| prf jßcpubUcnti. WATERTOWN, WIS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1881. NEWS IN BRIEF. Perils of tlie Deep* The propeller Jane Miller went down in Geor gian bay with all on board—probably twenty-six persons. Burned to Death* Nine railroad laborers were burned to death in a cheap boarding house at Rock Cut, near Pittsburg. Pa., on the 10th inst. They were sleeping up stairs and were unable to get out, so quickly the flames spread, Washington Gossip* John Davis, nephew of Bancroft Davis and son-in-law of ex-Senator Frelinghuysen, will be President Arthur’s private secretary. A. S. Gratiot, of Wisconsin, has been ap pointed assistant superintendent of the docu ment room of the house, at §2,000 per year. Fatal Explosions* About 5 o’clock on the evening of the 9th inst. a boiler burst in the Keystone rolling mill, at Pittsburg, Pa., completely demolishing the boiler house, killing one man and wounding ten others. A Brussels dispatch records an explosion in Cockerill colliery by which sixty-six persons lost their lives. Peril** of the Sea* The steamer Hibernian arrived at St. John’s, N. 8., on the 9th inst., badly shaken up by heavy weather. Her third officer was washed overboard and lost. The British steamer Saxon Monarch, from Gibralter for Antwerp, a month overdue, is supposed to have foundered in the Bay of Bis cay. It is feared all hands, numbering forty, are lost. An Aeronaut Lost. The government balloon, in charge of Capt. Templer, accompanied by Walter Powell, M. P., for Malmsbury, and Gardner, ascended from Bath, Eng., on the 10th inst., and descended at Bridgeport. The ballon struck the ground heavily, and Capt. Templer and Gardner were thrown out and injured. The balloon then rose with Powell and was seen again to descend at sea. Nothing has since been heard of Powell or the balloon. A Huge Swindle* A combination between boss section men. boarding-house keepers and others along the line of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad has been discovered, by which the corporation has been defrauded of a large amount of money. Fictitious names were car ried on the pay roll and in this manner from §IOO,OOO to §200,000 has been stolen. It is thought that two hundred men have engaged in the swindle. Eighteen arrests, including men of prominence, have been made. Jlinor Jlishaps* Dr. Crawford, of Van Buren County, lowa, one of the oldest physicians in that state, acci dentally swallowed a dose of poison, and died in thirty minutes. The house of Jacob Miller, near Lapeer, Mich., burned on the 6th inst., and the old man perished in the flames. He was 60 years of age. A floor in St. 'Mary’s Church Sunday School building, at St. Johns, N. 8.. fell, on the 4th inst.. killing Bliss Morton, Charles Doig and Harry Farrel. John Meacham, an old and wealthy citizen of Battle Creek, Mich., was run over and killed by the cars on the stb inst. Friglitful Holocaust. On the night of the Bth inst. while a per formance was in progress at the Ridg Theatre, Vienna, Austria, a lamp fell on the stage which set Are to the structure, wuich was consumed. The rapidity with which the flames spread pro vented the panic-stricken audience from tak ing advantage of the ordinary means of exit and upwards of seven hundred people were either burned to death, suffocated, or had their lives stamped out under the feet of the fren zied mass. Many of the audience saved thoir lives by jumping from the windows into cloths held by those below. It is estimated that seven hundred people perished m the flames Many of the bodies were totally consumed in the galleries and otho: elevated portions of the structure. The bodies of victims as they were removed from the nuns after the fire presented a horrible spectacle, and the scenes in the neighborhood of the calamity were heartrend ing. Kail way W recks. By a collision on the Cincinnati Southern Railroad, near Kismet, Team, the engineer, named Briel, and the fireman and a brakeman were killed. The Wabash Railway lost §130,000 by the col lapse of St. Charles bridge. A freight train consisting of thirty-two car, 0 :, mainly loaded with stock, fell through a bridge over the Missouri River at St. Charles, Mo., on the Bth inst. There were six men on the tram, but only one was killed. A collision of two freight trains occurred on the Bth inst., on the Chicago and Alton Road, six miles ease of Kansas City, Mo., causing damage to the amount of §25,000. W. C. Craddock and Frank Ruhr, brakemen, were badly injured and will die. Two trains collided at Hallsville, Tex., on the 6th inst., killing two men and wounding several. Two men were killed and another fatally in jured by an accident on the Se’ma & New Or leans Ro:.d, on the sth inst. mortuary. Col. Henry G. Stebbms, one of the founders of the New York Stock exchange, a leading banker, and who brought Clara Louise Kellogg before trie public, died of paralysis. Gen. H. B. Banning, an ex-member of con gress, died at Cincinnati. J. Duncan Putnam, of Davenport, lowa, one of the leading entomologists of the United States, is dead. Chief Justice French, of the British supreme court of China and Japan, is dead. Col. John W. Foraev, the eminent journalist, and politician, died al Philadelphia, Pa., on the 9th inst. Ex-Congressman Rudolph C. Doon, of Jasper County, Texas, di. and