W!teN&UH,4rx. HLJ.'. . 4 At .. .fa i. l i: A ff) fa fat if B. P. SCHWEIER, THE OOISTrnmOI-THE OTIOI-AIB THE EWOEOEMEIT OT THE LAVS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXVII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY.. PENNA.. AVEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 12. 1S83. NO. 37. - ' 9 --i.iiib,. Ah m 'Hi i . 2 tone airo An, darkness fc,,, "TL And though unknown, I strove to So wise a good thatVn mich 'Around his brow dwell,, oontk" djy." But now I daily older crow I wat. h the shadows 'mong the trees And hear the sigh in evening-, bret And weep tnat wisdom U far ofiL' And think, perhaps, the night maybe Less dark than is each day to me Aud so, in sadness, still I wait tor soon I know, or maybe late 1 he gates will open wide for me" And 1 shall journey toward the sea, hose breakers roar in every ear- n'tig song I ne'er shall' fear A hose saddest music oft has waked ' 1 he mrm'ry of a thirst unslaked. THE DOCTOR'S SI Rritl-K. The gas flared brightly in the drag room in the great city hospital of " Dr- Wharton, one of the young physicians in charge, stood by the marble slab tuittine tion. Xear him lounged idly. Dr. Fra zier, his colleague, a dark, moustached young fellow, with a hard, intolerant cast of countenance, rendered more re pliant just now by an. angry scowL "Don't talk to me, Phil' he said. "There is a miserable poor outlook for either of us here. The poorest hod carrier that walks the streets has a bet ter chance for success than you or I even though we have M. D. attached' to our names. You can brag of your profession if you like, but I am sick of it. I'll try something else before the year's out," "1 bavent bragged of it," said Dr. Wharton, good humoredly, '! have said nothing. You never gave me a chance," "To think of how I've wasted my life," continuf-d Frazier, without heed ing him. "Four years at college, two in a doctor's office, two in a Philadel phia medical school. And here I am and here you are, men of twenty-four, glad to have a year's practice in a hos pital for our board, when my brother, two years younger, and without an edu cation, is making a handsome living speculating on the Stock Exchange. A great difference, truly." Philip Wharton made no reply, but trround away steadily at the mortar. "Do stop tliat screak!" said Frazier, irritably. "Come out and have a smoke," "I haven't finished putting up this pre scription." "You haven't had your supper, either." ".No, but I shall fuish the prescrip tion tirst." Yii s1u;:iv4 vtirk at a HiIikt until it. is finished. You'll stick at your pro- - - r, - . t' . . iessiun umu 11 nuisues you.-- "I hope not," said Wharton, laugh ing. "What are you going to do when you leave the hospital? Our time will be up in September. Where are you going to settle?" "1 don't know yet," said riiilip, his cheerful face suddenly clouding. "I know of no place where there is much chance of success. My cousin John ad vises me to go West, But there are half a dozen doctors in every village out there already." "There," said George Frazier, tri umphantly. "What did 1 say r There is absolutely no chance for a young doctor, unless he hasa fortune or friends to push him on. You and I have neither. We had better go out and preach this new cure of fasting. W e have every prospect of becoming good examples of its eflect?, whatever those may be," Dr. Wharton laughed, but made no rplv. His face showed, however, that he telt the truth of what Fraiier said. "You had better come to supier, Phil," Frazier added, in a more cheer ful tone. Having succeeded in making his companion feel miserable, his own spirits began to revive. . "No, I must put up this prescription first." , "Very welL I'm going to cut my ward and take a stroll to-night," He sauntered out into the clear moon, livht and fresh air. lr. W bar ton glanced after him, feeling as if he, too, must escape from the nau seating siuell of the drugs and the heavy, 1 lid air of the sick wards. But he ground steadily at his powder. He was a homely little man, whose only attractive trait was a happy, hearty buJyanc, of heart, but that was gone now W ben the prescription was made S ii little pers, labelled and diiec -ed he washed his hands, put on his St, and looking at his watch walked ouicklv into the street. Half an hour S ffi time he gave himself for but to-night he would use the haU hour for seething eh tluMV lie turned into a quiet cross street, a,,d in a lew minutes reached a little Sgrew suddenly red as she l0-olUFuilip'." she cried, jumping rSLSSFSt S you, -as "ho un.li1" hi9 face darkening, he?" said PbnP. M i Fvrferror at in the back room. ge me and Fhilip, or be npoiible then what should I do. cltVn0w, nie,&usie, lo jou muncU wereabUlefiy form ooy ing candy, and tou my wife, But 1 ermmr trouble, though and keep .bout i . fTourveSuLturself vour profession , ;nini? to think "Frofessionl , better Frazier is nguH d ton -j o hndarner tnan a k Frazier is nut,---to, T Then and ist I would be sure - " -nsd wages,butnow,wtenx"- ltmay ara befor i cttu v keep us from at,.r. ;.. . , ,. marrv -"6, ii we snouiu J thou-h l.r ii SU!ile' wugbmg, else ,.raZier '8 S0ilx' t0 trv something "And will you?" Wharton hesitated, and theu that ueienuiued look which Susie knew so well. iriv.. ' at t. I never have I'll w i " -r1 gHUu 1 dld acd n.n V i Vesln lt uow! But you, you must help me to keep up heart, Susie," Ed 2 ?h112 brmh be took "Why, there's no r-ason why we should give up heart," she said, with a cheerful tone. "Go now, there is -NlXOll COlllllKT JT A., ..... " i:, . you here." o, said Philip, "he is afraid he IVIll lMCQ ! as-... . .., cierK. lie u not Und another that he can grind as much work irom on starvation wages." 'Go! g!" she puslied him to the door still laughing, but when he was ffmia c 1.. I.: J 1 1 ... 6"'" ': iu ner ueau on the ledger and sobbed. ousib was an oqiliau and had no inens in U113 world but the man who uau loveu ner since she was a child. She had more courage aud energy probably, than he, but the life of the girl in Nixon's shop was almost intol erable, and she was very lonely and tired. If Dr. Wharton was moody aud des lairiug the next day his patients did not know it. He had never been more gentle or untiring in his care of them. They were all poor, for the hospital was a city charity. liut the more heavily his own trouble pressed on him the more tender to those wretched paupers be grew. 1 1 a 11-.1Q dnoUl nil 41. a ....t .;i. one old countryman, who had fallen in !. i- . . . t 1 : . 