Published by Roanoke Publishing Co. k'fOR GOD, FOR COUNTRY AND FOR TRUTH." W. FLKTCHEB AUSBONj EDITOR. C. V. Vf. ACBBON, B08INKBS MA.HAQBB. VOL.111. PLYMOUTH, JN. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1892. NO. 44. The Baltimore' Sun- thinks that Pro fessor Koch's alleged consumption euro was tiro Ecientitic failure of the year. There is more genuine physical culture in productive labor, avers the Detroit ' Free Press, than there is in a fancy gym aa urn. 16 ingenuity of the American people tshown Irom ttio lace toat luuy three f oatthVpf jlae entire manufacturing cap ital of this country, or $6,000,000,000 is based upon patents. I A Russian city is trying a novel plan, to produce good servant?, by giving prizes to every servant who can show a record jof. services performed to the.satis faction of her employers for the terra of two rears.,. The money for . the prizes Lrtyjfrsometv: raises bv sellirisr nass-books , . v " to the girls who wish to enjoy its bene fits. In these pass-books are inscribed . the testimonials' of employers., y. ,, 'sPVS-the. last session of the Cali- fnia'" Ljfgfelttrej' ; a law was passed f4fkia ij,t(hekity of the Country' Board of Horticultural Commissioners to in spect orchards, nurseries, or other places in their jurisdiction" J": where they shall deem it necessary. ' By said law it is 'also their duty, .if such localities are 'found infestefl with the scale insuct, the codlin moth, jor other' pests injuri ous to plants or trees, to notify tbt owner of such a' fact, and they shall request such owner to eradicate or de stroy ths said pests wkhin a time sped , -fied. ' " ' ' . -. The total fleet of Chile, including transports and all typfes, wood and com posite, numbers' thirtyfour; but, except- ' jingthe Magellane3 - and O'Higgins, the fighting wooden . stiips,' says Harper's .Weekly, are nearly all "lame ducks," as the sailors phra3e it. We have certainly (fifteen effective wooden snips, including ,the two frigates Pensacola Knd Lancaster, '; iwhieh are in every way , better built arid ' equipped than .any Chile could isend against them ; and as "a reserve, on both coasts, a large fffiet of merchant-vessels, jfrom which blockaders, fighting, des patch, transport and torpedo vessels ol an excellent character could be drawn. Dr. Leslie E. Keeley, who has en gaged in reforming drunkards by the bi chloride gold curefaunouces that he has discovered a specific, for the grip. ' Ht Jsaye,: 4 'Assafoetida, in dose3 of sixteen jgrains adminstered four times a day, will jcompletely break up the worst case of 'grip at any stage of itj developement." yAssafcetida is very common ana ea9y tc procure, observes the JNevr York lade- pendent, ahfho vlpd ot" DrrKeelehs .recommendation can be very quicxly 'teBted. If if Houldhirove;to : Be " - a sure Jcurehe will.erifctied to the'grattfucb-. I of the world,t 4east of that Jarge par lof the world which has Je'eu ' subject' ta imis very naia3suig.iisusse. - .. Modern inAQd Xet!''!. "W to.-' introduced into China, . contract' with: an EnlisU fiTn having been'made '"fdi the supply pt .complete Bessemer plant, i.to include wt five-ton converters with" , icupolas, blftig eniues, cranes and lother machinery. The contract also in- . eludes the sopply'-of the machinery for a; uarge rau m4U4; pmw umif wu, twenty pud&lfag-furnaces, "and two blast 'furnaces of .the Cleveland type, the whole being for an-output of-100. tons of pig iron daily. ThbSe works are to be located rear the citj of vHankcw on thes slope ol the Hanyatfg-lWls. lb- is further stated that a foreign technical staff for the con duct of these works has been secured. The fire losses in the United States and Canada in the year 1891 aggregated the enormous sum of $137,716,150, the heaviest annual losses by fire which the country has sustained since 1872, the year of the great Boston fire. The loss by that conflagration alone was $S0,000, 000, while the loss by the Chicago fire in 1871 was upward of $200,000,000. ' Vfhh the exception of tne tro years, 1871 . and 1872, there has 'not been' a year in the history of the country when the destruction of property by fire has been as great . as in the year just closed. This does not' speak well ?;for the.im- 'provements that have been niade in fire proof construction, the provision bf fire annunciators and automatic extinguish ing apparatus, and the enormous annual outlay by the greafcf. cities for the in creased equipment and efficiency of fire departments. There is evidently, a screw loose" somewhere outside of the .fire plugs. THE . UTOPIAN FARMER. Come bere.my dear, I want ter say a word or two ter you 'Bout what I think's the proper thing for me 'n' you ter do. . Ye've gave me mighty good advice sence we n. was wed that day . Way back In Eixtv -one, 'n' now Pd like to have ye say " Ef you don't think I've got a right ter do aa others does, r . '2S' sell the crops before they grows, jest like them Easterner?, s ... . Why, Meg, a man out in Noo York hez sold a lot o' corn . ' Thet's several thousand bushels- more then what the country's borne 'N got his money too, I'm told, 'n' didn't have a peck ' ' Y- Of grain o! any kind in hand to back his lit- jtle spec, i . , ' He cleared a hundrid thousand cash! W Meg, that's more'.n we . ; Have cleared atfarmin' all our days, or ever will by gee I' .'-.'. ' 'N' I can't say I sees the use o workin' day by day ... 'N' only sellin' what we raise for mighty !ifc tlepay, When them as hasn't any grain can sell np there in town A million pecks f wheat 'n' corn, 'n' git their money down. -The modern plan's a dandy Meg, 'n' ef we makes it go. I'll get you that planner, 'n' the trottin'. '' .. horse for Joe. We'll raise the mortgage off this roofn" -.t. .. paint the qld barn red, W send the gals to Pari?, France, and buy a rosewood hed. w en gee new carpets ror tne floors, 'nViecp a hired man, Ef only I can go to town 'n' learn to work the plan. 'N mebbe, Meg, I'd make enough ter run ifor Governor, Or get sent down to Washln'ton a full- -' fledged Senator. I tell yer, gal, this is an age thet beats crea : ; tion. Say, . What would yer fatherve said, d'ye think, t:; if he wuz here to-day, ...... Ter see folks sellin' wheat and corn, and hull .' cars full o' rye. 'N' leven-twelf ths of all they, sold nowhere ? V tut in their eye? jsow te wouid yell ter think of us a-makin b' gd at sellin' fellers things we haven't J.really gotl , What's thlt ye say? It isn't straight to sell . what ye don't own? W if I goes into the spec, I goes it all alone?' The music on the planny ye think' would' - , drive yer mad. . If it was bought from sellin' things ye never rightly had? r Wall, have yer way; Til let it go; I didn'-t mean no barm; ' But what is straight in cities can't be crooked on a farm. V .. . John K. Bang?, in Harper's Magazine. ALICE GUMBLEfOiTg CAT. 1 BT W. 1. HENDERSON. " UCH like Brer Rab bit was the village of Uumbletown in that it lay low jal But nevertheless it Q boasted ,:the proud W nossession of a ho tel, seven churches, a wholesale store" and a small steam- fire engine of " brilliant appearance and un tried ability r. otay, : there was also a high school, the Guttob'etown Free Academy as it was called At which the yp.fth ot both sexes applied their ,ruby lips.to the Pierian Spring with e.di7 fyisg .-results. . The tcaool prospered with s large and unctuous prosperity, and the number ot its scholars increased and" multiplied until it became necessary to engage an additional professor. He came, irom no maixer wuere-u was over, the hills and far away. And he looked it. He was a wonderfully handsome man, and his name was Bartholomew Spunk. He was-a chemist by profession, and he had become so fond of communing with nature in her secret moods that it was well nigh impossible to induce him tj communicate with anybody elee; es pecially if anything else had iorfg hair aid wore skirts. Professor Spunk had no fear of unmentienable chloride nor of indescribable oxides; but he was afraid of woman,' lovely woman. She was not afraid of bim, however; but, so far a she was of Gumhtetown extraction, she spent much of her time in endeavoring to get a good look at the Professor's eyes, which were said to be very beauti ful. . ' - ' Bartholomew Spunk took up his aboo m a moss-covered boarding-house, where the fried steaks and the coffee grounds sang together as morning stare, and the cold boiled ham came out on the eastern horizon as the