A D VKBTISIjf , R ATSS. w ,o.e ier.H-.. ......,.,Jir. tit 00 L1AT A C 1 One inch, one insertion ..11 00 One iuch, eaeh sabstquent inseruon... 60 Six ' Mouths... .....;..",.wt.kwi..l 0 Qisrter'y, SemKan uual or Yearly eon 1. Iu writing onbusiBess ba a-are give; the Postoffiee at which yon cet'oar nail matter. ' frnr.I! i . . '. . : ' .'J !.: ! .- ' I 2. In remitting money, alway give both enae aid Poatoffice: f I?.. tnets will be made on liberal Unas. - Obituaries and Tribute! of reapeet charged f r at advertising rates. Ne oiamaniaationi will b pablished a leu aeaompanied by the full name aad ad dress of the writer. These are not requested for pmhlieatioB, but aa a guarantee of good faith. 3. . end matter for the mail department j b a separate piece oi paper irom any tmn far publication. ";" .4 Write eomnauaicatioas eniy on one side of tke sheets -- -y t li-OT ESTABLISHED 1848. A Family Newspaper, BeToted U Huae f itresti anddfBfral lews- TERMS J2.00 PerAiHim. All commmnieatioBs for the paper, aad bosiaesa letters, should be addressed to tLISHED AT, RUTHERFORDTON, N-"L EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. THE BANNER, Rusher ford too, N. C TIRHK or MrRaroiivnnv 1 ' ; i r if r 111 fK111H1of -r Mr i f lii. 2.0- .ti. II II II; My Httte lore, do yoti remember, , i Ere we were grown bo Badly wiae, ; Those eTonlcjfi! Iq the bleak December, . Curtained wejta from the snowy weather When yoi tad I played chess tojethea Ohe mated by each otb r 's eyea 1 j Mi; still I see your iott, white hani; Hovering mm o'er Queen end Knigtji. '. BraYepawnB in valiant battle etam The double castles guard the wings; I J The Bishops bent on distant thing, ft "i Move, s'd'.ing through the flgh; " ; Our fingers touch ; 'our glanles meejt . And falter; fall yott'rJjolep"$aii" " Against in? checks; down the field; - - Tout Queen Bides slow, her to'djery all between, And checks jjie Unaware. . ' Ah me 1 iheiittta lUft'a, $.',. -, uitrperBt is ail its omyairy ; ' ii j Tali aiasy a move, since then, bare we " i 'Mid life'a perplexing jcheokers mafle j And many a game with fortune piayel, . What is it we have now? I This, thia at least ifthisa'oue; I TTiat uever, ucnu', ntvJuor,: 5 Aniuthoseo'd still nlhls of yore - f' (Ere we were grown so aLiy wise),'! Can you and I tlwt out the skies, 1 , Ts-hut oat the world and wintry weather, And, eyes excnanriUg warmth witbleyes, May chess, as eu Wt playeil u.getlity ! JL QUEKJl SI OR Y. honvt of the Perils ,of liailutty (TivveHnff ' , in Great Jiritaltu 'i . The crime of Lefrpy caused tlie great est agitation in Eiigland concerning the system of traveling 1 by railway. Mr. Labouchere took' advantage off the ex citement to publish a ramarkaple story illustrating the perils of that system.' It is drawn from real , life, an'J records the adventures, of . Rev. Jude Gloam, a slry young clergyman, who !had taken a glass more than usual at supper, and of "Miss A.vis8, an -equally shy yoto lady, n hom. he accosted on the traini ' . It is the curse of say men that, getting Bo little practice in converging with women, thfiy never know whefe to stop when, peradventure, they db get a chance of talking. It is by, shy men that the rudest things are habitually said and done through sheer ; inexperi ence. . Mr. Gloana had no ide that he was transgressing the proprieties He thought he ,was making himrelfi very po lite and agreeable. : ' ' ' "I say, Miss A viss," stuttered the. llev. Judef, with a leer, " iipposing there were a piece oi mistletoe in this carriage?" jj o answer from the girl, bufjher eyes opened wide, and she shrank tip, trem bling, in her corner of the carriage. "I I think' there i3 a pfece ; look there!" continued the foolish; man, pointing to the lamp in the ceding, for he meant to be facetious. 3.e girl was now lairly mgntened, and moved from her seat to the further corner of the carriage. She had heard of drunken ruffians insulting ladies in railway carriages, and she set down her revered, companion as leing drtmk, and possibly a ruffian. No doubt fiia cieri cal garh was only a disguise, jf 1 V What are yon running away for ? " asked Mr. Gloam, and hexose- to follow her with an unsteady gait, caused not bo much by tipsiuess for lie! i was not regularly tipsy as by the dscilhition of the train. But to 'the-affrighted girl who saw him stagger it' looked?; as if he were dangerously inebriated, ji "If you approach another step, sir, I shall scream ! " cried ske, starting up, with all the color tied from her; fact. "What for?" asked the Bev. Jude, and, putting his