on the sth inst. Gabriel White, aged 100, died at Piqua, 0., on the 9th i;.st. He was one of the colony of emancipated slaves of John Randolph, of Roanoke, sent to Piqua in 1847. The Hon. H irvey Jewell, of Massachusetts, brother of M -rs ia' Je veil of Connecticut, and at one time a leading republican politician of Massachusetts, is dead. Heart disease ca ried off Ex-Chief Justice Barbour, of the New York supreme court, on the Bth inst. Joseph Hargraves, the celebrated cricketer, died at Philadelphia. Pa., on the Bth inst The state de bailment has received informa tion of the death of Gen. Kilpatrick, minister to Chid, which occurred on the 4th inst. Admiral Bird . f the British uavy, who com manded the Investigator in the expedition in search ox Sir. John Franklin, is dead- U ork of the Flames. The Mansion House block, Northampton, Mass., was damaged to the extent of §20,000 on the 10th xnst. On the same day, the harl vester warehouse of D. M. Osborne & Cos., Chicago, took fir., aud the damage was §320,- 000. A passenger car on the Wilmington & Weldon Railroad, whs burned, near Rocky Mount station, Va., on the night of the loth, Graff, Bennett A Co.’s rolling mill, about four miles from Pitlabmg, Pu., on the West Penn sylvania Railroad, was bun.ed on the lltb; loss §309,000. At Baltimore, Md., on the 11th inst.’ the steam box factory of Becker Bros. & Sons was consumed; locs §25,00(>. The stables of the Atlanta (Ga.) Street railway company were s iept away by fire on the 10th inst.. a number of mule* being lost. The Portland, Me., smelting works burned on the Bth inst. Loss §35,000. Miss Hunter’s boarding house, South Street, Morristown, N. J., burned on the Bth inst., and Mrs. Anna Walsh, a boarder, and Lizzie Kelch, a servant, perished. The other inmates were rescued from windows. Nearly a block of frame business houses in Short Creek, Kansas, burned on the night of the sth inst., involving a loss of about §50,000. A fire broke out in the Tennessee state peni tentiary at Nashville on the sth inst., causing a loss of §250,000. Only six couvicts escaped from the guards in the confusion. The Haight tannery at Balston Spa, N. Y., burned on the sth inst. Loss about §IOO,OOO. Seaman’s furniture warerooms, at Milwaukee, Wis., were damaged by fire and water to the extent of §35,000, on the night of the sth inst. Tragical Tales* Augustine Ishpeni and Amidio Cusitore, New York shoemakers aud roommates, disputed as to which is the better workman, and Cusitore stabbed Ishpeni, who in turn shot Cusitore. Both are probably fatally wounded. Deputy Marshal Sweet and E. Wethorn had an altercation with Marshal Halbert at Belton, Texas, in which pistols played an important part. Sweet was killed and Halbert wounded. Ellsworth Crettning ravished Gertrude Dyker at Milltown, N. Y„ whereupon Miss Dyker’s brother shot the villain dead. Two brothers named Adcock were mysterious ly murdered near Texarcana. Ark., on the 10th inst. Both were shot through the head. Isabel Aimes, a noted political magistrate shot and wounded no less than seventeen per sons in a frenzied fit at Chamamoco, Mexico, recently. The infuriated desperado was killed by Ike populace. On the* moruing of the 9th inst., Pacquili Tocucitto, an Italian residing in New York city, shot his wife Catharine through the head and killed her on the spot. Turning upon bis mother-in-law, Maria Valenta, he shot her Ihrough the head, aud next shot himself tkrough the neck. Bespattered with the brains of his two victims, and dripping with blood, be went to the Prince Street police station aud gave himself up. The murderer has a chance of recovery. The mother-in-law died from the wound. The wife was but 14 years old. Jealousy of the wife was the cause of the shoot ing. The Mercer brothers, two notorious Decatur County, lowa, characters, were shot and killed by the sheriff of Christian County, Mo., on the 7th inst. They killed Marshall Topliff on the 16th ult. At Fall River, Mass., on the night of the 6th inst., Frank Sharon, a young barber, went home, entered the room where his wife was sleeping, kissed her three times, and drawing a pistol, shot her dead. Sharon says something crossed his mind aud told him to da it. An unknown assassin murdered Mrs. Ann Jameson, a respectable widow, living near But ler, Bradford County, Fla., on the night of the 4th inst. Guiteau’v Trial* Eighteenth Day. —Guiteau was filled with fear and trembling as he cringingly shuffled through the large crowd which lined his walk from the van to the entrance of the court. Dr. Kennou, managing editor of the Chicago Medical Re view, gave it as bis opinion that the prisoner was insane. During the testimony of Dr. Ken non, Davidge maintained that John W. Gui teau had sworn positively that the prisoner’s father was not insane. Witness admitted that when a man committed crime while acting un der the delusion of Divine inspiration, aud then conducted himself precisely as a criminal would do, would be presumptive evidence against insanity. Several other experts were called, all of whom testified that if his actions up to the time of the hypothetical question were true the prisoner was undoubtedly insane. Guiteau .vas incensed at the qualified testi mony of the experts and denounced the wit nesses as cranks. Nineteenth Day. —On the 6th inst. the de fense