Newspaper Page Text
Shi ruc Mtttiitrm J AW TAW, MICHIGAN. i i.KMI TOPlt S. i i.i l.ae the State, comity ami ilis trict bUffl in the We st been h1 successful as tho 4 the prseiit year. In tcet MA it has been rWOSUtlj de- i i. il i the Old Oittiottni In Oaf isiij that i prisst may lawfully many. Ladxm, beware ol those striped hoae that ;t just coming into fashion. They pro. i ii eruptions on the liinlw. A HS nl journal published ''nClevc lami baa BBds the iHlflfUMJ that bald beadrd people are exempt from con sumption. Tin I ditors ol Fort Wayne, i ml.. Lavo induced a Judge to declare insane and commit to the lunatic asylum man v. 1. 1 au ungovernable penchant lot writing poetry. UM Is lavorite (mp IBaTSting chorus oi the Qeorgis negroes at tbeiz revival meetings : l''ort-c-f"'!; bull-fisiRK a!) iu d row. DOWI in 1' lafOOB, latl'iii at .1. .row; IJrcs ! p ml lArd, how ilo cullud uiigol i 11 ; Maml ..i?t if .i.n,' r-. or you all gwtm to h. 11, Bros ii. jj.vxl i)rt. . , Etonwann is the name of a gentle nan who writes rosy editoriali for the 1 Ouiahn Bee. He is evidently not the fightiaj ditor, as he was badly thrashed, the other day, by a wraths individual ' who i. foil d t I tain a rose-colored view of one of hii playful paragraphs, ObTJGAOO haa improved on tlie inveii lion of ;. uard inscribed "hire a hall," or "t:. - mar. was talked to deatli," in tended ror the discouragement of pro (eanjoaal bores, The present device is I i small ears fasteosd by a thread to the button hoi. . When the speaker has oat t: ! : Li welcome, the victim oslnv 'v places the ooffc in his near ear. I Now vi. "i there are so many ambi-, I t ions candidates before the country it is tim.Mhc ihonld know vhe.re they got their names. Cktndidut rnoarii white, Old in o . B ':ne men who offered them selves foi Ottoe were " candidati, " be- I diau the won- very while robes, which, by t!i way, they sometimes chalked, or. as w' should say, 'whit.-ncd, " and when they proceeded to go round I ttmbitt and solicit votes, they were j srabiti is. Candidates, pleass take no-: tice, and k cp clean. That ecppei-eolorod statesman, ora- I tor ai H F, Hon. Spotted Tail, in a ipesoh to the Black Hills Commis-ion ers, th- other day, gave vent to this j burs! ol eloquence : "Yesterday, when we col I yon Commissioners, you I m all drunk, and you tried to throw a ivl i ray head. To-day I breathe the frsa sir Of heaven among my own, people, . Dd 10 no w talk to you what I did not wish to say ywstefday. If you j .cant mi. land we want the boundary line ot Nebraska ohanged, the reserva-1 Hon BOMfged, and we want to know what you nay.' Ugh ! A ( . porruspoadSPt of the Spring- field i Masff ) '' publican draws this pen- photograrh Of th" venerable William Alien: "He is a tall, angular, loosely built m::.Ti in i clos. ly fitting suit of shiny blsok. ifiti head is covered with ashook I of ahorl white liair, even thread of rjrhieii tcsiiksas if it might be clinched on the netbei BiAaol his tough old soalp; tl'' s-t, aaaapaafa Sjnii um that would ; , . :. t init to M.aruo the nobbt Komati ot them ill; slarsje, tbatinate aaonth; anuBsnVel face witho ii one isrene s"t upon it, but deeply furrowed ewer by lbs paasaons f a Strong, coajbativv r.aturv tln4 are j Ihe Imi .1 i striking characteristics of ouj modern politioal BapVanl Winkle I Hi lATOl JaMBS K. DoOtMRIA, in hfe reeent aoVraai at the Winnebago ' c.im.ry (HL) Aariouitural Fair, Bfopoacd ;i Dowel ichanw for pafuini in eleetions, Hh n . includsa the f oQowina; nasas axes: Tic mbdhrisiou oi stseaoral pic -r - ta nutil DOt BMte tlnin 7A) votes shall bs n srrj one, a loal iwejuflwaaanl that . vrry ettiMn who cannot give a good sirmss aa iQ sttsnd and eosi at all okwtlCBUt and minority representation in saaaoM (popular) ol tudf ami clerks ot rfeetiOD, i'2 fan oftisa i' more than 30.000 inhabitant tin- DMM Bud PSBi d are oi aaaji fotef to Im- pubUelj read h. len hw lniilot indsunsJied, and public proof oi bii Identity and quahfleation to 1m' given OS tin- spot ami Under oath, if ohaUengod; and (8) that beads of fami lies shall li allowed two voten, one lor Hi. m -e'v .- , Mad tkS other aa representa U ID lil lnniilis. I h i y ;i'arsaffi), uu the 27th ult the - e w - drat fanca of tatdeisa was drawn by a o rmoi as open to the public n is Hhi ;i' Darlington, in England, nnd (i,..rj.'