cQcbnixhit Jjldvci'ti.w. m a, W, rAIHDnOTUER& 00 rioprletori. AUBURN, "1 i NEBRASKA. A SONG FOB WOMEN. Within a dreary, narroivrooin, 'J'lmt looks upon a noisome street, Half-ralutliijr with the stilling hunt, A starving Kill works out her ilooin. Yet not tho Iiinh in (Jod's sweet air Tho llltln birds sing free of cure, And hawthorns blossom everywhere. Swift, consoless toll scarrc wlnnoth broad; jiDtn eariy dawn mi iwiiigiu iiiiih, f hut In by four dull, dirty wiiIIh, Tho hours cruwl round with miiidorous troud. And all tho whllo, In Homo still plnoe, Whom Intertwining houghs embrace, Tho blaokbirda build; time II Ion upauo. With envy of tho folk who die, Who limy lit hiHt their leisure take, Whoso longed-for sleep nonu roughly wako, Tired hands tho restless needle ply. Hut far and widu lu meadows groon Tho golden buttercup nro seen, And reddening sorrel nods bolwoon. Too pure mid roud to soil hor soul, Or stoop to bandy gotten (rain, , lly days of changeless want and pnlu Tho seamstress earns a prisoner's dulo. Whllo In tho peaceful Molds theshoop l'ood, qulot; iiml through heaven's bluo doop Tho Hllout cloud-wings stainless swoop. And If bIio bo alive or dead That woary woman scarcely known, Hut hack and forth hur nocdlo goes, In tiiuo with throbbing heart and head. I,oI whero tho leaning alders part White-bosomed swallows, blitho of heart, Abovo Htlll wators Hklin mid dart. O God in Iloavonl flhall I, who tibaro That dying woiniin'fl womanhood, Taisto all the summer's bounteous good, Unburdened by hor weight or care? Tho whltn mooiwhilslcs star tho grass, Tho lengthening shadows o'or them pros, Tho meadow pool In smooth ha Bins'). A.Matheton, in Macmlllan't Alauatlne. ORIGIN OF POPULAR I'll RASES. llosh. Tlio (lorivaUan of this word, which is applied to anything nonsensical or trashy, is variously accounted for. It is traced by some to tho Dutch bosch, corrupted from Rois-lo-Duo, tho name of a town in Holland. It is probably a Turkish work, however, moaning empty, vain, worthless, bogus, in short, and was imported into England Homo twenty-five years ago byjmtish soldiers who Itad served in tho liusslan war, and had picked it up from tho Turkhdi soldiory with whom they Had boon thrown in contact. fo Trodden the WmcPrcss. This very beautiful and commonly used quotation Jfl from Isaiah, ixlli?,!): "1 hnvo trodden tho wine-press alono." An interesting fact in oonnootioniwitU tho lino is, tiiat iu Italy tho sam'o, prlmltlvo process of troadiiig tho wino-prcss that provallod in Egypt in patriarchal days is in opor ntion at tho present day. Tho grapes nro thrown into an enormous vat, whero tho juice is tramped out of them by tho bare feet of tho poasants. Hanker. Probably a corruption of ''hunger.1' It Is always used in con nection" with tho word aftor, us "wo linnker after something." Tho toxt in jMutUinw-.v6i. AJl)ortd aro thoy whioh do hunger and thirst after righteous ness,"' shows tho afllnity, oven if it docs not ostabllsli tho identity of tho two words, "hunger" and "hankor.11 Hun a Muck. Thlsisnnoldphrasofor attacking madly and indiscriminately. "Muok" is a Malay word. In tho island of Coylon, cook-fighting is carried on to a Sroat oxtout. Tho buniatrans aro ad iotod to tho use jf dlco, and gaming 1b strongly characteristic of tho Chinoso and Siamese Tliis is notably truo also of tho Malayan. VAftor having resigned everything to tho r good fortuuo ot tho winner, tho Malay gamostor is reduced to a horrid stato of desperation. Ho thon loosens a cortaln lock of hair, which indicates war and destruction to nil with whom lie meets, Ho intoxi cates himself with opium, and working himsolf up into a tit of frenzy, ho bites and kills overy ono who comes in his way. But as soon as this lock is soon ilowing, it is lawful to iiro at tho per son, and to destroy him as soon as pos sible This is called