Newspaper Page Text
Sri
Craft H k a D#w»«
wvurfbthc ite. 8 - of denars,
{foe ma fl of
5 ot to the ns*» of caoniaf
Soitotlws** pM«oa
>’ot to the one
X*.for the world'* rwio’ra
iiot in for® of fishiou.
Cotoeth a We*«nf drau. _
«iot " eototaod'aexpaasK*.
settothemfaer'.etem.
Sot to tbe prinoely maum-u, crMt:
Not»tbe blazoned
got to the sordid woridiing.
Not to tbe kniTiih clown.
Not to tbe hangbt; tyrant;
ComeXi a Ueeaingfl 0 * 11 -
NottetbeftelJ-ifri^ ■
^Sfe^Sglcct of doty,
„ ia the moaveb’s erowu.
Sot at the enilt- of beauty.
Cometh & bteMi&g down.
Bat to one whose spirit
Yearn* for the great and good;
Unto tSeoite ttfcOSB ftu^r.nr
Yielded the hungry food;
T'nto the one who labor*
Yearleaa of foe or frown;
Unto to the kindly-hearted
Cometh a blessing down.
AQ,V 6 HIU ?6 XKK+U Wltn O U XTy>qI ro-n
A SAILOR’S TAR*-.
* mtrselvea promontory in oflf iiy« July Besch, in diyia^ the
a warm san
.moat stiorioosdaneeihtheSoond. approyed primitive style, 'We—that after »
ia, Tom Phceair, Charley Matsei! and
ivself—were loyera of the *alt
for each of ns, i» 'ra»o«a-Wiiys, had tried
by^^Slia it awatoandawaiu, a^aothority Ohariey wag oor
fT mwcagcToi M tbesnbiect, ^snndS
l hii m uayiSded
Teasels a pretty nearly
thenlobe ’
wThad sh*r'“ aTfmeh^r been broaching the <»tiehtbS enbieet
of far^^ttlatoe*s4^BochiUe“tSnbSd bMB
r.fewdare diverged bef^t From^hat^
wo had to seaoserpentu, a snb
j^tniamwWch skeptical. Tom Not Phrenix Charley! and my.
sett were so
he not bat only he had believed in the off great toe mons
ter, seen one, coast
tggzsss’axssz America. It is native fish. Sea
to a
»nrpe»ts aad Chili can’t go blether,
anyhow 1“
tlharleylay theater snapping the salt h.s\s„ grass
and ptwl.lling semi-offendea dignity with
in — * vvry
Nentnne in form and mien he was. too.
‘‘My opinion belongs exactly," I Capo added-; Col “ tbe
soa-serpent to a
“ Oh, laugh oil—laugh on, hearties
—I .......... cap bear it; aud W ' ,!lt ' 8 m " te rvp
’
seen a kraken!”
“A what f” vrehoth fthouttti.
He looke<l up in triumph as lie repeat
ed--“ a kraken: the great monster term
ed‘lerirthan’ referred to ,rt by b Milton: ra B.o Scriptures, and
* •
__<•'Which <M cf all his works
created hugestthst swim theocean »tri-»m;
Him-toly dnmljvriiig !>n the N°rw*y foam,
^
_
“Bravo! bravo!’ says Tom. “Clui
ley has been cramming OverhfnI thecncyclopedm for ‘kraken’
over when night found, ont On
and make note
OR , my Captain Cuttle."
very reference, for rt ia
a cutt e-fisn of wotulrons size. As for
’“b cranuDnig, I did that lemg ago, and
tliete»noiabitof prose «r poet^ To on be
the snbjeet there I ca..-t reette The to yreu krakenflsh
sure s not much
nas never bren describe.! that by he z,K.logists, ishalf
but it is we ll settled n
J*!®^**® and f>raioffton*ny about him after bulky. Isaw
I did theeraainung
bun.
Saw , him MtxU— very goo.1!
Pray! <bd you ww him lutwo-thfs halt
mile monster?
Now, if yon U proimse not, to into)
rupt, 111 tell you toeystn, audit s true,
too—every bit.
uscrawl.downmtothe ‘Agreed. reepoflriedTom; water and “fUet soak ,
whfle thui secretoryis being ^ born
W e sm tod the a ifi ion to word , an .1
msrTeywnteThis “It spdecb to toliisprom;s.-. Canton. We
was or. my voyage Sandwich
bad stopped at the Islands,
end were three toril, days’ sail off, when tomk-n w.
lioe a mo .k cca Vo«- may
hot betopbnt latitnde jnsttoy sunning sucha yourself be
m that t It was jnat
calming as befell toe Ancient Manner,,
aeoording t limetl all to night Ckilendge.__The AtdaybreaR calm TO*' eon
we
alt up, praying for a bit of air, tor it had
wnaTOnmsieri boon too nijt tb«t to sleep slsmM all night, I into* audit
wr
hands who could be spared availed them
se ves of the privilege, and in a tow
.n antes the ships drifting wake and. for
a hundred yards uround was lashed into
foam by-theeyertionsof swimmers; toe and,
althongh so hot cold, above, speak. water The was
quite enpsy so to
Irat mate was swimming about when
Imcrted out : ‘ He to I there a a floating
island t We raised np onr nia-ks as the
baud of the mate pointed to the cast
a •••Ftoateng^riands/Mitdiieriifl r d ; ^ t I wli see.netteff, ^ cen
niau and experienced salt, its tlio liule
"t ® 8b! p l
,dy °“,7 01 ' know of a vessel[as
w? Why, 1 » three responded toe the mate
top* its times length of
■ ‘/ir
the the Sd™‘enTbito sides ami ,, into the , , rigging , , of , " P
vesseltolook.
* And b) 0 w me if it amt
3 mi Sfm rJ^T/ZT" °5 fll< f^ 1 ’,. 0m1et MI BSi ‘ ! ’
‘t The deuce! adued . a second, , im- .
me&atoly, what not ‘down F it goes, island, hulk,
or . :
‘Ah* 1 , sure enough, nothing was to
. *}} *2°MKt each other.
and the old salts face became somber, i
This oome* of the oalrn . - **ul he.
cb^Sh- ?r^sT i^ve 6 ^hii^'
ire a roller, or onx ^eyeswere dazzled by
the straining, as it bobbcxl upintpsight!
within an eighth of a mite from our !
course, !
' “The mate had been slipping on his
trousers and shirt dnrim; toi* brief in- ;
terval, ™ wtuch he bail been loUowed by :
some after of the it to men. what’s ‘Hulk what. or island, Who’ll I j
am see i
bear a hand, my hearties?’
“A dozen volunteered, myself among i
the number, and m a few mmutee the
hmnch' wa» imTh d awuv
owarda the singular object which now
h.ad drifted or tieen moved away to the
leeward of the sliip perhaps half a' mile. •:
As we came nearer, we-could see .about
cellular ten feet projection substance,'covered of a dark granite-like
with aheilfi
wl seaweed, rieifig along the surface of ;
‘.-.^jJKjWi, and to the taperiug length along of half the mile.” ridge
r« a
r g A Y e lin involuntary wliis- •.
« vresr* 'ir,i ^bich' Charlie iiid
■nriiflti X,' .not
“ T«;» fav :
Johnson the matA »’Ji, a 8 'Iv* ie U u: P to it, and
from th« vmnf ' f ' t ^P lra P
t;
TjfoTeetion. -Irfan J ^ "*
: and ;
f‘r>Tftlie«mVx«*ftrSMx SwSiSm LtoS; ? or ! >Ti v
.7^f^JS5 , ® , ^^ 8 P^* d J®“ 7 ! ;
8
ebarep kmttng-hW offiip 0 ^line . • ^ ^1 ktotofo^to^ ^ iZZZ . m _an v n - 10 in
tor about, hits
rnrotiSMMMls oftbe^wonterfal oftoeUs t t; , Khtonnkr^wb pocket: „ocket aa as trophies'' tsi-nia
atoto
ttSriis diatant“^“ Wby ^
P l2>Mtei?nd tomfnnv a^’mire ’.
^SrSygg “We ear W 11 i,
th?saSe' !
at hS« fatomt ? ejacnlated
doWr -‘0W eD8 ’ i bo ^ - — 1
■
.