closed their testimony and District Attor ney Corkhili directed all the medical experts to remain for examination by the prosecution. Scoville requested that President Arthur be summoned. Guiteau broke in with: “Yes; and Grant and Conkliug aud the rest of my political friends.” Counsel for prosecution agreed to allow Scoville to prepare Interrogatories to the President, and allow his evidence in this form to be put in later. The prisoner read copiously from his book, “Truth,” certain passages of which will be marked by Scoville to be submitted as evidence. Twentieth Day —The government began its re buttal. The expert testimony was not called at first, the prosecution producing a large number of witnesses who had been early neighbors, friends of the Guiteau family. The uniform testimony went to show that while Gmtcau’s father was eccentric in some ways he was a man of unusually bright intellect, and was trusted with important positions with the fullest con fidence of the city of Freeport, where he lived. Other relatives were eccentric, but very few cases of actual insanity were found in the* fam ily. • Gen. Sherman was placed upon the stand. When he had concluded, Guiteau said: “I thank you, General, for having ordered out those troops that day. If it hadn't been for you I should not be here to-day. I owe my life to the protection which you and General Crocker gave me during that period when mob spirit was rife.” The prisoner interrupted the coun sel as often as usual. Twenty-first Day. —The testimony taken on the Bth tended greatly to weaken the prisoner’s case, as it destroyed every vestige of the claim of hereditaiy insanity. The prisoner interrupt ed the witnesses repeatedly and viciously. President Arthur’s answers to’Scoville’s interro gations were read in court. He said he had seen the prisoner ten times and possibly twenty times, that the prisoner, to his knowledge, haci rendered the republican party no service during the campaign; that there was nothing in the relations between the leaders of the partv and Guiteau to furnish the latter with any ground for supposing he would receive an appointment. The President stated that he had received a letter since the indictment containing some claim of his having rendered some important services to the republican party during the Presidential campaign, and an appeal for a postponement of his trial to give him time to prepare for a defense. Twenty-second Day. —When the criminal court opened on the 9th, Guiteau became un usually noisy, abusing Corkhili and a number of witnesses. Geo. W. Plummer of Chicago, after suffering the interruptions for a while said to the prisoner; “It seems that your close relations with the Deity of late have corrupted your manners.” The prisoner laughed heartily at this sally and said: “ Well, that ain’t so bad, Plummer, for a western man.” Plummer said be had noticed nothing about Guiteau to indicate an unsound mind. Stephen English, editor and proprietor of the Insurance Times, New York, took the ftand. Guiteau called out: “This man was in Ludlow Street jail, and I got him out for §300.” Witness said he was in jail under §40,000 bonds and hired prisoner to secure his release, giving him §3OO. Guiteau took ihe money, aud also that of other persons tut rendered no service therefor. Guiteau shouted at the witness; “Why, I would not spit on you on the street, you old scoundrel. I'D get some insurance men to show you up. You are lying all the way through, English, you old fraud.” Witness considered the prisoner a shrewd sane man. At one time Guiteau cried excitedly: “I want to know, Corkhili, what all this kind of evidence has got to do with the real issue—-who fired the shot that killed Garfield, the Deity or I? I think it is devilish mean to rake up ‘my character in all its details. The only issue here is, who fired that shot, the Deity or I! Just take that home, Corkhili, and think it over till to- morrow morning. I want to know what all this has got to do with ray sanity or insanity on the 2d of July? As I told you before, I had time enough to go crazy a hun dred times in the interval.” J. McLean Shaw testified that Guiteau told him that he (Guiteau) was bound to become notorious, and might some day, like J. Wilkes Booth, kill some great man in order to draw attention. An apartment-house, capable of ac commodating forty families,has just been completed at Brooklyn, at an expense of $500,000. It is an enormous struc ture, and families will be able to live in a most luxurious style. It is model in every respect, containing elevators, steam, and all sanitary improvements. The cost of running it will be SIO,OOO per year, and the rental will probably amount to $55,000. FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Senate* Monday, December 5. —The senate was con vened at noon with Davis in the chair Sena tor-elect Windem presented his credentials, qualified and entered upon the discharge of his unties Bills introduced: For the appoint ment of a commission to investigate questions of tariff and revenue laws; for retiring the trade dollars and recoining them as standard silver dollars; to enforce the treaty stipulations rela tive to the Chinese; to promote the efficiency of the life-saving service: to incorporate the Gar field Memorial Hospital; to place Gen. U. S. Grant upon the retired list of the army; for compulsory retirement of all army officers after forty-five years service; to provide for the issue of three per cent, bonds (it authorizes the secre tary or any assistant secretary of the treasury to receive lawful money of the United States to the amount of SSO or any multiple of that sum, and to issue in exchange therefor an equal amount of registered or coupon bonds of the United States bearing interest at the rate of 3 per cent, per annum payable quarterly or semi annually at the treasury; such bonds to be ex empt from all taxation, to bo payable at the treasury after January 2, 1887, and the money received for these bonds to be applied solely to the redemption ol 3% per cent, bonds) Ad journed.