I4 to run a muck," tho phrase boing first introduced in En gland by sailors. Drydon writes: " VrontlotM, und Batlro-proof, ho scours tho streets. Am' ruim tin Indian muck at all ho moots." Ami, too, Pope says: " Satire's my woapon, but I'm too discreet. To run a muck and till at all I moot." The Half is llclter than the Whole. Tho author of this proverb was Hesiod, an ancient poet whoso learning was not drawn from books. It was glvon in tho nature of an admonition to his brother, to prefor a friendly accommodation to a litlgous law-suit, and lias fixod a para doxical saying often applied. Evil Communications Corrupt Good Manners. This lino forms part of tho 33d verso of tho 15th chapter of 1st Cor inthians. It was borrowed by St. Paul, from Menandor, tho Grecian poet, and is found in a fragment of ono of his comio productions for which ho was noted. Nemesis. "Grecian mythology'1 tolls is that Nomosls was " a fomalo divin ity who was regarded as tho personifi cation of tho righteous anger of tho gods." Sho is represented as Intloxlbly nevero to tho proud and insolent. Ac cording to Hoslod, sho was tho daugh ter of Night, though sho is some'imos called a daughter of Erobus or of Ocoanus. Tho Greoks boliovod that tho gods woro enemies of oxcossivo human happinoss. and that there was n power that presorved a propor com ponsntion in human afi'airs from which it was impossible for tho sinner to es cape, 'lids power was embodied in Nemesis, and sho was in an especial inannor tho avenger of family crimes und the humblor of tho overbearing. Thoro was a eclobratod templo snored to Iter at Hhamnus, one of tho bor oughs of Attica, about sixty stadia from Marathon. Tho inhabitants of that place considered hor tho daughter of Ocunnus. Accordlug to a myth pro orvod by Fausanlas, Nemesis was tho mother of nolen by Jupiter, and Loda, tho reputed mother of Helen, was only, in fiftt, her nurse. Hut tills myth scorns to have been invented in lator tinio to represent tho divino vengcanco which was Indicted on tho Greeks and Trojans through tho instrumentality of Helen, Hark as Egypt's Ni(jht. Tho origin of this phrase Is found in tho 10th chap ter of Exodus, tho 21st, 22d and 23d verses: " And ytho Lord satdunto Moses: Stretch out tliino hand toward heaven, that there may bo darkness over tho land of Egypt, oven darkness that may bo felt. And Moses stretched forth his hand toward licavcn; ana tnero whs a thick darkness In all tho land of Egypt for tlireo days; thoy saw not. ono anoth er, noilhcr rose any ono from his placo for threo (lays; but nil tno cniiurcn oi Israel had light in tlioir dwellings." Lynch Law. This term, as common ly in uso in tho United States, is a per sonification of violent and illegal justice. According to somo authorities, tho term was derived from a Virginia farm er named Lynch. But it can bo traced to a much earlier dato in Ireland. When, in M9tf. James Eitr.stcnhons Lvneh was Mavor and Warden or Gal- way, ho traded largely with Spain, and sent his son thither to purchase a cargo of wine. Tho young man squandered tho money intrusted to him, but suc ceeded in running in debt for a cargo to a Spaniard, by whoso nephew ho was accompanied in tho return voyago to Ireland, whero tho money was to bo paid. Young Lynch, to conceal his de falcation, caused the Spaniard to bo thrown overboard, and was received at homo with groat honor. But n sailor rovealed to tho Mayor of Galway tho crlmo which his son had committed. Tho young nmn was tried boforo his own father, convicted, and sentenced to bo hanged. His family and others determined to prevent tho execution. Tho father, finding that tho sentence could not bo carried mto otloct tho usual way, conducted ids son to a window overlooking tho public street, Willi his own hands fastened tho halter attached to ids neck to a staple In tho wall and acted