™Tfelt rinicto* in cohiteon SidwJrtortlv «k„
vapid watef’and
rS£teBteSS«ad2S?*?^fiL^“ dreo in in nnicker Htne
rLJSSb^tor^r^V W?L«e’MrimSte eS?„f‘ h f n lt ; ’
SmtomiA iaonon,Hnn, toteSha^fto? maeea,.i^gan to joke sbout I i
_ Said ,
th® submerging h-tend. Ir8
rigorous Strok*, '
miiing J :■ of -• when the : wordwas
e
sEs.ws^wS'i'S
£5tly raised twenty feet 8 te*‘‘*: 8 ;
away oar qaixzical hnmor, and we baa
Dot a word to *&y. After a breath, or a
sigh, he continued:
“ H«*w we pulled over the weary, miles
which separated as from the ship—
wL*t we thought or what we said
- -1- + -- - ■ -.- .....i l i
the-eafter tell. Our very souls were
crashed with the calamity; and the tale
became, X*r weeks, until we
Canton, fhe solemn story of the mess,
in tbe cabin and in the forcastle,”
“ And did you never find ont whatit
sf’fld'elT-w.
“Wh«i we got to Calcutta, I
tered an attache of the East India Com
pany there, who was a scientific man of
great and universal attainments. I told
and SheOj takicj! flown an oM roJnrae
1 :.fal»dottK Pliny, sail: * Sir, yon have seen the
monster, of aisiignity— the
i krakfK.' ' / _
••And su Ibent’
-TTo. "^*! ■ t« tmn, te riddity, kWity,
rigb.’' To*a, clorties. juarpingjip Mid ran
'be ning tor his “‘Krakau’ moot
Hie German for ‘O. ix>th eraekie"
“Ooheider that we belieye, with
onr thanks; for nothing but your horn
b!e story has sared me from a chilL”
Bnt Charley was silent, and dressed
himself moodily. Either he was an ae
eompliahed actor, or he w<« i« earnest,
But hang me if I want to see a token !
-------—•
The _. _ . „ 11811 „ » ..... f "‘‘ lhl
’
A correspondent in India writes from
Delhi: The building is a very lieanti
fol pavilion of wMtemarble, supp.rte!
s^ttrs^r-'aas
“surk?»sr wii.h of flags of white
i - ci mposoil wU,,
„„rble. ite* each of toe front row
»f pillars is a balustrade of marble.
Ctod'work. clmstelv carved in several designs Snihlhfgis of per
The top of the
ornacaenlcil wilt onnolas. with four raftrblepavilions ceiling of the
with w,J The
pavilion originally completely
,-ied with iiligree work, but in 1799 toe
value' of the sane being estimated at
language la^'ge • . tt -If 0 to^ l e’is n a^arJdiS'“n
eartb, it is this. •» In this hall was the
famous jvearock throne.; s<. called' from
its t having b H»wCtafft"to^t^ behind the figures it, of two , bSr« peacocks
steidiDS utanding n behind rt, their their tails tarts being being e*.
panded, and the ."r whole cmcr&Ui rr. 15. so 8 inlaid pearl*'and Sj -. with 3
; Mt»pphi.roH 4 pphirea, rublne*, nibbles, etunrelds, 4 pearls and
f fTrtf .
her r I precious ‘T’ nS stones of appropriate
S ”!;xrt!L Ss tz
It stood' on six massive-feet, which with
the laxly, emeralds were of and solid diamonds. gold, jnlsid Itwas with
rubies, of
surmounted by » <«Kqiy gold anp
SIl^om^w.Tb ornameut^l
o^toMted the toe borders lamlfmoMlm of Iho
Between Uie two pea«wk»
. . h ' .‘l h . been • «gv^ont j t
ave .
Sjf SSn SooSa elJSta. i tonSrefca
one “!ren 01 toe 8 oVtontil oriental embfc’lM emblems ot M realty roy^.
ncldy . embroidered* and'fringed Ti"
toed ntn.i.i/iwm,
‘l^o-ids j .-««* ^ { this superb
7
, .. m9 • varT " f rom k o<X tlitou, 1 000 to 830 -
■. • Ti u treLurcs ixaoook with
tj,,, in tltocitv coiuiuerer were 'iu
taken nwav bv a Persian
' dlesfextra va^au^
emJSenre 3 bm
- P h« to
^ HeUffereuco uuon rows
miration. my i^ly riiends to a frantie pitch of sd
__...
---- — ■■ -' ■■■■• -
The Peopling . at America.
Plov * Ray, Behring Straits, has an
portan interest attaching anything to it of be far more abont im
ro than to said
or ASSic expaitions/ It is
moro than probable that from or near
tl,„r pay M.rer.>-*.MM,Ag the wandering Tnnguse or
Wrah StrelU tod
peopled { u)Il | America. afUwn The latter, in canoes doit
illg „r tw e,,ty arsons,
now; why not in. the “ton* ago.” The
«rib r lias, in couiniun with tnaiiv who
Have visited Alaska (formerly Bussian
America before the country was pur
toased bv the United States) remarked
the almost Chinese or Japanese cast of
toatnres that possessed by fteir the coast natives
of coimtrv. Asiatic origin
„mld not be doubted, and on the other
Alouts-natives of the Aleutian
nhfto strctvli oat ia a s.and
c ]| 9 j n n-oni Alaska—who hail shipped as
sailors on the Busso-American
expcJition, anda Tchuktehi boy brought
down to be educated, were constantly
^Xr; i a keu for Jananese , |S^re or Chinamen C rdSoOoSfto’ in Sail
easions, V^plo. been driven Junks have, the on two Baciflc
across
Ocean, and have landed their crews,
These facta occurred iu1832-3* the first
west America, and the Flattery, second North- in. the
harbor of Oahu, handwicb (Hawaiiam
l s l au ,l K . j n the l Ll.x± former case C lT„. all the crew
u-, --- , . 7
th e natives, In the latter case, how
crer> Hie 8 audwich Islanders treated the.
nine JajiBne.ro forming «£l the crew ,rf the
junk with Hnibwe., when they rew
eJTfrom Asia.’ How ea^ly, then,
could we account tor the peopling of anv
SSStSSS ; 6 j an j or on diePacific Whether
SfortS Ohina^* of wather ob tod
p, pe „ pJe America, or Northern whether they, or
at all'events' some Asiatics
took the “short sea vervstrimgproba^tv ronte ’’via Behring
Straits, thereis a VF^h'ivinBbeeS
in faVor of toe Not
but peopled the Olfteat from not Wof11 merely Aflia the Old World,
:
' ‘
-----------------
' 711
'
A Koval \ Female • Gambler.
Princes? Souwaroff, during a recent
at^ Saxon lee Baines, happened one
evening to have an extraordinary ran
bail luck while gambling. Her neigh
bor, a retired tradesman, sympathized
with her, and begged to be permitted to
his purs* at her diapoagl. She
refused ut'first, but the desire to continue
play was strong enough to overcome all
ner borrowing ;i npics,-and she The finally accepted,
$2,0(H). money w «08 punc
grange, bmJIy 4 ^i>aid, delighted and the lender, find M. Dela
w** to that the
princes had condescended to make use
Him, and that slie invariably spoke to ■
B?.i Setoongnabebad " S ‘ 11 h< ’ « 8t aciuiml l * 88 in the toe Casino. privi
,e i 8 ge © of L beingre««der^ H,i ng Cfogagitlferetl among among the the inti- inti
.
wUeu
an AJ max 4oS ho comply! ,- , with alab^. Tids
S?“. P 5eut waa made by which toe a !‘ lender ntsauge- Vi
„ his to debtor in Paris at
stated time. The a
princess, on her re
hal K Jtu.s hfl .T' of her , receptions r8oe, !f die ,° n8 rehml of . th8
w!,..,.»exe,lat theapparent
put-.upon.him, bepn to clamor
! be ^ mWBS :
a8ll, '! h kT at s J^^ l 8 * < 1* b 5 r, 5’ to °° m ;
tb .e treatment ie reeeived ,
T her daughter, and. receiving no
ply llwaroff ’ '* n ‘* 8 ‘to°afi*to 8t Princess '
1 has heeu ordered to pay i
‘
once under para of seizure. i
FOR TOl'WJ PEOPLE
-
a. k«H» B*um*r
Fwitj , h uttie
v^r r^
their sting is the only thing they have
with which to protect their precious
store of honey and wax. You remember
what we said abont that sting the other
day that it was so small that you couldn’t
»ee it even with a magnifying glass that
„- , i . t l®. ®^rr-^-sprTOTtnt., .
a quarter of an inch broad J and yet how
that sting can hurt 1
Ereir swarm of been oontoine
these little bee houses that many of you
who live in the country, have seen sc
often, is composed of three
kinds—the qr.eei>, the workers, and the
drones. The queen is not the only fe
male in the swarm, but she is the only
perfect female. All the worker-bees
are females, but not perfect ones, and
gr» the males.