. itd-piieiiMciii wiim the engineer, boQi ot tfie road and of the locomotive, it v. i Beginning of isahxssiBBg, and the S' :) t'LtenniflJ of the eve nt ban pint I.,,, . . :..ie,: :,r hu iington ova grand ad banquet, participated in 1 K by many tlistingnishinl Englishmen. The little line then opeued has since iMHm absaaasl into the KoithsMiisu nulroml of England, an immense ror )H)rution, whos capital is ffiO,()(K),l)OU, Of eiuid to that of our whole Pacific rail road, and evsntheJ Is surpassed by thsss other British nulroada. The railroaiis of the worhl liae all beco crtiated within this fifty years. The United Stat Imve hiid the MOat lengtli in that time, and about as much as all tlie rest of the world put together. Tlie cost and manner of building 1ms U n the most magnificent in Knglaud, where Us- perceuiJge of net return nnd gross earnings to coat is less than with us. MICH 10 AN NKWS. Ovm del issued proposala for the erec tion of brick building for the use of the Fire Department Font prisoners escaped from the County Jail at Jackson, tlie other night, by digging a hole through the brick wall. So Mill wns the work that none of the other prisoners heard anything of it. Two SBOfKKBS, named Forster, quar r'eled, one day last week, while at work on the Great farm, near St. Johns, cut ting corn. One received a Eatal stab from tlm corn cutter in the hands of the other. OaUB Knk.ht has pttU arrested at Fast BaginsW, charged with an attempt to tiie the dwelling of Win. C'arrcn at South Sagiuaw. In default t v.aMl bonde he wan committed. He had just been put undet bonds for thrcatetiin; to kill Carren. Hum W. Bans, of Brooklyn, being largely interested in lumber at Hay City, was interviewed by a reporter of tlie Hay ( it;. 7W6flfte, and gave his opinion that it is not the excessive supply but the great cost of production that causes the stagnation in the lumber trade. To over come this Mr. Sac;.- says that u reduction in the expenses of mills is necessary, and concludes that the most possible way of doing it is by the importation of Can adian laborers. Thk verdict rendered by tie Coroner's impiest on the remains el' Claude Avery ami Antoine Orover, recovered from the Berndon House ruins, in Marshall, is ms follows: "No satisfactory solution of the origin of the tire can be derived. There were QO pp r facilities for es oape in 'nse of lire supplied in the con struction of the building, and it is the opinion of the jury that a competent night watchman should have been kept in a hotel of the magnitude of the Hern don House."' An exciting scene took place last week in the court room at Detroit, during tic trial of the Ward will CSSSt Jttst as the OOUrt adjourned, Henry S. Ward, son of ('apt. Ward, sprang to his feet and vio lently denounced Wirt Dexter, oounsel for the widow, and threatened to blow his brains out. Pining Dexter'l re marks he alluded to theiomeyn chaige that Mrs. Ward and her n IsttVCS had worked upon Capt. Ward so as to have him appropriate most of his property to her and her children to the detriment of the children by the first wife, as the charge of a slanderous tongue. Romeyn asked DeXter if he applied those re-iniu-ks to him, when Dexter replied that he did, and held himself accountable to Romeyn for them in or out of court. Til i: tTM i:NNI VL. Mlehlgan Bvatlqaargaraal the Phltadalphtti 'elltelllllltl. The Miouigan Board of Cen'anrilal Commia-Hioucr-i propoaa to erect a building in I'lnla delphia foi tba pnrpoao of Mloblgau '"i.t ;i inai Htadtraartora Nothing will be nasd in tto conntruction of the edilice which la not Qlreatlj the product, Bumafaetorad or dtherwlaa, of Michigan aotl, except the nailf. Tin- material an teeing Into tto building will be: Walla and foundation of Michigan uiiuhlc, freeatone aandntono, sto. ; roof, nwbigaii alata wlndoara, Mri,p'" glaM ; obimoava, Miobiasa brick, etc. Tba intarior will al-.n be f nrulabed with Michigan WOOda. and tic wuole will Brat lie complete I hete. und then nelit to Philadelphia to be put Up. The builil- ing win no ina the Sficbisan Board "f Uaadqnartara for Dll ectoiH eotora, Beoretary. iH-ooie MMnllT exhibitors, and Mlehiaaii Full record- and duaoriptiooa products hii'I rmourcea of the Statu and other like information will be topt for tba aulightan incut nl tiuise not Michigantlers, a well hm t'ilen of all the lea.liii;: Atichigun newspapers. A register topi Bj I m Hi n . saw) will contain the narneH. raaidancea and atoptring plaoaa ol n Miobigan folks, hii that then Iriends nnd other wu bt able to find them awattjT n- tribationi to paj for labor m araottng thm fttiobigan oaatM art aanaatl! i ilidtad. and thn ooosf thay ara m at to tba iommlnwlmi In this city, the bctt.-r. AjdSYaaa F. W. Noble. S.