THE OMAHA DAIU BEE : JANUARY 22,1877-Eight Pages. I THE'DAILYBE ] E. aOSEWATER. EDITOR ASD PROPRIETY TO r Ws BO soi desire any contributions whxtei of literary or poetical character : and will not undertake to praierre , or to i serve the same. in any case whatever. 0 Staff is sufficiently large to more than et ply our limited space in that direction. POLITICAL. AXNOUXCEHEXTS of candidates ( or offici whether made by self or friendi. a ; whether at notices or communication ! the Editor , are ( until nominations : made f imply personal , and will be chare u adrerttiemnnta. OOK COOMET FRIFND ? we will always ' , pleased to hear from , on all matters co neeted with crop . country politics , a : on any subject whatever of general inti et to the ] eeiile of our Suite. Any infr mation connected \-tl\i \ the election , * i relating to floods , accident .etc. . will gladly received , All uch commun'catio however , must be brief a ; possible ; ai they must , in all cases be written ut > i ne iideof the sheet only. All Communi'-fttionb should be a-Mresf' ' to E. KOSEWATER. Editor und Publishe A GOOD country for sourgrapes- "Pembina " THE Herald is still for the undi dvj Herald. And his firat name is Miller GWYER has , we tit derstaud , consented in the intere ; of harmony and "regulare" to shaK bands with Senator Saunders. THE Senatorial contest in Illinoi promisps to be protracted. The ir dications now point to a com promise Republican candidate. MILT.RR baa , on various occi eJons been fo-csd to swallow cro but this time his digestive organ appear to revolt agaiiut that diet. ANDYEW Jon > soN's successors Senator Keyes , has been defeatei for re election to the United State Senate by the Tennessee Legi'la Jure. AMBR SE i > dscsnso lite. Thp champion acrobat of Ne Vaska wants it distinctly under stood that he never Tanted to se < him on any previous occasion am does not want to see him uow. OLD Subsidy Pomeroy is matins another desperate efibr. for th ; Kansas SenatorshJp , but if ws cat judse the temper of KaiHfc * Rspub linaus there is no disposition to en dorse the old corrup"o'-iisr. A communicetion favoring th < repeal of the usury laive , which ap < pears elsewero , does not meet oui views on that question. Comment ! on ths ? subject are however defence for the want of time and space. THE WnKKiY BEI : ha non reached a. circulation of 3,820 , ant still new &ubFcribers are comiue in It is the first journal in Nebraski that has attained a sub-criptioa lis to exceed 2,000 It will now seer reach four and be advancing to ward its fifth thousand. THRKH is balm in Gilecd. The Nebraska City frets peeks to draw consolation for its political woundi by pointing to the fact that its Lin coin correspondent predicted th < election of Governor Saunders , That is just what General Van Wyck thought when ho cast bis firrt vote for United States Senator THE Herald doe * great injustice to the Cfiairmsn of the Senate com mittee on buildings , by charging him with deserting th late lament ed -'in a body " Tom. ban many sins to answer for , but this was not one of them. He came over only after be saw the cau e was loat , and. in the language of the immortal Shakespeare , "Poor Tom'acold. " SENATOR ? Paddock and Saundew little realized during the territorial existence of Nebraska , that the then Governor and Secretary would at a future period be again broughl together by the mssterious changes of time , aa tue most honored repre sentatives of a populoua and grow ing State. It is worthy of note that during all these long years these gentlemen have been strong au l fastidious friends , both bave secured their positions bj the uupurchased vote of Nebraska's legislators and both at the time ol thair election were untrammelea by any piouiisea of appointments. In speaking of this tfo wl h to cor rect an error made by our correspondent pendent Gabe , wberein he unin tentionally did injustice to Senator Paddock by nn allu Ion which would imply that no senator had heretofore been elected without im proper influences. Tb p30j > le of Nebraska are to be congratulated therefoieupon having in the national senate two repre sentative who will co-operato for the welfare of tueir constituency , and who thoroughly understand the wants of the State , having both advanced vruh its growth from its territorial infancy to its present prosperous and p-ospectiye condi THE PROPOSED COHPKOM18K. The proposed plan for the aettl mont of the Presidential mudd does not meet our approval. It * fb stavery unconstitutional t : nedient to remedy a defect lu tl federal constituti n. A more sati factory and tully as si fe * way 01 of tlie difficulty would be to allo Hayes and li'den to throw dice fi the Presidency. It is proposed to constitute ab > ai for the decision of disputed que tions , to be composed as follows : 1 Five members t the Senate. The.