- Tuesday, December 6.—The senate met at noon and appointed a committee to wait on the President and notify him of their readiness to receive the message. The committee reported that the. President would communicate to both houses in writing forthwith Bills intro duced: Granting the franking privilege to Mrs. Lucretia Garfield; for a territorial government for southern Alaska; for the admission of Da kota as a state; establishing the territory of Northern Dakota and providing a temporary government therefor; establishing a United States mail service and reviving foreign com merce in America, between New Orleans and Mexican ports; for the establishment of a steamship mail service between the United States and Brazil; to authorize the Baritavia Ship Canal Company to construct and operate a ship canal from New Orleans to the Gulf of Meixco overland and the waters of the United States: for the relief of Ben Halliday; to estab lish a board of education and in the support of the public schools.., .At 1:05 p. m. the door keeper announced the reception of a message from the President of the United States, and the clerk a moment later began reading the annual message At the conclusion of the message a resolution by Edmunds continuing the committees as they existed at the last ses sion was passed Cameron (Pa.) introduced a resolution declaring that in the opinion of the senate it is inexpedient to reduce the revenue of the government by abolishing all existing internal revenue taxes except those imposed upon highwines and distilled spirits. Laid on the table informally.... Beck introduced reso lutions instructing the judiciary committee to inquire into the provision of the constitution regarding Presidential disability (suggested by the Garfield case). Laid over.... A resolution by Sherman to appoint six senators in con junction with a like committee from the house, to provide means of expressing the deep sensi bility of the nation upon the decease of Presi dent Garfield, and referring to them that part of the President’s message relating thereto, was passed Adjourned. Wednesday, December?. —Sherman, Pendle ton, Dawes, Lapham, Bayard and Morgan were appointed by the chair as a joint committee for the preparation of the senate memorial upon the death of the late President Garfield Bills introduced: To enable the people of New Mexico to form a constitutional and state government and for the admission of the state into the Union, (temporarily tabled); making trade dollars legal tender at their nominal value for all debts public and private except where otherwise expressly stipulated in the contract; also to provide for the allotment of lands in severalty to United Peonas and Miamis of Indian Territory, (referred); granting pen sions to soldiers of the Mexican war and to soldiers engaged in the Creek, Seminole and Black Hawk Indian wars, (this bill was report ed favorably from the senate committee on pen sions at tiie last session); to establish a depart ment of agriculture ana commerce, (temporari ly tabled.) A resolution offered by Hoar for a special committee, to be appointed by the chair, to whom shall bo referred all petitions, bills and resolutions asking for the extension of suffrage to women and the removal cf then-dis abilities, was referred... .Adjourned. Thursday, December B.—Upon the expira tion of the morning horn 1 Morrill addressed the senate at considerable length upon the tariff commission bill Bills introduced: For a bridge across the Missouri at the most accept able point from five to six miles above St. Louis; for recording marriages in territories of the United States; to make a wife a competent witness in a trial for bigamy in territories of the United States; for the erection of a monu ment to the memory of Maj.-Gen. Baron De Kalb; for the sale ol lands of Miami Indians in Kansas; for a bridge over the Missouri Liver at or near Arrow Rock, Mo.; providing that the widows and minor children of soldiers who served ninety days in the late war, and were honorably discharged, be entitled to 160 acres of public land not otherwise reserved or appro priated; retiring judges of United States courts, after ten years’ service, at 70 years, and after twenty years’ service at 65 years Ferry, from the committee on postoffices, reported back with amendment a bill granting the frank ing privilege to the widow of the late President Garfield. He asked unanimous consent for the suspension of rules to consider the bill. The bill passed without objection, being the first of the session to pass the senate Pending mo tion for adjournment, the President pro tern. (Davis) called attention to the fact that the sth of December, the day on which congress con vened, was the fiftieth anniversary of the day when Isaac Bassett, the much esteemed door keeper of the senate, became connected with that body. Half a century ago he entered the service of the senate as a page through the in fluence of Daniel Webster. Tu all the mutations of parties, no attempt has ever been made to disturb him. “I am sure” Davis said, “the sentiment of all sides is cordially expressed when I wish him health and happiness in the name of the senate of the United States.”