TEZ fLKmXO BOCL. war saorT. "OhE? Ucuto(d4 Ui-hau hit art aoiaalnf,! 0 ftis. :a twra I .T H at o & now, W.! (rah wul wiaii r blown, Ao4 U 4no4 Kit yooiLM brow Tty err?ul lijht m rSowitf I tdwirl, is, Tb raikc rcaic( aait Tin kid bneht oa Aira't Uk6 Anwlte from ty dfmmt t Mil i.e ko, Wj aeanrt friraJ, I pry Tkt t9-10 eras tharci! mk. Ytaaid'H om bow I air h bOVwi war I m ttea kaOf bi(h : But to g .iEpM of a furUxr Ctort Hu iti 1 auaiaiez eje. B:r a4 what Ohj b.-j- 0( !; jWt bfToad. Tars btck froa tettjwtox urj T lit ewa aativs bail. "It it vol iota bat psia Tai r;r fa to lay bwat r:;y, Uwantroawsjaia ; 1 cav kt tac irt." Co kc j Jock, tfcsl nr rrpruTol ma For U. w I tot bear (hi Bsve kok of miier.Lf moved nx T ITJ1! BIT BKhM pT i Aa4. w.th twUca dxrk. taetxaric y; d.t-tioa wy ; 'm a t en A farther gracing ei.ntl my tool thai awful dy. r!d, at of J. the tw sun wtlinr ; gunk 10 fo Um twi:hl bntm ; Summer dt Ml softly, veUicg Gltc s4 (!ad, and Kleat tree. Tbc I t era bfia to weary. We jitd beoaalb a nwrtal lf p; And tie r rU jtvw Uraaplr dreary, Cl'rtid'wJ, ereB u they would weep. But they wept not, and Uy changed n., Never moral and sever eioted; Tmubled still, aod Mill Uey rLfd no Wuxiered not. nor yet repoted I So I knew llial k wu dy ins, Stooped, ad raited bia Uajuid bead ; Felt lo breath, aod beard bo sighing, bo I Leard that be wit dead. tbi semen or fOLOl HEAL15G. IT O. B. BIBI, II. D. Abont 20 yeut ago Gen. PlMutaotoD began acd eontioaeJ aerie of eipeh manta to detormine the effect of bin light npoc animal and vegetable growth. Many Terr remarkable reanlta were pro duced, ty placing few pane of bine glasa among the ordinary glaai of bot housea, the plants were made to grow with rapiditT oarer before equalled by any process of' plant culture. Animali aiao were found to outstrip all competi tor!, when placed for part of each day under blue glaae. Application of bine light waa toon male to human be ing, and here, too, in many case, the effects far excelled all expectation. Other aeientiflo men had given the object much attention, and there i now considerable literature published by them, ail confirming the idea that differ ent colors produce vastly different ef fects upon human beings, animals and plant. Most of these rose arches, how ever, concern red and blue light, giving leaa attention to yellow; still leas to mix tare, and almost none at all to other colors, and the influence which exist in the solar spectrum beyond the luminous or visible part. Dr. Edwin D. Babbitt, of New York, baa gathered allarailablo information on this subject and woven it into a large and comprehensive system of hi own, giving the effect of all the different colors and combinations, as well a the influence of the dark portions of the spectrum, and building up a system which, supported a it U by reliable testi mony and experiments, must be regard ed aa very remarkable and worthy the attention tl scientific men in general and medic-el men in particular. It U my purpose in this paper to give a very brief outline of the more promi nent joint of hi conclusions. I Intend merely to say enough to draw your atten tion to the matter, after which you can give it such attention as seem best to you. X j brief notice could do justice to the many pbaaee which he presents, so I Uke principally from one or two chap ters, the idea and direction which ap ply !erticclarly to the effect of different colors. 1. In general. 2. I' pon animal and vegetable growth. 3. I pon disease. When tho ordinary sunlight is sepa rated by a prism, we have the well known rainbow colon, from red to violet. It is well known, also, that cer tain influenoes extend both way beyond this visible spectrum. The investigation of Babbitt and other have shown, that the invisible spectrum is fully ten times a great as the visible part. Babbitt says that the influence of the visible color are repeated in the dark portions, like the octaves of key on a piano, and in modified, form, and accordingly call them octaves of color. In regard to the heating power of the different color, it is easily tested by holding thermometor for a given time in each one. According to Sir II. En glofield, if the mercury rise 1 degree in given tiiiiS in blue light, it will rise, under the same circumstances in green, 4 degrees, in yellow, 6, in red, 10, and in tho dark portion just bolow the red, 1H. Thus the heating power at one part of the spectrum is 18 times as great