1 1 1 iuc onctrt uoiu iiis iiorse, auu ueen car ried in insensible. Dr. Frazier round him beside the old man's cot early in the afternoon. Vi-i-yiuf ....( ...... -1.. ..11 M. UOU 11 u LQClib 11C11 Ijr tXLL day His face was flushed ami his eyes no uuiuuig iui c&ciieuieiiu no beckoned Philip aside. 'There's a chance. It's something big," he whispered excitedly. "Call til t-lL'A rmir n'inl tliw u ftariwvn ' vvr unf iiui aiA a,asx mnii and come with me. He's going to take lit 1 lie. 44T nant ri-o uti tie vir.t P.utr He's a blunderer," said Wharton, gruiny. 1 ou may u you choose," "oneed to snub me, l'hil, when I'm trying to do you a service. You said the other il;iv vnn had savttl a couple of hundred dollars." . 1 es, that s my capital to begin the world with in September." "Well, Frank my brother, you know has just had private informa tion of a great expected rise in the Dar ling Silver Mine stock. He'll let you and me into the chance. We'll go down with him to the Stock Exchange and buy up all the shares we can." "I can't leave my ward to Poor," he said. "There is no patient in danger but this man. But he is in a very cri tical condition. I wont' leave him. 14 Viiciii'i What fan a ninnln tif hours matter! It is a chance that may sure thing, 1 leu you." hartou shook his neau. l.wrn tn rpa 111 l'hil Vim m:iv . li ir pimiKrh liv this venture to make. a beginning for a competency tor-years.' 1 ou can auoru meu w wait 101- piac tin Ynu niiL'lit eveu mam7, if vou can find a nice girl," he said, Willi a laugu. t l:irrv!" Ir. AVhartou's handsliook. as he dropped the medicine into a sjiooiu I WOUlu neeu lime 10 cousiuer me 111 vMitm nt " he said, "even if I could leave this man. 1 would wish to be clear in my conscience that it would be 9 ,r.Mnr nnA to make. Uut the old man's condition is such that my present .. It- .1....... .. l.n duty is clear. lie sai, uuu vj 111c :it-liin'j Hie sick man. The pic ture of Susie at work in the miserable shop, with that brutal old jNixou oriv rcr iiur rkS l-fore lum. She might have to' bear this for years, and now that possibly he miguiiieipuer, sua uc w irive it up tor this man an utter stran ger to him. o .... . . .ri.i :rl The ciocKuckeuswimj. face was haggard. "Come!" Frazier said nurrieiuy. "I'll not go, Frazier." v,.t tril You are not uoiair to lose vouroue chance in bfe tor. that old pjmjier tnai oiu uaviuuin nmiuo contemptuously towards the cot. "I'll not leave mm. - , Dr. t razier stooiel over the old man and examined him. He may lay in tms way ior aajs,- i. "It ia likely vou will hnd nun UC " " 11,, just as he is when you come back." ... . 1 . . . nl.'i mifl mt till V Tl 1 l"l i eS, lUl UC ITilJ uimibt J ment. Tlie treatment I am trying is a new one. Poor knows nothing about it- " .... .!! "You'll not come, iiienr- sau x i zier halting on his way to the door. iiViw.,,. tr.ui followed him a step or two. and did not reply for a moment. hits nt the withered old face on the pillow flickered, a sliarp glance shot out irom tneui. "No " he said, quietly. "I will stay withhin. Ttiis is no common work, and I will not leave it to Poor." Frazier went to the exchange, and bv several ventures cleared several hun dred dollars. He was greatly elated over his success. , , . . ... Dr. Wharton uruageu aiong i daily rounds among his pauper patients witu no other reward tlian the old man 's recovery. "You are rea-ly for discharge to morrow," he said to hiin one day when fortnight uau passeu. I:. ".. ehl That was a queer iiatitiw a i experiment you tried on me, young rnan. I've bad some little experience Lnysic in my day, and I can't say I TJt saw the bke of that treatment." e,-. : mit-tliB old method, su-.' said W harton, resictfully, going on his rounds. . . When he came ikh.iv, . ,V". ;..i....siv: "Where's the in? Some tniet uaa i- -"You wul tind it with the buirm- tendent.'' T. nn t. Oh. ayei i nope so. - . : t . hr an institution. I buTformykeephere'Ube hiuh. young man?" "I'here is no charge, u SSfil" grumbled the old feUow tn himself, turning over in bed-. toir.V -1..- i lft the hospital, while Philip was at dinner, without a WhTi3 tTeend of it," thought I the doctor. This one rreat struma of his life had cost him so much, that be could not understand how the man who naa gamed by it could be so indifferent I wish he had said good-bye, at icaL uut no matter." J. he next week tie Superintendent sent for him. "Who is John Sands, doctor?" he asked, as soon as Philip openea me aoor. . "A poor old countryman who was in my ward. Discharged last Tues day." "Poor, indeed! It was Dr. Sands, as it turns out Dr. Sands, t f Schollsburg. The old man has had all the practice of that county for forty years, and has amassed a tortuiie, but he chooses to go about like a beggar. He was mis taken for one and brought in here, it seems. He encloses a check for a hun dred dollars, for the hospital, and says he doesn't chos to be indebted even to an institution." "Well done for Sands!" laughed t nanon. "He has done better than that," said the Superintendent, with a twinkle in his eyes. "Sit down a minute. Whar ton. The old doctor, it seems, is feel ing his age, and wants to take some young man in as partner, to whom he can leave his practice in a year or two, and he has fixed noon upon well. narion. lie lias nxed upon your' "Me!" and Philip sprang to bis feet. "You. Yes, I said you. You have made the old fellow your debtor in some way, by a favor, which he says he can never repay. Besides, he says he watched you closely while here, and approves of your system, your manner. and, above all, your inflexible devotion to your duty, ihere is his letter." Philip read it with eager ejes. "lou see he says he wants you to come in September, and to bring a wife with you, if possible. A married man. he says, is always more successful. .Ec centric old fellow, 1 fancy?" liut 1 tulip did