TEX OLD BiM. JueketT, old end eraay, - Shmglelees, laekiiif eotae doors, 1 Bad In the upper itory ' . i Wanting boards in the Soon, . -r Beam strung thiok with eobwtbe, ... .BioepoUieeiidf,'', '"Banging In halpUaa lnnouoo -' Over the snows of hay. How tba winds turned around it t -" Winds o( .a tormy day J Scattering tha fragrant hay aaad, ' V - . mbw nta mm aiif at a Streaming ia at tba eraaniaa, w Spreading tha dorar smell, . ' - Changing tha dark old granary v Into a flowery dalL i v Oa, bow I lorad tha shadowa, That ollng to tha silent roof, " Day dreams wore with tha quft, Many a glittering woof I limbed to tha tha higheat rafter, , And watc&ad Uii.iir-pAy, Admired the knota in tha boarding, And rolled in the billows of hay. Palace of King couldn't match it, The Vatican loses ita charm, When placed in my memory' balance. Beatda the old gray barn. And I'd rather aoent tha clover, . Piled in the barn's roomy mowa. Than ait in the breath of the highland, Poured from Appenine brow. Barb'ry Tom. He stood and looked at her. -1 -IT" mm . a juaoei r reeman was evidently a new creation to Tom. In a morning wrapper of oiue, tnat set oil her fair complexion some' what as the azure of the sky contrasts with the white of the snow, with aoft brown hair and tender brown eyes, with her rather talL slender figure, she affected "Barb'ry Tom" even as a flower that suddenly springing out of the ground and blooming at once into an unusual Deauiy wouia cnallentre all our admiration. And she stood and looked at him. He was known as "Barberry Tom,' or, more correctly, "Barb'ry Tom." He daily hawked about the red clusters of wild fruit now piled up in his basket. This stout, sturdy boy was about fifteen. His clothes were rough, his feet were bare. And yet, from the very moment the young lady at the door saw Tom s eyes, darker than her s, dui nxe tnem in tneir tenderness, with a complexion as fine naturally, only turned up to the sun too long, she was magnetical ly attracted toward him. "Don't you want to buy any barb'ries ?" he said, hesitatingly, and dropping his eyes as the blue morning-glory hung its petals over mm. "Tell him we don't want to buy any DarDncs to-day,' screamed a voice within, sharp as if there had been a life-time of filing to make its edge as disagreeably fine aSDOBSlOlfl. ' . ' 'Sorry. " said the ioung lady ; "but but, perhaps, if you will come another day, we may want 'some then." Her voice wag so kind and musical that Tom wished he had something else to be refused, so he could hear her again. "Thank you." Mabel laughed. "What do you thank me for?" "Why, loins ain't always so Kind in their way. I'd rather have some folks step on me than have others pick me up. They would step on me. so kind, you know. But I don't believe you'd step on anybody." Mabel laughed again at these complimen tary remarks. Tom, this gatherer of Flora's red coral, slung his basket upon bis arm and slowly went down the lawn path. "There I" said Mabel, in a minute, "What did I let that boy go away for ? like him. I might have him in my Sunday school class." Down the path she flew, gracefully as a blue bird. "Look here, please r one mo ment." Tom looked around, and then stepped back. " "I have come here to spend the autumn, and have started a Sunday school class in "our house. Wouldn't you like to join it f" Tom a eyes flashed like diamonds with light behind them. "When will it be, miss!" "Next Sunday afternoon, at two. " "I will come. I ain't been since father and mother died. Granny and the children needed me so much I couldn't spare the time to take the long walk to church; but I can come here. "Do come, then!" and Mabel aaidthe "do" like a bobolink; making his sweetest whistle. So ' "Barb'ry Tom" came to Mabel's school. It was noticeable what a -change took place in him. Tom s soul was like . musical instrument where some of the keys are broken, and yet a skillful hand can find and bring out notes of sweetness and ten dprnna Tntn'n QnnT roornnrH in t.hflf vav to, Mabel's touch. Her dropped a certain roughness of manner. He showed in a still more marked degree at home the kindness and self-sacrifice native to him. He became prayerful, studious of God's Word, and used reverently tne day once given to nail ing in his odd momenta. Tom was a faith ful attendant at Mabel's school. And Ma bel was a faithful Visitor at Tom's home. She cheered up the blind old granny, giving her a look out upon the world through her own bright eyes. Mabel had traveled a good deal, and her memory was a gallery of scenes worth looking at. She gave the children better clothes, mended the torn curtains, and hung