COW V-f OLBVK. ALBANY, OREGON. WRITERS OF ONE HYMN. The fame of many writers rests on a single production. Defoe was a volumi nous writerj but " Robinson Crusoe " , is all that has come down to us. " The Burial of Sir John Moore " has em balmed the memory of the Rev. Charles Wolfe, no less than that of the military hero ! It is so In sacred poetry. Take most favorite hymns, and you will find their authors oomposed nothing else popular. . Their genius seems to have been ex hausted by a single happy effort. Let as look at a few illustrations : " Come, thou fount of every bless ing," was the earliest and best per formance of Robert Robinson, awak ened under the preaching of White field. He was unstable, becoming Methodist, Independent, Baptist, and finally died an avowed Socinian, in 179a Bock of Ages is a glorious Chris tian lyric, and Toplady has left nothing .half so precious. He began his minis try amid the beautiful hills of Devon, in 1768. Toplady was bitter enough in dispute, but his spirit lost all its harsh ness when he tuned the instrument of sacred song. ' ... Few hymns have been more frequent ly sung at times of special religious feeling than " Come, ye sinners, poor and needy." Its author was Joseph Hart, born in London, 1712. He began life as a teacher. The Rev. Edward Perronet gave to the church that , grand 'march, of the aaints, "All hail the power of Jesus' name. His father was a clergyman of the English Establishment, but he him' self labored under the patronage of Iady Huntington, who died in 1786. "Nearer, my God, to thee," has probably touched more hearts than any other hymn. Sarah Fuller Flower, its author, was the younger, of the two daughters of Ben j amine Flower. In 1834 she was married to Adams, a civil engineer, and died in 1849, at the age of 44. She was buried near Hartlow, Essex. How many weary pilgrims have been cheered in passing through the dark valley by the consolation of " Just as am, without one plea." Charlott Elliot was an invalid from early years, and died in 1871. She was the third daughter of Charles Elliot, of Clapham, England. Timothy D wight, elected President of Tale College in 1795, prepared four ponderous volumes of theology, which few clergymen ever take from the shelf. His classic version of the 137th psalm, "I Love Thy Kingdom, Lord," will perpetuate his memory. A few years ago, in New York, Phoebe CJary died of consumption, at the age of 46. She and her sister Alice were both graceful poets. "One sweetly solemn thought," written by Phoebe, in its pensive sadness, touches the heart like a dirge, "Sweet the moments rich in blessing, one of the most inspiring songs for the great congregation, was composed by Sir Walter Shirley, converted under the ministry of Venn, who died in 1796. Shirley afterward preached in England and Ireland. About fifty years ago the Rev. Dr. Muhlenburg, rector of St. Luke's Hos pital, New York, wrote the well-known hymn. " I would not live klway." Not satisfied with its spirit, the author has since endeavored to correct its teach ings, writing, in 1868, an additional verse, which breathes the true feeling of resignation. This is generally ound, however, with the older verses. PR I G RTF UL RAILWAY SLAUGHTER. The London Timet, of Dec. 25, gives an account of a terrible accident on the Great Western railroad, in which thirty-one persons were killed, and up ward of seventy wounded. A large number of passengers, most of whom were visiting friends for Christmas, were being conveyed in thirteen car riages, with two engines, from the sta tion at Oxford, at 11:40, to Birming ham and the north. The train, which was half an hour late, proceeded safely for about six miles when the tire of a wheel of a first-class carriage broke and the car immediately left the metals, and for at least 300 yards plunged along ever the sleepers, many of whom were cut in two, and rushed over two wooden bridges, one over the Oxford and 'Bir mingham canal. The carriage was thrown down an embankment, and dragged after it several others. The train was traveling at the rate of forty miles an hour, and the impetus given to the carriages as they left the rails carried them with terrible force for a Jong distance, until they were finally dashed to pieces in the meadows below. Three carriages and a luggage van were deposited beyond the canal. :", One car riage carried away one of the stone abut ments of the bridge, and fell in splin ters into the water. Fragments of two earriages, turned wheels upward, were literally strewn about the embankment, and one carriage was hurled right across the line on to the bank. The front part of the train continued its course for some distance. In