not answer, lie was buttoning his overcoat with troubling hands. "F,xcuse me," he said, but there is a friend to whom I mutt tell the good news," and in a moment more he was on his way to the book-shop and Susie I Dr. Wharton is now the priuciial practitioner in scholl county, and a happy, successful man. "1 gained wife, lortune, all I have," he says, "simply by sticking to one thing until it was finished." Dr. r razier s success was but tempo rary, lie risked all he bad on one un lucky venture, and lost. He is now a clerk ou a small salary in his brother's olhce. A Crockery Rsk About 8 o'clock, a man smoking plug tobacco in an old clav pipe, walked out of a Michigan avenue saloon, Detroit, with a rat in a trap. He looked neither to the right or the left until he had reached the middle of the street. Then he placed the trap on he ground and whistled for his dog. If he had a dog. the animal did not respond, but the public did. In less than two minutes thirty men were rushing to the siot. "Ilil there: Don't let bun out tui 1 get my dog," shouted one. "liold on! W ait ior the dogs:" yelled half a dozen voices at once. - "Keep cool and form a circle!" com manded a policeman, as he took a fir mer grip of his baton. The man with the trap spread a large handkerchief over it and waited, lie was not a bit etcited. On the contrary he was as placid as a chip sailing in the wash-dish, f f "Whar' did ye. ketch him?" inquired a newsboy. . ' ' . ' ' The placid man did not deign to reply. "What '11 ye take fur him?" asked another, but his inquiry was treated with the same silent contempt. Then four or five men came running up with dogs under their arms, and ten or fifteen dogs on foot followed behind. There was a light between a bull-dog aud a Newfoundland, and there would have been a row between owners had not a second policeman appeared. Or der was finally restored. The dogs were arranged in a circle and held by their collars, and the placid man slowly knocked the ashes Irom his pipe, looKed carefully around, and then raised the trap and shook the rat out. All the dogs made a rush, but in ten seconds each and every canine walked off on his ear and seemed to be hurt in his feel ings. A boy stepped forward and held the rat up to view. 'It's a crockery rat;" he yelled as he whirled it around. "Yes, it vuas a erogery radt, mid he cost me den cents!-' calmly replied the placid man as he walked off wUh his trap. Poison la tbe Teacup. Among the many articles of common family use that have become the subjects of cheap adulteration there is probably no one more conspicuous than tea. Poor and cheap teas are flavored and colored to re semble, in a faint degree, those of a better gmde. while teas that have been once used and tbeir strength entirely extracted are redried, recolored by the use ol copperas and Prussian blue, and by the aid of a slight admixture of genuine tea are palmed ff on an unsuspecting puunc The fraud of selling tea that is entirely worthless Is bad enough, but when But ncient of poison is added to tbe tasteless decoction to irritate and injure the stomach tbe evU becomes of sufficient magnitude to call for preventive measures of a vigorous kind. Just bow this can be best accom plished is somewhat uncertain, rteliable dealers of courae refuse to handle the fraudulent and poisonous stuff. But ras cally dealers in tbe adulterated goods es tablish agencies, employ canvassers to go from house to bouse, and as tbey can af ford to sell these worthless goods cheaper than the family grocer can sell an honest article, they manage to deceive ignorant and well-meaning people and work off the poisonous and spurious goods hi large quantities. Several states, rennsyivania inciuuca, have stringent laws against the sale of adul terated articles of food and drink, but tbe laws fail to pi o vide practical methods for detecting these adulterations and are thus insufficient. Gongress passed an act at its last session to prevent the importation of adulterated and spurious teas and, as all teas are imported, if tbe inspectors are efficient and watchful the evil should be checked so far as new importations of tte worthless, stuff is concerned. There is, however, a vast stock of the doctored herb already in this country and there are firms which follow the business of adulteration in some of our own cities. Against these two sources of supply the public must still continue to guard itself. . The best method of doing this at present is not to be too anxious to get cheap teas and to be sure that tbe tea dealer of whom tbe family purchases are made not only la honest, but knows what real tea is when he sses it, Fatuous Escapes From 1 nillmns. "stones of marvelous and ingenious escapes were the romance of tbe colonies. and such adventures ditte back to the earliest Indian war in Virginia, where s man sod bis wife, who had been spared In tbe wholesale slaughter, found their opportu nity to escape while tbe Indians were danc ing for jiy over the acquisition of a white man' host that tad drifted ashore. These captives got into a canoe, and soon after ward surprised their friends in tbe settle men's, who hid believed them to he dead. Very like this was the escape of Anthoay Bracket and his wife in Maine. Tbey were left to follow on after their captors, who were eager to reach plundenng party in time to share tn the spoiL Brack et's wife toucd a broken bark canoe, which she mended with a needle, and thread; the whole family then put to sea in this r.ckety craft, and at length reached Black Point, where they got on board a ve?seL A little lad of eleven years named Eimes, taken in Philip's war, made bis way tbuty miles or more to the settlements. Two sons of the famous Hannah Bradley, previously mentioned, effected an lneenious escape, lying all the first day in a hollow log and using their provisions to make fnend with tne dogs that had tracked them. Tbey journeyed in extreme peril and suffering for nine davs. and one of them fell dowu with exhaustion just as tbey were entering a while settlcmeuL A young girl in Massachusetts, after three weeks of cap tivity, made a bndle of bark, and catch ine a horse, rode all mgbt through tbe woods