-e-retary. BOSBI II, Bank iiloak, Detroit. '. i', publican. Addraaa t the Aarimltanata nni Horticul BaeaUeof HtaSjpan in kick "i i bm ranniAi. Boaan or i n uhhh . i Booai 11, Sana Baooa, In.Titoli, Mi. Ii., uk. 14. IhT.'i. The Msts Centennial Board oi Masunjara iie sire the hearty reoperation of any and nil of our citizens, who are in auy way interested in thi braiK-b of industry, to give uh your aid in collecting arid forwarding lotto UantSbnta Es pnHition any of Ito prodoehi of th noil yon may have. Tto State of Michigan staiuls hijh 11 the list Mt an agricultural Slate our BfO ducts are farted hihI Of a BtSjB order. The gaoBraphtoal noattioa Of Michigan ia pecuhaiiy adTBSSaaSSUai The climate of a OOOOtry is the nrult of all iu meteorological Inrlnauoaa. 1' is niiahtied by latitude, naflrsla tion.it' kU - hi I... proatoitj to water, winds ami nature of its soil. Tlie woila of every State ..institute its princpal SfttssHaral wealth, and he at tto foundation Of a:l dc'sirahle pronpenty. However rich a countiy may lie i:. minerals, ita Independence cannoi he maintained without a suMi.'n in of fertile aoiln to produce food eiionch to aababn iioiinlatiou. The great fphvnical agencies which govern the creation of uenltb Minute ana hoi i me nrm regulating flonaumcy. energy and .lire, tneeis ..f luUir the living, with reasonable certainty, the prntiu Ol labor. It is a happy conihination BUeliigaa baa. A healthy, invigorating climate, and a fartile eoil. I uat. and hoi I. it S "il! i.iear. are neces- -r conditions of wealth, und. by reason of , IfUi'un which wealth ivas, ot inttUigeiico, moral culture and civih.atnui. tto maetivitv of general btjabaaaa, aai thr 1 1 jn.ai dspswaaas biswisjbI bianchesof maun rtCtariag IndiD-trv. not enlv in hut fotwigu OOOitSriflB, I im mntUi MVHiUhln n laro anion of Hllni ud labor for rstavsafcmSM. 1 he nlti nii.te i..nli cannot fail to SS tWS)S(MsL Tin opporttmHy aew esTarw for n to invite th in vtwtiuftiit of h Krtioiiof Ih.Hi capttolaaid labor do not let UiiH letsaa opporSaalty pssa Wa k vou to uivu iw your aid iu piettaritig mucIi products of the m.iI a will place Michigan at Ui head of the lint an an agricultural Htate. Tlie Hoard of Managers have aeMigned to I. J. Woxlroan, of Paw Paw, the Department of Agriculture and Horticulture. He will give theru hi eriieciul attenMon. and will rejuiro an SWSh aewunce an each and ever)- citizen oau give. Whero he cannot give hiVerHonaJ at tention, it i Imped tiiat ieople having articlen they are denimiM to forwanl f r exliibitiou. will communicate with F. V. Noble toorstaiy, who will fnraiah all mfCrsMitkm. In the Department of Agriculture will be rep resented : Arbortooliurs and forest productu. Pomology. AgriculturHl prod acta. Laud animal. : Marine animals, rih cultiue and appaiatus. Auimul and vegetable products ( ine a lo.nl or aa nnttoiialn ). Textile rotolsneaSi of vegetable or animal origin. Machines, implements, uml procenoeH of maimfactiue. Agricultural engine. -riiiK Mad aJiniiastration. Tillage and general management. In the Department of Horticulture: Ornamental trees, Mlmd and floweca. Hot hoiwen, aosaarvstoiissi Bvspeitei ind . then management. ) Garden t.U. iraiftHftTloi oi BSSaSaisSja (i.irch.i rtaajglllng, nstl tmn and BMBSgS lueut. flan ami Information maj be obtained . ; uuy nieiaber of the Board. l or detail, blank application for apare. and I onsrsl regttlationa for exhibitors, lidraati F. w. Noaut, Si ratarji Boom II, Uauk Block, DttruU, .i.iu.n J. Bauu , ; PraakU nt Caataaalal ii"ur.i of MaaagaM, Oapait I mcjit f RdoeaMoB, Belcaoa ami Art. Jam i Bourn L'. s. Commlwionar, Bay Otty. '. B. GaaaT, alternate IT, s. Oommlaaioiter, Houflhtun. BL I Ifnxa Detroit, Hkm.v Paaui k. Ctrand Barttfla. D partotent ol Machinery and Maaufaotorea, J. A. HOBBXIX, Houghton. Department of Ulningand Metallargy. J. J. Woodman, paw Paw, i. partment i agrlenttnn and BortlmHure. BUehlaaa Deparlliient ol Ai;i ieiiltiire i n.l Horticulture. JaKxaaL Omca, K.mu Ho, 11,1 Ban Bi ooa, Dxiaon . As one of the Stute Board it has been made ; my Hpocial duty to superintend the collecting . and arranging for exhibition "PtirlnrMr of the products ol VlicuiKioi so.i. 'lnis will include the prodneta of the fans and gardes the or- otold and the forewt. 1 am mnfHent that no State in the I'uion i can present a greuter variety of agricultural i pvodueaa, or of valuable timber and buabsr) i than Michuaii : aud in ftnil gSOwing, it atanda pea aiainent, The reputation of the State and I the interest of the nation demand that these interests las well and fairly ip , resented in this groat fair, not of the Mateo only, but of the world ; und 1 appeal to I the farmers, fruit-growers and lumbermen of the Siste to co-operate in collecting and foi I warding aettBSUa for tliis purpose. We want pore aaaiplee of all the duTereut varietiee of wheat, and till other cereals, gTSSS seed, peas, beans, etc.. produced in the Mat.