as at another. The greatest light of the spectrum is in the yellow, diminishing rapidly both ways. The greatest electricity is near the vio let color. Thus we have three leading qualities . - - f V '"O WW places on the visible spectrum, heat at one end, light near the middle, and electricity at the other end. These point are matters of science and one would think, need not have waited so long for practical application. Heat, we know is stimulating to flesh and blood of the body, and light is stimulating to the nerves, while elec tricity is just the opposite, cooling and soothing. Now since these influence, heat, light and elnctricity are found in variably with certain color in the spec trum, it seems very natural to look for the effect of these agencies upon any auimtanoe wnicn might te placed within e placed within I If, therefore, a ' their ref-pejtive limit mm. iaeoli. let bias get into wd fjVhi- if be U deficient eesaibilitv of Brrea, give bun yellow; ana if too ex ,.iU nr too warm, let him take blae. Experiment ia tbi direction have abundantly confirmed the most aanuine expectations, uvleej have far excelled laem Seeirg these influence always associ ated with certain colors ia the spectrum. itreaniredbctaatep to associate iceca with the eclor out of the spectrum, any la this matter. Babbitt has probably gone far ahead of all others. We find many common expressions whkh are in keeping with tbi principle, although they came into use, we might say, involuntarily, certainly without reference to any connection with visible phenomena. Thus we speak of the 'heat of passion," and it is not to be supposed . - . 1 1 . tht toe wora - oeax was ui uiuw passion produce both beat and redness. We speai of "the warmth of love," "a warm, loving heart," etc., and we know that these aen-sations always tend to ac- nlrat the heart action, and eone quently produce beat and color. We speak of the "coolnes" of reason. Also of the flashing of the eye, thus associating the words light, nerve, fu.h All these idea are singularly con firmed bv the finer sight of certain sensitive nerve. The experiment of Von Tifhenbach are. perhaps best known in this connection, sensitive persons actually see certain colors em anating from the body, and these colors aa described by them with approximate uniformity eonespond with the reoog- nixed principle 01 anatomy, iney aee blue coming from the forehead, where the reasoning power of the brain, are upDosed to center; yeiiow, green ana white, exauisitelr blended over the top of the head, supposed by phrenologist to represent the devotional nature; and dark red from the base of the brain. here both anatomy and phrenology place the animal part of our nature. However much or little importance is attached to these visions of sensitive peo ple, thsy are, at least, very interesting, aa being exactly in the line of the general effect of light and color already hinted at. The next step in the consideration of color, is to suppose that the effect of any substance may be known in some degree by iU color. That this is largely true, may be shown by numerous example. First, however, a word i necessary as to the manner of estimating a color, since many things are transparent. It is done bv the spectrum. The substance being burned, the prevailing spectrum tint are taxing as it predominating color. Now take a few example: commencing with red, we find in the word of tte L. S. Dispensatory: Cayenne Pepper fruit scarlet, some time yellow orange effect, arterial stimulant and rubefacient. Bromine red liquid, caustic, irritant. Iron preparations are mostly radish, and the effect are tonic to the arterial system. Alcohol red from it hvdrogenl which give red spectrum lines) and certainly stimulant. Many other example are given, but these are enough to show the general di rection of Dr. Babbitt' investigation. Take yellow and orange, and we find also a singular unanimity of color and effect Anything which stimulate the nerve, aa well a the circulation, will produce the effect known aa emeue, cathartic, diuretic, diaphoretic, etc., ac cordingly we haver Lobelia yellowish liquid, emetic, ca thartic, diphoretic. Indian Hemp Teiiowian Drown. emetic, cetnartic, diuretic. Tartar Emetic yellow, orange and red in the spectra of its elements emetic, cathartic, diuretic, diaphoretic. Colonuth, flowers and npe fruit, yel low A powerful hydragogue cathartic. Castor oil, yellowish aiud