to Conconl. Mrs. Dean, taken at Oyster Hiver in 1694, was left, with her dauehler, in charge of aa old Indian while the rest finished tbeir work of destruction. The old feilow asked bis prisoner what would cure a pain in his bead. She recom mended him to drink some rum taken from J her house. This put him to sleep, and tbe woman and child got away. Another downcast captive, with the fitting name of Toogood, while bis captor during an attack on a settlement was disentangling a piece of string with which to tie him. jerked the Indian's gun from under bis arm aud, leveling it at his bead, got salely away. "'tscaping captives endured txtreme hardships. Une Bard, taken in Pehnsyl- vania, lived nine days on a few buds and four snakes. Airs. Inglis, captured in the valley of Virginia, escaped in company with a German woman from a place far down the Ohio river. After narrowly avoiding discovery and recapture, they succeeded in ascending the south bank of the Ohio for some hundreds of miles. When within a few days' travel of settle ments, tbey were so reduced by famine that the German woman, enraged that she had been persuaded to desert tbe Indian flesh -pots, and crazed with banger, made an unsuccessful attack on her companion with cannibal intentions. 1 be most fa mous of all tbe escapes of New Eaeland captives was that of II innbh Duston, Mary eff, and a boy, saniucl Leonardson. 1'hese three were carried off, with many others, in 16a", in the attack on Haver- bill, Sirs. Disums infant child having been killed by the Indians. When the captors had EeuurUed. the party to whom the two women and the hoy were assigned encamped on an island in tbe Mcrriintc river. At midnight, tbe captives secured hatchets and killed tea Indians two men, two women, and six children one favorite boy, whom they meant to spare, and one badly wounded woman, escaping. After tbey had left the camp, the fugitives rememoercd that nobody in tbe settlements would believe, without evidence, that tbey had performed so redoubtable an action; ihey therefore returned and scalped tbe Indians, after which they scuttled all the canoes on the lsUnd but one, and in this escaped down the Jlerr.mac, ard finally reached Uaverhill. This was such an ex ploit as made the actors immediately fa mous in that bloody time. Tbe Massa chusetts General Coart gave Mrs. Duston twent7-five pounds and granted half that amount to each of her companions. 1 be story of their daring deed was carried far to the S)utbward, and Governor .Nicholson, of Maryland, sect a valuable present to the escaped prisoners." The Rubber's Care. Some of the quiet homes in and around the village of North Tarry town, in Westchester county, New York, have been disturbed in tbe hut few months by burglars, The property taken has not been always of 'great value, bat the losses nevertheless have been felt. The villagers and the local police have made efforts to find the criminals, but the search has heretofore been fruitless. It has especially puzzled the police to con jecture how thi goods have been carried off without attracting the attention of the neighbors. Messrs. Thayer, Leg gett, Ma-on, and others whosa homes have been entered have been especially active in seeking the thieyes. The in formation that had been sought in vain, however, by the constables ard deputy sber Si, was obtained on Monday, Aug. 20th, in an unexpected and roniantie manner by two citizens of North Tarry town. Mr. Van Tassel and a friend were strolling through the S&cha woods in the afternoon when their attention was attracted by the mysterious move ments of a stranger at a little distance. They could scarcely determine whether he was developing a recently-discovered gold mine, searching for a mineral spring, sinking a well, or digging a last resting-place for himself. Ibeir thoughts were rudely disturb ed, however, by the mysterious being in whose movements tbey were taking so keen an intereV. The stranger, hap pening to see the two men. resented the intrusion, and seizing a rule which lay oonvemeutly near, suggested the advis ability of being lalt to the solitude he so much desired. Mr. Van Ta-sel and his friend not being at that time in an argumentive mood, agreed to the propo sition of the genial stranger. They strolled in another direction until they secured the aid of some of their towns men, and then the party returned to the neighborhood where the digging warrior had been seen. The man had disappeared, but the inquisi tive villagers proceeded to examine the ground iu the vicinity, and they were soon rewarded by the discovery of a piece of iiatural scenery hitherto un known to the oldest inhabitant. This was a cave which had bee a concealed by boards covered with earth so as not to be noticed from the path. The boards were taken off and the acquisitive dispo sition of the Btranger became manifest. He bad secured boots and shoes, cloth ing, and provisions enough for miny people's needs. Tae property whish the straDger had taken such pains to acquire and preserve was taken by the villagers to the office of Justice Ken dall, the local magistrate, where they are awaiting identification by their owners, who will probably receive them unless the man with the rifle should pat in further chums for their possession. GUnpm of Alaska. Three sunny and beautiful days were spent sailing through the enchanted islands, with steep mountain sides and bold rocks reflected to clear waters, cascades dashing down between tbe pine trees, and lofty snow peaks taking on the delicate glow and flush of the late sunset light. The midnight skies had been dyed with the flames of the aurora, and the early sunrise was a dream of faint and misty coloring just before we rounded the point of a green island one morning and saw tbe town and totem poles of Fort Wrangell before us. .next to h.odiak and SilKa, Wrange'l is one of the oldest settlej.ents in Alaska, and for eighty years has been a great trading post along tbe coast. Tbe liudson Bay Company and the Kussian Government had forts and stations here, and for a few years after the purchase of Ala'Uta a garrison of United States troops was maintained at Fort WrangelL As different counsels