r - ; ' l2SifiKS2.. . - --- r"-c -sx3c.is 'iPf- THE RED CLOUD CHIEF. Rates of Advertising:. s The Red Chief. One cjlosa, one ytar 93.0 lltlf 0-W Quarter" 2ACO Start adTcrtlscraoalJ. tail atlrrrlUcacnU for ton line tiaa oar yrr, rc 3bjrct to a tpocU! coatmct. Locil and SJi'.orlil Notice 10 c?at a lie Tor first lmcr'Joa, aJ S cent for rsca abi"jcnt lonlon. LrjrU adTcrtlttn at autate price. Uulortcinli $Spryer. The c ar oar lowtit cuh rate, an J so o&r PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT BED CLOUD, NEBRASKA. M.,H. W-A-IRlSriEIR, RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1S7. NUMBER 2.5. VOLUME III. Editor mud Proprietor. j terra will be Ktren. iiHHiWmj.!' W ' .iW MMMWMMnM, M Cdoud W vS o pyas ss- i- . pp to. - 1 v. K (JENF.KAL KEV1S CONDENSED. There was a shock of an earthquake in Placer, Nevada, and Yuba counties, California, on the night of Dec. 23d. No damage is reported. The trial of Embry for the attempted assassination of Col. D. R. Anthony at Leavenworth in May last, Iihs resulted in his acquittal. John Brugger & Son, stocking manu facturers, of Manchester, N. II., are ' reported to have failed, with liabilities aid to be $100,000; essls, f 20,000. The jury in the Bowen libel suit against the Brooklyn Eagle, found a verdict for the plaintiff and fixed the images at $1,000. Other cases of libel are to be tried next term. Indiana editors with their wives to the aumber' of about two hundred, arc to visit Philadelphia about the 16th of January for the purpose of viewing the Centennial buildings. A coal miner named Lee, December 25th, at Charleston, West Virginia, was set upon by two miners named Davidson and Eastept, who stabbed bim thirty- 'three times. The murderers are in jail. While a colored man named Simms, was driving across the Potomac near 'Washington City, on the night of Dec. 34th, his horse fell from the bridge, and .his wife, son and daughter, were drowned. On the morning ot December 24th, Xuther H. Briggs, freight conductor on the P. C. & St. Louis railroad was in stantly killed at Richmond, Ind., by fall ing under his train, which severed his head and fearfully mangled his body. At a social party near Gallatin, Sum ner county, Tennessee, on the night of December 24th, Jack Suddlete was shot dead by Joel Barres. The difficulty originated in a dispute about the pos session of a chain. At an election held in Dakota and Dixon counties, Nebraska, December 27th, on the question of issuing bonds to the Covington, Columbus & Black Hills Railroad Company, the bonds were voted by four-fifths majority. Work .on the road will begin at once. While some workmen were repairing fcitawncl on the Eastern Kentucky Rail iroaft, Dec. 27th, a large mass of rock Uell,-iwantly hilling J. W. Bower, road imaster:; Robert Allen and Jack Thoinp sOB, section men, and severely injuring George Barney, section foreman. Alaason Palmer, who, a fow years ago, owned aoeoe of the finest steamers on the great lakes, and whose great wealth made him one ot the powerful citizens of Buffalo, died the other day in an Insane yAsylum, penmScas and craty, at the age tf eighty-one years- He lost his wealth in reckless speculation. A storm in Southern Ohio, Dec. -doth did considerable damage. M .Catawba, Clark county, a new MetVodist .church was wrecked; damage, $3,KW. In that, vicinity and in the neighborhood of McConnelsville, the streams were at flood height, sweeping away fences, out buildings, trees, haystacks and bridges. On the night of December 24th, in Cherea, Tenn., Monroe Gibbs shot and killed Ike Walker for alleged seduction of his wife, and then shot her, Inflicting . a severe wound. Gibbs then attempted suiciae, but was prevented by a party of . negroes, one of whom threw a handful . of mud in his eyes and then captured ihim and delivered him up at the station Ihouse. All were colored. .Hon. W. A. Richardson died of para lysis at his home in Quincy, Illinois, .December ,27th. He tiad served five ttenns'in the TJaitcd States House of Rep ncsentativef, and was elected to fill a wscaacjuntthedtenate occasioned by the icteath of fltefben A. Douglass. He was art the time of his death 04 years old. JLt Providence, R. I., December 27th, coroner's jury in the case of a child killed in its mother's arn by! kick of the drunken father, returned a verdict that the person from whom the father purchased the liquor which made -him drunk, was guilty of the murder of the , boy. The father, Phillip Gallagher, was i held in $1,000 bail, to answer before the ; Supreme Court On the 26th of December the bodies . of two men were found on the roadside t. within five hundred feet of each other, near Waverly, N. J. Both were well . dressed. One had his throat cut, and in his pocket was found a knife with which it was supposed he had committed sui cide. He bore the appearance of being ,a German, about 45 years of age. The . other was a man of