hand out to steady him self, he quite unintentionally rested it on her shoulder. The movenent of re coil which thisj apparant assault caused the girl to make threw Mr. (Jloam off his balance, and he pinniped into the seat from which she had risen. This only increased the girl's fright and wild ly opening the window of thei carriage she screamed " Help ! Help ! Mnrder !" . In an instant Mr .Gloam wall sobered. The -girl's shrieks cleared all ilie fumes of wine from his brain and shewed him in what a desperate position he ha3 ; placed himself. "For God's sake, don' scream Like that," he imploredj " you'll ruin mp" and Kr-i'iT.c thA cnr bv fliA' 0 . o "J w . waist he wrenched lier from I jthe win dow. ' ' i " Help ! " she gasped as she f ell on to one of the seats and struggled jto regain her footing. , "Miss Aviss, for God's sake Jet meex" plain," entreated Mr Gloam seizing , her hands ; but the horrible fear which was now legible on his face made him a more dreadful object to look at than bej fore, while the violence he' used ,to re strain the girl robbed her of alj ! presence of mind. DiseDgaging- herself from him, she .tottered toward th! nearest door and iriUitically tiuned thk -handle.-A blast of cold night air flew1 to ihe car riage, and a shower of sarfes from thej engine was seen flying by. Mr. Gloam, made a grab at the girl to raw heT back. She eluded him, and, ijreaming louder than ever , tried to step? on 'the foottoard. Then there was ; another faint shriek and ' all was silence. The.. door, swinging forward by the., impetus of the train at a curve, closed sdf it- own accord. The girl had slipped ! anil was gone. ; . '' " Great, GlfVmuttere4 Gloam wheqn awful mwute had elapsedAHe had taken off liia hat and wasp stroking . his forehead as 1a sat endeavoring to re rt-ixzx wuaii tuci uapouou, ; aio asKeu,,, himself whether he was not in the midst of a nightmare. If our train had stopped at that minute he would have been unable to crawl out, and anybody who had seen him must have suspected him of a crime. During a quarter of an hour the poor wretch could neither stir nor think lucidly ; he could only moan and tremble. What first recalled him to himself was the sight of the things which the poor girli-no v dead, beyond doubt had left in the ''carriage. There was a shawl, a traveling bag, a novel; and on the floor a small gold watch without a -chain. - " The sight of, these articles stirred in sC?Tunwilu,ng murderer tha"sense of self preservation. He caught them up one by oneand flung the,m out ' of the win dow into the dark, after which he crept on his knees and looked under the seats to see if anything else had been left. He bund nothing. J- Pitiable as his agony ol mind then was, he saw the necessity" for composing himself, and sat down again trying to reflect. Had anyof the pas sengers in other carriages heard the girl speak? Had any one seen her fall? If so, he was a lost man. He would be ar rested at Birmingham, '"and in due time he would be tanged orrnlenced to penal servitude for the better part of his, life. How would hia story be believed And if it were believed how would it justify him ? The public outcry against liim would be all the greater, as he was a clergyman ; and, now that he had thrown ihe girl's things out of the car riage in the lirsV monaent f hisr panic, the evidence of criminal intention worikV seem complete. " Why did I tiirow the things out ? " faltered Mr. Gloam, speak ing to himself; and then 'he groaned again r " My God, what shall I do?" It was between Leamington and Bir mingham that the girl had fallen out of the train; .As the' express neared Bir mingham the tension on Jude Gloam's nerves was such as few men ever expe rience. Within five minutes he endured " an amount of terror and anguish enough co spread over a lifetime ; yet he had the craft to see that all .. his chances of iscaping Unsuspected j might depend upon his behavior when the train slopped. Ha nSusb alight quite coolly ; he inust not run, nor appear anxious to get away ; he must control his terrors, though his heart throbbed to bursting. . The train glided into the station ; the porters ran along the platform opening doors ; one of them opened Mr. Gloam's carriage. " Any luggage, sir ?" " Yes, I have some luggage," said Mr. Gloam, aud he stepped out, shaking in every limb, but apparently sedate and calm, as it behooves a clergyman to be. Next moment he was mixed up with the throng of people whp were foraging for their trunks and portmanteaus. Nobody paid any attention to him. No one talked