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About The Albany register. (Albany, Or.) 1868-18?? | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1875)
COLL. VAN CLVB. ALBANY, -v OREGON. XX2VCOZJVV IvtSTES, , , . . TLtE. IOOLIT- RrminUeatro of A War ef Me JReheHtoM. In the summer ; of 1864, during the ; darkest period of the war, before the renomination of Mr. Lincon, there was a serious effort made by man y prominent Bepublioans to pat him aside, and to nominate another candidate for the Presidency. At a dinner party given by Governor Yates, . it -was discussed, and the Governor himself was inclined to favor the project. immense mass-meeting of the citi zens of Illinois was held at Springfield shortly after, and the Governor being called upon to make the first speech, in mild and gentle words, but in most un mistakable terms, broke this . matter to the dense mass of patriots around him. It was the largest political meeting ever held in Springfield. Probably more than 20,000 men were present. I was seated upon the stand, and had a full view of the sea of earnest faces, and of the speakers. The Governor was received with great enthusiasm. But when' he began to broach the subject of laying aside Mr. Lincoln as a candidate, and substituting some other man, there was a profound and almost agonizing silence. They gave no cheer and no expression of approbation. Their respect for Governor Yates was too great to allow them to rive 'vent to expressions of disapprobation ; . and, as he was in such high position, they were made to feel by his remarks, that, perhaps, they might be called upon to acquiesce in the sad necessity, much as they loved and honored Mr. Lincoln. Never shall I forget the sorrow seen in every face, as Governor Yates closed -his address : and never can I forget the speech which followed. - Senator Doolittle, from Wisconsin, spoke next. I sat near him during the speech of the Governor ; and, as I was one of the parry at the dinner, I watched every movement and expression ot his countenance, as I did not then know whether he joined in that movement and sympathized with Governor Yates or not. He looked pale and nervous his broad chest heaving with deep emotion,, and his broad face beaming with intense earnestness. As he stepped forward on the platform, slowly he began, in that deep, penetrating and far-reaching voice of his, which all who have heard cannot forget " " "' " Fellow-citizens !" said he, lifting his hand and face toward heaven. "I be lieve in God." Then pausing, looking around upon his audience, he added, in a tone which reached every ear and thrilled every heart in that vast assem bly, "Under him I believe in Abraham Lincoln." ., . -r- - , . , - That was enough. Then ensued such a scene as I have never witnessed. The agony was over. The hearts of 20,000 men found utterance in cheers, in sobs and tears, in grasping of " hands, em braces and salutations. , For some time Mr. Doolittle could not go on. Never have I seen, and I doubt if in the whole history of the world a speech of eleven words ever produced greater effect. He went on, at length, and spoke for an hour and a half in the same vein. . When he finished. Governor Yates at once took the stand, and said he was satisfied the people demanded the election , of Mr, Lincoln, and that he would do all in his power to aid that result E. L. Waterman, Ottawa,' III, THE OLDEST WOMAN IN CHICAGO There is now living in Chicago a lady named Amy Gridley," who was born in Lyme, Conn., in July, 1777. She is ac cordingly approaching her ninety-eighth birthday. She attributes her longevity to three things the plentiful use of water, ample exercise, and marrying when past thirty-five. ' : In her youth she was a sew ing girl, and journeyed from farm-house to farm-house on horseback. : In 1825 she and her husband rode ' a distance of 480. miles in a wagon to witness the cere monies attending the laying of the corner-stone of Bunker Hill Menument Her husband died' in 1826, leaving con siderable property, and five months sub sequently, when she was nearly fifty years old, her first and only child was born. In, 1854 she cama, to Chicago. Until within a few years she could see and hear plainly, but these senses, es- pecially since the' fire, have gradually grown weaker. She was always indus trious, and devoted nearly all her leisure time to reading. Evn now her mind is unusually clear. Her only occupation for . the past year has been rumpling handkerchiefs, from which she seems to derive considerable amusement. Unlike most old ladies, she does , not take snuff or require much attention. She is peace ful and contented, and calmly awaits the animmons which will nsher her into the -world of perpetual youth. TELEGRAPH MACHINES WORKED 'An account is published of 'an inter esting exhibition of telegraph machines, worked exclusively by air, lately given in London by Mr. Guattaris, the invent or. ' A number of different instruments were on view. J The impulse ia produced at