How bogy the workers are! They
gather ifll the honey^^and bee gine, feed
after the oloee and of keep fl» the honey fciTes clean, they and
season
kill off all tbe drone*.
With the excaption of Use queen, all
tbe bee* in a hive die in abont nine
months, swarm/ so every The winter ft»4« new S««
in the qneeu lays from
sometimeB 1,000 to 8,000 eggs 80,000 a day, bees. and a hiye
oontaina
There i» a yery fnnny that, thing whfle aboni
these eggs, and that is all of
them are alike when theyare laid, the
workers feed the maggots with different
kinds of food to make toe differentkmds
of bee-the drones workers and qnetma.
The qneen deposits eggs first for the
workers, and then tor the drones and
8bo Infki !■!(!!
&SiS*tti"s£;as ;
f ,”,- s WI “* * or ’ ’ in / ’
, ] te^eto« ,
^U-Hhin'^a thfton We
shotudn t tliinfc that the top bee bee who
wonl ’ i Bal1 “
®m7„ i he bees, beside knowing a great
'XCh^^Xn^reT^ tU "'l 8 *“• '‘V 1™ 1 . ctoml'
they
tbB “r
„ . ...
| r £ T t
8V< ‘ Is “.f <*£“ “ d
«“* ,nt<> ‘ t : Whenshc com* ont she
w.covered from head hereicgJ to tad “md'th with e^S pollen,
over »ver ,. her lier and body. body. ^ ^ .’She She herself berself tokes takes off, off her her and and first first pair pair
oflegs <ia8t dust dusts the the middle pas** pr frhto
J| this ^“^“wir IW m(t > her ^ to hind middle legs, thT pair EJ* With tZ and the e * r{)m last ‘
into
bit * 0 , mu. T h
J? J h?ve i X Stoat to™Both*rbS- “he'n ™he’ , *tohe?n m!e f h^
^ SXStoto.tS woX.v'r XwnTte untilthe! the
b ^>™ a «>ft paste. ami then ft is in J
to give to the littla bees larva*,
When tUl! larva, gets so big with eattng
t<>fll i itsC(jtl>Uie w o rkeratlon ' t
it any ' more, but cover the month of the
odl ltu ^ Then the larva;, who ia
a ita prisoner, ceU with begins silk,, which to cover it spins tbe inside just of
‘ as
tJw , silk WQrm does _
Then wonderful ehangea take place Th
the the perfect chryrelis, bee. and terand by outcomes
Let u» see how they build their cells.
“They generally chamber begin at the top or
roof of their and build down
W8rd < 8t A rR t working irregularly, and,
“ building lt wer *> h^«m^o*y, PtoMng over the ef snrfaoe, and
a more per
*ect form. These at length beeomeso
nnmerona that they extend downward
“ the form dt > vertioal wall, Other con
n t iou of sev er al bodms in
W turn) ol’ceUs in raeeea
sion nntit wlloie assumes toe
form of a series of perpendicular plates
nr pa rt i t i ons. Each pbtn mnsistsof a
set of ceBs, the bottoms ofwhich
are applied to each other, and torn, the
partition between eaeh set. The cells
sufflcienlnuHShr are not always of the oi same size, depth but s
are
reserveii lor receiving eggs, am) which
are nei’essarily adapted tho smaller to the size shalhmer of the
future maggot; or
cells are those in which the honey is
stored.
The breeding and store cells ari
placed cell horizontally, but little the mouth of
the is sometimes a raised, the
better between to retain the -the vertical honey. combs The is inter
orally space about half inch; these geu
an strata,
as they may be termed, in this city of
industry, being just wide enough to al
low two bees burned nimn incommoding toe opposite
eeHs to pare witoout thesoliitoi^aoot, each
„U.e.. : In addition to
the combs are perforated in yarions
Us so as to allow a passage for the
from < ne street to another, thus
saving them much time.”
Don’t so°mimy von call that wonderful? Bnt
weflml other things of intereet
that it will be impossible to tell all about
them this time. There are the swarm
ings, the wild bees, the gathering of the
honeTbatH bufl&’thb which hrenTes some of the riLs wild bee*
of togrert
masses four feet long. At some other
meeting of the club we will talk overall
these matters.— if. Y. Tribune.
.
■ *1* s ew Kail road Pass,
t • , •?** ,
. 8 .
been patented by a mlrond R ? man 8 which
t prerido a^nasiT^k-b'am
“»Y *" 8 » b ® P 88 *®'* 8 *kore. it is
, requirement. 88 h e ^) and thepasB Around seems tho to meet the
« with description pare proper which,
8 m 88 K“. a
by the use of a punch, may be made to
fit »> 9 body.; After of figures the wor.1 of “ which nge ”
appear a senes out
the person issuing toe pass punches the
corresponding whom the with the nge of
4118 0,18 *« puss is famed,
The “ after the liea.1 ” shape ” follow the
words Bum, medium, stout,
-«i^> rpnl e ii » . ——Affor^«i4*iiog..^>£.ihair.L ,
come the . designations “ black,”
“ brown,” “gray, J ’“ light,” “auburn. ”
After “color of eyee,” come “black,”
“brown, beard” ’“gray,” the “blue,” “hazel;” and
after “ terms “ Bbne,” “full,”
'* side,” “ chin,” “moustache.” Thus,
supposing issued be the. dark, man slim to whom with the pass is
a man, black
eyes and beard a la Napoleon, the issuer
the pass' would punch the ■•word
“ alito ” undei “ shape,” “ black “ under
“ eyes ’’ and “ hair,” “ moustache ” and
“chin” under “beard.” The pass
could then be transferred only to a man
chancing to au'swer just the above de
This idea is certainly a novel
one.
--
SuscepUble e Hens. „
Wedonotknow We do not know who who wrote wrote the the fol. fol
My and pnU.pa'>t.i.nottrnc: occupied
young plants in: was - small in
a centervat. .ry, which
partitioned 'dff'bv a lattice work
warthto the hennery, so as’ to Whifewoo- afford light
to the latter.
cnpieil to*to. she Began to sing, when ail the
*«• behiml twenty-five in number, con
the lattice, and seemed
their to enjoy heads the music, and side^^to^^ kept jerk
from one the
!ber ’ 1,8 lf kw i’ i! « time. On stopping ’
. singing they reaaed their motions,
renewed them immediately when it
resumed. This extraordinary pfae
was witnesaed by several rrther
and created much aatonish-. i
’
F<f i Hjrt- 888 * 9*n< »!.*»«. ,
'r' htmten, who hedloceted
^ ^^rs LA gas
'J ere > he turned^ and d ashed away
through ^ the nnder^owth, taking
directly from tbe cabin, .
course away m
“°P e8 of it from destruction,
Bnt t wo of the Indians, however, fol
lo wed him, while the other two, after
* croa S tf?
hunter who bad fallen, made at once for
the cabin, to which, after plundering it
of all that was valuable, they applied
fhe torch, and it was soon consumed,
Is t“® meanwhile, Humphreys—such
wss the hunter s name—suweeded for
two or three mfles is maintaining lus
lead, and would probably have untoward shaken
fehe accident. ?“ entirely but for an
la attempting to leap across a small „
, »nfl higu. be migqgfl ha lo cmg, a nd
: pw bauds-tram "7. » powerful being hurled-to effort prerented thnbot
:
<®m. As it was, he foniKi that tujkad
: to such an extent
a*. to rend«r it almost a matter irDpcesi
i Me to fnrthra - «mtinne_his mght. Bnt
i W® **• .B 1 ™* 1 *•*** *® straggle tor, and
■ althmigb yetHmnpWsoonknneJtok*P"bgbt- KTiffenng the greatest agony,
i h after a^ead deeoendi of hia pnrsnera. te hill, he At entered length,
ngqui a
upon »lerel bottom, at the other mde of
which ran a stream, the Imrfts of which
were thickly Mied.by a heayy cane
^ t w. ‘ it w LTnt^ear * L de^ fiSd he^ild nC
“^^“ a „v y ^retoTJffto bT a rigl?The of
WS
fonu.i a large poplar tree had been blown
(flJlmg direaivtoto toe raneand
s^.ts&^rasfs s
fo tC“hlfhe^d heaviest Hardlv had toe toS In^^Tg he suecemle,! fe#
upon t toe and log, run rapidly shrill a
then nttors TOelTre“J$ «L.n nf
red^in hml seen him as lie crouched
tasCt ^X“e^u?d have t^n
upon him, tomahawk in hand, when
?^ *°\ deep ’m±,Zi angry ^i roar rather than a
) a I S;iu n 1 :^
^onb^ dS^AkSml«!lte g
| hybe“ ™Jgg
■ _ friffhtenrf “i. /“^.,.“ _ Indmi""Tlielght IBe, _ 4 y.? 8 i". _ n'^ntoe
ion toff w'^'of was of ^rAZZJ short duration, 7.7ST: and after a
tow fierce « er ce struggle* struggles ..fo toe the two two combatants ftimbat oit*
pitched ln ? t..i UM i ov over , r and fell, fell locked looked in in a a ifeiiillv deadly
embrace, SKX m K race into into the the water water "oth^r below below. ttb Hum! What What
awake, tr»»,.
bat ac aip f. thatb8
, ,
bank,’ ,
opposite hi si andleaving themlskin
struggle and s toTSe mggy opponent engaged mSde in a
orfleato, he all
pexible haste to reach too This block hooae
son- three miles distant. he sue
Returned ccetled m to domg, the aud tbe next moraing
scene of action at the
creek. Neither te.r nor Indimi was to
. condition bethough the tom and bloody
1 of the bushes _<m the banks
told how fearful toe combat must have
; been. Humphrey* wm, on the whole,
well satisfied, and tor many years
t boasted that be was probably the only
m® i» tire wildemees whose life had
been saved by a hear.
