)tv$i$ rcgouiiuu EVERY SATURDAY MORN1KG, evtjh or Aoveimuxc i coiyf One men, irtt wwtion. $2-00 Each MbHqwent (ntertbw, .-. . . . .- UOO , I Vj . 1 TUaelrftr. trj cmm. Mum uur.a tt locil calaau. Xntii r. . ... - . i UL. IE3. BULL. a - MM orricnj..t; ...... cooit, htkkkt. , orr-osiTS Tor corn-noun. Rate of Subscription lu Coin: oe Yew. U 00 SlxilOBOui ISO Tkree Monl&t I SO SIesU Copies JO . t' ' - Mivnuisr "VOL. 3. PENDLETON, "UMATI tL'A (X)UNTY, OKEGON, SATURDAY, DEOEiTBEIl 1, 1877. NO. 9. J OB WORK ffl. The Minstrel. I aiu.no gifted child of song,. , Xo harper old and gnr, To win the smile of courtly throw:. With somcencbanting lay; Yet still Jo friendship old and true. I'll touch the tuneful strinr. And o'er thy heart as blUsful dew, It&juusie,softly fll"-, J would bring hack the youthful page. His true Iot, time aul-place Theyroud father iu liU re,- ' iiAndpstthemtscetofa.ee; . And humbly though the cift my be, - and Weak my'mlnstrel skill, i .lis alt I hare to offer thee. And am thy debtor still. Lady.1 tbe silent hour of night, r When starlets twinkle free. Are fraught with viipns of delight, - . And memories of thee; , Aid when the pale moon softly smiles, Upon the other main. And glides among the f tirrj It-lcs, I list thy voice again. 1 would recall some lorelit green, . Where islsadjorera smiled, ; Acd bring again the'festal tecbe. At Moorish Irsnlld; I'd bring them from earth' fairest spoil. FrOB island, lake and tea, Tct lady, all .my waking thought Are evermore of thee. Ah! Tain It were tome glad refrain, To other theme than thii. Fori would hare no note of pain. In thl tweet dream of bliss; Dear lady, a I kneel to thee. And pen thl tuneful line, Lrt Iotc so changeless plead fur me. Oh! wilt thou not be mine A Doctor's Storv. I am a doctor. I lire in London, and in one of the most crowded localities. I had U-en in my present abode two Tears, and had never had a patient from the more aristocratic circle, when one night, about 11:30, I was startled bj a violent ring at my bell, and baring just got to bed alter a hard day work, 1 can't say the summons was agrteable. However, I ran to my window at once, and, thrusting my bead out into the rain, cried, "Who is there!" AToiceaaswered, "Only I, doctor. Its an nrgeat case. Piease come down t the doorl" I hurried oa some clothe, pd down stairs, and opened the door. There stood, in the full light f the ball lamp, an el derly' lady, dressed in mourning. She put out the smallest of hands, in a fije, black kid glove, and said, pileouslv, "Are vou the doctor! -Ye-," I said. " rheu come wuh me,' said she. "D n't deUj. Tt' life or death. Come! Itierried ,on my overcoit caught up my umbrella, and, fiering my arm to the old lady,walked down the we; atrcct with her: -Yoa must be. my guide, madam,"" I said. "I do not know where you live.'" She. jusiinj.ly gve ?hs a street and number that surprised me still more. It was a tolerably aristocratic quarter of the .town. "Who is ill, madam, I inquire, "a -grown pers m,-or achihir "A youn-f Wiy my diu said. - J .' - i : she r "Suddenly V -"Yes, MidJeuly, he atiswered. .-Do jon keep a LrougUamI Yo j ahuuldiLaTe iiad it 4uL if you du. tVe would hare ieen able t go faster." I keep.no4nvejance," I said. ?Perhaps ynu are or!" le si, agery. - -Certainly not rich,"" I said. "Care her, ami I'll make you rich, 1 saLL in a .sort of.supjireiStU shriek. " Core her,a3d I'll gsfe you anything yon csk. I don't care fur moey. " I am roll ing in J"ld. Cdreher, andjQIJwwer it ou you." "You ,are excited, nialam," I said. '-Pray -be calm . rfkimV shesaid. "Calial Jjot ioa fdoaVknoWs Kuthtia hean.' t We Tiid reactfed the street 4h(T V.sH in -dicated, and were at the door of me of its hoases. The. old lady a-iomded tlw step, and opened he. door with a latch lbey.- A-lwtt burned iu the hall; anwUier In one of HM 'parlors, -the 'furniture- of which was drajed Titf d shrouded in white linen. ; f "Wait here, sir, if yoa please," she: said, as she led me into one of these. I waited what I thought a mast uares PfhJjtime'intbktglopmyJparlor. I be gan to grow a little ncrvous.wLeu a stout, short, red-faced woman, bustled into the TOO IB. "I Jbeg your pardon, sirhe said, ia a singular tone, such as one who had com-1 mittcd a speech P) .memory might use; I -'but Biy missus the IJy who brought you here is Tcry nerroux, and needle. y ' alarmtd. Sbebcgj yur acceptance of the customary fee, and there 1 no need of your f erviccs." Thusspeakiosrbe handed me a guinea, courtesied, and ojxrned the door for me. I bowed, expressed my pleasure tliat the patient was better, and departed. It was a queer sort of adventuic, rather amusing than otherwise; bi-side, I had a good fee. I roc early next morning, and piid n couple of vitits lef re breakfast. Re turning, to my att'inirhaienf, I found sitting in my consulting-r. om the lady of the niglit before. SIus vros at T en tered. "What must -yon think of meJfche said. But no matter. Jly .