m ' 1' i! it fe I'! i f IV l THE JOURNAL.- WEDNESDAY, AUG. 1, 18S3. ! laterei at tic ?::tc:s, Cotatas, ITct., a: iccmI cUjs ntter. FOREIGN GOSSIP. In the recently-taken English cen sus returns, several men caused their wives to be written down as the heads of the families, and one described him self as an idiot for having married as he did. The Concordia, a well-known liter ary society of Vienna, lately passed a resolution advocating the discontinuance of Monday newspapers on the ground that the work for them must be done on Sunday. The coal production of Germany, according to the "Wurtemberg Gewerbe blatt, has so enormously increased with in the last two decades that there is rea son to fear an exhaustion of the beds at no very distant date. In old time Lord Mayors of London were required never to go more than fere miles beyond the city gates during their term ofoflice. Of late years, how ever, they have been allowed to leave England in state, attended by their offi cers, to accept the hospitalities of foreign municipalities. Mistake as to identity had very un pleasant results for Mme. Gainaud in Paris lately. One Martin, separated from his wife, mistook Mme. Gainaud lor her, and when she fled for refuge from him into a shop shot at and badly wounded her for revolvers seem now as common in Paris as in Leadville and then tried to kill himself. When the real wife appeared her resemblance to Mme. Gainaud was astounding. There comes from Hautosco a story which reads like a page from Boccac cio. It appears that some persons near there resolved to abduct the pretty daughter of an Italian colonist. Her father learned of the plot, and sending his daughter to a neighbor's house, he attired himself in her clothes and lay where she was accustomed to sleep. The robbers came and carried off the supposed damsel, with great glee, but were much surprised when the father gave them some hard hits and other tokens of regard. A committee appointed by the Brus sels municipality to consider what meas ures should be taken to diminish the risk from fires has drawn up a table showing the proportionate number of victims to fire in fourteen great cities of Europe during the ten years from the 1st of January, 18G9, to the 1st of Janu ary, 1879. By far the largest number of victims were in London, where the proportion was 8.:? per 100,000 inhabi tants. Next comes Cologne, with 7.1 per 100,000; then Hanover, with G.7. The greatest immunity was enjoyed by the people of Munich, where the pro portion per 100,000 inhabitants only reached 0.1, Infractions of the Postal Laws. Few persons are aware of the multi tudinous duties attaching to the office of post-ofiice agent in reality the post office detective. Were these duties con fined to a single office, or even a single city, they would not be so arduous ; but when, as in the case of the agents in this city, they cover all trespasses upon the law through the southern and eastern parts of New York State and the States of Connecticut and New Jersey, proper attention becomes a heavy task. It is work for day and night, and is not un frequently followed with a want of suc cess. Possible offenses against the post office laws are literally without number. The more frequent crime coming to pubtic notice is that of the embezzlement of letters ; but among other matters sent to the agent for investigation arc cases of missing or stolen registered letters, forgery of money orders, post-office burglaries, the use of canceled stamps, loss of mail pouches or keys, mailing writing in second or third-class man matter, the detention or abandonment of mails, investigation of the .sureties on postmasters1 and contractors1 bonds, the removal of post-office sites, and the es tablishment of new post-offices. Dur ing the past year forty-six arrests have been made in the New York district, the offenses being as follows : Embezzling letters, twenty detaining letters, two"; forgery of money orders, two; using canceled stamps, two; stealing and rifling letters addressed to employers, two; tampering with letters put in boxes, two; mailing writing in third class mail raatter, three ; mailing writ ing in second-class mail matter, one; removing stamps from letters and sell ing them, one; robbing of money order and forging of signature,one ; robbery of registered letter, one; robbery of let ters from post-office boxes, one; as saulting a mail-carrier, one ; desertion of mail, one. There were also six ar rests for post-office burglaries, two in Pennsylvania, where convictions were gamed, and four in Connecticut, in which the identification of the culprits was incomplete. Mr. Newcomc, who is the senior agent in this district, was well known in the PostK)ffice Department before his ap pointment to this office. He was con nected with the United States Marshal's office for several years, and while on this duty was instrumental in breaking up the gang that had been robbing the open mail wagons of Dodd's Transfer Company. Pouch after pouch was re ported as lost and several arrests were made. Matt Callahan, the leader of the gang, escaped to California, but soon returning to New York, was ar rested by Newcome at the St. Charles Hotel, and afterward served out a four year's sentence. The office museum contains, among other articles, a heavy cane taken from Callahan with which lie attempted to resist arrest. Another case in which Newcome was particu larly successful was the following up of the arrest of the members of a gang of robbers in the Shawangunk Mountains, who within a short time entered and rifled every post-ofiice in the mountains within a circuit of many miles. New come was intrusted with the work at the suggestion of Postmaster James, and several men are still doing service for their connection with those robberies. When Agent Newcome first took his present position the complaints in the New York Post-office and branches were very numerous. Since then many ar rests have been made, and a wholesome dread has reached over possible offend ers; in fact, he has been told by one of the Superintendents that the complaints have not at any period during the last ten years been so few as at present. 