VOLUME VII. NO. 49. ALBANY, OREGON, AUGUST 27, 1875. : BUSINESS CARDS. SAMUEL. E. YOUNG, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, GROCERIES, BOOTS & SHOE?, THRESHERS, REAPERS & MOWERS, WAGONS, PLOWS, SEED DRILLS, BP.OADCST SEED : SOWERS! ETC. First street, Aloany, Oresroi. - Torms: - Cali. St. Charles Hotel, Corner Waslilujtou Mul First St., ALBANY, OREGON, Matthews & Morrison, PROPRIETORS. Honm newly fiirnisTied throutrlioot. The best tbe umrkel utlotvls alwnj a on the table. , Fre foaen to niitlfroiu uc House. Exchange Hotel, m Corner First and Washington streets, ALBANY, OREGON, E. S. Morrill & Co., Proprietors. Vnder the new management, tltls popular Hotel ha txjen rent tea ami reiiirnisnett. atiei now otTer the trnvelinjr ynilio the best uccotu molii'ionson the most reasonable terms. CSFree coacli to and from the House. &7 A CARD. A .11. BEI.I. & PARK ER. late of Oregon City. ttesf leave to inform the public that tliey liave purchased the entire stork ol drnsjs. med icine. Ac., formerly ownedby R. C Hill- n. and that they ileslsrn continuinjr the busities at the old stand, where they purpose keeping in tbe fur a re a lull assortment of lrv'j?, - UJieaiicals, Toilet Article Perfumery, and everytlitiig usually found in a lirst-cla.s tints store. While earncstlv soliciting a continuance of the liberal ra'rotiase heretofore extended totbc ,-i.o honse," we hope at the same time, by fair and liberal dcaiinat.and carwfn! atieniion to the wants of enMtoincrs. to merit Itieestn-io tf any xkw friends who may favor us wiiU tbeir or ders. Particular attention will be plven to the com ponndinx of physician' prescript iottH and lino lly recipes, at all hour of .the flavor ntent A. II. BKLI. At PAHXXAC. Kueeewors to 11. C. liii-I. SoK. Albany, October 9, 74-n4i f Here's the Tlace ! S SC. Claugiiiosi Baa received and Is offering for sale a well selec v ted stock of GENERAL MERCHANDISE ! Which he is determined to sell AX THE LOWEST 111 1 C ES for C a s & , or MercMaWe Prcdace ! Please give me a call, and examine Goods and Prices. H. II. lLALIITO.V. tUr "Lebanon, Or. 0. P. S. PLUMSiER, M. D., -DEALER IX- Aficure, CIUAR., . 1UBACCO, BOOKS - AND STATIONERY. A full stock of Trnaaes and Surgical appliances. E2T Remember rLlJIIKK. v7 n23 AMEKICA! EXCHANGE. P. 'C. HARPER & CO., - "Dealers in datMnv Boote and Slioes, HU, Uraec ritm, rmmry Go.di, Ko(toiis fchotjesuns) 'f "PtatoU, Sails, Rie, Mirrors, WUf.sr, WmmI Md Willow Z " TniliU and Valises, rochet CoUry, Ax., &., 4ML Tory tow either for cash, or to prompt ror fats ev jtpmers in time. yj AlToany JJath noas-3 & Barber Shop. THE Of TJEHSTtlN ED WOULl K ECT X fally thank tha citi2asof Alban and vi ciqity for the liberal patronage bestowed on him for tlie past :ven years, and kopes for ttwi futnr. a contlnua I Lon of tbeir favors, j-orthe aecoinzaodatiB of ftanslent customers, ami friends in the pper part of tow n, he has onen ed a neat little shop next door to Taylor Bros. 6akton, where a good workman will always be In attendance to wait noon pat rons. "Deo.ll.lS74. JOB WEBBER. 37AIIIka:jLiIJfc-iLO z . , LCSX TO YOUR INTERESTS ! MONEY : Old Reapers), Mowers ami Thraaers Bepairetl and made almost aa gvod. as new r:v r.iACHiric chop la now prepared to do all kinds of : "VToed Turn lax, Sawing and rrlna Also, any Ironwork and general Blacksmith- ins fan trade may demand. - Fuitciiie i'icketo wul be kef u hand at all Hume Interests Kpeeial Sfotlcca. .LUMBER EOR SAiZMr. F. E. ItoMn soti i prepared to furnish first quality Lumber at the foot of Washington Street. Cull before contracting. 30tt tW Albany Collegiate Institute opens Monday, September Cth. For particulars address, It. K. WARBEX, Fres. 4Jtd To tlie rrment of Unu ottnty. Ilold your orders until you see the Chi cago Pitt ThreshcM. Ask old Illinois farmer and they will tell you that they are the best in the world, without any ex ception. Sold only by Liutorth, Kellogg & Co., Portland, and their agents through out Oregon and , Washington Territory We also have a full line of forming- imple ments and machines, consisting of the following A Xo. 1 goods: Win. Anson Wood Mowers, whlo-h took 32 first pre miums, in field trials, iu 1374, and could go into the field with any machine on this coast to demonstrate that they are the best, which we are prepared to prove, and chal lenge any machine to the contest. Extras to all machines supplied from our Portland house, without delay a full supply always on hand. Please send for price list and circulars. Address, A. SLOCUM, Agent. Portlaud, Oregon. 