-e of course will be Republ cans. 2 Five mftmbei ? of the House. These of course will be D mi crats. 3. Five members of the Supien : Court , to bechosm in the folio win manner , V'E : Four of them selec ed by the committee , and comprii ins : two Democ at9 and two Repul licaus , the fifth to be ehosen by th other four. Up to the choice of the fifth Juds we have a board or boards cornpoi ed of ssvcn Republicans and seve Democrats. Now , the question ii how shail the odd Judge be belecte and what snail ba bis politic : Jaith ? The twoRapublican Judge will probably suggest a Ropubhca brother to fill the vacancy. Th two Democratic Judges will suggas a Democrat. Neither will be like ly to yiald reauily , for on thechoic of this fifth Judga , in all probabili ty , will defend the whole que tioi of the Presidency. And now we reach the kuotb ; problem , bow shall tue choice b made 1 Shall it b : made by place ing the names of the rema'uinj Supreme Judges in a hat , shakiuj them up and drawing for the re raainiug member. If so , you migh iust aa well omit the entire batch o Senators , Representatives ant Judge ? and simply put the name ; of the nine Supreme Judges in tbi iat , and draw oue name to deoidt the Presidency ; or Better still lib Tilden and Hayes , decide by tossmf joppers for the prize. To assume that this political predictions o the Supreme Judges will have m bearing on their verdict is vertuallj to contradict the conclusioni if the conference committee that drafted the bill for the proposet Jouiproraiae They propose to create 3. high court of arbitration made uj Df sevnn Republicans and sever democrats , leaving tin casting vote < o a person whose selection ia to hi Ibtermined by chance. No mat : er bow much confidence tha Su > reme Court may inspire at n court sitting judicially upon : inestion brought before them ir their judicial capacity , we have nt more confidence in them as politi ? iana , uittine in judgment as such : ! mn we have in mny other eminen men chosen faay from the C binei 3t tne Keuale Chamber. No mattei n-hat formalities are to be observed u organieiug the proposed higl jotirt of arbitration , the final ver- lict must necessarily depend upon the chance of the judge who has the casting vote. It strikes us that it would be rnon n conponauce with the spirit if noi with the letter of the national coir titutlon to allow the President o , he Senate to count the eltctora rote , and if the Supreme judges an o have anything to dpwitl bin great problem let them act as i ourt and not aa a political returning ward. THE BEE extends its thanks foi he numerous congratulations which aave been sent to us in the past few lays upon its final success in the ix years' campaign. We resret hat want of time , from nosrlected ; vork of the past two weeks , pre ludes personal response to all ol hem. THERE was gome very tall , as if ell as some very short swearing at jincoln in the investigation o.f that jorrible case of "forgery. " Why jot send for Mr. C. E. Perfcins , and et him taue a swear at his own ian manual , and several other mat ers. Gerald. Mr. Perkins will come of hia own iccord , and his testimony ill eflec- ually silence the malignant eating louse acrobat whose endorsement > f forgers and perjuers like Flana gan strikingly exhibits hia true harac'er. A YictoryofRefonB. Jhieaf o Tribune 19. Hr-G v. Alvm Sauoders , the last Governor of the Territory of Ae- ) raska , was yesterday chosen by tbo sgislature to represent that State 11 the Uaited States Senate for tke nsulng six years from the 4th ot tferch next. The present Senator , Hr. Hitebcoek , was a candidate or re-eltotion , and had an rgauized suyp-r , but We was veighed down with the salary grab eoord , snd was ao regarded with .Hfavor on account of an overplus f devotion to the Pacific Railroad nterests , and nor all the power of mronuge acd the potency of the Machine could force him upon the in willing Republicans , who-e num- ) c-rg were surlicient to control the itup.tion and at the list secure the lection in Gov. Kaunders of an ther and a better representative of he reform element of that party. Si'ANK , SPANK , SFAMf. FroM orniir till eight , fr m ary da Hf ' . . . With tears in n r y , Anil witk num rou sigk ; . A Mtthir wai iriel inc * neap -n f iekl A ilinptr , all woven witfc cardinal red. Which sh flovr ih < d trimapkantly ov r k keU , laeu krouiht it with T nc * " * o > on ( bai flam Of the child o ktrkncs , Spank s aik , ip > nk > IUurti"beUow dht , "Uladonit , " quotkim * . Sp k , ipuk , iponk- Spank , ipant , ipank. Thtre't a maiden who it now f rtparinc wed. wed.But But do y luppoia That tha fair creator * knowi Thattk * thtifhthas on t even e Ur d h htad That era loog ihe'll ba playing a methei cad part , With h-r pr-ei ui younc aarliar clasp close to h-art. And a ilipper carterioc alter * hit ba flank- flankThat That Bonn h will Itarn Toipank. rpank. ipank , And thtuch bellow 4 h , Hhe willrieht merilei 8paik. ipank ipa-k. RELIUIOUS. The Chaplain of the Colorxd State Senate is a negro , Rev B I Watson , of tbs Methodist Episct pal Church. The Kapti tH have made rapi progress in fi. ting up their summr campaign plan on Point Thai Uuqu % , Chautuq'.ia Lake. The widow Van Cott hasjiee preaching hi the Thirtieth str c Methodist Church , New York which ha1 * b an ciowded from en trance to chancel-rail with attenti v congregations. Rer. H. A. Buchtel , a retnrnei misiion ryBowstationod at Knight town , Indiana , writes that they ar in the midst of a great reviv l , hav ing as many as 240 inquiries at i single m-eting The Pope has sent A letter te ; German prelate , warning the Cath clic clersry a Jiiutt the accsptanc of the infallibility dogmx from an ; orher cauae swe ns a belief in it a a Divine decree. A Trritr ? ' in the Irish Church Ad vecata fctntes that at the recent opsn ingot a ehapel in England , s .ve : Baptist ministers werepro'eut wni iad been clergymen of the Estab lished Church Rev. Jame Presley , D. D. , wh ( ras formerly well-known in thi Qnit , d Presbyterian Churah , hai iecliued. it is said , nn invitation t < the First Presbyterian church. New irk , Ohio , and returned tohishotm near Pittsburg , Penn The Moody and Baukey idea o jreacher and ninijer collal > . 'rstt > fr ii jetting into the regular churches The Clark Street Methods ( Jauroi n Chicago hn Rev. M. M Park- luisc to prsacli anil Rav. W. A 3psuer to sing the Gopel. The juexiugttm Methodist Confer- snce ( colored ) will m et at Mays yille , Koutucky , March 4th , 1877 Bishop Bovrmau presiding. Tni- jonfernnce embraces all of K > M. ucky * ud parts each of Ohio and [ ndiana , and is doing a good vrorl for Methodism among the colored psople. The Unitarian ministeis are ma .urins a plan 'or the holding : of min sters' institute * , to meet biennially jut in the > -ear = when the National "onlerenee does not meet 'Ihej ill Ia t each on" we k , and will b ( devoted to Inctu es in spscial de iartmnt . Tlie first will be bole : n September nest. Rtv. B. W Parker , who wnl > ut from NSK London , Ceuneeti ; ut , forty four years ago , to the 3andv.-icl : Ulands , on a while ship 6 now visiting his home for the jrst time. Seventy thou and pnr- ions have been receive' ! into -he ; hurch in the Miiuili since ttie lirsl ; ntrauce of ths missionaries. Th United Bfp ' > ? report , foi K7G4.U7S churni c > . j n increase ol 58 , Ii3fcia ! meuiUeit. an inereac o r,8u5' 1,92 mini itors , a.i itcrease o' ' 16. During the year , $638,799 were aiRed for 11 purpusss ; of ihh auru ? 3'29 96 wer'or the support of tin maulers. This church has an ofli ; ial pubhshiug uous > c at Cayton , O Th revivitl nieetin-js undci Me r3. Graren and inland , at Mus jatiue , Iowa , are fepueQ of as un- jrecedented. The entire oi'y and ill its surroundings fcre under the nfiuencf of this wondpiful work. Jjoree of the young and some ol he most prominent and wealthy cit- zeus are the suhjsc'sof this remark- ibis revival. Ihe ' 'AsiociatioH Dorainicale ' i new French Roman Catholic so- siety for the promotion of a better tbservance of the Sabbath , \ re- > ortod to be making great progress n F ftnca under the patr > m ga ol he bishops. The motto of the As- ociatiou is a taymc of the present 'ope : "France will only be saved > y a return to the e&nctificatiou elbe be Sunday. " Rer. Dr- Riley , Protestant mis- iouary , says th l the assumption of he presidency by General Porfirio ) iaz will not harm prote-tant m- eresta in Mexico. General Diaz epre ents the liberal interest * of he republican party , and ia not aa .dvocate of the Roman Catholic ra- time The Epibcopalisus , at least , eceive encouragement from