PUBUBBTD EVERY TRITiAT BY COLL- "VZSI CLEVE. ALBANY, OEEtrTSff. A CARNIVAL OF GHOSTS. The millions of Spiritualists in the United States find their Mecca, just now, in a little farm-house which lies seven miles north of Rutland, Vt. It is the home of Wm. H. and Horatio G. Eddy, and it is haunted by hundreds of ghosts. Col. Henry S. Olcott has been investigating the phenomena for the New York Sun and the Graphic. His series of letters in the latter paper have Deen profusely illustrated. The Cbi-1 cago Tribune condenses from both sources an account, apparently au thentic, of the Eddy brothers and their doings! They were, it seems, tormented by spirits from their birth. Their fattier, a prosaic farmer, first essayed to cast out the devils by beating and starv ing the victims. When this failed, he used his children's spiritualistic gifts to make money. They gave exhibitions. He superintended the show and pocketed the proceeds. The boys and their sister (now dead) were mobbed, stoned, beaten, burnt and shot. They were twisted into agonizing positions, and tied there for hours, while the mani festations went on. When they came home, they would gladly have relin quished their inconvenient powers, but they could not. It is noteworthy, by the way, that these powers were in herited. Mrs. Eddy, the mother of the boys, was a clairvoyant. Her mother had the same faculties. Her great grandmother was sentenced to death for witchcraft in 1694, but was rescued from Salem jail by friends, and secretly sent to Scotland. The children could not go to school, for they were accompanied thither by rappings that drove the other scholars wild with fear. They have consequently had little edu cation. They are, and always have been, unpopular. They are shy, gruff, sensitive men. Their reputation for integrity is 'good, but the neighbors think they are in league with the deviL With this preface about themselves, we pass to what they, or the spirits around them, have done. There have been thousands of manifestations. Very many have consisted only of feats of clairvoyance, moving furniture, and rapping out communications. Two great classes of facts remain the float ing in air of human bodies and the ma terialization of spirit forms. Horatio Eddy, when he was in his seventh year, was one night carried three miles through the air to a neighboring moun tain-top, and left to get home as he could. Col. Olcott gives no authority for this story, which may be founded on a mere case of sleep-walking, but he quotes the testimony of two out of three eve-witnesses to the fact that another brother, now dead, was carried out of a window and over the house. There are hundreds of instances to be given under the second grand division the ma terialization of spirits. The ghosts of known and unknown persons have ap- ) peared in the house and in the neigh borhood, in darkness and in light. People have talked with them and have felt them. They have been distinctly seen. CoL Olcott weighed the spirit of an Indian girl, Honta, twice. She stood on a Fairbanks scale and weighed 88 pounds the first time and 65 the next. He turned the full force of a battery upon her without producing any appar ent effect. Nearly all the phenomena attending the appearances of " Katie King" in London and in Philadelphia have been repeated in or around the Eddy homestead. Very many persona have witnessed them. Since Col. Olcott began his investi-' gation he has received innumerable letters from all over the country asking him to procure information on different points from the spirits. Most of the letters, it is heedless to add, are very silly. They serve to show, neverthe less, how wide spread public interest in this subject is. Is Spiritualism a cheat, or is it true ? There are many, many people who would give a good deal to have that question definitely decided. WEARING SIXTY FINGER-RINGS DAILY. Among the Romans plain rings were worn originally on either hand at option, but when gems and precious stones were added they were worn by prefer ence on the left, and it was considered extremely effeminate to wear them on the right hand. At first one ring was worn, then one on each finger, and last ly one on each joint. Charinus, accord ing to Martial, wore sixty rings daily, or six on each finger, and did not take them off, but slept in them. This was an extreme case, but rings were of ten worn on every finger, and also on the thumbs. In Germany rings were fre quently worn upon the joints, as was the Roman custom. The wife of Sir Humphrey Stafford (1450) is sculptured in the Broomsgrove Church, Worcester, with a ring on every finger but the last one on the right hand. Massive' thumb rings were supposed to tell of. wealth and importance, and Falstaff declared that when young "he could have crept into an alderman's thumb-ring. A