pictures on the dull walls. - An interesting conversation happened one day in Mr. Freeman's house. "I think I ought to tell Mabel," observed Mr. Freeman. "Tell her about her family!" asked the same voice we have already noticed, and that the years had filed down to a knife-like sharpness. "Yea. I ouirht to tell her. Mabel is not reallT our child, although legally adopted. True, she knows no other parents ; but then here we are. after our lonn stay in Europe, near the home we took her from Her brothers and sisters have grown up sinfe her adoption, or have come into the world after that date. She don't know about i.A thov ahnut hpr. Her old crrannv is blind and can't indentify her features.- Still, I think I had better tell her how it is, ' or ahe mav find it out in an unpleasant way. T think nhp sometimes suspects she la not our child. I ought to hare told her long tim ami." "I should hate to nave me ww uuup from that home running over me, "squeaieu i a lira, rreenuin.' "fwould be like an in-' vasion of spider," , " , ..- there was another interesting conversa tion the next Sunday in Mabel's class. The subject was the making of sacrifice for others, s "Boys,? said Mabel, "I want you to tell me tome way la which we can rive others proof of our love for them i , , . c; - iain.T run, tu avenue to whose finest fuaceptibilitiee seemed, to run through his ippetite, thought it might be to let tome. wxiy cue nave 'the last piece of pie.". BiUy Boyd, who had great passion for rod and line, thought if might be to give "another feller the best chances for bites." They kept on making: their jueases, tow or high, according to the standard of their aauy culture. - ' ;;,' "Now tell me" aald'MaheL "whai tsu-A. lice yoft think would be the greatest " r Tom's wad felt the pressure of Mabel's influence. .She was touching the deepest finest keys of his being. i : " spose, teacher; i. Ja what you read about last finniair w-r f TTfin who laid down His ike far Bis enemies." "It would be hard to do that for friends eyen, sometimes, Tom." lorn said nothing. He looked up with an honest admiration in his eyes, and thought it might easily be done for some. ! A third interesting conversation tonb place a few days after. Mr, Freeman and Mabel were walking down a road leading to Long Bridge. It crossed a wide pond. The pona naa once Deen used lor picnic' purpo ses extensively. Pleasure parties had de serted it for more fashionable resorts, and the bridge had been left to the gentle decay of old age. The floor timbers were weak. 1 The railing was still weaker. Mr. Freeman and Mabel were so absorbed in somethim? he was saying that they did not observe the warning with which the entrance to the bridge was placarded. "Mabel, I want to have a talk with you. suppose you do- not remember further back than the age of four. Jflabel did not recollect : "I have a confession to make..j Dear to me as if you were my own daughter, it may startle you to know that you are not. Per haps you have suspected that. Have you?" Just a flush of Mabel's agitated features told Mr. Freeman that she had had her suspicions. Then the color went like the glow of a fire vanishing from a window- pane, leaving as little trace on her white face. 'After our long residence in Europe, we chance to have come back into the neigh borhood that was your early home, and we are near the family from whom I received and adopted you." Mabel was now looking up to Mr. Free man with a most anxious gaze of inquiry. The glow of the fire within came again to her face. She stood leaning against the railing of the bridge. "Don't lean on that railing-!" It was a cry of warning from some one hurrying along the bridge. The cry came too late. The railing had already began to crack, and it abruptly broke, letting Mabel down into the deep, dark waters.. To Mr. fraoman, wbaM arrack With funsDe ment and astonished into helplessness, it seemed only the lapse of a moment when some one rushed swiftly to the gap and plunged down into the water. When he came to the surface, bringing Mabel with him, Mr. Freeman saw that it was "Barb'ry Tom." . ' 'Quick, sir 1" gasped Tom. ' 'Lean over and pick her up when I get to that pile of the bridge I" The pile nearest Tom was soon reached. Tom clung to. it with one arm, and sup ported Mabel with the other. Mr. Free man acted Uke one stricken with a night mare. He recovered, however, his self possession sufficient to reach one arm down toward Mabel, almost touching her ! "Try hard, sir. Do! do" was Tom's appeal. 