(laughter is very dear to ine.nud I have beard of,your skill. She is worse again. Can yon call some timVto-duy, as early aj possible, at my house?" "I will be there fn an hour. The lady Jook out her parse. '. " "I am an old-fashioned woman, he said. "I retain old-faahioned habiU. In my day the doctor receired his fee on the a pot. It wa, in ordinary caei,a guinea. Will yuu reccire it now?" I did aot know what to say, but she laid the money on the tablc.aml departed. I ate my breakfast, and, having dressed myself carefully ,made my way-tn the old lady's hue. I Vnock-d. Ttie dior was opened by the stout female wli-i had dis missed me the night before. "The doctor," 1 said, by way tf ex planation, "Ahns"d she. "Hat misfits .called you in agsint" "Ye, I answered. "There it no ned, I aunf yon, ir," she said. "I can't really ak yoa in. There's no one ill lure. -It's a whim of Lmtssus. I m a better judge of illness than she. .No nerd ol a doctor! ' 1 left the hUM, of courxt, partly In dudgeon, partly in amazement. Tnrec weeks pased by, when, lo! the old lady agnin. She walked in'o my cnsulting-nKHn, dressed as before, aa grt'l" agiuUed, aa caefully -pallte "Sir," sue said, "again I trouble yoa My -MKir daughter! Come at once." "Madam," 1 answered, -it is a doctor's duty, as it should t hli ple-uurn, to obey such calls; but you are aware that I bare been sent from your door twice without seeing the patient. ' Allow me to atk vou a question are v.a the mistress of that uoiocr 'llearcn kn-w I m, sid the old lady. "I have lired there for forty years. I am the only person under that roof who lias the right to give an order. "And the person -jrho sent me- away -My old servant, Margaret.' -D.d she do it at joar order" "lo, sir; it was a piece of presump tion. But Margaret means wrlL She loves us." "Then, madam, if I aecowpaay yu, I shall see the patient" -Assuredly, sir." I put on my hat igiin, and we went out of the bouse together. Wc exchanged very few words as we walked the streets. At the door of her hoan: the old lady paused. "Don't mind Margire," she whispered. "She means welL" Then she ascended the steps. At the last one the d.wr was opened to ns by the woman I had twice sees before. "The doctor must se my chiW, Mar gsre,'" said the old lady. Margaret stepped back. "Walk in, sir," was sit shetaW. The old lady beckoned ire to follow her. I did so. She went up stairs, and opened the first door we came to. It was an empty bed room. She closed it w.th sigh. The next room into which she led rae was also empty. So were all theoth- ers. In effect, wc visited six apartments. only ne of which seemed to be recularlr occupied as a sleeping chamber; and at the last the lady turned to me with a strange glitter in her eye. "Stolen," she said, 'Sto'ea; somcboJy has stolen my girl. Sir, do yea know, I think it mu-t be Satan!"' Then a steady step crossed the sill. Margaret came In. and the old lady.burst ing into tears, suffered her to lead hsr away. As I made my way down .uirs, Mar garet rejoined mc -You nadcrttaod, i cow,", she said. "You see this htst' 6r"iy is not in her right mind." UdomleedIsaid.' ' i i Sie had ailaubter, on or," saidl Mr "garef,'and the girl a jih-ity ciciture of sixteen ran away with a bad tana. She came tack home ooe day,aad begged for- gireness. uer mother turaqji;er Xrom the door, in a fury. It was night; the raiu and hail beat down on too pjor thing, and the wind buffeted her. There is no knowing what happened to her that night; but, next morning, the lay dead in the police station. H-r ta-itLer ad dress was piiiued to her babya.cotbrng. and tbcT-tjrpoglj her bime- From tht awful iday,!Lviny mistress who, iii Ijtr remorse and delirium, called in twenty doctors to bring her dead daughter to life has always been doing what he has d nc to you. 1 iry to Keep the jwcret gener ally, bat some find it out, and others think h rd t i gs of ut. I thought I would let you know tlie irut. If the contrive to come agin to yoo,- you can always promise to call, and so be rid or her. Poor soul! beba nobody in the world but me now.' She' punished for her iiardrie-s, at any rate, sad you'll ex cuss her cniduct." IIO Ae. I could say nothiag. "Mar garet opened the d or for sue, arnf I walked out into the fresh nir. As I looked back upon the house, wl'b all jUtl-gatjctJ it seeruil O'me to hare a haunted air, as though ttie gliwt of the p-.or girl atilldiovered ajuai.it. GoiT only kdo-show many fearfnl-se-cret such handsome jiome may at times shut in," I said to myself, as I turned my back up-rn it gladly, I have never st-en the poor old lady since that boar. Probably Margaret tbas kept loo close wa ten opou her. ATuocoBTrcLGooo Mas. A middle aged woman has called at the TKiioffice two or three times daily for the past week to see if there a any rniil to her ad dress. Ilr-r auxiety finally bee-tine so great that she explained