'But the working up of these cases," Mr. Newcome says, "is the easiest part of our work. The men are directly under our observation, and, sooner or later, if they persist in dishonest practices, they must come to grief The most difficult cases intrusted to us are those origi nating with out-of-town post-offices with regard to ordinarv mail matter. This was particularly the case in the Jersey City Post-office, where at one time the complaints of missing letters averaged a hundred a week. The thefts were skillfully made, and for a time the men escaped detection, but eventually a carrier and two clerks were arrested and convicted, and two other clerks were dismissed for complicity with the accused. The Jersey City Post-office bow ranks No. 1. An amusing case was that resulting in the arrest of the assist ant postmaster at Sing Sing, the par ticulars of which were nerer published. Upon an investigation there it was as certained without a doubt that the thefts were made by either the assistant or one of the clerks, though they could not fcsiapltiralj. traced to either oe. Both were young men and members of the volunteer fire department of the town. we determined to try to reach them through this latter connection. Officer Blouk, attached to the post-office here, who was assisting.mc, gained an intro troduction to the assistant postmaster and represented himself as a member of the fire department in New York. I came on the ground afterward as another fireman and was introduced to Blonk and the suspected man. A con vivial evening followed, in the course of which the Sing Sing man passed over the saloon bar some of the marked money that we had sent through the Sing Sing Post-offico and lost. His ar rest and conviction quickly followed.11 The tracing of registered letters, the loss of which are very frequent, is, the agent says, comparatively easy, as the receipts from one employe to another, and to destination, surely fix the respon sibility for loss. A recent instance is that of a registered letter sent from Canada to Buffalo, and from there to Hampden, Conn. It never reached there. The railway mail clerks held re ceipts up to the deliver of the pouch at Hampden, but the letter did not reach the post-office. Suspicion immediately attached to the messenger between the depot and office, and ifdid not lake long to trace the theft to him. In connection with this it may be well to speak of the theft of moneyorders and their collec tion by the forging of the requisite sig natures. These cases are comparatively few, and would be unknown if the pub lic would only take proper precautions. Letters containing these orders, and giving every particular as to names, etc., will somestimes fall into wrong hands. If disposed to be dishonest, the person hav ing the letter has no trouble in answer ing the questions at the monev-order desk and obtaining the money. If these orders were always mailed unaccom panied by any letter there would be al most positive assurance against loss. The complaints of loss of letters ad dressed to mercantile firms are usually traced to the boys who collect the let ters from the boxes, but the responsi bility of the post-ofiice ceases with the delivery of the letters in these boxes. For the sake of placing the responsibil ity, these complaints are nevertheless investigated, and the arrest of boys are of almost daily occurrence. In the ma jority of cases, however, the employer declines to prosecute, and as they do not belong to the United States courts the post-office authorities are necessarily obliged to drop them. A great source of trouble is the burglary of country post offices. These are being continually robbed by sneak-thieves and tramps all over this district. It is very seldom that a professional stoops to this work, though an exception was the robbery of the post-office at Wallingford, Conn. There Mr. Newcome secured a set of burglars1 tools of the finest manufact ure. Another offense against the Post-offico laws is the detention of mails, causing at times troublesome investigation, sometimes followed by arrests. The complaints usually come from country post-offices, where the postmaster, to satisfy a curiosity, or gain time in busi ness connections', has detained a letter; but they more frequently originate among " postmistresses and clerks. There is usually some plausible excuse, and the matter is dropped with a repri mand. For writing in second or third class mail matter there is a fine of $10. This is of frequent occurrence, and many a fine is collected on this account. The "use of washed canceled stamps has become a great business all over the country, and there seems to be no meant at present of putting an effectual stor to it. Mr. Newcome recently secured one conviction for this offense, that of t grave-yard insurance broker at Port Jervi?, and has another case before tho present United States Grand Jury. The complaints coming in daily from all sources, the majority