- also, rare sKciiueiiH of ever, valuable prcaluct. Samples of grain shouM contain !aj OOSraa, grits.- aaed ana pint, to i- ut Ineaoaa, Selections of grain aini oabc r prodoota to 1m' exhibited In the ear. toad, pod, Of ill the stalk, snould be enre fully packed in D0XOB, so as not ts he iiijniel iu abipnuag. Prepared fruit aud vegetables that caim.vl be put in sacks, should be put lip ill giic-s jars or boxes of two qaarte each. All samples of grain, sc. ils. etc.. s. !. cted for exhi bition. . ill exhibited In lean jars, to lie tur tuabed n tto Board, Tto pro kastt of the fosesSl a 111 constitute a valuable and interesting feature of the Bxhibi J tion. Spi OBMBS Of every nriety of valuable timber and ornanicnful aroodj from the forests 1 of Michigan, should b" seltH,tel and i -, ,;u- , i iu such a manner as will do ercht to thai rent interest, of the State. The burden of this div. ' sum of the work will naturally fall upon the lumbermen, und we have every reason 'o be lieve tht it will be done. Bran article or sample of products fbfilH he aeleotodj prepared and f aided to 9, W, Noble Secretary of the State llonrd, Detroit, during the aoauig autuiiin and early winter. I an appointing Buperlntsndentt In the asr ' I eral countios. wlio will gie their pSTBSBB attention toeolleoting and forwarding samples and prodoeta j and foi that purpose will attend ( the fairsof thee unities; and ltrust the OfttOSTI of the Agrienltaral Booisttea and at her 0r . an tationaof Parmera and Pruil Orowere will co operata with the Oounty Baporhitaudeiita nnd State Board in this woik. Vanities and aevtioaa of tto BtaM that wieb totorepee sen ted iv assplei of prodoeta, from anoh localities, oan db so. but should apply forspaoa in the cxhtbrtton at tto oarUaal possible mo ment. Back Sample should be accompanied with a statement, containing the neSM of the pro ducer, where raised, and such facts relating to 1 soil am! cultivation as may be deemed of mt r -t. It would be desirable to have sample of soil, producing rare BpeoiflAena or heavy yielda, forwarded w.th the specimen. While our State ha.-i vast resources in its min eral prodneta and lumber, yet the great source of its wealth and prosperity are the products of the f.-rni" and orchards. Shall these inter ests is' are! rapreaeutod In the Centennial Ex hibition of the nation, is tto quoatiou for the agrieultnristi of idieblgati to decide. j. .1. Woodwax, Manager. l'aw 1'nw. Mich. stute Agffess1taal seelaty and the. Oen temaali At meeting of the Exc CUtiVfl Committee of the St"le Agncultur.il So.-i.t . held nt laist , l " , ' Basinaw, on tba avaning of th 17th, Col. W. onnnittee to a bom was referred tto OeateanJal subject, presented the following report I k The Centennial Board have made the fol lowing divisions of the different interests to ' bt rspraasasad at the I . ntew ml of I87a from Michigan, with the view ot thoroughly can vassing each and every department, so that j our re) r at ntatiOfl of the resources and pnal H' ts shall be u credit to ito State and a glonoua and lusting remembrance for genorations to como. Bduoatiopi rts and m loaea have bw a Me-i ncd to the supervision of QOT. J. J, Dag ley, rraatdaai ot the Centennial Board, aaaieted by tto State Superintendent of Public IaaSTSO tion nnd such other assistants as desired. Tbt arlnera resources nre under das awjior Lntondenoe of tto How, Jaj a. Rubbell, Goa mbMionerof Ito Board, aareetad hi tto Lower Penl .--.' by Mr. fJarrlguea, of Bagtnaw, The smis. rapaa, woods, and BotttonMnral Depart- inei.t. the pfOdUOtS of th Agniiiltural Co.lege Pern and Hneenm are jaaeigned bthe AgriciU tural College. The tAornoIogioal BooWty the Board are desirous should tafcs atone of ito iruits. collect, forward and avperintend the details nnd IxhibitiOM ol that depaffsasnt, Tlie AgrieuHoral Society are asked to take charge of the Agricultural Department, and, under tba auperinsaadonoa of the! ksnaSsaaoaar Of the State Centennial BOBfd, aid and SSSBN in tha collecting. alSSSifjing, and exhibiting of nil the products an. 1 resources of the soil and BMetoatoal or mauufaeturlna departments not otherwise jirovnhxl for. .1. J. WoSSBBas is assigned to the department of agriculture, Henry Praliek and BL L Mills to the iiepart nasnl of Matitilnerj and ManufacturoH." The comnuttee report to the