cathartic. Sulphur, yellow Laxative diaphore tic. The more red is mixed with yellow the more violent becomes the cathartic ac tion. For example, Gambage, reddish orange Powerful drastic cathartic. Croton oil. varies from pale yellow to dark reddish brown Powerfully cathar tic. Chubarb. yellow, with reddish brown tinge Cathartic and astringent. Ijet these examples suOlce lor yellow and red. Take a few from substances of blue color. If the same principles holds good, we may expect to find from blue substances such effects aa are indicated by the words, astringent, refrigerent, febrifuge, sedative. Accordingly we find our old friend aconite, flowers violet blue a powerful nervous sedative and anodyne; long familiar to us aa an arterial sedative. Belladonna, combine yellow, red snd purple in its plant, or spectra, and is therefore both stimulating and sedative. Acid Most of the acids have blue, indigo, or violet spectra, and are refrig erant and astringent. Ergot Violet brown, yellowish white, violet, powerfully astringent. Bo much for the general significance of color. As to its effect upon animal and vegetable growth, a few word will show the general ideas. It ha been found br experiment by Robert Hunt, Charles Lawson, and others, that germination of seed is more rapid under actinic or electrical ravs, that is, under blue and violet light, without any yellow or red, than in ordi nary sunlight or in the dark. In Law son s experiments, seeds, which before had germinated in eight to fourteen days, under blue glai germinated in two to five day a. Also that yellow light prevented germination. Frof. Hunt says that red light pro duces rapid evaporation from the soil and surface of the plant, by It increase It retards growth, and turns the leaves reddish brown, and Uus even if the plant be eiven extra water General Pleasanton placed one line of blue panes and seven of ordinary glas alternately in the roof of hi grapery He then ot out twenty grape cuttings one year old of the size of a pipe stem, and in five months they were forty-five feet long and one inch in diameter. Others of the same varieties, in ordinary sunlight, having good care, in the same lime attained a length of five feet, with scarcely an increase of diametor. The next year General Pleasanton witnessed even a more remarkable growth and hsr- vested about IM) pounds of fine grapes from the original twenty cuttings, after vetted about VJW pound of fine gra onlr seventeen month' crowth. The next year they yielded 40U0 pounds. This went on to the time of writing, nine year, the vines being healthy and stron:. Other case are given, but let these suffice. Tne effect npoc unhealthy plant i equally marked. When house-plants are drooping and unthrifty they may be re rived in two or three da v by throwing over them a blue vail, such as ladies wear, and exposing to sunlight Animal bfe is also subject to great modification by the use of different colors. Increase of beat tends to pro duce animalcuLe in air and water, while decrease of beat has the opposite effect Acting upon this known principle, pro fessional gardener near liostoo, alter try ing in vain all the expedients in hi knowledge to prevent insect from eating his vonnz plant, finally made some small frames like soldiers' tent and cot ered them with blue gauze. Placing these over a part of the seed, the others were left exposed, and the result wu that while the exposed plant were eaten a soon as they began to grow, those under the blue tent escapea entirely, mis was manr times repeated. On the other hand, when animal a pigs or calve, were placed nnder a lim- f. 1 1 : L . .1 ,v Ilea supply 01 iias ugui, uieir grv tu was rapid beyond ail precedent. Thus we tee that undiluted actinism, or more properly electricity, i unfavor able to animal growth, while a proper proportion, combined with ordinary light, develop a condition which greatly favors it I must hasten to say a word about color effect as applied to the practical treatment of diseases. Bed light, a we have seen, is the warming element of sunlight, and pro duces a rousing effect upon the blood, and when accompanied by a small amount of vellow rays, stimulate the nerve as well, and ia useful in such dis eases as are characterized by a slow cir culation and impaired sensation. Thus a red orange color will be indicated in paralysis, consumption, general exhaus- tion, sluggish bowel, etc., and contra indiated when there i an excess of