. .. Adjourned until Monday next. House* Monday, December 5. —At noon the clerk of the house, Adams, called the body to order and announced the opening of the session. The roll-call showed 298 representatives present, the absentees being Morey, Scales, Mills and Deuster. Nominations for speaker being in or der, Keifer was put in nomination by Robeson, Randall by House and Ford by Murch. The roll was called, and resulted as follows: Whole number of votes, 285; necessary for choice, 143; for Keifer, 148; Randall, 129; Ford, 8. Those voting for Ford were Brumm, Burrows, of Mis souri; Hazeltine, Jones, of T£xas; Ladd, Mos grave, Murch and Rice, of Missouri. None of the candidates voted. Fulkerson and Paul, of Virginia, (readjusters) voted for Keifer. The result having been announced. Keifer was es corted to the sneaker’s chair by Randall and Hiscock, and took the oath of office, which was administered by Kelly, of Pennsylvania, as the oldest member in point of service. The work of swearing in members was commenced, but Alabama being the first state called, Jones (Texas) objected to the oath being administer ed to Joseph Wheeler (Alabama) and asked he be compelled to stand aside. So ordered. Springer objected to the swearing in of Cutts' (Iowa), Van Vorhies, (N. V.), King, (La.)! Moore, (Tenn,), and Chalmers, (Miss.) All of these gentlemen stood aside. oejections were further made to the qualifying of Wadsworth and Van Vorhies, Dibble and Moore, (Tenn.) After the work of swearing in members to whom there was no objection was concluded, the case of Wheeler was taken up, but a* he had a prima facie right to a seat them was no strenuous objection made, and ho was finally allowed to qualify. All objections, with the ex ception of that against Chalmers and against Dibble, having been withdrawn, the gentlemen were sworn in. AU republican caucus nominees were then elected and sworn in... .Adjourned. Tuesday, December 6.—Haskell offered a resolution declaring Allen S. Campbell, dele gate-elect from Utah Territory, entitled to be sworn in on a prima facie case. The resolution was under discussion, a point of order being raised against it by Cox, when the President’s message was received and read. The message was ordered printed and referred to committee of the whole The question on Utah’s dele gate was then postponed till to-morrow.... McKinley offered a resolution for a committee to act in conjunction with a like committee from the senate to consider and report by what token of respect and affection it may be proper for the congress of the United States to express the deep sensibility of the nation at the death of its late President, James A. Garfield, and that so much of the message as refers to tnat melancholy event be referred to the committee. Adjourned until Friday, with the under standing that further adjournment be taken un til Tuesday. Wednesday, December 7.— The house was not in session to-day. Friday, December 9.—Mills (Texas) appeared at the bar of the house and was sworn in The speaker announced the appointment of the following committees: On mileage—Smith of Pennsylvania, Ryan, Paul. Cobb, MacKenzie. On the death of President Garfield—McKinney, Pacheco, Belford, Wait, Forney, Dunn, Martin, Davidson (Florida) Stephens! Cannon, Orth, Kasson, Anderson, Carlisle, Gibson, Dingley, McLane, Harris of Massachusetts, Hoar, Dun nell, Hooker, Ford, Valentine, Cassidy, Hall, Hill (New Jersey), Cox (New York), Vance, George, O’Neill. Chase, Aiken, Pettibone, Mills, Joyce, Tucker, Wilson and Williams (Wis.) The house then adjourned until Tuesday, wheu the introduction of bills will be allowed as if it were Monday. DOMESTIC ECONOMY. MACARONI. Boil until tender enough to put a fork through easily. Put in a deep dish a layer of macaroni, with a little melted butter and salt; grate cheese over this; fill up the dish as above, the last layer of cheese without butter. Pour over all milk so you can see it on the edge of the dish. Bake until a nice brown. HONEY-COMB PUDDING. To one pint of molasses add one cup of brown sugar; beat them well together. Melt a piece of butter the size of an egg m a teacup of milk; add one teaspoont'ul of saleratus and pour it into the molasses. Beat the whites of six eggs to a stiff’ froth; add the yolks to the molasses; stir in one teacup of flour; add a little mace and cloves. Stir in the whites, and bake one hour in a moderate oven. Serve with a rich sauce. CURRANT SWEET LOAF. Mix two heaping teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, with one pound of flour; then rub into it four ounces of butter, as for pastry; add eight ounces of currants, six ounces of sugar, and one pint of milk, in which one