the ease of a majority of the victims, death was in stantaneous. - .: ' - - -- ;'- Ix devising his property Dr. Frank lin made a bequest of five thousand dollars to the city of Philadelphia, and alike amount to Boston. This money was to be loaned to married mechanics, te assist them in starting business, and the interest was to be compounded for se hundred years, at the expiration of is-hica tim the accumulated funds were to be expended by the respective for public improvements. Eighty-five years have passed. The Philadelphia inna amcunts to about forty-six thou sand dollars, while Boston has a fond accumulated to the amount of one hun dred and eighty-two thousand dol lars. r. - CREMATION. "We read an interesting account of an act of cremation successfully performed inxsresaen. xne body was that of a lady, the young wife aged twenty- snree oi a soutn Uerman physician. The hall around the furnace was 1aw rated with flowers, and in everv nth a respect the solemnity which should at tend so serious a rite was duly ob served. No clergyman could, however. be found to take part in the ceremony ana Bpeax a Disriai address over the dead body, so Herr Siemens, the eon Btructor and proprietor of the oven, de livered a brief but impressive speech. after which the coffin was committed to the flames. The process of cremation was screened from the eyes of the lady's friends by an iron door, but a small number of physicians and other scien ti.no men witnessed the operation through a slit in the wall. Thev de scribe the spectacle as free from any thing offensive either to the senses or the imagination. The current of hot air burning up the body appeared as a transparent name of a pale redish hue. There was no smoke er any unsightly transformation of the body. ' When the coffin was consumed the body appeared in its natural state, then red hot, and at last appeared to be of translucent white. From this it crumbled into ashes. Up to the period of its entire consumption by tne names the process was merely a rapid drying up. After seventy-eight minutes all organic matter was gone and nothing remained but a small heap of ashes, which was con veyed away in an urn. CUR1AG THE HICCOUGH. The Reese River (Nev.) Reveille tells the following : A young gentleman who attends the Austin public school had been told that a sudden shock or fright would cure the hiccough, and the other evening, while he was studying his les son for the morrow by drawing a picture of tne schoolma'am on his slate, his re spected progenitor was seized with a fit of hiccoughs. The old gentleman was tilted back in his chair, with his feet resting on the stove, and the young hopeful concluded to try the cure . on him. J ust as the old man was " rast ling with a heartbreaking hie, the boy jumped up and yelled "Fire!" The old man was just getting out cuh-ouh, but he never got it out. He gave a jump which tilted over his chair, and in endeavoring to regain his lost equi librium his feet flew up against the table, upsetting it and a student lamp which stood upon it, and his head land ed in the ashes on the stove-hearth. The old lady, hearing the racket, came running in from the kitchen and tripped over the old man's prostrate form. knocking down a whatnot with a lot of glass and china ornaments. When that boy's father arose from the wreck, and shook the ashes and splinters of glass out of his hair and clothes, he was cured of the hiccoughs, but there was a look of sternness in his eye ; the boy says he knows it was a "stern" look feelingly "stern," as he can testify. He says fright is a splendid cure for the " hiccups," but that the " stern look it occasions is three hundred thou sand times worse than the " hiccups. ' He can't play tag now, as he says his mother has forbidden him, and he sits on the edge of the seat at school and lies on his front when in bed, and silent ly murmurs that the old man can hiccup his consarned old head off before he will ever again try to cure him. THE DOG HEAVED HON KEY. A full-grown specimen of the dog- headed monkey from Abyssinia has been presented to the Museum of the Uni versity of Geneva. - This Abyssinian monkey is characterized by the long hair on its cheeks and the greater part of its body. It was held in veneration by the ancient Egyptians, and enjoyed a certain celebrity from the rank that it occupied in their cosmogony. Its fig ure is engraved upon the mouments of ancient Egypt, and there have been found mummies of the animal well pre served. According to Ehrenberg, this monkey served as the emblem for the arts and sciences, music and astronomy, and especially for speech and hiero glyphics, or letters, over which he was supposed to