heart-action, inflammation, or fever. Case of all these are given, but would occupy too much space if detailed here. Lxpenmenu with, the insane have fully confirmed the principle already given. In a trench asylum violent and maniacal patients, when placed in rooms where the red light predom inated, became worse. If removed to a blue room they became quiet. A woman whose delirium had become greatly aggravated by a red room, be ing taken to a blue room, exclaimed, "Oh, how soothing it is!" and soon fell asleep. Many case of this kind might be given, but will occupy too much time. It is much to be desired that physi cians in charge of insane people would give them the benefit of this wonder ful influence which is poured upon the earth in unlimited quantities by the great King of Day. The mean employed lor the applica tion of colored light to given cases are very simple. For chronic cases, patient not confined to bed, place three or four panes of glas of the required color, in a sunny window, and have the person sit in the mixed light much of the time. Complaints of limited extent, as sensi tive spine, or rheumatic inflammation of a limb, may have blue light applied di rectly to the skin. If immediate relief of pain is required, use Babbitt's five- inch lens, focussing the color a pon a particular spot. For sluggish bowels focus yellow-orange light upon the abdo men. In the absence of glass, use col ored clothing. A person who is sensi tive to sunlight should wear blue lining in the hat. One cf general sensitiveness might wear blue undershirt A cold per son should wear yellow and red. In a case of consumption, with sensitive head and rapid pulse, I di rected the patient to be placed in the sunlight, with blue covering for the head and heart, while the whole trunk was covered with red, half an hour to two hours at a time, daily. The good effect was soon apparent. Another verv interesting and import ant feature of the subject is that water or other substances exposed to the influence of colored light, become charged with it properties and may thus be given in ternally for conditions which call for that color. Sugar of milk thus treated becomes an im portant remedy, and is the odo-mag- netic sugar, or od-sugar, advertised by Dr. Bohland. The foregoing are but hint. The sub- iect is too large for a single paper, enough has perhaps been said to direct attention to it and the methods pointed out with sufficient accuracy to enable physicians to follow them. Asparagas. "A Wiltshireman" write to the editor of the London Daily New a follow sir: The wasteful way in which thi delicious vegetable is cut and conse quently brought to table ia a striking example of the loss the public suffers, and apparently without complaint, in conformity to custom. When I see in the London markets the handsome bun dles of large "grass," about six -seventh of which are white and uneatable, and only one-seventh eatable, and know that the same length might be sold for the same price, all eatable, I cannot but re gret the sad loss and waste of COO per cent on this article of food. The evil arises from cutting the asparagus too soon and below the surface of the beds. I allow mine to grow eight or nine inches above the ground, and thus obtain seven to eight inches of green tops, the whole of which is eatable and of good flavor. Asparagus should be cooked standing in bundles in the pot. with the tops just above water to prevent their being over dose whilst the steas us sciHn CvO&cu sufficiently. If any of your readers who grow asparagus will try this plan of cut ting and cooking they will find they have saved the large percentage I have men tioned; and better knowledge on the part of the publio would soon bring green and eatable instead of white and uneatable asparagus to market" "If you find a locomotive rushing at vou, says a trgima authority, spring into the air and come down on the cow catcher." Thi might injure the cow catcher. A better plan would be to jump into the air aod let the train pas nnder you. it require a mue practice at arsv. Norriatowa Herald. I stall Bitwi ! Fraice. Many Englishmen will learn with con siderabl satisfaction that a strong feel ing is being stirred abroad against the wanton massacre of small birds. As long as the bird are netted and shot to a per fect! v unlimited extent in trance and ItaJv on their war to and from their win ter quarter, our own measures for their preservation cannot