Liverpool invention is the substi tution of oil or glycerine for steam as power for engines. These substances be ing placed m small cylinders and heat ed, the expansion produced is found to be 10,000 pounds per square inch, with out the danger of explosion. Even if an explosion occurs, it is claimed, there will be none of the danger attendant upon steam explosions, as the cylinder would only crack, and not hurl every thing endwise after the manner of steam. This process has been applied to printing presses and puucljang ..and riveting machines with perfect success. WHO ARK THE MENN0N1 TES This question derives interest from the fact that a large number of persons so-called are settling in this country, not in a casual and hap-hazard way, but with system and organization a large colony, for example, having just pur chased a tract of land of nearly two hundred thousand acres in and around Marion county, in Kansas, and an-s- nouncing themselves as the forerunners of many more. The Mennonites are the followers of the doctrines propounded by a remarka ble man, who shared in the awakening of mind of the sixteenth century. His birth is variously placed in 1496 and 1505 ; but of his being a priest of the cimrwh, and not very good at that, there is no, doubt. The reading of the New Testament, the history declares, pro duced a change of view and of charac ter, his meekness, purity and gentleness becoming very conspicuous. It was common in those days to call all radical reformers Anabaptists, that name being familiar, and rather ill-omened ; and Menno (Simonis was his second name) was so classed. But he did not hold or teach the extreme views ascribed to the Anabaptists, who denounced war, magistracy, oaths and science, and are charged by their enemies with violence in attempting to carry out their ideas, and set up a visible millennial " king dom of God" at Munster. It must be borne in mind, however, that all ac counts of a sect that come from its ene mies have to be largely discounted. Whatever be the truth regarding the Anabaptists, it is admitted that Menno did not go to extremes ; that he com mended his canso to the judicious and moderate, who desired Scripture-teaching for all men, and free Christian in stitutions ; that he was extremely ac tive in spreading his views in Holland and Germany, especially along the shores of the Baltic, and accordingly was much persecuted, finding protec tion at length in Holstein, and availing himself there of that great missionary agency the printing-press. He died there in 1561, leaving a work (published in 1739), known as the Fundamentbuch, expository of his doctrines. WRITING ANOTHER MAM'S LOVE LETTERS. There resided in the lower portion of Rondout, not long since, a swain whose sweetheart dwelt in a distant place, and in communicating with her her lover was compelled to call in the aid of a third person, as his early education was defective, perhaps from too fre quent indulgence in "playing hookey." To guard against any temptation for die scribe's falling in love with his sweet heart, the young fellow settled upon a married man to perform the duties thereof, and so for a time things worked most harmoniously. The scribe had been there himself , and profiting by his experience, he penned such deliciously gushing letters to Mary Ann in the name of George, of course that the little maid soon surrendered the citadel of her heart to George, and promised in due time to surrender her hand also. Now, time in its flight caused the swain to move to a neighboring river town to pursue his calling; but it was necessary to keep up the correspondence with Mary Ann in the same handwriting, as George got a friend in his new home to write the tender messages and mail them to the scribe in this city to copy and post. The plan succeeded admirably for a time, but on one ill-fated day the scribe, after inditing a most loving epistle to Mary Ann, ending, of course, with a prayer for a reply by return mail, in a fit of abstraction signed his own instead of George's name. The return was a female, and no less a one than Mary Arm's own mother, who searched out the scribe, and laying his last tender effusion to her daughter before his as tonished eyes asked him in such tones as only an outraged mother can com mand, how dared he, a married man, with a family, write such a letter to her innocent lamb of a daughter. Then that scribe had to rise and explain how he had been engaged in an amicable fraud, and the words must not be taken as an expression of bis own sentiments oh, no 1 by no means but those of George. His explanations, however, fully satisfied the matron, and all' is again serene. PREVENTION USING OF MISTAKES IN MEDICINES. The many deaths that occur through the lack of a proper system in the i apoth ecary business demand a speedy