about shrieks having been heard during the journey. The passengers all attended to their , own business, and left him to his." Mr. Gloam's biisines's was to collect a portmanteau, a box and a hamper ; hav ing done this, he turned to ask a porter to call a cab for him, but, as ; he was about to speak, his words froze on his tongue, for he saw standing beside him a girl who f as the very image of .Miss Aviss. Tf the girl hpd looked at him she mfi'jt have noticed bis confusion, but she wJ glancing toward au elderly gentleman and lady who wo walking toward her; " Here's her box, papa, but Ty& not seen her pass," said the givJ to the elderly couple. . " We have looked into every cj-riage," said the. gentleman addressed as papa " but she hasn't come. I suppose shi missed the train." j " But how comes her box to be here?" " Wasn't there a change of. carriages somewhere between this and London ?" suggested, the elderly lady , ;"I think there's a-change ftfr-Diirew Perhaps she got out ther the wrong train. she got out there and afterward entered it B . . ; ThA wrnnir train "How very provoking 1" exclaimed the girl. ' . " 1 dare say fw shall t find a telegram when we get ' hom'ft" -tsaidHhe elderly gentleman; "but we must ask the sta-: tionmaster to take care of Mary's box whenshe comes to claim it." Mr.' jjflosini had. glanced at the box beside vhich the girl stood, and he saw on" it a card with the name " Miss Mary Aviss. " The miserable man shrail as the father, mother and , sister of poor girl with whom he had traveled passed him. Theh fie helped the porter to lift his portmanteau .and walked with him to a cab. He had a six-mile drive before he could reach his parish of Ror- leigh, which was on the outskirts of Birmingham. However, he drive wai accomplished in safety,- and that night was spent by Mr. Gloam, ; sleepless, in his new parsonage. h" ' ' '' .t: - . ' f The body of Miss - Aviss . was found dead on the line early on the following day, and afterward her' -traveling-bag v.-' '.' -: -; U was aiscovered twenty mues runner down the line. But for this discovery of the Tag the poor gifl's death would have leSittr4Stedlto vcidentYa8T it washeniit fl-sttisteAte''ii2 somebody must have had a share in her death, nobody accuaea w Kev. Jua Gloam, Nor was anybody else accused. The porter who had put Mr. Gloam into the carriage at Oxford had not noticed, that there was a young lady in the com partment, and, simply owing to this' slight fact of non-obEervance, tho Btory of Mary Aviss death was fated to re main a mystery. It became known in time, however, to one man to whom Mr. Gloam communi cated the facts in writing some five years oiter-they had birpp3nd.He7thero; " tot of R&rleigh,' fended bis letfer by Bay-2 vug : - I nave Uvea in -a purgatory, of remorse and sbrrow ever'since that aw.- ful night, ,ahd am thankful to think 1 Bhall soon be rid of my load." He was dying when he wrote this of a decline, brought on by overwork in, his parish ; and he left behind him the reputation of being the most earnest, zealous, kindest and also the saddest rector whom the people of Eorleigh had ever seen. TUB W1IALKBOKE TBAD9. The whale is the largest fish that jBwims in the sea and it is probably the most useful. It is,' of course, captured for its oil, but there ia a part of its body which commerce has made an extensive use of to the enrichment of many men. In the upper jaw of the whale are thin, parallel lamina, varying in size from threa to twelve feet in length, f These are called whalebone, and all above six feet 'in length is called size bone, a- quality which, commands the highest j price. Whalebone once brought a very high price, especially when hobpskirts were more in fashion than they are to day. The Dutch formerly received $3,500 for a ton of whalebone, but since 1763 it has never brought anything like that price. In 1818 it brought $450 a ton, n 1834 from $530 to $545, and 1844 it varied from $L080 for Southern to $1,550 for Northern bone. As the whale becomes scarce of course whalebone will rise in the market, and at present the . Dutch add the Scotch whalers are doing a very poor business. The Americans also complain, and now that this is the case the inventive genius of man is try ing hard to find the oest whalebone. This is obtained from Greenland whale. From the mouth of one of these mon sters from 2,000 to 3,000 pounds are often taken. The manufacture of whal bone into articles of use and ornament is not so extensive as one might imag ine. - it is principally confined to jNew York and