prevailed at head quarters, the troops were withdrawn and then returned, and after a small fortune bad been expended in this abandonment and restoration cf the military, the soldiers took a final leave twelve years ago, and the block house, stockade, and tbe log quarters were given ever to picturesque ness and decay. As a point of departure for the Gasiar mines on the Stickeen river, Wrangell has maintained its importance even after tbe lthdrawal of troops, and the miners and prospectors of tbe gold region make it a oase of supplies in all seasons, and a place for social hibernation when the snow and ice drive them down from their mountain retreats. A few trading stores straggle up the main street that runs parallel with tbe beach. At one end Ibis thoroughfare is guarded by the stockade and sally-port of tbe old fort, while at tbe other U gradu ally changes into a rambling Indian village, set with totem poets and f nnged along tbe water front with long cedar canoes. I he Indian bouses front directly on the beach, and behind them are tbe grass-crown ruins of the old Kussian tort and its outlying graveyard. The bouses are low aud square, built of rough-hewn cedar pleuks, with few attempts at paint and outer decorations besides the tall totems that guard the doorways of the chiefs and the other great men. These totems are the shrines and show places of Wrangell, and tne ordinary tourist can appreciate something of tbe great interest that ethnologists have taken in them. A pair of especially fine totems were taken from here in 1S76 and sent to tbe Genten. mal Exposition, and since then they have occupied a place in the great ball of the Smithsonian lnstiute. The totems of Wrangell are ancient and weather worn, spotted with moss and lichens and bearing tufts of grsss and waving bushes in the crevices, and the heraldic carving and coloring is wonder fully improved by this toning and soft ening of the elements. The totems by tbe doorways stand forty and sixty feet bigb; carved from base to crown with huge, grotesque faces of men and animals tbe bear, tbe whale, the wolf, and the raven standing as most prominent among the heraldic beasts that represent tbe great families of the TWiukels, Kicb one of these faces has a significance equivalent to the quarletings on 'he shield of a noble family, and a man's ancestors and able- ances are to be read on bis totem posts by all who run. The carving and painting of tbe symbolic beads is a work of savage skill, and tbe cost of these poles is aston ishing even in this day of extravagar.ee in decorative art. The noble Tblinkct must first fell his tall cedars and set tbe artist to work, and then comes tbe grand cere mony of erecting tbe pests before his home. A feast is given of all tbe deli cacies tbe Alaska market can afford, and potlach or gifts of blankets and calico are given away so generously that the totem party often costs as high as $1,000 and $2,000. A man's rank and riches are considered greater tbe more he gives away, and as the blanket is tbe unit of value, his wealth and standing increases according as be tears and distributes blankets on the occasion of his house-warming and pole- raising parties. Totems are also erected over tbe square-box houses in which they deposit the ashes of then cremated dead, and the town abounds in picturesque little tombs niched in between tbe bouses of tbe living. Surmounted by a fox or a whale once painted in brilliant colors, but now toned down by tbe mosses, the terns, trailers, and rank vegetation that rapidly creeps over and conceals everything in this moist, temperate climate, the houses of the dead are more picture1 que than those of tbe living. Fear of ike Dentist. Ten thousand dentists, whose thriving business attests badness of American teeth, meet with amjsing adventures when they encounter those who are suf fering from what Burns calls the "grim, mischief-making chiel" that makes "man kind aft dance a reeL" A reporter describes some of these expenenevs, as they were described to him by several dentists. "We encounter more that is ridicu lous in the extraction of teeth than in any other branch of the profession, " said dentist. 'Why. I have had great strong men come into my office with the intention of having a tooth extracted, and at the sight of the instrument actually turn and run, yes, run, as if the angel of death bad sud denly appeared before them. a On tbe other hand 1 have seen r rail- looking little women come in, and without a word or look that would indicate any timidity, take a seat and undergo the oper ation with scarcely a sign of fear. "Men and women of large sta'ure as a general rule, make more lusa than smaller men and women, and women exhibit less fear than men. "Some very amusing incidents occur during tbe practice of a dentist. For in stance, not long since a prominent lawyer, being greatly annoyed by an aching tooth, decided to have it out; so, mustering up courage, he went to a well-known dentist and told him he reauired his services. 'The lawyer took the chair and the dentist got everything in readiness, when the lawyer spoke up and said, 'I am going to faint.' and be did. Nevertheless, tbe tooth was extracted. and the loss of blood bringing him to consciousness, the dentist asked him if it was a commin thing for bun to faint, and receiving an amrmative answer, saiu mat tbe fact of his fainting had removed tbe necessity of his administering gas. ProftMor Treadwell, of Massachu setts, found that a half-graw American robin in confinement ate in one day sixty eight worms, weighing together once and a half as much aa the bird himself, and another had previously starved upon a daily allowance of eight to ten worms,or about ii) per cenLof his own weight. Dot the mice from the shocks of wheat standing in the fields by scattering a few bread pills mixed with arsenic. Thn nhinkMia mnt tint hava uwu to 'the field-however, ro; Signals. The principal fog signals used in this country are the siren, the steam trum pet, the steam whistle, the whistling buoy, the bell boat, the bell buoy and heavy bells ruug by clockwork. The siren is sounded by driving steam through a fl it, circular disc, containing a number