as his executioner. In tho council books of Galway there is said to bo a minute that Jame3 Lynch,. Mayor of Galway, hanged his son, out of tiio window, for defrauding and kill ing strangers, without martial or com mon law, to show a good example to postority. Archimedes' Lever. Tho famous Greok phllosophor Archimedes was tho author of tho apothegm: "Glvo mo a lover long enough and a prop strotHj enough and I will move tho world' Tho saying arose from his knowledgo of tho possible oll'eets of machinery; and however much it might astonish a Greok of his day, would now bo readily admitted to bo as theoretically possible as it is nraotloallv impossible: for. iu tho words of Dr. Arnott: "Archimodos would have required to move with tho velocity of a cannon ball for millions of vnnrs to nltor tho nosltlon of tho Ctu'tll V '-.""-- - - 4 . .... ... .voars.to altor tiio poai by a small part of an inch. This foat of Archimodos is, in mathematical truth, performed by every man who leaps from tho ground, for ho kicks tho world away from him whonovor ho risos; mid attracts it again when ho falls." Steal My Thunder. This saying or iginated witli John Dennis, an English dramatist born in 1G57, and who dieil in 1731. Tho incident connected with its origin is found in Biographical Britanniciu, vol. v., p. 103: "Our author, for tho advantage of this play (Applus and Virginia), had invented a now species of thunder, which was ap proved of by tho actors, and is the very sort that at present is used in the theater. Tho tragedy, however, was coldly received notwithstanding such assistance, anil was acted but a short timo. Somo nights aftor, Mr. Dennis boiti": in tho pit, at tho ropresontation of Macbeth, heard his own thunder made uso of, upon which ho rose in a violent passion, and o.volalmcd, with an oath, that it was Ids thundor. "See," said ho, "how tho rascals uso mo! Thoy will not lot my play run, and yet thoy steal my thundor." A Bird in the Hand Is Worth Two in (Ire Hush. This saying originated from tlio following oirounisUmco: Will Somors, tho celebrated jester to Henry VIII., happened to call at Lord Surrey's, whom ho had often, by a well-timed, jest, savod from tho disploasuro of his royal master, and who consequently was always glad to see him, wtis on this occasion ushered into tho aviary, whero ho found his lord amusing him solf with his birds. Somors happened to admiro the plunmgo of a kinghshor. 44 By my lady," said Surroy, "my princo of wits, I will givo It you." Will skipped about with delight, and sworo by tlio groat Harry ho was a most noble gentleman. Away wont Will with his kinirfishor, toll'ms: all his ac quaintances whom ho mot that his friend Surroy had just prosontod him Willi iu Now, It bo happened that Lord North ampton, who had seen this bird tho day provlous. arrived at Lord Surrey's just as Will Somers had loft, with tho intention of asking it of Surroy for a present to a lady friend. Great was his chagrin on finding tho bUd gono. Surroy, however, consoled him with say ing that ho know Somors would rostoro it him if ho (Surroy) promlsod him two another day. Away wont a mossongor to tho princo of wits, whom ho foimilln raptures with his bird, and to whom ho dolivorod his Lord's message Great was Will's sur prise, but ho was not to bo bamboozlod by oven tho Monarch himself. "Sirrah,11 said ho, 'toll vour master that 1 am obliged for his llueral oiler of two for ono, but that I prefer one bird in tlio hand to two in the bush." Hence originated this oft-repeated say ing. St. JLouis Ulobc-Hcmocrat. FACTS NI) FIGURES. ' A Now Yorior has been fined S300 for giving tobacco to a glrallo. Wo caught cured and consumed $90,000,000 woth of fish In 1881. It is estimated that 000,000 acres of Northorn soil afo given up to tobacco, and that tho crcp will reach $40,000, 000 or $50,000,000. N. Y. Graphic. It is estimktcd that thoro aro, In round numbers,! 