sun slipped down the west. The Professor came and went in silence, and he lived his daily life in hii own solitary fashion. Every evening he went out in the garden beside the house and smoked his big briarwood pipe, a relic ol college days. The garden was pretty, and just on the -other side bf the fence Vas another still prettier. The Prolcssor frequently peered through the lence at this garden and wondered 'who kept it in such exquisite order. "If he Mm- ''. mi bad, known that every time he peeped through that fence he was watched closely and by a young woman, 'he would have sunk through the earth, if hV could In the next bouse lived the remnants of bne of tho primeval families of . Gum bletown. Even that isolated village had old families and blue blood, and when old Jonathan Gumbleton, after whom the town Was named, had died forty years before, he left two young sons, who hastened , to marry and extend the family.: The widow of one of these sons lived in the house to which belonged tho pret ty garden. . She had a daughter, and that daughter's name was Alice Mary Gumbleton, Blue blood frequently de clines to associate with beauty, but in this case it did not. Alice Mary Gum bleton was as beautiful a creature as one, or even two, could wish to see. Her hair was as black as the shades of night; her large eyes were a deep, 'soft brown, her complexion was like the bloom on a lily ; and her mouth well, there is no way to describe her mouth except by saying it was one of the most enticing features on earth. Miss Alice Mary Gumbleton resembled Professor Barthol omew Spunk in one thing she was bashful. Not all the awkwardly ex pressed admiration which the swains of Gumbletown had laid so generously at her feet had 'ever been sufficient to in spire her with the smallest portion of that, self-confidence which usually ani mates a belle. She was hopelessly shy, and her conversation was terribly mono syllabic except to her cat. Alice Mary Gumbleton had a Maltese cat upon which she lavished the treasures of her heart and her intellect. Every one who ever saw that cat said it was the wisest looking animal in the world. And it ought to have been wise; for Alice Mary talked to it by the hour and gave it the choice results of her long pe riods ot silence and meditation. The name -of the cat was Jane. !; And the cat was as beautiful as its name. Yet in spite of Alice's devotion to this animal she was obliged one day to speak to the Professor, or. I .should. say that it was because of . her devotion. ' v A few doore away from the home of the fair Alice dwelt a hideous youth whose favorite companion was a large bull-dog. This bull-dog was like unto the rest of his kind. He loved not man nor beast. -. His soul was filled with per? petual gloom, and he ' went about the world. with a depressed 1 .might say hans-doa look " which boded no one good.' One day. Alice was aroused from a deep meditation by a series of heart rending" shrieks followed, by. a - dire dis cord of hissing and spitting which she at once recognized as being the product cf the energies of Jane. Rushing to -the window she beheld the dear cat mount ing 0 the fence ' with less dignity than haste. At the foot of the fence stood the,, obnoxious bull-dog, looking very angry. ' " ' "Oh, .my beautiful Jane!" -screamed Miss Alice.. She rushed from the house with' ahfoOm.in her hand prepared 'to meet death in the defense of her pet.. But when, the dog wheeled round and pre,'-.' pared to reist her onslaught, she paused and changed her tactics. , "Go away, you nasty, beast 1" she said. But the dog failed to catch the idea, and remained, where, he . vus, still keeping a watchful eye on the cat. . ' 4Oh,dearl" said Alice, 'what shall I dol" -'-';; V'' At that moment the Professor entered his garden by the front gate, having just returned; from school. His. eyes fell upon Alice, who'was a lovely picture of despair,-as she stcod gazing atthe fero cious, dog' and the unhappy cat; " The Professor was . speechless with admira tion. He stared at Alice as he had sever -look at a woman before. Then his scat tered senses began to return to him, and he felt ihe blood mounting . to his fqre .head, while his heart was. going like a, steam