preside. It is for this that the AbyssinLtns now call it iota. - Hor apollon reports that this monkey was consulted in the temples ; a tablet, reed and ink, presented by a priest, were used as tests to ascertain if the partic ular animal belonged' to the race that knew how to write. This representa tive of Thoth also symbolized the judg ment of souls; and upon one of the temples of Philae . there is one rep resented with a balance in hand weigh ing the actions of men. In other places it is represented writing with a reed. hrenberg also supposes that it is the locks of this monkey that have served as the models for the perukes figured upon the heads of different divinities in ; the Egyptian mythology. - A ooon-zooKisa house-girl, employed in a family in Detroit, received a pres ent of a muff the other day, and in a day er two after the lady of the house discovered a receipted bill in her hue band's desk, reading s " For one muff $20." She hadn't had a new muff, and when the man came home to supper that night the old girl was gone and a new one was wrestling the dishes about. Miss Ahthohy, who recognizes only the rights of the Eves, owes her nativity to Adams, Mass. - EDUCATING APPRENTICES R. ROE co:s TECHNICAL BCHOQL. The house of It Hoe & Co., well known for the invention of the wonder ful Hoe cylinder press, convinced that the efficiency and success of their corps of workers would be greatly increased if they possessed a good English educa tion and a thorough knowledge of the fundamental principles of mathematics and mechanics,' established a year or more ago a school for their apprentices. The recitation room, fitted up with all modern improvements, is a portion of the large, airy, commodious apartr.ent on the upper floor of their new busi ness house, No. 504 Grand street, hav ing magnificent views from windows on every side. The course of study em braces grammar, arithmetic, algebra, geometry, reading, writing, drawing, composition, the ten science primers, and Overman's mechanics. The classes in these various branches recite once a week, the recitation being an hour in length. The lessons given' are Jong, but the apprentices have ample time out of work hours, not only to prepare them, but to reflect upon and study their practical applications. All the apprentices, numbering upward of a hundred, are compelled to , go through this course of study, and as the term of apprenticeship ranges f ron five to seven years, they have time to become profi cient in every branch taught, so that when their apprenticeship is over, they have ahorough English and technical education, so far as mechanics are con cerned. Everything is furnished gratuitous ly the best of instruction, text-books and drawing materials ; and the annual outlay required is, Mr. Hoe assured us, very trivial compared with the valuable results already attained. The benefits conferred upon the apprentices them selves, and upon the community, by a school of this sort, are inestimable. From the ranks of iceehanics thus care fully educated must come skilled work men, inventors, and those who shall make new and valuable applications to the practical economies of lif a of prin ciples already known. The scholars in this school are earnest and enthusiastic in their studies. New York Tribune, PRACTICAL HINTS CONCERNING THE USE OP TEA. j The following hints concerning the use of tea may prove useful : 1. Whoever uses tea should do so in great moderation. 2. It should form a part of the meal, but never be taken before eating, or be tween meals, or on an empty stomach, aa is too frequently done. 3. The best time to take tea is after a hearty meal. 4. Those who suffer with weak nerves should never take it at all. 5. Those who are troubled with in ability to sleep nights should not use tea, or if they do, take it only in the morning. 6. Brain-workers should never goad on their brains : to overwork on the stimulus of tea. , 7. Children and the young should not use tea. 1 8. The over-worked and under-fed should not use tea. . xea snouid never be drunk very strong. 