about 25 years. He Iliad a pistol wound in his temple, and Hinder fcis body was an empty revolver. -.Thomas H. Chandler, the town Mar shal of Lebanon, Ky., on the 27th of December, summoned a number of men to assist him in arresting George F. -aforthcraft, whose conduct was dis .orderly. When approached by Chandler :aad the citisens he resisted the arrest -.and called on 6ome roughs to assist him. A. general row ensued, a numoer ol hos being fired by both' parties. Chandler, the Marshal, killed North .craft, and eome of Northcraft'a friends .killed 'Chandler. General excitement oUowed tke killing, but ;no other rows occcurred. FOREIGN NEWS. A dispatch from Madrid says that 000 soldiers were to embark for Cuba on the 30th of December. It says that Spain has resolved to retain Cuba even if the insurgents should obtain greater forces and conld rely upon some powerful pro tector. The Centennial authorities recently j sent Pope Pius IX. an invitation to give his recognition to the enterprise by a contribution to the Exposition of some of the works of art from galleries of the Vatican, or from the workshops over which he may have control. The letters of the Pope are couched in the warm est terms of friendship for the United States, and in them he promises a com pliance with the request. The Mark Lane Evprcst ot London, Dec. 27th, in a weekly review of the grain market, says: ''The large imports -since the first of September has kept prices down, but we cannot expect the imports to continue while the rates are so low. The business in Europe is rea sonably dull and prices are barely main tained. At Paris, at several of the pro vincial markets, flour has again dropped a franc and wheat one shilling and a six pence. Belgium and Holland are about a shilling lower. Vienna is drooping and Odessa is dull. Holders are main taining high prices. The Weser Zeitung of Bremen, of De cember 8th, coLtains the following account of the capture and massacre ol a detachment of Egyptian troops by Abyssinians, briefly reported some time since by cable. We have bad news from Abyssinia in .the expedition of about 2,000 men sent by the Khedive under the command of General Arendrop, a Dane, to subjugate of the Abyssinians, was drawn into hu a rubusli and nearly every man slaughtered. Gen. Arendrop, the Pasha, and many other officers were literally hacked in pieces, their heads stuck on spears before the Abyssinians, and their bodies thrown to the wild beasts. Mackilop, Pasha, is said to be alive and a prisoner. Of Col. Roach, the American, nothing is known, and only officer, Schwcrzer, escaped. An expedition, comprising 12,000 men in fantry, cavalry and artillery is to be sent out from Cairo without delay, and will be joined by every American officer in the Fgyptian service, including Col. Stone. PERSONAL, Theodore Tilton will soon remove himself and family to Chicago, to take up permanent residence. The Emperor of Brazil will embark on board the nenlius on the 26th of March, for New York, to begin his tour ot North America and Europe. The military of Savannah are making preparations to celebrate the anniversary of General Robert E. Lee's birthday, January 19, by a grand parade. The Rothschilds, who acted as bankers to the British Government in the recent Suez Canal stock transaction, made the nice little profit of $1,500,000 for doing the business. The wife of Houston, the Chief En gineer of the steamship Pacific, who lost his life while trying to save the women passengers if the ill-fated vessel, has become insane from grief at the death of her husband. Dorrence Atwater, American Consul for the Society Islands, has married the Princess Moetia, a wealthy native lady, whose right to rule, though she has not asserted it, is equal to that asserted by Queen Pom are. She is educated, ac complished and beautiful. An original portrait of Washington, painted from life by eavage in 1793, is on exhtbition at the Centennial rooms in Bocton. Two others, taken previous to this by the same artist, are In existence. Charles Francis Adams has one and Harvard College the other. Professor Mosler, of Germany, is now successfully treating phthisic; or pulmo nary consumption, by making an incision through the wall of the chest and draw ing off the pus with a syringe, and after ward washing out the ulcers with weak carbolic acid. The Hon. George Bancroft told a reporter of the Philadelphia Item, re cently, that the coming Centennial Exhi bition would in every respect excel any international exhibition ever before giveL. He thinks it will drive away hard times and encourage immigration to an aston ishing extent. Mr. Bancroft thinks the next Presidential campaign will.be the most exciting one of our history. Henry Porter, who was the color bearer of the 19th Illinois regiment during the civil war, and one of the in conspicuous but heroic characters of the great conflict, died on the 19th