being referred from the Department at Washington, make a formidable pile, but the solution of one case very frequently fully dis poses of a great many others. N. Y. Times. The Finding of Arahi Pasha's Papers. Mr. A. M. Broadley, Arabi's senior counsel, writes: "The story of the finding of Anibi Pacha's papers is as follows: On the evening of the 22d of October Arabi said to me : 'My life and honor are in your hands and in the hands of England; if you can get me an interview with my servant Muhamed Ibn Ahmed, I will give you all my pa- Iiers which escaped Telel-Kebirand tho ooting of my house at Cairo, and they are by far the most important instru ments for my defense.'' Sir Edward Malet and Sir Charles Wilson gener ously came to the rescue, and on the aft ernoon of the following day the negro half-caste, Muhamed lbn Ahmed, re ceived his master's orders, in the pres ence of Sir Charles Wilson, to treat as brothers the English lawyers and sur render to them the documents he had so faithfully guarded. Arabi described minutely the different hiding-places of the papers in holes of the wall, behind the backs of pictures, and in his wife's dress; and the servant promised obe dience. Muhamed Ibn Ahmed has probably no other property in the world than a blue shirt and a ragged cloth coat to cover it, but neither terrors nor bribes could shake his allegiance to his fallen but beloved master. 'Give me to-night,' he said, 'to open the recep tacles the Pasha alludes to, and to-morrow morning the papers are in your hands.' I slept little that night, as I felt how much depended on the result; and next morning I was very early with Arabi. From the window of the cell I saw his son and servant arrive. I went down to meet them. The news they brought was not encouraging. Muhamed Tewfik's powerful agents naU smelt a rat, and Palace emissaries during the night had told the wife of Arabi that on the morrow her husband would be sur rendered to tho tender mercies of Ab dul Hamid at Stambul. She had fled to a friend's house, and taken the pa pers with her. 'Your father's honor, and perhaps his life,' I told the son, depend on your finding your mother. I conjure you to lose no time. Three hours hence it may be too late.' Mu hamed Ibn Ahmed Arabi is a slender, dark-complexioned youth of twenty-one, with one eye hopelessly destroyed. He has always been his father's darling. He grasped my hand and said : 'I am sure I can find her; but grant me two hours delay, and I will join you at Shepherd's Hotel with "the papers.' Muhamed Ibn Ahmed Arabi and his servant dis appeared, and I took up a post of ob servation in the well known and cool veranda of the great Cairo hostelry. Hardly an hour had elapsed when a brougham was hastily driven to the door, and my friend Muhamed hastily descended, and, carrying a large parcel in his hand, rushed up the steps and in to my room. Fives minutes later and I was deep in the exhibits of my client Ahmed Arabi. From a woolen cloth. the distinctive feature of which was a yellow ace of spades, the boy drew forth, one after another, his father's hidden papers. With Mr. Napier's as sistance, 1 took them one after the other and placed them in a case firmans, letters from men in high places at the Imperial Ottoman Court, decrees of the Ulema of Egypt, covered with hundreds of seals and signatures, records of Cabi net Councils, and papers of every con ceivable description. I must confess I never shook hands with any one more cordially than I did with the faithful Mu hamed Ibn Ahmed. Two hours after ward the papers were in her Majesty's Consulate, initialed and numbered by Sir Charles Wilson and myself. Time will show the value of my frouvaiJ." London Graphic Texas Land Corners. Wo rode out last week with a surveyor and his assistant, who said they were going out on the prairie, some twenty miles, to survey a thousand acres that a stockman wanted to enclose for a past ure. The land had been surveyed bo fore.but the corners had been misplaced, or carried, off by some one, and to find out the boundaries a new survey had to be made. We often wondered how a man could identify his land on a flat frairie where there were no apparent andinarks to guide him. In wooded lands the corners are known by marks cut in trees with an ax, but where there are no permanent natural objects, the surveyor marks a corner by driving a small wooden stake into the ground. This is a vory unsatisfactory arrange ment, because the first teamster who comes along will probably carry off the southeast corner of the survey, and cook his breakfast with it, or appropriate the northwest corner, and use the ancient landmark to whittle on as he rides along. In the absence of wood, a few stones or bones are piled up, and form a cor ner, and we have seen a cow's horn stuck in a buffalo chip make one of the marks of the corner of an eleven league grant. When corners are lost or mislaid, the surveyor, to find the place again, has to go back to some plainly defined starting point, called an "established corner," on some other grant, and survey from that. He often has to run a line ten miles in length, from a known to find an unknown point. There is one kind of corner that a teamster has never been known to carry off. It is made with a spade. Teamsters may have attempted, but have never succeeded in carrying off a hole in the ground. There are certain old Texans in every locality who know, or pretend to know, the location of most all the old Span ish grants in the State. These old frauds are continually appearing in the courts as witnesses