prevent their dimin ution even in this country, and the case is of course much worse with conn trie lika Aiutria and Germ an v. According to two articles just pub lished in the Cologne Gazette, which are obviouslv written by some one well ac- ouainted with the south of France, the destruction of the small birds U pursued at all time of the Tear in the most wholesale and barbarous manner. The two seasons in which shooting license are granted are in the north of France from the beginning of August to about the end of January; in the south, from the middle of August to the same date a license costing about twenty-three shill ings. But no license is required for shooting in small private inelosures. sur rounded by a wall that Is, in the vast mass of ordinary gardens; and here it is that iu the absence of larger game, small birds are trapped and shot without let or hindrance all the year round. The use of net in these in closures is indeed forbidden; but a no garde champetre can enter them without a special order the prohibition has little or no effect. In the south of France autumn is the chief time for a general massacre of the birds of paassge; but when spring comes, and the travelers are living north again they are shot down in numbers as they gain the French coast from the Mediter ranean. Among other ingenious artinces for the destruction of small birds the system known aa the poste, will hold its own for deliberate ingenuity. It is a sort of hut about five yards square, half hidden in the ground, and when possible surrounded by evergreen shrubs. One side is made of wooden planks in which holes are punched for shooting through. This hut is built at a few yards' distance from a group of fir trees, or, in default of these, post stuck in the ground with dry branches fastened to the top (cim eous is the Provincial term) to wave in the air; and under the branches a num ber of little cages containing decoy birds are hung. Most of the latter have had their eyes put out,especially such as finches, linnets, etc., which would other be too timid to sing amid their strange surroundings. The poor blind things pour forth their songs to the rays of the rising sun which they feel but can not see, and attract their fellows from the neighboring woods. These blinded birds are to be had in hundreds at any bird fancier's in the south of France at from two to five francs apiece. Some postes have only a dozen or so decoy birds to do the work, but others have hundreds, rich owners sometimes spend ing 2000 to 3000 francs a year in their purchase and keep. At sunrise "sports men" arrange themselves comfortably, we are told, at their posts, with rugs, a sofa, a stove sometimes, if the air is chilly, and apparatus for making coffee. frequently ladies who delight in the pastime are of the party. The cages are hung up, and the birds begin their song. The gun-muzzles appear at the apertures of the hut, and as soon as a bird is seen on the top of the cimeous, drawn clear against the morning sky, down he goes, whatever species he may be. the shoot ing goes on till 9 or 10 o'clock. If many "sportsmen" are at work twenty to thirty birds are brought down at a volley. Good postes yield in the best season often from 200 to 300 birds a day, of every sort thrushes, nightingales, linnets, wood peckers, yellowbammers, blackbirds, robins, crossbills, field-fares and larks. Large and small are all shot down alike; the sweetest singers are not spared, for all without exception are eaten. Nor is the postes the only expedient for getting within shot of the small birds. The agachoun is a tower, or sort of wooden scaffolding, with a little platform on the top, from which flights of birds can be seen and fired at a they pass; but there is an element of uncertainty about this, and it is more fatiguing than the postes, and hence less popular. The numbers of birds that are netted are, perhaps, even greater than those which are shot. Thrushes and nightin gales are caught by hundreds in the tesa, a sort of net which is spread along the sides of narrow, well wooded lanes, and, in combination with the inevitable decoy birds, proves extraordinarily effective. The means of destruction are so varied and ingenious that it is only wonderful that there are any small birds left. The comparative absence of bird life, which strikes a traveler in the south of Europe so disagreeably, needs, at all events, no furthur explanation. Swallows