one end of a tube by the operator, and performs the mechanical work of the oUier end, either by ringing bell or traing a needle round a diaL A rapid ity and precision can be made equal to aije electric telegraph, the conducting tcbs being able to be laid under or over cover, Lathe same manner as the ordi Taarj telegraph, Attached to each ma cldae ia a bell and dial, and the message i,i tatnBiISed by the ' moving of '" a ' small I.. er which drives the air through a pipe t j the other operator. As the lever is moved up and down, the dial, which stands where the message , is destined for, registers whatever the words may be. ach dial is supplied witn a neetue, and, as each spurt of air presses against the words of the machine, the needle is moved exactly the number of times that the lever is pressed. Each instrument can receive or send a message about 400 yards, and is, therefore, of special con venience for private intercommunication. THE DO VOL AS MONUMENT. For many years the incompleted mon ument to , Stephen A. Douglas, in Chicago, has remained a sad comment upon the professed admiration of the city and State for the dead statesman. Last winter an effort was made to have the State appropriate a sum of money sufficient to complete the monument, but in a spirit of economy the Legislature voted down the proposition. - At last, however, a scheme has been hit upon which gives hopes of a speedy completion of the monument in accordance with the original plan. This scheme is to sell the property dedicated to the purpose in 1864, and remove the remains to the Chicago University near by. It is be lieved that the sum realized from the sale of the land fronting on the lake, where the base of the monument .was long since erected, will be sufficient to complete the work. The total height of the monument will be one hundred feet, the diameter of the circular base fifty two feet, and of the tomb twenty feet. Within this tomb is an arched chamber ten feet square, where rest the remains within the sarcophagus. Near the corner of the tomb are four pedestals, which will be surmounted by statues of heroic size, representing respectively Illinois, His to-' ry, Commerce, and Arts and Sciences. Above the tomb will be a pedestal fifteen feet high, ornamented with festoons, having near the base large, heavy bronze plates sunk into the rock, bearing on the face bas-reliefs of subjects purely Ameri can. The first will be an aboriginal scene ; the second, Three Pioneer Farm ers ; the third, Trade and Enterprise ; the fourth, Education. On the pedestal will rest a column forty-eight feet high, and five and a half feet in diameter at the base. The whole will be surmounted by s colossal statue, showing Senator Douglas in the act of addressing the United States Senate. MA NA O EM EAT Of CONVICTS. The annual report of the Inspectors of the State Prison of Michigan, for 1874, contains some excellent and humane sug gestions for the treatment of prisoners and the management of prisons. Capital pun ishment having been some years ago abol ished in Michigan, solitary confinement waf substituted. It was, however, found that this system was fatal to the health of ponvicts. Some became insane, while others drifted into idiocy and complete imbecility. Such prisoners are now put to hard labor. During the year 1874, the number of convicts has increased from 655 to 703; these numbers entitling the Michigan to rank, if such a condition may be regarded as an honor, among the foremost prisons in the country, j No prison government can be effective, says the report, without the power of punish ment. A prison contains desperate, dar ing men, guilty of the most flagrant and revolting crimes some of them so subtle and cunning that they are frequently able to hoodwink an officer, if not a firm and incorruptible man. The report suggests, as an effective agency in the maintenance of good order, a. tidily-kept kitchen. Pet animals are also introduced with beneficial effect; and the affection , lav ished by men confined for life upon dogs, deer, rabbits, geese, turkeys, doves, and chickens is said to be most touching, and at the same time human izing. "The matter for a hundred thrilling books," says the agent kindly, is ever floating among these galleries. while these corridors echo to many a sigh as they ring with the clik of the watenman s Key. I A LEGAL ROMANCE. There has been a romantic suit in Kan sas City for an estate of $300,000, and it has ended, as it should have done, in the most romantic manner. Thirty years ago, William . Gillis was one of the pioneer capitalists of the West. At that time Lahurst, Chief of the Pion-Kashou Indians, had a daughter, lovely if dusky, and her name was musical and soft as that of any Tnian Kahkotequa won the heart of William Gillis, who bought her from her father for a bale of blankets, and lived, with her. They had one, daughter, Nancy, one, of the prettiest -of half-breeds, and the belle of the trading- post which has since become Kansas