60 THE WEST SHORE December MUSIC AND THE FORTS. Upon music, the finest of the tine arts, the language of BbftkoipMM is very forcible and striking. Among other sentiments we find the following: "Wlien griping firitif ft heart l"th wound, And doleful rhUDH tilt iriiml Then mimic with MTJIIw ouiid, Willi itedj' nelji doth tend mlrww." Again he writes: 'TV MB thnt huth no mimic in liiiiMulf, Nor it not moved with rd of sweet sourulii, 1m lit fur UiMOIII " i in- UK) Ipoflli Tliu miHlMII of hi it spirits art dull tut night, And lii SftTsCttooi dark us KruLiw; Let no RHb MB lw tnwlwJ," Other poets ami authors have paid homage to the Muhc. Lather tells nil "Music is the art of the Prophets, the only art thnt can calm the agitation of the soul." Hogg has expressed the ame sentiment in verse: "Of all Um ln-.'0-ts tMBMBln Uic Heaven, That man him found, 'r Ood Hum gitn, None draw the wiul H aweet awaj, As nutkri milling, mystic lay; WiicU tuiohiii l the t'H short, t tuOtim the '. ni all to love." Milton, in describing the enravisliiiieiit of music, says: "I was all cur, And Ufik in strains that might HSSts u wiul Under IhrlUof ilealh " Or. Ihirwin thus speaks of song: "(.' me Ian a IMg, a winding Keiitlu wing, To lad me into ilMtt, lM If Dt I" Ax Zephyr telllty -mn I- Id i.i l or I v Ami Nl 1 'I '."i"' Hi'li flmt iff" around tin-it llul most of llnuiuht, for And when the ISSVSS "f If tht ru'N m Mad, reiwui 8o life. i deth; awing lleoin before another del From tin' of my Utoufuts, her inuole I'm hid - I IMen, I -li- .1 SINHI It, HELPING PAPA AND MAMMA, I'lai ting the 00fH ami (NiUtoea, Helping tn Hatter the ISSUS. Feeding tlie hSM and the thick urn, I'neiiig (he gunk-n frotn weods; liming the niwa Ui Hie paitiire, r'iMilmg Hie horfW in Hie sUll, We huh- ehildrrii are tinny; Mure Ihere in work lor u all, Uelplnfl hinsaliiiu the hay In the matliU, linking it "p Hw il'B l,r i hekiiig OH BMMSSl uml t-eadiea, Down in thl orchard lianl hy: I'liklug the i:mh b in Hie untyitnl, Helping '.i(a. Bwseping and matting Hit tiring - the M ..l rrotn u illnhen. Innuttt, i Mi l ui.; I.i m.tK.' iy llm lull, i.i.ii.,- .1 . n of ih.-huhy. Watching lltrr lent nIiu ihould full, We Huh' BnildfM are him ; Oh ' there in work for H all, Helping mamma Work tnaken us eheerfnl and happy, Ihtke UN 1h.Hi aotlVS and Mining; Mai woenj ly all Ihe heller When we hart laUirul M lung U bully we help our kind parent, yn.. k we Ml ,,t their ea.11. ChlMrm ibould hive lo hu bun ; There ii murh work for u all. Helping USDS and mamma iv fmtk'i c THE TftUK UKNTLKMAN. l(o is above a low act. I If OWUOt sti Soiiimit a fraud, Ho invades no secret in the keeping of . l i . I. i. He takes adits!) Ad vantage of no man's mistakes, lie is ashamed of muemloes. Ileuses no ignoble weapons in controversy- He never stabs in the dark. Ho is not one thing to a man's face and another to his back. If by' accident he cornea into pos session of his neighbor1! counsels, he passes them into instant oblivion, lie hears scaled packages uithout tampering with the wax. raKT not meant fur Ins eye, whether they llutUT in at his window or lie open Itefore him in unrcuarilcd ciosiiru are seciet to him. Ilo profanes no privacy of another, however the sentry sleeps. Holts and bars, locks and keys, Ivouda ami securities, notices to trespassers, arc not for him. lie may be trusted out of sight, near the thinnest luirtltioti, anywhere. He buys no ollice, lie sells none, intriuues for none. lie would rather f nil of Ins own right than win them through HiHhoiior. He w ill eat hon est hu lie tramples on no sensitive feeliuga. lie insults no man. If lie has a rebuke for an other hti is straightforward, oiien ami manly. lie cannot descend to scurrility. MdlniKcate docs not lie on lus track. Of womati, and to In i he speaks with decency and rvsjH'ct. In short, whatever lie iintges tionoraide tic nrac ticea to want every our. He is not always .tressed in broadcloth. "Some people," says a distinguished bishop, "think a gentleman meniia a man ol i, i ml. nt tortmic a man win (area umptuousfy oiery day; a man who need not laiHir lor hw Uaily hreaH. NOMM tie make a gentleman not one of them nor all of lliem tocetlnr. 