THE INDEPENDENT. rsmiiiB Every Thursday Evening, Br H. B. LUCE, Office, - - - Old Court House, ILL8BOKO, OREGON. THE INDEPENDENT Advertising Bates. linfftoe Indeoem LEn.IL A DVKHTIIIItXEITI (!.) Mjuareor Irm, on Inarrtlon II IV DIM xjuare rath sub-fuest luaertion SS MHHMN AltVKHTIDKNKNTM (rln.) Tran i ingle copy per ymr 92 50 fclnjrl copy six month 1 SO Wuifltt number 10 VOL. 4. HILLSBOHO, WASHINGTON COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 187G. Was 01 ' wSWxH jlH.j.9.jlN.tH. eo.Vco.jl eel. .N'r",,-3" TT. f month. ...' I 00$ 4 Oil S a TO0I1J HOMO 00 NfAa " 1 vSllDmgpi J month. .. 4 00 sn 7 00 bO 10 00 IT SO IT M I months. . tOO 7 0(1 t 00 11 0U II 00 M ft) S 00 . - i (noBUlVi 7kjI ioou uso 1100 1TI into moo NO. 3(l J i rMr j io u u ft -jo a j is oj no oj W U OS What the Bullet Sang. O joy of creation, To be! 0 raptur to fly And be freef Be the buttle lost or won, Though it smoke shall hide the sun, 1 shall lind my Love the one Born for me! I shall know him where he stand3, All alone, With the power in his bands Not o'erthrown; I shall know him by his face. By his godlike front and grace I shall hold him for a space, All my own! It is he O ray Love! So bold! It is I all thy love Foretold! It is I. O Love, what bliss! Dost thou answer to my kins? Ah, sweetheart, what is this Lieth there So cold! Bket Haute. If We Would. If we would but check the speaker When he spoils his neighbor's fame, If we would but help the erring, Ere we utter words of blame; If we would, how many might we Turn from paths of sin aud shame. Ah, the wrongs that might be righted, If we would but see the way! Ah, the pains that might be lightened Every hour and every day. If we would but hear the pleadings Of the hearts that go astray. Let us step outside the stronghold Of our selfishness and pride; Let us lift our fainting brothers. Let ua strengthen ere we chide; Let us, ere we blame the fallen, Hold a light to cheer and guide. Ah, how blessed ah, how blessed Earth would be if we'd but try Thus to aid and right the weaker. Thus to check each brother's sigh; Thus to talk of duty's pathway To our better life on high. In each life, however lowly, There are seeds of mighty Rood; Still, we shrink from souls appealing, With a timid "if we could;'' But a God who judgeth all things , Knows the truth is, "if we would." Michigan Rose. BV FI.DHA MAKCIAX. Two little boys of the street picked up a bunch of Michigan roses, defaced, bruised, troddeu on, soiled with dust stains. Some country girl had dropped them from her bosom, for they were from a distance and not seen in any of the florists' shops. To the children they were a miracle of brightness, a revelation of another world, and they stood together on the street as the crowd surged by, earnestly and intently examining he clus ter ot seven small pink roses and a bud. A girl, passing by, aud attracted by the eager and interesting look on the chil dren's faces, stopped to enquire what they were talking about. "What is this! It is a bunch of Mich igan roses," said the girl, with a twinkle in her eyes; "and it grows tall, away up to the sky, and all the bush is like this cluster, pink, with yards and yards of flowers." "Sweet Michigan I" said both boys in the same breath, as the girl went on her way; but from that day forth, as the quest of the Holy Grail possessed Sir Galahad, so the search after Sweet Mich igan possessed these orphan boys. By great perseverance in sweeping street-crossings, blacking boots, selling newspapers aud many other bleak little contrivances known only to the children of want and destitution, they got together enough mouey to buy themselves each a white straw sailor hat with blue ribbon and a little gilt picture of an anchor on one end of the steamer and a small pic ture of a sailing ship on the front. They bought cheap shoes and linen clothes also, through anxiously hoarding and saving of pennies all summer long. They had picked up all the information they could about "Sweet Michigan," ask ing the big newsboys in what direction that country lay. The children could not learn much, but what the little newsboys told them they remembered. "Did you know," said one bootblack to another, "that Johnny and Sammy are goin' to emigrate i "No; where they goiu'?" "Wall, they're goiu' out West, where roses grow, or suthin' o' that sort." "Their heads are kinder cracked, I think it's likely. And 'tain't no wonder, as I knows on. Last winter was a hard un on bigger coves than they be." "They was always clever creeturs, and busy as the day was long." "Yes, ami the littlest newsboys onrthe street." "They're goin to start in the mornin'; we must set 'em off, Bill." In the morning more than twenty newsboys and sweepers and bootblacks went down to the Erie to see the boys start ou their journey. We must take a collection for 'em. Pass round the; hat, boys." "No," answered Johnny and Sammy ; "we are going to sweet Michigan and shan t need any money. Keep it your selves." If you get there before