heaping teaspoonful of car bonate of soda has been dissolved; add a little salt, spice to taste, and bake. The addition of two beaten eggs and four ounces of citron makes a rich loaf. A RICH MINCE MEAT. Boil a fresh beef’s tongue, a large one, weighing five or six pounds, in salted water till tender, about three hours. Skin it and then put it back into the liquor until it is thoroughly cold. Weigh it and chop it, and to every pound of tongue put a pound of snet, a pound of raisins, a pound of currants, a half pound of citron, a pound of chopped apples, a pound of sugar, cin namon, allspice and cloves sparingly: a pint of brandy to the mince meat, which must be packed down tight in a stone or earthen jar. When you make up your pies add to every five pounds of the mince meat a quart and a pint of cider. This is enough for eight pies. If you require more brandy it must be added at the time of baking. The cider must not be put into the mince meat jar, as it will spoil the whole quantity. This receipt makes a very rich mince meat. For the ordinary mince meat, take three pounds of the “ sticking piece ” of beef, which is from the neck. This has some fat in it. Boil till tender in salt and water; Let it get cold in the liquor. Then chop it; add two founds of suet. Then put an equal quantity with your weight of beef, of currants, raisins, chopped apples and sugar, pound for pound. A half pound of citron to each pound of meat. Cinna mon, allspice and cloves, and the juice and chopjied rind of two lemons. APPLE BUTTER. Boil four gallons of cider for three hours, skimming it. Have the apples pared and cored, and put them in gradu ally; as they boil down fill up with more apples. Have an oaken stave pierced with holes and fastened to a long han dle—a broomstick is the best—so that you can stand at a distance from the kettle. It must be stirred continually to prevent its burning. If you have your cider on to boil by 10 in the morning, the apple butter ought to be all cooked by 12 at night. Sweeten it to taste with light, brown sugar, but the sugar must not be added until about an hour before it comes off the fire, as it burns more easily after the sugar is in. Add cinna mon and cloves to taste when yon put the sugar in. When it is done it must be so stiff that a spoon will stand up in it. Apple butter is a tedious thing to make. It is beet to have a merry-making over the apple-paring and stirring, as it is very heavy work for one or two per sons. A gay party in a country house undertook it a few seasons ago, but long before midnight all had given out, leav ing one strong-armed young fellow alone to finish it, Apple butter must be cooked in a very large kettle, a perfectly new tin boiler, or a copper kettle. There is no use in making up a small quantity, as it takes just as much time as to cook a barrel of cider. If made according to this receipt, it is sure to keep. Washing in Italy. [From the Cornhill Magazine.] In cold weather much washing of the person is considered to be dangerous to health; and my barbarity in subjecting a young baby to a daily bath during the winter excited almost as much virtuous indignation as my culpable neglect of the “fascia,” so necessary to keep the legs straight. On receiving a neighbor into the house for a week, I thought it incumbent on me, although it was the dead of winter, to provide him with all conveniences for washing, but these at tentions were lost upon him; and my astonishment when the house-maid thought fit to inform me in her dramatic way that neither soap, water nor towel had been touched, was perhaps no greater than his own at finding these useless thing provided. “ The signora says to me,” begins Marietta, “have you put soap into the room of that gen tleman ?” —“Sissignora.” “A bath?” —“Sissignora.” “Two towels?”— “ Sissignora, sissignora, ma, signora, non toccati! ne I’una, ne Taltra! ” The spruce-gum industry in Maine is represented to be in a highly flourishing condition. Men who range the woods collecting the gum make good wages, selling the article for 40 cents a pound. Altogether residents of the state obtain $40,000 yearly by the sale of the article. THE LOWER CANADIAN. A Model of Thrift who Dwells in the Queen’s Dominions. [From the December Atlantic.! The inhabitant is a model of thrift. He grows his own tobacco, makes his own “beef” moccasins, and manufac tures his own whisky. His wife spins the wool out of which is made V etovffp. du pays, a kind of frieze, in which he clothes himself. His house is a picture of neatness. The outside is whitewashed at least twice a year; the inside is swept and garnished until it is as bright as a new pin. The floor of pine boards is scrubbed and sanded every day. The walls are hung with pictures, somewhat gaudy as to color, of the pope, St. Cecelia, St. Joseph and St. Anne, and photographs of the parish priest and of the children who are away in New Eng land or Minnesota. Over the broad fire place, in which huge logs blaze in winter time hangs the family fusil, the old flint-lock a sire carried under Mont calm, and now used to kill an occasional bear and to fire a feu defoie on St. Jean Baptiste day and other great occasions. Near it are medals brought from Borne by the priest or the bishop, and the rosary that has come down as an heir loom in the family. The house is