43in2 New Firm. Sam Miller has bought the Wns 011 and Sfinithshop heretofore occupied by Peter A Speidel, together -with the material ml unQnisherl work, and Is now prctnued 10 furnish anything in his line, consisting of t .'itrriH'.re, ttusics.' Litmber Wauons, Ihicks, &e-. and goiieral smithing neatly and with ilis vaich. I employ none but the best of tuecliHti ics, and Insure satisfaction. All work war ranted. I think I can make it an object for vou to buy of me, in price, style and dombilii of work. 1 tr tbe best of material, hickory and oak, from the Kasiern States. Call and e amine for yourselves ; all I want is a fair trim. I have had" several years of experience on this roa.it, and with I he knowledge thus nuim-d. uiu certain I can plea.se you. I jcuarsintce to sell tor vusb as low us can "lie boujiht sn this cily. A larae lot of lumber waijons, side and end sprinsr turriutrea and hacks on hand. Patronize hitiie manufactory do not send your money of. out ot t he country. Act the mrt of wise men. and build up our own S'ate, and you wiil prosi er 821 f Mil. James Mooue-Will coimnence, on ot about the loth day of Vuy, delivering fresh Milk. Batter, Kggs and Vcjjetntoles to tlK? ciii zena of Albany. "Sow is the t line to make youi arrangements, as Mr. Moore will run a team daily, and do as be agrees. nU3tf. Rkmovai.. Dr. Gamble has removed bis office to his new btiililing, adjoitaig his residence on Firsr street, one block west ol" the foundry, where he may be found at all hours. 43 PltKsnrM CHAIRS. Those wishing to ! procure the celebrated .Metzier cnair. ww i:iie nonce iu;o. miiie .ire iiu.es he name -f. M. MuTZl.tn apear. on t!te back of ettch chair. 41 tf. New Patents. Through dispatcltes to Dewey & Co.. Patent Agents, S. fr, we re reive the following advance list of U. S. Patents granted to Pacific Coast inventors, viz: II. Uarneal. S. F., gime board; I. Lobree. Antioclu Cal., faucet; T. C. Stark, Vallejo. Cal., steam plow; II. T- Bestor, S. F., shelving for stoves; .). B. Gribble. Griss Valley, Cal.. candlestick; W. L. Palmer and I. W. Knox, S. F., rotary pressure blower; W. C. Bussey, S. F., lancet; E. J. Fraser, S. F., aina!giiin:itor; T. A. Stotnbs, S. F., autoiuatiu rotary carbureter. The Dog's Victory. There is nothing in the world that impresses a man so much as trust. Some years ago I was mastered by a dog.in that way. lie came into my pinlen, and lie had no business there. Thinking that he would not improve my flower-bed, I walked along quietly and threw my stick at him. and thus advised him to go somewhere else. 1 hat did that dog do? He stopped, picked up the stick. "Wagged his tail, and came running to me with it. and laid the stick down at my feet. I felt asliamed of having thrown my stick, and the dog was told he might tome round the garden when he liked. Mathwlist.- Qucer Results of Advertising;. The accident to which Orange Judd owes the suddenness of his success was this: Mr. and Mrs. Judd lived, in their early historv. in a modest house in a retired street in Flushing. L. I. Air. Judd went to Xew York every day to work 4tpon Tlie American Arborimn. a struggling paper sold at the rate of $1 a year, and in the evening he and his wife put up seeds in lit tle paper bags, which were sold in tlie New York store. He kept an old horse for business purposes, that went by the name of tlie hair trunk," and it was a standing joke in Flushing that the gentle men would go to the city in the morning, passed Mr. Juild's horse at a certain point on the road, and, though he was evidently moving, it was at the same spot when they returned at nighty The laugh was not all on one side fori.wg- One day Mr. Judd sent a clerk out to coI!ci; some money, to the extent ot fliX), out of which he was to nay for the Insertion of a two-Ifm- "ad" in a daily paper. Through a lucky stroke of stupidity the clerk left tlie "ad" and the $100 at the newspaper office, and said that it was to be inserted to that extent. Im agine the irngal seednmn's horror on finding that the money which was to have carried him through several weeks hue nil been spent in one advertisement. For the length ot two columns tlie morning paper repeated the lines. "The American Artxtri w out to-day." Tlie consequence was that the edition was exnausted early and tlie subscriptions came pouring in. From that day Mr. Judd and ills paper became established successes, and now lie owns a stylish team and about hall of Flushing, they say. , . As Mr. Cleveland waa learing the Con necticut House alter his speech on woman sufierage. he met a member who said be wouldn't vote to. make a man of hU wite. Air. Cleveland replied, "I hope your wile will succeed In making a man of you.' As some laborers at the Cos port (Va.) Aavy Yard were recently engaged In haul ing out Umber