1 Mr. Freeman tried and failed again. What could he do? He looked about him, and saw where a timber ran under the bridge; and if he could reach it, he could reach Mabel. He frantically worked at a plank in the flooring of the bridge, dis placed it, and, lowering himself, reached the timber. He heard an ugly splash ! Tom and Mabel both had disappeared. Tom, in trying to make his hold on the bridge more secure, had lost that hold and lost Mabel. In a moment up came Tom again, still clinging to Mabel Mr.'Tree man could see that-Torn was much exhaust ed; but he struggled for the bridge and reached a pile once more. Mr. Freeman now grasped Mabel and drew her up' to his own position. He saw the light of a great, triumphant joy in Tom's face ; and then, like the light of a torch, it was quenched as the face sank under the ! water. - Mr. Freeman hardly realized all this at the time ; but afterward he remembered each' detail. He lifted Mabel to the bridge and carried her to a grove near by.v , t v l 'Oh! help! help I "he shouted to some men that passed. "I can't swim and there's a boy drowning ! " The men searched and found Tom. They carried his body to Mr. Freeman's house ; but all attempts at resus citation were fruitless, apd everything was then made ready for the grave. "I. want to see him," said Mabel, who had come out of the chamber whither she had been led, her face white, sweet and pure as a lily rescued from the drowning waters of the pond. Mr. Freeman led1 her into the room where Tom lay in the hush of death. He raised the lowered gas-light, turned back the sheet and took off the white face cloth. The triumph that Mr. Freeman saw in Tom's face just before sinking still lingered in his features, though softened now, like the pale lustre shed from a golden crown held above his head. Mabel thought of the conversation upon saerifice in the Sunday school class, and burst into a fit of violent weeping. "Mabel " said Mr. Freeman. "I did not finish our conversation this afternoon about your relatives. Barb'ry Tom was four brother I Glvmt Up by Doctors. "Is it possible that Mr. Godfrey Is up nod at work, and cured by ad simple a remedy?" - "I assure you that It ia true that he is entirely cured, and with nothing but Hop Bitters J and Only tea days ago his doctors gave him up aud said he must die!" Wellalay I That la remarkable t I will go thla day and get some for my poor George. I know hope are good." Zalmon Sturgls, of Weston, Ct., is ninety-eight and his wife ia ninety-four. Tbev are the oldeat married counle In . k. a S js e w aniacu. Crime e rads. A great number of capital - crimes hart tecently been committed in and wound Pari without the police bang aDie to lay nanda on the authors, and it appears that the old dictum of "Murder will out'J no longer holds good. A few years ago five or sir murders .were committed in rapid fuccesaionj and evi dently by the same person or ' persons, at Limoges, but the assassins still enjoy immunity, la spite of all the effort of the Paris detectives.. Only to deal with the crimes committed this year, we find the police are unable to unravel the aff air of the Ogress des Lilas.a womat who managed under various pretenses to sret hold of new-born children, who" werej never more neara or !' ogress is It prison, hut the police, have been unable w u?cos wBtv-rbtftrwixu naa be come of the stolen children. The affair is enveloped in mystery .impeneti able to the eyes of the Rue Jerusalem, which is our. Scotland Yard, At the St. Maude, one of the most ill-lamed quar ters of Paris, a grocer boy was recently found in his cart with his throat cut, but the murderer is still at large ; nor have the police been able to obtain any clew to the would-be assassin of M. Simmonet, at Montreuil, and Mme. Ratillon, at Aubervillerg. . The perpe trator of the crime at the Courcelles Station has also to be discovered. This station, be it remarked, is almost in the centre of Paris. Between the St. Laz are terminus and that station a young man got into the same carriage with Henriettie Plcot, and because she resen ted his familiarities he stabbed her, and quietly got out of the train at Courcel les, leaving his victim weltering in her blood on the floor of the carriage. where she was disco ved on the train reaching the Porte Maillot. The poor girl is not dead, but the information she has been able to give as to the ap pearance of the man has not led to his arrest. A few days ago two young men were found poisoned in the Rue de la Petite Truanderie. How they came be poisoned no one can say. A learned professor declares they must have inhaled mephitic , gag, but how and where is more than they can tell Nearly a month ago Maria Fellerath, a woman of bad character, was