reform. There will be plenty of ignorant and careless people among the sick or their friends, who, without some better warn ing than they have at present, will mis take one drug for another. They have a stricter system as to this matter in German j, and one still more strict in Sweden. In those countries, the pois onous medicines are locked up by them selves in a special closet. We cannot see why this should . not be done here. If morphia or any two' or three danger ous substances are too much used that they must be handy, le each have its own place and package, so as not to be mistaken for anything else. Some have suggested triangular, vials for poison, so that nurses and patients, as well as clerks, may know the danger by tho touch;, and the suggestion is a good one. Bmt best of alh .we think, is the plan of having every proprietor or chief clerk of a drug store make out a com plete list of ' poisons that he sells, and place it in a conspicuous position on his prescription counter, and compel every clerk who waits on customers io learn the list by heart. The list must, of course, include the dose within Which safety lies. If druggists performed their duties properly, there would be no need for protective legislation. iSoietitiflc American. ' . 'OuBsat'home The baby. THE CAPTURE OF NENA SAHIB. The announcement by dispatches from Hindostau of the capture of Nena Sahib carries the mind of the mature reader back at once to the terrible Se poy rebellion in British India, seven teen years ago, and the shocking details of massacre, murder, torture and out rage worse than death which' accom panied that insurrection. In that ter rible history Nena Sahib was the fore most figure, and the most devilish of the diabolical tortures visited upon the English captives were of his invention. His escape and continued hiding for sixteen years after his last forceB were defeated and disbanded, is an illustra tion of his craft and cunning. His cap ture now ought to be followed by speedy trial, conviction and condign punish ment ; for, if ever there lived on earth a treacherous and malignant monster, prodigal in cruelty and apparently utterly devoid of mercy or feeling, Nena Sahib filled fully that detestable ideal. He was born in 1824, the eon of a Brahmin of the Deccan, and was adopt ed when an infant by Bajee Rao, the Peishwa or chief of the Mahrattas. This adoption, according to the Mah ratta law, carried with it the heirship and property of Bajee ; but, on the death of that prince in 1851, Nena Sahib, who claimed the inheritance, was not recognized as the heir by the Brit ish East India Company, and an estate which had been bestowed upon Bajee was declared lapsed to the company, while a pension of 450,000 a year, which was granted to him and his family in 1818, was stopped. This seems to have been the cause of Nena Sahib's fero oious hatred of the English a hatred, however, which he managed to conceal under ah assumption of extreme friend liness. He was still fabulously wealthy, and lived in royal splendor at Cawn pore. He entertained the English mag nificently, imitated English customs, and even followed English fashions. All the time, however, he was secretly fo menting the disaffection which finally broke out in 1857, sweeping over India in a whirlwind of fire and blood. Such was his duplicity that he was trusted by the colonists as their friend, even after the rebeUion was at flood tide. But the tigerish nature of the man soon showed itself. He sud denly took the leadership of the insur rection, and massacred all the English that fell into his hands, among them two large parties, principally women and children, who were endeavoring to escape down the Ganges. He then laid siege to Cawnpore, and after it surren dered, on the condition that the garri son should be permitted to escape un harmed, let his prisoners embark on their.voyage down the Ganges. This was, however, but another instance of the feline cruelty of the man. He was playing with bis victims as a cat does with a mouse. Immediately after the captives had got aboard they were fired upon, 'and the survivors recaptured. The men , were instantly killed ; the women and children reserved for name less horrors. They were kept alive for eighteen days, and then, when Havelock, hurrying to rescue them, was close at hand, they were slaughtered with in conceivable barbarity, and a well filled with their mutilated bodies. Through the rest of that exciting In dian war Nena Sahib was the chief spirit of the insurrection, and displayed no little military skill and energy. He was defeated at Bittoor by Havelock, and his army destroyed, but he soon as sembled another, and besieged his late conqueror at Lucknow until the latter was relieved by Sir Colin Campbell. In 185$ he was chosen Peishwa or supreme ruler of