ot last October, at Rugby, England. He was taken prisoner before Atlanta, by the tke forces ot General Hood, but con cealed his colors about his person, and, after a prolonged confinement at An dersonville, returned them to his regi ment. His sufferings during his impris onment shattered his constitution, and Bally lei to his death. Modern Explosives. Something About NUro-Cilyceriue, Gun Cotton and Giant Powder. The fearful explosion of dynamite and consequent loss of life at Bremer Haven, will remind many of a similar disaster which took place at Aspinwali some nine years since. Tin; dynamite on the pier at Bremerhaven, it is said, was iu the personal baggage of a passen ger. The nitro-glyccrinc which ex ploded on board the steamship European at Aspinwali, in 1806, was invoiced us "oil." Its powerful properties were quite unknown at that tune in this coun try. There were about seventy cases of the stuff in the hold of the ship, which had been transported from Hamburg to Hull, England, and thence to Liverpool by rail. It will never be known whether the explosive quality of the compound had been heightened by partial decom position in the tropical heat of that low latitude, or whether the careless hand ling by the laborers in the vessel's h Id brought about the disaster. The steam er was blown up, many people were killed, and much shipping and wharf property and buildings were wrecked. Great indignation was expressed against the shippers who had disguised their consignment in order to insure its transportation. In the shape in which it wa3 carried it completely deceived the vciy people who should have been made aware of the dangerous properties of the cargo which they were obliged to handle. This shipment was designed for San Francisco, and, by a curious coincidence, a similar disaster occurred in that city about the samo time. Tid ings of the two explosions reached New York almost simultaneously. An express company in Sun Francisco had reciivcd, in the course of business, a case containing several packages of Ditro-glycerine, tho outer wooden covering of which was saturated with the perilous stuff leaking from the inside cases. Nobody called lor it, and borne man was instructed to open it iu order to see what the contents might be. The first blow of his mallet caused an ex plosion which killed eight or ten peo ple, wrecked the warehouse, wounded many persons, and destroyed property to the value of two hundred thousand dollars. Both these disasters occurred when the manufacture of nitro glycerine was yet new, and while the art of packing it safely for transportation was com paratively unknown. Of the various serious accidents which have happened from a careless use of this explosive, that by which eight men were killed and several were wounded, at Bergen, N. J., in 1867, was most notable. In this instance a laborer attempted to dry a can of nitro glycerine by thrusting a red hot poker into it. We now know enough of nust powerful explosives to handle them, at least, with great care, aud to transport them from place to place without incurring any such awful penalties of ignorance as those which followed its ignorant disposition less than ten years ago. Indeed, the article of commerce known as dynamite, which caused the explosion at Bremer haven, was the result of Alfred Noble's experi ments to discover n form in which nitro glycerine might be safely handled. Noble, a Swedish chemist of Hamburg, after studying the composition and properties of such explosives as the "wood gunpowder" of Schultze, and the compressed gun cotton of Abel, in troduced nitreleum, or trinitine, to the world on a large scale. It was not until 1865 that it became well known in the arts, and the series of shocking disas ters which followed its introduction brought it at once into great disfavor; those who saw its immense value as r.n explosive dreaded its hidden forces. It was then proposed to diffuse the ex plosive fluid in sand, or chemical sub stances, by which means the explosive force would be divided, and any latent heat would be conducted off. Another plan was to mix the oil with wood naptba, which would form a non explo sive compound, the naptha being easily drawn off when the nitroleum is required for use. None of these expedients were found practicable, and the latest result of all experiments was dynamite, or giant powder. This is simply pulverized si lex, saturated with nitro glycerine. A cheap substitute for the sflex is a de posit of infusorial earth, found in some parts of Germany, and which answers every purpose of the artificially pre pared material. The saturated mass looks like a damp grayish sugar. If carelessly prepared, the nitro glycerins settles or collects in crops, and is, of course, dangerously explosive- Of each of these compounds it may be said, as of fire, that uit is a good ser vant but a bad master." Railroad tmild ing, and all