10. It is better with considerable milk and sugar. lL Its use should at once be aban doned when harm comes from it. 12. Multitudes of diseases come from the excessive use of tea, - and for this reason those who cannot use it without going to excess should not use it at alL WORK. ! " I am a burden to no one, I pay for whatever I have. I am dependent only on myself." We hear such assertions every a ay xrom tnose who never did a stroke of work, either at business or manual labor, but they have some hun dreds of. thousands, left them by some one who did work, and they have sat down to "enjoy life," as they term it. Let us tell you, friends, the workers of this world support you no less than they do the veriest paupers in the alms house. We ask, What do you in your idleness ; but . consume ? , And ; by what divine right are you entitled to idle about and use without endeavor to keep good that which' industry has be stowed on you ? Are you a better man than was your father that you can spend his hard-earned gains regardless of the example be set you? Or a better woman than was your mother that yon need not remember thatshewas a worker?. Bouse your selves, thoughtless ones. Find a busi ness, go to work as men and women,, in your homes, among the busy throng, any where or at anything respectable, only find something to do now, and trust the testimony of the many that you will be far happier than in this life of idleness which, when you stop to consider, dis gusts you as much as it does any one. John Wabp, a young man of Haro . county, Mich., about two years ago committed some fracture of the law and was arrested. He broke, loose from the officer who had him in charge and es caped out of the county. . But John Ward left some 'unfinished business with a girl of 17 who had a liking for him, and for , whom he proved himself willing to suffer imprisonment and even death. " He returned to see the girl. Her father forbade him coming into the house. Ward drew a pistol and walked in. . The mother admired - the dash of the young man and became bis friend. The girl was there, lovely, and 19, and true to her lover. .Ward was arrested on complaint of the father for assault with a pistoL i The mother' testified in favor of Ward and against her old man. Ward was found not ffuiltv. It was soon John Ward and wife. The old lady having, as she supposed, fulfilled her mission, took a big dose of lauda num to get away from her husband who had disgusted her by persecution of Ward, but the doctors pumped her out, and she still lingers in this wicked world which does not pay for the trouble. CHINESE CHRISTMAS FEAST. The San Francisco papers record a perfect marvel in the way of a Christ mas dinner given by a few wealthy Chinese merchants to some of their American friends. Under the gaidance of Dune Sone and Yim Chang, the guests found themselves in a perfect maze of grandeur, rivaling the descrip tion of the "Arabian Nights" in splendor. There were gigantic lanterns, gilded ' hangings, and embroidered chairs. During dinner the guests were regaled with the " Overture a-la Con fucius," or " Celestial Chords,", with tin pans and clashing of gongs. There were lacquered tables with ivory chess and checkers for those who cared to retire for a smoke. Over the. backs of the sofas and chairs and around the side tables were covers of elaborately embroidered scarlet broadcloth in gold and silver. The dinner table was a marvel of taste and beauty. No two plates or bowls were alike. Besides chop-sticks, there were the usual array of spoons, knives, etc. ; and scattered over the table were images of dragons, lions, antelopes, devil-fish, in rice, flour, and sugar. The native wine was scented with attar of roses, and it was ae strong that a couple of thimblefuls were considered sufficient for the even ing. The bill of tare consisted oi thirty courses, comprising stewed birds nests, stewed shark fins, duck legs, Li Chee nuts, pigeons, watermelon seeds, fried fish fins, mushrooms, an4 ducks' web foot, capon and bam, and almond paste. The pastry was wonderful in design, resembling birds, beasts, and fishes in endless variety. After eah course the party left the table, converged, lounged, or smoked. Following the Chinese dinner came a European spread, of twelve or thirteen courses. After six hours of hard dining, !. the party separated. i MILKING A MULE. He is an industrious citizeiof Charle county, Ohio. He got up at the usual hour, some time before daylight, a few mornings ago, and, taking his milking pail with him, went out to the barn. There were four stalls in the Btable and in the stalls were two mules and two cows, and the boy, not the old man, had put up the animals the night before. It was very careless of the boy, very careless and blameable, indeed, to put the cows in the mules' place and the mules in the cows' place, rjid he should have told his father of the change but he didn't. The old man, too, was care less in not taking a lantern to the barn with him. The off mule is a vicious brute, and it was additionally unfor tunate that the off mule was the one in the place of old Brindle, the cow the farmer has always been in the habit of milking first. And surely some spirit of evil must have possessed that off mule to a greater degree than ordinarily that