of slits, the disc being fixed In the thro tof an immense trumpet. Be hind this is a revolving plate, having in it a similar cumber of openings. The plate is revolved by steam 2400 times eacb minnte. Whenever the slits in the plate coincide with those in tbe diso i jet of steam escapes through each open ing, mnder great pressure, into the trumpet. If there are ten openings there wii be 21,000 screams each min ute. Tb'jee combine! in the trumpet give a s'ngle, strong shriek in deafen ing volume, and of great range. The sound c.n genrially be heard at a dis tance of twenty miles, and can readily be distinguished from all noises at sea. The siren is the farthest reaching fog signal yet produced, but lt is tbe most expensive to build, the most difficult to run, and the most costly to keep going. One of the largest size sirens is connect ed with the light house at Cape Henlo pen, at the month of De'aware Bay, op posite Cape May. where iu a fog it gives a blast six seconils long after an interval of 39 seconds'. These instruments have done so well on our coasts that other countries have procured numbers of them. Great Britain has more than twenty of them now in operation on her shores. The Daboll fog trumpet is made like a mons'er clarionet, and is sounded by air condmsed in a reservoir by machin ery driven by a hot-air engine. The largest trumpet is 17 feet long, with a month 38 itches across and a throat 31 inches in diameter. Its reed of steel is teu inches long, 2 wide, an inch thick at its fixed end and half that at the other. The Ericsson engine thit drives it has a 32-inch cylinder, which, at twenty pounds pressure, can give a five second blast every minute. Thn Daboll trumpet, is, however, going ont of favor because of its liability to accident and the difficulty of getting it repaired. The nearest one to ns is in .Long Island Sound at Execution Kocks Light Sta tion . The rnoet frequently used for fog signals of this general class is the loco motive steam whistle, with a diameter varying from 6 to 18 inches, operated by an ordinary boiler, under a pressure varying from 50 to 190 pounds. By in tervals of blast and silence it can be dif ferentiated from neighboring fog sig nals, and these intervals automatically produced by having an engine take steam from the same boiler, and open and close its valves at fixed times, when the steam is sunt off or let on as desired. These instruments do not easily get out of order, and they are readily operated. '1 he whistles are used on light ships as well as light honses. There is a 12-inch thistle on each of the litLt ships on Five Fathom Bank, off the Capes of the Delaware. The power of these fog signals can be expressed in proportion thus: Siren, 9; whistle, 7; trumpet, 4; and as to cost of running them they stanu as follows: si ren, 9; whistle, 3; and trumpet, 1. ihere are bo fog signals now on our coasts operated bv steam or hot air. The bell boat, which is at beet a clumsy contrivance, liable t be upset when most needed, cottly to build, hard to handle and dil-nlt to keep in repair, has been superceded by Brown's bell buoy, which was invented by an officer of the Light House Service. The bell ia mounted ou tlis bottom section of an iron buoy, which is decked over and fitted with a frame work of 3-inch angle iron, 9 feet high, to which a 3(J0 ponnd bell is rigidly attached. A concentric grooved iron plate is mado fast to the frame under the bell and close to it, and a cannon ball is allowed to roll on this plate. As the buoy rolls on tbe sea the ball rolls on the plate, striking ore side of the bell at each roll. This signal is always at work, and the heavier the sea the louder the sound of the belL There are 24 of these bells now in use in this country, one of which is on Brown Shoal, Delaware bay. They cost, with their mooring, not far from $1,000 each. The "whistling buoy" consists of an iron pear shaped ball, say 22 feet in di ameter, with a tube 20 inches across and 40 feet long running through it The water in the the tube acts as a pis ton to draw in the air through a hole covered with a retaining valve, and to expel it through a ten-inch whistle, a shrill moaning sound which can be heard several miles. Its dimensions have recently been reduced without de creasing its power. As its action de pends on rough water, it is only used in open water. They now cost, with their moorings, about $1,200 each. There are 25 of them on onr coasts, 5 of which are in our immediate waters. The whistling buoy recently placed on the outer Hatteras shoal, just off the pitch of the cape, is of greatest use to our coasters. The bell fog signal most in use is the bell struck by machinery moved by clock work. Ihere are about 123 of these bells. They weigh from 300 to 3,000 pounds each, though not many weigh more than 1,000 pounds. The tilth North. It sounds strange to hear of a steam boat on the Suith Saskatchewan river iu Manitoba. Canada. The Saskatche- wan with its north and south branehes, rises in the Kotky mountains and runs east into I.ake Winnipeg, its length being nearly as great as that of tbt Ohio. Its general course is through a region further north than the latitude of the lower end of Hudson's bay, and as there are settlements on its banks, and the country is described as fertile and tillable, it would seem that the northern limit of profitable farming lias not yet been reached iu that vast region once regarded as a bleak desola tion, fit only for f ur-bearing animals. Not very far north of the Saskatche wan the Arctic sys.era of rivers has its head-waters the Athabaska and Peace, which unite, to form the Mackenzie, the mighty stream which discharges its waters into the Polar sea above- the Arctic circle. Here is a vast region, almost as large as the United States, abounding in rivers aud lakes, some of which are known to be navigable. This region is being actively explored, and permanent settlements follow fast in the track of exploration. The lower part of it will, in a few years, be pro vided with railroads; British capital and enterprise are at work in it to test its capacities, and we may yet live to see the foundations of an empire laid in its unbroken solitudes. Am HlMorle Sea Bmle. An old man gives the following ac count of the memorable fight between the American brig Enterprise and the English brig Boxer during the war of 1?12. All along the coast of New England the people were scared about the British vessels coming and landing their men to burn the houses, and some of 'em really took to the woods and hid. There were two British ves sels cruising off the coast, the Tenedos and Boxer. Well do I remember see ing their boats filled with men pulling past Pemaquid Point, and some one, I don't know who it was, tired three guns at 'em. I was running about the bill here playing. 