in cases where bound aries are disputed. They can point out and identify corners, follow mean ders aud give the biography and pedi gree of the original grantee of every piece of land within a radius of a hun dred mile3 from where they bear wit ness. They have wonderful memories. We knew one of them who testified to having carried the chain in a survey made in 1S0C. As he only claimed to be 80 years of age at the time he gave bis testimony, the fact that he was able to carry a chain in 1806 goes to show what a precocious and robust race the early Texans were figures proving that this man was butfour years of age when he was engaged in the surveying feat al luded to. The extraordinary memory exhibited in the matter of the identification of corners by the old Texans is explained by a quaint custom common in the early days of the Republic. When a settler received a giant of land from the Span ish Government, he would get it sur veyed and have the corners established. Then, that the identity of the bounda ries might be preserved in the family, would take his children out periodically, and whip them on the corners of the land. It was no uncommon thing for a traveler, as he journeyed across the prairie, to see a rugged old pioneer standing on the northeast corner of his league and labor of land, thrashing his eldest with a raw-hide strap, while, un der the ministrations of his mother, a younger son was howling on the south west corner. In such manner was nurtured the boy, who has since developed into the old veteran of to-day, so eloquent and unre liable, As sconea long past ot joy and patn, Come wandering o'er his used Iiruin " Texas Sif tings. Stories of Floating Islands. "Speaking about paying taxes," said a man who had perhaps been perform ing that pleasant duty, "reminds me of an old fellow, a sort of hermit, who lived where I did in a small town in New Hampshire, and if he wasn't the out-and-outest chap for avoiding the de mands of the State,then I'm mistaken." "Why didn't they sell him out?" "Because they couldn't get hold of the property. No, it wasn't air cas tles, and he didn't live in a balloon, but on solid property, and every time the tax collector came around in New Hampshire Ezra and his property were in Massachusetts." "Oh, I see. He had the State line on wheels, and shoved it about to suit." "Not exactly, but he had his property fixed so that he could shift it anywhere he wanted. It is nothing more nor less than a floating island made up of bog and stuff, ana for a good many years it blew about the pond, until finally the old chap put up a hut on it, kept a cow, chickens and ducks, and had a regular floating farm. But one day he heard the assessor was coming, so he cast off the moorings that he had rigged to the island, and before the next day the wind had carried him over the State line that ran through the pond into Massachu setts, and when the collector went out in a skiff the old bog-skipper, as they called him, actually threatened to have him arrested for trying to collect the taxes of a neighbor State. He anchored the island on the Massachusetts side until the selectmen got after him there, and for several years he dodged back and forth, and didn't pay a cent on his four acres. But finally they put up a job on him, and two assessors, one from each State, went out in skiffs, the island being anchored in the middle of the lake. The old man said he was ready to pay, only he wanted it just right, as he lived in both States the house was in one State and the barn in the other. The collectors got so mixed up trying to straighten it that I believe they had to take it into court. Anyway, I don't think the old man's taxes are square yet." "A similar case might happen at another place in New England," said one of the group of listeners. "On Lake Menomenauk there is an island that for a long time was called the mys terious island. It belonged to the town of Winchendon, Mass., contained about six acres, and was covered with trees thirty feet or more high. Some of the people declared they had seen the island move years ago, but they were generally laughed at, until one morning they found it gone, and now it is, or was a short time ago, over the State line in New Hampshire, nearly three miles from where it first stood." It was origi nally bog held together by roots, and the water had gradually undermined it, until a good sharp breeze took the trees as sails and away it went. "Many lakes have similar islands, even in streams affected by tide. They are found anchored by roots, rising and falling with the water, and swinging by their vegetable cables. Some of the European lakes have such islands, that are used for pasturage, and they often carry the island population to great dis tances. "During the great flood in the Missis sippi in 1874, vast floating islands were formed in the river and carried far out into the Gulf Stream. One that a vessel ran into 300 miles from the delta was over an acre in extent, and populated with a great variety of snakes, frogs and turtles, besides a number of land ani mals that had sought protection there from the rising" waters, only to be swept out to sea. The geo graphical distribution of life, it will be seen, depends much upon these floating islands a fact proved by comparing the inhabitants of islands "milei apart. Several years ago a large snake was picked up off the Bermuda Islands rMmnr W Z. UUSMOg UUU1U MIX, WHS- ontxioubt, nan oave xnjm te Asm mas xx ooraafaMK aosern river in the same way, carrying seeds and even animals far around the circuit