enterprises requiring blast ing, tunneling or excavation, have been vastly cheapened by the introduction of this tremendous explosive. It was esti mated at one time that the Hoosac Tun nel woald require less than one-half the time and money to finish it by using nitroglycerine than any ordinary process would involve. In blasting, the bore holes may be smaller and further apart with nitro glycerine or dynamite than with'gunpowder. Although an cxplsion wlth these modern compounds is ex traordinarily sudden, the mass to be de tached is not thrown out with the vio lence of a gunpowder blast, but is shat tered and Insured without much pro jection. The increased volume of un exploded charge of nitro glycerine or dynamite is enormous us compared with gunpowder, being about thirty times larger than that of powdf. There have been iuudj sa-called "perfectly safe" ex plosive preparations, of which dynamite and dualine are the newest. It is evident that, like the nun explo sive burning fluido pe3V'd aoout the country, these are not to tre trusted im plicitly. Several mysterious and disas trous explosions have occurred from them, that at Bremenhaven, so far as we know, being one against which no watchfulness on the part ot the shipping agents could gua'd. Tiiere is no such thing us a safe explosive. The most safe, under certain conditions, not yet clearly understood, may be insidiously, by the operation of the laws of chemis try, transformed into uncontrollable ele ments. A Tennessee Kuuunce. Ho was young, he was fair, aud he parted his hair, like the average beau, in the middle ; he was proud, he was bold, but the truth must be told, he played like a fiend on the fiddle. Barring his voice, he was everything nice, and his heart was so loving and tender, that he always turned pale when he trod on the tail of the cat lying down by the fender. He clerked in a store, and the way that he tore off calico, jeans and brown sheet ing, would have tickled a calf and made the brute laugh in the face of a quarterly meeting He cut quite a dash with a darliug moustache, which he learned to adore and cherish; for one girl had said, while she dropped her proud head, that 'twould kill her to see the thing perish On Snudays he'd searched the straight road to the church, unheeding the voice of the scorner; aud demurely sat like a young tabby cat, with the saints in the umen corner. lie sang like a bir.l, and his sweet voice was heard, fairly tugging away at long meter; aud we speak but the truth, when we say that this youth could outsing a hungry mosquito. She was young, she was fair, and she scram bled her hair like the average belle of the city; she was proud, but not bold, yet the truth must be told, the way she chewed wax was a pity. Barring this vice, she was everything nice, and the world admired her bustle; and the Fay etteville boys, being calmed by the noise, walked live miles to hear it rustle. She cut quite a swell, did this wax chew ing belle, and men flocked in crowds to meet her; but she gave them tho shirk, lor she loved the young clerk who sang like a hungry mosquito. So she hummed and she hawed, and she sighed and she "chawed," till her heart and her jaws were broken; then she walked by his store while he stood at the door awaiting some lovely token. She raised up her eyes with a mock of surprise, and tried to enact the scorner; but to tell the truth, she grinned at the youth who loved the amen corner. They met alas! what came to pass was soft and sweet, and precious; they wooed, they cooed; he talked, she chewed O how they loved,good gracious ! They had to part, he rose to start; her grief cannot bee painted ; these are the facts, she swal lowed the wax then screamed,then chok'd, then fainted. Her pa appeared ; her beau, quite scared, rushed out to get some water, the watch-dog spied his tender hide, and bit him where he "oughtcr." The tale is sad, the sequel bad so thinks the youth thus bitten. He sings no more, as oft of yore he gavo the girl the mitten. She pined apace, her pretty face looked tender and dejected; her father kind, but somewhat blind, beheld her and reflected. His income tax he spent for wax Bhe smiled and called him clever. She went to work, .forget that clerk, and chawed in bliss forever! Political Conventions in 187ft. Jan. 5 New Hampshire Republican State Convention, Concord. Jan. 5 Texas Democratic State Con vention, Galveston. Jan. 12 Texas Republican State Con vention, Houston. Jan. 13 Republican National Com mittee, Washington, to select time and place for holding the National Conven tion. Feb. 22 Indiana Republican State Convention, Indianapolis. March 15 Indiana Democratic State Convention, Indianapolis. May 6 National Convention of Pro hibitionists, to nominate a Presidential ticket, etcjCJeveland. May 17 National Independent Con vention, to nominate Presidential tick et, Indianapolis. Captain ''Young, who commanded the