I do, remem ber me; I'm coining, too," sang Josh Bates. "We will." The boys got i aboard a Western ex press ; their menus waved tbeir hats and gave them a cheerful farewell ; the train was off; Johnny 'and Sammy had started on their new lives. "Tickets, boy," aid tne conductor. "Yes, sir." responded the children, tak ing out "a neatly folded brown paper irom eacn vest pocket ana uanuing u to me agent. i;he packages containeu ex actly fifty cents apiece. They were the remnants of the earnings of Johnny and Sammy. There were four five cent pieces and the rest was in pennies, two and three cent coins. The man looked down in those sun-burned, happy faces. He read no story of misgiving there, but a confidence aud hope that was pleasant to see. "Where did you say you were going?" "Sweet Michigan," lisped the babies together. "Is this all the money you have?" "Yes, sir." "Put it back in your pockets. You are running away, aren't you?" "Yes, sir." "I shall have to send you home." "We're a-goin honie, sir." "Where are your father and mother?" "Both dead, sir." Then the boys told the conductor the story of the rose, and the desire to go into the country of that sweet flower; of the summer's toil accomplished in this hope ; of the hats, shoes, linen clothes, and lastly of the mouey saved so anx iously and carefully. "Aud you had bet ter take it, sir, for we shan't need it where we're a-goinV The loneliness, innocence and youth of the boys touched the heart of the agent. "How do I know but God's calling them there?" said he to himself. "I am not going to do anything contrary to Him, or go against him in any way. So he took two tickets and wrote on them: Ekie Pass these boys alon? the line to "Sweet Michigan," aud order Lake Shore to do the same. SAM. So Johnny and Sammy were passed over the route, and tbeir story was borne along with them. Travelers gave them food from their baskets. At night a motherly old lady folded shawls to put under their beads, covered them up and made them go to sleep in seats near her own. Johnny and Sammy really had a glimpse of Paradise as they steamed along the Erie that day. In the night the boys awoke and whis pered together. "It's a very good place to be on the Erie, Sammy." "Yes; they are all so good to us. They ain't the same kind that used to be in the city." "I don't know there's some awful good ones there. There's that girl who told us where the roses grow; there's Josh and the p'licemen was always good to us, and we could sleep in the station when we couldn't sleep anywhere else." "i don't mean that kind ; I mean the swell ones." "Well, they were pretty good, too, es pecially on Sunday, Johnny." "Well, conductor," said the farmer, "me and Marier must git off at the next station ; our ways don't run no further together. I'd like to know what be comes of them boys two children a-goin' to the Lord knows where. Curus, now, ain't it? Bound to go to sweet Michi gan, yet nothin' to go to there as any body knows on. I'd a-took 'em long to Kansas, but Kansas won't do, I'm sure ou't. Mark my words, conductor; the Lord's a-takin' on 'em up. And it's time, if I do say it. Good day, conductor; if you ever come our way, call. Boys, when you git hum I want you to drop a line to John lied ley, Onion Creek, Kan sas. Good day to all on ye," he nodded to the passengers. "Come along, Marier; we must be a-gittin' hum." Along the level of the prairie the sun burned red and warm. Acres of wheat were cut and gathered into ricks that looked like little old women with their bonnets on. There were also sweet ricks of pink buckwheat, and the stubble land where the buckwheat had grown was oink. too. A very large orchard of youug apple-trees was in full bearing. The sunshine falling on the ripening fruit made them seem yet yellower, red der and riper. A little rill ran along the road-side for a short distance, then crossed the highway and trickled d;wn a meadow whose greenness showed the second growth of the year. Great flocks of hens, turkeys and ducks gave anima tion to the farm. The great barn doors were wide open, and out of them issued the sweet scent of newly cut clover and timothy. Across the road, opposite the barn, a fine herd of cows waited to be milked. They stood quietly chewing their cuds as Johnny and Sammy came to the yard by the roadside where they were. "Will they hurt us, Sammy?" "No; they are gentle things; I know by their pretty eyes." The farm house was a pleasant building a story and a half high. The doors and windows were open. The path that led from the house to the gate was bordered with camomile and China asters, with some bright nasturtiums. But over the portico of the front door there crept a magnificent vine of Michigan rose. Its time of blossoming was long since past, but a few clusters starred the green boughs. Both boys saw it and recog nized the flowers at once. "It is the place 1" exclaimed the boys. "Sweet Michigan I" and opening the gate they walked into the yard. They rapped on the