of the Atlantic. The same is true of tho Ganges. Great rafts, populated with animals from the interior, havo been found by vessels over 200 miles from the mout h of the river. "Tho great mass of seaweed, oc cupying an area of many thousand square miles in the Atlantic, better known as the Sargasso Sea, ia a vast island inhabited by a fauna entirely dif ferent from that of the surrounding waters, and all the animals are in some way peculiarly adapted or modified to their surroundings. Similar tracts oc cur in various parts of the world, often so thick that the passage of vessels through them is seriously impeded." "Well, I declare," said the first speaker, "then old Ezra's floating farm wasn't such a very singular thing after all ; but I reckon he made an original use of it." N. Y. Sun. How the Shah Treated a Painter. Among the many who were engaged by the Shah to go to Persia was M. Er nesto Pelletier, a young French painter of great promise. On his arrival in Teheran he went straight to the palace, and not knowing a word of the lan guage, and consequently being unable to explain himself, he was seized by tho guard and thrown into prison, where ho remained for nine months, suffering the most awful indignities and priva tions. One day the Prince Moskin Han, the Grand Vizier of Persia, was consigned to the same prison, and took an interest in the Frenchman promising him to intercede in his behalf should he be liberated, which happy event, he had reason to believe, would take place in a few days, as it really did. A few weeics later the artist was conducted to the palace, when to his astonishment the Grand Vizier addressed the Shah thus : "Most Glorious Father of the Sun, this is an infidel painter, who arrived this morning only, with the rising of the sun, from foreign parts, attracted to this great and mighty city by the fame of your Majesty's name, and now humbly asks to be allowed to paint this most wonderful of palaces, for which he asks no compensation, the honor of having served the illustrious Emperor of Persia being of greater value to him than the gold which three camels can not carry." To which the Shah replied: "Let him paint," and dismissed him. A very comfortable apartment was assigned to him, and he set to work. In three months he completed the deco rations of a small trick-track room, which so pleased the Shah that he sent for him, decorated him, and gave him a purse of gold, and from that day his Majesty used to sit for hours watching him paint. On Wednesdays the Shah used to sit at the window of his medglis overlook ing the palace-yard, and from there try the prisoners below. On Wednesday he invited the young foreigner to sit by bis side and see how he judged his subjects, and the horrors to which he was wit ness can not adequately be related. A trembling baker was in the yard between two soldiers, charged with selling light weight loaves of bread. A cadi made the charge. The poor wretch made some defense. "Kess kopeogli" (cut the son of a dog), said the Shah, hold ing up his right hand; and in a second the executioner seized the man, and there and then cut off his right hand. The feelings of the artist can easily be imagined, but, knowing what awaited him if he interfered, he kept his seat in silence. The next prisoner was a watch man in a store of the bazar, into which robbers had entered without his hearing them. "Kess kopeogli," quietly said the 'Shah again, this tune holding both his ears; and in an instant the poor watchman's eare were cut off. In three hours, during which Monsieur Pelle tier assisted at this awful day of judg ment, two men were beheaded, one woman and six men lost a hand each, a muleteer who had already lost one hand had the other cut off, and in ten cases were the prisoners deprived of their ears, eyes and noses. In many cases, however, the prisoners bought themselves off immediately after the sen tence was pronounced, but before it could be executed, by shouting out the sum they are willing to pay his Majesty; and, after a deal of bargaining between the sovereign and the subject, the latter went away accompanied by an official to whom he was to pay the money, and by a soldier who saw that he did not es cape before paying. Mons. Pelletier subsequently discovered that whenever the Shah required money he used to or der the arrest of wealthy citizens, and the cadis had instructions to accuse them of crimes they had never commit ted. The Shah would then sit at the little window of the medglis to try them, which really meant to extort large sums of money from them, under the threat of cutting off their ears or hands, or, what was still more serious, their heads. The artist used to spend his leisure time in painting in his apartment on his own account. He had finished a life size picture of the head of St. John the Baptist being presented to Herodias' daughter on a charger, and with which the painter has since taken a prize. His friend, the Grand Vizier, who took lessons in painting from him, thinking to do him good, told the Shah that the young Frenchman had painted a magnifi cent picture refecring to the religion of the infidels, and that he prayed to be al lowed to exhibit it to his Majesty, to which the latter consented. On the fol lowing day the painter took the picture to one of the Shah's private apartments, but the moment he saw it he told the artist it was faulty. The latter asked where the fault was, but for all reply the Shah demanded how many minutes were supposed to intervene between the head of St. John being cut off and its