the Mahrattw. Long after the rebeUion had been practically put down, and its other leaders had either sub mitted or been captured, Nena, with the Begum of Oude and some ten thousand Sepoys, maintained armed opposition to the British in the north ern parts of Central Hindostan. In 1859 it was asserted that he died of fe . ver, and since then the accounts of him have been vague and almost like le gends. There seems to be no doubt, however, that he is now in the hands of the British authorities. Detroit Tribune. "DEATH NOT GENERALLY PAIN FUL." When the blood ceases to be oxygen ated, physical sensibility is destroyed, and the oxygenation of the blood being accomplished by the lungs, if these or gans are obstructed, a proportionate privation of sensibility will necessarily be the result. The lungs are the weak est of all the great vital organs ; they ordinarily begin to die sooner than other parts, and their function is actual ly suspended before that of other or gans. Thence it follows that the4 oxy genation of the blood being gradually suspended, the privation of nervous sensibility immediately ensues, and tttere can be no suffering. , These theoretical notions aie supported - by facts. So far as my experience goes, if a1 dying man be asked whether he suf fers pain, he will, in the greater mem ber of instances, answer in the nega tive ; yet there may be at the same time a frightful appearance of distress. -.My opinion, therefore, founded on a great cumber of observations of the character above mentioned, is that death; iB , hot generally painful, and that nature, "like a kind mother," while she surro'tmds its idea with imaginary ter rors, has contrived the animal organiza tion in such a way as to produce a natural anodyne in depriving the blood of oxygen. There will be found, ho doubt, exceptions in chronic diseases already alluded,', to, as arising from physical causes', and there will be an other class of exceptions of a different, nature from moral causes, such as the recollection of abad'ijtte.-t25r. Warren. A GOOD REPUTATION. The young live much in the future ; they are fond of gazing into its un known depths, and of endeavoring to trace the outlines, at least, of the for tune that awaits them. With ardent hope, with eager expectation, they an ticipate the approach of coming years when they shall be called upon the grand stage of action, confident that the future will bring to them naught but unalloyed felicity. But they should allow their anticipa tions of the future to be controlled by a well-balanced judgment, and moderated by the experience of those who have gone before them. In looking to the future there is one important inquiry which the young should make : "What do I most desire to become in future life? What position '0m I anxious ts occupy in society ? What is the estima tion in which I wish to beheld by those within the circle of my acquaintances?" The answer to these . inquiries from the great mass of young-people can well be anticipated. There are none among them who desire, to be held in disre spect, and shunned by the wise and good ; none who are anxious to be cov ered with disgrace and infamy ; none who seek to be outcasts and vagabonds in the world. The thought, if they are doomed to such a condition, would fill them with alarm. Every discreet youth will exclaim : ' Nothing would gratify me more than to be honored and re spected as I advance in years ; to move in good society ; to have people ask my company rather than shun it, to be looked up to as an example for others to imitate, and to enjoy the confidence of all around me. " Surely there can be Hone so blind to the future, so lost to their own good, as to prefer a life of infamy and its ever- accompanying wretchedness, to re spectability, prosperity and true enjoy ment. But how are these to be ob tained ? They do not come at your bidding. You cannot reach forth your hands and take them as you would pluck the ripe fruit from the bending branch. Neither will wishing or hoping for them shower their blessings on you, if you would obtain and enjoy them, you must labor for them earn them. They are only secured as the well merited reward of a pure and useful life. The first thing to be aimed at by the young should be the establishment of a good character. In all their plans, an ticipations and prospects for future years, this should form the grand start ing point, the chief corner-stone. It should be the foundation of eveTy hope and thought of prosperity and happi ness in days to come. It is the only basis on which such a hope can mature to full fruition. A good character es tablished in the season of youth be comes a rich and productive soil to its possessor. INTERESTING. Europe signifies a country of white complexion ; so named because the in? habitants there are of lighter