1,000,000 employes of tho United States railroads, about ono-thlrty-sccond of tho population of fifty millions. A Great Northorn Railroad train, witlt an olght-fdet singlo driver outsido cyllndor engtno, lately ran from Leeds to London, 18fc miles, in exactly threo hours sixty-two mi an hour. Upward of 13,000,000 letters and postnl-cardjMfTo posted daily in tho world; )flHHBO0cttors nro annual ly distribmHlBA, 1,210,000,000 in Amorica,fD(wn Asia, 30,000, 000 in Austria andPRfoOpo in Africa. Tho valuo of tho hay crip in Now .. 1 1 it a. 1 - i!J.f, .!... - England, ncco tig to tho statistician of tno Agrlcmui Uopartmont at wasn- ington, is an 740; Mas sad vs: Alamo, tflu,4Uu,- tts, $16,831,450; Vor- mont, $12; 2; Connecticut, $12,- 100,800; Now lKmnshlro, $7,925,255; Rliodo Island, 1728, 2 10. Total, $00,- 383,001. Thu total numbor of journals pub lished in Franco is 3,272, being 1,313 in Paris and 1,929 in tho provinces. Of tho former it is surprising, to find that thu most numerous clnss is financial, 209; thon medical, 97; illustrated, 88; fashions, 81; political, 71; law, (54; Catholic, 04; science, 41; literaturo, 30; and art, 19. Tho provincial papers aro thus classified according to their politics": Republican, G15; Legitimist, 177; Or lcanist, 14(5; religious, 108; Bonapartist, 100. A:. Y. Sun. Tho world's production of load is about 440,000 tons. Tho estlmato for Europe is as follows: Spain, 120,000; Germany, 90,000; England, 07,000; France, 10,000; Italy, 10,000; Greece, 9,000; Belgium, 8.000; Austria, 0,000; Russia, 15,000; making a total of 320, 500 meter tons. Tno product of tho United States is .estimated at 110,000 tons. This places thu United States tho second ore-producing country in tho world. Spain leads us only in tho amount of 10,000 tons, and has )eon rapidly declining for tho past few years. We aro now consumers ot about one fourth of the4' world's load product, and bid fair by another year to tako rank as tho first, and capablo of furnishing a surplus to tho foreign markets. WIT AND WISDOM. A man gathers wisdom by financial loss. Like a razor, ho is sharper for be ing strapped. ' Hero is a suggestion which may do lyou good:--ovcry man will mend ono WO shalTall iincnhHl. - . , If you hood tho insults of an enemy you aro but his equal, and yet tho way to stop his insults is to pound him until ho whoops for moroy. Detroit Free Press. You do not deal a death-blow to the Darwinian theory by saying: "Man descended from tho monkey, out what did tlio monkey descend from?" Tho monkey descended from tho tree. Tho thing now for city girls rusti cating in tho country is to whittle minia turo nay-racks out of white wood and send them to their admirers in town. This probably signifies: "Come and muko hay while tho sun shines." C7i cayo Tunes. Neighbor's pretty daughter:' "How much is this a yard?" Draper's son desperato "spoons" on hor: "Only ono kiss." " If it's so cheap I will tako threo yards, and grandma will pay you." Ho now sings Thou ait ho near, and yot so far, Hut It's wonderful how euto you aro. "Soniobody lias loft on our desk a poem addrossed to Lillian. Wo shall not publish it. Not that it isn't pretty 5;oou poetry. But wo don't know Jllian. This poet makes hor oht as delicious. If she isn't, wo don't want to spread broadcast a wrong impression of her; and if sho is, wo1 11 do tho poetry writing about hor ottrself." Boston Post. "Do wo lovo old music," Borta? Oh, indeed wo do. That is tlio kind wo lovo. There Is a piano noxt door that is now in tho ninety-seventh year of its ago, and it has tho asthma so bad you canH hear it ten feet away from "tlio koy-board. And compared with tho loud-sounding throe-year-old across tho way, tho antique is an angel's whlspor. liurliwjton Hawk-eye. A now fashion in onr-rings copios