open door and a sad-looking wom an advanced to meet them. "Come in, children," she said, very gently and sweetly. "Is it the place?" inquired Johnny and Sammy. "Yes, I think so." "We are so glad to get here." Then in answer to her question they told their oft-repeated story: "But we were so glad when we saw the rose." "Take off your hats and come out to the trough and I will brush your hair and wash your faces, and when father comes in from the field we will have supper." So when she had washed their faces the boys saw a pet Iamb in the yard and wanted to play with it. Mr. Laly, com ing across the field, saw the little lads, and wondered whose children they were. His wife met him at the gate and told him what they had told her. "And I think, husband, God has sent us some thing to love. They can never be like our own dear children, I know, but it is so lonesome." "They must be queer little fellows, Sail 7. You say it was the rose that brought them to the door?" "Yes; the same slip that little Sally j brought from mother's and you planted it for her by the portico." "Well, let us go to supper now. Call the children; if we like them we will keep them." Johnny and Sammy never before saw real plenty. The loaf of bread, delicious butter, cream and peaches, the cake and honey were all new. The affluence of the farmer's house astonished them. In the buttery they saw long, shining rows of milk-pans, full to the brim, rolls of butter ready for market, and baskets of egg9- "So, boys," said Farmer Laly, after supper, "you thought you would come out here and live by the Michigan rose?" "Yes, sir." "And you like it, do you?" "Yes, sir." "Well, you can live here, if you want to." "Forever?" "Yes. You can call Aunt Sally there mother, and if you like me for a father you can call me so. Now, boys, 1 am going to milk the cows; come and see them." The winter had been one of sickness among children; diphtheria aud scarlet fever robbed many a home of its little ones. Among the most afflicted were Mr. and Mrs. Laly. Of their three chil dren not one survived. This it was that made their hearts so tender to the stran gers who came seeking sweet Michigan. From this day forth they became Johnny and Sammy Laly. Aunt Sally taught them to read. In their sweet home we leave them, thinking that thereto they were guided by some angel of the Lord, perhaps little Sally herself and a crusheu cluster of withering Michigan roses. England's Dilemma. England's worst enemies could not hope to see her in a more humiliating position than that she now occupies. She sees her ancient enemy, Russia, marching forward with restless force to the accom plishment of the very thing which Eng laud has devoted all her energies and sacrified a profusion of treasure and blood to prevent her doing. Twenty years ago, England was able to summon r ranee anu Italv to her aid to beat back the Russian from Constantinople, but to-day she seeks in vain for an alliance. France cannot goto war; Italy has been bribed away; Austria has been bought by tne snrewa Muscovite; Spain and Portugal care noth ing for the Eastern Question, and if they did, have as much as they can do to at tend to their own attairs. England nas no armies to send abroad large enough to meet on equal terms more than a Rus sian corps. She has heretofore fought her battles in Europe with her navy, her money, and a small land contingent. Her navy can be of little effectiveness in such a strug gle as is now threatened, her money of but little more use, since mere are now no good disciplined troops to be hired for service against Russia, and if there were it would drain even her long purse to put troops enough into the field to cope with Russia's hundreds of thousand. She has no Prussian armies and German contingents to come to her assistance as she had in the Napoleonic struggles. It is doubtful that if she chose to go to the expense, she could assemble from all Europe troops enough to match the Rus sian hosts in numbers, while they could not possibly be a match for them in dis cipline and effectiveness. She finds one hope left her; she appeals to the Court of Berlin, to use its moral influence to prevent the Russian from carrying out his schemes. It is sad to see the proud nation which was so long the arbitress of Europe brought to sup plicate the good offices of another to se cure for her that which she thereby con fesses her inability to secure for herself. And this supplication is the more galling when it is remembered that the relations of the Prussian and Russian Courts are so intimate as to give color to the supposi tion that they are accomplices in each other's designs for national aggrandize ment, and therefore England's humbling herself lefore Prussia is nearly equivalent to assuming that attitude before Russia. It is safe to say that England's conti nental influence has about disappeared. Toledo filade. When Men Are at Their Best. Dr. Beard states that from analysis of the lives of a thousand representative men