Boston, four manufactories being, in the former ,and three, in the latter. When the raw whalebone is first received at the factory the hair is cut off the slabs. They are then soaked in water until they are - soft, after which they are scraped of all the gum that ad heres to them. . They' are next put in a steam box, where a workman Straight ens them with a knife ; they are finally polished, and are then ready to' be made use of for any purpose"; that the dresser may see fit. Whalebone, is principally used nowadays in . the manufacture of whips and corsets,. Umbrella frames used to be made altogether of whale bone, but since its .. scarcity and high price steel is mostly used for this yax pose..' Whalebone hats and whalebone ribbon have just come into vogue. The former look very beautiful and are very comfortable on the head. Whales, like seals, do not get time to grow, for they are slaughtered mercilessly, young and old, in the pursuit of wealth. The old ones are of ten killed before the young are able to take care of heinselves, and the result of this cruelty is a loss of thousands and thousands of whales and seals in a year. Mankind will have to be -more'.thoughtfil in the work of slaughter if it wishes' to be better com pensated by tliese animals, and the whale must be let' alone for a few years if the ladies" are to have fine corsets' and the gentlemen- fine' walking-sticks and riding-whips.---Brooklyn Eagle. r ;. . . . . ,f , T Maqazme that the belief in the alleged ! disagreement of doctors is a popular fallacy. In the first place, there is not much real disagreement and the discussions-are largely 'in, regard to tech nical terms rather than the merits of a case. - He says, moreover, that it is as nnrea8onable to expect unanimity among doctors in regard to disease, as it would be to complain of engineers for differing in their opinions as to how many miles an axle with a flaw in it could run with out breaking down. The controversies over medicine are 'trifling when com pared with those which come up in law, politics, finances and religion. Mortality ranges from 1 to 3, peTj cent. annuaHy ; but, since for each lawyer "that gains a case the other must lose, it follows that lawyers" make 50 ! per cent, of mistake. In' religion it would range from 100 per cent, saved of thd Universalistsi dowp,to the one less in ten ' consigned by-the Calvinist to the hades of ' thia new ro-.visionj',-i' t:..-;:H tfSbi Wheeling Intelligencer notices, as a curious feature of the mortality sta-' tisties of this year, the large number of deaths from what are known as zymotio or Cltn diseases. The last quarterly re port of the health' officer ! of that city from all uaeaj 1Q8, camej under the head pf Zyia.0tio disease,' Astronomers divide meteors into sev era! classes aerial meteors, as -winds. tornadoes, etc.; aqueous jneteors, aa fogs, rain, snow, hail, etc.'; luminous meteors, or those doe to the 'action oi elements in the air, as rainbpwshalos, parhelias, mirages, etc.; electrical me teors, as lightnings, aurora eto. ; ; and igneous meteors, as shooting or falling stars, star-showers, bolides or fire-halls, aerolites or meteorites, eta j In present usage, says Prof,. Newton, they term me teor is generally limited io thoxlast group, or to the igneous meteors.." ; The meteorites are all evidently fragments, not separate formations. Thjr ar$i says the same authority, in the heaveas, to some extent at least, grouped in eireams . ....... i ? along tne orbits of known comets, and hence have a common origin with them. The continuity of these sreams- the double and multiple character of Biela's and other comets, and the -steady dim inution of comets in, brilliancv at suc cessive returns, seems to argue ja con tinuous breaking up of the comet' into fragments by some cause, prpbably by the sun's heat. This view ;is. strength ened by the fact that the meteoric irons and stones bring with thejn carbonio acid, which is known to form so fpromi nent a part of the comet'sj tail.s. It is now' universally admitted : that igneous , meteors are caused by small Itodiea trhich have been traveling about1 the 'Bun in their orbits, but now comeu'intd the earth's atmosphere, and rin general, burn up. 1 The stony meteorites 'have in general the shape of, broken fragments of stone. The outside is usually covered with a thin: black crust, which ?is evi dently due to a melting ofjtli'6 suDface in the atmosphere. There have bee$ found at various times and place Jlooy iron masses that are assumed to be of; mete oric origin, because their