dec orated with sampler work of saints and angels, for which the women are famed. A crucifix hangs above the fusil, and in settlements near a church the house is always supplied with holy water. The patriarch of the family sits in the ingle ueuk, puffing blasts of smoke from his long pipe up the bellowing chimney, and •sporting the toyue, an old-fashioned red night-cap with a brilliant tassel, which his fathers before him wore under the ancien regime. The good wife in mantalet of calico skirt of homespun blue, and neat Norman cap, is at the spinning-wheel; the eldest daughter, soon to marry the honest husbandman in the next clearing, is weaving her linen outfit at a hand-loom. The pot in which the pea-soup, the staple dish, is made, is gurgling on the fire; a smaller pot contains the pork; and in the gulf parishes the tiuade, composed of alternate layers of pork and codfish, is still the piece de resistance. The bed rooms are furnished with old-fashioned bedsteads, covered with patch-work quilts of cunning and patient workman ship. Here, too, are pictures of the Madonna and St. Ignatius, and a small i plaster figure of the great Napoleon, j meditating with folded arms on the | cliffs of St. Helena; a bough of palm i blessed at Eastertide; holy water, a j specific against lightning; and the snow-shoes on which the inhabitants visits his little kingdom of eighty or one hundred arpents in the long winter season. The housewife bottles an infin ite variety of preserves in the fall, raspberries, blueberries, blackberries, huckleberries and other wild fruits which the bush and the swamps yield in abundance; and in the spring the ma ples furnish a sweet harvest of sugar. When the dcfricheur comes in from the woods on a cold evening, ho fortifies himself with a draught of the mordant whisky; the blessing of God is asked on the more substantial repast, and he | falls to a valiant trencherman,’with an I appetite as keen as his ax. The bon | bomme gets out his rosin and his bow, [ the lads and lassies come in from the 1 neighboring farm houses, and as Long fellow has it of the Acadians in “Evan- j geline “ Gayly the old man sings to the wibrant sound of his fiddle. Tousles Bourgeous de Chartres and de Carillon de Dunkerque.” The dances of the olden time still j hold their own in the country districts, i The cotinious, the gigues, the galopades, ■ the minuets, the danses rondos and the i ancient ballads, the Claire Fontaine j and the En Boulant are ever new. At! 10 o’clock the grandfather puts away I his fiddle and reverently gives his! blessing to the company, which now disperses, to be up and at work by the first peep of morning. LATEST MARKET REPORTS. NEW YORK. Flour—Spring Extras f 600 @ 7 50 Wheat—No. 2 Spring @ 1 37 Corn—No, 2 @ 71% Oats—No. 2 @ 54 Rye—State @ 1 07 Pork—Mess @lB 25 Lard @ll 30 CHICAGO. Flour—Good to Choice Spring $ G 25 @6 75 Common “ 5 25 @ 5 75 Wheat—No. 2, Cash @ 1 28 No. 2. Seller Dec @ 1 29% Coen—No. 2... @ 6 % Oats—No. 2 @ 46% Barley—No. 2 @ 1 u 6 Rye—No. 2 @ 98 Pork—Mess, Cash @l7 00 Larl—Cash @ll 10 Butter—Good to Choice Creamery 25 @ 35 Good to Choice Dairy 25 @ 27 Egos 22 @ 23 Cheese—Prime 12 @ 13% MILWAUKEE. Flour—Good to Choice Spring $ 6 00 @7 00 Common Extras 4 50 @5 00 Wheat—Spring, No. 2, Regular @ 1 31% Spring, No. 3, “ @ 1 11 Spring, No. 2, Seller Jan . @ 1 30 Spring, No. 2, Seller Feb. @ 1 30% Coen—No. 2 @ 61% Oats—No. 2 @ 43 Barley—No. 2 @ 95 Rye—No. 1 @ 97% Pork—Mess @l6 90 Lard @ll 07 Cattle—Good to Choice Steers 5 00 @ 5 50 Hogs—Good to Choice 5 70 @ 6 30 Sheep—Common to Choice Shorn. 4 00 @ 4 30 Butter—Good to Choice 25 @ 33 Eggs 24 @ 25 Cheese —Prime 13 @ 13% St. LOUIS. Wheat—No. 2 Red @sl 35% Corn—No. 2 @ 63% Oats—No. 2 @, 47 Rye—No. 1 @ 99 Pork—Mess @l7 uO TOLEDO. Wheat—No. 2, Red @sl 35% Coen—No. 2 @ 65 Oats @ 45% A Bell with a History. [From the Buffalo Telegraph.] In the Episcopal church at ElMcott ville, Cataraugus County, is an old bell, which according to a very legible date on its side, was cast in Moscow, Russia, in 1708. Its history is about as follows: It is now 173 years old and was cast for and first used as one of a chimes of bells in a large cathedral in Moscow. When Napoleon inaugurated his disastrous re treat in 1811, by burning the city, the cathedral with its chime was molested in the common ruin. Several years after ward, this bell was gathered up other old metal and sold to a sea captain for bal last to his vessel, which he returned light to New York. In the course of time the bell found its way into the hands of the well known bell founder, Andrew Meenelej, of Troy, and was kept in his yard for several years as a curiosity, though not highly valued. When the present church building in Ellicottville was finished, a gentleman connected with the parish happening to see it, purchased it at a low price and presented it to the society. In due time it was elevated to its present position and after a half century’s silence, its peculiar tones once more resounded through the air; but this time, not sounding a single note in the Misericordia of a nation groaning under the bonds of moral and physical oppression, but pealing forth a glad sound of its own in a land where every heart is free. The bell to-day is still sound, and its notes as clear as on the first day of its existence, and its re