preposition of the lkiard the following, and move Uh ad vpttou: "Astsaoh apuroynate action betaken bj the State Agricultural Society ae shall fully carry out the re.pu at made by tlie Centennial Board. n After Home diacnasion a reaolution to appro priate tiOOO to arrange foT the proper repre Hentation of the society at the Centennial w as adopted. The .b ath is nnnounoed at Vernon, in Franco, of tlie inventor of the apparatus aomniotil v known aa the siphon, by which aerated wutern are sol eanily usod. lie - ' had aciuired a law hrtnm. THE LITTLE FtiLKs. T. TmI. Toe 1 Til. tat. toe! Thtee u a row ! beavj mini mi elock etrikee loud ami llow. rn n.iw i-viT.. BMtt one May k( ami t4k.' hi tiiti," Ibe k1 ii tic t u'lii-r crlrn, lor tin- cliool it dont." l it. tat. toe! All Iu a row ' Oat Uuonirk Saa apaa Soat tta merry aSIMraa Laai iuu only tun-.-, Nuil a wad can b w reteaaS llttte enlprMa, witii tin It epeUere, - yaa Tit. tut, toal Tlirei- iu a rm ! Hilly lliuubl-, Beuuy Bell ami Utile Kittle C LUtta Kittle -i. i.- : LMtta Baaay enea ; Ami htti. Billy Huuibir pokea In Angera . i . ii ln- Tit, tjt, t, : Taiaa la pm I Tbat D the kiu- they played iip.ni tlc ir lute, rou knu ; Till- O n were 111. lile li Kate : Tlie .TilSK.'S t IV luT lu.l'e ; wiiii. Billy k.-pi the taUj ai the i.tt m wlate. M i. n tin ii . ! nw in aid. i ie i Donldal ipell j word They put aa "i"in burly, and the put m liird : H.i, according to tin rule. Tin y ataat iTndy niter trthtrl. Or by and by hmjtV hare to n upon tie looL Of th' lIllllC. Tit. tut, toe ; Three in a ruv The ti ... at panoll lapaoo the dank broai ami i.iw. "Now cotue the "uy, "an I hpell ; Tin sure you'll do it well : 1J th l.i iht. iiiiiK of your f.ir.n, I r. adiK . an t. II.'' i u. t it. la I Thr. . in u raw ! Straight t.ith. t aelier'H.liMktln They M tln ir k tMMMI n i i tnlalSag la ton Thaj I away, determined to l wUBng chUdran ie : idle nevi ran m l it. i.it. lea ! Three too ! - faaeinating DaatBne Uu little ) Hilt, nil ! It IMM er lii I fAc km To w .ilk in fottj 'i waya; er plruaui'.' quickly jiumm-h, while pnui nun Ii ..ug stayn, oc. ,i. WtuintortA in Tht Vareara The Milteii. 1 o yon want to know why little eln'1 dren wear mittens, and not gloves, like grown persona) I Listen, und I will tell yotu a mother went out Once upon n tin) and siid to the five ttie lingers, 1 ;iui- ore:., wnen i urn not ilT noma, oeimve well, and do wlmt I tell yon. If yon are kind and obedient, 1 will bring each of yon S little bows, where yon can live when it is Bold in winter." J 1 . T 11 "Oh, mother.'" exclaimed tin pern, "we will eertainlv mind ; five ti II onlv tell us what we must do!" Then the mother answered The fin -linger must iMiint ubroail, Dhe middle-anger can onlj aod, The third Soger itrlH yuead naual keep, Leal tie- littli .uu i nt. nweohlef creep, Xinl the hahv tliiiuii) mot! welob ami an 'lhat ai. Bm i "st obedient be." "Now go," mother dear," said the fore-finger, V oertsinly be attentive, and point prettily, if yon.will only bring me Bometbing." Then the middle-finger cried mt, " 1 will promiss to le polite and bow nicely if yon win bring mes little honse too, for l am the biggsst one f "J will oertsinly keep watoh that ray little brother does not get into mischief," cried the ring finger ; "int ray bouse must be the prettiest !" " No ! mine !" exclaimed the little fin ger ; " mine must be prettier than sll the rest and then I won't make ;i bit of noise." Bat the baby thumb oob said, 1 ' Mother, dear, I will do jnst w hat yon say !" Jint their mother had only been gone ii very few minutes, when the fore-finger exclaimed : "Tt is very stupid und tedious lobe 80 good, and to point all the time. I want to rest a minute." So he lay down. "Ah, you lazy thing!" replied the middle linger; "it is much more fatiguing to be no industrious, and bow all the time." and he was going to lie down too ; but the forefinger jumped np and crave him a blow, oryinqr, "how dure you find fault with me Vou are lazy yourself, you wicked boy!" Then the middle finger struck him again, the forefinger returned it: and who knows how long they might have fought if the ring finder bad not called out : "Ara't you ashamed ai yourselves! One of you is SB bud as the other. See, how I torture myself, and stand here keeping watch all tha time. I mean to stop and rest, and let yon great fellows keep oiianl over your little brother!" ' What " exclaimed the forefinger and middle finger, "you UttBtrogue, do you pretend to dictate and find fault vuth your brothers There stop now !" Then they both began to beat the ring