the ; ovornment. The ilormvian Year Book for 1877 eports 13 bishops in diQereut parts if the world , and 97,362 "member * . ) f this total 67,413 are to ba found u the missions. The territory oo- upiad y the "brethern" is divided nto three pro rincas German , Sritisb. and American. The Ger- nau province contains T,749 mem iers , the British 5,675 , and the Lmerican 13,763. Thu K-formed Church of the Tin ted States , popularly known a * the taruian reformed . reports for 1876 ne General Synod , six Distiict lynntls , forty-five classes , 664 min- slsrs , 1.333 conjrregulons and 141 , 92 members. The contrib ti' > us to lenevoleut object ? were S71 9SS ; t'e contributions to locf , ! onj ot" , 33J,193. The nnmber of students itepiriiig for the niicietry is 162 Iho Universalist Register /or 877 reort ] j the statistics of the lf- lominatiou for the United States and Canada to be twentr tire Sta c 'nvention" , represented in one gw eral convention ; 69 associations , 8 ! parishes , wi'h 41,029 families ; 6 ! church orgamaations , with 39,9- members ; 641 Sunday schoali , ha' ing 59,463 teachers and scholar 7 3 church eaifices , worth , above s i&debtedhess , $7,465,495. At the Broadway Congregation Tabernacle , New York tha pat arnonlv rented , the prices rangta from $35 to J325 a year There a : SCO paws , which afford sittings fi 1,650 peop1e. The income derm from the rents in a year amount ' $37 000. Out of this sum the Re Dr. Taylor receives $14000 , an SI 250 is paid ror bis life iusurane The church is said to be out of d b and there is a surplus every year < from $4 000 to S8,000. The Indian H < > m * Mission to U Hanthal * reports 118 adults baptise laat vear , and the wholejiumbsr > 2 133 pre ent communipantb ] has been decided to ordain two i the S nthal to be mifcpiouarii among their countrymen , and 1 have pastoral charge of some of tl churches ; thirty m n and tw women have bsen selected to a < , tiaveling Elders , andtoengag in homo-to home visitation. Thre Sinthai reading books have bee published , und other works a e i manuscript. Rv. Dr. Twin } ? , in reply to a open letter from Bishop Hunting ton , sy9that an average of flv cents a week from the 180,000 corr rauricants , and from the same uun bar ofuou-communicants , includin children , making a totol of 560,00 persons , Trould pive u ug regatc c 81,456.000 , which might be distribi ted BS follows : Domestic Mision > 300,000 perannumn ; Foreign Mis sioiip , IUJ,00 ( ) ; Home Missions i Colored People , 400,000 ; Indian Mis sions , lOii.Ou'O ; education of youn man for the ministry , 100,0 > 0 ; age and infirm clergy and widows an orphans of deceasbd clergymen , an 36,000 ; work among the J wn ; 10 , 000 ; work ninwug the Germans an r-candinavians , 10,000 ; work ii Mexico , 20,000 ; Bible and Prayer b.wk Society , 20,000 ; Church publi antion , 20 000 ; an average 10,000 t each of forty-oue dioceseu , 440,001 3HSCELLAITEOUS. Ten picfures from the Johuntoi aolleition have been presented ti .ho HnstoB Art Museum The attempt to cultivate the Eti ualyptus tree in the yard of the Un ited 8tata Court House , at Charles town , S C. , has failed in couss Qjuence of the recent frosts Mr. Coxwell , the eminent .Eug Uh aeronaut , eudoraua the opiuiot that the North Polo maybereachoc uy balloons under favorable circum ituuces and during comparatively mild weather. The State of Maine pays a $ ' jounty for every be r killed withti ts limits L t y r wa.3 apparent V a R-iod one , or rathe' a bad yen ; for bears , for 549 were killed , cost ng the State S2.475 At Marshal MacMahou's recep .ion on December 25 , Jules Simor srixa a guest , and pre < enied his wife [ * a ra was also a number of Senator : ind Deputiea of ths Left who wen jresent at iho Marshal's re idenci 'o the nYst lime. Gau Chrnzy , cominsnding it ( Liters , has interdicted the a-lmis .ion in thst country o the Djauun ind all other Constantinople news papers , which are stimulating Mus iulmans into the so called "holj ivar'1 with Russia. In the coal slia'e at VVgikon Jwitzeriaiid , a heries of pintsd fij Doles , cov icd wi'h wicker-work iav been fouiid They are nup Du&od to be the most ancient ovi iencas yet kuowu of the existeuc < > f man , and belonging to the parlor nterveuing between the two g'acia ipochs This is he way the Ashtab.fs appeared In Paris : New Deciembss 80 Lwt night h ? express train on the Pacific rail- oftd tra.s siopp d by a considerable ! ell < cun of snow on the woods : > rdgo ! near Ash Sabula , near Sail jake. The train , pieceded by ii. uo'.7 plow , bucked some hundreds L f metres , then started under a full ie.nl o' steam to try and force s jRssate. The bridge brohe undei be strain , nd the train fell iulc be river from a height of 75 feet. 