City. ' She grew up, and had two sons, Frank Boye and Jim Charley. : Gillis did not treat his half-breed family, kindly, for when he died he willed his estate, consisting of handsome business blocks, and at least one hotel, to his niece, Mrs. Troost, reserving $125,000 for an orphan asylum. ; The half-breed heirs claimed the whole estate, and the County Court awarded it to them jointly. The ad ministrators appealed to the Supreme Court, and a day or so ago that tribunal affirmed the decision of the lower, court. Thus the two orphans most interested, heirs of the woodland and stream, have become wealthy capitalists. The moral of this story is evident, and those who make a practice of .buying r up pretty Titdiim girls will do. well to avoid willing their property, away. It , only , gives trouble, and wastes the money in legal feed, besides making the Legatee, mad without doing him or her any good. . Thx shoemakers of Lynn are out on a strike again' against a reduction of wages. . They held a mass meeting on Saturday and the thread of their discourse showed that they had waxed angry, and were da termined to' fight to the last and give up their all rather than yieki a peg. Arcadian. RATH I NO AND HEALTH. Dr. A. B. Crosby, formerly of the Michigan University, now of th9 Belle vue Medical College, New York, deliv ered a lecture on Saturday evening in the Cooper Institute upon " The Skin and the Use of the Bath." Dr. Crosby commenced by giving a series of stere optioon illustrations of the structure of the skin, explaining the important func tions it performed in the general econo my of the human system. The lecturer said he thought it was Charles Lamb who once said upon meeting a man with very dirty hands : " My friend, if dirt were trumps, what hands you would hold 1" However that might be, be regretted to be obliged to open his , lecture by re marking that . man was a dirty animal. He said the amount of fluid formed by the sweat glands underneath the skin was ordinarily about two pounds, or two pints, in the day upon ; the whole body when the person is comparatively: at rest. If exercise was taken to any great extent much more of this secretion or perspiration would be thrown off. When the skin is viewed with a magnifying glass of moderate power it is seen that minute particles of moisture ooze from the pores which speedily evaporate. The object of perspiration was to regu late the temperature of the body. I It was found, in connection with the circu lation of the blood, that there was a proc oess going on by which oxygen was be ing taken out of the blood by the j ar terial blood, and that carbonic acid was being taken away by jthe veins. The heat of the body Was constantly being formed. . The normal temperature of the blood was about 98 degrees, and were it not for the process of perspiration, which cools the system, we would get a temperature that would be inconsistent with life. The temperature of the body could not be carried 10 degrees above or below its normal temperature without fe ceasing. It would then be seen that the limits of temperature within which life can be sustained lay within a very narrow range, and hence the importance! of perspiration by which the temperature of the body was regulated. He then re ferred to the practice of bathing among the ancients, and said the first act of hospitality shown to a visitor was to pre pare a bath, as mentioned in the case of Ulysses and Telemachus whenever they were hospitably received j in their travels. In Greece the bath was both a public and private institution. In Athens the practice of bathing was joined with that of the gymnasium, and Plato recognized the necessity of bathing, so much so that he made the bath one of the institutions of theSstate. When the explorations were madelnPptopeii in 1824 the ruins of baths were found ainniW to those that existed in Borne, covering 10, 000 square feet. The Romans were in the habit of bathing seven or eight times in the day. . In modern times the Turks had cultivated the use of the bath more than any other nation. Mohammed ordained that there should be prayer five times a day with ablutions, and he was morally certain that we prayed no more and bathed much less. In India the bath had always been associated with shampooing. THE PRINTER'S PROGRESS. The Registrar of the Privy Council of Great Britain, Mr. Beeve, when examined recently before the royal, commission on the administrative departments of the courts of justice, explained the practice which obtains in his office of printing matter that would otherwise be written. He said: "I have a strong opinion that there ought to be no manual copying in offices. I have no writing clerks; I have nothing written beyond a very short letter. The moment even a letter is at all long I have it printed. I am convinced that, on ac count of convenience, dispatch, economy, and every other motive, all public bus iness ought to be done by the printing office. J think it is a barbarous piece of antiquity to