that she was exiecting m .nvy from her bus band, who was elf on his annual vacation. Yesterday morning she Was made glad by nceitiug a postal ord from hira. She retired to.oneof the win dows and read aloud to herself: "D-tAtt "Wiru I'd end yra twenty dollars with this, but yoo ce I'd have to pin it oa, an Jsome one might take it ofT, put a counterfeit in iu place, and when I got home vou would be in jail." She read it over again, and there Were tears in her eyes as she mused : "lie's the best mau on earth. Pew lmtinrwU "have been as thoughtful as that. I don't Know gooa money trom bad, and but for his tboughtfulness I might pass this very night in jail. 1 sec no w but n narrow escape I've had, and I'll take the chil dren and go and board with my brother-in-law for the next two weeks." Is Germany it has been strictly forbid den to build school-rooms with windows on both sides, such illpmination always having proved injurious to the eyes of the pupils. Duck-Slioothi'r in Maryland- ' There are "various ways of thooting the ducks of the Chesapeake and its broad atflacnt, the Susquehanna. Gen tlemen for the mst part shoot from "blind" and use decoys; while market gunner u-o the ".ink-boat or the "sight reflector." -Blinds" are any sort of ar- tihcial Gcnceaiment placed at an adran lagci'U point uiion the shore. They gene ally consist of a scit in a sort of box or shelter joint four feet deep, and capable of containing three or four per sons ana a. coupieTl XJrvs.- they are thoroughly wrereoup wilh pine branches and young pine trees, and communicate with the sli -re ly a ptth sim larly helUioI. The water in front is com tiaratirelv shallow, ami. if it contain lls of wild edery oa the b -ttora, i sure to be a feeding ground for the duck. About tbirtv yarus tram the blina" are ancbrrd a fleet of pcrbap a hundred and fifty decoys. They are wo.de duck roug'ily carved aad psintol, bat devised witn a sUict regard far variety ana sex. ai a utile uistance tbey are calculated t j deceive any eye. and they certainly bare a great deal of weight ia determining the action of a tiastiBg flock or "bunch" of ducks. The sink- host is in reality a floating blind. It is nothing more than as anchored box or ooffis with hinged flaps to keep the wa tcr from iavadiog it. The gunner lies on hb back ia it, completely out of sight, and aroand it are placed ihe decoys. It is extremely tiresomo work, but very de structive tj the birds. They float down the stream when shot and are picked up trom a boat stationed b!w. It is a wholesale murderiag sort of thing aad has little -sport" about iu The -aight reflector" is qeite as ba i. It consists of a large reflector behind a common Daub tha lamp aad Hoanie-i upon the bow of a ixut. ice latter is rowed out into toe stream where the deck are "bedded" for the night, and the birds, fascinated by the light, swim to it from every side and bob against the boat la hdpleu con fusion. The number of birds secured de pends only on the caliber of the gua. From twentv to thirty deeks to etch sbnt fired is a common experience. The hanter who uses one of these reflectors maj succeed in getting ioto half a dwzea -beds" in a niht. Another thing be sometimes succeed in is getting a charge o( shot in his body from some in dignant ports m as oa shore. If a nfle is bandy aad aay oae chancel to be Bp and about t the hour, no hesitation U felt at baring a crack at the "pot baa ter's" nefarious light. Jnm "dia wj back utai Ttrrapimf Scnlnrr. The Dead Letter Sale. THE CCUJOCS TU150S SENT BT MAIL THAT SETKfc KXUCUEOTaElE DEsTIXATlOX. In all Gaes where letters aad packages contain valuable, they are returned to the writer or forwarder, if there is any clue to his address, and when neae can be fosed they are of ooars-s re'aiaed ia the dead letter office. The mosey alone which yearly fiads its way into this of fice ranges from $75,000 to $100,009. Daring the last fiscal year the am oust received was 77,0CC.6C, of which C37.17 was returned to the forwarders, and $22,527.-17 remained ia the hand of the department. Simeidet rf the ar tides accumulated may be gaiaod whn it is staled that the list embraces 2,219 miscellaneous articles (inclsdiag wear ing aptu-el of all kinds), 1.375 pieces of je wclry some " very t!u able 1 ,593 books, treating on almost every subject, 203 chromoi, 217 pieces of sneet music, an J 102 stereoscopic vieas. Among the mechanical implements are organ valses, ewiag machiae tvols and needles, lut pah ile cutters,-tuoing-Atfkr saw fl'c, stcd wire a wis, sdss-jrs, Tplrft-guiges, siphons, screas, prcsing-shears, shoe uskcTS tori WaciimitbsVttlA-jurgical intuumeau, etc The list! 1v wearing Mpparel is very long, including as it djc tbunraad of articles, from a pur' of slocicings lo a lady dress. The misoel lanecos srtiQKS nsadacttnwaoaic- n, pocket compssie, necdteoFlf, sun glasses; Ixx.k mark, keys, neodle-cases, papers of pin, razors, spectacles, hair