't is believed that 100 passengers yere killed , and about 52 wounded. A belief in eolor-poisonmg bv neaua of green dresses and green vali papeia has already been forced ipon the public by some tclerablj lonclusive evidence ; but it seems hat the mischevious propensities ol his color are lar from being yet ex- > osea. A French savant , Mr. Paul Jert , has just exhibited against it .rtielfc * of impeachment of the ; ravest character , supported bj re- orfs of whole series of atartlinu xperimeuti. If hi theory is true , t is nont only the ar.-enic used in reducing the color which does tha njury , but the aciual color itself ; , nd a mere ray of green light is c- iable of affecting the health ot tha lersou esp B"d to it. apart from all id nfforded to it by the smell or tiesence of arsenic To deaaon- trato this alleged fa t , M. Bert ban ubmitted several specimens of the ensitive plant to rays ot diilerem olors thrown upon them through taiued glass , and in every case nose which were treated lo the most rilJir.iu green light with , red and died in the short- st time. In those plants which f re exnoscd to a red light a ps- uliar phenomenon was observed ; be tips or frpikrs of the leaves pro 3nged tnem"8lvea and grew for- v rd in a lean and hungry fashion lOiizmtally with the branch from rhicb th.y sprang ; wUile in a blue igbt t'ie contrary efleut was pro , uced , ihf npikes standing out Jtb- ujnly and pcrpendicularJy from hfir slem On "ne of their planti eing closed 4 sort of Jaiifiru , laving red gla s on one side and reen on the other , inated of hrinking away from the poison on heir rigiit to the ro-eate antido'e n t'ucir leit , the leaves , us if by a ( ttal fascijation , turned with one oiiboiit the other way and literally joktd death in the tace. PUBCWEXTISTIC. The early worm gata caught. Gold ia not yet se low that peep refuse to take it The dentist who was in a tig ) place managed to pull out. If a prisoner cannot be bailed on let some interviewer pump him ou Texas hotel keeper * wish evei wind would brine them a .Nortl truer Do not take it to heart if a patei Medicine man asks you how yoi 11 ver is Ole Bull is not partial to the mu ie ef Wagner. It is too much f < one fiJdle. There arc so many courts that tl tailors do uot know where to brie their suits. When whisky is down to sixt ceuU corner store merchants natui ally set low spirited. A.n Illinois sirl rjlayed Lojan photograph for the jask of spadei and said , "He's a trump " Tne korse that has sp ? * ri and bo tona Ii the animal on which a ma should bet his bottom dollar. They do not know exac.ly how t dispose of tne Vanderbilt property ' will there's but where there's a way. ' Tha arrival of a short man in Western town is mentioned in th papers under tbo head of "pereoni brevities. A child sat down on a hot stov htarlh ia Fittsburch , and was pei tnanently branded with the wordi "Bass Burner " Vandsrbilt's great motto wai "Mind your own busiuesi" ] everybody would do that they migh become millioHaircs. The world goes on well enoug ] without Commodore Vanderbill There it no man living whose plac can not be readily filled. Bates says the cremation chap have been ranking incinerating re marks on his friend , Baron voi Palm , and they must be stopped. A little boy in Stocktoi. , Cal , stuck a red hot poker into the bunt ; hole of a ke % that contained a pouni of gunpowder The result was al that h * could have expected. A Broad vay india-rubbsr firm re cently telegraphed to St. L uii 'Arcticshoes , St. Louis Bias , are no built in this eity. But vre can ssnt you a modal of the Great Eastern. ' TSae Boston Transcript says tha Ml true mus c is in the middli note * We had remarked this fac when a member of the Philhar monlc Society found ten cents in i ptperof tobteco. Millions of swallows went aoutl frem Caii ornia * as usual last fall and have just returned in mid-win tar , which is very unusual. Did tbi political atmosphere down then disacrse with them ? It is said thatuaorgw Washingtoi 3haved himself , and it is sublime U think of tue father of his country ii lis shirt sleeves , with a towel 01 ais arm , tearing about the housi for a piece of paper. Bascher ajsd Tilton rods tORethe n a p lace car ea the .Navr Yorl Central railroad Ifo