com plexion than those of either Africa or Asia. Africa signifies the land of corn, or ears. It was celebrated for its abundance of corn and all kinds of grain. Spain, a country of rabbits, or conies. This country was once so in fested with these animals that the in habitants petitioned Augustus for an army to destroy them. Italy, a country of pitch, from its yielding great quanti ties of black pitch. Gaul, modern France, signifies yellow-haired, as yel low hair characterized its first inhab itants. Hibernia, as utmost, or last, habitation; for beyond thiB, westward, Phoenicians, we are told, never extend ed their voyages. Britain, the country of tin, as there were great quantities of lead and tin found on the adjacent islands. The Greeks called it Albion, which signifies, in the Phoenician tongue, either white or high mountains, from the whiteness of its shores, or the high rocks on the western coast. Dr. C. Ewai.0, of Berlin, describes a method of washing out the stomach, which, on account of its great sim plicity, seems likely to make the topical treatment of diseases of the stomach, especially in cases of poisoniflg, much more common : "A piece of ordinary India-rubber tubing, such as is used for gas lamps, about six feet long, is used ; one end is rounded with scissors, and, if necessary, two holes are cut at a short distance from the end This tube possesses quite sufficient rigidity to be passed without difficulty into the stomach. To the outer end a funnel is fitted, into which can be poured either water or a solution of soda, etc., ac cording to circumstances. If the con tents of the stomach are to be removed, the outer end of the tube must be sunk to the level of the pubes, or even lower ; then the patient must make a short but forcible contraction of the abdominal walls. By this means the tube is filled to its highest point with the fluid con tents of the stomach, and becomes a siphon the liquid continuing to flow until there is no mere, or till the tube is stopped up. This last seldom oc curs, if the tube be of a moderate cali ber. Should it, however, happen, or should the abdominal pressure be in sufficient to fill the tube in the first in stance, or the patient be insensible, or any similardifficulty arisej ii. can, in general, be readily overcome befitting a common clyster-syringe to the end of the tube, One stroke of the piston of which is generally sufficient to remove the difficulty." Tub title of Czar is obsolete, and not applicable to his Russian MjVsty, while the ft-repeated formula, l"Em peror of all the Rassias," is aro8s error. The title, literally translated, is "All-Russian Emperor." HOME. A trite maxim hath it that " Home is where the heart is ;" and if we might sometimes be disposed to quarrel a little with the assertion, we should har Uy be inclined to do more than transpose it slightly, and say " the true heart is where the home is ;" for it is undoubt edly true that the first instinct of man, alter the merely animal instinct of self preservation, is to provide for himself a home. And let that home be what it will squalid, dingy, meagre, comfort able, or palatial let it be desolate and lonely, or illuminated with the presence of fond companions and musical with the laughter of children, it will be, through all, the central point of exist ence, around which will cling and grow lovingly all the truest, purest and noblest sensibilities and aspirations. Our first thoughts in moments of tri umph, success, or happiness, and alike in moments of pain, sorrow, danger and despair, is of home ; for there, more than anywhere else, we are sure of that tender or exuberant sympathy which our varying moods demand. The spot hallowed by our tears, our prayers, our hopes, our sacrifices, and above all our love, becomes the Mecca of all our pilgrimages ; and let us be erratic, truant, discontented as we will, we shall eventually double upon our own wayward footsteps and return to it once motel if only to die surrounded by its holy affections and influences. "-w, . How the poets have sung in eloquent numbers of homej and how they still sing tirelessly upen the same darling theme ! Search the language through, and there is no fitting or beautiful word which has not been used for its exalta tion. Who has not seen a gay and mer ry company, seemingly carelesF, thoughtless heartless, almost hushed into the most tender and touching rev erence, when some sweet young voice among them rang, with bell-like vibra tions through their hearts, those sweet lines so replete with holiest meaning': " 'Mid pleasures and palaces Though we may roam, Be it ever bo humble. There's no place like home." And with what pathetic pathos and fervor every soul found utterance in the simple chorus, grand in its very sim plicity : " Home, home, sweet, sweet home, Be