linger. He turned, with nil his strength, and struck the little fiBSjer, which he had the care of. The little mio gave a dread ful scream, and began to scratch as well BS he could, but as they were in the hottest of the tierht tike door opened mid their mother came in. O, how frightened the naughty lingers were ! They hung their heads, and WetSJ so ashamed they couldn't speak. Finally the middle-finger said that the forefinger was lazy ami he would not nl low it. Rut the forefinger laid the blame on the middle finger, and said he began the quarrel. The ring-finger blamed them both nnd the little finger complained of :U. Then their mother spoke gad said : " You an fir naughty, disobedient children, wlsi deserve to be punished. See here what I have brought lor you !" and drew I beautiful glove out of her po.-ket. On it was found five hnn MB, jnejt ss Isrge as the five fingers. One was for the thumb, one for the fore Anger, one for the middle Anger, and one for the little tinker. " llui you cannot have then.' pretty houses QOW," suid the mother. Then she went out, and soon returned with another kind of glove, "Lookl" she exclaimed, "this has 1 only one separate house, which lielongs entirelv to the little thumb, because M is good and obedient. You others must live together, and as soon as you have become kind and oliedient, then you shall have a house of your own." And there it WBSJ ; the four fingers might entreat as much as they could, it would not help hem. Y. v r since this time, ho many littip children wear mit tens; but when they grow tall and le ec me good, then tney can wear gloves. I . . U in tin I'm I l t OROWINU MoT VI USs. Yon would not thin!: it, but I'm told it is actually so, that very high mount wns increase in uzo every year. This is owing to the grout (pmntities of snow , which fall upon tln ir tups. Some ,,f this mow .slowly melts and runs clown the mountain sides ; but much remains, und BO the mountains grow higher, year by y. iir, as each Mnaaon's snow tails upon that left there the year before. I IE MEAN NO OK " HrUAH." Who ran tell the meaning of "hur rah.'" Jack used it just now a little thoughtlessly, considering its true sense. The pretty school ma 'am says it origin ated 1 among the Eastern nations, where it was used as a war-cry, from the belief that all who died in battle went to heaven. 44 To I'aradise !" ( hurray !) men shout ed to one another, by way of encourage ment, in the thickest of the fight ; and, so, in time, came our word "hurrah which means almost anything you choose, so that it be of good cheer. TUJ; SPIKE OF r. NICHOLAS. Have you heard the news, my pets I The biras are full of it, and they wish ! me to tell it to the army of bird-defenders, with their compliments. The spire . of Slrasburg is no longer th" highest in Europe. What is, then Why, the spire ot nr. NlOnOiaS, to lie sure the great church of St. Nicholas, lately coin pleted at Hamburg! Strasburg sends its beautiful steeple 4(Wi feet into the air, but St. Nicholas tops this by six leet a clear reach of 472 feet, my beloved the , highest spire in Christendom. who can oorvr tick BRSBBa I Did you ever try to count the stars.' I used to try to do bo myself, but some- j how 1 always fell asleep before I could get through, and when I woke up 1 could not tell where 1 h it ofT. I'm told, though, that it has been done, and that tbega are only about eight thousand visi- i ble to the naked eve. Don't they make a great show for a number no Larger than that f But the Kaven tells me that his i master, the Astronomer, says that these 1 we oan see with our eyes alone are but a very trifle compared with the number that we can see through his telescope. ' He says, for instance, that there are eighteen eaffMosM of sturs in the Milky Way. Now it's of no use I I can't even think of such a number as that. My hea.l isn't big enough to hold them. KATS A TREE. Ma on, Ga. ' Jack: I want to tell you of something rather curious: ' Some years since, 1 occupied a summer resiih nee in OsSBgBa, surrounded by 1 mimosa trees of n fine, feathery foliage, : with pods rather shorter than those of the BWaSS locust. Tlnse pods were filled With hard, shiny brown seed, often use.1 by the children for making baskets, brsselota and necklaces. For several days 1 noticed, alter dark, a great rust ling iu the tree near my window, as if the birds on Its boughs were peculiarly ( restless, I did not, however, pay them nine1! attention, till uo evening, sitting by tin' window in the twilight, leaning on the sill and enjoying the cool air, 1 gradually became conscious