other passeu ten were in the car , yet they die not avail themtelves of this first class opportunity to fight a duel. The Farmer's Vindicator explain ! something by saying : "Weaskoui read-rs to exusa all shortcoming ! n this issue , ai cur foreman ha ; jsen quite sick and none of th < other bauds understand it as well.1 A little boy was very mush ex r cised for fear he would not know lis father when he got to Heavau but his mother eased his mind bj saying , "All you will have to do i < to look for an angel with a red nose. " A San Francisco lawyer receiver ) a wooden jackass as a Chrutmasl ; ift from his fellow practitioners in he Police Court , and he says : " 1 : nov. how hard it is to pick oul stable presents , butlr.lmost thinfe MI insult was intended " An eager young man rang the aell t t a Washington street house Sunday evening , and the eldest laughter came in with smiles to lei lim in , and just as she opened the ioor , a small boy , all out of breath , reached the front gate and yelled : 'Ho , Jim ! Bill s-iy ? as how you uust come right home. He says aa low 'taint you * turn to wear that tore shir ; ibis week , no how , cause you wore it laat Sunday , and ie says as bow he's got a 'ointment o go and see a girl over in But Rome , and ain't he just hop- j'n' mad " The young man on the ioor-stsp looked as though there rrai a pain in him somewhere. Rome Sentinel. CUKRENT TOPICS. A monument to the great Swedish laturalist , Jjinnreus , was unvallpd n Stockholm yesterday , the 100th inuivewary of his death. William B Martin , of Pifsnurg , isked a companion lo sing the revi ralhymn. "The Sweet By end By , " ind at the close of the first verse tilled himself with a pistol shot. It is understood that the decision > f the Virginia-Maryland boundary inc Commissioners is against the ormer State , the-citizena of which nil thus lose the greater part of the aluablc oyster beds in Pokomoke sounds. The temperance promoters nave jst besu convicted of a great blan- ler in London. They 1ml opened a eople'rt c.illee rooms at low prices ; rut a Correspondent who sallied urth on a. lute terrible night to test heir utility found all the gin places : rwded and ablaze xvith comfort , ml the "People's Cafes' cl'-st-d , at 1:30 p. m. Thepxcu.-e made by the uannjjers was tbat it did uot "pay" o keep them open after working loura. Recpntly samples of mud c na : silver were sent to San Fran- itfcco. At first there was a pretence > f secrecy as to where the stuff came rom , but later a company of cap talists were told that Mud Spring O fgon , was the place that yelelt such richness. These men wei cautious and wculd not invest an money before an iuvesticatioi They sent some of the mud to Pr fe'sor Silliman of Yale Colleg who informed them that the sllvi had been added by human agenc ; and evidently parsed through quartz mill. Ihe authors of U fraud are to ba prosecuted. Ihe people of Los Angeles took very unique method of preventir a tbreatentrd influx of Chinese 1 bors. A parly of six hundred a rived there a few days ago ar camped near the new depot. Tl citizens immediately started a r port that the peculiarity of theclin ate causes the no-n to grow to formidable long h , and that the Ii dians invariably seize Chiname by their elongated appendages an wring their heads oil. A few mil utes before the time for the depar ure of the train for Indian Wella tl Chinese seized their baggage , dasi ed it from the cars , and stampede ovei hills and out of sight , The census of Paris la loofced fo ; ward to much interest In 1700 th populat'on numbered 720,003 iuhi bitanta Toward the end of th e'ghteenth century it had dimii iehed to 620,000 , and continued t decrease until 1801 , when it nutc bere-I 546.000 From that time : has steadily risen , fn 1831 it w 774338 , In 1836 900 1T6 Twent years later it readied 1,538 613 I 1860 the annexation ofallthedii tricts comprised between the ol Octroi boundary and the fortifies tions had the effect of swelling th numbers to 1,700000 and to 1,82 : 000 in 1886 These additions near ! , doubled the area ot the capital. I 1872 the population showed a aligb falling off compared with 1870 , bs ing 1,851,702 , against 1,800,000 ii ike later year. There are six universities in Rua sia , two in St Petersburg , and on each in Moscow , K'ssan , Odessa and Kharkoff. In 1866 there wer in all of them 3,591 students , li 1871 the number had increased t 5,301 , but in 1876 it had dimmuhei again to 4,492 As a rule Rusii&i students bave no resources of thei own , and aie obliged ! o give lesson to support themselves. At Moscow many of them especially the medi cal students , are said to be in : miserable condition. From 187' ' to 1873 while S.a-.M atudeuts finishei their course ot studies. 