alone have been tolerably exempt from perse cution, not because they are less esteemed by the jaded palates of the South, but because of the ex treme difficulty of shooting them. Powder in France is so dear that a swal low is literally not worth powder and shot. They might, indeed be netted; but this is forbidden in their case by law. M. Guibert, Councilor-General of the Department of the Vauclause, did, indeed, get this prohibition annulled for a time by way of doiag his electors a good turn; but people soon found them selves threatened with a perfect plague of gnat and mosquitoes, and the law was re-established not, however, before many thousands of swallows had been taken bv the marshy Bhone banks. Very similar has been the experience of Swit zerland, where swallows are now pro tectedalmost too late, however, to re pair the mischief that has been done by heavy fines." Pall Mall Gazette. Tub Rtos or a Nanon. A Chicago rag dealer estimates that each of the 50,- cards an average of five pounds of cloth ing yearly, which make 250,000,000 pound for the whole. Then, he says, there are the tailoring establishments, big and little, whose cutting are not much less in quantity in the aggregate than the cast off clothing of the nation at large, while their quality as rags it greatly su perior. Then there are carpets and bed ding and curtains and other domestic articles of cloth of some kind w hich make up a goodly bulk in the course of a year. The different article make up another 200,000.000 pound of cloth material. Hi estimate ia that one hundred car load of rag eater and leave Chicago daily. XB. UrOOPfJDTIE. "Now. my dear," said Mr. Spoopen dyke, hurrying np to bia wife' room, "if you 11 come uowu ia vum jmiu 1 to gut a nleaaant surprise for you." "What is it?" asked Mr. Spoopendyke; "what have you got, a horse? "Guess again, grinned Mr. 8poopen dvke. "If something like a horse. "I know! It's a new parlor carpet Thai s whet it is!" "No. it isn't, either. I said it's some thing like a horse; that is, it goes when you make it. Guess again." "Ia it paint for the kitchen walls?" asked Mrs. Spoopendyke, innocently. "No, it sin t; and it ain't a hogshead of stove-blacking, nor it ain t a set of dining room furniture, nor it ain't seven gross of stationary washtubs. Now guess again. "Then it must be some lace curtains for the sitting-room windows. Isn't that just splendid?" and Mrs. Spoopendyke patted her husband on both cheeks and danced np and down wun oeiigtii. "It's a bicycle, that's what it is!' growled Mr. Spoopendyke. "I bought it for exercise, and 1 m going to ride it Come down and see me." "Well, ain't I glad!" ejaculated Mrs, Spoopendyke. "You ought to have more exercise, and if there's exercise in anything it's in a bicycle. Do let's see it!" Mr. Spoopendyke conducted bis wife to the yard, and descanted at length on the menu of the machine. "In a few weeks I'll be able to make mile a minute," he saia, a he steadied the spparatus against the clothes-post and prepared to mount. Aow, yon watch me go to the end or this path. He got a foot ia one treadle, and went head first iuto a flower patch, the ma chine on top, with a prodigious crash. "Hadn't yon better tie it np to the post until you get on? suggested Mrs. Spoopendvke. "Leave me alone, will ye?" demanded Mr. Spoopendyke, struggling to an even keel, "i m doing most 01 this myself. Now yon hold on, and keep your mouth shut. It takes a little practice, that's all." Mr. Spoopendyke mounted again, and scuttled along four or five feet, and flopped over on the grass plat. "That's splendid!" commended his wife. "You've got the idea already Let me hold it for you this time." "If you've got any extra strength you hold your tongue, will ye? growled air, Spoopendyke. It don't want any hold ing. It ain't alive. Stand back and give me room, now." The third trial Mr. Spoopendyke am bled to the end of the path, and went down all in a heaD among the flower not. "That s just too lovely lor anything! proclaimed Mrs. Spoopendyke. You made more n a mue a miouie mai ume. "Come and take it off !" roared Mr. Spnopendyke. "Help ne up! Dod gast the bicycle!" and the worthy gentle man struggled and plunged around like a whale in shallow water. Mrs. Spoopendyke assisted in righting him and brushing him off. I know where vou make your mis take," said she. "The little wheel ought to go first, like a buggy. Try it that way going back." ilay be yop can ride this oicycie bet ter than I can!" howled Mr. Spoopen dyke. "You know all about wheels! What you need now is a lantern in your mouth and ten minutes behind time to be the Citv Hall clock! If yon had a bucket of water and a handle you'd make a steam grindstone! Don't you see the big wheel has got to go first ? 