it ever so humble, There's no place like heme." MAN AND WIFE. Thomas Jefferson wrote the following excellent advice. There is much human nature and good sense in it : " Harmony in a married state is the very first thing to be aimed at. Nothing can preserve affections uninterrupted but a firm reso lution never to differ in will, sad the determination of each to consideVt the love of the other of more value than nay earthly object whatever on which a wish can be fixed. How light, in fact, is the! sacrifice of any other wish when weigh ed against the affections of one with whom we are to pass our whole life. Opposition in a single instance will hardly of itself produce alienation ; this - i i i i .11 i.i ; only iaK.es pia.ee wiieu itii me opposi tions are put, as it were, in a pouch, which, while it is filling, the alienation is insensibly going on, and when full it is complete. It would puzzle either to say why, because no one difference of opinion has been marked enough to produce a serious effect itself. The affections are wearied out by a constant stream of little obstacles. Other sources of discontent, very common indeed, are the little cross purposes of husband and wife in common conversation a dispo sition in either to criticise and question what the other says, a desire always to demonstrate and make the other feel in the wrong, especially in company. Nothing is so goading. Much better, therefore, if our companion views a thing in a different light from what we do, leave him in quiet possession of his views. What is the use of rectifying him if the thing be unimportant ? Let it pass for the present and wait a softer moment and more conciliatory occasion of reviving the subject together. It is wonderful how many persons are ren dered unhappy by inattention to the little rules of prudence." SUN SPOTS. The idea that some connection exists between the weather on the earth and the spots on the sun is supported by the numerous series of meteorological observations which have been collated by Mr. Charles Meldrum, of the Island of Mauritius, with special reference to the subject. These show that there is a terrestrial rainfall periodicity corre sponding with the periodicity of solar spots. There is an increase of rain when the spots occupy the largest area on the sun's surface ; and, conversely, when the sun-spot area is the smallest, there is a decrease of rain. Whether changes of temperature upon the earth also correspond with the fluctuations of the sun-spots is yet to be determined. The Brunswick (Me.) Telegraph re lates a strange occurrence. It says that Mr. John Fitzgerald, a well known temperance fjeeturer, was confined to his bed and quite feeble, being able to speak scarcely above a whisper. Satur day morning, the time of the Fall River disaster, his wife had just left him to go out into the stable, when she was startled by the cry of Are. She went to her husband, when he repeated the cry. He was greatly excited, and attempted to get out of bed, saying; " There is a fire in a factory in Fall River) 'Mass., in the upper story the mule room ; I see sparks flying from the machinery, as sparks fly from a grindstone when men are grinding their tools, and the factory is full of women and children. I see it all." After a while he fell back ex hausted, saying the roof had fallen in ar$ the poor people were burned. This occurred about the same time in the morning that the fire did. STRANGE MATCHES. It is an historical fact that Frederick of Prussia formed the idea of compel ling unions between the tallest of the two sexes in his dominions, in the hope of having an army of giants. The reader will, in all probability, recollect the following ludicrous incident. It so happened that, during a rather long ride, the King passed a particularly tall young woman, an utter stranger. He alighted from his horse, and insisted upon her delivering a letter to the com manding officer of his crack regiment. The letter contained the mandate that the bearer was instantly to be married to the tallest unmarried man in the service. The young woman was some what terrified, and, not understanding the transaction, gave an old woman the letter, which was conveyed to the com manding officer, and this old woman was, in a short time, married to the handsomest and finest man in the crack regiment. It is not necessary to say that the marriage was an unhappy one particularly so to the old woman. In this connection comes another anec dote. A rich saddler directed in his will that his only child, a daughter, should be deprived of the whole of the' fortune unless she married a saddler. A young Earl, in order to win the bride, actually served an apprentice ship of seven years to a saddler, and afterward bound himself to the rich saddler's daughter for life. But the union was anything