2,911 wer compelled to desist without takiuj their decrees Several scholarships of tha amount of from $100 to $2fii yearly , have been founded D , n Government and bv private lib-ral ify , but there number i tttll far be low the number o' students whi tiKV no means of subsistence bu miserable paid lessons. When a man in ew York ha auce taken a 'ine house he doean' like to leave it even if his incorni bes-in-i to fall. It makes people talk iud his position may be effected There died not long ago a gentle man , who up to hia death , bad beei paying $10,00 ' a year for his house ind aould leave nothing for his fa mily. He took it when times wen lush and didn't Rive it up. Ii London , where rentt are bi he than anywhe e except New York no one hapi'd such a rent as tin : uce Lord Palmerston , when Pnmi Minister , paid the some SUM fo Dambrige House iu Piccadilly . Hi ras childless , eighty , had an incoiai sf 20 000 a y-ara lu real estatt nnt salary , and his \vife nud upward o 20,000 a year more , London m i with 100,000 a year In the mos sol.d securities are contf-ut will aouses ranted at ' ,000 i veaThs London rents of t\s two ri3bes uen it , England did not amount t < | s7,000. Their propsrty vras wortl : ? 80,000,000. A bslieve iu color-poisoning bj ue ns of green dressen and greer arall ppera has already been forcec ipon the public by ome lolariblj ionclu'ivc evidenoo ; but It seeup , hat the mischievous propensities 01 his color are far f om being yel iilly exiiosed. A French savant ii. Paul Bert , has ju t exhibited i ainnt its articles ot impeachment ) f the gravest character , supported > y reports of a whole series o ] itartling experiments. If his theory s true , it in not on'tne arsenic isad iu producing tba color which toes the injury , but the sotual coloi tseif ; and a mere ray ofgrcsn lighl s eapsble of aflVctiag the health 01 he person exposfO to it apart from ill aid afforded to it by tha srasll 01 ) re-jenc of arsenic To demonstrt his clleed dst , Mr. Bert has sub nitted saveral spaeimsr.a of the ensitive plant to rays of diOsrenl : olora thrown upon them through tined glasi , anfl in every ca s hoe which wer treated to the nest brilliant green Jight withered ind dipd in the shortest tims. Iij hose plants whicli were exposed to red licht a peculiar phenomenon v observed ; the tit > 3 or bplkes ol he le&vea prolouge-i themsalvei md grew forward in a lean and lungry faibioa , horizon t lly with he brancu from which they sprang ; fhile in a blue light the contrary ifteft was produced , the spikes landing out abruptly and pcrpen- licuJarly from their stem. On one ftbe plants being inelosad in a sort if lantern , having , red-glass on one ide and preen on the other , instead if shrinking away from the poison > n the right to the roseate antidote 'n ' their loft , the leaves , as if by ataJ fascin&tiou , turned with one onsent the other way and literally uoKed death in the face. Ostrich farming is carried on nth the bc3t success at the Cape oi Jt > od Hops choice birds are worth 350 eaeh They feed on grafs like attle , and icquire verv little car * . Jsua'ly they are tolerably docile , iut at the breeding season they b- onae irritable , aud will often attack . person who ventures too ueai hem Eac'i bird yipWa from S150 o J200 worth of feathers per -year ? hoae from "he female are gray , nd the 8 from the male black , ex- tpt a single white plume which ; revs under each wintt , and whieh 3 the most valuable of all. IIONEY FOR THE LADIES. The neble red man is tba pull , baok on the outskirts of civilisation. Mr. Hill Keith , of .Lake Forest , to. C , having loat his wife laityear , was married to her mother on Christmas day. Bvery onca in a while some scientist tises and says that the moon is dsad. This scicntifie fact is what inakea youn * lovsrs on a frosty night linger at tha gate and look up at the corpse. A Louisiana paper wants to know what a New York citizen would think if ne saw in .New Orleans tba most beautiful girl * In the world ? Probably he would think of in New Orleans more lasses. It recalls what Dundreary said about it : "Y a * , she was a nice girl. I WAS e going to mary her m-myself , but I d-didu'tgetup that in morning , or somatiog of tb-that sort ; I d-don't w-weeollect now ju- juth what it wath. " A man In Cincinna'i owned a pet panther. Ha wentoflrecently with his wife and family for a visit of a couple of days , leaving the pet pan ther and his mother in law to keep house. On his return hit grief can be imagined on diecovery that It was the panther that was dead , not the mother-in-law. The old lady had talked the poor animal to death. 