being.presented to Herodias' daughter, to which the painter replied that ho al lowed two minutes to pass ; when his Majesty, walking up to the painting and closely examining it, said" that in that case the lips ought to be ashy-white and wide-open, instead of being pink and contracted; and, as the artist was unwilling to be convinced, the Shah clapped his hands onoe, and, upon a slave appearing to answer the call, his master drew his sword, and, to the dis may of Monsieur Pelletier, with one tremendous sweep severed his head from his body. He then pulled ont his watch and called the trembling painter's at tention to the time. Exactly two min utes after he stooped down and picked up the bleeding head, and, walking to the picture, he held the real head by the side of the painted one, and said to the Frenchman: "Monsieur, you can see for yourself that the lips ought to be ashy-white and wide apart, and you will learn to believe the Shah in fu ture;" when he tossed away the head and calmly walked out, leaving the Eainter more dead than alive, to take imself and his unfortunate picture back to his own apartment. This shock was so severe to Monsieur Pelletier's nerves that he became quite hysterical, and the Shah, seeing that he remained so for months and was unable to do any work, conferred decorations and titles upon him, which cost noth ing, and, giving him just enough money to uute mm nome, auowea mm to leave Persia, and he now occupies a studio in the Palais Rajal in Paris. Cor. Phila delphia Press. Spurgeon is sometimes raore bhml than polite. For instance, inhisrsccM answer to a neighbor who asked hirajto support a certain candidate foraleojjqp to the School Board on the noxs&wi his belonging to the Blue BUti5n.tt he replied : "Do you thtakX Uto support a The Parents' Influence. The schools are in session in country and town and the natural supposition would be that every parent is earnestly interested in the succoss of at least the one particular school of which his chil dren form a part. But how many par ifcts actually possess sufficient interest In their own school to impel them to visit it, we will say once every sdiool term, to see for themselves how their children are advancing in knowledge, what moral iutluence is surrounding them, or to make sure that they have the simplest requisite health conditions warm feet, cool heads and a sufficiency of wholesome air? How many of those parents who fail to visit the schoolroom excusing themselves by saying, "O, I cua tell well enough how school is pros pering without going there!" how many of these take the trouble even to uphold the teacher's influence at their own firesides instead of aiding in its overthrow? "You cannot mean me," says one; "I never meddle with school matters one way or another." "Hyou never "meddle," as you phrase it, the inference is that there is a corresponding lack of interest. If your olive plants are of the thrifty, growing, wide-awako kind, andare accustomed to have mamma interest herself in their affairs, then school affairs will not form an exception to the rule. Nor should they! That parent who asserts complacently, 4'I never listen to tales about school." aud therefore thinks she has done all that is required of her, comes very far short of possessing the right kind of interest in school affairs. If children are interested in school work, they will prattle of this work at home as natur ally as sparrows chirp or robins sing. Nor should it be repressed. Tho moth er's expressed delight at work well done, her sorrow and regret at failure, will often help the good work along far mora than the parent is aware. Nor is this less the case in matters of discipline. A Sentle, I am so sorry you should have e3erved it," if your child has been pun ished, is far better for all concerned than a tirade against the teacher, too often prompted by that spirit of egotism that can never see one's own blackbirds to bo anything but white. Or if it is another that has been punished, the mother's "I hope, my dear, it may never be yon," or, "I can but think it a disgrace to ba punished at school it seems to me good boys and girls are not likely to be, oi words of similar import, cannot fail to have their influence upon the child's de portment in school. On the other hand, that parent who responds to her child's enthusiastic prat tle by a pettish, "I wish you would drop the school room when you leave it," or who speaks in a critical or sarcastic manner of the teacher or workings of the school who gives vent before her children to expressions of disapproval or dislike that parent, whether aware of it or not, is demolishing as fast as possi ble the teacher's influence and authority, so far as her own special brood is con cerned. Often far more trifling expres sions on the part of the parent are suffi cient to set pupil against teacher all through a term of school. A knowing glance from the father or mother to some other member of the family, a curl of the lip as the child's tale is told; these are quite sufficient to give these "little pitchers" their "cue" and aet them on the "rebel" side. Go into any school-room and point out those pupils that seek continually to evade the teacher's rules look upon her as a tyrant rather than a helper and friend and instead of according her that respectful courtesy which is ner due, treat her with contempt; and I will point out to you, without great danger of mis take, those firesides where the teacher's authority, if not traduced, at least is not upheld. It is really wonderful how blind parents sometimes