but a happy one ; the bride, neither by birth nor breed ing a lady, reflected little credit on her bridegroom's choice ; and repeated quarrels were followed by separation. So it is with all unequal matches ; gold and brass won't unite. Novels tell us the felicity following the union of Lord Fitzgerald to Mary Ann Jones, quite ignoring Mary Ann's predisposition to red knuckles and unshapely feet, which peculiarities finally make my lord's life burdensome. Novels are amusing, but not to be relied on in " matters of the heart," as a rule. Common sense says, " Young folks, marry within the bound ary of your social and religious circle." A FAITHFUL DOG. Metcalf 's grocery store in our place has been closed for a week or so. Met calf was perfectly willing to have it open, but circumstances rendered it necessary for him to suspend business for a while. There had been a good many burglaries, and Metcalf bought a dog to keep in his store at night. The man that sold the dog said that its one strong peculiarity was vigilance. That dog would watch that store closer than the Genius of Liberty watches the des tinies of America. So the man turned the dog loose in the store, and Metcalf locked up and went home. When he came down in the morning the dog flew at him as soon as he opened the door and attempted to breakfast on Mr. Met- calf's legs ; whereupon Mr. Metcalf sud denly shut the door and sat down to think. Then he went after the man who sold the dog, but he had gone out of town to see his aunt, and wouldn't be back for a month. Metcalf then un dertook to coax the dog through the crack of the door, but the animal still manifested a resolute determination to chew Metcalf's legs, and so Metcalf closed the door again and began to wish he had bought a dog less attentive to business. Then he procured a double barreled gun, and spent the remainder of the week shooting slugs and bullets down the chimney, and through the doors and windows, and up through the cellar ceiling, and still the dog held out, until finally Metcalf got a section of wire fence, placed it across the door way, opened the door, and banged the obnoxious animal into eternity. Then he entered and found that he had shot holes through the molasses cans and the coal-oil barrels, and had blown all the chinaware to atoms ; so that the store looked as if a fifteen-inch shell had burst in it. ' Metcalf cleaned up and resumed ; but he is anxiously await ing that man's return from his visit to his aunt's. He wants to see him about something. Danbury News. THE DISEASE GALLED EXCITEMENT. Man does not need that which he calls excitement. What a healthy mind most craves is placidity ; to do its work in perfect calm, without any stimulus ex cept that afforded by perfect bodily health. Mind and body healthy, each will give all the stimulus the other needs without resort to artifical means. Men tal dissipation and physical debauchery are alike disastrous in their effects ; alike breed a fierce appetite for more, an appetite that will not be appeased except by deeper and deeper draughts which finally ruin body, mind, and soul. Unfortunately, 'this appetite is fostered by our theatrical performances, novels of the day, and social gossip, so that religion (so terribly assailed by scandal just now), legislative enact ments, social philosophy all seem powerless to effect a cure. We are sometimes disposed to think that the only way is to let the disease run its course, until the poison eliminates it self from the body politic. Society, as at present organized, may die of the disease, or perhaps it may survive to enjoy better health afterward. Let us pray for better health. A German cremation society, num bering 450 members, exists in New York. Its design is to build a hall with iron walls sixty by forty-four feet. In the center will be erected an altar, and in front of it, upon a large plate, the iron coffin will be placed. After the burial services have been performed the car containing the body will be moved under the furnace and subjected to the action of the air at a tempera ture of 1,000 deg. F. The ashes in the coffin will then be returned and col lected. An hour and a half is the time mentioned, 250 to 450 pounds of coal oil the fuel and $8 the price. THE JUDGES OF THE SUPREME co:.. mm A Washington correspondent writes as follows of the nine black-robed ven erable Judges of the nation's high court : Chief Justice Waite is the youngest man on the bench, and looks still younger than he is. With a solid and erect form and bearing, square and massive head, covered heavily with black hair, which years are mottling into gray ; strong and expressing face, genial but decided manner on the bench, he looks the Chief Justice of the pres ent, being clearly distinct f frrjifc the ideal Judge of the past, when wiufcftaad