assasina ted, and a Pole was ; arrested on suspi cion of being the author of the crime ; but, although Jules B. is still in prison the police have been unable to sub stantiate the charge against him. The Pole had been in Maria's company ear ly in the evening, and bad been playing atcartls with'fier 'mTDTIeTTwnjj;- In addi tion to being a concierge, acted as char-woman to her daughter. Jules B., who had long been an ardent ad mirer of Maria Fellerath, declares that after leaving the concierege he went to the Passage Saulnier and knocked at Maria's door. As there was no an swer, he went away. He ' returned a couple of hours afterward and got into the apartment by a skylight, and found his mistress lying dead on the floor. He immediately gave the alarm. Ma ria appears to have been murdered with a Japanese dagger ; on the floor was a sleeve-button with the initial C. ; a robbery had been committed. Neither the dagger nor the button appears to have belonged to the Pole, and, if he plundered the victim, it was probably only with the view, of misleading the police. Here the police are once more at fault, and it must be said that the evidence at present elicited is very nicely balanced. One-half is sufficient to condemn, and the other half to ez culpate the prisoner. . A Question of Bone. 'What are the facts in this case, doc tor?" asked the magistrate, as Dr. Busby took the stand. "Why, you see," said the doctor, Jones, the coroner, here, yesterday discovered a lot of old bones in the cel lar of a stable which was torn down. Bein? a little hunery for fees he de termined to hold an inquest, and he sent for me to get a professional opin ion. They were boues of a horse ; you know; bat whenI got there, Jones had them laid out on the ground in something like the lorm of a man ; and when I remonstrated with him, he said they certainly were the bones of a man, and he was under a solemn obligation to hold an inquest." "You say," asked the justice, "that they did not resemble the bones of a human being? ' "Well yon know, he had one leg made out all rteht. but when I called his attention to the fact that the bone of the other leg ran clear up into the body and stuck out eight inches be yond the top of the skull, he said the man may have been peculiar, he may have been deformed. He said be had an aunt whose leg bone projected so far from her head that she had to put a hole in the top of her bonnet." "Did he produce the said aunt?" "No. And when I showed him that the right arm had three elbows, while the left contained no joint of any Kind, and looked like the breast-bone of chicken, he said there was a man in Peru who had tight elbows, and that his oath as coroner did not obligate him to account for all the phenomenal freaka ot nature." "Had the remains any other elbows about it anywhere?" asked the justice "Not unless you count the joint in the middle of the back. The coroner had the horse's hind leg inserted jnat below his man'a shoulders. A real man, you know, built in that way. could knock the back of his head ff his coat-tails. and I doubt If he aid keep from turn- ing back somerssi most of his time." 5?Tod saf the, loner was not im- pressed with th flews?' :.. sir ie 4wed that the man snayjUTcDeen 4trcus actor, sad have had a hingt put&tiis back on purpose. But wheirJ polm but. that the nnn had a tow of teefflihisshlnbone, and that some of tbei vye as big as a wal-natj-and sbwediii that for a mar to itUmpt jte eai hy m ala with Rajhina, or for amantohf vc ue toothache near to his toe was in leutntagonism to all precedent; afl Jell as to the as certained facts abou tinman physiolo Zji h said the. man teth mar have Wted V dfcW or somethingi adltjbsj&jr 4edJia ue aaia niagranaiufcuAat. knew a. man in Illinois whose! teeth slipped down and began to grow upon his ribs, with fatal results.'? ' "Had he his grafimother'safiidavit to that effect?" He neglected to'produce it if he had. The skeletons left foot was com posed of the horsi' breastbone. It looked as much likek foot as a clothes pin looks like the Goddess of Liberty, and as the other foot iwa made up of about three teet of the animals pinal column, while the neck jras formed o' the horse's upper jaw. Jremonstrated strenuously with the cotmer." -"What did he say f" 1 He said that kind of a man was the kind, speaking generally! that was put together in the Gardea u Eden, and while I might think I cpukl get up a better one, he wouldn't trust me to tack together an idol foi a Digger In dian, or words to that effect. So I re plied, and he hit me with the horse's fibula. I retaliated - with the tibula, and in about two