1 have known men ol tin roughest exterior who have bjMfl ustnl all their lives to follow tlie plow, and look after horwa, aa thorough gentlemen in heart aa any nobleman who ever wore a ducal coronet 1 mean I have hMW them aa uiisellish, I have known them as truthful, I have known them aa ympathiring; and all the qualities go to make what 1 under stand liy the term "a gentleman. " H ta a noble privilege which ha trn aadly pnntituted ; and what 1 want to tell you ia, that the humblest man who has the coarsest work to do, yet, if his heart ie tender, and pun and true, can ln in the moat emphatic seuae of the word, "a gentleman." Tht CArwfMti .S'fufe-nIN. Tut fact that the tin suspender button in a hurch coiilnl'iitmu U.i on foreijjn uusiionscaii, vn a aquar issue, outvote the nickela, two to ooe, ia uot to te taken a an indication of a re- turn to ieeie payineuU. Till latest rniHly (or hog cholera Kaai, ia ly and aoft eoap. tHir butcher uaa np all their tie aim solt soap ou ineir cuswuier. FUNNY I'AKACitAPHH. Thk Smith family are to have a reunioii in New .Jeraey. It is too soon to nominate a president. A Yorso couple that are devoted to each other and eat onions, must undoubtedly Imi cn gaged, Wk are offend m-veral dontilt'l advertise ments payable in "trade." Their trade is not eiyVnmble with us. "Thk lalmrer is worthy of his hicher," as the fellow remarked when he married a girl a foot and a half talk-r than himself. Iv I marry my wife's cousin, ami niv wife marries my cousin, what would be the legal re- Tins year the mowing machines and reapers did much towards keeping the wooden leg fac torial of this country m successful operation. ADHMIVXirMfl is a strong development ot Washington's character when developed by a "lick on tlie hack ol his liead, at tlie post yfloo, In the search for stolen goods at I'ittslmrg the poUoe recovered sixty hams from a single house. That man worked harder on the strike thuti he ever did on a job. A UlOHIOAM widow recently hid her cow away under the bed to save it from the tax collector. This may lie called a genuine case of "OOWJUOulg ly ii lemale. The exploring party struck the store where lam used to trade for his Hour and beans at Myceuie the other day, find found the Trojan Monarch's poll book, showing that his account was behind .'ill ilraeliime. Dr. Schlieman sayw this arouses all the grocer passions of his nature. "Si: in-:, Teddy, iwhatiw the mailing of this 'do facto" that the Sun kapes a call in the l'res- Identf "Kuix, an it's mesilf as don't know, I'at. and it II be sonic hcucli parhvoo, ami tile UUne intirely as honorable." Ha VI vou 'OoldKnjth'l ( ireeco f " was asked of the clerk in the store in which books and various miscellaneous articles were sold. No," said the clerk, reflectively, "wo haven't lioldsmith's grease, hut we have some splendid liiuroil. HOW TO WASH LACKS. Now that luce and muslin riilllcs are univers ally worn, the pleasure of the possessors is a ittle (lushed by the UlOWledgfl that the pretty varieties will lose their freshness mm hulf, at least, of their Wauty in the wash, unless re- mrse be had tothe expensive skill ol a rreneli laundress. Hut if they are washed at home af ter the following manner, they may hold up their heads with the beet of the unwashed: er half a doi n w ine or porter bottles with old stockings, sewed on to tit as tightly M pos sible. Ou these haste the soiled lace, carefully catching down every tiny loop in the border. The work is tedious but necessary. When the lace is fastened, cover the lsittle in hot suds made of line soap and change the cooling suds to hot again several times a day. Or, lietter still, put the lsittle in the Isiiler, and let it boU two or three hours, by which time the lace will bo unite clean. Set the Isittlo in the air, and leuve it till the lace is nearly but not unite dry. Then np the lace off carefully, and presH it in a book for a few hours. It will come out spotless, not too white, and with the almost imperceptible stillness which new lacu has. Kveii point lace emerges unscathed from this process. With half ft dozen bottlH much lace can 1- cleaned at once, and the lacu can be tacked on at odd moment. Kxid roR Bornmnu Hxm in thk. kd us RU8, In the course of a recent lecture at I'hiladelphia. Mr. W. H. Wahl, one of the edi torsofthe Pohjtirhnic litrirtr, sHike as follows: Wo need, imperatively, the educated skill of scientific workmen in every department of technology, men who can rationally direct the tillage ototir countless acres of productive soil, and the rational utilization ami cultivation of our forests, that the ignorant impoverishment of the former, and the improvident and criminal destruction of the tatter, may not, despite the exulierancu of Nature's bounty to this, tlie rich est of her continents, cover lier fuce with the widespread desolation that has converted so