(’nrlens (nrions Habits Hab ts oTa of a Fnrlons turious Bird Bird.
A ,? 8 t S? lui \, ^ Y", am \ 8 ff’°“P an 7'
toff . the French expedibon to theislanda
" f !:lu , "’ <l Amsterdam, to 1874, tor
the purpose of observing the transit of
Venus, baa lately flora pubbtoed an
<>f the fauna and of these lalands.
ln the description oftlie birds that were
■ ? et w,a, » thopengum has » large space
byriiasfin cr,totaling of pts habits. very curious The and always 1^
lay the m<mth of penguins September,
fito *o to
8 P d «“»«“* “?“•**»
’ bl ° n P on *hu islands of Ht P a u l and
Amsterdam at the. time of breftong.
Velam observedthe birds at their nest
“getetiqna with the deepest interest,
and came to .lie oiinclnsion that, instead
of n i j7 beingtop^tumd eonaidered, they animal are they realiy are gitted pop
with mnximmon powers. A synopsis of
'“hua* account, whrelHs given in
77/ “ At r ‘hefame !, HH v ' of ,,, the arrival , of toe ex
P pedit 81 ®# re nf to fy hatch. ober), Each^pair th e .bird s y kept re p ep» ro
brely to themselves. ^ Each nest had
• t dirty .? 8 eggs—large, white bat nearly marked round, of a
color, here and
‘awe xnto a few russet spots. Both
birds wtook of tlie cares attendant on
the incubation and to<* urn about on
the The off duty_ ,
nest bin! would at
<mce make for the sea faithfully■ return
«♦ «.« .rewimtM rime, end
f“hng to waddte direct tons own nest,
*f though no human bemg feousands oonld see a
8 ™ n88 between the that
*?“ 8 ‘rewn about, Sometunes the
whole camp of buds would have to be
riaverrederetoe nert songhttor would
*?«?“»«? toortcut would .«■!» >»» bei sure *7*8* to be attacked J** 8
by not those at whom all tolerant it disturbed, of for they
we d ^ one another;
not “ 8 toP>d, tor surely Z™ neither ft* “*7 stupid
P»°P]^ M 'elain n°* stupid arriving birds in ever their quarrel. midst,
-
they wcmld mid beyond-all-measnre one and dl act np an tin
mense they would calm down stunning
ciy, soon, aud
worn not to mind his presence. The
incubation lasted tor Are weekm The
and ored looked wool. like They halls of got flue, tired gray-col/ of the
! soon
oranforte at theirpeats, and began to as
somble, together with their little «VIon” broth
era and sisters of the same in
large by infant schools, of the which sedate are old presided
over some birds, i
Many they times a day, at stated intervals.
, spend are sleeping fed; the other portions a^lit- they
in and talking and
tte fighting. Space will not permit us
to refer to .uany curious details about
-'. Awlmmir.p 1 <wm. nq M — rh
Tribune.
How Bee? Treat .Moths.
There i« a large moth, commouly
known aa the deaths--head .moth, from
its having a curious mark on its
like it skull and crcwfibonea sculptured
ou an old tombstohe, which makes very
free with bees’ honey. It flies in tbe
dusk of the evening when the bees are
at rest, and enters tbej hole in the
hive, pokes its long sucker through the
wax walls which surround the comb,
and draws much honey into its stomach,
Very often in thelong around evenings about there are
many bees hovering tho.
hive, but if the death’s-head alights and
moves towaptl toward the the door door they tb^ do do woiilil not not take take
mucli notice; infti.m- .vet t'nt' nnn one iiiinfr sting would kill trill
it, it. and and it it has has no no means'of means of hurting hurting the the
bee ra return, 're. . .-A'troubled are |
some hives by these flat curfnns: wall visitors. of
that the bees erect a wa,
just within the ti. hive door, allowing hand. a
small J opening exist on either
This, a rote, pnzzlcsthn m o t hs, and ;
it cannot cuter. On the other hand, if
a moth gets right into the hive, the alone’ bees
do n-t kill it. 1m! either Set it
or honey use stealing all their propensities. ingenuity to stop Whilst its
occasionally thu moth is enjoyingita'meal, the of bees the
behind pull down it, and some mould the
wax Wl.ei ^riekh-vrra R to tom finished. a de n se mre.1, wall
the moth has its
ami turns to get out of the hire, it fir,
itself waited up and imprisoned for life,
A »—■rtsMc * ;ite »
John J. B*H, known m toe hermit of
Cavan's Point, H. J , who died a few
year. ago, m A wri.b!r character
Kskd w»> mowded with a store in the
On the most important subjects around
him he would talk learnedly and with
interest He was no*«d, beside©, for his
mastery of many trades. He was an
adept at kaSaomining,plastering painting, shoemaking. an^sign carpen
tering, i.^aSg^TOaifeSCFaoTf-gegr^.
fj e was sensitive and proud to the lastm
being self-independent, and to offer him
abns was to offend and hurt him; bathe
would take in proviaons three times the
value of his servioea in filing a saw,
patching in a shoe, rivitmg a jack-knife, known, of h or is
mend g ajrua. Little ia
history. Hw birthplace, is in northern
Vermont, and he lived tor years in Men
den and New Haven, Conn. He has a
brother, a ship builder, in New Haven.
; of tho Bemieft’o war Ite was
; n Florida, toappinir, banting and flsli
; jngr- Then he worked westward to
. ’Prras, and .eaat- l«ek in timeto go to
; Mexico in the Meiicsn war. Hiawan
flerinj. htbi<» ontbre«sfwtb'' olu [;».«> b:ra afterward,
; *od »t the t
s ^ th e Army o* thelPotoniAO. He sad
li ove r s ix yo a r -v.
having b previously i lied an old boat,
,
Battles ef tht ^narrows
h^«a On*JujrM Uttie mppge Bug !,h sparreOT.nto- theseeminglj i mr im inalr
whollyTee S milff
i^ttae Sie 7 UU Mt ^®nb*h sthow«er ? yT ^rttontoly wtoCT
^“neStog terribly £,rSh’ng, aTpre 7
«
ent. Tlieypi hSletoan in clans or bodies, and
are often extreme, fighting,
sssr sft'v ?erw
1 suvlqnently fought on the Suing ground then iu the air,
toe battle
limbs of rises. Each following the
other SctTk^ng^thTflgto oominn into dose wiug-to-wing
twenty minute** until both weemed ex
Snume^s thsmmbst thrsp^.ws was in nm.
others of
were likewise m earliest conflict, deter
top of a large bay window, were many
SdiS them wcre^eSiitedlT SSSite fluttering'withta
acting “ITie _ _ _ id self-defense' „r of “o domiciliary ? mS“
righte. rights. Thelnvading The inritoing dislodge army armv wasdonbi w» doubt
i teas less endeavoring ecdeavovmo to tn dutedon those those in m
I S original original possession. Therein wan the
•’apparent i Z^'rrTJ? apparen cause of EvTnSafrir so furious a battle ^ of
tic ana a
insurgents were driven off and those iu
' preaumed then rightful S atten'ng, f.«session chirruping appeared, and
f~ni
. antly rejoicing, defendJthrnr hsppy to having homerights.-yto/. so trinmph
timore Sun,
'■ “ '
A Ci»w Fight with a Panther.