that the Birds were very odd. They seemed to have no wings, and their tails were long and stringy, whisking from side to side, ius they ran lack and forward with great agility along the crooked limbs. After : gazing with inOTOasing wonder for some moments, 1 called the children. The moment they arrived, the birds disap peared; but standing quiet BS mice, we soon saw first one, then an I other small head, with its black, i sharp eyes, peer from under the eaves I of the QOUSe, then spriisg quickly to the nearest branch; and we now discovered i that our birds were not birds at all. They were not even flying squirrels, but Urge brown ratS, thatlivedand flourished ; in our roof, ami came out to regale them selves upon the seed of the mimosa, and I gambol among its boughs. We saw one ' greedy rat, in his eagerness to secure a , very tempting pod, slip from the branch ' with a squeak of fright, instantly fol , lowed by I squeak of pain from another, I as, in ins liantic enorts to eaten noiu oi something, he caught hifi neighbor's hnngiiiK tail in his mouth. This second rat, in his desperate etlort to get away, j , dragged the hanging rat near enough to grasp a limb and release the suffering , J tail. During this struggle, the whole I oolonj stood still, looking on, and squeak- ! ing in sympathy. The pulling and crunching of pods to get the seed, aud ! the dropping of empty shells on the i ground, sounded like the soft pattering I ol rain. The children and I amused ourselves ! till supper time throwing brooms, I brushes and shoes into the trees, to see on the instant the lmey crowd disappear i like magic, but with none of the flutter 1 ( iuul f wittering of birds. They would bs 1 gone without a sound. These tree rats Wire I source of interest the whole sum- 1 mer, nnd we spent many pleasant hours ! trying to distinguish them apart, giving f I names to some ami counting the baby ! rats added occasiomdly to the crowd. i f. Xijiola for tM-tnfn r. To Remove Foreign 1 todies from the Eye. A medical COBBSapOttdsOt of the l.nn OSt makes a suggestion which may prove useful on emergency to some of our readers. He says: " IA eosjae-1 qiieuee of the difficulty I BBySfiaBBBBl in i removing from a patient a portion of ste,. bedded in the cornea, which did not yield to the spud or needle, some j other means of removal Iwcame neces- j sarv. Dry, soft, white silk waste sug gMled itself to me, and was wound round a thin piece of wood, so as to j Completely envelop its SDd. This soft j application was brushed once backward l and forward horizontally over the pari of th mes where the foreign substance scmed fixed. To my astonishment it was at once entangled by the delicate 'out strong meshes of the silk, and was with Irawn with the greatest ease, caught by the name, A gentleman, in turning steel at I lathe, suddenly felt that a por- Hon bad entered his eye. He went at once to a surgeon, who, with the most skillful manipulation, failed to extract the same, saving " woum soon worn am of Itself. "The next morning the pa tient saw me, having BDjfersa severely since the accident, and on the first ap plication the portion of steel was ex triicted." It matters little to Lewis, of the ie- troi' ' t lrr that he has achieved fame bv writing a book. The iron en- tera his soul the name uh ever about some thing-, ss rineed In this hurr ot esird Ethos: " Ho saa it is for the (hand puis Eayh to steal items from the ! ',. fVWBS, dust one clip of the she. u , i one mechnnieal motion." People uml Things. j Ix Drittuny bed-bug poiou is ai-n lar item in tlie hotel bill. i DOMAPaJn i SI documents are sent into France packed in sardine boxes. j AT the end of tins year ( 'hi.-Ago will have 10,000 more houses than it hud List I year. Hannah Him, has very properly be j appointed to the jMistotfice at Lookout Mountain. j THE gout is no l esoeetel of religious faiths. Cardinal Autonelli audSpurgeou ' Inith have it. Thekk BIS miles enough f railroad in the United States to go three; times ! around the world. BSttlMB Com'mhia will send a flag pole J 10 feet long, composed of a hingle tree, to the Centennial. GATE ('onoNY, Africa, has 800 miles of i railway iu course of construction, at a j cost of 20,000,000. Forty-five Indian arrow or siear 1 heads were plowed up recently on a farm near Kingsbury, Ind. Since the year 1800, Fngland has ! waged 10 wars, France ;I8, Russia 'I'l, Austria 12, Prussia 8. PosTAn cards don't diminish in popu larity. The Bsetory atBprrngfieldii turn ing ("nit 860,600 par day. The people of Armenia are getting into trouble; by utilizing