peculiar form, their peculiar composition," anc 3 their peculiar crystalline structure aire like those of the iron masses that'hae been seen in several instances to: eomstdown from meteors. Shooting stars aye seen on any clear, moonlight night j they leave behind, many of thgni, a 5 bright cloud of phosphorescent light ; Pieme leors and their trains hive various colors white, green, blue,i yellovj scar let, etc. ; the duration of" ihe flight is generally less than a second of tbae, but the brighter ones may tlabt- .Rev era! seconds; the meteorites containno ele ments, so far as we know whicli have not been found on the earth, but' these elements are compounded differently from terrestrial mmeral,;60DifltiQies they reach the earth, and again $re con sumed in their course. it ? ' !; BTVFIJi TEAGBVfG. f There is a vast amount oil humbug in the system of common-school education, and it is hot strange that many parents are adopting the plan oft having their children instructed at homewhe they can carefully watch the child's teaining and see that what time ia chsvoteel to in struction is turned to good account. A disgusted father writes to-Phlli!4elpbia journal saying that the .ojheray he heard his Httle girl sobbing' ovr a rule which she was trying to cojnniit l mem ory, in the following woras,';to-it : "Rule for short divbiiav" rule dah one write' the divisor at tie Jefi of the dividend, semi-colon, begipi'at Jhe lft hand, comma, and write ; the 'quotient beneath, period. Paragraph. ; 2. If there is a remainder af tet any division, comma, regard it s prefixed to he next figure, comma, and divwe' as l)eore, period: If any5 partial dividenjl Ss ls thaii the divisor, prefix U to the next ficrnre. comma, and write a' cipher in the quotient, period. Paragraph proof pe riod dash- multiply the quotients Sby the divisor, comma, and add the reminder, comma, if any, comma,. toVthe product, period. " 4 f t After reading these painfull idiotio paragraphs the amazed parent made in quiry and found that tha pupils chil dren under 10 were required rto study rules in this way in order tlsat thej might be able to wrjte'them it and "point" them, not' correctly, Tmt ac cording to the "book. 1 1, "I. also found," he ajjds, "that if a comma was left out, though th sense remained unchanged, th "pupil uffefed as much in loss of rnark. as though she had commitya Vital blinder; ' .Thahks to home instruction, my little irl .un derstands the rules of arithmetic, but she cannot learn them 1 by rote an this parrot fashion,, and suffers- Accordingly. Can we have nothing jlone . in this mat ter to relieve our childr&r froni utterly useless memorizing, that leaves them at theend of a few ear vwith weakened minds and no taste f jr tudy? -I got a letter the other day from a rin who had graduated from a university. He could nekher . write nonipeli Correctly (spelling goes 'gose'), andye at school a few yeara ego, he cold glihjhf recite all the rule of gramnar, ; and Was by no means an indifferent pupoJL"- ,1.1- . r , .. r , V. , In Iowa, Uliuois and -Whiopnstn many farmers are purchasing oows and gping extensively into the dai busiiess, giv- ing as a reason , that- tnero is tv greater profit grain. to be expected than ia rasing if BBAUT DKJKJ1XP1 It is not surprisine to find the learned in things medical unable to un-j derstand that brain development, which of course is generally a matter of heredi-j ty, determines eharaoter. Such, how! ever, is, and must needs be, the fact.: Whether the mind is something outside matter which acts through or by the! brain, as a musician may use a musical instrument, or whether, as some think,) what we call mind is simply brain func-i tion, it should be manifested on consid erahon that upon the quality and con-j formation of a man's brain must depend his mental capacity ; and, consequently,) also his characteristics both intellectual and moral. We are not disposed to" urge specialities of development as ex enses for cqnduct because,' given an av erage degree of intelligence and f airly; strong will power, the individual is clearly reaponsible for his actions ; but it must not be forgotten that his instincts of right or wrong, and the facility of kidgment with which he distinguishes between good and evil, will be acute oi dull in proportion . as his brain is de veloped. The mind is in a large sense the char-; acter of a man, and as directly depeni dent on the physical growth of his brain as -the speed of a race-horse is dependent on its muscular development. This is not sufficiently recognized, and