in all the great branches of the human fam ily, he made the discovery that the gold en decade was between forty and fifty, the brazen between twenty and thirty; the iron between fifty and sixty. The superiority of youth and middle life over old age in original work appears all the greater when we consider the fact that all the positions of honor and prestige pro fessorships and public stations are in the hands of the old. Reputation, like money and position, is mainly confined to the old. Men are not widely known until long after they have done the work that gave them their fame. Portraits of great men are aeiusions; statues are nesi They are taken when men have become famous, which, on the average, is at least twenty-five years after they did the work which cave them their fame. Original work requires enthusiasm. If all the original work done by men under forty five were annihilated, they would be re duced to barbarism. Men are at their best at that time when enthusiasm and experience are almost evenly balanced. This period, on the average, is from thirty-eight to forty. After this the law is that experience increases, dui entnusi asm decreases. An Englishman, named Bryce, has been looking after the pieces of Noah's Ark, at the summit of Mount Ararat, where the Armenians of the neighborhood believe it yet to be, in a good state of i i r i preservation, to mem me mountain nas been thought inaccessible. But this is the third or fourth ascent that has been made. The mountain is 17,213 feet high. The peak is in sugar loaf form, of volcanic origin, and covered with snow. It is quite needless to add that the Ark was not discovered Dy Sir. Bryce Make Your Own Table Syrups. We find the following, by a correspond ent of the Sunny South, and it contains so much good sense that we give it to our readers. The numerous brands of molas ses and drugged syrups on the markets can be replaced by a healthful syrup at nearly, if not quite the 6ame money perhaps money can be saved, as stated below. There can be no good reason given why people should eat just what the world sees fit to prepare for them. What one eats ought to be pure nourish ing food, not filthy and poisoned matters inade up by bad people to make money. There are several reasons suggestedby economy and convenience for the making of syrup from sugar a household prac tice. The dealer who retails syrup has to pay freight on the weight of its con tained water; this he extracts from the consumer in the price at which it is offered. The package in which it is trans ported is much more costly than that in which the sugar is conveyed; the differ ence is added to the manufacturer's price, and is another item of cost to the con sumer. The retailer of sugar adjusts his price at the lowest practicable rate of profit, because modern luxury has made it an article of prime necessity, and one that will not bear profit; not so with syrup, however, on which a rate of profit equal to the average of that made on ta ble supplies is required by the dealer. To make a gallon of syrup of beautiful whiteness and crystal-like transparency, such as is known in our markets as silver drips or rock candy drips, there are re quired eight pounds of refined sugar, such tis is known by its various names and grades of A or B or extra C, and cost ing 10 to 12.j cents a pound, according to locality aud distance from sugar re finery. To this quantity should be added three pints of boiling water, and the whole subjected to slow boiling for a period of fifteen or twenty miuutes, after which the solution, while warm, should be strained through a fabric of moder ately close texture. This will produce a gallon of syrup at much less cost than the price demanded for the grades of syrup named. For a light yellow or golden syrup, the same quantity of light brown sugar may be employed, and so on through the lower grades of sugar and syrup; but no grade of sugar can be found which will produce so worthless an ar ticle as the Cuba molasses generally of fered in our markets. The Family. The family is the edu cation of the race. Here men and women are made. What they are in the world, that they were in the family as children. The family is the place where the first lessons ot law are received, and where the whole character in view of law has a di rection given it. The citizen is made in the family long before the time for voting or activity has come. When Napoleon said, in answer to Madame Stael's ques tion about i ranee s greatest need, "Moth ers," he asserted the all-potent influence of a true life. The family is the greatest means tor the development of character. What a world does it present for the at- lections to abide in ! Where on all the earth besides are sympathies so warm, love so pure and lervent as here? All that gives value or beauty to human char acter finds in the family at once an at mosphere in which to expand aud de velop the elements which shall bring it to the highest perfection. Take the Pains. Never