fire-engine. He gazed about him and finally perceived the cat, but not the dog. . " "Can I shall I that is I beg par don but but do you want ths cat I" he stammered. "Yer, sir; if you if you p--please, sir," was the reply. The Professor advanced slowly and hesitatingly toward the fence. Sud denly he heard a low growL . He paused and looked around; but, seeing nothing, again advanced. "Oh!" exclaimed Alice; "take care. there's, a h-h-hole in the fence; he can get through." The Professor stooped ana peerea oe- tween the pickets. . Then ne saw the bull-dog. The next moment the Pro- fessor had vanished into the house. "Ah-hl" screamed Alice; "please to come bak and save Jane." She had miscaculated the Professor's gallantry. In another moment- he re-, appeared, bearing. in his hand a huge navy ravorv er. '... , . "Please go into-r-the nouae,.' he said; "I might hit you.' , . s But Alice remained transuxed with breathless anticipation. The Professor advanced cautiously toward the fence. When he had reached a position from which he could see the do r, he pointed tna pistol carefully, turned away his head, shut bis eyes and pulled tne trigger. There was a tremendous report; epliDters flew in every direction and a cloud of smoke obscured the Professor's view. - The astonished dog laid back his ears and fled down the street as if ho thought the end of the world had come. No sooner had he gone than Alice rushed . forward, seized the unhappy cat, anl, pressing the animal convulsively to bet bosom, rushed into the nouse. When the Professor got the smoke out of his eves, and found that girl, Cat and dog had all disappeared he marveled greatly at the extent or ms own prowess; and had ho not caught a glimpse of Alice through the window, would cer tainly have gone and surrendered him self to the town constable The next day the Professor rose early and robbed bis landlady. He stole a saucer of milk and went out to look for for the gray cat, of course, ne found Jane basking in the sunlight. As a basker. in the sun light there was no cat that could sur pass ' Janei The Professor stole through the opening in the fence and set the saucer ot milk Under Jane's whiskers. At that instant a window flew open, a fair head popped out, and a timid voice said: - "Thank you." ' Then the window shut with a hang, the Professor jumped clear over the cace and disappeared. When he returned from school that afternoon he found a cote on his table. It saicL . I meant "thank you" for saving Jane, not for milk. , . That was all. Day after, day the Pro fessor fished vainly for an opportunity to see that girl again; but he could not'. He had vague suspicions that she watched him from behind half-closed blinds and half -drawn window curtains; - but he could not verify his suspicions. They were true enough. PoorAlice'l She was in a miserable state of mind on account of her own dreadful forwardness in sendv ing that note. But the damage was done . now. The Professor sought consolation in the society of Jane. With stolen saucers of milk he enticed the cat through the' fence, and finally up to his room. There he used to pick the purring animal up, walk about the room with her - in his arms, and mumble ridiculous nonsense in . her dun-colored ear. ' , . She's the mos' boofulst lady, in world, Kitty. Yes, s'e is. Don' yo wag you' ear an- say s'e's not. An' pU p'ofessor, he jus' lubs her um-m-m so" much. But you mustn't tell, Kitty." '' And Jane didn't.; She never said a word about it. It's strange, too ; because when she went home, her mistress .used to seize her and1 embrace her, and say: "Ob, Jane, darling, you've been to see him I . And I'm sure he mugfc.havc kissed you, because you're so lovely. 1 wonder where. Oh," it must have been right there on your beautiful forehead.! There, there, there!" It was strange that Jane held her peace after that; but she was a wise cat,-" and knew that time -works wonders. Perhaps if Jane had known what won ders time had in store, for her but nq matter,' . One day Jane wehi to the Pro--fessor's .'-room when He wis out.'; Jane', waited, some time," 'and? then, becoming' restless, she began to wander about the room. Over in a corner she saw a lot of bottles. .She decided to examine them.. She did so. One4' of them feH"oyet against another. There was a flash, a report, a yell of anguish ; and Jane rushed ' from the jhotlse-- a sad . ani.