1 heard tbe report and saw the flash, and the smoke drift ing away before the wind. The boats fired canister into the bushes, and an awful rattling it made. Many a time have I heard old Sam Mclntyre swear. when he was in liquor, that he tired nineteen shots at the boats, although some said he was so scared on hearing tbe firing that he ran off and hid under bridge. One Saturday afternoon. just after I had driven the cows home, saw the Boxer coming into John's Bay and anchor just back o' the isl and, between lt and Pemaquid Point, and the folks were pretty well scared about it, and some of 'em was nigh going to the woods; but father, who had seen the last of the Revolution and was a Freewill Baptist besides, was not a mite uneasy about the Britisher. On Sunday morning she laid there to an anchor, her black hull shining in the sun. One of i.er boats, with an olhcer, had pulled over to Mouhegau. Our folks were so unsettled on account of the vessel that none of 'em went to meeting. It was nigh onto 1 o'clock. and, boy like, I was mighty hungry and thinking about my dinner, when all of a sudden I saw they apwared to be in a great hurry aboard the Boxer getting her under weight, ard presently she was standing out under all sail. ' 'Climb upon the smoke-house and tell us what you see,' said my father. Our house was built on rising ground, and the smoke-house was about fifteen feet high awl built of poles. From the top of it 1 could see all around. Away to the w'st'd I saw a vessel coining down under all sail, with the Stars and Stripes flying. I commenced to feel retty safe then. It was not lou be fore they neared each other, ami al most at the same time a sheet of flame and smoke bunt from their sides, aud l could see the water torn up in spray by the shot. The American vessel was good deal the best sailer, and she out-maneuvered the Boxer. The firing was so rapid that they were soon hid in smoke. Once in a while, through a nit in the cloud, I could catch a glimpse of their tattered sails and ri ging. They drifted out toward Mou- hegan, looking like a cloud of thick vapor, from which burst incessant sprouts of flame. I guess the folks all forgot dinner and everything else when the deep boom of the guns woke the echoes among the rocks, and the win dows rattled in their frames. Watch ing the tight it seemed to be an age, although it only lasted forty-five min utes. I tell you, sir, I have never for gotten the sight, though sixty years have passed," and the old man's with ered ctiet-k flushed and his eyes kindled as he spoke. 'By and by the firing slackened, and the smoke rolled away to leeward; one of 'em had lost his mainmast head, and sails of both hung in ribbons from the yards. I almost strained my eyes out o' my head to get a glimpse of the colors, but they were too far off to make them out. By seeing 'em drift away to the e'st'd the folks thought the Enterprise was beat. The sus pense among us was awful, even the women folks catching their breath with a sob, and many prayed aloud. Pre sently I saw them set their courses, tack, and stand to the west'd; then we knew the Britisher was whipped. I tell you I was a tired boy when I came down off that smoke-house, just as if I had worked hard all day chopping kindling-wood. 1 remember Henry Tibbets and his brother David pulled out in a dory from Christmas Cove to see how the tight had gone, but they could get no satisfaction iu answer to their hail, it was said that when the Boxer was boarded her decks were slipjiery with blood, and lumbered up with splinters, coils of rigging and bod ies of the dying and dead, many of whom had been tossed overboard, just before her colors were hauled down to conceal their looses. "I heard that her boats crew watched the fight from Monhegan, and when her maintopmast was shot away one of them exclaimed: 'There it goes! and four of our best men with it.' Mind, that's only what folks told around, but what I saw I know, and I've tried to tell you about the tight just as I saw it" A Lightning FlaitU. The Russian papers report the de structive action of a flash of lightning. which struck the stable attached to the cavalry officers' school at Krasnoje- Selo, killing sixteen horses on the sjiot. The electric fluid, on striking the cor ner of the building, seems to have traveled along the iron with which the racks were covered, and set all the hay on fire at once. The horses all feu to the ground. Most of them rose again quickly; but sixteen were found to be dead, and two were quite deaf. In all the horses that were killed the electric fluid seems to have entered at the head or the neck, passing down through the fore feet. Tne killed horses were not all together or in adjoiiJng stalls, but were scattered up and dowu the stable, justifying the presumption that tlieir death was caused by their coming into contact with the metallic covering of the racks. The horses who survived were most probably not in contact with the metal at the momeut when it was being traversed by the electric fluid. Iridescent Ulaee. Many lovers of the beautiful are great admirers of the colors like those of tbe rainbow sometimes seen on glassware, and wonder how they are produced. Tbe story goes that the workmen ol a Bohemian manufacturer wishing to celebrate) his return home kindled some Bengal lights in the annealing ovens. What pieces ot glassware were mere pe- came iridescent, xnis accineuuu uia eovery was taken due advantage of ... ,in "1 when like enacts were ueiirea. w nue the glass is hot, and before it is put in the annealing furnace; a vapor is passed over it. This vapor is the product of a mixture of photo-chloride of tin. car bonate of strontoan. Altor the anneal ing process the colore can sometinu be removed by vigorous ruooicg. NEWS IN BUIEF. Mr. Flood's San Frincisco 'house" will cost, it is given out, nearly $.", 000.000. Bismarck has had his b3urd s'lavel off, and again appears with sliavdn face and heavy moustache male fu uili ir by popular pictures of him. Iowa, Republican, and Texas, De mocratic, are both free of debt, and the latter State has au "emb.irrasiu " cash balance in its treasury. The largest man in the British ser vice Is Lieut. Southerlaad. of the Fif tv- sixth Reginieut. lie is t) feet 4 inches high and weighs about 304 poun Is. In 1372 the British nation d d.