switches and Chi goon tj baby shoes, furciga stamps, sb tmckles, fiUiing tackle, scapula and Agnes Deis, batter flies, faas, crimpers, scent bags, watch cases, roarie, bullet molds, cloth charm, bird w ings, goi eyes, weael, wolf and cooas' kins,itapk!ns, do'U clothing, air gun an 1 pop-gun ammunition, artilieial teeth, tooth-picks, bucklfs, sardines, boxes of shells, pipes, "butcher knives, wax candle, g'ne potr, shut poaches corn-buskers, night ca&, poXechip,' crucifixes, baby rat ties, chewing gum, gas burners, ooe china' ang'el, one pie crust cutter, hats. Corkscrews, whiplashes, d'g collars, rattlesDikes' rattler, pepper boxes, scythe stoaes, three 4 what-ts-its, one squirrel tail, wing of a bit.' Tiincos Wg"LiKE to See. A real lady wlw Can carry a parcel; a father at a place of amuscineut with hi children; ayoung man with a clear eye, and a fresh, virtu ous, vnhackneyed face; a shop girl neat ly dressed, and without sham ornament ation; i man of budncss going home at niglit with a boqucl for his wife; a shop keeper, civil to and p itieat with a poor woman who, wilh a baby across her arm, venture to buy a one shilling Article; a dressmaker who is scientific enough to perfect a "lit" and yet leave your breath ing apparatus in Christian working-condition; a shop that is not an "emporium"; a mil. iter who didn't come from Paris; a jolly domestic who likes the family; a bride with her pet, small house; a young father with his first boy. tt Always" -win fools first. They talk much; and what they have once uttered they will stick to; wheress there is al ways time, up to the last moment, to bring before a wise man arguments "whlchitnay-cutireiy ehang.his opinion. Htlpt. " EtauT girls in Macon, G-, the other day, graduated in gowns of their own make, and then put in type their "com-jiosltions. "The Opinm Fiend." Charles Tyler, known to the New York IKslice as the "Opium PicBd," is ia the Tombs of that city for sb-atiag surgical instruments and ca-es of ruorpMa from physicians. The instruments, he says, he took to.sell"thtthc micht nntcure morphia. To a reporter who visited him hsaid: "My right came is Henry L. Sanford. I was born in jiie Dhtrict of Columbis, aad am twenty-eight ve&rt old. Mr mother was a Tyler, of Virginia, but my lamer was a nortuern man. I hey are both dead. I have brothers and a sister, though they catt me ofl long ago on ac count of my habit of Uking morphine. At twenty I gnuluated from the college oi pnvmacy in uwfiago. i srarteil out a a physician, bat before long I became addicted to .drinking whisky. I found that the habit was injurious to my busi ness; beside, as in all cases, after aahite ihc whisky failed to gire me the satisfac tion itdhl at first. It was then I began to take m rphine. That had a splendid effect oa me, made me lively and anbi ttous, aad gave me aa amount of happi ness I cannot' express to you. , t trans formed me atoace. I became strong and iadepeadest, Nothiag was to "hard for me to andcrtske. I DeculatcJ aad made lot of money. At the end of two years my suKenag begaa. I hsd to be coa staatly ander the influence of the drug. I had married aad lost ray wife, and this made it necessary for me to take stronger doses until my mind became iraprel. I was pat Into a lunatic asylum in Mas sacbasetti, and the doctors said they had never heard of any one who took so much morphine. I was allowed to leave this iastitatwa partially cured. I agsia be gaa taking the drug, aad sooa areraged forty fire graias a day. If I only bad about thirty grain now it would make me so lively I could daace ail around the room. The doctor gives me twenty grains morning and night, but that only en sogh ta keep me alive. I take it by injection. Loag age it failed to hire aay effect oa me whta taken throegh the mouth." Here he bsredhts left arm aad showed the reporter the effect of these injections. They were made by ahypodcrm-c syringe, aad from their frequency his arms, from the shoulders down to the wrists, were oae surface of scars, aad the skia was of a bluish tint. Many of these punctures were not healed, but Ssafsrd declared he was totally devoid of all feeling. One might bore into his flesh wilh a red-hot iron, be said, and he would not fed it, aad as a proof of this he showed sc-srs oa his legs, some as large as a silver baif dstlar, and told .bow he got them. It appears that adversity in ittfallest meat cre came upon him. He lost hi hypo dermic synnge and so procured a com man syrisvgr. This he could not Insert into the flesh without first cutting a bole, lie used to take a razor and cat adsih in his thigh aad then w ith a pair of scissors bore a bole into the flesh, iato which b would iasert the s triage aad inject the raor pfeiae. All the fleshy parts of hit hodv which be could cmveatentir ret at have been cut aad punctured over and over again. "Oaring tielast two yesrsSsaid Ssai ford, "I har takeaorer sixirgriins'bf