have any public documents written, with the exception of such as are very short and inconsiderable. ", I think there ought to be several copies of them; and printing is the most economical way of multiplying the copies. You send a quantity of matter in a very rough form to the printer, and he produces it in an eligible shape; it is paid for, and there is no more expense. But if you have clerks to do the work they are constantly employed; there are periods when there is a great deal to do, and periods when there is nothing to do, and there are vacations, but the clerks must be paid all the year round." ' " ; Mr. Reeve says it would require sev eral writing clerks to do copying 7 in his department. But- the stationery-office accounts show that the cost of . printing executed for his office (the judicial com mittee) was only just over 100 last year, including the cost of paper used. The commissi oners agree in the main with Mr. Reeve's reasons, and think it likely that in the departments of state generally the adoption of a system of printing documents or letters where more than six copies' are required might be attended with economy, as well as advantage in respect of speedy execution and accuracy. r-JLondon Times.' . , - ; ' SLEEPING TOGETHER.: J ' More quarrels occur between brothers, between sisters, between hired' girls, be tween clerks in stores, ! between appren tices in mechanics' shops, be tween hired men, between husbands and wives, owing to electrical changes through which their nervous systems go, by lodging together night after night, under the same bed clothes, than by- almost any other dis turbing cause. There is nothing that will so derange the nervous system of a person who is ehminitive in nervous force as to lie all night in bed with, an other person who is absorbent ia nerv ous force. The "absorber will go to sleep and rest all night, while the eliminator will Via fnmViKniy o-n1 iratfonGT. restli and nervous, and wake up in the morn ing fretful, peevish, fault-finding afd discouraged.1 No two persons, no ren ter who they are, should habitually sleep together. One will thrive and the other will lose. This is the law, and inar- ried life it is defined, almost universalis CHILDREN'S DINNER - RA S KE TS Of the throngs of children who are obliged to carry dinner-baskets to a .dis tant school-house, how few take yith them perfectly suitable luncheon t '3To wonder they grow pale and thin ! " My children study too hard," says busy, mis taken mother. "If they go on losiKg vitality and color iri this way, I mist take: them from school." Very w4lL that'sfciot a bad idea sometimes, when tired eyes and brains need rest ; but; in this particular case, if you care to inter cept one of these little victims on pis way to school, and lift the cover of jbis luncheon-basket, I think youll 4nd the cause of his ill-health lurking be neath a mass of cake and pickles. Chil dren like dainties, and will of course? eat them in preference to wholesome food, if allowed to do so ; therefore, lacking judgment as they do, they should never be intrusted with the selection of their luncheon, as they often are, in this busy land, where mothers are overrun with other duties, which seem, on the surface, more important than the filling of dinner-baskets. . But what is in reality more important to mothers than the health of their children ? This is no light matter. The unwholesome dinners of too many Of our school-children tell steadily upon their growth and welfare and future use fulness in the world. Like grown-up people, they use up daily, or waste, by exercise of all sorts, by mere bodily com , bustion, too, in keeping the body warm with blood, ; a large portion of the nourishment they get from food. Their daily wastage must be made good. Chil dren have not only to repair their daily waste, but: to go on building up new bone, new muscle, new brain, as they grow from day to day. Their food should contain nourishment for all parts of the system, and they should have plenty, but they should be accustomed to such plain fare that they can readily stop eating when their hunger is satis fled, and not go on nibbling merely to gratify the palate, thus forming habits of gluttony. Cake and pastryhave but little, and pickles have scarcely a particle of nourishment in them, and they almost invariably do the system positive harm, in greater or less degree, when taken into the stomach. The harm may be so little and the overcoming influence so strong, in the way of out-door exercise and other healthy conditions, that no evil result may be apparent ; but all our diseases are caused by violation of hygiene in some respect. We are not always per sonally responsible for these violations, since our sanitary conditions are not always within our control, never indeed entirely so ; but where, we can help our selves we ought clearly to do so. A Q VEER DISEASE. A very valuable retriever belonging to Mr. Higgs, of Southampton, Eng., be came sullen and ceased to manifest pleas