are on this point blind not only to a sense of justice, but to their own and their children's best interests as well. How often the really capable, scrupulous teacher thinks, in her inmost soul: "H I had the children only to manage, how easy it would be!" If complaints come of cruelty and in justice and neglect (as they often will, along with the rest of the school talk), too much weight must not be given them, remembering that a child's reason ing faculties are imperfectly developed, and that impulse, even in older people, is not greatly to be relied upon. But if the parent feels that there is reasonable ground for complaint, censure must not, even then, be spoken before the child. It can do no good; must inevitably do harm. If complaint must be made, let it be privately to the teacher herself, and to none other. But in making up the judgments, let the parent bear in mind how many days there are when nothing goes quite as it ought with her and her little ones at home, when she is nervous and out of sorts, and they are irritable and cross, and ask herself if she never fives a sharp word or angry blow. She as three or four, may-be. while doubt less the teacher of the school has twice or thrice a score, whose various dispo sitions she has yet but imperfectly learned, however faithful and earnest her efforts may have been. That teacher must indeed be a marvel of wisdom and patience that never errs! A School Teacher, in Country Gentleman. Playing Chess with a Thug;. The announcement that a clergyman in the north of England is about to play a game of chess on his lawn with living pieces supplied from the children of his parish, recalls one of the most amusing of the "Contes Eccentriques" of Adrien Robert The Thugs, according to a French writer, who wished to have it all their own way in India, having made five at tempts to stab, poison, and blow up the Governor of the East India Company, attributed their want of success to a tall man in the shape of his gray felt hat, un known till then in India. His passion was chess, and it was determined by the chief of the sect to challenge him at that game. The stake was the Governor's hat on one side and the surrender of the ringleaders of the Thugs on the other. On the plains of Barrackpore a chess board one hundred yards square was marked out. There were elephants for the castles, and knights in armor and living pawns. The Governor's men were supplied at 25 apiece by his rival. The game lasted all day, for all the Siece were killed as they were taken, ust as the Thug Queen was in danger, having taken the white Queen, the im perturbable Governor adjourned to lunch, where he stayed two hours. His rival was in anguish, for the Queen was his own wife. On the return of the Gov ernor the white King advanced to take her, but the magnanimity of the En glishman stepped in, and he took her prisoner. This generosity so demoral ized his opponent that in a few more moves the game was over, the conspir ators handed over to the mercies of John Company, and India saved from perish ing. Pall Mall Gazette. A London paper states that the mules purchased for the Egyptian cam paign, which have been brought to En glaud, have not turned out very profit able property. Many of them have just been sold at Woolwich, and, though choice specimens of their race, they have realized neither their value nor cost. Indeed, they barely produced an average of 10 a piece not a third of the amount expended in purchasing and transporting them from South America. One day last summer Mr. A. Bron on Alcott said to an acquaintance: "I early determined in life not to be a slave to things; not to put my life as a pledge for fine furniture, for luxuries, for the material surroundings. We lived simple life, Mrs. Alcott and L and I have never regretted it," All Day in a Mexican Town. No one seems in a hurry in those places. And why should they be? 1b necessaries of life are few and very cheap, and the extra dollar needed for the Sunday cock-tight or tho weekly game of "monte," of the men, and the fan or comb or silver shawl-pin of the women, easily earned, aud so the good man is not obliged to walk fast on oft days, when he us in town and goes round to the "matanza," or butcher's shop, to buy a piece of meat for dinner, and there is not the least reason why he should not stop for twenty minutes on the sidewalk and talk to Juan or Jose, whom he has encountered on the way, or spend half an hour in at the "tendajo" hanging over the counter and discussing a glass of mescal and the crops with Tomas or Telesforo. The good wife, too, rises early, and the day is still young by the time she fetched water from the river and swept the earthen floor of the one living room and the "patio" outside, and given the good mau his breakfast and dispatched him to the field, aud she has ample time to don her black head-shawl and trot oft' to morning service, and by no means hurries herself as she walks home again and drops Donnas Juana and Maria and Victoriana at their re spective doors, stopping awhile to ex change a few parting remarks with each; ample time has she, too, to pre pare the inevitable tortillas, beans and coffee for the midday meal. From noonday till between three and four o'clock in the afternoon (during which hours the inhabitants are all in doors eating dinner aud taking the sub sequent "siesta") is the quietest and laziest time of all. Then, indeed, does the little town seem like a city of the dead. "The streets lie white, silent and deserted in the fierce sunlight, nothing stirring in them