many of the fairest garden mjhiIs of Asia and KurojHj into arid deserts; men who can direct us how to tap, with the magic wand of science, the rocky ribs of our hillsides and mountains, and force them to disgorge their hidden treas ures; we need designers and constructors, who shall supply to skilled laborers, in other fields of industry, the tools, implement and machin erv which will miiltinlv their nroductive ivow- ers a hundred-thousand fold, so that the products of multifarious industries shall U placed within the reach ol the huiulilest ami poorest ot us. Itut alove all, the preeminent merit of a widely disseminated scientific training will le to inspire men, who comprehend what science ha done for civilization, through patient, faithful, un flagging and unselfish labor and study, with a genuine enthusiasm for the pursuit of truth for toe truth s sake, with a keen conviction ot the dignity of lator, with a thorough hatred of sliam ami pretense, ami keen pleasure in tn consciousness of work w ell done. Mrsimoow Knviin. -1'lace agaric of aa large a site aa you cn procure (not worm eaten), layer by layer, in a deep pan, sprinkling each layer, a it is put iu, with a little salt; the next day stir them up several times, so as to mash and extract their juice. On the thin) day strain otT the liquor, measure and boil for 10 minute, and then to everv pint bottle of the liquor add one-half ounce of black pepper, one ouarter ounce of bruised ginjror root, a blade of mace, a clove or two and a teaapoonful of mustard seeH; noil again lor halt an hour, put in two or three hey leave and set aside until uuite raid: naa through strainer and bottle. cork well and dip the end in reain. A very little t'hila vinegar is an improvement end some add a glass o( port wine or a glaaa of strong ale to every bottl. lw ahould be taken that the spic is not added so anunuanuy as to over power the true tUvor uf the mushroom. SULPHIDE OFOABBON AS A CURE FOR MITES. A foreign newspaper, the Journal tlr. f Ayn cuitnrr, has an assay by Or. Felix Schneider, giv ing the results of IB years' experience m meth ods to rid poultry of mites or lice. In all this time experiments were made with almost every proposed substance, but the writer proclaims fulphideof carUn the remedy for which he sought long and diligently. We give his re marks concerning this substance. He sajs: 1 had failed to find my desideratum a remedy whose etiieaey should not depend on its b.cal ap plication, or ou subsequent attention to it, that should be both curative and preventive, ami that, placed once for all in tlie pigeon house, should keep away the vennin without injuring my pets. At last the idea struck me to have recourse to a well known insecticide used by the vine growers of the South for the destruction of the phylloxera I mean the sul phide of carbon. The very next day I was agreeably surprised and encouraged to rind the enemy had evacuated thulr htnni"h"ld" leaving none but dead and lying behind, and on the following Hay noL a siligle living insect was to bo found, while my birds, that Lad hitherto been wretchedly perse- cuted day and night by their microscopic tor mentors, were sitting quietly on the roof en- joying an uuvvunte.uy peaceiui revise. This nappy Btate of ailairs lasted for 12 days, till the sulphide of carbon has fully evaporated, a fact which I noticed on Saturday morning at alsmt nine o'clock. Twenty-four hours later a fresh invasion of lice had already put in an ap purauce under the wings of the birds in the warmest portirtns of the house, where there nere no currents of air. I replenished the iiipply of Bulnliide. and by Monday morning only a few of thcue frcah visitants were remain ing, and no turtlu-r arrivuis nau occurred, wu luesday morning every trace oi venom nau fllnnmarad. Since that time I have personally made a great number of further truis witn tne sul phide, and have witnessed others carried out by my advice by some of my friends who keep pig eons and poultry. hclorc pnn.