'lea. dear, murmured airs, spoopen dyke; "but I thought if you practiced with the little wheel at nrst, you wouldn't have so far to fall." "Who fell?" demanded Mr. Spoopen dyke. "Didn't you see me step off ? I tripped, that's all. Now you just watch me go back." Once more Mr. Spoopendyke started in, but the big wheel turned around and looked him in the face, and then began to stagger. Look out" squesled airs, spoopen dyke. Mr. Spoopendyke wrenched away, and kicked, and struggled, but it was of no avail. Down he came, and the bicycle was a hopeless wreck. "What'd ye want to yell for?" he shrieked. "Couldn't ye keep your meas ly mouth shut? "What d'ye thinky'are, anyhow a fog-horn ? Dod gast the meas ly "bicycle!" And Mr. Spoopendyke hit it a kick that folded him up like a bolt of muslin. "Never mind, my dear," consoled Mrs. Spoopendyke. "I'm afraid the exercise was too violent anyway, and I'm rather glad you broke it." "I s pose so. snorted Mr. Spoopen dyke. "There's $60 gone." "Don't worrv, love. Ill go without the carpet and" curtains, and the paint will do well enough in the kitchen. Let me rub you with arnica." But Mr. Spoopendyke was too deeply grieved by his wife's conduct to accept any office at her hands, preferring to pun ish her by letting his wounds smart rather than to get well, and thereby re lieve her of any anxiety she brought on herself bv actini? so ontratreonslv under the circumstances. Brooklyn Eagle. Thb Heart or Locis XIY. The French are made happy by the skull of Cardinal Richelieu and the heart of Vol taire being placed in safe keeping. But would they like to know where the heart of "le grand monarque" is? It reposes in Westminster Abbey. An emigre brought it over with him to England during the French revolution. Being hospitably entertained at Newnham, in Oxfordshire, on his departure he made a present of the heart to the host. There it remained for a considerable number of years as a curiosity. The late Professor Buckland was on a visit at the house when the heart was shown to him. It is well known that the professor during the later years of his life, was eccentric. The heart looked like a small piece of dried leather. The professor handled it, then he smelt it, then he put it between his teeth, and then, to the horror of the spectators, he swallowed it. The re mains of Professor Buckland repose in Westminster Abbev. and conseonentlv in Westminster Abbey reposes the heart of Louis XIV. False happiness renders men stern and proud, and that happiness is never com municated. True happiness, however, renders them kind and sensible, and that kappiaeas is always shared. Leie Xoiatala. "City of the 1 Dead." At thy feet lie, one of the living- city teeming jj life, with its street crowded with mot ing, reatleta being, the fall 0f whoJ feet are ever beard eaotnding and blend ing with the roar and tumult of it sea of life. In that living stream flow the old sad the voung, the rich and the poor, snd the happy and the miserable all gliding, shifting and flitting like the veriest shadows. To-morrow there are those who will be far away, perhap never to return, and others who never again will promenade iU thoroughfares, but will be called to take np their abode with the silent ponn. lation. How beautiful, bow happy, how gy and bright appear her moving thousand a they troop by at night What joyou sounds swell upon the ear; what raviib.. ing music floaU in the air. How little are they burthened with thoughts of the dead. Oh! how far front their minds the City of the Dead. Ho little they think of iU fleshleas inhab itanU, yet how soon will they be num. be red with iU skeleton. Every tick of the clock, every toll of the bell, every ebb and flow of the great world of waters, heralds the approach of the living to the dead. Within thy gloomy portals, no living throngs surge np and down; no noisy revelry ascends. The very air breathes of silence and iU surroundings speak of death. Within those little enclosures lie many a mother's darling; and many a sad and almost broken heart comes here to weep, and to view the little hillocks where all iU pleasures lie. Oh, stricken