from the basin, (bey sudden ly discovered that an object which they supposed to boa log of live oak timber was a monstrous live alligator. How he wined admittance to the basin la a mystery. f Gen. F. E. Spinner is namoil as a prominent candidate on the Republican ticket for Treasurer of the State ot New York. The selection could not be bettered. , A repjrt says that some brass jour nals were stolen from a railroad car in Chicago the other day. When a few Chicago papers cannot be Started on the way to their subscribers without being stolen, it is high time for the railroads to call tor troops, j ' ' ' ,Tho Catholic ' World, in a recent issue, derives tie political position of its adherents as follows; "It is necessary first to bo a Catholic, and. afterwards French, German; American, English or Irish, a tlm vase may be; to. be first of all sure that we understand and receive the teaching and the -spirit, of the Cath olic Church 'in theology, philosophy, morals, politiesj and that we make her rights and interests, .her ' advancement and glory, and spiritual and eternal good of the whole human race, the tri umph of Jesus Christ, and the glory of God paramount of everything." 'I lie Jjti Tltfiiit in Saltld.-. There are various ways of committing suicide, but perhaps the best is that lately invented by one George Moore, who lived near .Midway, Kentucky. Moore, tired of cruel fortune, concluded to no longer fardels boar, but to termin ate it all by the introduction into his system of a certain amount of strychnine. Accordingly, Ise procured the poison and swallowed it. In the manner of the swallowing his improved method h;r suicides was illustrated. He didn't take tbe villainous powder straight, as met) say of-liquor, but rolled it up solidly in a piece of tissue-pa er and then swallowed the pellet, paper and all. The advantage of thir. method ot taking poison wih be readily eiceived; it a lows the suicide time tor reflection. In Moore's case the method worked ad mirably. 'I wo hours elapsed before the deadly drug Itegan to take efilvt, and in that interval Moore came to the con clusion iJiat' he didii't want to die. . He had little time to spare, but lie employed that time in rushing to a dixitor ami Ix-ggiitg for, a remedy. The doctor acted promptly in the emergency, and Moore was very nearly torn in pieces by iwet-.ty-horse-power emetics; but he was saved. The new style ot taking strychnine or any other poison should 1kj generally adopted. We are always doing things in too much of a huny. St. Louis Jiep'Mifiii. Crvsatle Against Wilis!.-. The organic law of Loinpoc colony, in Sranta iJarbara county, prohibits the sale of intoxicating liquors. A recent infraction of this lav? was thus sum marily dealt with, as related by the Loinpoc liecord of tho 7th instant : "For several days prior to August 2d it was pretty generally known and be Kevcd that a certain drug stoi-e iu town was retailing liquor by the glass, or at least not in accordance with the rules prescribed by the by-laws of the com pany. Tlie colonists felt tlie condition critical, and while the male portion of the population were discussing earnestly, yet quietly, methods for suppressing the illegitimate practice inaugurated, the mothers and i daughters of Lorn poc as sembled at the said drug store, a hun dred strong, and administered summary justice by I KNOC'KIXQ IN TIIK HEADS Of barrels and emptying demijohns and bottles containing anything and every thing that would intoxicate, trom bay rum lip to; S-'cheidam . schnapps The proprietors weie expostulated to desist from the sale ot liquor except as pre sent ed by the rules of the company, and a simp'ei pledge to do so would have satisfied the ladies and all present, for by this time two hundred men and women were investing the premises, bent on meeting the issue hikI sett'ing then and there the fate ot the colony, but uo satisfaction or assurance was given by the proprietors that their business would be conducted in accord ance with the rules of the colony, and thereupon the work of letting out the liquor of all kinds and qualities begun, and stopped only when the establish, ruejjt Was renovated of everything Til AT WOULD INTOXICATE. "The company moved aboit town visiting every business house in search of bottled liquor or-bitters, but found none. Every proprietor promised that liquor, bitters or anything that would intoxi cate should never enter their estahl si ment or ever be sold at their counters. The business was not undertaken or conducted through excitement but as a necessary and imperative work that must have a beginning, and the sooner thj3 better. Theie was no attempt at disguise, every, woman