The Ottawa (Canada! AVee/Ve** says:
A hunter, named Jacob Farquarson,
while rew ttmori tbe forest be
tween White Fiah Lake mad Black
Tkont IsdHh M«r Nte haadwatmof
Madawaska river, encountered a puma,
or American panther. He came across
toe carcase of a deer, which he^stopped
to examine, and found to be toe remains
of a large upland Cariboo. While look
toff »t it he heard a noise at some dis
tance alter, ofi the among sounds the tree repeated, tops Shortly and,
were on
lookmg up, he saw a large toiinal leaping
from tree to tree toward^toe spot where
be sto<xl. He was armed with a Ballard
nfle, and as the beast came near enough
alarm, be fired the at it, brute when, aprang to his^surprise frnm the tree and
: d.reetly at him. In tire meaniimetoe
. hunter had rapidly and reload**!, and Uavmg^■
• jnmped aside behind a large pine
, l^tore tlreinlnristol annaal
i cover other tor bullet a second Both spring, shots he gayo had it an
j effect neither as in was Vital afterward part. discovered, After toe but
a
j pad shot the-»un» 4ume«t and ilarted
with a roar at the banter, who drew a
long keen back edgixi hnnting-kuife, awaited aei his
with his against a tree
The gnraged animal sprang at
him and fastened its long curved claws
his shouWer, when he drove toe
< knife repeatedly to the hilt into Ins
breast. Both came to the ground to
gather, fortoe bnt toe straggle weakened did not last by
long, toe of blood bilge snisial, the bullet and
loss from
dead. knife of The Farquarson, animal, which soon is turned quite over
rare
in Canada now, was one of toe ltegeat
size, tooextrein^ measuring nine feet fromthenose
oiiho hS,
.
■,— i 1 .—
ludore inents.
The following old authors should be
}?™XauflZ profitable J, ««.. to any who are f inclined ,i Beware to in
r ;„ n a .
that uis p^ethanotherWs ^decay B f toon debt <^’st seeketl.
“therwire Q w n toLefXr^tend ati moSey not
*b™lf K hmuln althmurk toy thou
mmn imnd
^,5 /MnK pl easnre If friend.—Xord tbee be Bur
„^tV anv maa desire to his
9 give eoLvS liira 1 part of aZtoitom what thou
b “ f'^j frieiHwiip
iH not th v
^ffbrethit chooseth Imm to itself than
If than be bound for iifttraueer
S? treyjd b^teeir^nit uretobe"*!®: _
™ y ™" 8 ^ e ‘ 8s88 7
{SfiftSthSel? b 9 "! e to “* e “ 8 el«*. ^ as Iv? their ■ d Bberte vt!7! re
t^faft^^TESwtoSw Jv “- to T* rSS' ° f
whom m ■?? ™kers hail left elbow room.
f“ — oa 8 i “> ™“ by suretyship have expired
”L* O^orn. Be thou
tort“is«m^» ?x‘ <* P** »b«» * »*a»?LS^’ainS+ 9 i rik8b8nds i 88 !
,,,W ,
he for. a stranger suretjeldp Phall smart •
* or 1 b ^« that Imth 18
>
' 4
“ P
A Sew (>real t Discorered.
The Ventura(Ctd.) Free Free* Bays: j
We have, been ahowu ft new grain, ai«- !
v ered atk>ut four years ago by a fanner •
°* ^ riurprise State, Valley, hiken iu from the the northern part of j
^j‘1 crop a
former. goo»e He which had been shot by the j
^er it taken sowed the seed immediately
a was from the garner of the
bird’s crop, and it produced more than a i
hundred fold. Mr, Meritbew, a farmer
pf Butte County, being on a visit ti> Sur- •
P^«c Valley, obtained Home few reeds of
br:g ^rain, and snccoeded in props
? a :? with 'wcaderfu 1 Success on his
I farni arm in in Butte Butte County. C oaI 1 tv. The The straw straw end end
bPAffilOBH beardless hflflil head wecnnihlaa resembles wheat: nfhbflt' tVio the :
gram gzain large looks* looks a littSelike litt]„ like rye, rye, but but ib is twice twice
« a? rye. When cut, as it is pass
tog into to^i&Zjt make* » hay even 1
™I»n« to wheat hav. It appears to ns
every wav he-of-g*,* supteto, to rye, and may
Pfove to utility, as it is a :
fl nagroWcr-an.t ^ productive.
. Term, ------ :
for Poetry.
Onr terms f w . pnblfahtog original.
poetry Very are good-QraJfa' as follows
Common—Twi MeJium-Tea So per line. line.
u tv cents per
rates. ff Si ii na g ewto an* ■* ■
Horrible (such as will make ^me/ people
7 I
Lacks* Vp la a Buk ThA
......... TfusiaiLiili. «mi uf m rnilul
SWn NeAMm^ttSirwent Marshal and ex-Congressman cxplrieoce
an a
pat Thiel, of the Detective iper.ee,
safe was unlocked, and that Mr. Thiel
had stepped out a few minutes before.
In the meantime the practical joker
went out exulting in the funny plight
in which his victim must find himself
when he discovered th a t be c ould m±
oal HrT K«iroamb'» reflections
were becoming more could and more serious
every moment He not hear any
sounds from the outside, and wondered
what had became of his friend. He tried
to cry out, but knew that his voice, even
if raised to its highest pifc^h, could not
pene t ra t e , t h r ou g h the thick wall* that
surrounded him. He tried, but the re
verberations ▼eroerarons of of his lus voice voice in m the the narrow narrow
SSSS^S^^tSitt tomb tomb were were almost almost deafening. deafening. He He pound
*d against the walk, bruising «... bi« hand
........
effectual to at tr act attention. A strong
and powerful man. he felt himself to be
a slightest hopeless hope prisoner relief. almost withont tbe
of
The ticking of his watch, plainly
hie in the dense eft**.vrmezi orimontaKd,!
him tervals of the between rapid fligh the the seconds seemed
iou g er li m n he hml c r-r known b e fo re .
j The quiet had become so intense that he
oouldplsinly hear toe beating of iris
heart sound It thumped of pile against driver, his falling side, like
the a at
regular intervals, and driving—so he
thought—his burial earth.* place deeper tbdagfat and
deepr deeper into into the the earth. He He thought he’ he
00n > l! he * r bi " b!oo<l 88 il P«<nped
oat of h « teart and counted throngb bis
» reminded him of the mnrmnr
of and a brook flowing throngb the woods
trickling over moesy li stones. The
!wl l on "* h '“ lnn <?‘f ™ d,lenl y
K«ssw , i: , !3i?ss
* "v® ni ' harder, ^“ brought 1 , 9 to his mind the
terrible question, how much longer
gmldhebvein Husponfined atmosphere.
Hecalcnlated how much air was con
^ narrow h wallsand farth- how
tt would fiuppoxt i.e. _ At the
esl it appeared to mm that be Could not
hve more than t-entymnnufesaud breathe then
he would have to this vitiated air
sssts’Ts Melp9B expenditme l of the
KfSme J»»» ' n «rtotr 8 t ^Tstnt very r
SwiS not^af flretVnderS^Tbe
murmur gradually increased to a loud
taa-bmi and then he realised that this
m*. *»"»*»* h 7 ™ sb otMood to the
head, the effect ot his confinement. The
buzzing Aefolt ^increased to a roaring thunder.
himself stagprer, and then
Sol Tot Z =!