- grewsome sight. ' Hairless, black,- and . feeble, . the" once glorious Jane went -home and : lay down at her mistress's feet;' 'A ,quaj of an hour later, Professor Bartholomew Spunk,- entering the gate of. bis plain and substantial .bording-ho.use,- was con fronted by the figure , of ..a ; weepfng .4It's all your fault!" exclaimed, Alice. ; "If you had let my darling Jane..aioner and hadn t coaxed her into jour iouse, it would -.have been all right. Now sow she's gone and gone and got herself-all all blown, up and she'll die and, ioh, and oh--oh'-? I, h--hate. your-; , - v;-.':.m,; '-' Bartholomew; - Spunk . turned deadly. pale. ..(- - ..-. v-c. t.'Si "Alas IV he said; "ana is jane-iown- up ? But but what can T say I ' P6r haps that is Mis3 Alice may be fell ;will you take me instead of. thV cat?" r- : v ? ... : She looked up Into his eyes Then she decided that a gray cat wa not-the help that was meet for her. Puck.8 Is Snrtr a Fertllizerl, - ten The query is snow a fertilizer! is often asked. There cannot be a better reply, perhaps, than this one by the Country Gentleman: It. was common many years ago to give .much credit to snow as the "farmer's fertiliser,'! but later in vestigation proves..- it as of very slight value at best, -mesmounc. oi nitrogen which is absorbed and biought down in rain and snow in one-whole year is only about one-sixth' part of the amount re quired for the growth of crops, and it is therefore ouite insufficient to feed' a growing crop, even if it remained, long l enough in the soil to prove in any degree effective. But the snow can secure'only a small portion of the yearly feupP1 nl .therefore it is safe to make no account of the snow as a manure. ' To go a little more into detail, the results cjf pareiul 'examinations by emi nent scientific men show that the total amount of ammonia brought down in a whole year in the rain, .dew and snow is about eight pounds to. an acre 6 f surf ace, varying somewhat with seasons and lo calities; while in a crop of twenty-eight bushels of wheat there were iorty-nve pounds of nitrogen , ia two and one-half tons of meadow hay there were fifty-six pounds, and in two and sue-half tons of clover hay there were 108 pounds. New York. World. - i- ii Two centuries and seven different men claim the invention of. gunpowder, LARGEST AMERICAN DEER. HTTimwa THE ELK IN THE WILDS OF THS FAB WEST. A Magnificent Animal Shooting Iwo Bull Ellcs While They Were Engaged in Deadly Combat. I TO my mind, says Civil Service in the New York Sun, one of the most attractive sports of the West is elk uuntincr. The elk used to be found over almost the entire United States, but it now exists, in any numbers, only in the great . mountain chains of the Rockies and the coast ranges in Oregon and Washington. It is without excep tion the lordliest ol the deer kind, and in size is second only to the moose. Nothing can surpass the grand beauty of an old bull elk bearing -; his twelve-tined antlers aloft with easy grace as he roars out his challenge to all rivals.. In some parts of the We?t afar . from the settlements the elk is still plenti ful. He offers to the hunter not only the grandest of trophies . in the shape of his magnificent head and horns, but also an abundant supply of the best possible meat. There is no venison upon which one can live so long without tiring as elk meat, the only drawback being that it. must be eaten hot, as the fat turns into regular tallow as soon as it cools.. . During the summer, while their horns are in the velvet, no true sportsman will "shoot the' elk, nor will he shoot cows and calfs at any time save when absolutely in' need of meet; but in September the velvet drops off his horns, and then each of the master bulls begins to collect a harem, of .cows, from five or six to twenty or thirty in number. He keeps all the small bujls afar from this berdfc.and wages furious war against ,every rival of! the same size and antler growth as' himself . At this season the bull nas a very extraordinary and peculiar note; The frontiersmen call it whis tling, but