Pandora in her late voyage in the Polar region, will be sent by the British Admiralty next year to communicate with the British expedition in the Alert and Discovery, which is aiming to reach the North Pole via Smith's Sound THE WORLD OF SCIENCE. The Proper Time for Cutting Trees'. An extensive inquiry has been made in Prussia into the effect ot the dura bility of woods of the season at which the trees are cut down. In general, the wood felled when the sap is not running b?s a decided pre-eminence as to its durability, strength and density. The heat given out in burning wood felled in December and January is also, ac cording to these experiment:!, greater than for woods cut in Fcbititiry and March. Cleaning Silver-ware, Etc.. with I'o tato Water. Silver and plated articles should be placed about ten minutes in the hot water in which potatoes have been boiled (with salt), and then be rubbed with a woolen rag, an J rinsed in pure water, when the articles will not only be free from tarnish, but perfectly bright Potato water that has become sour by standing several days answers still bet ter, and is also excellent for cleaning articles of steel and glass water bottles. Conduction of Heat by Building .Ma terial. The coefficient of conduction for heat of various building materiuls has lately been carefully investigated by Ling, who, in his studies, has eudeavored to exclude the influence of radiation, and has made measurements by means of the thermo-electre multiplier. He finds that the stones considered by him are much better concuctois of heat when wet than when dry, and that various classes of stones Mich as miilile, sand stone, granite, etc., have approximately the sime coefficients of conduction, while bricks of alt kinds are much wo'se conductors than the natural stones. The Elasticity of Purified Air. Some researches of Mendeleff and Kirkpitschoff sho x th:it the product of any volume of air by iti pressure which according to the law of Marriotte should be constant for a'l pressure?, is not so for the air, varying considerably when the pressures diminish to so small a quantity us half a millimeter. This product in fact, which for perfect gases is constant, varies tapidly in the ease of air. The deviations from the Jaw of Marriotte lor rarefied air arc contrary to those observed by R'gnauM for com pressed air. In fact, the product in creases when the pressure increases, and diminishes when the pressure diminishes. These discordancos are far larger than the possible errors of observation. Moisture In the Air anil Intensity of Frlctional Electricity. Certain theoretical considerations hav ing led Rosctti to the conclusion that Ohm's law should apply to frictional us well as to galvanic electricity, he has instituted experiments .showing that, under similar conditions ami in the same series of experiments, the intensity of the current is nearly proportional to the velocity of the rotation of the disk of a Hollz machine. TI113 relation is influ enced by the moisture of the air in such a way that the number of turn3 which the disk must make, in order to give rise to a stream ol" a certain intensity, 13 greater in a moist than In a dry atmos phere. The quantity of work which must be expended for the development of electricity is exactly proportional to the intensity of the current; therefore, the ratio between the work expended and resulting intensity o? the current is the same with increasing moisture. The Temperatnre or the Earth. The interest which attaches to careful observations of the temperature of the earth suggests that the apparatus which is used in Germany should be better known in this country, in order that, when practicable, it may l-e introduced here. The following is a (!e3:rintion ot it as used by observers in Hungary. In its general ontlines it does not differ from that recommended by Lamont. It consists principally of a rectangular tube buried permanently in the enrth, withm which five rectangular prisms of wood are placed one above the other, at differeat depths in the ground, and which by a simple arrangement, can be easily and quickly drawn up. Each of these tubes contains a thermometer, and there is a hole in the side of the msin tube, opposite to the bulb of the ther mometer, where the woodwork is cut away, and the opening closed by a plate of thin sheet copper, whose temperature may be presumed to be the same a3 that of the adjacent ground. The depths at which the thermometers' bulb3 remain, are four, eight, twelve, sixteen and twenty feet. Shenzi, as the result of ob servation made during eight years, finds that the time required for heat to pen etrate to a depth of one meter is, on the averags, twenty -one day. Ex-President Thiers of France has written a letter reserving the right of loosing between the Senate and Cham ber of Deputies if he should be elected to both Houses. He adds that aii bis wishes are for the