think it too much trouble to answer your children's questions. How often do we hear the tart reply, "I am sure 1 don t know, child pray don't tease me when you see I'm busy! lhisisthe surest way to stunt the growth of your child's mind. It is the most cruel and ruthless conduct possi ble, thus to deny a child the information which he craves, and allow him to feel all the awkwardness and pain to which ignorance exposes him. Rather hail with joy these indications of a growing mind, and make the little inquirer happy by drawing him to you with a kiss, aud give him as full and patient an elucidation as he may require. Spiced Beef. Pncure a piece of thin flank of beef about ten pounds in weight, which salt for about a week; when ready. split it open with a knife and lay it out flat upon a dresser, having previously prepared six onions, chopped very tine. with about ten sprigs of parsley, and the leaves often sprigs of thyme, the same of marjoram, two ounces of mixed spice (without cinnamon), and half an ounce of black pepper; mix all together, spread half on the beef as it lies betore you. then fold it over to its original shape, lay on the remainder of the preparation, roll it up tightly in cloth, boil, press aud serve. Corn Fritters. Take half a dozen ears of sweet corn, grate it from the cob as fine as possible; three well-beaten eggs; a tablespoonful and a half of flour; season with pepper and salt; melt equal portions of laru aud butter in a trying pan; when boiling hot, drop in the mixture, a spoon ful at a time. Fry brown and send to the table hot. Fish Fritters. Take the remains of any cold fish; remove all the bones; add bread crumbs and mashed potatoes in equal quantities. Mix half a teacup of cream with two well-beaten eggs, a pinch of salt and pepper; beat all together; cut into small calces ana fry in boiling laru. serve hot. Rte Drop Cakes. Two coffee cups of rye meal, two teaspoontuls cream tartar, one teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoon- tuis sugar, iwoconee cups ot milk.poured in gradually, two eggs, well-beaten, one teaspoonful of soda, dissolved in a little warm water, and added last. Beat well, and bake in cups or gem pans heated, be fore filling. Indian Custard Pvddino. Four heap ing tablespoonfuls of Indian meaL one egg, one quart of milk, salt and spice; sweeten tosuit the taste; beat the egg and meal together, then pour in the milk and bake two or three hours ; stir two or three tames. Lkarnino without thought is labor lost; thought without learning is peril ou. Confuciu$. The Cobra. When the Earl of Albemarle was per forming military service in India, he had frequent acquaintance with that deadly reptile, the cobra de capello. At one time, a servant, who had leen bitten by a cobra, was brought to the Government-House, in hopes that the physician in attendance could save his life. The remedies given were ineffectual, and the man died in half an hour. His death appeared perfectly lainless, for so long as life remained his body rested in a state of complete repose, with the hands open and the palms up ward. The cobra can be domesticated, and, when tamed, allows itself to be handled by persons to whom it is ac customed with perfect impunity. An instance of its amiable bearing is cited by the Earl : "The General in command of the Barrackpore District in my time, an old gentleman of the name of Hardwick, was passionately fond of cobras, of which he had a large collection. His pets, leing of a truant disposition, would frequently escape into the adjoining compound, to the no small anuoyance and terror of his neighbors. I once paid a visit to his snakery. I saw him seize a cobra by the tail with his right hand, while he passed the body of the animal rapidly through his left till he reached the head. He then forced open the serpent's mouth aud showed the poison-bag at the base of the tangs. When he let the reptile go, so far from showing irritation at such rough usage, it seemed rather gratified at hav ing been chosen to exhibit the idiosyn crasy of its species iu its own persou." The Hindoos have a superstition that, if a cobra is killed, some of its relatives will avenge its death. For this reason the serpents are allowed by them to mul tiply without molestation. It is stated in a recent publication that, in the Presi dency of Bengal alone, 11,410 persons died of snake bite in the year 1869. The Hurricane. New York, Nov. 1. A letter from Key West, giving the exierience of the Uuited States steamship Uippee in the storm of the 10th and 20th of October, says the men, in getting about the decks to atteud to their duties, wero thrown violently from their feet, and, blinded by the salt spray, were obliged to go grop ing about as if they were in total dark ness. They could only stick to their stations by the most desperate struggling against the hatches, gratings, doors, deck- buckets, and many other articles that were being swept back and forth across the deck, by the rushing of the water