verberations are still throbbing and echoing away among the hills of old Cat taraugus. Particles in the Eye. [From Youth’s Companion.] Old and young per sons are often sore ly troubled by small hard particles of matter that get under the eyelids. When children suffer in this way, their parents may not even suspect the cause of the trouble. The irritation may go on in creasing for years: for the inflammation strongly resembles catarrhal conjunc tivitis, which has quite a different cause. The conjunctiva (as the termination itis in medicine always means “inflam mation of,” conjunctivitis means inflam mation of the conjunctiva) is a mucous membrane which begins near the edge of the lids, upper and lower, lines them, and then, turning back, covers also the eye-ball. It thus forms two sacs. It is exceedingly sensitive and is very liable to inflammation of various kinds, all painful, and some very difficult of cure. A foreign body beneath the eyelid soon inflames it. Such a body beneath the upper lid is not as readily detected as one beneath the lower, and it is harder to remove it. A child that had long suffered from what was supposed to be catarrhal in flammation, and for which it had been energetically treated, only to grow worse, was brought to Dr. Broosa, professor of ophthalmology in the New York Uni versity. On turning up the child’s upper eyelid, the source of the trouble was found in a small bud of a cherry-tree. Belief and cure followed its removal. In all such cases the main thing to do, is to avert the lid. The lover lid is eas ily turned over the finger. If the parti cle is beneath the upper lid, press the lid against the eyebrow and have the patient look down. Then seize the eye lashes and edge up the lid aud turn the lid quickly over the thumb. Bemove the speck with a handkerchief, and show it to the patient; for he will often feel for some time as if the object were still in the eye. A Minister’s Messenger and What He baw. [Paris Letter to Philadelphia Press,] Two hundred years and one week ago. almost at the very moment when his soldiers were entering Strasbourg, the Boi Soldi started out fr< *m Fontaine bleau to take possession in person of his new conquest. The day b. fore—that is to say, on the 29th of S ptember, 1681, Louis XIV, had announced to his court in the presence of the German ambassa dor that he had made up bis mind to go to Strasbourg, in order to receive the oath of fealty w i<-h the treaty of Ni megue gave him tin righ to exact from the city. It was a coup do theatre, and no mistake. But how happened it that the king was so well infra mea as to the set tled condition of off o s at so distant a point? Well, the storuns ns follows; One evening the minister Louvois sent for a young man who had been recommended to his good graces, and said. “ Sir, you will g t into a post carriage which you wi I find at my door. My servants have exact instructions what to do. You wiil proceed to Bale without stopping, and you will reach there about two o'clock to-morrow. You will proceed immediately to the bridge which crosses the B ine You will re main there until f<: ur o’clock. You will carefully notice aT h at you may see there. You will then again get into the carriage, and without 10.-h-g a minute you will return and report to me what you may have seen” Tee young man bowed and started at once. Two days after, he reached Balt, n>d at once has tened to take np his st a* on on o>e bridge. Nothing extraordinary attracted his at tention. It was market-day, and some peasants were passing and repassing, bringing vegetables ran! taking back their empty carts. A squad of militia passed. Townsfolk crossed the bridge, talking of the news < i the day, and a little man wearing a yell* w coat, leaned over the railing and an mo and himself h 7 dropping stones iiao the v aver, as if to create circling eddies, which he watched with a satisfied look Four o’clock struck and the ministerV messenger started on his return t > Paris. Very late in the evening tin- young man, greatly disappointed at he jesult of his mission, arrived at tie home of Lou vois. The minister uas -tdl awake and rushed to meet bis proto:,-- , “What did yon see ? ” he ;*fked. “ I saw peasants g-iug and coming; a squad of militia J if bridge; citizens who walked ?do iscussing the day’s news, and a v mm wearing a yellow coat, who v -:ie. am ■’ g himself by dropping stones ivo. • her.” The minister had * ear ■ i _*h, and he hurried to the kina. i. i ! man in yellow was a secret ag- e , a . the stones dropped into the v-at. ; a a signal that all difficulties lad < overcome, and that Strasbouo b 1 > France. Nautical Nonsens: “Father,” asked Join •, “ what is a log?” “A log, lev replied Brown, stealing a b;i> ; r at Mrs. 8., to see it s: e was i g for bis answer, “a log, my s- . big piece of wood or timbei. . ■ >o \ou ask, Johnny?” “It tells n .-story about heaving the log, and \ s the ship went fourteen kuom air. What does it mean by hither?” “Knots, Johnny?—! you have seen a log—aim. covered with knots—haven’t ' t, that’s what it means— it h m— the ship got by fourt* <• o n hour. That’s all, Johnny,” ■ , with a sigh of relief that he ' i r of it so easily. A new Sunday la v i- ringently enforced in Indiana tin- b ! >ers and cigar dealers who keep th it shops open on Sunday morning are fined