and mourning mother! If thou hast a belief or a hope in the life to come, weep no more, but rather re joice that thy1 little one has escaped so early the miseries and wants of an im perfect existence; and remember that life is but a troubled dream, and death but the awakening to a more perfect and blissful state.and that time will soon roll its mystic course, and thou, too, will soon pass through the mysterious gate, and will awake as a child to the dawn of a happier existence. Golden Era. A Farming rTomaa ia TaJare Coutj. A very remarkable example of pru dence, foresight and continuity, hu recently developed in the southern ptrt of this county. The more so in that the subiect is a woman. And in comparison with the conduct of so many men oo have become easily discou"ged Dd "tramp" a the most pWseworthy, this young lady had sted with nothing but her education; taught school a few term ad acquired a little ready nionev. The occasion for iU use speedily arrived, which she was not slow to perceive. A young man in the neighborhood had taken up one hundred and sixty sores of land, built a house upon it, a barn, bored wells, dug ditches, sown it in wheat, and in all spent hundreds of dollars upon it It happened to be a dry season, and the crop failed. He became discouraged, and like many desired to leave.and offered his claim and improvement at a sacrifice, for means to get away. The young lady alluded to gave him $100 for his right, title and interest in the land everything on it. She sold the insufficient crop for hog feed. The bogs rooted and scattered it. The winter rains came, and with them came the volunteer crop, which matured and has just been cut, yielding twelve bushels per acre on one hundred and entr acres. She will clear at least 81500, besides having the land and im provemenu. So much for adhesion and the girls. Visalia California Delta. Seasonable Economy. TJTa An nnt !V- nHncn'tKMS Wsdonot like economy when it comes down to rags and starvation. We have no sympsthy with the notion that the poor man should ...... ... . hitch himseil to a post ana stana aim while the rest of the world moves for ward. It is no man's duty to deny him self everv amusement every luxury. every recreation, every comfort, that he may'get rich. It is no man's duty to become an iceburg, to shut his eyes and ears to the sufferings of his fellows, sad deny himself the enjoyment that results from generous actions, merely that he nay hoard wealth for his heirs to quar 1 ,lnnt Ttnt thpra ia an economy which is especially commendable in the man who straggles wun poverty au economy which is consistent with happi ness, and which must be practiced if the rr man would secure independence, ia almost every man's privilege, and it becomes bis duty, to live ithin his means; not up to, but within thom Walth dnaa not make the man, and should never be taken into account in our judgment of men; but competence should always be aeourea wnen n cau u, the practice of economy and self-denial to only a tolerable extent. It should be secured, not so much for others to look nnnn nr to mi'm na in the estimation of others as to secure ns the consciousness of independence, and constant satisfsc tion which is received from ito acquire ment and possession. VnmriTT nr th Pica. On Wednes day a curious inoident occurred on the Tnlla Bridge, about S mile from Thuriea, which showed in a remarkable degree the voracity 01 m nik A nnmber of dncks were swim ming on the river, when one of them ut tered a loud "quack," was seen suaaenij in diaannoAr. a enmmotion being lm mediately afterwards discernible among the remainder of the flock. tome young men, going through curiosity to the spot where the duck had vanished, found near the bend of the river an enormoas Eike floundering about and so uneny elDlees that they had very little diffi culty in ianding it, when to their ai2- ishment they found the dues, wmcu appeared the pike had seized, but was of course unable to swallow. The monster whose insatiable voracity had caused it death, weighed nearly w pounas. in Land and Water. Carlyle: I call a man remarkable who becomes a true workman in the vineyard of the Highest Be hi work that of pal ace building and founding kingdoms, or only of delving and ditching, to me it is no matter, or next to none. All human work is transitory, small in itself, con temptible. Only the worker thereof, and the spirit that dwelt in him, is significant