‘ h8 ,™ fe ’
but was restored by tbe free use of water,
msred with some etunulante.-SV. Zow#
Po ‘'
. — -
-noble’’^STflteSandTth«s TV- alchemiRta divided the petals into
readily^ wbtoh
do not tarnish on exposure^^ bastTmetai to
^‘ixedwith a ; r ) «nd “ biwe ” When a
,Jdto a mtole-one, the latte
the wao ratio which be«• alloyed," the former oralloye-l boreto too to
saH« ’iTlmn ’’ nllmr" bsa-heen-dw
tended Suitor™ in aignifleation so As to iuclnde ° ae
ofmetols
At a temneratnre whioh rednoes them
to a fluid condition most metals will
TOlveauv/otow "i riito which they are
b rotI( ,| 1 t n oontact either quickly precipitate or
B i ow w Those which do not
t | le par ticles, but hold them in
S°“m^y #0 lntion till they cool which^are anil harden, almost form
Sehill lid of new
ea^^A^^tooao suWve a vast variety of
yjfoJJjJjiia wedl known are
y,'; }^ fcornier p SZy and tin), copper bronze
K) Wes
^{j 3 6 eraan r ”„“x silv« (copirer, aio
7 ^ ; and Uu,
8 ^’,.n,i n a antimony i,7e
S“l-cr z #4 T
are-Pored
K,!’ ] ,? " aeoording to the
. S , he are designed,
acanbemad etoresem Me gold and
0 „ facilities tor counterfeiting. AHovs
^t #hich melt nttemperstTrieB theirSnatitnentmends tierween
, In 0 Borne Z serve to solder other metal
rfaces and then hard
aiinwtbeir weld anSwitoereom. to make
,i tira i,! e The
, *v e Plac,' Vendome which
,v „ p * ar 8 " : s 8 Communists „53 U .“ ^ overthrew was
lf „ efltetNaDoU>oh
Lml ^“ w L him '7“ in 'Lavie
r
.H„ "wl^vb^se”toe t P X P Smtreetor^™
tiortiims first eiamined contained more
than the tbileoften stinnlateiJ nronortiou mSre^brittteta of tii
Mtovs lietter^ able^
P 088 metels,.are usnaUv nsiialiy netter aoie to to
rilmiSb'ra^at^itolv ^^“^1*4. mSte eSv dfff^
8 f^- bJ sir?™ nature itLtSrw can
a^- f temperature, at which He the
ZZlr?Z »* .«■ eoPplT IZ^nZ
elt8d » with-the ti,„ - n?her other metola metals —uJS when
[ be ma8 ? 1,88 O 0018,1 -,}? «hqn«ted by
heating ll br .. !" 8 K to tbe . is silver own melting^point, with it and is when then
ex P®^®J ' Type-net :tl, Uk© water, p 6 s
fl 88 ?f* Ul « Q u8bt y °* expanding forctis itself when it
SSMRA mhdifles, and thus ** ^ into
Take Take Fare Cure ef or the the ImbreHas. imureiias,
There is, perhaps, r desefving no article more
abn9etl or les9 it than the am
brella. By a ha.1 custom it has been
votel out of protection as property help him- ev
0r y m a„ being at liberty to
self wherever he can find one—provided, !
of course, to4 he be not aliove meanness, It i
bears brant iff the storm, and is
by the scorching snn; is count
ed j«. imi 8 aue+) in the house while wet,
amifrom neclect eoeedily falls a victim
to^},ar«f^ usage. Henr ' it
half; Affor use in a storm, place with i
the handle downward, in a stand With a
tub or dish attached to catch the together drip. ;
If vou have no such ntand, nail
a shaliow box of planed boards, and with few
four uprights fit the corners, a
wire.« «t proper flistances passing
around the uprights t * form the frame.
ft will >'ave many a pnddhi ir. the bouse,
and many a storm from the neat house
keeper. * If .set with the handle upward,
the waters gathers aronnd the joint at.
the top, rusts the'wires, and tbis-apeed
ily rota the doth; As soon as nil the
water bus ceased to drip, the umbrella
«hould be opened out, and set in an un
occupied occupied room n»m to to dry. drr. The The observance observance j .
0 f these lime.-, mi-amlnirinnawill preoant.onswill prolong liroloUtf its 118ft* use- ,
fulness frillat at least least one one half. half,
' ______ ■. — ~
Is there any jo 7 gre«ter than that :
.
which is experienced another j perron? by one person There
when he helps low-down that itosaid
are some men s<i j
cannot bear to have the smell, of
their clover go mto toe highway, for fair
that other f<.Ik will get something that
beionos to tiu-m witio-nr prying ter it;
there are some men who are said to be->
pudge bees the honev which theytake
from their flowers without leaving any
behind, but that is doubtless
A man whose heart does
«»p«ad to roa aat - nt toang good "r ,
happiness re no longer a man.
He b-« passed the line of manhood and j
be ranked among beasts. ;
A SesMltesAl Basic/.
We take the following ludicrous a
tract from Bret BreI Hsrttfsakntoli. *** " ** 8lCl1 ’ Settled “ DWM
^de pUtfom.^Sed^^eKdSS
was expected to provoke a challenge
from Colonel Starbottle, which would
give Bungstarter the choice of weapons,
and deprive Starbottle of his advantage
as a dead shot. It was whiskered also
swar . > . f
this fact, wSold retmliAte in kind » oat'
rageouslv recourse’but as to leave Bungaterter no
to demand satisfaction on
the spot As Colonel Starbottle rose
the eager crowd drew together elbow
ing each other in rant and ecstatic ex
£y pectancv. All ears were hairy’o alert nartieti
the verv tonsr ard n e s m st
rising above tbe Jinnv! railing of the speaker’s
platform platform Bor Bor Jinny, having having a a feminine feminine
distrust distrust of offiolitude solitude and and a a fondneas fondness for for
■ bo™, shadow ««». followetl her w maetor to the
&tai?toSS * ™
___*«
’
for her_____
way* —......— extended to her age and sex.
CoL Starbottle, stertorous and purple,
advanced to the railing. There he un
*.—ir. — _ 11 ...n.^ **4 i..m *.«*. «&.)>
his antagonist, he ___________ drew off his bine ____
_ - han d in
ff. K ' k-cu a l. Sl id , th r usting on e to
< hia ruffled shirt front, and raising toe
other to the dark canopy above him, he
opened his vindictive lips. The action,
the attitude, were Starbottle’s but the
j voice was not For, at toe supreme
•itoR'fe’utt^soS moment, _ a bray—so profound, mibihiiiiff; subdning, __ so appal-
1 lyriig. ling, so utterly soul -milk so para
iisi^ifleanee that eyerythingelse beside it-fllled tomere woods,
and sky, and air. For a moment only
the multitude gasped in speechless only—
astonishment—it was a moment
«od then the welkin roared with shonts.
a-ussr.rs.rrsfe's l
agftJ8.
finished, and was still Oenflemen’’ recurring to her
original theme. « (hee-haw g^rid
; Starbottle. ••aojj;ttemi buffoonery ? t..by restrict
from Jinny) brutal il to
the right .if free speech to (» pro
longed atwent from Jinny) i» worthy only
the dastardly ’’—but here a diminuendo,
so long drawn a* to appear a striking
imitation of the Colonel sown —•* apopleo
, -
It must not be supposed that, during
^ nSt™:r o“u«r5r/fremz:
dlmortoiing'in speedily cleared etther circle eSemi^Sy with flying
b'oofs, a table'’and h»
j Smashed the sneaker’s
wa ter pitcher, sent the railing flying in
fragments over the cheering crowd, and
. only succumbed to two blankets, in
which, with her head concealed, sbetoas
¥S&
crowd 1,18 ««*• away, Rt and i ? te reduced 7’‘K dr8w the otoer JJ*” ,*w
j to mere perfunctory hearers. The de
adjourned: Col
u“utte!S anTtoTBnn^iCZte g8 P “
remained «a«l triumnliant. triumphant
'
l ~ l - -
Sssnenslon buspenslon Bridges Bridges In In Peru. leru,
The ancient Incas, not being the arch acqoamt- mid
^ the prtooiple of ;
toh a hltfa w -a e nnrit sw -whMM'no l a m
timber was fonnd, were bridges compelled in order to to
resort to suspension which crossed
P 888 tb e deep ravines And nothing
famous highways. Hama as had'
beavier than a man or a ever
°<»asion to travel answered on toe highways, very
"Unlit stmetnrea To this day bridges every prac
. ticaI
puriiose. of^the Inrareoqcniw pro
: c !»fly bke thoae the
™<7 »«ea where these were built These
slight strnctnres involve every suspension principle
wbieh enters into onr own
bridges. composed of braided
Stout cables,
wi«-es, are stretched from bank to bank,
nnd-mpppri toe flooring, whioh^onnsiate
of strips of bamboo laid close together cables
aermn thcc a b l e a. T wo smaller
the otbers served as
The cables rapidly decay, and must be
renewed every two or. three years, «o
that the involves. maintenance nO mtle of these labor. aimjile Tlie
.
m0R t famous of these snsp»'K«ion bridges
iwthat whielrorassses t - deepgorgeof
Bio Apnrimac, Iretwe. t’uzco and Aya
cuebo. It is 148 feet long, from support
to snpport, and it is 118 feet from its
water^which
soars below.
11
I’hotogrniiblng a Heart Beat.