secoEds he had heav ed all the skeleton at oae that I hadn't heaved at him. Thethe winked at the iury, and it suddenly brought in a verdict of death from cause or causes unknown,' and then I had him arrested for assault and battery." The magistrate held the coroner in bonds to appear at cqurt, and when that functionary had given the bond, he moved off to collect his fees for the inquest. Remarkable Clook Mechanism. In the late French horological sec tion at the Exhiblrtt, were two clocks remarkable fori Ur mechanism. On trie top"bTotie of ttfefiils" seaieJ, a handsomely attired Greek lady, a figure hardly a span high, with a small barrel organ, held by a boy, resting on her knees. With the clock's last stroke the miniature organ b set in motion and plays a tune, the toy keeping time with his head. On tbj left arm of the figure is a bright starling, which as soon as the piece is played out repeats the melody, accompanied by the move ments of the lady's head. The mech anisnt of the second dock is more won derful. The clock is surmounted with a figure representing a juggler in Ori ental costume, seated behind a golden table. To his right stands three large silver bells on a plate, The juggler raises himself as the clock strikes, and gesticulates with his hands as if in pre paration for his feat, tikes up one of the bells, shows it to the spectators to convince them that it as empty, then seizes another bell, ana puts both on the table. He lifts tfrtn up again and under each lies now-a golden egg, which appears and disappears repeat edly. Sometimes both eggs disappear sometimes they increase in number. and instead of two, three or four eggs are seen. The little magician's perfor mance reaches its climax when he turns up the third bell and displays a bronze ball to the astonished auJiencc. This bronzy ball bursts immediately af tec, and a Lilliputian bird, about the length of a finger nail,makes its exit and pipes, a tune. The next moment all vanishes again, and the clever perfor mer, alter a graceful bow. resumes his seat. Trad in Children. Ernest .Morris, the jqunr American naturalist travelling in Brazil, tells about a practice prevailing along the ur-Der Amazon, as follows : At ope of the houses we met a trader who bad come from the river Japura. He had on board a boy and girl of the Miranha tribe for sale. Senor Batalbia bought the boy, a bright-looking little fellow, forflftymilrays,or$25. The little girl cried pitifully when separated from her brother. The trade in children is spoken of by Bates, who was at Teffe twenty-flve years ago; it is prohibited by the government, but openly carried on. The mirannas ar-n ine muni power ful tribe on the Japura; they are a warlike nation, who for a knife or gal lon of rum, sell captured children. Numerous raids are made by them upon their weaker neighbors ; and men and women are killed and the children sold into slavery. At Teffe there is not a house in which you will not find child ren of all ages, as you also will at Man- aos. On my return on the steamer Bu Branco the captain was Uklns; to Para a boy be had bought for $35. "The reason for this," said Senor Batalbia, 'is very simple we must have servants and they make good ones; besides they are not Brazilians they are Indiana of New Grenada." This trade in children is carried on mora extensively every year, and is a disgrace to the govern meat. gainst the CMUfca.T It Is man's destiny still to be longing sfter something, and thus therratlfica. tionofone set or wishes but prepares the unsatisfied soul tor the 'conception ot aaother. ..." -- ' ' The child of a year old wants little food and sleep;: and no sooner to he supplied with a sufficient supply of either of these , things, than he begins whimpering or yelliag, It may be for the other. ' .At three, the' young urchin becomes enamored of sugar plums, apple pies and confectionerr. - ' At six, his Imagination runs on kites auu tuua. uv wimiant oi playtime. At ten, the boy wants to leave school, and hay nothing do bjuVs- flrd- At n i teen, be wants a beard and watch and a pair of boots. At twenty he wishes to cut a figure and ride horses; sometimes his thirst for display breaks outln dandyism, and sometimes in poetry ; he wants sadly to be In love, and takes It tor granted that all the ladies are dying for him. The young man of twenty-five wants a wife ; and at thirty he longs to be sin gle again. From thirty to forty he wants to be rich, and thinks more of maklngjnoney than spending it. About this time he dabbles in politics, and wants an office. t fifty he wants excellent dinners and considers a nap in the afternoon