because it is not we every now and then find silly remarks in print such as the follovi- ing: "The convolutions of the brain may have something to do with the dif ference between mediocrity and genius but at present they are not recognized in the law courts, and it is difficult to see how. they can.be ;" with such weak and wide moral, reflections as that "It would be scarcely satisfactory to a pick pocket to have his brains (sic) examined, in order to prove to those ho left behind that he really could not help being jtt thief 1" And yet the facts are sufficient ly plain and simple, so plain and simple that any one should be able to under stand them. Lancet ' OA RFTBLD AS A F It I TJX I). The world likes to hear of the person ality of its heroes their habits, tastek, peculiarities, likes and dislikes. I may be pardoned, therefore, for speaking of things in connection with the dead President, which would be of trifling in terest. if not an impertinence, if said of one not widely loved and honored. Gen. Garfield had a warm, aflectionate na ture. The people he liked were very dear to him. He took them to his heart and cave them his full confidence. He would often sit down beside a friend and throw his arm over his neck, or put his hand on his shoulder -or knee, as the natural, expression of his liking, or in walking would place his arm through that of the friend.- He had a way of calling an intimate friend or comrade "old boy" or "old fellow," and once, when Col. Bock well thanked him for some kindness, he said, putting his hand on his friend's shoulder, "Old boy I the ties of friendship . are ; sometimes Btronger than those of blood ! " By the courtesy of Col. Rockwell I am also en abled to include here one of Gen. Gar field's most characteristic letters. CoL Rockwell says ; ; 5 j,K i , j "On. the Sunday preceding the elec tion I had sent, him a little expression. of my confidence in, his success, closing, hs I remember, with the stanza from Goethe: . y. " The future hides In il dladness and Borrow. We press still thorow ; Naught aV'ded in it Paunting vis onward !. "To this' on the eve of election, Ihe sent the following reply : ; . 11 ' "filKSTOB, Ohio, IsTov. 1, ISHQ. "DkAk Jahvis : The evening mail brifigs me yonr letter of. the 3st, and I take a mo ment, in the lull before the battle, to say how greatly glad I am for all the oarxtett and off 06 tive things you have done for uie. Wiateveir may be the issue to-mortrow, I shall carry with me, through life, niost grateful mention the enthusiastic and noble work my frieudt1 have done, and especially my college class mates. .The campaign has been fraitfril to we in the discipline that : comes from endurance and patience. , I. hope that defeat will .not sour me, nor success 'disturb the poise which I have sought to gain by the experiences of life. " Prom thia edge of the conflict I give yon my hand and heart, as in all the other "days of our friendship. Aa ever yours, J "J. A. GAJLFIXIdB. E. V. Smaltey, in the Century Sfag azine. ... . j mm m . ' .- i i J. TTED TAZL'S SOKE, One' day Capt. Liee was talking with Spotted Tail and others about fhohest people and the keeping of one's word, - " There's no such thing a an honest man,", said , tiiei. Captain, r,,, jokingly. There used to be, however. . Infor mer tunes honest men . always used, to have a. bunch of, hair, growing in!, the palm of the right hand, , I don'l see; but a few bunches in my hand." , SpottadTail . stepped up .h. jand, shaking hands with him, sanl ......i, How ! . How I JL usea . to nave , a nreat big bunch of , hair in tha palm of. my hand, Jpv. it Joaa au Den worn on bj hakinK j-tands with the waitea. Mast preachers'seek to "impress their hearers with 'the fact that life is short,5 but forget it in their sermons. A V KfOtSEUUiB. It is a beautiful legend of the Norsa- land. Amilias was the village black smith, and under the bpreading chestnut treekin his village smithophiken stood. He the hot iron gehammered and sjhod horses for 50 cents all round please. He made tin hjelmets for the gjodds and store-pipe trousers for the hjeroes. Mimir was a rival blacksmith. He didn't go in very much for defensive armor, but he was lightning on two legged "bjswords, and cut and slash svrculassssses. He made cheese knives for the other fdodds. and he made the great Ejsvsstusen, an Arkansas tooth picK tnai wouia mase a tree moision - i - . , . ... - . , - clear into the transvere semi-colon of a cast-iron ichthyosaurus, and never turn - its edge.' That was the kind of a bhjair- pin Mimir said