for they were first in the attack and man stood up fearlessly and boldly for what they knew and felt waa right, and demanded nothing but what was just between tbe proprietors and the colonists." Even embroidered silk stockings won't make up for, a wart on the nose.. XI. e Ilerxcso vi (t a Cprlsluy. Herzegovina (pronounced, according to Zell, IJairts-e-go-vee'ua) is an almost independent province of the Ottoman Empire. Along with other Danubian Principalities owing a certain vague al legiance to Turkey, its normal state has long been one of more or less pronounced insurrection. Ever since the Turks in the thirteenth century, says the Chron icle, invaded southern Europe and sub jugated the Christian population, the latter have been restless under Moham medan rule. The mountaineers of Mon tenegro; the warlike Servians, glorying in the fame of Stephen l)ushan, as tho Scotch of an earlier gafieration gloried in the tamo of Wallace and of Bruce; the ITwzegoyijiSj witla I population of which more tliaa eighty per cent, was Christian, continually revolted against a harsh and fanatical Mohammedan rule. The fact that partial insurrections growing out of local discontents, unpop ular imposts and "troubles between the Christian and tho Mussulman popula tion have been frequent, and that the Government of Stamboul has always succeeded in suppressing them, has tend ed to produce the 'impression thai the uprising in Herzegovina is a matter ot little significance. If we concede that tho Turks have the power to subdue their rebellious dependencies in case the latter are left to their nnaided resources, that admission docs not warrant the co elusion that the present uprising is a mere ephemeral demonstration of local discontent, sure ' to bo sicedily sup pressed as other local insurrections have been. On the contrary, the present cutbreak is liable to assume a very eri ous magnitude. . Only a short time ago Montenegro was m a state of insurrec tion. A Vienna dispatch of the date of August l(kh says that the rebellion in j Herzegovina' is assuming alarming pro i portions, and that the insurgents have been joined by the natives of Bosnia. The jieople of all the Daitubisn Prirei palities apjtear to be in perfect sympathy with the rebels. But back of the recent demonstrations lie certain fcts of which litt'e notice seems to have bejaoJ,akcn by those of our Contemporaries who have undertaken to elucidate the situation. Last year Austria, Russia and Germany addressed a joint note to the Ottoman I'orie indorsing the propriety ot a .com mercial treaty between Austro-Hungary and the Danubian' Principalities. The English Government entered a protest against any such negotiations frtn which the Turkish Government should be ex eluded. Russia, Germany and Austria support the right ot tho Principalities to conclude commercial treaties without tlie sanction of the Porte. Tlie dis patches show that the feeling which has culminated in rebellion, is by no means confined to Herzegovina, but ex tends to Servia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Houmania. It left to themselves, without interference from Russia or Austria, the jteople of these provinces could probably defy the whole power ot the Turkish Government; and there now seems to be some reason for be lieving that neither of the great North em Powers will meddle with the mat ter, unless in a secret, nnder-band man. ner. Piucunt Harvest In Kevada. In a couple of weeks, says tho Beese IUver JReveillc, of the 12th instant, the Piute and Shoshone Indians of this sec tion will commence to assemble at Mam moth to gather the piucnut harvest. A short time previous to "tho ripening of the nuts which grow in great profusion on the hills iu that vicinity the In dians gather at Mammoth to tho num ber of upward of a thousand. They go from Austin, Belmont, Stillwater and other places within a circuit of 150 miles, and lrave a grand fandango, last ing upwards of a week, and when the nuts are ripe Xhe squaws gather and roast them for Winter use. When ihe harvest is over the Indians return to tho haunts of civilization, where they live comfortably through tho Winter on pinenuts, kitchen rcfufe ai:d slaughter house offal. Entrails roasted iu the ashes and bread made of crickets and pinenuts mashed together form a royal feast for an Indian, and when seated iu his wickiup enjoying this savory mess, ho don't give a continental whether Grant gets a third term or not, and is perfectly indifferent as to the : price of gold or Beechcr's guilt or innocence. A Michlan man lias Invented a cnt-ofT saw wlyeh revolves around tbe log, and is claimed to be an Improvement upon, any thin now