ure at his owner's approach. Soon he began to snap and howl in a peculiar manner, and to tear his kennel, which was of wood. Supposing it to be a case of hydrophobia, if was at first proposed to shoot him, but inasmuch as he was such a valuable animal and was so se curely fastened as net to be able to injure any one, it was determined to deter kill ing him for the present, and to await re sults. ' Day after day passed, the dog re maining in the same condition, however eating heartily and drinking freely of water. By this time he had torn his kennel into shreds. One day Mr. Higgs discovered that there was a large swell ing, commencing at the lower rib and extending up toward the shoulders, which he concluded to be a tumor. It increased in size and broke, when the dog immediately manifested delight at the presence of his master. An inspec tion of the opening revealed in the cen ter a substance which presented a . firm and pointed front,' and appeared to pro ceed from the intestines. Securing the dog's head with the assistance of a friend, Mr. Higgs seized the obstacle and with much effort extracted, it, which to his astonishment he found to be a galvanized iron skewer six inches long, which the dog had evidently bolted with the scraps thrown to him from the kitchen, with which it had got mixed. After a short time and proper treatment the ulcer healed and. the dog was apparently as well as ever. ' - - A DANGEROUS WIPE. Jacob Carlyle, of Areola, HL, pub lishes a card warning all persons from harboring his , wife,: and declaring his financial independence in regard ti all bills contracted by her. In the fullness of his heart Jacob adds: " She haB been so disagreeable that I cannot lire with her. She threw m candlestick into ray mouth and cut it, and has repeatedly kicked me. Sha threw the chairs oat of doors, and took my ax with the intention of chopping them to pieces, to prevent which I was compelled to send the ax to the house of one of my neigh bors. She threw a butcher-knife at me, stick ing it in the door, and declared that aha 'wished it had split my head open. She struck me on the head with a broom-handle, raising a tumor thereon nearly as large as a hen's egg.- An at tempt was made td poison me by putting arsenic in my jug of whisky, .of which I drank, and which nearly killed me, and I s aspect that she didif - - . All of these . offenses save the last might have been overlooked, but a woman who would , put arsenic into a man's whisky is, not merely a disagreeable but a dangerous character, r ., Thkbe ia a story of a defunct dry goods clerk who, after the -funeral services were over, and the undertaker . had put the last screw in the lid of. the coffin preparatory to interment,' was heard to say, in faint and muffled tones,' " Any thing else ? A RATTLE WI TH BULL-WHACKERS. Every now and then comes from the frontier a story of blood and passion caused by the raiding of frontier towns by Texas bull-whackers. The bull whacker is not necessarily destitute of humanity er principle, although the exi gencies of frontier civilization not un naturally beget in him an indifference to the amenities of civilized life, and even to the rights of his fellows. The bull whacker becomes a bully, with a latent energy for evil in him, awaiting its op portunity to become active and disas trous. This opportunity comes when the bull-whackers escort their property to market. Passing through the small towns of the frontier they become drunk on bad whisky, and then their active energy for evil becomes little less than astonishing. They rough-ride it over the townsmen, shooting and cutting in their mad fury, and leaving corpses and invalids behind them. Until recently a policy of conciliation has been main tained toward these ruffians, but' recent outrages have welded the citizens into bands -for mutual protection, and re prisals' are constantly occurring. New Mexico has recently suffered more than usual from their incursions, and the town of Cimarron became the scene of a violent affray but a few days ago.' The bull-whackers had made up a small party, and, in the violence of intoxication, went out with the avowed intention of killing somebody. A Sheriff's posse opposed them, and they opened fire. The Citi zens' Committee immediately formed, drove them into a stone ' building, from which they broke every light of glass, and finally forced them out. The bull- whackers were prepared for such an emergency, and had their horses held ready for them under . cover of their ,rifies. They managed to get into their -saddles and ride off, followed by a volley of slugs and buckshot. . One saddle was emptied, its occupant having been rid dled with ten bullets; a second herder iwas severely wounded, ; but ; succeeded in making good his escape, 1 while the rest escaped without injury, the citizens not being mounted. It is barely possible that the town of Cimarron will be the ob jective point of an increased gang of 'raiders; but it ia more probable that the 'bullies