he was. One day Amilias made an impenetrable suit of armor for a second-class gjodd, and put it on himself to test it, and boastfully inserted a card in the Svenssf- ka NorderbfrdinskJkanahelde8plvtden8- kaoroaovu8aken. saying that he was wearing a suit of home-made, best chilled. Norwav merino underwear that would knick the unnumbered saw-teeth in the pot-metal cutlery of the iron inongery over the way. That, Amihas remarked to his; friend Bjohun Bjt ob'in sssoh, was the kind of a "Bdjucckk "he was. When Mimir spelled out the card next morning, he said, " Bjji !" and went to work with a charcoal-furnace cold anvil, and A. T. Hay's isomorphic process, and in a liftle while he came down street with a sjvazaxd that glittered like a do! lar-store diamond', and met Amilias down by the new opera-house. Amilias but toned on his new bjarmor, and said: "H you have no "hereafter use for your bid chyjeese-kj-aife, strike !" Mimir spat on his hands, whirled' his -skjvaard above his head, and fetched Amilias a swipe that seemed to miss everything except the empty air through which it softly whistled. - Amilias smiled, and said, "Go on," adding that .it "seemed to him that he felt a general sense oi cold iron somewhere m the neighborhood, but he hadn't been hit.' "Shake yourself," said Mimir. - i Amilias shook himself and immediate. y leu into naives, tne most neatxy-ai- vided man that ever went beside him self. ' "That's where the boiler-maker was away on in nis diagnosis, saia mimir, as he went back to his shop to put up the price of cutlery 65 per cent, in all lines, with an unlimited advance .on special orders. Ihua do we learn that a good action is never tnrown away, ana ui&v uaa words and.patient love, wilLovercome the hardest natures. Burlington llawk- .Eye. . e , : - The bindings of books in galler nerish ' from heat, and the higher the boJks are above the floor the , more ac- Jtive is' this destructive agency. .Leather an animal tissue, and 'Win not, like llinen, cotton, paper and Qther vegetable jsuhstances'.' ' sustain 'without injury ' a i;"Ligher ternperatiire than we find agreea ;ble to live in. Books cahnbt live w;here ;nieu cannot live. They are more nearly Sallied to us as congeners than we are 'wont to suppose. In excessive heat the leather of binliAgE slowly consumes and iits life departs. The sulphurous re- ;sidiam of gas comb-nstion is also said' to 'be injurious to bindings. Books should, ' klierpfdre be shelve'd in the coolejt "par of the'tqom; aiid where the air" is iieter likely to 'pe overheated, which is ndar the floor, where we ourselveB : live and Imovo. In ' the private libraries of our ! residences a mistake is often made in P carrying the shelving of : onrbook-cases iso high that they enter-thtf upper and jovirtieated stratum of ir. H-any one be skeptical on this point, let- him test by means of a step-ladder, the condition : of the My near the ceiling of his common sitting room on! a winter evening, !when' .the gnsT is burning freely.;: Ths heat ia eimp'ly insufferable. - 1 ' - - Gov.. PnEiiPS, of Missouri, has been surprising all hie friends - by 'refusing to drink when invited. ,: -Three months ago he V swore off" in New York- city, and though ho has " drank enough to float a Mississippi steamboat, he -says never. again will any ; alcoholic, liquor pass his lips., ' : His , . qi.it ting drink was ; brought about by a singuarciTcnnstance. He went to visit his sister in New York, and when , she. prepared, . a zoom for her dis tinguished brother she placed a -decanter of whiskv in it The next day she noticfedr the . Hquor - was untasted, and asked him the feason. He did not tell her J' but h afterward told a friend that when he saw; tha whisky in hia room he thought to himself,; "Does my sister think, I have e-qch a love for whisky that it is -necessary to ioep it ia my room? Does anybo4y s tiaink it ?- s-H thej . do, they will never think so again, for I will never drink another dtaaJv, From that day to this he has sot touched drink, anaoia njwM3j u iuuiku n (wt; qjj Qr seventy-nve or even iw tmo.