in use.. Humble in France. The London Daily TelegrapJi says : "A quaint picture in the French Salon this year attracted considerable notice. Its title was 'An Execution in the Mid dlo Ages. You saw a monstrous sow upon a scaffold, with the rope round its fat neck; behind stood the hangman, and in front the Maire reading the death warrant. Authorities were given in tlie catalogue to show that such sol emn execution of a pig convicted of murder or sacrilege, actually took place on several occasions. We are reminded of the picture in reading a case tried at Montelimart. At 4 a. m. on May 26th a police agent on bis round distinctly heard a treasonable chorus. Hezeal ousTj looked about, up and down, aiid 'at length espied the audacious culprit. At an open widow on the fifth floor hung a blackbird's cage, from which isbued an appeal to sleeping Monteli mart summoning the citizens thereof to arms. Police Agent Savoye saw his dnty, and performed it. Hurrying up the stairs he arrested that seditious blackbird, and applied for a summons against its master. But we do not now dwell in the Middle Ages at least", the majority of us do not. The magistrate asked that awkward question. 'On what grounds?' Police Agent Savoye was confused for the inumcut. In Eng. land he might have answered, glibly, Drunkenness and obstruction of an offi cer in the execution ot his duty ! But that convenient formula is still unknown in France not to our particular ad van tage, perhaps, for they have others that do as good service. The summons was finally drawn on a charge of tapoage nocturne improper rows at night. The case came to trial, and a tremend ous indictment was leveled at the black bird and his master. Social order was endangered by its tkill in singing the 'Marseillaise,' tho 'public repose' dis turbed; there was sound reason to sus pect Communeism, and the Government of Moral Order was certainly held up to ridicule. But thejuge de cwr did not see it. In a verdiet full To? charm ing irony, which reads all the better for its profusion of law terms, he decided that the blackbird had only followed is instinct in singing; that no authorities at command ot a Judge de paix- en abled him to judge betweei its natural strain and that of even the 'Marsellaise;, that Poliee Agent Savoye failed to prove its note to have been more pierc ing than usual with blackbirds; that the owner was not in the same apartment, and that there was no evidence of Ins having excited the bird; and so, finally, he reached the conclusion that no offense had been committed, under a true in terpretation of paragraph 8, article 479 of the Penal Code. Hilled by tlie bite of a Horse. From the Boundout (N. Y.) JTree man, we get the following particulars in relation to the cause of the death of Conrad Elmendorf, of Olive, LTlster county. The Fieemcm says : Conrad Elmendorf, who was bitten by a stallion died on Wednesday. ThS patient was attended by Drs. Hull and Hasbronck, We understand that the family blame the doctors because they did not imme diately amputate the arm ; but we do not think the doctors should be blamed. They did all in their power to save the man's lite, and DrV Loughran himself says that if the arm had been taken off the man would have died all tlie sooner, because the muscles were torn, not only the w hole length of the arm but also on the breast and shoulders.- The power ful animal had actually stretched tlieso muscles and sinews so that they were entirely dead. There was no cure for, 6uch a wound. Of course the warm weather did not help it, and the saliva of tho horse besides has no "doubt acted as a poison. The horse was a powerful animal, and like nearly all stallions was full of bi ute force and fire. When he became unruly Elmendorf took him by the head with one hand and whipped him on his fore legs until ho partly lay down on the ground. He continued to whip, and then, the horse becoming in furiated, sprang upon him, inflicting the wound. Tho sad affair shonld be a lesson to hoi semen to exercise more care in the government of their anima's ot this class. , . " A Crusader. -. Miss Annie Oliver, the vonncr Brook lyn girl, who has attracted considerable attention ot late as a Methodist preacher at Sea CliS and other places, is a grad. uate of Ilutgers Female .College, in Brooklyn, and is described as a young woman of "slight build, coal-black eves. at abundaut brown hair and very graceful manners." Her real name ia Am.;a Oliver Snowden, but she took the other when working among tba enwaders. She tells ber own story as follows : "I preach because I love to, and because I feel that I have been called to the min istry. When tho crusade against