morphine a dayad I bare often taken orer a drachm iaooe day. Ooe drachm of morphine is eqaal to more than five hun dred grains of opium.'1 ueiag atkedtscxplaia his present nre- dicatneat, Saaford said that when he lost every meni oCjaskmg moasy he sold everything ho bad, fxota time 6 time, to procure morphiae. When everything was goae he prtcd'aWoa.creuit with druggists and dealer with whom he had acquaintance When UilJStiai of getting the drug was denied him be stole what be could, and with the pio cceds got what 'he wanted; "Knowing the ways of doctors and the value of their instruments." said he. -I .devoted myself to this-snecUl war of raising the wind. Ofcourse T cot caucht. When I want mwpbine I will do any thing to procure it. I would sell my own faibcr in a mlautelt I coaldJgct eausgh fir one dose. Whea the dedre comes oa me I would ixt exrhtage the morphine for heaven. Gise me the dose and then hkflg.scfedf JVfcJjke. I doal far r Tvhat tliey do with me after I have got the morpliac." 1'hilidtlpKU BtUtiU. A Good During the first year of the wxr.Say a "erioat "jspcr.-when cuange was scarce and some large firms were issuing currency of their owe, a farmer eat to a store in a neighboring town and bought some go and gave the merchant a firp-dolrsr bfl, of which he wanted sere nty-five cents back. The merchant counted it out and handed it orer to the farmer; who looked at it a moment and inquired: "What's thlal"" -It's my currency," said the merchant. "Wal, 'taint good for nothin' where I ltve,"aai the farmer., , -Very wcH, replied the merchant, "keep it until you get a dollar's worth. and bring it to my store, and I will give you a dollar bill for it." The farmer pocketed the change and puled. A few weeks after he went into the same store and bought good to the amount of obe dollar, and after paying over the identical seventy-five cents he iook out a handful or pumpkin-seeds and counted out twenty-fire of them and pas'cd them orer to the merchant. "Why," said the merchant, "what's this!" "Wal," said the farmer, "this is my cur rency, and when you get a dollar's worth bring it to my place and I will giro you a dollar for W'WoontocXH Patriot. A mas msy be supposed to save money and laV it llV fnr iflrni. ntk.r tmr. poses;. but he cannot do this unless his wife lets him or helps him. A prudent, frugal, thrifty woman is a crown of glory to her husband. She helps "him ia all bis good resolutions; she may, by quiet and gentle encouragement, bring out his ucucr quauues, aau uj uci mmiw iu mar ttnnlant in lilm nnliln nrincinles. which arc the seeds of the highest prac tical virtues. Ki.nd.vem gives birth to kindness. The War. The talk among the European power about interfering before long with toe couiba'aat in the East and so presenting their carrying the war over into another year, is too loud aad open to be passed liy a iif no special significance. It is becoming more evident that the powers are restive under a continuance of bostili ties and wfmld be giad to bring them to aa end. This they seem to think they cn do without passing judgment i n either party, simply calling itadrawn- batHe. No doubt Turkey would accede to terms of peace. offeretT'ba such a basis. prorided they intobvd ajKhleg like hu miliation; but what i"W77t might incline to dn, or boar far it would feel disposed to favor tbe propOEiition of the powers, is some a bat problematical. For aituugh Jb Uujdsairmyjjs secured a fcjets0& fn Djlgaria from which to launch the caapsign of next year, it might be will ing to regard this as triumph enough under the circumstances, and to forego its design of advancing upon Adriaao ple and beyond. But the fact that the project b opealy talked of b enough to show that It b not without a greater de gree of support ia the cabinets than might be generally suspected. It is mani fested by this time that the war tells ma terially oa the general prosperity of Eu rope by rendering all the foundttions of price so uncertain. There is tbe spot where it hurt so so'eiy, aad'thb b the reason why interference is now openly broached la quarters thst spctfc with something like authority. It woald puzzle oae more thaa ever to say precisely what the war Is being waged for. If the Bulgarian atrocities stimu lated it, the have to all Intent been fcr some time lost sight f. Other aims and feelings hare saccceded thn such as are implied ia redrctsicg those wrongs. Rus sia has encountered a foe worthy of her steel, aad in tht protracted stregie she has had occatioa to think of many other things. Tbe religious war has bees grad ually changing into one for paw cr, which indeed it was in the beginning, whea stripped of its ostenlatiocs disguises. If Husti a, boaevrr. Is to btcoae the neces sary agent at wboe hands Turkey it to be schooled la the processes of aviliza tioa,or semi-aviltzatioe, she will sot have gone into this contest ia vain, what ever may harr been ber