will make a wide circuit around it next time. The attack in this case was purely wanton, as indeed it usually ap pears to be. I THE ART OF COMPLIMENT. A delicate compliment is a work of far higher art than the most biting sarcasm. Every one knows the i story ! of the poor creature who found him self seated between Madame . Reca mier and Madame de Stael, and managed to offend them both by say ing that he sat between wit ana beauty. The court of Louis XIV. seems to have been the school where the art was brought to perfection. The flattery offered by the men of genius to the King was at once coarse and exquisite. Wit ness the inimitable reply of Mignard, who was painting the king's portrait for the tenth time, when Louis asked him, " Do I look older?" " I see a few more campaigns on the brow of your majesty." It is only fair to Louis to acknowl edge that he ' could ' himself bestow praise with more grace than any other : monarch of whom history makes men tion. After the battle of Seneff, he re ceived the great Conde in state. The Prince was suffering from a sharp attack of the gout, and made his way somewhat painfully up the steps of the royal stair case, at the head of which was the king. Conde begged of the king to forgive him for thus keeping his majesty waiting. Louis hastened to silence him with these words : "Cousin, take your time; when one is so heavily laden with laurels it is impossible to walk fast '.' It is an old Reproach against Orientals that they can not understand a joke, and that they are still less able to say pretty things to la dies; but a daughter of Louis XTV. , the Princess de Conti, inspired the Moorish Ambassador with as gracefully turned a compliment as can be imagined. ' She had railed against, the Mohammedan custom of polygamy, and the Moor thus de fended the practice : "Madame, plural ity of wives is allowed among us, be cause in our country we must seek' in several women the charming qualities which are here to be found in one." Wit, like money, is of no country. LIFE IN VENICE. Charles Warren Stoddard writes from Venice to the San Francisco Chronicle .' " There is much that is gay ' in the beautified old city. One is forever wending his way unconsciously back to the Piazza of St. Mark, where, on sum mer evenings and winter afternoons, three times a week, the . band plays for' two hours and the people walk up and down the great stone-floored court, with the ever glorious basilica at the top of it, while in front of the florid and grotesque facade three tall flagstaffs stand, with a splendid display of . bunting on Sundays and feast days. I is not surprising that the Venetians are well bred and of very graceful address, for they are continually brought in contact with the best of their people, who gather at the hundred little tables in front of the great cafe, the Florian, to listen to the music or gossip with their friends over chocolate or ices. They seem' never to be in haste , here. The gondolas swim up and down 'the canals at an easy rate of speed ; the pedestrians are sure to give up a chase after they have surmounted the, third bridge. " And as for time, it glides by without a break,' and is perhaps the only element that does seem a little fast; No wonder that -the dream -life of Venice be gets repose. The Old East, the Orient, lies just over the water from it.rt The. golden j, ; horsesy that, prance over .; the. gallery of St. Mark's have -" .nee adorned the hippodrome and South America. All commerce seems to find its way through the wilderness of islands to the marble gates of Venice, yet there is very little shipping in port. A GUASTL T COMFA CT. How It Warn Fulfilled A Remarkable Story of Special riritation One of iho Weird. Form vhleh In unity mill Ammume. - (Worn the Davenport (Iowa) Oawtte. One of the strangest cases of insanity ever heard of in this portion of the coun try is engaging , the attention of a well known physician in Davenport just now. We say insanity because the doctor says that the man is insane -a monomaniao---while the patient himself declares that he is in his right mind ; and he talks sensibly enough upon every topic brought to his notice, not excepting the one which has alarmed his friends and caused a physician sattention. The person in question was a soldier in the 2d Iowa cavalry, during the war, and when the regiment was in camp near Daventport he and a fellow-soldier of his company became warm friends, although strangers before enlistment. ' One day in May, 1863, we believe, the two were on picket near Farmington, Miss., and they fell into conversation about the state of the soul after death a topic which en gaged the minds of soldiers of the late war frequently, as many of our readers know. . On this occasion the two troopers talked earnestly on the subject. One believed in the immortality of the soul, and the other did not ; but then and there each pledged the other that, should death come to him . during the war, he would visit the survivor, if possible. -The