tho stylos worn by Cleopatra, who bit herself with an asp, and diod boforo tho war. When Cleo. dressed to "mash" Antony sho woro a pair of ear-rings which cost over half a million Hollars. If this is tlio stylo now Introduced, more than ono editor's wifo will have to worry along anotlior year without a pall et Cleopatra oar-riugs. Norristown Herald. Tho prevailing stylos of dog for this season will not bo changed In any marked degree. Tho window-brush dog continuos to contlnuo in favor among young women who have been erossod In lovo and havo tho. dyspepsia. A favorite stylo of dog has a princess noso, anil Is trimmed with an ostrich- plume tall tightly curled ovor tho polo naise. Tlio Prince-Albert cutaway sausago dog is not used In Warm wcathor. City dogs that uudortako to depopulate tho country fields of tho or nate and festive bull will bo gored. Shaggy dogswlll bo worn with tho hair boiitmnt around tho nock, plain about the waist tuuj polonaise, and a pompa dour Uil-Broqkln EayU Youths' Department. THE LITTLE MAID FOR ME. I know n llttto muldon, Whom I always soo nrrayod In Bilks and 'ribbons, but sho Is n spollod and nnttprt Ittllnnl For slip novor nolo? hor mother, or her slstor, u; Hut, fowttlnK all around hor, Uvea cntlroly lorhorsolf; Bo sho slmpors, and nho sighs, And sho mopes, and sho cries, And knows not whoro tho hiinpy hours llco. Now lot mo toll you prtratoly, my darling lit tlo frlonds, , , Bho's as mlsorablo as mlsorablo can bo, And I foar sho's not tho lltUo maid for mo. Tint I know another muldon? Whom I've often soon arrayed In Bilks and ribbons, but not always; buo'b a pru dent Ilttlo olf; And sho always htdps hor mother, and her Bis ter, and hor brother, And lives for all around hor, rjulto regardless of herself: So sho laughs and sho sings, And tho hours on happy wings Showor gladness round tier pathway as thoy Hoc. Now need I toll you privately, my darling Ilt tlo Irloudg, She's as happy as n Ilttlo maid can bo? Tula Is surely just the Ilttlo maid for mo. yir)eiJ 1'ouiiff People "the MINUTE-HAND CLOCK." OF THE A flormnn Hoy' Adventure. "Kaspar, thou little roguo, how often shall I toll thoo not to mcadlo with that clock?" "I was only watching tho wheels go round, father," said a sturdy little fol low in a soiled leathern jacket, starting up with a mischievous look in his bluo oyes "And what hast thou to do with tho wheels, oh? Suppose this clock is stopped or put wrong somo day by ono of thy tricks, what shall I, Hans Solicit or, custodian of St. Martin's Church, say to tho Town Council? Dost thou know what birch porridge is, thou roguo? Beware, or I'll givo thee such a tasto of it as shall make thee go round fastor than tho wheels." , Poor Hans was, indeed, kept in con stant terror by his inquiring son's un controllablo habit of going wnorovcr ho ought not. Tho old Cliurcli of St. Mart in was a famous play-ground for any boy, with its shadowy aisles, and count less pillars, and tall towers, and deep niches, and half-ruined battlomontsj anil tho worthy custodian, when ho awoko from his after-dinner nap in his little 1113 UllUl-UIIIllUl Hill 111 J1IO lltliu at tlio foot of tlio great clock tow - vcr knew whether he should iid' room er, never his honoful bov hidinf? hfihd'trioMar- scroon ion, tryitajkbloi the ran bel- 'lows, playii scek among tho pinnacles ot r sitting astride ot a carved indrod and sixty feet abovo tho t. ight have boon (WOodiah was All this, fonriven, for t really as lontt ot little roguo" us tho boy, with all wlldness, was of him. But tho ono thing that Hans could not pardon was tho danger caused by his son's restless inquisitiveness to his beloved church olook. It was his pride nnd -glory .to. bo ablo to toll every one that during the whole forty years that ho had been In charge of tho " St. Martin's Kirche," tho clock had never stopped or gono wrong; and nothing would convince mm that it was not oy far tlio finest clock in tho wholo world. 