it should have allowed the farmer to get fairly settled down and fumbling away before it turned on the steam in its big, bony off hind leg. And, if Ohio people are as carious as other people, it must have been aggravating to the neighbors that afternoon that no body was around the yard to tell them, when they called from the street, what made that big hole in the side of Smith's barn. The old man was the only one who knew anything about it, and he had been in bed senseless from the time that careless boy found him lying close by the barn in the morning. . HOW TIGERS 4.UE TAKEN. Jamrach, a London dealer in animals, gives the particulars of a tiger capture in Asia. ' Full-grown tigers are never brought away for the use of showmen, as they cannon be tamed, and make trouble by gnawing and breaking their cages. Therefore, only those under six months of age are cap tared. The natives stealthily watch the lairs at the time of brooding, and, upon waylaying a male at a distance from the female and her litter, shoot him. For his head they get a government reward of fifty rupees. When tne cubs are old enough to live without their mother, she is also shot and beheaded. The capture of the young ones is then safe and easy. They are kept at Calcutta until after teething, and are thence sent to the purchasers. The Sultan of Turkey buys many, but most of them go to the menageries in various parts of the worid Tigers are also killed by the natives for their skins, wkich, if hand somely marked, are worth a hundred rupees - each. The claws, too, are bought by the Indian jewelers, and sold for ornaments. Jamrach says that the number of men eaten by tigers in Singapore is very great, and that an average of one Chinese wood chopper disappears everyday. A BUSINESS WOMAN. Mrs. Phebe Benedict, of Antioeh, California, ' has solved the question, What can women do ?" Some two years since she took ont papers as sole trader, gained the consent of her hus band to allow her complete manage ment of the farm, ana transact all the business of the place, and at a time when the farm was mortgaged for sev eral hundred dollars, and - farming im plements out of repair. Now, by econ- otuy, close attention , to Business and shrowd management, she bat paid off the mortgage and interest, purchased a new cultivator, plows and other imple ments, treated herself to a sewing ma chine, repaired the buildings and will shortly loan money. EL1CSR OF ANTIQUITY. Among the most interesting relics of antiquity that have been brought to light in Rome, in the course .of the building and restoration that have been carried on of late years in the old city, are a numoer oi writing tablets, or pugillares. These writing tablets were much in use in the times of the Caesars, and consisted of two leaves of ivory hinged together bookwise. The inner surface of the leaves was slightly hol lowed to admit of a thin layer of wax, and the enter surface wai often adorned with elegant carving. The writing was executed with a stylus having one end pointed for the purpose, and the other blunt for making erasures. These tablets, called pvgillarea because they were small enough to be borne in the band, or diptycha, because they were double-leaved, were tied, sealed, and sent from friend to friend as tokens of regard. They were especially used by Consuls, who presented them to their friends on their elevation to office. Juvenal mentions their use by lovers in transmitting tender messages. The missives conveyed in them frequently had the portrait of the writer at the commencement. One of the tablets recently found in Rome still bore the inscription of its owner, Licinius, a favorite of Julius Caesar, and created by him Governor of GauL The in scription gives evidence that Licinius was a man of great wealth. A quantity of silver forks have also been recently unearthed in Rome. They are two-pronged, and with handles of elegant design. It has been hitherto supposed that the table-fork was a mod ern invention, and that the Romans, as the Greeks and other nations, ate with their fingers. Such, indeed, was the prevailing custom among all peoples down to the fourteenth or fifteenth cen tury. Meat was generally stewed, or, if roasted, it was cut into small pieceB by the carver, so as to be easily man aged by the fingers. At sumptuous tables the guests were furnished with basins of water and towels, for the con venience of washing their hands at the close of the repast. It is said that the use of forks at table first arose in Italy. In the reign of Edward I. forks were very rare in England. A half-dozen or, so were reckoned in the King's treas ures at his death in 1307. For three centuries later the