next day a battle was fought near Farmington and the party who1 believed in the hereafter was killed, and his body now lies in a national cemetery in Mississippi. That was nearly twelve years ago, The surviving trooper was deeply grieved over the loss of his friend,' but he con tinued in the service .till the end of the war, and was honorably discharged when his regiment was mustered out.' ' He re turned to Iowa, engaged . in business presently, was married and has a family. Some five weeks ago his wife became alarmed at his actions in the night. He would wake her and ask her if she saw anybody or heard any noise in the room; and of course she had not. In a few days, finding his wife , was becoming nervous over his nocturnal wakefulness, he insisted on occupying a room alone, but on the third night thereafter he came to his wife's bed-room at midnight, threw himself into an easy chair and said he would ait for he could not "sleep. Just before Christmas, while with his wife on Second street, the intention being to purchase holiday goods, he asked his companion if she could see a form before them, that had walked just a few feet in their advance ever since' they left their gate. No, she had not. On Christmas the wife went to the family physician and acquainted 'him with her fears concerning her husband, and the doctor returned to her home with her, and both demanded the reason for his strange conduct. Heretofore he had refused to converse with his wife on the subject. Then the afflicted man told his com panion and physician the story of the promise of his comrade to return to him after death, made under the circum stances told above. And he stated that thoughts of the pledge of reappearance came to him often during the few months after his comrade was killed, but he had long since dismissed it from his mind. But in November last he was wakened in the night and saw the" form of his friend, distinctly, in his room not in uniform, but with a robe for apparel, a face not very . pale, and eyes and hair of natural look and hue. , The Hps moved as if the form would speak, but he could hear no words ; the face smiled also, as if the vision was glad to see his friend. Nearly a month elapsed before he spoke to his wife about it, and then it was because he had become so nervous that he could not help it Several times the form seemed to accompany him on the street, and it appeared to him in his bed-room plainly every few nights. This was .his plain story, and we give it as it was given to us." The patient knew that he had been affected by the visitation ; his sleep had been broken, . nervousness engendered, and appetite much impaired. Weeks have elapsed, and' he is still a patient insane patient his relatives believe ""i to be, though he talks sensibly on every topic suggested except the one that re fers to the ghost, and he believes his friend has come to him for some good purpose which he cannot define. He attends to his business almost daily, though, and none but his near relatives know of his ailment It ia not unlikely that a trip abroad may be advised for the patient , . , , . 'death OF A REFORMER. Mr. Trask, the well known anti-tobacco apostle, died at Fitchburg, Mass., re cently at the age of seventy-nine. Mr. Track's long and active life was spent in the ministry of . the Baptist Church, but he is more widely known in connection with the work of the Anti-Tobacco Asso ciation, of which for many years he has been the. chief head and front , In an autobiographic sketch of his life, con tributed to the Phrenological Journal, he tells how he had been a victim of to bacco for twenty years, and had become ''emaciated, tremulous and cowardly," and was at the gates of death. "Abandon, ing the noxious poison, he regained his former health, which - he' enjoyed throughout an unusually long and vigor ous life. He wrote an immense number of tracts denouncing the . use of tobacco and alcoholic drinks, and lectured in cessantly on the subject , Auj the forty-two night schools of Philadelphia except one . have . been closed on account of insufficient appro priationsdepriving 13,000 pupils of in struction. . .:".'.! LET THAT EOT ALONE. ' It is strange that adults so soon forget their childhood, and that they so easily become unreasonable in their demands, upon the young. Are boys often con trary and " unlikely f " Are they averse to remaining at homo during the long winter evenings f Are they sometimes lazy f Well, that is not very Jstrange, and it is possible that all of tins resulta as much from the improper and injudi cious treatment received from those who should be their friends, as from their native depravity. .When boys are treated more like human beings, and less iiae slaves-as we may " learn; if we notice them in some' families where the parents remember their childhood they" are as ready to work as older people if there is sufficient inducement, the proper en couragement Adults are not easily driven to labor, and that without some return, some