as the ship sailed and tossed. Breathing was difficult, and the air taken into the lungs was so loaded with sea salt that it caused excessive irritation, producing violent coughing and vomiting. I he suffering of the men was most intense, especially among the firemen and coal heavers, who were not only deprived ot ventilation but obliged to inhale the salt water steam produced by the seas rush ing into the fire-room. It was then thought advisable to encourage the men by the use of stimulants. The surgeon found a sufficient quantity to give all hands and sent it to the cabin to bo dis tributed. The effect of the storm on the animals on board was peculiar. The cats disappeared the morning before the storm and were not seen tor hve days alter ward. The dog, Daniel, a splendid pointer. owned by the captain, exhibited the greatest dread at being left alone and was only appeased when some one was petting him. The hens and turkeys, usually the most hungry and voracious aud quarrelsome beasts On board, for got their hunger and barely opened their eyes when food was thrown them. Two birds (babo9), a species ot pelican, came n board while we were lying in the vor tex. They must have been drawn down while attempting to fly over us. The parrot was the ouly thing on board tliat seemed at all to enjoy the surroundings. ii r.KOF.u iji Town. A lausrhable incident is told of a German aud his ,ift? who visited Ocean Grove the other day. Going into the ice cream garden I A the man aslied lor beer lor two: "Zwei glass peer." "Eh?" said the clerk. "Zwei glass peer," with more emphasis. "What is it you want?" "Peer I peer! peerl Zwel glass." The clerk failed to comprehend, and urAn to experiment bv placiusr two plates of ice cream before the pair. ...... i i. r "Ugh I take away uot sniooij ve vani peer lager." "Oh! Lager bier, eh?" "Yaw yaw ! dot is right. Zwei glass." "We haven't any- don't keep it." "You no keeo hiinf Veil, vere can ve findt soom eh, uiein frent?" "Nowhere. You can t get any in the nlace." "Can't i?et any peer no laser? Mein " n m- Got in Hiinuiel! Dot was awful places! Vat dime leafs de nexdt train, eh? Coom on, Katerma," and without waiting for . i . i la- ii , - an answer iney Btarieo ior tne uepoi. The stewardess of the Plymouth R'Ksk tells of a romantic young lady who ven tured out too far at Rockaway Beach and was nearly drowned, but fortunately, was . - ' . i i . rescued ana given in ner cuarge. isn coming to her senses the young lady de clared she would marry him woo naa risked his life to save hers. "Impossible," replied the stewardess. aitru.. ii t a alpaa1e n a rrS a1 t't "No." "Wasn't it the handsome young fello who was bathing near me in the surf when I became unconscious! ' No, 'twas a Newfoundland dog." TCupkror William has addressed the following words to the citizens of Wis sembourg, in AUace, where the French first felt the shock of the advancing Ger man hnt: "I know vou come to me with bleeding hearts. It is only natural, my friends; but I myself have known vicis iM1oa hut bore no strain st them. Be lieve me, as an old man, time sets all things right. Time reconciles as to greatest changes, and time, I am sure, will make yoa satisneu. A dry subject The mummy. The Story of Captain Nathan Hale. On September 22d, one hundred years ago, within the limits of the City of New York, Captain Nathan Hale, of the Con tinental Army, was hung as a spy, with out the formality of a trial and under circumstances of peculiar atrocity. He was but twenty-one years of age, a grad uate of Yale, and a man whose fine liter ary attainments are perpetuated in his gran J-uephew, Rev. Edward Everett Hale. The World gives some interesting remi niscences of this hero-martyr, and says: "Tradition has preserved a picture of the gallant young soldier, w ho, in April, 1770 encamped his company iu the helds near our Buuker Hill, at Broadway and the Bowery, and who iu September the same year crossed the Sound, at Norwalk, on his perilous errand. Tweuty-oue years old iu June, bright-eyed and athletic, he was dressed in a frock of white linen, fringed, such as officers then wore, with a yellow ribbon in his cockade, to mark his rank, in lieu of epaulettes. He had his firelock slung behind (all officers wore them thus), aud at his side was the sword worn by his uncle, Nathan Hale, who was killed by a shell at the siege of Louis burg, in 1745. When equipcd for the perilous work of a spy, Captain Hale changed his uniform for a plain suit of citizen's clothes, with a round, broad brimmed hat. He was set ashore at Huntington, Long Island, and thence proceeded through the British camps ou Long Island aud New York. After pass ing safely to the outposts of the British army, he stopped at a tavern called the 'Cedars,' where he was seen and recog nized by a Tory cousin, a dissipated youug man, named Samuel Hale, who had received many favors at his hands iu former times. This double traitor be trayed him to the British, saying that he was a captain iu