One n of .. the mostjcmarkaole . applies- i
,onao! , pbotogrsphy is Hurt by trim*
> 8 ^ ma-le to register, and m the most
accurate manner, the mechanical motion
«f the heart. The device by which this
to-^eod <”bsiste ,v tnnmph of thin of
i tnj n 7 } nbT u, hher sbl L" bag, Y* to which a short a glare
18 ; ru
‘ Qbe 188t ‘ a8b8d; 8 n ffi 8 ' 8n t ™.f 8nI 7 18
p °? ral tbe 8 ppar tube, 8 tus to fill .the the bag
an ^muLt d a portion of tbe and m
f S? is then placrsl over 1 tbe Arranged heart
**** *° ^ eiaml “ e ' ;.
m • 4,118 manner > er8r y P nl8atl0n of the
heart “ ind of ‘ ca the * e ‘ l by 8 ™rresponding of the tube, ,
. movement mercury
provided with Pb^phic moving sensitive apparatus shp of
a
papeIj aod a perfect of the tegistretum pulsation is of obtained, the ex
t ,j D t rate
The interesting fabt ia made known by
thia procms that toe fall of the pulse
aometimea fcake^ place in succesflive
horizontal lines, the column reascending
two or t h r6 e times before falling alto
„
'
English Crown rilamonds I. rre*u
■
The English-crown diamonds have ;
arrived at the *8,800,000. Paris Exposition, They *»J» and arc. i
valued at «
thick iron chest, and are guarded by
sentinels day and night There of is a
diadem of eighty-six diamonds van
oiia sizes, in tbe middle of which is the
celebrated Koh-i-Noor, alone valued at
*320.000; atop » collar of-lOff diamonds,
in the centre of which is an emerald,
«aid’to be tbe purest aud most beautiful ;
A-eeo»d^l4Mera emeralds. is a-hlemliug :
of diamonds aud lathe ccn- ;
ter ia the large^' Kaudavawiy. diamoud.
valuetl at $600,000.. It would be rated
at a higher sum/wer© it not for a> alight
defect. These, and many other valuables
of the kind, belong t-i the Engheh
crown. A .portion are used by the,
Princes* of Wales on special occasions;:
the others are reserved for the.Queen, ;
Kaudavaasy was deity, formerly and the has eve been of
« one-eyed lately added Hindoo ihe collection.
but to
— — ;
A “ Tongue '“f Amputated. “ P ’
Robert u F. Hurtbut, private secre
twy tarvof of Gov. Gov. Bishop,-rf Bishop, of Ohio, Ohio, liw» has just Just
tea.tongue fllfi tOUCfUe sawed amputatednear fttUPQtStftd twain DPftr the theinsit. and fOOti the
c tin was in
pread apart in order The to take out
diseased'., tongue. work was ';
m a .comparatively short :
of time, and the patient was com
and conscionti m tore than an
Next .day Mr _ Hnrlbnt walked
the rum, and -wrote m wants
paper. He » not permitted to at
to spc., k. and. of course could not
so it he ue«rei The physicians
he will te able to articulate anal
intoeooirne of fame. Thu* far the
has been to give nourishment,
been done by injection
tehee hare been egenryd, and
nourishment will be green by '.
mesne' until tom soreness in the j
is somewhat subdued.
WMrtefi »w Swan rail*.
Two brothers, John and Patefok R«l
toy, residing at Ciuppawa, Ontario,
visited this pU» (say. a recent imm ..of
fi’xr’is'xr&^s
£<«" te30 iu the evening. Oneoffo*
1*3®* Two or three parties who started were at
Port Day when the two men
noted the dangerous both route which Reilley they
had taken, but as the
brothers were known to be well aoqa&mt-
41 ■■ f..ai= myi
P««J that orhou they found they eonld
uot cross so low down the in stream of. they the
would pull up and cross one
usual tracks. In apparently utter ig*
norance of the rapidity with which the
treacherous ti current bore the boat dc*wi
16 stream, the two brothers the pulled
e t sa dily on- rtieir way. A*
»^pt lower and lower, the- attention °f
others outer* on on the tue bank nans of oi the uie river river became oeraiue
attracted attracted to to the the impending impending catastrophe. catoetrophe.
When the boat, as s seen irom this shore,
------------- --„ --
0 Cuitotiui Aomnt it- had drifted
a ss and having drifted into ctoae
current
■ proximity nroximitr — tn the flrst of the terrible
reefs at the
toe two men were to
torn their boat around . . and . with — steady
strokes toe reefs. pull The their watehere crMi safelyover this mite two of of
on
tire river then lost night of both men
“od boat, boat, bat but othere others on on Street’s Street a Island Island
«<» C^a « «>e Loretto tba^j Conrenl toe twitrelely on the
; sbore thud ^mv
jumpewi the reef, when best md
au men T were disappeared^in never seen again, the boding rapids,
—-gT jg fi a ?
*“°“l‘7 b ! ,, ia tbe evenings, and
j
r broteersit occurred t<> nun
,,, L: ve friVtlVrionX'"tobma JL,,! tii
task. t „ He watched f for hours at a time
^* *. h J^Xi^’shdiie ° fo ^ e8 bnThiTid^’l^ ^
£-g«SSHr£s before he ioine<l
»oon made „ good p„ibon for tomsell,
| Ia r8abze ™ rabb h “ ? not .“ bia n fBr **>« « le n V u ?J! ,m ™ *° t
, «»*»“« °» tbe «*• ^ P ettce bnt
>
i wd«l war s deadly blast was blown, and
i 18 returned to his native Ijlaee, he re¬
1 8 l? I ?? d c 9 ns * de ™ t,t ™, td the subjecl
, used to declare was, eveo ra
! , ^ ingenious *S£j£iS5l JUt
i “‘J^^I^'^VP^nglai urea, com
£ ,tu “nsTi Ihe * be pto be^M to
werc^nt h dtos toclthe
leVere to
seemed achieved, mecliwism when, after one or two
movements, too came to a
| I dead halt, be and got could to not by again. any available Honrs
means £ move
in attempting vriSont to discover
; what was wrong, but snccess,
and, »A^ w wearied «iiar^gi t.y hi. 3 ga&-Bw prolonged fcea^r anxiefe at'
s ».a
hope of seeing a net woven by msehinery.
Flinging coilSgire, thekey. of the foom to his
he went home. The mechanic
induced a friend to examine the machine
^h him, when tiiey found that toe
stoppage was caused by a bolt slipping
f ro m its place. ■ The defect was made
good, and toe machine was got to work
i laiatime smoothly. Mr. lred, Paterson, called, who Was fact by
in was the
tliat the machine was “ all we&tolook right ” re
IK ,rted to him, and when he
at it, his assistant was of meshes producing by ite
aid rew after, row at « rate.
: Whieb a score of handworkers conld not
:
‘
Vesiroying tlla tne ..... mois.
Nepaul has been swept clean of gods,
the temples are apartmente to let
Tlie Prince Bum Bahadur, whose qneen,
tlnding her lovely face disfigured by
kingdom, small-pox, her poisoned doctors, herself, and cursed od bis of
the g «
INepaul. He and had her doctors ffiurged,
and the nose right ear of each cut
off. He then drew amf np heavy artillery
before the gods, after accusing
theih of having obtained from him
twelve thousand goats, several hundred'
weight of sweetmeats, and two thousand
gallons of milk under false his pretenses
(not eTen in retnm BaTiu g wife from
disfigurement- and death), he had the six
g , ln9 opene a upon them, and after
hours’cannonading, reduced the deities of Ne
panl-were bicu all dr to fragments,
ff no horses men ouuiu put to
gether again.
— ■)«
M «aer* : msm,;; ssm.!!! »to‘.
r«i to nmenre Mrs. w™i°w’. So-ithin* Hrenp
for all discuses incident to Ihe penod of teetu
tehgta XUjtewj, tee^gldtamj^
tte mother. It is An old and weU-trfed ronmity.
• —---
_ why-i*itf
tmlwmrks of prejodioe and disbelief, or reinain
forever nnknown. Why facts ia it that relate peorf» direcUyto »«»
reluctant to rweive that
the phenomen. of their extatmee?^^ .fB 81 ® 8 ;
“^oncr’.nd^ifiilfMe^'r’toA^S.ra^^S »'
w hich nj*them»tic*l problem i* ono®iolv«l
becomes forever an axiom; hut no matter how
clearly the nriociplM which fovern heaUh and
q iden Medical ,«y aai Mwoverv retim*?teS5S' b» oitnvaieii tie
0
old Mf^^teSSitSBateASS time retrewriUs, fcn l-rflet* are m poerrt
y th*e's“itirrh V Ki.iitey
u# Dr.. and hi* Favor- I
iP) prescription areenonnona Where the din
is sallow and covered with blotches and plm
pies, ot where ttwte «s scroWons xwciliiig. .