establishment of a Conservative Republic. i Curlouo Krr.tU- of m iuurtUnt' Hirl- riareU. A lady resident in thia city was the delighted owner of a pel crow, whose oddities of disposition and love of mis chief tr.ustonned him into a household pet. He was the 'icial lion" of his day. and company were always entertained by un interview with "Jim Crow," as he was called. Though "Jim "has doubt. les passed over into the hippy hunting grounds of his ancestry, and may now possibly le divettirg himself m the same old way, thw recollections of this inveterate mischief maker and his remarkable freaks are d veined worthy of n rtJiwarsal. His discevcrj and the subsequent incidents of his eventful history are thus related by the ladv her self: " Sitting iu the trunk of u tree beside the cabin ot a wood chopper in the Alle ghanies, I first saw "Jim Crow." He was too young to fly, and, only partially covered with feathers, looked so quee-, so helpless, aud wilhtil so mischievous, that I bought him, tied him in my hand kerchief, and, hanging it on the pommel ot my saddle, rode twenty miles to my home. Tiie long ride in no way disagreed with him, but seemed to have only in creased his appetite, for from his perch on tie apple tree his continuous 'caw caw" could be heard all day from morn till eve. It wus the amusement of all the family to fill up "Jim Crow," which meant to take pieces of bread and clo ver heads, and indeed anything, almost, to ''Jim,' drop it in his wide open mouth till his craw, his thro:it, and his mouth were filled. There he would sit with his bill wide open, unable to shut it till the fool slowly digested, then recommence his "caw, caw, car." With the wings came the quiet twinkle in these black eyes foretold mischief, sly and deep. Mischief premeditated axd unpremeditated, and mischief purely because he couldn't help it, and this propensity wus exercised chiefly against the cook, 1 'eciui.se she most felt his pres ence and resented it. He delighted in going into the cook's room, whose careless habits made that place a purudise to him. He would gently put his bill under the lid of her sewing box and turn off the cover on the floor and then the fun began. The needles were all carefully .stuck over the bed one by one. The cotton was hid in the woodhouse, uud the scissors nicely tucked under the. pillows iu the room quite removed from the scene of his labors. The wax and thimble were dropped into the equnrium. And, after all this delicious fun, he one day took a little pot of hard pomade in his bill and hopped to the edge of the veranda roof, ate the pomade with evident relish, und then dropped the giuds pot on the stove pipe below with n satished air at its demolition. He then flew down and carefully picked up each piece and put it in the grass. Thij room as his favorite resort. To it we always went to find a missing comb, a tooth or 11 hair brush, and were sure to find it behind the gla.3 or under the carpet or bed. During the short illness of one of the family, rugularly at 9 a. m., 'Jim Crow' ho,) cd along the veranda roof, gave a quiet tap on the closed window, and, on being admitted. gravely brought with him to the bedside and laid on the table a chicken bone or leg, or something equally tempting. Seeing that he was uuly observed, he would rutlli; up his feather, make him self appear like a large round ball of black feathers, "caw," and then open hi9 month wide for a part of the invalid's breakfast. Alter stirring up things for half an hour or more, opening the clock, picking at the hands, stopping the pen- du'um. dropping the soap in the wafer pitchr-r, and .taking all the pins out of the pincushions, he would take his leave. The fish in the course of time disap peared from the aquarium, and although all the haps and mishaps of the house were attributed to demure little "Jim Crow," no one su3pected tint he was the cause of the fhh mystery, when one morning he was discovered taking a bath in it and a S-di breakfast afterward. The mystery wa3 solved, and when the aquarium wa emptied there came to light two thimble, a pair of scissors, a penknife, and a spoon. To carry away smill chickens and drop them into holes and cover them with dirt, was his intense delight, and when he saw a distracted hen rushing madly about the birnyard, some one looked up "Jim Crow" and went to the rescue. One day, after a day' Ashing, we were cleaning the fish ou the race back, and busy watching the operation was "Jim Crow" and some decks. One little fish wss considered too small and thrown into the water. A duck quickly seized it by the head, and "Jim" took the tat', and then they pulled and pulled for a few lecondi. The scene wi3 exceedingly amusing, for "Jim" planted his little black feet firmly on the edge of the bank, and was slowly drawn into the water, holding on to the fish. As soon as be found that he wai DhPRiloifi of a Pet Crow. i gettiug in too deep, he let go hi hold i and tlew to a tree to take hi uu.il re- venge in scolding, and with hi bead on one side he ?colded till nil the tub ure cleaned. Jim' scolding consisted of a succession of guttural 30i:nd said over and over with a very solemn face and mournful mein, aud lus moved many people to hearty Intightcr because it was so intensely dioll. He loved to tee the peacock, who ttme every dy aftr dinner to the vcmudi to le fed with pieces of bread. He would ent quickly all that he 'xttilhly e uld, to t.