save a hungry pig or two, or a dog going somewhere on unavoidable business, his head hang ing and his tongue out, as he hugs cliwely to the mud wall which offers the faintest prospect of a little shade. Even the voice of tho irrepressible cock gv'ts faint and weary at these hours, and the mournful cooing of the pigeons be comes low and intermittent. Between threo and four o'clock the town begins to wake up slowly. At four, or thereabouts, comes "meri enda," a sort of afternoon tea, consist ing of coffee and cakes. At live the women dress and go out visiting. At seven the bells sound for "oracion," or evening service; at eight comes supper, and by nine all is as still as the grave, except on Sunday nights, when the band plays in the little "plaza," on moonlight nights, when the rich notes of the mocking bird fill the silence and make the exiled Englishman think of nightingales and home. Garcia (Mex.) Cor. Detroit Free Press. Confederate Bonds. Another attempt is being made to get up a boom in Confederate bonds. For some time past Baltimore stock brokers have been advertising for Confederate State bonds. The movement in these bonds started some three years ago, and since that time the purchases have been very large, one firm alone hand ling about $30,000,000 of them. Balti more has been the headquarters for their purchase and Europe the destina tion of the bonds, orders coming from a large London lirm. When the excite ment first began the bonds, which were considered worthless, brought $1 per 1,000. The price subsequently ad vanced and has gone up as high as $15 per SI, 000, though now they are from $6 to $8 per 1,000 for 6, 7 and 8 per cent, bonus. The bonds are somewhat scarce now, though some days 100,000 will change hands and other days not 100. The dealings are altogether in coupon bonds with the 1865 or prior coupons on. One Baltimore dealer who makes the Confederate bonds a specialty has offers from the South of bonds in lots ranging from 100,000 to 500,000. Richmond brokers and others in the South are purchasing them and sending them to the London house, the head of which is said to be a party by the name of Moses. North Carolina war bonds arc also being bought for $1 on the 1,000. Since the flurry begau there has been great rummaging about old closets, chests, boxes, etc., for the pieces of paper that contained the promises to pay of the Confederate States of Amer ica. Some bring them into brokers' offices already framed, having been pre served as curiosities; others bring them stiff with paste, having taken them from the screens which they have lonor deco rated, and it is even said the bonds have at times been used for wall-paper by fantastically inclined people. It is safe to say the walls have needed new paper ing since Confederate bonds began to have a marked value. What they are being bought for is what no fellow can find out. Some have advanced the theory that the purchasers entertain a forlorn hope of their being paid some day; but another, and perhaps equally as rational a theory, has been put for ward. During the late war England did buy some Confederate securities, and at the close of the war found them worthless. It has been suggested that the holders still entertain an idea of get- ting something back. The present pur chasers, it is said, believe the same way. The summing up of the theory is that the English holders look for some com plications to arise between the two coun tries, and hope that in its adjustment England will be in a position to insist on the United States indemnifying the English holders of Confederate bonds. Washington Special to Indianapolis Journal. m A Snicide Club. A very extraordinary story is re ported from Pesth. Six youths, son for the most part of respectable shop keepers, recently formed a kind ot club, and arranged among themselves td put their spare money into a general fund and to spend it from time to tim. in social enjoyment together. Ere many weeks elapsed, however, not only the spare cash, but also every kreutzer these young fellows possessed in the world, vanished in mild dissipation, and the members of the club strangely determined that, as they were utterly penniless, they would all commit sui cide. With this object in view they ad journed to a wood not far from the city, taking with them a six-chambered re volver, which was to be tho common instrument of death. A boy of seven teen was the first to put the decision into practice. He deliberately fired one ball into his neck and a second into his breast, and then fell. Thereupon four of the survivors lost heart and fled; but the fifth, not deterred by the sight of the bleeding body of his friend, picked up the pistol and discharged it in the direc tion of his heart. One of the foolish youngsters was fatally wounded; but the other, it is expected, will recover, and, it may be hoped, will join no more suicide clubs. St. James1 Gazette. Lieutenant Waghorn, of her Maj esty's service, was the pioneer of the overland route to India, and having demonstrated its feasibility and value, the opening of the Suez Canal followed in course. Waghorn died poor in 1850. His surviving sister, to whom was ac corded a pension of 25, in recognition of the great services rendered to the country by her late brother, has lately died under distressing circumstances of neglect and poverty. Vennor is going to spend the sum ner at Old Orchard Boach. Wiggins vill spend it in oblivion. Chicago Inter-Oian EASTWARD. Dally Express Trains fc-r Omahn. Cnl rsKu. 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