convenient imple ments were employed only by the higher classes. Hence the interest of the present -"find" in Home. It cor roborates the old saw that there is noth ing new under the sun. MORE NEXT FRIDAY. A postoffice romance comes from Washington. It began forty years ago, in 1835. Mr. John II. Hallett, now Superintendent of the Dead Letter Department, was then a delivery clerk in that postoffice. In the year named, i a fine-looking, well-dressed lady came to his window one Friday morning and . inquired for a letter for Mrs. Mary H. Russell. There was a letter. She called the next Friday morning. There was another letter. She called every Friday morning ; there was always a letter if net in the morning, it came in the afternoon, and the lady returned and got it. They were all dropped let ters, directed by the same hand, and Mrs. Mary H. Russell never got any other letters. This went on for thirty years, and Hallett 6till stood at his window. In the meantime the hand writing of ; the address showed signs of age, and the lady was gray and looked 60. Hallett was transferred to the Dead Letter Department, and a younger , man took his place at the window. For short time the lady came and got her letter, as of old. At length Hallett found a dead letter addressed to Mrs. Mary II. Russell. He knew the hand. The lady had thea quit calling for her weekly missive. The letter was opened. It contained a 5 note and this sentence, without signature: "More next Fri day." The letters continued to come, and they were all dead letters, and there was always So and "More next Friday." For ten years they have come 520 dead letters and 520 $5 bills. In one letter was the admonition, " Do not write." What could he mean ? Who is he ? and what has become of her? Still the weekly dead letter comes addressed to Mrs. Mary H. Russell, and forty years have passed. The history of that cor respondence is the history f two long lives. John M. Hallett, growing old at nis postoffice window, saw the hair turning gray and the wrinkles multiply ing on Mary H. Russell's face. Then he went to the Dead JLetter Office, and the letters followed him, but the old woman comes no more. THE EFFECT OF M VSIC ON 8A VA GES. Sir Samuel Baker, in his new volume of African adventure, tells us of the notable effect of music on the natives. " I believe, "he says, "the safest way to travel in those countries would be to play the cornet, if possible, without ceasing, which would insure a safe passage. A London organ-grinder could - march through Central Africa, followed by an admiring and enthusias tic crowd, who, if his tunes were lively would form a dancing escort of the most untiring material " One can but imagine the different record we should have if music, instead pf gunpowder. had been employed as a force for the conquest of savage races. The pilgrim father, who so severely condemned un godly music, might have reversed his judgment had he known the effect of the fife and the drum and the trumpet on the sensitive ears of the Indians ; i he might, indeed, have organized bands of organ players ; ana, even if his own spirit had severely suffered under that unwonted noise, the speedy conquest of the otherwise intractable savage would assuredly have rendered the employ- ment of such means good and wise in his judgment. Let African explorers hereafter go forth with many wind and string instruments ; even the pirates' of the China Beas,' or the cannibals of the Pacific would cease to be a terror to every traveler, had they means at hand for the production of " sweet and dying sounds." Fearful has been the blood shed because the power of Orpheus has been unknown or neglected, and f atnre travelers, explorers or adventurers into unknown wilds may cordially thank Sir Samuel for this valnable hint. I A MISSING WATCH. The Duke of Athol having one day, at Blair-Athol, entertained a large party at dinner, produced in the even ing many curious and interesting fami ly relics for their inspection, among them a small watch which had belonged to Charles Stuart, and been given by him to one of the Duke's ancestors. When the company were on the point of departing, the watch was suddenly missed, and was searched for in vain upon the table and about the apart ments. The Duke was exceedingly vexed, and declared that of j all the articles he had exhibited, the lost watch was the one that he most valued. '.The guest naturally became exceedingly uncomfortable, and eyed each other suspiciously. No person was present, however, who could possibly j be sus pected, and courtesy forbade any stronger step than the marked; expres sion of the noble host's extreme annoy ance and distress. Eaoh departed