44 Don't toll twe of tho big clock of Strasburg Cathedral," ho would say, with an oostinato shako of his gray head. 44 Could it go forty years on end, think you, without tlio slightest doviation? No, that It couldn't, nor any othor clock on the faco of tho earth except this ono." Mindful of Kaspar's inquiring turn of mind, his father, having to do somo marketing in tho town tlio day aftor our hero's stolen visit to tho clocK, locked the door of tho tower, and took ,tho koy along with him. 44 Mo harm can Happen now," no muttered; " and, iu any case, I shall bo back boforo ho gets out of school." But, as ill-luck would havo it, the teacher was called away by somo busi ness that afternoon, and tho boys got out of school more than an hour earlier than usual. Kaspar, finding his father gono, wout straight to tlio door of tho clock towor, and looked rather blank on discovering that it was locked. But ho was not ono to bo easily stopped when ho had onco mado up his mind. Getting out upon tho roof, and crawling along a cornice whoro only a cat or a school-boy could havo found footing, ho ropt through an nlr-holo right into tho clock-room. . For somo timo ho was as happy as a child in a toy shop, running from ono marvel to another, until at length ho discovered anotlior hole, and thrusting his head through it, found himsolf look ing down upon tho market-placo through tho faco of tho clock itself. But when ho tried to withdraw his lioad again, it would not come. It was such a queer sorapo to bo In that Kaspar was nioro inclined to laugh than to bo frightoned; 'but suddenly a thought struck him which scared him in earnest: his neck was in tho track of tho minute-hand, which, when it readied him, must inovitably tear his head oil! Poor Kaspar! It was too lato now to wish that ho had loft tho clock alone. Ho trlod to scream for help, but with his nook in that cramped position, tho cry that ho gayowas scarcely loudor than tlio cliirp"of a sparrow. Ho strug- Sled desperately to writhe himself back irough tlio holo; but a piece of tho wood-work had slipped down upon tho back of his neck, ami ucm mm liko a vise. On camo tho destroyer, neoror and nearer still, marking oil" with its meas ured tick ids fow remaining moments of lifo. And all tho whilo tlio sun was shining gaj'ly, tho tiny fiags woro llut toring on tho booths of tho market, and tho merry voices of Ids school-follows who were playing iu tho markot-placo fl'iHi- houB hiiW came faintly to his car thoro helpless, with Dt w him men nv men. inj r.v. and the measurei Ing sounded liko thel drum, whilo too con I clock looked like a mi stretched to soizo himj faces on tho spouts sceil cibbcr at him in mockl tho terrlblo hand crept oil nearer, nearer. ' Whn.t fVli flint, tinner face be?" said a tourist bell his spy-glass upward. " WlT it looks liko a boy's head!" " A noy's liofuli" cried a gl watchmaker besido him (oncl achellers special friends), TiT hastily at tlio crlas as hi spoke. 14 Why, good gracious! It's Fttlo Kas- par. IIoMlbo killod! he'll b killedl" church, And ho rushed toward tye shouting like a madman. The alarm spread HkpAvild-firo, and boforo Klugmann,- tKB watchmaker, had got half way up toe stairs leading to tho tower, more tAan a scoro of oxcitcd men were scampering at his heels. But at tho top r(f tho stair they woro suddenly brought to a stand-still by tho locked door. "It's locked!" cried IClugmanu in tones of liorror, " and Hans must have taken tho key with him, for it isn't hero." 44 Never mind tho key," roared a brawny smith behind him. " Pick up that beam, comrades, and run it against that lock. All together now!" Crash went the door, in rushed tho crowd, and Kaspar, now senseless from sheer fright, was dragged out of his strango prison just