original moiircs. Soma sach discipliaary exercise was es sential to prepare Tsrkey,lf she shall ever da so, to ester the Eropeaa family of ea- lions. And inasraceb as Rasata herself can hardly claim full almissioa to that circle, since she is Asiatic as well as Eu ropean, it may be in the design of Previ desce that ae result of this prolonged collision of hers ith Turkey is to etim isata from her sj stem also what still re mains of barbarism, aad by degrees trassfsrni her as west as Turkey to the condition ia which alt states must come before they can expect to eater tbe circle of civitixatioa. ifii. iv;JUiAa. The Hatter of Tramps. Tht chinctcriitsrs. habits tad teadescies of this increasingly dxacerous class of people are more aad more engaging the attention of th'e w hoe thoughts are turned to the secant? aad welfare of so ciety. We recently mvie a note of "what' uaj oeen sagges-eUTss tae amy practical remedy for the tramp danger aad nut since. Mr. uhu iwrntt, ia recent letter to the public, remirks that ia com pirisan with the d us of f jreign vagrants the American tramp is the very worst of hb class. The tries o ia Ear land he describes as a solitary vagatoad, who is easily managed, while in this country he is grcga-iotts and formidable from union with his fellows, who move La bands through the country, though they mav deploy as individual skirmishers, levying contributions ofYod.aad clothing under a menace uaderstoo-1. If not expres-ed, Mr. Barri'.t says be must hare' Old World institutions to protect society agaiast them, and he, 'hints the Eorli.u workhouse precisely adapted to their case, with such Improvement as we may see fit to a id. Ia tbe Northern bines, he thiaks there should be one such work house for every county, and several where the population is dense. We could then say to every able b-lied vagrant "There is tbewoxkhoate within a day's walk at farthest. Thec you will find plenty tif work aad better food aad dodging than you can get by begging."- We should thus get at their true iawardae-s at once Wht really "keeps this dargtrbus class ia conditloa b tbe mistaken good-feeling of the people oa whom they really prey. It is a false sympithy that feeds and fur nishes them on their unbroken line of march. If those who are disposed to giye this gratuitous assistance to vagrants who have not tbe slightest 'claim to it, would only propose in every instance that the applicant should set about some piece of work. that was kept always ready, they would very soots bo. alsibuscd of a weakness that u really a hurt to the community. Tea CctTCitE. Wliilc labor is high priced and of poor quality, it, is tiopefess to believe that tea can be profitably pro duced in tbe United States. Hundreds of experiments have been made in years pan with the tea-plant in various parts of tbe States for the purpose of ascertain ing if it was adapted to our soil and cli mate; and althongh in many instances they have proved successful, so far as the growth of plants was concerned, still the high price of labor has heretofore pre vented extending Its cultivation. Of late, excrimeats in tea culture have attracted considerable attention ia California; bat the same difficulties which have attended it elsewhere in this country prcceat any considerable progress. The war correspondent of tbe London Arc says that at the battle near Kara levo, where the Russians were defeated, "a Russian officer, who was observed gal lantly trying to rally bit men, was killed, aad the body whea subsequently discov ered proved to be that of a woman. She was buried where she fell." The reduction ia tbe public debt last month amounted to $4,315,300. A rctlc Explorations. The reports (if another nmlrrtMl Arc tic expedition tares our attention to the ' (.1.... l.t... u tl.L t . . . I iniense Interct which ta, so loog.ttacbed b. the frozen re-ion. of .h JJ. the Icelandic rover, found the rich kVC cries of New Poundland and the (J had cosaLsincts the exoediti-n ,.f .7. (..aoou uemoastrated that if the murh. coveted i.X.r.h-est pssssge to IU'Uiur: should be diered, it would le all butC?' Si ufr uselW commerce, those frozen regions cueX T, liavejAased the enterprise, and ItZ 0 the faH a tbe boldest xaviga'tor. uf XS'.0" ! mostWerysaccetd.ng generaUoa. The TrLTpriJLSr2i lu" d?l Cabou In lWKtoutVtleb.peofficd- a?teV5Z T tag a direct psno Cathay f d India, S&lntk g3a. but swcecdsvisr rat reiehin?? sa rATdw. .. , . . ,alt amnon. 8'" iwr-uSJori, wniie in l,W tlx c.nU)rj C-r-l.met witb cothicg but Uisasttr-ln'tbeirrovage to W derr. north. In IoJa.r Hugh ughby, with hii crew, wa, .acr.nced b. f ! dcire of Ing apstssge a tlie n- rth of Eurooe.1.: "nTT! T..-T. ."CIt Then Msrtia FrobUh r di.rs,l entrance to Hodsoa's bar aad first trave Davit followed. Iiiractz. !? bat tif. and Hudson resorted that a rvaif t.