indispensible. The respectable old gentleman of sixty wants to retire from business with a snug independence of three or four thousand, to marry his daughters, set up his sons, and live in the country ; and then, for the rest of his life, he wants to be young again. HarneMtagr an Elephant. An elephant keeper in Philadelphia, Pa., tried the other day to get a vener able animal named Old Chief to draw a wagon. OldChief didn't object much while the harness was being placed on him. He merely blinked steadily and now and then cast a glance- at his per secutors, as though he would' say that his time had come. His actions nuz zled his keepers not a little, and they began to suspect that he was brewing some mischief. At leneth thev eot him hitched to the wagon. The gap ing spectators looked on with deep inter est. Chief manifested no sisrn that he was going to move. The trainers put their hooks into his trunk and began to pull on him. Chief snorted a.littia and shook his head disapprovingly. They pulled harder. ' Chief snorted and flapped his ears like the roofs of two houses coming together. They gave his trunk a jerk. Chief lifted his ears up with a yell and made a dash for ward, jerking the trunk free of the hook and projecting it out before him like a bayonet, tearing through the yard with the wagon at his heels, scattering the affrighted spectators in every direction. , He went tearing di agonally across the long yard, taking in a pile of tent-poles in his course and making straight for the gap in the low er corner of the enclosure. As he dragged the wagon over the pile of timber a party of half a dozen, who had retreated there for safety, ran for their lives. One man tried to jump a six foot wall and fell back to the ground white as a sheet. When he looked up he saw the wagon, a complete wreck. not ten feet from him, and Old Chief, with the broken harness clinging to his body, standing wedged ia between the corner of the wall and the corner of the stable. He had knocked out the whole corner of the stable, scattering rortv or mtv brick over tne srrounaat his feet. After a irood deal of trouble his keepers succeeded in backing him out of his tight position and he was sent back to the stable, still snorting and defiant. No moderate estimate cover the amount of punishment Chief will have to receive before he is reduced to subjection." Bpeaklna; Hardly Ever. In 1865, an old gentleman living about three miles east of Nelson Fur nace, Kentucky, named Lloyd. Wimsatt, was taken violently ill with a disease that kept him in confinement for many weeks, and at one time his family and friends as well as his attending physi cians gave him up. Being under the impression that the next hour would be his last, yet at the same time pos sessing his faculties and with full power of speech, Mr. Wimsatt requested that the priest then officiating at the church at New Haven, Ky., be Sent for, and the minister was early at the bedside. The room was at once vacated by the family, and for some time the patient and the representative of the church w:;iJV".J were alone rtr there remains a mystery, as the patient and in a hort time was no up I and about; but ever since then. , r " "uco ' . save upon two occasions, ne nas not ucri a word. Yesterday an Enquirer report- er heard that Mr. Wimsatt had spoken to his son, and in order to be satisfied that he had, interrogated Stephen Wimsatt, aged about 19. upon the sub ject, the result of which was as fol lows: ' "They tell me that your father spoke to vou last night. Is it so?" .v.. .ir: he raised nn In his bed and M 'Oh stenhen Mv mother heard ir.d all iot no and tried to ret bjm to talk more ; bat he seemed to be entirelr speechless, as heretofore. "Do you know what caused him to - lose hl speech?' 'Sickness, I think. He can hear and answer by signs. He will not notice a stranger however?" "When did he speak last before this?" " ! "About three years ago. 1 cut down a tree and tt commenced falling before I noticed it, add be halloed to me aay- Ing, 'Look out, Stephen, so I did look out, otherwise,! would have been killed." " "What did he do after that exclama- Itlonr' -He then began making slgns-agaln, bM heard since." WHMIj V "O MUliy V 1 TkAwntafnUV rltaMla a Svnrk Iva I the neighborhood renort that the eler- w j vw wuiua sivi w w an-uv w gym an commanded hltat M tog-IB case $S hXr& frch Jip. apeak cm bis Sick- ness InXt'lMjr:, . "No, sir; I am satisfied thai. part of hia history Js without foundation, tor nobody knows what passed between the priest and my father at that time." "Then you think he lost his speech in consequence of that sickness ?" "Yes. 1 1 think it was the work of vrou; dui mat is about as far as l can go." 