,4i duti. dmW. U deUlL*>A saOmcLir
havs
of skin, or yellowi*ti-brown spots'-on fuce
or body, freqnent fae%d*che or dt«*mwi* f bad j
in moath. internal heat or chniB ftlter
foreboSwi^nwlIr kro^nffd *'wSf f?om acltiSSe I
yoa Inmauy-cMe*of' ing Torpid €? Lnrer Liver c,-mr or
' only part of these symptom* ex* I
era
‘ ^goch S»^dk °*M*i j
na} jig'll effect* perfect cares the
., r n,.A
who have nndergen© ail th* tortnre« of
.and the knife, and yet goffer with thoae 1
relief uf nmna coantipmtioa Dr. Ptora»’i*F*Tor^
Frencription; while « torpid
or- “bilkmsness” are promptly relieved .
the dro *«^_-............. Pliant .-PorgstiTfr Pellets. .Sold by
- ,f ko^li5E?S«*} v V *5 Ifaye ?*rw • KatSt^f ^ • . v
“ ." trii* «ai
. r a 4 *It w
it the prefewaice oirer *31 others, is »b
pure; ie every j pacta^e is stxirilv ^ fall
„SSe_ . dJmouriy ogW.
C£TEW
The Celebrated
“Matcslmk”
Wood Tobaooo. Tng Ptag :
Tn* F ion mb Tobacoo CoMPkinr,
Sew Yf.rfe. Boston, *n& Gbuegv
Wo st« Ksowum.-Ona thirty, mat Hot
of Johneon. Anodyne Liniment will effre
cure rore briSHfldtteJitomiiJmy- Inoga blredtes .t the lung., ■ ««» '
'**' 1 «*■«»> wtoptag !
-
“.A Parmer'.Sou or Daughter." See Advt. i
iftesii T5?
. d®c*, fed oet .pariagty U» pre*irt«fe« m * •ocfat
too* mBiKieMe thirty dey
man oae doBa, is vain, m .
T * J m wm**—
s._
o.-.aM •^S’ZT’m
TOBIAS’ VSSETIAS BOSS* LISIMXST. ia IW»
___M Owe Ootlw. * wwroeel »e
eOer, <» SO »AT. We tie m. •» OoK*. OOa Brelew.
Old S..W Solder Hi mwer-A p*« term
rwarara*
osTK a Co., st
$3SQ “ saoxHUX.^iwSrts?'
Ab a uK mmsss:
iHBijS ^^T7« «*^i f »**• kwi OT t, *«a mawo#
*" 1 " " 1 * ' ! t *
«»■—WW,™ baattt. w ± .
| |*| mm JH.|C AflfTA Jk ^Si^sti'-Sir.
vlIVVilv EH-sare:
: raasia a day at kb »*e» t*
Pl|l 1U) y#| III PyD Pfi9
wmmmmmmmmmmm J« nrfvQUB'n , ls^ott o 4 ^5Sn»& SonS,
n-ee. J. H.
, , . L»«» hh *yl . ..... 1 - --------.
■ ; Uu*qb \\ T ANTED Un «Ti c* ■
at
atsrmtaarie.’xariiSB ••*rtr pew***.*" ^ **? 0 ®*. .ft flflrm.titft! •'•hH -M
>
sa Saw..S mcbsku wum. eoari .J 1 TBi muruwn rrog.axjtBAcn. ia.naiul'i. r»
lefspaper Birectory
.
j. - 1078 -
APRIL EDITION NOW BEADY,
» . Frio* 40 <»nt*. Fra* by nut. Cantata* wad
g; Mt sad etrCttlotioM of *11 Mtt Mbhatood. pM i n, *
r of th* town* ia vhtch «b»j ur*
**"- "■ nrrfhiiggBft^IBgvto
, , m The ReUevtng andWerva brat FROWTRATIOK. Mental ritalhln* Sretaa. and Fbytlcnl il
1 ^ ^.nn^BWa Depot a Platt sa. IbX
mas i •n^Oof organs SOO «•» fifi'as •aif
^ mt prw*i
wVr«ti^VSStoi°BBl- ntotr.t«s caa«« M»u*i. 0 ^
vunos.
tradr mark. BR. cSSSS BECKER
K VfY V07d iS BALSAM
tW
IS A BURK CUR*
For IS FLAMED, WEAK EYKR?
STYES aadSORK EYELIDS.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS,
DEPOT , ft BOWKRY.I.V.
SENT BY MAIL FOR 33*.
A FARMER, a Farmer’s Soo or DmHv,
•* taki n« order* for fire of N*i.li»‘ Harpoon Hom*
PulUn Arid Grapple*; A«t'l Steel*. MeUie’OMt T®*1
Steel OMting*. iPlow-Shar** front ttu* o*o b*
welded, worked into ehia*ta or edged 4oo!«.) Ornemen
TAKE IT EASY.
Common-Sente Chairs
and Bockers.
Wirt... Wirtme RmM* IHtU.
tA fdrj|iu»trated n&J,Vv. Price
SUbp
Every CheEr t*amp.d aid Wmr.
rented.
Scientific News.
J2SJ of TK SrimattJU Oi^SX^SZk’^lSX. XBimrv: and Joehns Utw*. the well 51i
tad PATKNTW. «lnt edrioe W» end eecnr* * Fampblet FaM^ free. fot new Eft jnn tnUottooe. **pr
Consumption Cas Be Cored.
C O^i<r.>}l*'f KIN «od >11 iimnJU 'S IS. I.nee. tho
end Thronl. It lnvi*orate« thn brain, tone* op
anthem, mekee tbe week etronp, and is pleujtut bo Uk*.
PriCB Un* Uolier par bottle et Uru*ai «U ereent *rr tin*
Proprietor on receipt of price. A pemphlsi conteinin*
ralneble edriew to t'f>n*amintve», maay earUbomn
of ACTCAL crBKB. and fall direction* for neinp eeooni
panioe «»ch Jl^SKS, bottle, or ! Wfll be «nf frta to may addraw. «|C
QHOAR G H.OortUndt Str eet, Hew T t
HAVE Y01 BP WAY,
Bat &\ w»is -isa gh an mrr Fire Ton Wnpnft Soule, whieb
we deliver.freight paid, for SAG- AH iron uad *t**l :
bruM tmutn. No paf till tested. Free Lithcjfrupb end
Prioe Li»t.
JONES OF BINGHAMTON, Bingbumtoa, 5 Y
EVERETT HOUSE
FrumUntf 'Union Square
NEW YORK.
Finest Location in the Oity
Scropssa fe-Resta! UisarpusK
K KBKtSH dt WKA VBR, Rreprie ter*,
BABBITT'S TOILET SOA^
fflJXKTS-'
s 29 i (etutific -nsnufii/ tt.r •
, ^7 M .
La. £ s£L*
wSSoMS?*® ^S?> "ff?SSSSr'£-nSS! iB?<“
* f J9;VZhftS^% c,t '
! —^ SANDALWOOD ------------ ---------—
|
j . ^ ^ M ^
• laBre*
■»•«*» . rewrenkwmri ______________ ere*
«r.i « ..ovteiaM. n aim (Ndores ■„■
mwa te«me)iiaia^ B b im wp«mi
i remttw »wr mjreM m a m »w«
&y.. aie.s&cr **&«©» «***•***•
•* ,, U , ; Iretreas , ^ M n.,,
ov*»d* mv* *
ST ^ r _,
Til
-
6000 OLD
STANO-DY
mm sdstais luimeit
FOR MAN AND BEAST.
— , _ *»•*•
* . fTrgT . u« dwk um. 'SSI m_J.
■*&&»* <* «»• -orw w mCB&m&T" wwi
ofet jtoaa*-a»
to *n*t*M*. in msu • ootu*. ts» Mvm*og I 4 y«*»
•arww&w bwwii# _ wifi.
V,LU KY ALL MKDK;mR J?®9555:--
1,300,000 ACRES
Ilf ||i||l. flff PI1IWT1TP If jl|||)|IM|f f SiftillSil A11 Hr
lllUU 1 iUUUlHU WlillU
*HTTATEP 15*
SOUTHWESTERN MINNESOTA
KTO
NORTHWESTERN IOWA.
F< >Ti SALE
At Low Prices, With Easy Terms of
Payment, and at Low Kates
of Interest.
Tn*»i ieads Arm r*rf pro*?arte fa. my al ealtiretleo
end eoownMWU to psAPkei*. Alternsto wwtioB*
oriwapied by ftctnei **Hier». p’«M*wrt *«i
Fkrarwhmjr wrttr Gh fitr eb e*
Schools ^ *t cottTW»i*Dt ditaocw altar th* whole 1»« of
JSmiSTIL- ^ m*mm* HmmtmU. aum hSTmrir ah* tat
- «**
fmMa , „ 6 ,o-iaweit.
T . ,, AI ,. A atorx HTV l. *t,.HOAD.
... ........."h-Cyi
,» e n