- In. dia through that regi n was impossible. (- 1.1 . i... j:.r r ... uwt u uu tut. upcuiuoD, irom wnicn he never returned, the discovery of Hud son Bav szraia raise-" i the hnt- of ihr. traders, aad explorations receitcd a new Impulse. Mihoat paain to meation numerous micorexDeditlont. we mar no. uce Baflin, who for fifty year was unex celled by sutMcqucat explorers, an-1 the upTiiu'iu di sua iiraogesi anu Aajou, unexpectedly cheeked by aaopeo set, at nearly 71 dejr. north latitude. Natwithstaading the offer of a Urge re ward to the discoverer of a nasaie to India, oCered ia 1743, the expeditions soon we largely undertaken in the In terest of science, aad efforts to reach the pole saeeeeded search for a commercial nisawaj. apiaia raipps, oipcaia u mjk, Mackenzie, failed to penetrate farther than Undson hvl r-nr.r tn lil-i ?Ko t- peditions under Captains Ross and Be chaa, the one aiming at a passage ta the west and the other to r"- were fol!"ei bj ezpditioas uadcr x-rry ana rranuin, woo had serred as lieutenaats on the previous one, all alike iruitiess. t our simultaneous cSorts were male ia lsi-L aad In li27. Csrn Parry reached S2 deg. 43 mia. north, i i i t. i . . . - . . . conn. waere oc uespsueu Ol reacaing Uie poie. In 1529 Captain Rs socceeded in locat- i .t . w m . ing uie jiagccuc poie,aad wnea we come to the last expedition of Sir John Pnale. lia, 1343. a survey of the entire northern coast of America bad been acoom- plished . Then followed numerous ex- oedltiost f a iMrrk nf C7r JnS,. W.V-. Kb, aad again others for exploratioo, tbe most impartaat Ufng the Polaris expedi tion from our ova country. Looking over the accouats of hardships aad privations endured by these men, tbe number of expeditions in which the bold leaders have lost their lives, it woohl seem that raea would loag since have been dicocra?ri Ta Tit's ftV" fKs ifff vt Importance of the results to be attained, and whea we add that men concede that no practical commercial interest can at- taca to the eaort". ssrprise becomes Sort., sarprise becomes hearing of the elaborate I w makfnc for another at- , ,b, .TllZZZ amazement rn hi Drenaratioss now tcrnnt lo hills the s.T.irt ,,T seal a portioa of this world from oar ia- vesugauon. uiory caanot urge men to aa uadertakiag which the masses decry as lacking ia practical utility, and still we find oca willing to leave their homes tor a winter oa the bleak coasts of the far north that they mav be inured and i tx Jij . ' . .t ...ia hardships ot next spnngs northward, ti,-.v .i.;7 .. . command the aAnlraiion ntL. f , all intelligent people, aad the csi-e maai-, fested in the preparatioas gives hope that a farorable mlnnrr will h-nnr- v-.1n,, additioca to scieatiic kaowledgc Jlirk tj. Ax Old Pout. Ia Florida the old fort formerly called St. Marks, bat since the purchase from Spain, Fort Manoe, u constructed of ctquina stone. The fol lowing isaa utercstiagdescriptloaof it: This fort is orer a ceoturj old, having been bu,U la 175fl. It cost immease sums of mocej. aad is strong eaough to have withstood, ia its time, several for midable sieges. It is probably the most stupendous, and certainly the most inter esting piece of masonry la the United Slates. It contains dungeons which are said to have witnessed scenes of Inquisi torial atrocity, and whoe floors bare been stained, by the bh'ody tyrannies of a dark and cruel age. There are also a dispel and numenmigoard-roomifor the accunmodstiiju nf soldiers within its masslre walls. The whole is surrounded by a moat, which was formerly crossed bv to ancient drawbridges. 'Modelled after the old feudal forms of defence, each bastloa b crowned by a turret for tcali acls, aad has aa airof antiquity bordering oa the romantic, as well as being exreed iagly picturesque. Orer the Baincstracce beagraved,ia solid rock,the arms of Spain aad aa lascriptloa la Spanish, which In forms the stranger that the fortress was finished ia 173d, when Fcrdkaad VI. ruled the domiainas of the mother country. Dsin Alonzo Fernando de Henda was governor and comraaad er-!n- chief, and this- eni!nrr nf nnitmmVa was Don Pedro de Brazassy Garay. It b saiu uiar, in taiu, wncn x lortda was pur chased bv the United States, many of the old Snauish records, that aloati mulil light upon the obscurity of the early hb- iory oi iuis rvgion, were conveyed in se crecy away to Cuba. A Dasbcry man, who went to a drurj store to have a prescription prepared, teeing nobody but a clerk present, said: "Young man, are yoa holding company withaglrH" "Ye, sir,n answered the clerk with a blush. "Do you think all the world of herl" "I do," said the clerk, firmly, although blushing coasiderably. "Is tho iu tjwol" pursued the customer, anxiously. "No, sir, she b away oa a vbfu,r" "That will do," said the tsaa, "you can't fool arouad aay prescription for me." And he went away. "Blood will tell." Vela thought. A Ship.