'Then your father has only made the two exclamations you speak of within the past fourteen years, so far as yourself or any of your family know?" "Yes, sir." The subject of this sketch is a far mer In moderate circumstances, and is one of those quiet, easy-going stay-at-home kind of men, who seem to aspire to nothing of a higher sphere in life. He has n interesting family, and at tends to his daily labors with a sound body, mind and hearing, but either cannot or will not talk. There are people hying in the neighborhood who believe that he could if he would; and there are others who say positively that he cannot talk now, or he would do so, because previous to his sickness in 1865 he was an incessant talker. The fact, however of his making two dis tinct utterances, uuderstood fully by those who heard them, renders the case a very remarkable one, at any rate. The Sonoaa Explosion. They were in the back yard. One was a boy of twelve, and the other had seen only half as many years. The younger one sat on a barrel, and the older one had two ounces of powder in one hand and a turning stick in the other - "I doa'4 went to.be Bio wed," whined the boy on j the barrel trying to get down. "Keep right still, bub, commanded the other. This thing has been figured right to a science. If forty-five thou sand pound ol explosives raised Hell Gate twelve feet, two ounces of powder will raise you just exactly the fiftieth part ot an inch. Don't make an alarm ist of yourself.". "But it'll hurt," persisted the small boy. "It can't, I say I Haven't I figured on it? You may unbutton your coat, and keep your mouth shut, but that's safe guard enough. Now, thee, keep quiet and listen for rumbling noises. The powder was well confined under the barrel. Figures were at fault. The head Of the barrel went up, the small boy went up. the ble boy went end-1 ways, and when the smoke cleared away things were badly mixed up. n.. ... . . m. ..... I ine nig noy naa sore legs, ine iitue wj wo a uiM.-. u a coi wu t-uvaiug witb the odor, and a woman ran out . A rll Klsi am ww4.rn.. uv ouvuiU m. ts.v n , vm ... i nothings ! There's a shilling barrel all I pUt to pieces, two pair of pants to be 1 iw;"-u. vui iu-u u iuc i w., uu "e other just hanging, ana tne poor 18 weogea unaer tne nouse so I uk-" " wm uto w ms uuu vui "7 macninist." Spanish Merino. It is said that the origin of Span ish Merinos dated back to the Soman civilization, and thence to Greece. The Romans had a herd which they called Tarrentlne, from Tarrentine, a Greek colony. Hence, they were called also Greek sheep. Their wool Is of exceed ing fineness, and it is related of tbem that they were protected by covering.! of skin, carefully housed, combed and bathed with oil and wine. From thla we may infer that at that time they were highly bred. Columella, who lived before the Christian era, relates that hia uncle, M. Columella, transport- ed from Cadiz to his farm land., which were ; in BoeUca. some wild ram. of ad- mirable whiteness brought from Africa and crossed them witn tne coveted or T.,MnHn The offrinr nro - dncedrams with a line fleece. Strabo says ia hi. account of the geography of I ct. 1m thai Hma At Ch KmMrrtr - J i,ue"u" "w " " . , ... .rnirfnlMii Hnrfllanla I Af Retina and that the rama were - province for improving the ?X,t or about SIOOO" bred. for lent eCh f bont 1000' When tne noman empire wa. over- run by the barbarians, the Tarrentine stock of Italy being very tender became extinct: bat the improved stock of n!Aa llvlnrln the mountfins. sur- ... who, sklUed In the sextile arts, could apprecute lis vaiae, suuexuu a tne Merinos of Spain. If this view is eor- rect, tne Merino is the most important Ct, tne merino u uxio ohih uppvruiuk surviving renc oi ue materia civuua bon of the Greeks and Bomans. Silk was soun In China 2000 years and more before Christ was born. NSWS IN BIUEr. Gardner Colbv. of Boarim. ha nr.' Qted a case of valuable books to Colby UMverslty, Waternlle, Me. -. ' W aslVk W. . SeptenTTiaST rtuLSrSr? toJwhoTe'J Itdtrod"wly 1 TbV MAaion HouseLondoh) Hun- P nooa Uef fund amounts to r'' .. . . i1 it - v. Northrop, oft-Bur- o,. wm - ? i , y 1UVUVO. , - . 5fi..( . tl 'The Stfe ftuarrle of N6rth,KKl MUintV ftiM AMkU u T-' operation. f - tW. -j o. w- mwhj ail wmav it k .owr . ' Culver-' -vv .; sarf oi tne aestructiea: or that citrtiy an eruption or y esuvws. Only three murderer have Jeei pees 8 last hanged in Connecticut during the J&sd' twenty yeari, but there are how. lheo ' uuuvi nurauvg v. WV.IU. -sr Bobie is a town in California. Six, months ago it had 600 or 600. buildings and a population of 1400. Now it has some 4000 buildings and a population. of 7000 The American Consul at Florence informs Mr. Evarts that American manufacturers could successfully .fur nish steel wheels for the Italian rail ways. . . . During February. 