-ce.nng opnoiisu lhi. ti . vitv I wished to be doubly ;:ud trebly asauredot its real value, lor l could nanny nenevn the evidence oi tnv own n-- - " lien, altei such long and patient, researches, I had the good for tune to lay my hand upon an apparently infal lible remedy in so convenient and cheap an appli cation as this. Having two pigeon houses imme diately contiguous, but separated by an imper meable plaster partition, I employed the sul phide in one of them and withheld it from the other. The latter in a very few days was swarm ing with vermin, while the former remained as free from them as at the commencement of the observation. Mv brother, who is a very skillful fancier, prided himself a good deal for some time upon having his birdB free from vermin, but one day in the month of duly he was very glad to ap ply to me for my recipe, which he used with immediate and absolute success. I should recommend the sulphide of carbon to be put in small medicine phials hung about the pigeon house or poultry most. When it has about three parts evotHiratcd the remainder will have acquired a yeUOWUO tinge, ana no longer acts so completely as before, but if it be shaken up afresh it will still sutlice to keep the lemy at a distance. (Ieoluijii-ai. Si'itvKY ok Hiiazil Anion j the more important results so far accomplished by the geological survey of Brazil, says the Eiuji iit'cr, has oeen the discovery of the existence in Hrazil, of tlie Bilurian, Hevonian, car Donn emus, trials 0, Jurassic, cretaceous ami pott-tertiary formations, all of them furnishing well-charac terized fossils in great variety, and ot w hich large numlters have been collected by the com mission for its investigation, ami for the pur pose of distribution in Brazil and of exchange with foreign establishments. So far no well- leliued tertiary lias OtMtfl loiiiiu to exist in nra- zil. The survey has also been very successful in its ethnological researches, especially among the kitchen-middens of Santa Catharina, Para na, San Paulo, Bahla, and the Amazons, the re suits of which have licen announced in part, although much of interest yet reniaius to be published, 1 be researches in the corai reels nave been made the occasion of securing niun lers of marine animals, all of which add to the resources of the survey. Fkab or Okath. - It is said of the late Dr. Arnold that, finding one of his children had been greatly shocked and overcome by the first sight of death, he tenderly endeavored to remove the feeling which had I awakened, and, opening a Bible, glinted to the words: " Then Cometh Simon I'eter following him, and went into the aepulcher, and seeth the linen clothes lie, and the napkin that was almut his head, not lying with the linen clothes, put wrapped to gether in a place by itself !" "Nothing, "he said, ' 'to his mind atl'ords us such comfort, when shrinking from the outward accompaniment of death the grave, tlie grave . I itlies, tlie lonel nets as the thought that all of these had Wen around our Ionl himself round him who died, an.l is now alive forever more. Tiif. E:i; Trape or thk Uniteh States. The egg trade of the country ia immense. It iB atiniatcd that the inhabitant of the United States consume 4.OUU,000 eggs per day. Th city of New York alone, it is estimated, con siiniea 40,000,000 dozen annually, and Boston IMNQLQUQ BOMB, rilty-seven dealers in t hi cage alone, last year, received 4,660,000 dozen ol eggs. Dm fkoii HuiH Altitude, M. Gaston Tissaudier and his brother, aays Saturt, have made an ascent from Gilford a aeronautical gaa worn, tor uie purpose ol collecting the dust floating in the atmwphcre. The method em ployed ha been to condense the moisture of the air and analyze the water and ice thus obtained with a microscope, Knolasd ia e neck ahead. The man who Hvexl 18 hours with hia neck broken is outdone by the young Knglishman who has lived five years in that condition. TREES AN1 KAINFALL. utfLUoa oi nuns ox climate. In considering the influence of trees upon the climate and rainfall of the Pacific coast, we tirst encounter the impossibility of finding any rec ords of the climate and rainfall of ancient times. Beyond the mere fragments handed down by the early Spanish discoverer?, the records do not extend beyond a quarter of a century, a time too Bhort to be of value in determining a change of climate. Looking first at Arizona, we see extensive ruins of aqueducts and cities, showing the former presence of a large agricultural popula turn. That Arizona, and, indeed, the whole Pacific coast, has been peopled by one race or another from remote antiquity does not admit of doubt. Some pprtions, as central Arizona, were densely Bottled. Western Arizona iB now, for the most part, a sandy desert, destitute of trccH, with but a few inches of rain dnrine the year, and burned by a blazing Bun. By what means, then, did Arizona ouce sustain her large population, and why is the country now a dts ertl Arizona had once an abundance of rain and that within the general historical era and the present