scanty locks, a bald and glistening dome of thought, great age, and somewhat of coldness and reserve marked the typical jurist. Seated on the right of the Chief Jus tice are Judges Clifford; Miller, Field, and Bradley, in their order, and on his left Judges Swayne, Davis, Strong, and Hunt, the various positions being de termined by seniority of appointment, beginning with Judge Clifford on the right, continuing with Judge Swayne on the left, Miller on the right, Davis on the left, and so on through the list. Among the Associate Justices there are i three" distinct types of men. Swayne, Davis and Miller are the large and weighty men, who impress you with gigantic ability to digest either an abundant dinner or an abstruse legal question. Clifford and Bradley, though no pigmies in stature, aefem rather the sages of the bench, who, with voices somewhat broken by age ply the ad vocate with questions that show there is no lack of mental -gor. Field, Strong, and Hunt, on the other hand, are the clear cut, cold," and college- bred men who seem to furnish to the bench the culture and polish of the East, as Swayne, Miller, and Davis do the native vigor of the West. TnE NEW FRENCH MUSKET. The Journal de Paris states that or ders have been given to proceed faame diately with the manufacture of f!ue new musket, model 1874 (system Gras). These weapons will only be constructed in the workshops of the state ; private firms will not be called upon to assist. The calculation is that in about a year a million of them will be made. Then only will the arm be placed in the hands of the soldiers of the active army, and the men of the reserve and the terri torial army will be drilled in the man agement of this musket. The chasse pots will be withdrawn, and they wilfbe altered to the new pattern. France has at present 1,800,000 of them. One year will be necessary for that transforma tion ; so that, by adding 200, 000-.new ones to be constructed in the interval, the Minister of War counts upon pos sessing, at the end of 1876, 3,000, OOTJbf muskets (model Gras), witfi store of 250 metal cartridges per weapon. he manufacture will afterwards be tm tiuued on a normal scale, and in ""pro portion to the resources of the ordinary budget of war. The news concerning the artillery is no less satisfactory. France will have, at the end of the year 1875, 494 batteries of six cannon each of calibers 5 and 7, with ir a carriages, the pieces in bronze, breech-loading, on the Reffye system. From the begin ning of next year the construction of bronze cannon will be abandoned, and those in steel on the Lahitolle system will be adopted. NOT TO BE FRIGHTENED. An ol i French shoemaker, who boasted that nothing could frighten him, was put to the test by two young men. One of them pretended to be dead, and the other, going to the shoemaker, duced him to "sit up" with the sup posed corpse. The shoemaker was in a hurry with some work he had promised to have completed the next , morning. So he took his tools and leather, and began working beside the corps,. About 12 o'clock at night a cup of blacK coffee was brought ,, him to kjQpp him awake. He drank it and rsnTnH ntni-t About 1 o'clock, the coffee having ex hilarated him, forgetting that he was in the presence of death, he commenced to sing a lively tune, keeping time with his hammer. Suddenly the corpse arose and exclaimed, in a hollow voice " When a man is in the presence of death he should not sing !" , .'" THlA ft 1 1 - f TY1 Q 1.-1- V cfrfol flion cni". denly dealt the corpse a blowL on tho head, exclaiming at the same time vvnen a man is dead he should not speak." It was the last time they "Tried to-' scare the shoemaker. Mb. Okton's report of the condition and doings of the Western Union Tele graph Company is interesting teading to those who have a mind for such things. The capital of this compary is in round numbers forty-one millions, of which the company holds a little over seven millions and a quarter, with no floating debt. The income of the com pany last year was nine millions and a quarter, and its expenses fell short of six and three-quarters, leaving a clear profit of $2,506,920. And it has added 21,264 miles of wire to its lines by pnr cha.se and construction during the year. It has 71,585 miles of line, 175,135 miles of wire, and 6,188 offices. A novel and exciting race lately took place at Cork, Ireland, between a Mr. Playfair and a horse ridden by a Mr. Arnott. The conditions of the race were that Mr. Playfair should rim a hundred yards while' the horse ran the same distance, the rider to stand at the horse's head and mount at the word " go. " The race was run in eleven sec onds, and won by two yards by the rider of the horse, who exhibited great agility in mounting. In most like con tests the mounted horse has been beaten.