- him that last week he broke off mgbacccC' ;i4 'V chew Tms butter, cheese, egg and milk busi ness in Montgomery county, Pa., is aid to be worth &4U.uuu.uw yT i -Bearup k CarrahAr are gasfitters ia Grand street, New York. Christian Angel was arrested at De troit for refusing to support his family, and Christian Whuson for burglary. Mr. Kansas Nebraska Bill lives at Saybrook, Ct Mr. Bill was born in the time of the Kansas-Nebraska excite ment, about 1853 or 1854, when the Kansas-Nebraska bill was everywhere discussed, and his father, James A. Bill, named him Kansas Nebraska. He has a brother, Lecompton Constitution Bill, and another, Jefferson Davis Bill. Michael Sir Shepherd lives as Hf ord, England. When his mother was bid den7Name this child,'r she curtesied and replied: "Michael, sir," and Mi chael Sir it was. An old Irish song re cords a parallel case, where a dog, an- ' swering to the name " Dennis," was making himself too busy at the christen ing, and had to be checked by the mother, with the result described: u What's his name?" says the prieat ; " Down, Pea- nis," says ahe; So Down Dennis Bulgruddery they christened me. Doctor WiHard Bliss is the name of Dr. D. W. Bliss, who attended Presi dent Garfield. He was so christened after: Dr. "Willard, who presided at hia birth at Auburn nearly fifty years ago. The Rev. Ebenezer Bholanath Bhose has- been appointed curate of St. An. drew's, Bethnalgreen, London. , The Rev, William Napoleon Barley corn has been sent to Fernando Po as a missionary by the English Primitive Methodists. . F Mr. Arthur Wellington Waterloo is an ex-army surgeon in England. Mr. Eldersley Clinton Dor lard rde Clements keeps a laundry at Detroit.. , '. Miss Pauline Castle Garden, aged 2, was picked up in the rotunda of Castle Garden on the night of the Fourth of July, named by Supt. Jackson, and sent to the refuge on Ward's island. Messrs. 'Nova Zembla and Adamant ine' Johnson are residents of St. Louis, Mb. Miss Mazin Grace Brooks il a resident of Kansas City, Mo., her pious mother having named her" (by ear) out of the hymn-book r " Mazin grace, how sweet the sound I" - ' Dr. Theodore Ledyard, of New York city, used to be Dr.! Theodore Ledyard Smith, but obtained permission from the Court of Common Pleas to drop the last name." He gave as a reason that " it is his ambition and hope to become master of bis profession, . and to build up and establish a distinct individuality in his practice, and he fears that because of the great number . of doctors named Smith that name will hinder him jtn hia object." -..,;.!..,-; . 4 . ! The late Mr. Lewis Hamilton, of Ken tucky, left five children Mi; ; London Judge Hamilton, Master Southern Boil Hamilton, - and Misses Avenue Belle, China Figure, and, (Hebrew Fashion Hamilton. . XXX f CAN . ADOBE MOVMEM. One of the many distinctive feature of a foreign people to attract a stranger on entering Sew Mexico ia the . adobe (dobe) castle of the natj-fe. The arch tecture of the Mexican ,. adobe is simple and primitive, being constructed of .clay and mojdedtouit the convenience and taste of the owner. In the rural districbi of me Tenitoryby .which is meant all parts outside r of the half-dozen or so commercial centers, these mud houses rarely,' if ever', exceed one storylif height, and are constructed very much after the pattern 6f the backwoodBmaii't shanty," with flat Toof, earth floors'" etc. In Ihe three principal towns of the Territory Santa Fe Albuquerque and Las Vegas the adobe very often assumes 1 an impos ing appearance, in some instances reach ing two and even three stories in height. The clay being susceptible of a smooth finish, the surface of many of these mod err adobes is designed in imitation of granite, brick or such other pattern as may best su't the-fancy of the owner. To each adobe, in town or country, ia attached a plaza, either rear or front Tha wl-tw"ln .Matt nan farmer or town citizen constructs his i residence, olose to the design of a barrack or corral, with a wall, from twelve to fifteen feet . high, surrounding an area of - ground suffi ciently large to meet the requirements of his household. The. only entrance, to this incaosnre is by a gateway, ,. , i The several apartments of, the family are. arranged within and around, the in-, closure, without other opening than a door, leadinjr to the plaza or, court-yard, wnere a structure of mud from three to Bix feet hich andj beannfr a close re-. semblance to a bee-hive serves for a bak- rv and other kitchen purposes. By thia. stvla of architecture the Mexican senor not only draws the line of caste,', but " is protected from, severe .'now arid sand storms'that sweep, ' over the Temtory at irregular intervals. These jmud: struc tures are said to be Very ocWortable 4 mm in winter and cold in summer, it i ia claimed bv the natives that a properly- . 1 eonstructed adobe can be used with conv .ee Missoxtbi " has weekly newspaper which ha' suspended and been revived thirteen' different times. That's what ups ht he called Hyoig out eorofie. i