to his home in an exoeeedingly unenviable state of mind, and the mysterious die appearance of the royal relic was a sub ject for discussion for several j months in society. . . . j A year afterward, the Duke being again at Blair-Athol, was dressing for dinner, and in the breast-pocket of a coat which his valet handed to him, felt something which proved to be the miss ing watch. i " Why, !" exclaimed his grace, addressing his man by his name, " here's the watch we hunted every where in vain for I" " Yes, sir," replied the man, gravely ; "I saw your grace put it in your pocket." , , " You saw me put it in my ; pocket, and never mentioned it 1 Why didn't you speak at once, and prevent all that trouble and unpleasant feeling ?" " I didna ken what might ha'e been your grace a intentions," was the reply of the faithful and discreet Highlander, who saw everything, but said nothing, unless he was directly interrogated. GOLD IN THE SLACK RILLS. Here is a story about gold in the Black Hills. It is told by Mr. James Bridger, an old mountaineer, who lives in Jackson county, Missouri. In 1859 he acted as gnide and interpreter to Capt. Reynolds, United States En gineer, in an expedition to explore the head waters of the Missouri, i Yellow stone, Columbia and other Western rivers. Lieut. Lee, Capt. Menadier and Dr. Hayden were along with a num ber of teamsters and other employes. One day while in the Black Hills, Mr. Bridger stopped to drink at a brook, and waa attracted by the curious ap- perance of the bottom of the stream He picked up a handful of yellow peb bles from the size of a pin's head to that of a bean. Though well acquainted with the appearance of gold, he was in doubt and took a handful of the stuff to Dr. Hayden and Capt. Reynolds, who pronounced it pure gold. Capt. Bey nolds became excited and insisted that Mr. Bridger should cast it away and not tel1 7 of the party about it fear : mg that it would break up the expedi tion, by inducing the men to desert and hunt for gold. Mr. Bridger has since traveled several times through the Black Hills and has found gold in other place, though never to the same amount. The old gentleman says there is good farming and grazing land in that coun try, and in the winter, which is severe, stock of every kind can find shelter and food in the valleys. . He thinks it fool lshness for white men to invade the country, except in large parties and well armed, and he says it is impossible to go there before the middle of June, owing to the severe cold and the snow in the mountains. They must have a very foolish breed of deer in Canada. They have not sense enougn to. run away from a man with all the world before them. Dr. BiUmgton, of Strathroy, found one of that breed. He was driving along one day and saw a deer in the road. He shouted at the animal, and expected to see it scamper acrosv the 'fields. It chose the highest panel of fence at the roadside, and tripping on the upper rail, fell back in the road. The doctor still shouted, and the deer tried the same panel several times with the like result. The deer was evidently be wildered. It could see no way out of danger but over that particular fence. The doctor thought venison was good enough for him, so he got out of his wagon, hitched his horse, took out his pocketknife, caught the tired animal and deliberately cut its carotid artery, and its poor," fluttering life ebbed away. The doctor slung the game into his buggy, took it home, told his story to unbelieving hearers, but he had venison steaks and stews for a week, j Pxtboucuic springs have been dis covered on the Luneburg Heaths, in Northern Germany. The petroleum is obtained by simple borings, 1 and at some spots, as the village of Weitx, the sand ia saturated with rock oQ. In clearness, purity, and specific weight, the Luneberg is said to be identical with American petroleum, and to be, moreovert almost entirely without smell of any kind. HE PENSIVE DONKEY. How to Put a Stoppeb osr His Music. In 1840, says M. Hno, we were once making a journey in the province of Pekin. Our equipage was under the guidance of an old schoolmaster, mounted upon a magnificent ass, so full of ardor and agility that the two mules that completed , pur team had H.' the difficulty in the world o keep up with him. This ass, however, was so filled with a sense .of.., his own superiority, and so proud of it, that when ever he became aware of the pres ence of any of his brethren he never failed to comm?ncn boasting of it in such loud and sonorous toaes that his folly, became quite in supportable. Whea he gotto an inn, instead of trying to re6t himself, the beast passed the whole night in prac ticing his music, setting