14 vessels, of a total of 18,200 tons were launched on the Clyde, Scotland. Of these six were ocean steamers, ranging from 2000 to 3000 tons. A large number of heavy, broad- tired wheels were made in West Ches ter and shipped to Enrlaud, whence they will be sent to Southean Africa", where they will be used for heavy haul ing. . Ex-Sheriff Hogencamp.of Fateraon, New Jersey, who dleoV recently left exactly one hundred descendants. . niidren.grandchlldren.ereat-erana- children and great-great-grandchildren nearly all of whom were at (he funeral.. The ravs of the sun, shining through a stereoscope, set fire to -a table in the house of George W. West in Chichester, H. 11., a lew days ago. and the building narrowly escaped burning. ' The amount of logs cut on the west branch of the Penobscot river, In Maine, during the winter, i estimated at 25,-. 000,000 feet, jon the East branch, 12,000, 000, and on the Mattawamkeag, 20,000,- 000 feet. "A swarm ot bees took possession of the chimney of a Middle field '(Conn.)4 Methodist Church during the summer, and when a fire was kindled In the" stove on a recent Sunday the floor' ot thechurcn basement literally -flowed with honey. W The foundation-for a. Jesuit Cel- . lege to cost $500,000 has been begon In San Francisco, it will comprise a col lege, with all the requirements of mod ern education, such as laboratories. libraries, studies and rooms for the stu dents and professors, a church and a theatre capable of seating 5000 persons. Cyrus Degler, of Marlon township. Berks eounty. Pa., awoke on the morn ing of his wedding to find the snow drifted so high a distance of several hundred yards that hi sleigh could uot be driven through it. He shovelled out a roadway in two hours, and was at the bride's house at the appointed hour.. The Annual report of the Mas-. chusetu Bank Commissioners has Just,' been published. From It it appears that the total deposits In the aavinga, banks doing Dusiness in mat state on Oetober 31, 1378, were $209,800,634.18,, being a decrease for the year of $34,- , aui uecreae iuciuub -00.62 in the banks in the hands of re-. celvers. TliAm.. XTHIavAhtvi lu.ff.An f Coventry EngfanJ, his been sentenced , iUVUM WUI l. m aM.&WM ... by Lord Coleridge to four months lm-' prisonment, with hard labor, lor railing ta artpnil a lrk rhllcl in the mitrlct Of - , 'mi I w"1Ctt ne was meaicai orar, .-im gUn nt DT cuipabie netrlieetitse. afidir - rnnnrt him miitv. ana Btrons-- ly recommended him to mercy. ' "i The flrit Marquis of France has juk aiea, tne iouni oi 'jctauiy, x nnce , of Lisle and Marquis of Nesle. He was the son of Marshal de Mallly, who t so heroically defended Louis XVI, On the 10th of August, and great-grandson 5 of Louis de Mallly, Prince of "Orsnge smuu wiuuiBUuau vi -ub vrcuuaiiuciu of France. The title is as tld as the eleventh eentnrv ' y V When Queen Victoria salted on the . ...... royal yacht for France it wss on one of. toe stormiest ana most uisagreeaoie , Saturdays of the whole year. , A writer in a London paper , commenting on this shows that 8atnjrdv Is an unlucky day! w un iff r ii utile royaj liUUlJ. IIHMMiii I L Queen Anne., the four Georges, the' Ducbess of Kent, the Prince Cirnrrr and the Princess Alice all died n Saturday. The California Woodr-w-W. h.h-' it of dropping acorns and other nuts n-1, t"?' l SSg TSSfVM turned it into good account by knock- ing out a knot in the aide of his barn ' ing out a a not in tne aide of his barn 1 and placing a trousrh underneath. ' !Wln bis hogs n7e to hlmif. " BO .- -There aw twenty-flve Mennoqito 1 Tillage in aianitooa, witn w dwel-" dweL.- ! -A Ou 1 1 The imml-, I A e A 1 I rranta from Russia have 18.740 area under cultivation, 363 horses and some 2500 cows and oxen, and have already; Urge stores of grain and other produee. Xhe . rr0win rich raoldlv and prove the very best of citizens, settling 1 all their disputes among themselves aad having In their colony neither -a ! comtabie nor a locit-up - I TKa wve-aaLean w 1st fnsimAva ItTa n Cne nnnded urpedoboau and numerous cruisers bavebeen construct ed- Three clipper steamers have been"; bMJfebod. uuucuni, Bsu. -v.. . mwmammw fi. llAn - i --r - -- c" , .. i,nnni.r.iK... hin iat,lri.nnrh- Ud. but have not received thcirarma- 4 menu. To these four cruiser nave 1 been added by private subscription.