1'IODS SMILES. A fashionable London preacher recently said : St. Paul remarks , aud I partially agree with him - . " An agad Pailadol hiau is so de- voul that he often drops on his knees on the streets and loudly prajs for those whose sinfulness he witnesses There are 43,000 clergymen m tke United States ; but even th s num ber hava not succeeded in working the morals of the community up to that point where ail will pay on a crowded horse car. On a panel in a church wall in Valparaiso , Chili , is a painting rep resenting the emperor of Germany and Princa Bismarck gquirming in the flames of hell , while the aevil is poking the imperial chancellor in the back with a red-hot fork. Leonard Harper Johnson , of Vir ginia , has devised a new religion. Its leading ideas are that Johnson is to have one-tenth of the money of his followers and as many wives s hi can get. Thus far he has ob tained more wives than money. There is many a true believing Christian man who bides a mean act from hi * cctupiuious , but who his very little respect for the invis ible scuols that see him. And yet he is the very man to brag on an- w York Graphic : It IB easier for x camel to go through the knee nan idol than for a young man to go through ii church fair without bcin compelled to buy tickets in the raflle ot seven pincushions ctuSatl with br&u A traveler viiting a cathedral was show u by the bacristan , among other marvels , a dirty epaque glasj phial. Aftur eyeing it for some time , the traveler said : " Do you 36ll thia a relic ? Why it ia empty. " "Empty , " retorted thesacistan , in dignantly. "Sir. it contains some jf the darkue-,3 that Moses spread aver the lard of Egypt " When a man jumps out of bed as the whistle blows for quarter to 7 , lights tlie fire , carries in the coals , ires > as the ehildrei , draws the wa ter , blacks his boots , shaves nim- lelf. eats his broakfoit , has family worship when a man does all this and then goes down on the eight a'clock tinin , iiu realizes the fact that como things can be done as well aa others , and that there is aothiug like living in the country in the winter. Presbyterian minister ( portent- jusly ) : "James , there la a very ireadful thing ! You have beard ; hmre is oue .pauud missing from : ne bnx ! " Jame * ( the beadle who s s'rougly sus-pectudj : "Deed , sir , so they were ttlhn' me. " Minister solemnly ) : "James , you and I iloue had access to the box "James : 'It's . it muat lie just as yo fay. s r ; jetween u tvAn' the best vay'll ( > e , you -o pay the one-half , m' I'll pay the tither , an say na nair about it I' " [ Punch. POLITICAL NOTES. Watterzon would not have Cro- lin's nose for 53,000. Aucustus Scnell is the now bosa ) f Tammany , vice Kelly. H hopes ie Scheli ba as big a man as Tweed. Rev. E. E. Hale has a new story jailed "The Adventures of a Pull- nan Car. " it doea not let Tilton u. Kentucky can raise a bigger neu ral army than any other State. iVatterson's Q st draft is for 10,000 nan. The debt ot New York city in- ire sed $3,000.000 during the last re r. The city is for Tilden and eform. It * whole debt la now 1119,811,210.39 An exchange says , "Crocket , Texas , has a reading club and is se- ioualy talking of local option. " TVheu Crockett is right it should go ihead. It ia srid that before Senator Nor- vood becarae a politician , he was a irthlnolo ist in fact had a perfect ) as"iou for birds But he never ould a ascribe K briok bat , even after ia because a politician. Too Cold for Kissing. The St Joseph Chronicle , of the 6th , forcibly illustrates the severity if yesterday' * cold snap ia the fol- owing interesting incident : Lait nicht was no time for kissing n the open air. This is what a ihap says who tried it at a gate on tenth street , and had to thaw the ips of himself and sweetheart r part vith a burning match before being , ole to s.art home Besides this , ie sot both of hia big toes frozen , lis left car frosted , and will proba. ily have lo substitute another nose or the smeller th t he was carrying round this morning. The truth of he matter is , he's in a fearful pligh4 , ind credits it all to \v