all the donkeys in the neighborhood to singing the same tune, so that it was impossible to sleep. One evcDicg we said to the schoolmaster : " Yaur donkey is an abominable brute it prevents our get ting a wink of sleep. . " Why did you not tell me so be fore ?" said the schoolmaster ; " I would soon have stopped his singing." As the old - pedagogue was somewhat of a wag, and indulged sometimes in a small joke, we took little notice of his reply, but that night we slept quite soundly. "Well, did th ass make a noiae last night ? he asked, when we met in the morning. Perhaps not," said we ; "at all events, we did not hear him." ? No, I think not," said It;' "I saw to that before I went to bed. You must have noticed," he continued, "that when an ass is going to bray he always begins by raising his tail, and he keeps it extended horizontally as long as his song lasts. To insure his silence you have only to tie a largo stone to the end of his tail, so that he cannot raise it." , We smiled with oat reply, thinking this was only another piece of pleasan try ; but he cried : C ' " Come now and see ; you can easily convince yourselves." - And accordingly we followed him to the court-yard, whre we beheld, sure enough, the poor ass with a large stone attached to his tail, and with the air of having entirely lost bis accustomed spirits. His eyes were fixed on the ground, his cars hung down, his whole appearance denoted humility and de jection. We felt quite compassionate toward him, and begged his master to untie the stone directly ; and as soon as ever he felt his musical appendage at liberty, the creature raised first his head, then his ears, then his tail, and at last began to bray with all his wonted energy. ' A CURIOU- INDUSTRY. The statement recently mode, that the supply of ostrich feathers from Africa is gradually becoming far inade quate to the great and constant demand for them by dealers, has led to soma in teresting explanations of the methods of treating and disposing of these arti cles in the workshops of - Europe, where this curious industry is almost exclusively carried on. It appears that the feathers plucked from the living ostrich are far more beautiful, as well as more durable, than those taken some time after death ; but the feathers ob tained from recently killed birds have . the same qualities of adaptation as well as the living ones, and are far superior to the cast or , drop ped feathers. The plumage of the male bird, as is gener ally the case in all varieties of the feathered race, is very superior to that of the female, the fine drooping plntnes on the back and near the tail being of the purest white, while those of the fe- ' male birds are never free from the well known tinge of gray near the tip. The preparation of these feathers for their ornamental use is an industry peculiar in some respects. Tbey are first tied together in bundles, plunged into tepid soap and water, and rubbed with the. hand to free them from grease, and, af ter remaining in this for a few minutes, they are washed several times in pure water, as hot as the hand can bear, to rid them of the soap. Then they are bleached by being placed for a quarter of an hour in boiling water, holding in solution Spanish white, the solution be ing frequently agitated during the time, and the feathers washed in pure water on their removaL The next process is to pass the feathers quickly through a bath of cold water tinted with indigo, and the final one consists in sulphuring them, and then hanging them up to dry. The ribs of the feathers are scraped to render them pliant, and the filaments are curled by drawing the edge of a blunt knife over them. They are made to take a variety of beautiful colors, and of these rose color is given with saffiower and lemon jnice, and deeper shades of red by a boiling bath of Brazil wood, and subsequently a bath of cudbear. Indigo supples the blues, and tumeric the yellows. THE nAKflKR OF BETTING ON A More money has been lost in draw been lost in ing to aflush than in the Franco-German war. It is estimated in my country where men are apt to reduce the most leoondite matters to their arithmetical, results -that over 600,000 negroes and 20,000,000 bales of cotton have been, bet and lost by holders of sequences of four, with the chance pi drawing a. " quint " and filling the nush. Whether the player gets his flush filled ' or not, he ia sure to bet ; hence comes much bluffing. But for the consciousness of having bees so near a goed thing and misssed it unnerves and betrays them. A Senator who has just failed to get th nomination for president i never good for anything afterwards. Gen. Sohencfe on "Draw-Poker"