compensation. - When they are disposed to neglect home it may be possible that such a home is not a home, not made as pleasant as it should be made, not made attractive. ' ' If so, the fault is mutual, but ' principally that of the parents. If the older and more ex perienced " can . not make some sacrifices, exert themselves specially to make home attractive, so that their children will pre fer it to other places, it is not estrange that the thoughtless often, become way ward. '--;''- But let the boys alone. Ot, do not constantly stand over them as with a rod in hand, ready at any moment,' at the slightest deviation from the strictest pro priety, to apply the lash. ; Boys are not perfect, nor are their parents. To con stantly watch them, badger them at every turn, censure them for every accident, scold them for every thoughtless deed, ever ready to t censure and blame, and never to srive credit, never . to utter an encouraging word, will be almost sure to . spoil those worth spoiling. Of course good advice is often necessary, and not only necessary, but useful, if given as we would give it to a worthy friend and respected neighbor. But when counsel is given in a censorious spirit, the tones marked by a malicious ring; when the whole manner indicates . anything but what should animate the parental bosom, we may not expect the seed to fall on any but " stony ground." Let the boys alone, at least a part of the time. Do not hedge up their way all of the time. Do not expect them to work all of the time. It is not best or right for even adults to labor : constantly. Boys can not ' and should not be required to - do so, since rest and recreation are necessities of their nature. If you would have them . cul tivate judgment for themselves, do not always attempt to instruct them , on trifling matters. ; Let them learn some thing by experience, and then it Vill be better appreciated and' remembered. Do not caution them every time : they take a lamp, an edged tool,' a glass vessel, or any valuables into their" hands, if you ' would ever have them learn for them selves. In doing so you constantly remind them that they know nothing and have no care. Let them have a little peace and learn from experience to practice-self-control and self-government Do not torment, and harass and scold them all of the time. ' If you censure them when they do wrong, remember that it is' honest to praise them when they ! do right; the praise mark my word will be the most powerful for good. Do not follow them about as if you had . no confidence, in them, directing them at every Step,; un less you wish to sour the disposition and make them hate you. , . Give them , good advice at the proper time, not too often, in a loving spirit; confide in them, love them, but do not tyrannize over them. Teach them to respect themselves, but do not all of the time torment and badger them.',.. :'.") ':y:;-';;.. FRENCH DIET. - Although from time to time attempts are made to persuade people to vary their diet of beef and mutton by eating horses and other strange animals, the movement has not met with much suc cess. At one time it really seemed that hippophagy had a chance of becoming fashionable, and ," horse dinners" were quite common; but somehow the horses .... " wwwiinn . bUlg Ul UIO JLJ.M211 en, and their carcasses still find their way to the dog-kennel instead of being hung in front of the butchers' shops and market stalls. ' It was also thought after the siege of Paris that the rat had estab lished a clear claim to appear at the; dining-room table, and for the moment, there was a decided leaning toward this and other vermin in France, as pleasing additions to the bill of fare. But rats, went out of fashion with the war, and it seems not likely that they will everr be come generally popular as an article of diet f It appears, however, that 'rate are really eaten in Paris y and a disagreeable story is told by the Petit-Journal relative, to . the sufferings endured by "a young gentleman in that gay city who lately dined off .a cat that disagreed with him. Having acquired a taste for the flesh of" dogs and cats, the imprudent young man feasted one day on a large cat and waa. shortly afterward seized with excruoiat- - lag pains. A doctor was immediately -sent for, and discovered that the cat had . eaten a rat which had previously taken some food mixed with poison. Thus the cat swallowed the rat, and the man the cat, and the three between them nearly aH proved fatal to each other, r After aJV for comfort and safety there is nothing- lilra tlkn i .ij t 1. s oxen.' , -, A maw 1ui w liAAn in .ne Auburn (N. T.) State Prison for twelve years. ana whose term of service naa expired,, liked him nnnvtarn ma well that he ref rtaed to go out ; nor did the jailer know how to get rid of hint. So he was sent out. with a. bnnm An sweeti the aidewnlV. : whi they locked the jail door tspoa V - m m . m A A a.m. Aiiar many attempts o ores in,, he was compelled sorrowfully to seek other quartora.