the Continental army and a spy. Gen. Howe was then residing at the Beck man House, near the present junction of First avenue and Fifty-first street. Hale was brought before him, and frankly owned his name, rank, aud object. This was on the 21st of Septem ber, 1776, just one week from the day on which Washington had given him his se cret instructions, at the Murray House, ou Murray Hill. "Howe had Hale hung without s trial, and the infamous Provost-Marshal Cun ningham tore up the letters he wrote to his mother aud betrothed, on the morning of his execution. He died like a hero, saying with his la.t breath: '1 regret that 1 have but one lite to give for my country Ihe place of his burial is uuknowu, but is within the city limits. "At the time of Captain Hale's execu tion he was engaged to be married to a youug lady in Connecticut. She survived him seventy-live years, aud, though he yielded to the importunities of friends and married, she never forgot her youth- ul lover. V lieu she came to die, at the age of ninety three, the lat word the spoke was 'Nathan.' " A couiiEsroNOEXT furnishes us with the annexed accouut of the perilous ad ventures of Jake Ramp; "Thirty-five years ago, or thereabouts, there lived iu Southwest Georgia a wiry-haired, carroty- headed, freckled-faced backwoodsman by the name of Jake Hump, who passed through the following perils before he ar rived at the age of twenty-five years: "He was first slrickeu by lightning; then, ou two separate occasious, he w.i bitteu by rattlesnakes; then lie was bitten by a cotton-mouth moccasin, afterward he wa thrown from a wild horse, and had one arm aud one leg brokeu. But a shoit time after recovering from his fractures, he and a youug brother, while searching for their cows late one afternoon, were at tacked by a large panther, which caught Jake, dragged him at least a quarter of a mile to a dense hammock, where it de posited its prey and proceeded to cover him with leaves and brush. The p.tuther was a huge animal, aud had crushed Jake's shoulder there; yet he soon recovered. Soon after his shoulder healed up he made an attempt to run off with a neighbor's wife, was pursued, overtaken, shot, badly wounded, aud was afterward strickeu several times with a knife and left iu the road as dead. In time he recovered, aud stole from a neighbor a pig, for which he was sent to the penitentiary for a term ot i ; a st years, wnere i lost sigut oi mm. Sacannah Neic$. The New York World, of M mday, says: "Mr. Hutching, formerly kuowu as Uaruum s 'ligtittuug calculator, out now a licensed minister of the Methodist Church, preached at the African Metho dist Episcopal Church, ou Sullivan street, yesterday morning. He stated publicly before the services were over that he car ried a certificate from Mr. Baruum to show that 4,000,000 of eople had been to witness las remarkable blackboard ex ercises; but it was very evident that he would have to live a long time before that number of persons would hear him as a preacher. Hi audience was com posed of about one hundred colored uieu and women, besides half a dozen white persons. At this rate, he would have to preach 10,000 times before be could have been heard by only 1,000,000, aud this feat will probably be impracticable, eveu for a lightning calculator. 1 hose 4,000, 000 who saw Mr. Hutching as a feature of Mr. Barnum s show, will remember him as a good-looking young man, of slight figure, fair complexion, and wearing a very heavy black moustache. None of these outward appearances have been af fee ted by the very radical change which seems to nave taken place within. How to Woo a Woman. Woo a wom an bravely. If there is anything humili ating to a woman, it is to have a lover whom she wishes to honor, weak and rapid, ever yielding and half afraid ot her. She longs to tell him "to act like a man I" The man who conceals or denies his lore for fear of being laughed at is a coward. A love that has no element of divinity in it is not love, but passiou. which, of itself, has nothing ennobling. That was a beautiful inscription on an engagement ring, "Each for the other, and bout for Wod," Storms in the Sun. Professor J. D. Steele communicated the following to the Kltnira (N. Y.) Ad' vert iter: "There appeared In the Adcertiter aomo weeks since a paragraph, copied, I be lieve, from a Michigan paper, declaring that a column of magnetic light is shoot ing from thu sun at prodigious speed that it already reaches half way to the earth, and that in all probability by another summer we shall hay celestial aud atmospheric phenomena beside which our rudest winter will seem like a 'Juno morning in Paradise.' In tine, when this big tongue of flic touches the earth it will likely lap up our globe in one mouthful. Very many have made inquiries of mc concerning this prodigy, and, with your leave, l will try to satisfy their curiosity and perhaps allay their fears. It ha bucn known for some time that during a total eclipse flames were seen to play on the