-tke it away fr 111 the peacock He would e.it till his craw, thro.it aud bill wore full, and then he would hop about unable to shut his mouth and Mill trying t eat. Jiut as the puces were ton smill aud hi bilTtoo wide apart, he conld not tob thr poor peacock any more, und he would ily hwuv, di-nose ot it, und soon return to repeat the operation, and, strange to say, he was the tmor of the barn-yard. The peuc icks were atr.tid ot him, n- the geese ran uwny at hi approach. While he ws quite young ho was tyra uized over, and till the fowls, large and small, had a pick at Jim. Hut one day a happy thought seized Jim. He tok a long straw in his bill, and chd the geese, who lie 1 before him, and Jim reigned supremo from that day, and often repeated the scare, wo though:, for his own amusement. Carefully ar ranged among the loops and bows ot our best bonnet we f.juiid apple core, accordiug, no doubt, to Jin.' th.ttc, a great improvement. In the pocket.- t our coats there werw atonta and sticks, aud never a pen or pencil could lie loose on the table. Jim's strong point nm butter, und on churning itaysutm stayed at home und behaved himself. Hocuuld eat a half a pound; but one day he ran his bill through a pound, and tried to fly away with it. He was caught rolling over anil over the floor with it, and from that time he was banished. As the summer faded into autumn Jim staid away more und more trom home, and occasionally would leturn with friends, evidently showing them around. One Sunday afternoon the attention of the family was drawn t ig-ious caw ing on the veruiidii roof. There wan Jim with three friend., nil ca.ving in elegant crow language. They solemnly walked in at the couk'it window and re mained in the room aoinc time, keeping up their convmalion. When they lelt, all movable things were found over turned, und the room left iu the state Jim always left it. The pleasures ot that place hud no doubt been described by Jim to his friend.', aud he had brought them along for a frolic. His Is!tH from home became more and more extended, but whenever he came he ncolded ui much as ever anl seemingly tried to ttlk. He would fit before the house and deliver long harangue on subject.! and iu lai guage too abfltruc for us to comprehend. One rainy Srptembcr day he bat for hours on the apple tiec delivtring, it must have been a farewell addrc.i-, for wiien night came he fluw away and never came horn again. Jim was a great utiiiauce on waJi days; between dropping tick and stones unobjcrved into th tubr, find flying away with the soap, and pulling out the clothes p:n from the clothe on the line, U-. wan kept very buy. He regularly dropped small stone every evening on a pet toad, who lived under the kitc.tcn aud who came out to le fed by the cook and be tormented by Jim He would come quietly, meekly, hop ping into the kitchen, looking o inno cent and hungry, and us he pat-ed by the cat asleep, he wotiM give hor one frarful hard peck and fly out at the dour or wirdow. ThU was repealed so often that the cat feared him and aiumed the defensive at his nrpro&rh. He stole a quantity of butter one day, and hid it near the chimney ol an out-kitchen. We were a much surprised to feegreiMi trickling down the wall n.t was Jim when he went for his treainreand found it gone The outojrt or c.W4 tint fol lowed revealed the culprit. Jim loved to steal, and for thi pure fun of belDg chued he would come into the kitchen, try to pick up something and fly away, and if he failed In his object he would hastily alight and pick up a lent orttoao V) make believe he had been successful. Rending 'i.) TimA. A Wild Itoy. A correspondent of the Greenup (Ky.) Independent, from Floyd county, says: "A boy, eight yeirs old, who, eight months ago, waj driven away from the sheltering roof of his parents by their cruelty, was lately discovered by a chest nut hunter. The boy had been consid ered drowned during the high floods, and was nearly forgotten. He has now been restored to bi family, who, we trust, will treat bim more kindly. Doriag these eight months, while living in the woods without seeing a human being, he nourished himself with birch, sap, sang, wild corn, and grapes, and was in a fair way to turn completely wild when found." The statue of Napoleon was replaced on the newly finished Vendoste Colussn, Dec 27th. A large crowd witnef sed the proceedings. 1 I V - p .r- , -'