liquor sellers grew strong in Ohio I was drawn into it, and I helped them' all I could in Trumbull county. Then in Cincin nati I went with the ladies to" tbe tem perance meetings, and by talking-' to little knots of men I gained confidence enough to address a throng, and I preached to cluster of poor of the city. Then I addressed a throng in tho expo s tion building. I made up my mind that I could not be contented anv mora without an active work in tho ministry, and I began to seek a place to ttudv. Of course I thought that girls would have to be educated if they became preachers, as well as boys. I applied first to tbe seminaries of uiy own church, the Congregational, and they refused me. . Then I applied to the Presbyterian seminaries, ana they were very dignified audsxclusive. I applied to .fourteen in an, ana at last found , a university va Boston which accepted me as astuient, Oberlin College allowed me to etudy languages, and the ' professors thought that they were doing a great thing tor ,mo, and said that no other church would do so much. I have a vear more to "stay in Boston, when I expeci to app'y to tho Methodists tor license to preach." A Fane, al Struck by Untalng. REMARKABLE SCENE IX CEMETERY. A BHOOKXY2T Captain Jacob Johnson, a native of Denmark, who for many years com manded a Vessel that sailed bet.veeu Havana and the different European ports, settled down in Brooklyn, several years ago, at.d became an inmate in the family of Mr. W. II. Drew, 101, Park Place. The captain had no other in timate friends in this country: and from frequent conversations with him on the subject, Mr. Drew judged that ho either had left none in his native country, or that he wished to drop all communica tion with them. Last Saturday Capt, Johnson died, and on Monday afternoon at 3 o clock the funeral procession start ed from Mr. Drew's house for tho ceni- eti ry of the Evergreens, Mr. Drew and his amily being the only mourners. The few carriages had hardly .started bef re the rain began to fall, and the ride to the cemetery was through a drenching shower, blinding flashes ot lightning and crashing thunder, adding to the solemnity ot the burial ot the stranger Dane. W hen the cemetery was reached, the rain' was pouring down in torrents, and the little procession halted before cem etery office to- wait for a lull m the storm. The hearse was the first vehiele, the carriage containing Mr. Drew and his family was rext, and four or five other carriages were behind. Every flash of the lightning seemed to strike on the hill, ani? the roar and crash of the thunder was deafening. A loud re port frightened the horses- attached to the hearse, and they began to rear and plunge. The horses of the first carriage also were frightened, and it was all the driver could do to hold them. The oc cupants of the carriages were terribly frightened, and began to get out as fast as they could. Dr. Drew's carnage was soon emptied of all but Mr. Drew's daughter, a young lady who was just alxtut to alight, .vheu two balls of fire, seemingly two feet iu diameter, dropped just iu front ot the horses' heads, and burst with a report like a camion. At the same minute there was a blinding flash of lightning, followed instantane ously by a crash of thunder that made the cemetery hill tremble. The horses attached to Mr. Drew's carriage sprang forward, running the po!e through tho back ot the hearse and throwing the coffin of the dead captain from its mountings. They began to plunge, and the front of the carriage was dashed against the hearse and badly shattered. Miss Drew, who sat on tho inside front seal, was thrown out' and -severely bruised.- The driver could not control the horses, and they started to ran dragging the remains of the carriage up the' main aveuuo of the cemetery, and going nearly a mile before they could be stopped. Tlie' driver : was also tbrown from his seat aud slightly in jured. The same sfiock that frightened Mr. Drew's horses struck One of tbe horses attached to the next carriage, and knocked hiirr down, but did' uot injure him. Alter waiting tor nearly an hour in the office the storm abated, and the pro cession started again for the nr&ve. With the usual ceremonies, the coffin was lowered into its water-soaked rest ing place, and Captain Johnson's faith ful friends went home. A". 