it is not like a whistle at all; it is more like a bu'zle, consisting of a . bar r.two.of music on a rising scale.and . then another,, bar or two on a falling ,scale, fpilowed sometimes by three or four flute-like notes. It is most exciting to creep up to a bull when he is whis tling in this way. ' Once I shot two bulls while they wert engaged in deadly combat with each other. I had been lying out in a high alpine valley over night with a com panion.. We had no blankets with us, nothing but our . jackets, in which we had slept by the aide of the fire all night. Before dawn we were off, threading our way through the cool, dim archways tf the pine forest, and just at sunrise we , heard, half ,a mile in pur front, the clat ter ot. horns: and s thesavage. squealing. - which marks an elk fight. Stealing up softly, we 'were soon-within 125,. yards of the combatants," iwp powerluV and , evenly-matched bulls. -They fought by charging each' other I&e rams; the shock being tremendous... as '.the great beasts, with, bristling ",haiK flashing eyes, and lowered horns, crashed together. .' unce the antlers were interlocked each strove by sheer 'strength and address to -force his opponent backj and they1 stood for .minutes ' straining with' their haunchei gathered under them, squealing; fiercely at times ; then the j would separate, retire .some little distance, fronting each, other - with glarirfseyeSi8jidJt.hen.come togetner. The great objeet of ; each. was: to .catpn. the ether Hn '-the flanki The hair atfd tM. in itKi tranl- gii atiVmMra nfthfl i waDitias te elk is more properly callej f -.V Jti tJL , Lki.' w offer a nearly impenetrable" shield ; . hjit ,the- skin Js softer ph" the flant"ad. haunches and almost '- he only sericais damage that is evfir .doner in a fight is "when- the -victor is able.to. catch he v eaker animal in the flank i as he turns, or' pverfcake arid 'punish him as he 'flcs. I have neyer knqwB'hord to go thraiga; the hide around' the although yt ter . -a conflict t&eilesh.w1ill show great briises there under the sk'." jtim parti'aiar, instan.ee, howevervil iatirrupted th con? flict'long before- itebad-. time to eoxxe to a fatal conclusion; 'tilling both .coobat "ants one by a stfol la the shoulder as "tW 'wrestled toffeher.'s.rid;,theofhjfr b? ' - a bullet ia the flank as it, rah; JQn Jiad , had no breakfast that morning,' anl' the., first thing we did was to cut put. u strip of steak from alongside toe. loins, -build .a fire and roast ' on willow twigs ' UtUe kabobs of luscious meat. ' . 1 ' ' '.' If taken in the open; an elk :tn be run down by a good horse. ' Ihaxa never myself tried the. experiment, bu three years ago, near my ranch, VcQwbgywith whom I have often worked pn,roivd-ups performed the feat. He was 'n-..the round-up, and was driving some cattle put ox a brusn paten at ine - uoitcyi tu coulee when an elk sprang; -tip 'irectly aneau vi uim sau u yiv ,ing trot characteristic of the. ipeeiss. . A, trotting elk can go aU day, , buAi - if it should be forced .to gallop,, though, it goes -very fast for a; few hundreo. rods, it speedily tires. The cowboy on his soeedv. wiry .littl; .pony instanly dashed at the elkfprped it to -gallop, Mi kept: it on the run for nearly a milej then.. it began to fag v-Be( then caina. miongside and threwhis rope' over the horms With the utmost exertions,, however, he was unable to master it until anothcx cow puncher rode up and shot it with a re volver. .. Seals when, basking-, place one of their number on guard to-give the alarm in case of danger- Tho signal is a quick clap of the flippers on a rock. Rabbits signal with their fore, paws and have regular signals and calls, . SELECT S1FTIN6S. There are twenty-nine kinds of Metho dists. Twelve average tea plants produce one pound of tea. . A pet dog in Paris, France, wears itockingt and shoes. Butler County, Penn., has a genin, who dreams the correct location of oil wells. Poor persons are supplied with spec tacles free of charge by a Boston (Mass.) society. The proportion of pure Anglo-Saxon words in the Bible ia uinety-eeven per cent, of the whole. British horses were famous when Julius Caj3ar invaded the country. He carried some of them to Rome with him. An old