-bt stood at $,o,U00,0J0; in 1S3J at $;j,54,OO0,lHM Tuepreseut C.uuijl lor of the Exchequer favors a sj le.uj for more rapid redemption. The exports of pjtrjle j u for thj twelve months which endei Ju:ie 3 th last, amounted iu valua t t $11,911,07;), against S-j1,U,7o; f.r tlid twdlva uiouUis w.iio.i ealei Ju id 3)c!i, H-jJ. Mous. Dieulafait has coaelulal that the evaioratioa of sea water in tha region of the Rhoue delta must average at the lowest estimate about ouo fourth of an inch a day throughout the year. Tea culture is carrie 1 j.i i i sswHrl of the Southern States, an 1, acordiu to a letter Irom that section, the uuui ber of families that reg.il.irly uj tax of domestic production is steadily in creasing. The oldest printed b ilia 1 in t'u English languiige was lately au'iuirei for the British Museum. It is a con temporary record of the b itt.e of Flol den Field, printed by oae of tin earliest tyP-tjrapliers. In France the largest nmubjf of marriages taiie place m thj s iinei month, February; tiiesaiillest uuiu'j -r in December. La-tt year ta.-r3 wjrj 34,107 iu Februajy a.tinst le-ts tii.ri 13,000 iu December. A quartz bouldjr, weiIiiiij ! pounds, and worta ao it JJ), wa recently -hydraulicie V o;ic of a b in at Gibsouville, Nevalu It htl th appearance of uavia bje.i irj.i.i 1 ia a pot hole, beiirjsin m.Iuv tvaiiie L Ia 1JX the year bjfore tin intro duction of thd E izlisi ln!iir lit three letters per hea 1 of Uii p j.mlati .i was sent: iu it hil ris.'a t j 2). and nowstaals ai 3J. la (i.-ramiy, the number is l i; iu France, IV. The waiters' fee uuisa.ue is report ed to be particularly annoying t.iis sea son at Saratoga, It is stated that the head waiter at one of the leading Sara toga hotels hou-jlit at ttie closj o last season jXW worth of tioverniujnt bonds. It is mentioned as a rather ciiriou fact that Dr. Frenoy, the lea tin.; phy sician at Aix-les-Baius, where so iu my people go to be cured of rheuiuatisai, u a martyr to that ailment, thoa-rii hi is very successful m curing others of tlm complaint. The annual report of tiia Boar 1 o;" Trade of Cuicuiuau sUja-s tiitt t is t tal product ot the in imifactiire of that city, duriti' the last year, a u ju:il- ed in value to lDl,V72,i ), a i eais of $),0JJ,10) cj.uparel wita t:i; pn duct of the preceding year. Horn, the Germ.tnstatistician. s.ivs that cigars are driving oiu the ol I fashioued pip-js. During tin p is; year there were consumed iu tho Geruim customs union o'JVJ.HO.OJJ ci'irs' weighing 37,0t tons. -O.Uy" 3o,i7.) tous of smoking tobajco were use I. There has been found aiuiui? a Bedouin tribe east of the Jordon. nieces of skin containing portions of Deutoro- uomy and the commandments, inula about ttoj years before Christ, aa 1 t!i uruisn jiusttiiin is exiwctel tJ piy a fabulous sum for it. There is little doubt, among experts, as to its gen uineness. Boer drinking is done cenerousl in this country, as completed st atistics show. The total sales last vear amou nt- ed to 17,0U0,00J b trrels, or about 1') gallons per head of the population. Alabama and North Carolina brew verv little beer, and Arkansas. Florida. Maine, Mississipi and Vermont brew none at all. larishas twenty-three municipal libraries, some of which are located in the communal schools. Iu round num bers 128,000 books, of which 71,1 JO were novels, were borrowed from these librar ies during the three months ending J une 30th. Less thau five in every ou thousand books borrowed are in foreign langu;iges. - The Government printiu.j-o.Hje, said to be the largest establishment of its kind in the world, is valued at $ , 000,0UO. The disbursements last year (ending June 30th) were i2,t5o,loJ GS. The daily pay of employes is $.VJ0J. lt is estimated that from 1789 to 1881, the total outlay for Government printiug lias been in tne neighborhood ot" ilJJ,- ouo.oov. Chicago has 1JJ2 streets, 9s j fire boxes, 8 post otlices, 00 public schools, 27 asylums, 13 hospitals, 11 public li braries, 2-i cemeteries, an 1 about 0.) saloons, according to a statistical para graph afloat. She has but oue Mayor, out by most accounts he is a Harrison nearly all the people not included in the last enumerated class. Among the numerous tablets whi ch now appear on houses iu different parts of Paris, commemorating events of im portance or characters Ulnstrioui in uistory, Is oue which a few days a was fixed ou a house m tiid Una ."jiu'- dot, at No. 9, and waicli bjars tho in scription: 'Here formerly stood thj circular wall round Parts, erected iu the reigu of Pnilip Augustus, about 12U0 A. D. Site of ttio Ports Saint Jacques." Darwin tells us that the great pil lars of Stoueheuge have for years been undergoing the slow process of inter ment by the accumulation of mould around them, and that they are in dan ger of being undermine ! as fehe result of the labors of earth worms. The doors aud walls of Roman villas iu England have in the same way been lowered by the withdrawing of the un derlying soiL The Mans family, descendants of George Maris, who left England an 1 settled in Chester county iu IW3, have had a bi-ceutennial celebration at the "Home House," located upon a part ot the tract originally purchase I by him. Historical addresses ou the subject of the Maris family were de livered by George L. Maris, John M. Broomall, Clarence F. Maris and Jared Maris, and medals commemorative of the occasion distributed. 3 1 I .1 sv IT I f ft' I I h j -