edgy of the moou. During the eclipses of 180S and 18fl'J it was definitely settled that they were entirely disconnected from the moon, and were vast tongue of fire darting from the sun's disc. By observations taken with the spectroscope, aud also by means of the wonderful photograph of the sun takn by Dr. La Rue during the eclipse of 1800, it was discovered that these fire mountain consisted mainly of burning hydrogen gas. This was precious information to secure iu the midst of the excitement and novelty and in the brief duratiou of a total eclipse. It did not, however, satisfy scientific meu. For more than two years Mr. Lockyer, aided by a grant from Par liament to construct a superior instru ment, had been experimenting and search ing in order to detect these flames at other time than at tho rare occurrence of a total eclipse. On the 20th of Octo ber, 18Jd, he obtained a distinct image of one of the prominences, which ho ul'ter ward traced entirely round the sun. As tronomers can, therefore, now study these flame at any time. Thu result of observations now being takeu show that storm rage upon the sun with a violence of which we can form no conception. Hurricanes swept over its surface with terrific violence. Vast cy clones wrap its fire into whirlpools, at the bottom of which our earth could lie like a boulder iu a volcano. Huge flames dart out to enormous distances, aud fly over the sun with a speed greater than that ot the earth Itself through space. At one time a cone of fire shot out eighty thousand miles, and then died away all u ten minute time. Beside such uwtdl couvulsious, the mimic display of a ter restrial voicauo or earthquake sink into usiguincancc. Tnere 1 nothing iu these phenomena to alarm u. They have, iu ail probability, happened Constantly for age past. That we have now means of iuvestig ttlng their height aud velocity, furnishes no sense of anxiety. Rumor of these discoverie have crept luto tho papers, and exagger ated by repeated copying and setisatioual additions, have given rise to these mys terious aud uucailed for predictiou. The Hero of Minnesota. There is uo tragedy of Sliukeicaro so grand and complete, so satisfying iu its dramatic uuity, as ono which ha now been acted on tho stage of real life in Minnesota. Now that thu drama is fin ished by the death or capture of its vil lains, we must, tor thu honor of the state. reeat thu familiar outline of the story. A everybody knows, the cattuer of tho Northtield, Minn., bank, who was also thu treasurer of Carleton College, wa a mouth ago attacked in hi bank by a band ot highway robbers and told that he must instantly opeu his safe or die. This is uot thu first time .that cashiers have been so caught ami threatened. Ihey have always yielded, preferring life to honor. But the Northtield cashier was a hero aud not a cowaid. It took him no tiinj to refuse. He could die, but ho could uot be compelled by threat to be come the accomplice of robbers, and they murdered him. Hi trust he kept. Tho saviug of widow and orphan which had been confided to him he preserved. Ho retained his integrity. He did not think a few year more of lifo worth so much as honor and duty. Aud so he died, keeping well the trust put iu hi hands by a financial institution aud by a Chris tian college The robber came from Miouri, where Iced of violence are uot rare aud where they had often cscaited. They thought that by such audacity a had been suc cessful at home they could succeed in a more northern state. Butthcy found in Mr. Hey wood au obstacle such as they h id never met. Before they could turn and flee the citizen were rushing to horse aud arm. One of their number was already shot. They gained the-open field, but were uot yet safu. Tho country was aroused before them and behind. Every citizen became a detective and every copse and thicket was scoured to find them. Not one of them wa allowed to escape. A uuniber of them wero shot in their track. Others were captured, wounded or exhausted, to suffer the no les sure penalty of outraged law. The tragedy has had its fitting close. Inde pendent, An Optical Delusion. Hero is a neat delusion. Roll a sheet of writing paper into a tube ten inches in diameter, and hold it to the right eye, looking through at any convenient object, keeping the left eye also open. Place tho left haud, open with the palm upward, against the tube an inch or two from the further end. The surprising effect apparently seen will be a hole through tho hand tho size of a cross section of the tube. Now, in place of the hand, put a sheet of white fiapcr with a bole in it of a quarter of an eh iu diameter; stare intently into the tube, and you will see tho hole in the sheet of paper floating in the hole of the tube, clearly defined uy the difference of illumination. Each eye obviously trans mits a different impression to the brain, and that organ, uaable to disentangle them, lands us on the palpable absurdity of a materialized hole. A branch concern The limb of a tree,