well m California which, for a number of years, has furnished excellent water, has suddenly turned into an oil well. In the sleepy littl town of Winborne, in Dorsetshire, England, is an ancient library in which all the books are chained to the selves. It is a common sight among the Es quimaux, according to a traveler's story, to see a nursing intant with a quid of tobacco in its mouth. The National Library.in Paris, France with its 2,000,000 printed books and 160,000 manuscripts, is the largest liter try storehouse in the world. , Late tests prove that the strongest wood growing in the United States is the "nutmeg hickory" of Arkansas. The. weakest is the yellow or West Indian birch. In a recent libel suit in Detroit,Mich., there was a diversity of opinion as to the verdict, ranging from six cents to $60, 000. A compromise was Anally reached on $11,000. ' Bergen, Norway.boast a paper church large' enough to seat 1000 persons. The building is rendered waterproof by a Bolution of quick-lime, curdled milk and whites of eggs. The Chinese make what is called "Chi-wah-hi," or grass cloth, from the fibre of the common nettle. It is said to make a splendid cloth for tents, awnings, etc. When made into belting for machinery t is said to have twice the strength of leather. , - Walter S. Campbell, of Chicago, III., met his sister Alice at the general deliv ery window in the Indianapolis . (Ind.) postoffice . ihe other day for the first time in twelve years. The family lived Keokuk, Iowa, but Walter, at sixteen years of age, ran away, and had. heard nothing of his old home until this meet- In the language of the millions of China and Japan there is no term that corresponds with oiw - God.T Every student of missions knows ..well the abiding difficulty in China over the ques tion of a term tor God. Both' the na tive Christians and the foreigd mission aries are divided among themselves over this perplexing question; - : " The oldest rose bush in ; the world is at Hildersheim, in Hanover, Germany. . 1 t J , - 1 nn n Wn..aan) It was pittmei more iiiuu- ire uiuumuu . years go by Charlemagne. in commem oration of a visit made to- him by the ambassador of the -Caliph Haroun al Haschid.... The bush is now twenty-three feet high and covers, thirty-two feet of the-wall. The 6tem Cis only . two inches in diameter : . - - Boots in Drains. - .-Recently, in the yard of a public .school in Philadelphia, a drain from the out-buildings was found . to be choked, and on examination a little root of a maple tree had been found to penetrate a very small pore in the terra cotta pipe; yet so rapidly did these roots- increase, after they found there was plentjt".of food at command in the drain, that although the pipe was eight inches in diameter,several bucketfnls . ol. small, hrous, roots were taken out, and which had completely choked all circulation through the drain. It was; a wonderful example of the in crease of roots.under circumstances favor able through the abundance of food. It is said that ia this case no trouble is antic ipated ia future, years, as it is believed thatTa bucketful or two of salt brine, passed' through the drain .'-once or twice a year, will effectually scorch off any fibres that may attempt the same frolic in future. Where, however, this remedy cannot be applied, it will' be" a caution not to have drains in the vicinity of the toots of trees. Moehan's Monthly. : ' Ylolets are"Pnrlue.: What would you say if you were told tha't there'i no such thing in thd world as a real" bin viofetlThere lsn t, as serts a hotaaist,. inrl.ne; San' Francisco Call.. ...Tha fasWpnatile': sweet-scented violet, or viola oddrata,. 'naturalized from Europe," and the viola cordata, or -"heart-leaved violet," its near relative of American "woods, are . probably the spe cies which have given rise to the popular superstition.. But they are purple,as any body may see who examines the spec trum. He who cannot distinguish, a decided tinge of red in the petals must be' color-blind.- ' The handsomest of all native American violets' is the "bird-foot," - oi viola pe data, -The centre is quite conspicuous by reason of its pretty white and golden eye. When a violet ia not purple it is either yellow or white.