streets. There are i'l.OuO acres of water melons iu Burke county, Ga. San Antonia. Texas, is to h ive a $10,000 home for fallen women. Mme. Gerster ami her linsb.in.l Dr. Gardini, liave sailed for Europe, The Palace hotel in San Francisco cost $4,A,000, including the ground. The'California wheat crop for this year is estimated at 5i,'j.0,tXd bushels. Florida had Kit) factories, employ g -2740 haiuLs aud about $l.0.000 in capital. Ninety-three thousiiid acres of land were planted with tiinljer iu Kan sas hist year. Tlie area of Ru-isli in Europj U nearly 35 times that of the state of Pennsylvania. Ninety-nine thousand shad were caught in the Delaware during the sea son just closed. The silk product in the United States in 1SS0 amounted to more thaii $41,000,000. The Indians of Alaska are sup loosed to be an offshoot from the Japa nese or Coreaus. on Mr. t roude has Written an :irti-l. Martin Luther for one of the Eng lish monthly reviews. Of the total fires in Michiir.m ' last year, more than one-fourth werec:i!ised oy detective chimneys. Vlncenues, Indiana, luu a butter dish factory which turn. o.it S.I i lit. 00,000 dishes p.-r day. Tht era ItLithr' f.- ,i..r last class at thj Yassar about $Wj for each girl. " 1 nests and religions t: i. .v.. ljeeu exalted fro.u lj scaools at Paris during tlie list threu years. .T7XIrIy one-tll""l of the population of the t inted States is foreig.i bjru, or in uic second degree. with a bonded debt of over s,m....,u,j Louisville has voted to ex pend $ 1,500,000 on its streets. North Carolina has nnnv tnii,. trees more than loo ft hiirli.ai.d m suriug 30 feet around the Utse. ti. ...... . i ... , 1 U 1,1 tU,,-'lr f .eiloiie. 1 rees are lieing planted all along tha Mississippi coast. iteorge vtasuingtons grand nephew, Dr. Lawrence Washington is runing a farm and orchard m Tex.is.' Oscar Wilde's a,vnt sav.s th-ik i :. car is at least !0,00 richer than he was wneu he first lauded in New York. The Germ iu army Is at the present tune distribute I over .1)1 L'ar. isi.i.a !.. of which have an effective of over t en. ' The Suez Canal is to be enlar vl ami improved at an expense of $t 00. -000. The work will m'unr .vrll years. Ex-Vice President Wl...!..r i.., offered to give $lO,ixj toward a new Gougregatioii.it C nirea in Mitone Gounol, t!iJCJini)T. livrti in monastic-looking stru:ttirj, in Piris but the interior of his Ii.iiuHs bi'iti ful in appjintiujats, divoratiom. etc To her natural nrohietiom of nr. anges ami alig.ttors Florida is aJ.lin ' the cocatuit, .-),00j trees of this species having been planted during the present season. Since its commencement the New York society for the prevention of rn- elty to children has entertained over 11,000 cases, involving over 100,000 children. The largest city in the world is Loudon. Its jiopulation numbers 3, 020,S,1 souls. New York, with a popu lation of about 1,210,001', comes fifth in the list of great cities. The express trains lietween Paris and Constantinople, inaugurated ou the 5th inst., consume about four days and four nights in the trip between the two ioints. The fare is $.W. The largest suspension bridge would appeiir to le the one between New Y ork and Hrooklyu. The length of the main span is l.o'Ji ft. 0 in., the entire length of the bridge 5,0sy feet. The largest island in the world, which is also regarded as a continent, is Australia. It is 2,5uo miles in length from east to west, and measures 1,0.10 miles from north to south. Its area is 2,'JS4,2!i7 square miles. J4 During List year the number of persons killed by being run over or knocked down by vehicles in the streets of Paris was 103, besides whom there were 10S4 who in their injuries required the aid of the Police. The British and Foreign Bible So ciety continues to be remnrk.ibly pros perous. Since iu organization it has circulated il,000,OW copies . of the Scriptures in 218 languages and dli lects. The Earl of Shaftesbury, who is in great demand as Chairman iu May anniversaries, is President of the so ciety. Ex-Governor Leland Stanford has placed in his San Francisco home? the art collections purchased by him in Euroie last year, comprising 3d pieces of statuary awl lsi oil paintings and water colors. A marked increase hi Jtlie saie ot etchings and a corresponding falling off in that of engravings is reported by dealers in prints. The visit of Seymour Haden to this country last winter, and the effect of his lectures and exhibi tions, brought this about, it is said. A mechanic of Paterson, N. J., is building an exiierimental 10-foot long propeller boat, with a new. ale-cask for her boiler, the fire being placed on top instead of iu the usual plice. As the builder isemployed in a Paterson loco motive works, and is not a "crank," the result will be w itolic 1 with interest. spruiging up stairs i