geological epoch. Now the raiim have ceased, and these are the reasons why : The nmiBture that now falls in scanty aummer showers upon Arizona comes from the same monsoon that blows up the Mississippi valley ; it crosses Texas and New Mexico, losing most of its moisture in passing over high mountains, and by the lime it reaches Arizona its humidity is so greatly lessened that very little of its re maining moisture can be condensed, and the surface of Arizona does not oiler the necessary conditions for condensation. When the rain fell iu ancient times the aurface of the territory was covered with forests ; the air and earth were cool, and the moisture of the warm rain olottdl w as easily cooled and precipitated. But the ancient people, through ignorance, through selfishness, through domestic use, and through wars, slowly destroyed their forests. The re sults were mdHt disastrous to them. Soon the summer rains ceased to descend, the hot and bare earth increased the dryness of the air. Only the winter mills then fell. To raise crops the people were forced to resort to irrigation, and the remains of great reservoirs and canals attest their struggle for existence. More trees were destroyed, and less rain fell in winter, and soon not enough to fill the reservoirs against the summer drouths. Then began the extermi nation of the inhabitants ; no fruits or grains matured, the blazing sun parched the ground, and the sands of the desert slowly crept over the ouce smiling valleys. Most of the people starved, a few fled to foreign lands, and the re mainder managed to subsist upon the moun tains till exterminated by the Indians. The Bjmliation of the forests, the robbery of that part of naturewhich alone can make a country fertile and inhabitable, was the cause of their destruc tion, and not the Indians. Nature, justand kind and beneficent when understood and obeyed, peiniHs no infractions ot her laws, hut drives from their country, or sweeps out of existence as unworthy of her contined favors, nations who commit tlie unpardonable sin oi destroying her living forests. Sumurl Piirntll in Pacific Rural 'rat NEW PATENTS. ThroiiL'h Pewcv k Co.'b Patent Agency, San Francisco, we receive the following list of U, S. patents, granted to Pacific Coast inventois, viz.: For the week ending Nov. 13th, 1877. Ives Scovillc, Oakland, Cal., Bash holder; John II. Mackie, Oakland, Cal., sewer trap; Irvin Macy and John C. Watkius, Harrishuig, Ogn., wheel cultivator; Leonard K. Clawson, S. F., sectional chimney; Horatio N. Cook, S. F., leather splitting machine; John M. Crcal, Los Angeles, Cal., device for preforsting artesian wefl tulies; V. Dale, San Lorenzo, Cal., tin ner's machine stand; Byron Jackson, Wood land. Cal., horse hay fork; Gmdo Kuatle and Ottokar llofman, S. F., amalgamating nan; Charles Mowrey, Stockton, Cal., gang-plow; (trade-marks) Balfour, Guthrie & Co., a. r., salt; A. S. Hallidie, manufactured wire in th coil For the week ending Nov. '20th, 1877. Frank A. Ho wig, S. F., production of woodsn liottle-stoppers and bungs; Ives Scoville and Pliny Bartlett, Oakland, Cal., washing ma chine; William P. Barclay, Virginia City, ftev., hydraulic and wire-rope pumping sysveiu, William A. Cates, Union, Ogn., geographical clocks; Calvin H. Covell, Stockton, CsL, wrench; James N. Dudly and John Anderson, Petrolia, Cal., Baw handle; Henry C. Fallin, Grangeville Cal., windmill; Thomas A. Fits simons, Benicia, Cal., device for tilting ch" George McArthur, San Leandro, Cal., chul mold for wheels; Joseph Perkins, 8. F., CsL( aign; (trade-marks) More, Reynolds k Co., S. F., whiBky; Whittier, Fuller k Co., S. f., white I. .i.l. Amono the amendments to the general de ficiency bill reported by the Senate Appropria tion Committee is one proposing an appropria tion to pay claims allowed by the Treasury De partment for services, supplies and traniporta tion of Oregon and Washington Territory rol unteers in the Indian war of 1865. Watertiuiit Paprr. Packing paper may h made watertight by dissolving 1.8 Pjgg white soap in one quart of water, and in another quart 1.8 ounces of gum arabic, and 5.5 of glse. The paper is soaked in the mature and hss up to dry. Thk following silver piece were winff the Philadelphia mint during November: Ti dollars, 400,000; half dollars, 834,000; qaarj dollars, 722,400; dimes, 140,000. Total nomW of pieces, 2,096,400; value, fl,011,000. Till United States coast surveying chMjJ Sarn'M sailed from Baltimore November for Pnget 8ound. She will go thro g Straits of Magellan.