the telegraph wires to hang clothes on. An American girl won the gold niedul at the recent examination at the College of Brazil, llio tie Janeiro. The Ceylon government is trying to prevent the capture of elephants, and th price of line animals has gone up to 31, 000 gold. JJounnrcu City, OoL, is a happy city. Licenses for sdcxms, shows, etc., pay all Its expenses, and the Tax Collector is unknown. Thkki: are in the United States seven teen eatahl Ish nasnts where locomotives are built, thirty six cur-wheel manufactories) and ninety-two car shops. Imi are, according to Mrs. Craw shay's calculation, 900,000 women in the United Kingdom for whom there is no chance of marriage. What a pity. A Uoston woman's false teeth have just bean found in the attic, whither they were carried by a hasty and un oba rving rat fully three years ;igo. a BaO OOUnty, Texas, there is a farm of 8,500 acres, which is enclosed by one Fence an I cultivated by thirty-two own STS, every one of whom is unmarried. Tin: autumn atmosphere is driving home nearly all the seekers of pleasure at the summer resorts. Passenger travel is unusually brisk, ami baggage-smashers have an excellent time to get in their work. Tin: following epitaph, copied from a Pennsylvania tombstone, has been sent to the historical society of that State: " Here lies the bodie of Margeret Fav her would if her could but tier eouldn t stay her had had legs and a badtlish cough it were her leg! as carried her Oft" A XoKwic ii antiquarian will hike to the Centennial a book published in 1628, a 0SJB9 at least 226 years old, a single leaf from a Bible brought over in the Mayflower, and a sample of the white oak under which the first settlers of an cient Woodbury encamped the night after their arrival. A soldii'.u belonging at Fort llussell walked down to Lake Mahpalutah, near Cheyenne, the other day, nnd deliberate ly undressing himself aud sticking his will I into OOS of his shoe s, plunged into the i water ami was drowned. He is the third I person who has committed suicide iu I that lake this season. The St. Joseph (Mo.) ti raid regrets i that it cannot by " tin; wildest process I of versification " possibly make M rhi noceros" rhyme with "Queen Eliza i beth," or "gazelle " with "sewing ma- chine," and so has respectfully to decline S poem by one of the most talented of St. Joseph's fair daughters, The Uernuin Oeean. The German ocean, or North sea, like the English channel, is supposed hi have beeil once an inland plain or valley raised far above the Hen level. The sea has but recently invaded this pressing plain, submerged its forests, and super seded its river courses. The buried trees of its sunken forests are still stand ing, rooted in their own vegetable soil, although beneath the waves. Cromer forest, which dips into the waters from the coast of Norfolk, is tlie most famous of the submerged forests of the German ocean. This ancient woodland has been tfBCSd at low lads lot more than forty mile. At certain seasons, nndespeeially after great storms, the stumps of oak, alder, yew, and Scotch fir are seen stand ! ing upright in the water. The condition 1 of the Wood and of the fir cones (some ' of the latter obviously bitten by animals) tell us that the sinking of the land here occurred at no distant period in the i physical history of our country. I The remains of land animals, too, as j well as of the forests they inhabited, are ; discovered in the bed of the German ocean. In his " Physical Geography of Norfolk" Mr. Woodward fella us that in less than fifteen years the fishermen of the village of Happishurgn dredged up from their oyster beds as many as two thousand teeth of mammoths. Hones and tusks of miiminoths have also been iished up from these watery depths. Ii takes us back BO the time w hen the Ell ropean mainland, instead of terminating, ns it does to-d iy, with the coasts of Nor way and France, stretched far westward in one unbroken area beyond the present BOaat of Ireland. These were the flour ishing days of the forests of oak, chest nut, aider and yew, which are now sub merged in the QeTrBS& ocean and the i ; vish channel. Two of the monkeys at the Jardin ties Plan tea, Paris, fought a duel with knives the other day. By some aoOhisBl two large clasp knives SSSej , ( bj one of the keepers in the cage ot the animals, and no sooner hud they bsSS perceived ' than two of the largest monkeys seized them, opened Ihe blades, and tell upon i rin'll other like a pair ol men. Ope of I them was killed at the first pass, while his adversary had one of bJopawa nearly , cut obTi