1". Sun. A contributor to Iron notes two inci dents of recent occurrence, which in his opinion indicate that some ''mysterious' fires may have their origin in the action of the sun on glass. A few days sgo the master ot a steam-tucr in Encliah waters found a large hole had been burned in the center df the covering of his berth and that the fire had penetrat ed to the bed itself , which was smoking. It was then discovered that this resulted from a concentration 'of the sun's rays by the glass "dead lights" in trie' de of the vessel. The ground's of a new mansion in a British town are ered tiironeh gates richly ornamented.. To protect them temporarily tbey were cov. ered with canvas. One afternoon lately this covering' was found to be on fire and was burned, one" or the lamps above" l.7..n k 1im liAat 'All nOT?t?nm theories' df tbe"" causes" of flrb' failed to' account for" tins one, and it' was discov-" ered that the globular lamp's of the gate' concentrated tbe solar rays and directed them on the spot where the canvas bad: been, and thus doubtless' occasioned tba' fire. ... Dr. Bernays, Professor of Chemistry in St. Thomas's Hospital,' London, s ug- gests that by a proper application of earth, hutnatiou might be made' as safe' as cremation. Instead of cremating the" body, be would cremate tbo earth, and1 render' it, by increased porosity, the best ' material for slowly, but surely a&d safely, ; oxid izing the body. Thus' a3&id"'b)kt the clav soils of maftv of XnV..fiinteria.' "be 'matoprdpgHj-'' a MUibU"f&ittt&M without such burning of tlie soil (some' of our cemeteries ought not to bevseiLv Dr. Bernays suggests cofSnu of perfo rated iron plate, with lids' of the same ' material. These should be , wavered tar tbe depth of one foot with charcoal, and' Completely filled in with well-burnt' clay. By such a method advantage' would be taken of one of the most valu able properties of burnt clay the power of absorbing and oxidizii p injurious hy drogenous compounds' and' promoting decomposition. One great advantage' of coffins of sheet' irbrf thus' perforated would be the rapid oxidation of the re' ceptaele ot the body, wIiicTi, by the color of the' oxide, wonld render all the drain age water from a cemetery visible for some distance from its source, and thus give the necessary indications ot impu-' . In aii essay read before the London' Physical Society lately, Mr. Wbitehbuse described some experiments he had made "On the Electric Conductivity of Glass.' He employed pieces' ot thermometer" tube about an inch in length, - into tbe bore of which two platinum wires were inserted in such a manner that there was' an interval between the points. In some cases one wire of platinum occu pied the entire bore of the tube, and' this tube was surrounded on its external surface by a helix df wire ot the same' metal. In each case the arrangement was introduced into a circuit iB'Whiciv were also placed a Thomson galvanom eter and a set of resistance coils. It was1 shown that at the ordinary temperature' there was no deflection, but that the' current passed freely when the glass was' heated to redness. The difficulty of making contact with' the glafef led'Mrl' Whitehouse to use two test tubes, one? inside the other, both containing mer cury, with which' wres of platinum freely communicated. The flame' of aV Bub: en burner was applied to the outer test tube, and the temperature of the metal noted by the id df a theimoinv eter. In one series of experiments the" diameter of the internal tube was of an inch, the length in contact With the' mercury about 3f inches, and tbe thick' ness of the glass 1-100 of an inch. A" current was firfet' observed to pass at' 100 degrees C, and as the temperature' rose tbe amount ot deflection increased Health NotesV , . .. From Dr. Ball's Maxima. Whisky cures a great many ailments- infallibly, by tilling the patient.- Getting out of a warm bed and goir3 to an open' door or window bos bsetr the death of multitudes.- Families should everywhere .be.osi' their guard against galvanized zino iron'. water pipes for drinking or cooking puf-- poses.-" ... . Our legitimate scope is almost bounds less; for whatever" begets pleasurable" and harmless feelings .promote, health,- satiotis engenders disease. In every hundred- bushels of wheat more than a thousand pounds ox valu able nutriment is lost to human use by the present method of grinding wheat" into flour and preparing it for tbe table-- This one idea of keeping the pores of the skin steadily open by tSaeata of habitual moderate exercise and eirieS personal cleanliness would, if generally practiced, contribute more to human' happiness than tons of physic ormUHae of money. .- - So medicine' of drug, or anytLia ty be swallowed ojf inhaled, has ever ye been iodiid which can possibly IiAVe any direct, radical, efSaieci cgoney ig - permanently arresting even prepress of consumption. 7 be , .iiciss am to secure a vigorous.-.,-: Er.t bring baok tbe full breatLir cf lungsboth of which are pot 51?, -