- Cresr Poisoned. On tiie arrivaL at Southampton of a Scotch tcjronn nameil Wm. Inmin n 1 eTtraordTn Tjtifr ?' . m i 'lrwi poisoning a at tea I b 'l p ' Tf ' .3 enrane, and belonging o'su wi hb, .ew urunswtck, was oo a Teui I -ft Pih.ifn- ,i tk. i .u c .iT lltr p-g. on fo ?T. - . ,yr fir.d-lCao; rT. T.t J'???: .7? va "T?V Pl ?l UHI .7 v ,P''- 'C,,c tnr rteen forecas- iting aad showing other signs of extreme iliuas. Oathe4'h completely prostrated, aad next daT all the fourteen ere down, except Inman, who, thsugh very ill, was able to artist the officer to shorn n sail. Daring the next fortnight, the ship lying under thf to lower topsaib, the sufferings of ibe men were fearfuL Inman could not sleeps at night owlag to the iatesse pain, and . his bead often swclJ&I t a great size. Hb limbs were so weak that he could scarcely crawl alocg the deck. At the end of tbe fortnight, three of the crew. Turn Beaufort, a Loadoaer, Andrew An denoe, a Swede, and William Williams, a Poiander, went mad, aad ran about the deck quite delirious. This so frightened the captain, whom I n man describes aa a ' cactioas seaman, aad a kind hearted man, that be tried to. atkm tW the Faiklaad Islaad, distant 00 miles. Port Stanley., the principal harbor ia tic Falkland blasds, was reached oa December 7th. ' As the archer was let go, the Poiander Williams died in horrible agoar. The day after tbe Swede died, aad two day later the Loodocer succumbed to hb sal. . feting. A. week after the remainder of r."TwlM ? ur the crew had goee to the hospital at Part"' -T ... T . l. . l c ji! - . r-.... it A - : - . . a Dutchoaa died. On Jaacai-r lSrk."1 Harris Xd wards, a native of Margate.-., shared tao same fate? The. doctor stated 'j that they had alt been poisoned by pa- . tridpork. OaApnlid last Inrnaa left " Port Stanley for Montevideo, accompan ied bj two ship-nates, John Alrd, of Va- terford, and Alexander Buckley, aa Eng lishman. Subsequently they sailed q board the royal mail stealer Toj-aa, asdr have arrived, safely at Scthamptoa. Wfcea they quitted Port Staaley four of " their comradea were still in the hospital.1 Inaaa b enable to walk withat the aid " of a staff, and does not expect to be fit'- for work for several months. i The Eemorse of Xarderers. A VOUnC man flirinl I rr t. r-.r. -1 ?" r,. ,r.i .if : i- ' -'n r" ,T T.-,. . SF, catJ..f Ued a toc atf "Uh hoQ e onaliag, ccavscted of maaaianghter The seatesce of toe court was verv light oaly four months la the Pestles nary? Bat it xeras hb cooscjace impoiav sererer penalty, aad Oialiy warned hinc; to death. - Tbe effects of reaorc have cadoabt-. edly proved fatal in other cases thaa" this -J aad vet ocr outerratioa has led n .bel-eTe -1 aet a universal rale that pezsoot coai trae as vVotedf of mcldr Pienc aaj-feeling of rfir mote vtx- Hawcrer ttraaga it, J i lsc thevpiaica that as a, J, J WWtWh.-V,f Mui luoit escape irom ine gaitows tuaa firvm aay o her coascqceacca of their crime. ' So It is with doeUists, whoarsiaossel unse aad ttrictiy speaking, asarderers.j We well remember the case, of William Graves. He waa a popular lawyer, who was elected, a Re-resea'a:lve ia Coogress from LruUnlle, Kentucky. From having been the bearer of a challenge for W friend he became Involved hisaself isr a; dad with Jonathan CUIey, a lieprtscala-j tire "from Maine. They fougbt witij, rides, and at tae sccsind ahot Cittey was killed. U raves retired late pnTUaJite, and died a few years later. It waa aatd tint be died ot grief ; but a friend who conversed with, him during his illness o the subject of the duel, told us that MH Graves said that he hid never experl euced the tcait feeling of remorse iXni& the matter for a single raoascnt. Those wq die of remorse for such s act are not very apt to coasait the, acL- l Snaoowa. Not a heartlutose shall you find oa which some shadow has not fallen or is about to fall. Too wit! prob ably find that there are few households who do not cherish aosae sorrow:. t knows to the world; who have aot soK,e trial which is not their peculiar messen ger, and which they da not talk about, except among themselves ;soate Jhxfe that has been blasted; some expectation dashed down; soma wroag,Tal or' sup posed, which some member of Use house hold has suffered; trembling anxieties lest that other-member should not suc ceed; triab from .the peculiar teaipera sent of somebody ia the house, or some environment that touches it sharply frota without: some tbora in the Utah; sosse physical disability that cripples oar- en ergies whea you want to use &ea the most; sons spot ia the house wIm daia has left his track, oc . paiaful .liateaiags to hear his stealthy footsteps coiicg oa. . " " .44 Dtsturxt's eplgraaa'atk reaark U Loth air. "vou kauw who . th. ultu n the raea who hare filled la l'Ufatre u h way uare oeca aa uacoiMGiqaa plagiarism from Laa dor's IaairiaarT'Coa- vcrsatioas. Ia the dialocue bsiweea Soathy aad Porsea the latter says r "Tlw.se who hare failed as pal a Vers becoate sie-tare-cleaaen; those who have failed as writers tura reriewNs." i