as tlio lmgo bar of tho minuto-hand actually touched his neck. And so it fell out that poor old Schollcr, coming homo from a quiet afternoon nap, lound the door of tho tower smashed in, his son lying in a swoon, and ins little room crowded with strango men all talking ntouce. But from that day forth Kaspar Schellcr nover meddled with tho church clock again. David Kcr. Tho groat English Cathedral of St Paul's Is said to uavo adventure. witnessed a somewhat similar A Magnificent Telescope for Russia. Tho Russian Observatory at Poulkovo ' " c dl'hortly be in possession of a gigan tfo toloscoptf. lor a long time this ob oervawiry, coiisirucieu in tooy oy oruoi rdcr of the Czar Nicholas, possessed tho most powerful instruments in tho world, but ot lato years tlio scientific progress which has been made in England, Franco and tho United States lias put tho Poulkovo Observatory in the shade. The University of Virginia, for instance, has now the enormous McCormick tolo sffopo, th"o objective of which is 20 inches in diameter and thirty-three feet long, whilo tho Naval Observatory at Washington lias ono of tho same caln ber.andMr. Leek, a wealthy Calif ornianv is,jiboiit to placo a still greater telescope on Mount Hamilton, near St. Jose. Four years ago the Russian Govern ment accordingly determined to con struct a now instrument which both in respect to its mechanism and optic power would surpass any existing tele scope. Tho astronomer Otto bturvo was commissioned to superintend tho work, tho execution of which was in trusted to Messrs. Alvin Clark & Co., of Cambridge, Mass. The glasses.consisting of an amalgam of Hint and crown glass, havo been in hand for nearly a year, and by the month of October they will bo ready for use. The total length of tho Poulkovo telescope will bo forty-live feot, and tho diameter of tho glass thirty inches, exclusive of the mounting. The telescope will be placed in a meadow to the southwest of tho principal building of tlio Poulkovo Observatory, and it will stand upon a movable iron turret which will itself rest on rails. Tho telescope will bo so powerful that tho moon will bo brought to an apparent distance of only a hundred miles from tho earth. London Telegraph. Tho Snake's Ability to Charm. A veritable instance of tlio peculiar fascination which tho snake exorts was witnessed a fow days ago, within a short distance of our city. Tho gentleman who saw this says ho was walking leis urely along the road when his attention was directed to the movements of a brown thrush which was Hitting about near a small plum bush, and at inter vals giving a cry, as of distress. Ho walked up to the bush supposing ho would find a brood of young birds. He lookod carefully, but saw nothing, and was walking oil', when he noticed that tlio thrush had returned to tho bush from which ho had frightened it Ho waited a moment to watch its move ments, when ho saw it lly down on tho ground boncath the plum. There it stood still a short while, then began to oirole around tho bush, still crying in its peculiar tones. This circling was kept up for a whilo, and then tho thrush seemed gradually to weaken and at longtli stood perfectly still immovable, with its wings partly open, anil with its head bent forward, lie drew nearer to tho bush, when ho heard an ominous hiss, and, looking down under tho plum, ho saw a largo black snake coiled up and about to spring upon tho bird. Ho frightened tlio snake away and picked up "tlio bird, which made no oil'ort to es cape, and seemed powerless. In a few minutos, howevor, tho bird revived, and shortly afterward fiew away. Peters burg (To.) Index-Appeal. Griffin, Ga., has tlio largest peach orchard in tho South, containing 50,000 trees and eovoring most of GOO acres. On tho snmo farm aro 4,000 grafted ap plo trees and 5,000 pear trees. Chicago Times. K m tf ,4 K I